“In making this selection we have had two main objects before us—the first, to provide poems which boys might reasonably be expected to like, and the second (which is not unconnected with the first) to awaken or encourage their metrical sense.”
That is the first sentence
of the preface to An Eton Poetry Book (Macmillan and Co., 1925), edited
by Cyril Alington and George Lyttleton, both of Eton College. Some readers will
know The Lyttelton/Hart-Davis Letters, published in six volumes between
1978 and 1984. Lyttleton (1883-1962) was a longtime housemaster and English
teacher at Eton. Rupert Hart-Davis (1907-1999) was a publisher and editor,
probably best remembered for editing the Collected Letters of Oscar Wilde
(1962). Hart-Davis had been Lyttleton’s student at Eton in 1925-26. The men met
again at a dinner party in 1955, and started a regular correspondence that
continued until Lyttleton’s death in 1962. The letters are sheer pleasure for
readers. Alington was headmaster at Eton from 1917 to 1933.
People in the past,
including parents and teachers, often had a higher opinion of children than is common
today. They respected them enough to expect them not only to read poetry but to
memorize it, scan it and, God forbid, enjoy it and incorporate it into their
lives. In the next paragraph of the preface, the editors write: “There is, as
we hope this volume will show, a great deal of poetry which is likely to win
instantaneous acceptance from any reasonably intelligent boy.”
The book is organized according
to meter and form. Chapters are devoted to the heroic couplet, the octosyllabic
couplet, the sonnet, trochaic meter, and so forth. The poet represented with
the most poems is Keats, with six, followed by Browning and Wordsworth, with
five each. Several of the poets included are unknown to me, including Thomas
Jordan (1612-1685), whom the editors describe as “an unblushing plagiarist, or
thief of other men’s writings. His contribution is Coronemus nos Rosisantequam marcescant (“Let us drink and be merry”). Here is the final stanza:
“Then why should we
turmoil in cares and in fears,
Turn all our tranquill’ty
to sighs and to tears?
Let’s eat, drink, and play
till the worms do corrupt us,
’Tis certain, Post mortem
Nulla voluptas.
For health, wealth and
beauty, wit, learning and sense,
Must all come to nothing a
hundred years hence.”
The Latin tag: “After
death / No pleasure remains.” The “corrupt us” / “voluptas” rhyme is
priceless. The editors are right: a thirteen-year-old boy would love this.
I’ve always enjoyed and
relied on good anthologies, beginning with the collections edited by Oscar
Williams when I was kid. With a few edits and perhaps some updating of the
contents after almost a century, I can see incorporating A Eton Poetry Book
into every school curriculum.
My newly-7yob likes "A Kick in the Head", which includes: "What is the opposite of two?/ A lonely me, a lonely you." (Richard Wilbur)
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