“Usually he took for his subjects those who failed in life and love. He wrote about the derelict and downtrodden, the old and bereft. Who wanted to read about successful alderman, anyway?”
As a newspaper reporter, “celebrities” never interested me, the politicians and captains of industry hungry for headlines. Too often they sought the “glamour” a reporter might supply them, even in the provincial pages of a smalltown newspaper in the Midwest. Smugness and entitlement are repellant. At the same time I resisted romanticizing the plight of the outsiders, the ready-made poignancy that comes with poverty and failure. It was impossible to avoid both types, of course. The best I could do was maintain an uneasy neutrality, sticking as close as possible to the facts, sorting them out and resisting the effortless clichés.
The comment at the top is
by Scott Donaldson in his biography of Edwin Arlington Robinson, and I think it
accounts for my love for the best of Robinson’s poems. He usually resists the
romanticizing impulse, the easy route of making losers heroic. His emotional capacity is enormous but carefully regulated. He doesn’t gush. Take his sonnet
“Reuben Bright” (The Children of the Night, 1897):
“Because he was a butcher
and thereby
Did earn an honest living
(and did right),
I would not have you think
that Reuben Bright
Was any more a brute than
you or I;
For when they told him
that his wife must die,
He stared at them, and
shook with grief and fright,
And cried like a great
baby half that night,
And made the women cry to
see him cry.
“And after she was dead,
and he had paid
The singers and the sexton
and the rest,
He packed a lot of things
that she had made
Most mournfully away in an
old chest
Of hers, and put some
chopped-up cedar boughs
In with them, and tore
down the slaughter-house.”
In other hands, the
conclusion might have been insufferably cheesy. The poem consists of two
carefully structured sentences, loosely defined as before and after. The second
flows so smoothly, in the simplest of language, that we think: Where is he
going with this? A “Richard Cory”-like punchline would have been a cheap
disappointment. Instead, Robinson gives us an entirely unexpected coda to a
life. He makes a simple, obscure man noble in his grief.
Jules Renard and Robinson
share similar sensibilities. Both stood on the outside, looking in. Both
possessed healthy capacities for humor and irony. Neither was a rabble-rouser.
Renard puts it like this in his journal on May 1, 1902: “Fame. A reputation is
made with cement, mortar and liberal quantities of vulgarity.”