In his introduction to An Anthology of Light Verse (Modern Library, 1935), Louis Kronenberger is earnestly serious about his profoundly unserious subject:
“As I see light verse, it
is almost entirely a matter of mood and accent; and whatever work has that mood
and accent, regardless of its form or its subject-matter or its context, is
light verse. The mood is simply one of enjoyment, whether quiet or hilarious,
cynical or cordial, simple or complex; the accent is simply one of comedy in
its many, various and interpenetrating; comedy, perhaps I may add, in the
philosophical sense of the word.”
Huh? Not once in his seven-page
introduction does Kronenberger use the words “funny,” “ironic,” “comic,” “humor,”
“humorous,” “laugh," "laughter," or "amusing," though "philosophical" shows up twice. Light verse is forever fighting a two-front war: on one side, nonsense
and sheer silliness (any limerick not written by Robert Conquest); on the
other, stridency and ham-fisted message-mongering. What those opposites have in
common is their crippling inability to provoke a good laugh. Consider the year
of publication -- 1935, roughly the Great Depression’s midpoint. The nation
could have used a few laughs.
When Tom Disch refers in “The Art of Dying” to “Pope disappearing like a barge into a twilight of drugs” and “the
execution of Marianne Moore,” I’m still laughing decades after first reading
the poem. And the same goes for R.S. Gwynn’s Southern-style subversion of Hopkins in “Fried Beauty.”
Kronenberger collects some
good poems in his anthology, especially from the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries – Shakespeare, Jonson, Campion and Herrick, among others. But it’s
not light verse. And he doesn’t even come close to Swift’s best stuff, or Pope’s,
or Landor’s. Kronenberger devotes a section of his book to parodies, including
one by Robert Henry Newell, who captures the gaseous, high-minded
insubstantiality of Ralph Waldo Emerson thought:
“Source immaterial of
material naught,
Focus of light
infinitesimal,
Sum of all things by
sleepless Nature wrought,
Of which abnormal man is
decimal.
“Refract, in prism
immortal, from thy stars
To the stars blent
incipient on our flag,
The beam translucent,
neutrifying death;
And raise to immortality
the rag.”
No comments:
Post a Comment