Robert Lowell's Language of the Self
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Through close readings of the poetry and of unpublished drafts of several poems as well as letters from Lowell to George Santayana, Allen Tate, and his cousin Harriet Winslow, Wallingford treats Lowell's use of specific psychoanalytic techniques: free association, repetition, concentration on the relation between the poet and the "other" to whom he addresses himself, and the use of memory to probe the past. The book considers as well the role the narrative plays in these psychoanalytic and poetic techniques.
Lowell believed firmly in the identity of self and language -- "one life, one writing" -- and this study brings us closer to an understanding both of the poet and of his dense and moving poetry. It enriches our reading of Lowell's poetry by calling attention to the ways in which his poetic techniques are analogous to and to some extent derived from psychoanalytic techniques -- techniques that have in our time become integrated into our culture as a whole.
Originally published in 1988.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to make available again books from our distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These editions are published unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural value.
Takaaki Inuzuka
Takaaki Inuzuka (1944–2020) studied economics at Gukushuin University and was awarded a PhD in literature by Hosei University. He was Emeritus Professor at Kagoshima Immaculate Heart University, where he was also a former Vice-President, and served as Honorary President of the Satsuma Students Museum. He specialised in the history of Japan's international relations during the Meiji period, on which he published numerous books, including biographical accounts of Japanese students who studied abroad.
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Robert Lowell's Language of the Self - Takaaki Inuzuka
Robert Lowell’s Language of the Self
Robert Lowell’s Language of the Self
Katharine Wallingford
The University of North Carolina Press
Chapel Hill and London
© 1988 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wallingford, Katharine.
Robert Lowell’s language of the self / Katharine Wallingford.
p. cm.
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
ISBN-0-8078-5714-9 (alk. paper)
1. Lowell, Robert, 1917–1977—Criticism and interpretation.
2. Self in literature. 3. Psychoanalysis and literature.
1. Title.
PS3523.089z92 1988 87-37210
811’.52—dc19CIP
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
Printed in the United States of America.
92 91 90 89 885 4 3 2 1
Portions of Chapter 2 appeared in somewhat different form in Robert Lowell’s Poetry of Repetition,
American Literature 57 (1985): 424–33; portions of Chapter 1 appeared in somewhat different form in Robert Lowell and Free Association,
Mosaic 19 (Fall 1986): 121–32.
Permission to reproduce quoted matter appears on pp. 169–71.
THIS BOOK WAS DIGITALLY MANUFACTURED.
To John Martin Tapers and Alma Entzminger Tapers
And to Monroe K. Spears
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: A Poetry of Self-Examination
1A Poetry of Association
2A Poetry of Repetition
3A Poetry of Relation
4A Poetry of Memory
Afterword: The Language of the Self
Notes
Bibliography
Permissions
Index
Acknowledgments
My father was a newspaperman, and the Tallahassee Democrat was delivered every afternoon to my house, just alike every day and always different too. That printed object took on iconic significance in my life. Thus it is a pleasure for me, on this page of this book, to express my gratitude to my parents: my father, Jack Tapers, and my mother, Alma Tapers, who were the first to teach me about language and about love. Malcolm Johnson of the Democrat tried to teach me never to use a boring verb if I could avoid it. My professors at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College taught me that I could do virtually anything I was willing to work hard enough at, and gave me some of the skills to do it with.
I have had a wonderfully large number of teachers and friends and editors and colleagues whose contributions to my work are many and various, and it is my pleasure to thank them here: Roy Bird, Virginia Carmichael, Susan Cashman, Susan Clark, Irvin Cohen, Terry Doody, Sandra Eisdorfer, Kristin Flanagan, Alan Grob, Iris Tillman Hill, Dennis Huston, Walter Isle, Adrienne Mayor, David Minter, Bob Patten, Janis Paul, Meredith Skura, Alan Williamson, Susan Wood, and especially Steve Axelrod and Monroe Spears.
I am grateful to Rice University for a financial contribution toward the publication of this book, as well as for sustenance of a broader nature. I am grateful also to the staffs of the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin; the Houghton Library, Harvard University; and the Princeton University Library.
As Faulkner once said, So many people are seeking something and quite often it is love.
Some even find it. I would like to thank my husband, Rufus Wallingford; my daughter, Hailey Wallingford; and my son, John Wallingford—they have supported me in all senses of the word, and made me laugh.
Abbreviations
Robert Lowell’s Language of the Self
O Sir, now do I feel myself inwrapped
On a sudden into the labyrinths
And blind beholdings of the subtle mind:
Which way to loose myself, which way to end
know not …
—John Milton’s Prayer,
an unpublished poem by Robert Lowell
Introduction: A Poetry of Self-Examination
ROBERT LOWELL’S friend Blair Clark, writing of the close friendship among himself, Lowell, and Frank Parker at prep school, describes their association as a mini-phalanx that [Lowell] was head of—and there were only three members. But it had a definite moral function and he was unquestionably the leader.
As a basis for their association, the three friends pledged themselves to a regimen of unmerciful self-scrutiny: What do you do with yourself, how do you make yourself better?
¹ This commitment to self-examination, which characterized Lowell throughout his life, proved to be a driving force behind his plays and more particularly his poetry. Readers of American history and literature are not unfamiliar with this penchant for self-scrutiny: Franklin in his Autobiography systematically examines his faults and describes his attempts to convert them into virtues,² and Emerson in his journals analyzes his shortcomings and declares that it is our duty to aim at change, at improvement, at perfection.
³ But we encounter this habit of self-examination in its purest, most extreme form in two complex systems of thought, widely separated in time and intention but united by their commitment to a program of rigorous self-examination: New England Puritanism, and its twentieth-century secular cousin, psychoanalysis. Both systems have fostered methods and ways of thinking that have become thoroughly integrated into the culture of the United States, and Robert Lowell’s poetry embodies the spirit and the process of both.
Historically, both Puritanism and psychoanalysis have stressed not only the habit of self-examination, but also a concern with the process of that self-examination, and an acute awareness of the significance of language in the process. In The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century, Perry Miller explains how the doctrine of regeneration caused the founders of New England to become experts in psychological dissection.
The Puritans were required constantly to cast up their accounts
as they searched their souls for evidence of the workings of God’s grace. Puritan leaders such as Thomas Hooker struggled to convey to their people the proper methods for self-examination: like the customs officer who unlocks every chest and romages every corner,
the subject must consider all the secret conveyances, cunning contrivements, all bordering circumstances that attend the thing, the consequences of it, the nature of the causes that work it, the several occasions and provocations that lead to it, together with the end and issue that in reason is like to come of it.
⁴
The Puritans’ problem was that their self-examination, intended to focus attention upon and indeed to foster the submission of the self to God, often discovered instead stubborn assertions of individuality. Sacvan Bercovitch has pointed out how what seem to be simply tics of language in some of the Puritan writings—for example, the interminable-because-unresolved incantations of the ‘I’ over itself
—in fact reflect dramatically the profound Puritan ambivalence towards selfhood,
an ambivalence that resulted in their pervasive use of the personal mode.
⁵ Not only did the Puritans struggle incessantly and privately to determine their ultimate fate (saved or damned? saved or damned?), but the language in which they couched their accounts of the struggle of self against self had a more public dimension as well. As Edmund S. Morgan and others have taught us, the New England Puritans were the first to restrict church membership to visible saints, to persons, that is, who had felt the stirrings of grace in their souls, and who could demonstrate this fact to the satisfaction of other saints.
⁶ In other words, admission to the early church depended upon one’s ability to tell a convincing narrative of conversion, based at least in part upon what one had learned through self-examination.
Herbert Leibowitz, discussing Lowell’s early poetry, says that Lowell’s ambivalent attitude to the Puritans is central to an understanding of his poetry. Although he repudiates them intellectually, he is at home with their buffetings and morbidity. From them he takes or rather corroborates the habit of self-examination.
⁷ Lowell was no undiscriminating admirer of the Puritans; on the contrary, he castigated them in Lord Weary’s Castle for their cruelty and greed. But he was interested in their habit of searching the events of history for clues to the meaning of their own lives. Miller tells us that the Puritans universalized their own neurasthenia,
⁸ and throughout Lowell’s career he would use history in a similar manner, juxtaposing self and history in ways that illuminated both. And perhaps because of his own habits of mind, he was fascinated by the Puritan penchant for obsessive introspection.
Particularly in his young manhood, Lowell was drawn to the puzzling figure of Jonathan Edwards. During the months that he spent with Allen Tate before going to Kenyon College, Lowell was going to do a biography of Jonathan Edwards
; he was heaping up books
on his subject, and taking notes, and getting more and more numb on the subject,
until finally he stuck.
⁹ Lowell was to write three substantial poems about Edwards, Mr. Edwards and the Spider
(LWC 64), After the Surprising Conversions
(LWC 66), and Jonathan Edwards in Western Massachusetts
(FTUD 40); in these poems he borrowed liberally from Edwards’s own writings—a process of incorporation of the words of another that would continue throughout his career. And Lowell’s interest in Edwards expressed itself in another significant way as well. Writing to George Santayana in January of 1948, Lowell defined himself in these terms: I am 30, the son of a retired naval officer; J. R. Lowell was my great grand-uncle, Amy was about a fourth cousin; long long ago Jonathan Edwards was one of my ancestors.
¹⁰
Lowell wrote this letter a little over a year before the first acute crisis of the manic-depressive illness that would plague him throughout his life—an illness that, in its manic stage, often caused the poet to assume the identity of one historical figure or another. His desire to claim Jonathan Edwards as an ancestor, when it is not clear that any such relationship existed in fact, indicates the affinity that Lowell believed existed between them, and the attraction would continue for many years. I love you faded, / old, exiled and afraid,
he would say later in Jonathan Edwards in Western Massachusetts
:
afraid to leave
all your writing, writing, writing
denying the Freedom of the Will.
You were afraid to be president
of Princeton, and wrote:
"My deffects are well known;
I have a constitution
peculiarly unhappy:
flaccid solids,
vapid, sizzy, scarse fluids,
causing a childish weakness,
a low tide of spirits.["]
Lowell’s poem reflects his empathy for this ancestor
with his obsessive writing and his low tide of spirits,
but in the earlier Mr. Edwards and the Spider,
Lowell presents a fiercer and more intimidating Edwards, fulminating at his kinsman Josiah Hawley, who is doomed to suicide and to hell.¹¹ In retrospect, we see that Lowell too was condemned to the hell of his manic-depressive illness and that he, like the Puritans, faced his fate with courage and did not flinch from confronting the central questions of life: Your lacerations tell the losing game / You play against a sickness past your cure. / How will the hands be strong? How will the heart endure?
Like Puritanism, psychoanalysis provides a process for seeking answers to these questions. The Puritans, of course, found their answers in God, but they conducted the search for these answers within their own souls. Miller quotes the Puritan leader Samuel Willard who declared, Of all knowledge, that which concerns our selves is the most profitable.
This succinct statement illustrates the close connection between Puritanism and psychoanalysis, and indeed among these two systems and the myriad forms of self-examination that have become ingrained in our culture.¹² Robert Waelder refers to the categorical imperative of ceaseless self-exploration which provides [the] moral mainspring [of psychoanalysis]
¹³ and Freud himself imagined saying to the ego, Turn your eyes inward, look into your own depths, learn first to know your-self.
¹⁴ Stanley Leavy, discussing why and how psychoanalysis works, questions Freud’s libido theory that posits a release of energy in the lifting of repression; Leavy argues instead that the curative factor of the psychoanalytic dialogue is to be found in greater and deeper self-knowledge, realizing more and more who this is living this life in this world.
¹⁵ As we have seen from Blair Clark’s description of the prep school mini-phalanx,
Lowell was predisposed to this sort of rigorous self-scrutiny, and we can well understand why he was interested when he encountered similar habits of mind in the writings of Jonathan Edwards and of sigmund Freud.
Lowell knew Freud’s work as early as 1953; he had been reading-rather ‘gulping’-Freud: ‘I am a slavish convert,’ he wrote to [Elizabeth] Hardwick.
¹⁶ To Allen Tate he bragged in December 1953 that he had been reading … all Freud.
¹⁷ Years later he gave a perhaps more realistic account in a letter to Alan Williamson: When 1 was at Iowa—’50 or later in ’52—I read 2/3 of Freud, like reading Tolstoy. In that sense (memory, randomly renewed). Life Studies is full of him; a replacement to the Christian church, more intimate but without boundaries or credo, or philosophy. … I picked up Freud from reading, talk (I knew about his way of thinking vividly from Delrnore Schwartz before 1 read a word).
¹⁸ As he indicated in an interview in 1965, Lowell took seriously Freud’s influence on the culture in general and on himself in particular:
Well, I get a funny thing from psycho-analysis. 1 mean Freud is the man who moves me most: and his case histories, and the book on dreams, read almost like a late Russian novel to me—with a scientific rather than a novelist’s mind. They have a sort of marvellous old-order quality to them, though he is the father of the new order, almost the opposite of what psycho-analysis has been since…. There is something rather beautiful and sad and intricate about Freud that seems to have gone out of psycho-analysis; it’s become a way of looking at things…. Freud seems the only religious teacher. I have by no means a technical understanding of Freud, but he’s very much part of my life. He seems unique among the non-fictional teachers of the century. He’s a prophet. I think somehow he continues both the Jewish and Christian tradition, and puts it maybe in a much more rational position. I find nothing bores me more than someone who has all the orthodox sort of Freudian answers like the Catechism, but what I find about Freud is that he provides the conditions that one must think in…. The two thinkers, non-fictional thinkers, who influence and are never out of one’s mind are Marx and Freud.¹⁹
As this interview suggests, although Lowell admired and respected Freud’s works, he was ambivalent about the value of psychoanalysis. And this ambivalence imbues the few poems he wrote in which he specifically talks about Freud. In Life Studies, in To Delmore Schwartz (Cambridge 1946),
Lowell makes gentle fun of the two young, intense poets, Underseas fellows, nobly mad,
who talked away our friends. ‘Let Joyce and Freud, / the Masters of Joy, / be our guests here,’ you said
(53). Although he relished the bilingual pun on Freud
and Joy,
he knew well the irony of the pun and used the character of Freud in a more somber way in Death and the Bridge
(N 141). This poem is a meditation on a macabre landscape
by Frank Parker that serves as the frontispiece for Notebook. In the picture, against the background of the eternal, provincial / city Dante saw as Florence and hell,
a skeleton is borne on the back of a horse across a bridge of red railtie girders.
We will follow our skeletons on the girder, / out of life and Boston,
the poet predicts, singing with Freud: / ‘God’s ways are dark and very seldom pleasant.’
God’s ways are dark
indeed in Lowell’s last two poetic treatments of Freud. In Freud
(D 46), the old doctor himself, exiled and lonely in London, is on his own way out of life.
In Three Freuds
(DBD 112), the poet, entering a mental hospital as a patient, notices the bearded marble bust
of the hospital’s founder and the live patient
plucking up coleslaw in his hands.
Both look to the poet like Freud, and none of the three can help him; when he emerges from the hospital, it may seem too late.
Although Lowell absorbed Freud’s ideas from his own reading and more generally from the culture of the time, it was through the poet’s manic-depressive illness that he felt most acutely the influence of Freud, and that influence was more one of method or process than of theory. Lowell was in psychotherapy time and again throughout his life, but apparently he was never psychoanalyzed in an orthodox Freudian manner; in his letter to Williamson, he said that he had never been psychoanalysed
or suffered an emotional or intellectual transference in therapy.
²⁰ But the influence of psychoanalysis is pervasive and its techniques have been widely adapted by psychiatrists practicing other types of therapy. At any rate, as we have seen, the poet was predisposed to self-examination, and the specific therapies must only have reinforced his own habits of mind. It is impossible and unnecessary to know to what extent Lowell integrated his readings of Freud and his own experiences with psychotherapy, but thanks in large part to Ian Hamilton’s biography, we are able to trace in rough outline the progression of Lowell’s attitudes toward and experiences with psychiatrists.
If we can accept as accurate the portrayal of Lowell in Jean Stafford’s autobiographical short story An Influx of Poets,
the young Lowell during the time of his marriage to Stafford expressed a diehard repudiation of psychiatry as poppycock, a Viennese chicanery devised to bilk idle women and hypochondriacal men.
²¹ Lowell knew at least one psychiatrist early in his life: Dr. Merrill Moore, the family psychiatrist
(Unwanted,
DBD 121), whom Lowell’s mother consulted about