“I wonder why it is that I like Cowper as I do?”
I’ve asked myself
that question. I read William Cowper’s verse more often than Wordsworth’s or
Shelley’s. I’ve done that for so long I know what to avoid – the cringingly sentimental
stuff and earnest sermonizing. Cowper is a formidably uneven poet, a man of his
time and frequently quite insane, but he was the drollest of madmen.
The
questioner quoted above is Edwin Arlington Robinson in an April 22, 1894 letter
to his friend Harry de Forest Smith. For the previous week he had been reading
Cowper’s masterwork, The Task (1785).
Robinson is twenty-four and not yet a poet:
“Something
tells me that he is not, and never will be, one of the really great poets,
although in occasional passage[s] he is well nigh unsurpassable. There is much
of the sandy desert in his work, but still it is comfortable travelling. The
green and glorious places that come every little while are all the brighter for
the comparative barren[-]ness around them.”
This is
accurate and recalls a memorable passage from Book IV, “The Winter Evening,” of
The Task, lines 88-93, that begins:
“’Tis
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 uninjur’d ear.”
That phrase,
“loopholes of retreat,” has spawned a thousand wayward thoughts, in me and in
William Hazlitt, who writes in “On Living to One’s Self”: “He who lives wisely
to himself and to his own heart looks at the busy world through the loopholes
of the retreat, and does not want to mingle in the fray…” The phrase is so
attractive and useful, Hazlitt recycled it for use in a chapter in Lectures on the English
Poets, “On Swift, Young, Gray, Collins &c.” He writes of Thomas Gray:
“He is not
here on stilts or in buckram; but smiles in his easy chair, as he moralises
through the loopholes of retreat, on the bustle and raree-show of the world, or
on ‘those reverend bedlams, college, and schools!’ He had nothing to do but to
read and to think, and to tell his friends what he read and thought.”
Both of
Hazlitt’s passages might apply to Robinson, a famously diffident, retiring man.
Back to his letter, where one notices even more self-identification:
“His
religion is akin to mawkish to a man of my doubts, but I readily overlook that
in the consideration of his temperament and his surroundings. He is popularly
and justly, I suppose, called feminine; but human nature has a word to say
regarding such matters, and a little sympathy is not likely to be wasted upon
this poet. His timidity was a disease, and the making of verse and
rabbit-hutches, together with gardening, was his occupation. He was a strange
man; and this strangeness, with his almost pathetic sincerity, go take [sic] to make up the reason for my
fondness for his poetry. He stands between Thomson and Wordsworth, and for some
reason, he seems to stand upon pretty firm ground. I do not think another half-century
will disturb him to any great extent. His description of the wood-cutter and
his dog cannot die while men and women care for true art in homely things.”
With the "wood-cutter" allusion, Robinson
refers to a passage from Book V, “The Winter Morning Walk,” of The Task
beginning “Forth goes the woodman, leaving unconcerned / The cheerful haunts of
men . . .”
When writing
about Cowper I like to boost the Irish poet Brian Lynch’s fine novel about the
poet and his suffering, The Winner of
Sorrow (Dalkey Archive Press, 2009), in which a character says to the poet:
“Misery usually stands in the way of creation, William, but in your case it
opens the road . . . because you know that composing puts off your being
decomposed.”
1 comment:
I have a selection of 363 of Cowper's letters, published in the old Everyman's Library series (#774) in 1926. One could live for a long time, literarily, on Cowper's letters, Lamb's letters (I'm semi-patiently waiting for the arrival of the 3-volume set of his letters, published in 1935, edited by E. V. Lucas), and Hazlitt's letters. There are all sorts of letter writers in the history of literature, but that whole period from the late 18th century through the mid-19th century seems to be especially rich.
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