I used to think that everyone knew it -- “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.” -- the same way everyone knew “And what is so rare as a day in June?” and “Into the valley of Death / Rode the six hundred.” Of the three, only the second, from James Russell Lowell’s “The Vision of Sir Launfal,” was memorized as a school assignment, in eighth grade English. Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Tennyson were absorbed by osmosis. I don’t remember consciously memorizing those poems, the way I would lines by T.S. Eliot and Allen Tate, but they stick even after sixty years.
I’m remembering Browning rather
guiltily because June 29 is the anniversary of her death in 1861 and I
know little of her work apart from #43 in Sonnets from the Portuguese:
“How do I love thee? Let
me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth
and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when
feeling out of sight
For the ends of being and
ideal grace.
I love thee to the level
of every day’s
Most quiet need, by sun
and candle-light.
I love thee freely, as men
strive for right;
I love thee purely, as
they turn from praise.
I love thee with the
passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with
my childhood’s faith.
I love thee with a love I
seemed to lose
With my lost saints. I
love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my
life; and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee
better after death.”
Her sonnets, especially #43
(safely out of copyright), were stitched on pillows, printed in greeting cards
and in little booklets with sequins and sewn-in bookmarks. Truly, I’m not
making fun of such things. They recall a less cynical time, when a young man
could declare his love for a woman, and vice versa, with poetry. Browning’s
sonnet is conversational. Nothing in it would strain recitation. The only
archaism is the repetition of “thee,” but it works. Most of the poem consists of
monosyllables. I can pull out this poem while out for a walk or doing my exercises in PT.
I’m reminded of what Kingsley
Amis wrote in his introduction to The Faber Popular Reciter, the
anthology he edited in 1978. He wished to include “poems that sound well and go
well when spoken in a declamatory style, a style very far indeed removed from
any of those to be found at that (alas!) characteristically twentieth-century
occasion, the poetry recital, with all its exhibitionism and sheer bad art.”
In tribute to Browning,
here is her “Love”:
“We cannot live, except
thus mutually
We alternate, aware or
unaware,
The reflex act of life:
and when we bear
Our virtue onward most
impulsively,
Most full of invocation,
and to be
Most instantly compellant,
certes, there
We live most life, whoever
breathes most air
And counts his dying years
by sun and sea.
But when a soul, by choice
and conscience, doth
Throw out her full force
on another soul,
The conscience and the
concentration both
Make mere life, Love. For
Life in perfect whole
And aim consummated, is
Love in sooth,
As nature’s magnet-heat
rounds pole with pole.”