“For nearly twenty years after the publication of The Children of the Night in 1896, poetry comprised the only notable American literature.”
A
provocative statement that sends one scrambling for counter-examples, which
aren’t difficult to find. Between 1896 and 1916 appeared Willa Cather’s early
work and Henry James’ late, not to mention Theodore Dreiser, Ambrose Bierce, Edith Wharton and O. Henry. Still, Constance
Rourke’s grand generalization in American
Humor: A Study in the National Character (1931) would have sparked a sometimes
heated late-night bull session in the dormitory. She’s right about
Maine-born Edwin Arlington Robinson, a consistent though muted comic writer. Rourke
writes:
“Robinson is
master of that unobtrusive irony that has belonged to the Yankee; like the older
Yankee he turns constantly to a dry metaphor—‘an old vanity that is half as
rich in salvage as old ashes.’ He has all but created a new form of blank
verse; and not the least of the elements which have gone into its making is the
rhythm of a taut, yet slowly moving Yankee speech.”
Consider,
from The Children of the Night Robinson’s villanelle in trimeters, “The House on the Hill” and its closing lines:
“And our
poor fancy-play
For them is
wasted skill:
There is
nothing more to say.
“There is
ruin and decay
In the House
on the Hill:
They are all
gone away,
There is
nothing more to say.”
No, not slapstick or bawdy. Something subtler. Rourke puts
it like this: “A reticent humor runs through much of Robinson’s poetry, so
quietly as to pass unnoticed by many readers, yet producing a constant lighting and relief and change,
with a balancing of forces against the impending tragedy. Tragedy has become his
great theme; he uses that groundwork of defeat which had slowly come into the
American consciousness: yet the outcome is not always wholly tragic; it is
likely to be neither death nor destruction but a stripped acceptance of fate:
within this range comes the great play of Robinson’s perception of character.”
Serious
readers across a lifetime assemble and cull an ever-changing private canon,
immune to the opinions of critics and other readers. Like A.E. Housman, Robinson has become essential to my portable library.
No comments:
Post a Comment