A
friend sent me a link to George Green’s “Poor Collins,” about the mad eighteenth-century
poet, and told me how it reminded him of his cousin stricken with “wild
dementia” and “unsurpassed madness.” Like many of the seriously crazy, this poor
fellow thought himself a spokesman for God and His long-deferred Apocalypse. Recalling
a visit to his cousin in the asylum, my friend writes:
“What
I remember most is that while he ranted and raged, rocking back and forth in his
flimsy robe spotted with food stains, is my looking from the window into the
lovely summer’s afternoon and seeing just on the other side of the parking lot
the tassels waving atop the green corn stalks in the afternoon breeze, all the
greener for the unimpeded sunlight splashing around them like the sea. How
easily a sane man can live in a world of such contrasts. We do it every day.”
It’s
healthy to remind ourselves that no one is immune, madness is never far away,
waiting on the other side of a highly permeable membrane. The sanest of men –
Dr. Johnson, Evelyn Waugh – have lived with an acute awareness of its
proximity. Collins (1721-1759) seems to have been ambushed by madness around
the age of thirty. In the epitaph he wrote for Collins, William Hayler cites the
“thick’ning horror” of the poet’s life. The mad are Manicheans. Like Luzhin,
the chess master in Nabokov’s novel The
Defense, Collins came to see the world as a vast geometry of black and
white, ubiquitous evil and scarce goodness, horror and brief respites from it. In
The Life of a Poet: A Biography of
William Collins (1967), P.L. Carver dates the onset of Collins’ illness to
Easter 1751.
About
Green’s poem: “poor Collins” has become a sort of Homeric epithet for the poet,
like “rosy-fingered dawn.” In a 1754 letter, Johnson refers to “the condition
of poor Collins,” and Edward Gay Ainsworth Jr. titled his 1937 biography Poor Collins. In his first chapter, after
describing the poet’s youth and his poetry, Ainsworth writes a chilling
sentence: “The rest of Collins’s brief history is concerned with his madness.” In
his “Life of Collins,” Johnson recalls his final visit to the poet, “for some
time confined in a house of lunaticks”:
“After
his return from France the writer of this character paid him a visit at
Islington, where he was waiting for his sister, whom he had directed to meet
him: there was then nothing of disorder discernible in his mind by any but
himself, but he had withdrawn from study, and travelled with no other book than
an English Testament, such as children carry to the school; when his friend
took it into his hand, out of curiosity to see what companion a Man of Letters
had chosen, `I have but one book,’ said Collins, `but that is the best.’”
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