In “To See Robinson,” his remembrance of a meeting with the poet in 1929, Winfield Townley
Scott writes: “He said of ‘The Man Against the Sky’ that ‘The whole ending of
the poem is ironical, even sarcastic. Of course, the implication is that
there is an existence [after death].’ And speaking of what so many critics had
found to be a ‘philosophy of failure’ in his poetry, he said ‘I’ve always
rather liked the queer, odd sticks of men, that’s
all. The fat, sleek, successful alderman isn’t interesting.’” Here are the
concluding lines of "The Man Against the Sky":
”If after
all that we have lived and thought,
All comes to
Nought,—
If there be
nothing after Now,
And we be
nothing anyhow,
And we know
that,—why live?
’Twere sure
but weaklings’ vain distress
To suffer
dungeons where so many doors
Will open on
the cold eternal shores
That look
sheer down
To the dark
tideless floods of Nothingness
Where all
who know may drown.”
I sense
Robinson is trying too hard. There’s a portentousness about the poem that I
find off-putting. Unless your name is Isaiah, leave prophecy alone. This has never
been among my favorite Robinson poems. I prefer those devoted to his “queer,
odd sticks of men,” the poems that often read like condensed short stories, character sketches: “Reuben Bright,” “Mr. Flood’s Party” and “Isaac and Archibald,” among others. J.V.
Cunningham in “Edwin Arlington Robinson: A Brief Biography” (The Collected
Essays of J.V. Cunningham, 1976) writes:
“He lived
during his mature life among the moderately wealthy and cultured and with the
outcast and miscast. He belonged to the former by breeding, to the latter by
experience, imagination, and compassion. And he wrote of both.”
No comments:
Post a Comment