On March 27, 1905, Theodore Roosevelt had just started his second term as president of the United States when he wrote a letter to a little-known poet living in Boston:
Dear Mr.
Robinson:
I have
enjoyed your poems especially The
Children of the Night so much that I must write to tell you so. Will you
permit me to ask what you are doing and how you are getting along? I wish I
could see you.
Sincerely yours,
Theodore Roosevelt
A teacher at Groton School, Henry Howe Richards, was an early admirer of Edwin Arlington Robinson’s poetry and shared his enthusiasm with his students. Among them was Kermit Roosevelt (1889-1943), the president’s second son, who in turn recommended that his father read Robinson’s second collection, The Children of the Night (1897; reissued 1905). Roosevelt read some of the poems aloud during a cabinet meeting (“no doubt to the astonishment of the secretaries,” according to Robert Mezey) and invited Robinson to the White House. At the time, Robinson was living in poverty. In his biography of the poet, Scott Donaldson writes:
“Robinson
was thunderstruck. His clothes were so shabby that he could not accept the
president’s implied command to visit him. He responded at once, though, noting
that ‘getting along’ barely did justice to his precarious existence.”
Roosevelt
told advisers, Donaldson writes, “he might be able to locate ‘some position in
the Government service, just as Walt Whitman and John Burroughs were given
Government positions.’” The president offered him jobs as an “immigrant
inspector” in Montreal and Mexico City. Robinson declined, though he eventually
accepted a job at the New York Customs House, with a $2,000 a year stipend. Mezey
writes, “It was understood by everyone that this was a sinecure; Robinson’s job
was to write poetry. He went to the Custom House every morning, read the
newspaper, folded it neatly on his desk, and left. I cannot think of another
American president who has been so disinterestedly generous to a great writer.”
Roosevelt
reviewed the second edition of The
Children of the Night in The Outlook
and wrote: “I am not sure I understand ‘Luke Havergal,’ but I am entirely sure
that I like it.” In 1910, Robinson dedicated The Town Down the River to Roosevelt.
The Children
of the Night contains some of Robinson's best and best-known poems: "House on the Hill," "Richard Cory," and “The Clerks.” Here is “Zola,” about the French
novelist and courageous Dreyfusard:
“Because he
puts the compromising chart
Of hell
before your eyes, you are afraid;
Because he
counts the price that you have paid
For
innocence, and counts it from the start,
You loathe
him. But he sees the human heart
Of God
meanwhile, and in His hand was weighed
Your
squeamish and emasculate crusade
Against the
grim dominion of his art.
“Never until
we conquer the uncouth
Connivings
of our shamed indifference
(We call it
Christian faith) are we to scan
The racked
and shrieking hideousness of Truth
To find, in
hate’s polluted self-defence
Throbbing,
the pulse, the divine heart of man.”
In a letter
to his friend Edith Brower on March 14, 1897 (Edwin Arlington Robinson's Letters to Edith Brower, 1968), the poet
writes:
“Art for
art’s sake is a confession of moral weakness. Art for the real Art’s sake is
the meaning and the truth of life. This is just beginning to be understood, and
it is on this understanding that the greatness of future literature stands. If
[William Dean] Howells could realize this, he might write novels that would shake
the world; as it is, his novels shake nothing but his own faith. I have the
greatest admiration for the man, but I pity him. Zola is a parallel case, but
his objective power is so enormous that his work must eventually have a
purifying effect.”
Robinson is
unfair to Howells (see Indian Summer, The Rise of Silas Lapham and A Hazard of New Fortunes) but
shrewd about Zola. Purification followed just three years later in the form of Theodore Dreiser’s
Sister Carrie. Robinson virtually
predicts the waning of the genteel tradition and the coming of naturalism and other more robust strains of literature. In another letter, Robinson refers to Zola
as “the greatest worker in the objective that the world had ever seen.” Personally,
I think Zola’s novels are largely second-rate but I read them the way some people read thrillers.
[See The Poetry of E.A. Robinson (Modern
Library, 1999), edited and with an excellent introduction and notes by Robert
Mezey, and Edwin Arlington Robinson: A
Poet’s Life (Columbia University Press, 2007) by the late Scott Donaldson.]
I remember reading, somewhere a long time ago, that Roosevelt wrote a book of literary criticism. I've never seen this book but, if it exists, it might be interesting.
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