“I suppose I am alluding to that intangible which amateurs call Inspiration. There is such a thing as inspiration (lower case), but it is no miracle. It is the reward handed to a writer for hard work and good conduct.”
Seasoned
writers, whether sonneteers or P.R. hacks, will understand. Write long enough,
with sufficient concentration, trusting the process, and you too will know the
flash of inspiration and be rewarded with the word or sentence you could never have
foreseen. Phyllis McGinley’s encouraging words open her essay “The Light Side of the Moon,” published in the Autumn 1965 issue of The American Scholar. Vladimir Nabokov would agree. In his 1973
essay “Inspiration” he describes the sensation as “a prefatory glow not unlike
some benign variety of the aura before an epileptic attack.”
Fashion is
fickle and cruel, especially literary fashion. McGinley’s Times Three: Selected Verse from Three Decades, with Seventy New Poems
(1960) was published with a foreword by W.H. Auden and awarded the Pulitzer
Prize for poetry in 1961. Her command of and devotion to meter and rhyme was absolute. She
appeared on the cover of Time when
that still meant something, on June 18, 1965. McGinley (1905-78) was a serious,
amusing, accessible poet when such a description was not oxymoronic. She
was a Roman Catholic and often wrote about her faith. She occasionally reminds
me of John Cheever, minus the alcoholism and bisexuality. If we’re talking female
poets, I would read McGinley any day over Adrienne Rich. McGinley goes on about
inspiration:
“It is the
felicitous word sliding, after hours of evasion, obediently into place. It is a
sudden comprehension of how to
manufacture an effect, finish off a line or a stanza. At the triumphant moment
this gift may seem like magic, but actually it is the result of effort,
practice, and the slight temperature a sulky brain is apt to run when it is
pushed beyond its usual exertions.”
McGinley’s
message, especially for young writers, is this: inspiration is not a passive
phenomenon. It’s not a product of virtue or luck. Work hard and it may arrive,
but then it may not. Just keep working. McGinley is refreshingly unembarrassed by
having let the Modernist movement pass her by. In “On the Prevalence of
Literary Writers” she writes:
“It’s hard
Keeping up
with the avant-garde.
There was
the time that Donne
Had a place
in the sun.
His lettres were belles of pure gold
And they
tolled and they tolled and they tolled,
Until
critics in suitable haunts
Took up
Kafka (Franz).
Then
everyone wanted to herald
The genius
of Scott Fitzgerald.
And after,
among Prominent Names,
It was
utterly Henry James.”
In his tribute
to light verse, “Sweetness & Spite,” R.J. Stove devotes the most space to
McGinley:
“Miss
McGinley actually disliked the rubric ‘light verse,’ preferring to call her
manner ‘poetry of wit.’ She regarded herself as belonging to the tradition of
17th-century England’s so-called Cavalier Poets—Robert Herrick, Richard
Lovelace, Edmund Waller, and John Suckling, to name a handful—who eschewed the
self-conscious, syntax-wrecking convolutions of John Donne and his followers in
favor of a sweet urbanity. Something of this urbanity characterizes McGinley’s
own oeuvre.”
McGinley was
no dolt. She knew the literary tradition and her place in it. Here
she defines that much-debated, too often snobbishly denigrated category, “light
verse”:
“Between it
and poetry is no real division except impact. Light verse like serious poetry
can be either good or bad, trivial or important. It can range from newspaper
doggerel to the imperial heights of Marvell's ‘To His Coy Mistress’ (an example
of how light and heavy poetry merge into a work of art, the manner being
playful but the subject, Love and Death). Still, it does have a different
target from its sister-craft. Serious poetry engages the emotions. Light verse
aims at the intellect which it wishes to amuse and divert. (Mistrust that
definition, too, like all generalities. Much serious modern poetry, such as
Eliot’s, draws a bow at the mind rather than the heart.)”
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