The author,
Vivian Carter, deserves a hearty posthumous “thank you” for coining “floral
adornment.” The year was 1906 and the practice of using tasty bites of poetry
to lend savor to speeches, sermons and eulogies was already well established. As
we all know, the ability to quote poetry certifies a speaker’s sophistication.
The occasion, April 25 of that year, was the 106th anniversary of
Cowper’s death. Carter is writing in The Bystander (1903-40), a British
tabloid magazine with a wonderfully inclusive subtitle: An Illustrated Weekly,
Devoted to Travel, Literature, Art, the Drama, Progress, Locomotion. She
(he? remember Vivian Stanshall? Jay Vivian Chambers?) continues:
“[H]e is one
of the immortals, even had he not also given to the world a mass of very pleasant
domestic verse, tender in sentiment and skillful in phrase.”
The
vocabulary is a little creaky but the judgment is correct. I’ve been quietly
lobbying for Cowper’s verse for years. Take this excerpt from Book IV, “The
Winter Evening,” of his long poem The Task (1785):
“’T is
pleasant, through the loopholes of retreat,
To peep at
such a world; to see the stir
Of the great
Babel, and not feel the crowd;
To hear the
roar she sends through all her gates,
At a safe
distance, where the dying sound
Falls a soft
murmur on the uninjured ear.”
Cowper was
one of literature’s gregarious solitaires. He observed social distancing long before
it became fashionable. A few years later, Hazlitt used the same phrase – “loop-holes
of retreat” – in his essay “On Living to One’s Self”: “He who lives wisely to himself and
to his own heart looks at the busy world through the loop-holes of retreat, and
does not want to mingle in the fray.”
After all, mingling in the fray can make you sick.
1 comment:
It's the Letters of Cowper I meant to read. Here is C. S. Lewis on them:
https://books.google.com/books?id=kO0JeQn2TxAC&pg=PA131&lpg=PA131&dq=c.s.+lewis+%22cowper%22+letters&source=bl&ots=WPkW831w1e&sig=ACfU3U3ZyaxmrTJiueQCIiHIDDtqZAO9gg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiBs-qFgYTpAhVKZM0KHbORC2AQ6AEwC3oECAoQAQ#v=onepage&q=c.s.%20lewis%20%22cowper%22%20letters&f=false
Dale Nelson
Post a Comment