Asked to name which “mental attitude” she judged “dismal, disastrous and distasteful,” Marianne Moore replied with a single word: “apathy.” It’s a complicated state, not easily dismissed. Dr. Johnson defined it as “the quality of not feeling; exemption from passion; freedom from mental perturbation.” In other words, not a wholly bad thing. Many things, from politics to video games, are worthy of principled indifference but not at the cost of perturbation.
Chief among
Moore’s virtues as a poet are curiosity and wonder coupled with precision of
expression. A Moore poem resembles a Kunstkammer,
a cabinet of curiosities drawn from every human realm. Not for her what Tennyson called “hollowhearted apathy, /
The cruellest form of perfect scorn.” There's too much to love in the world. Kay Ryan, a poet having a lot in common with Moore, lauds her “darting, delicate,
exacting, pan-interested mind.” In her 1960 Paris
Review interview with Donald Hall, Moore quotes George Grosz: “How did I
come to be an artist? Endless curiosity, observation, research – and a great
amount of joy in the thing.”
Artists
endure who attend to the world. Details are precious. Art is collecting and
arranging them. Moore’s poems, even those misread as nature poetry, sentimental
bric-à-brac or whimsy, are cunningly made. The modern writer she most resembles
is Vladimir Nabokov. “Beauty is everlasting, / and dust is for a time,” she wrote during World War II after seeing a photograph of a dead soldier in a
magazine.
Moore’s condemnation
of apathy above is from her reply to questions posed by Harper’s Bazaar and published as “Antidotes” in its July 19, 1963
issue. The magazine asked “Which play, book, painter, food, film, musical work,
celebrity, activity, virtue, place, mental attitude, type of humor has seemed
to you dismal, disastrous and distasteful?” Don’t go looking for
self-revelations. Like the animal she
favored, Moore is admirably self-protective. As to the book she scorned, the
poet answered:
“The Prince by Machiavelli: so dull; the
advice, obvious (win the obstacle’s favor, enslave, or extirpate has not been
working very well). Whereas the History
of Florence says all by implication and sparkles like a diamond.”
Moore writes
in “Armor’s Undermining Modesty” (1950):
“If tributes cannot
be implicit,
“give
me diatribes and the fragrance of iodine,
the
cork oak acorn grown in Spain;
the
pale-ale-eyed impersonal look
which
the sales-placard gives the bock beer buck.
What is more
precise than precision? Illusion.”
[Moore’s responses
to Harper’s Bazaar can be found in The Complete Prose of Marianne Moore
(ed. Patricia C. Willis, Viking, 1986).]
1 comment:
The Encyclopedia Britannica describes Compton Mackenzie as a man who "suffered critical acclaim and neglect with equal indifference." Not apathy, exactly, but close enough.
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