griffin, rj - 18th century construction of romanticism, thomas warton & the pleasures of melancholy,...

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THE EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY CONSTRUCTION OF ROMANTICISM: THOMAS WARTON AND THE PLEASURES OF MELANCHOLY BY ROBERT J. GRIFFIN The great merit of this writer appears to us to consist in the boldness and originality of his composition, and in the fortunate audacity with which he has carried the dominion of poetry into regions that had been considered as inaccessible to her ambition. The gradual refinement of taste had, for nearly a century, been weakening the force of original genius. Our poets had become timid and fastidious, and circumscribed themselves both in the choice and management of their subjects, by the observance of a limited number of models, who were thought to have exhausted all the legitimate resources of the art. - was one of the first who crossed this enchanted circle; who reclaimed the natural liberty, and walked abroad in the open field of observation as freely as those by whom it was originally trodden. He passed from the imitation of poets to the imitation of nature. This quotation expresses many of the essentials of the “romantic” version of literary history. The chain of associations-boldness, original genius, break from a refined taste, natural liberty, direct observation, and imitation of nature -would lead most readers, I suggest, to com- plete the chain and fill in the space I have left blank with the name “Wordsworth.” Pressed to identify the author of the passage,one might reasonably guessit was Arnold, or some other Victorian influenced by Wordsworth, surveying the revolution in taste that occurred at the beginning of his/her century. In actual fact, this is an appreciation of William Cowper written in I803 by the critic generally recognized to be Wordsworth’s mortal enemy, Francis Jeffrey? The feeling of dis- orientation that comes over one upon realizing this is caused by cer- tainties rapidly dissolving. How is it that in 1803 Jeffrey writes in these terms? And if his subject is Cowper, why do we expect it to be Words- worth? It’s certainly possible to argue that Jeffrey owes his critical orien- tation to Wordsworth’s Preface to Lyrical Ballads published a few years earlier. But this response misses the broader cultural context: both Wordsworth and Jeffrey participate in a discourse that was formulated in the 1740s and 1750s twenty years before they were born in the ELH 59 (1992) 799-815 0 1992 by The Johns Hopkins University Press 799

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  • THE EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY CONSTRUCTION OF ROMANTICISM: THOMAS WARTON AND THE PLEASURES OF MELANCHOLY

    BY ROBERT J. GRIFFIN

    The great merit of this writer appears to us to consist in the boldness and originality of his composition, and in the fortunate audacity with which he has carried the dominion of poetry into regions that had been considered as inaccessible to her ambition. The gradual refinement of taste had, for nearly a century, been weakening the force of original genius. Our poets had become timid and fastidious, and circumscribed themselves both in the choice and management of their subjects, by the observance of a limited number of models, who were thought to have exhausted all the legitimate resources of the art. - was one of the first who crossed this enchanted circle; who reclaimed the natural liberty, and walked abroad in the open field of observation as freely as those by whom it was originally trodden. He passed from the imitation of poets to the imitation of nature.

    This quotation expresses many of the essentials of the romantic version of literary history. The chain of associations-boldness, original genius, break from a refined taste, natural liberty, direct observation, and imitation of nature -would lead most readers, I suggest, to com- plete the chain and fill in the space I have left blank with the name Wordsworth. Pressed to identify the author of the passage, one might reasonably guess it was Arnold, or some other Victorian influenced by Wordsworth, surveying the revolution in taste that occurred at the beginning of his/her century. In actual fact, this is an appreciation of William Cowper written in I803 by the critic generally recognized to be Wordsworths mortal enemy, Francis Jeffrey? The feeling of dis- orientation that comes over one upon realizing this is caused by cer- tainties rapidly dissolving. How is it that in 1803 Jeffrey writes in these terms? And if his subject is Cowper, why do we expect it to be Words- worth?

    Its certainly possible to argue that Jeffrey owes his critical orien- tation to Wordsworths Preface to Lyrical Ballads published a few years earlier. But this response misses the broader cultural context: both Wordsworth and Jeffrey participate in a discourse that was formulated in the 1740s and 1750s twenty years before they were born in the

    ELH 59 (1992) 799-815 0 1992 by The Johns Hopkins University Press 799

  • early 1770s primarily by Joseph and Thomas Warton, and by Edward Young. Jeffreys placing of Cowper, for instance, which one easily mistakes for a much later critics placing of Wordsworth using Words- worthian terms, reads like a summary of the main points of Joseph Wartons Essay on Pope (1756) and Youngs Conjectures on Original Composition (1759). Similarly, it was Joseph Warton who first argued that Pope was the poet of reason. To the extent that we give assent to the wordsworthian version of the eighteenth century, or agree with Arnold that the century was an age of reason and prose, we continue to participate uncritically in the master narrative established by Popes rivals in the decade after his death. Students of the eighteenth century have long abandoned such terminology, but they have been talking mostly to themselves. The romantic paradigm continues to dominate the way critics think about literature generally, as several recent studies have confirmed.

    The critical paradigm that prepared poets like Cowper, Bowles, and Wordsworth to challenge Pope was already in place by 1760, though it was not widely accepted. Romantic literary history, in other words, existed before there was such a thing as romantic poetry, or rather, before a great romantic poet appeared.2 The romantic paradigm, more- over, is shared by those who divide sharply over the value of Words- worth, as my opening citation of Jeffrey should make clear. Romantic literary history, as I argue here, originates with, and continues to function in relation to, an anxiety about Pope. It begins in the mid- eighteenth century and develops through the early nineteenth century as a polemical construction of Popes place in English literary history. Popes considerable influence throughout this period, even when con- strued as purely negative, is brought home by Byrons sardonic remark about his contemporaries in 1821: The attempt of the poetical populace of the present day to obtain an ostracism against Pope is as easily accounted for as the Athenians shell against Aristides; they are tired of hearing him always called the Just. They are also fighting for life; for, if he maintains his station, they will reach their own-by falling.3

    The Wartons and Young are usually defined as minor, pre-romantic poets, stock figures in a Whig history of ideas in which progress leads to a magic year, 1798. The teleological fallacy inherent in the notion pre-romanticism has often been noticed, most recently by Douglas Lane Patey in a review of a book by James Engell.4 My perspective, however, defines romanticism not positively according to the very varied forms its takes -Marilyn Butler uses the word pro- tean-but negatively as a phenomenon that is intimately bound up

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  • in what it dislikes. The unity of romanticism, that is to say, is discovered in the agreement over what it rejects. From this perspective, the Wartons and Young are key figures, for they, in conscious but ambiv- alent rebellion against Pope, helped create the new paradigm out of old materials -such as the hierarchy of genres and the distinction between art and nature. For me, then, pre-romanticism disappears entirely as a category: the Wartons and Young are simply the first romantics. Critics from at least the 1930s to the present have argued that romanticism is something that happened to Wordsworth or to Blake at a certain stage of their career, which is to say that before that they were pre-romantic.5 This makes no sense to me because I see what is generally called romanticism as neither a particular style (at- tention to details of nature, symbol, lyric expression, etc.), nor a par- ticular content, but rather as a discourse that arises in response to a psychological dilemma in relation to modernity in general, and modern poetry, which is to say Pope, in particular.

    Though discredited as a concept by many, the point of view implied by the notion of pre-romanticism continues to function as a mode of understanding literary history from Wordsworths and Coleridges point of view. This is only one example of the way that criticism, and with it literary history, tends to become simply a satellite orbiting around the attractive power of great writers. Since Wordsworth writes the poetry that is taken, retrospectively, to be the true alter- native to Pope, criticism simply subsumes under his name a movement that had been gathering force for a half a century, labeling it pre-. This leads to strange formulations that seem to corroborate Harold Blooms notion of the way that strong poets are able to reverse chron- ological priority. Edith Morley, for example, cites Joseph Warton on the need to see the object steady and whole, and on the need for a simpler poetic diction. Rather than suggest that Wordsworth was in- fluenced, or indeed shaped by Wartons discourse, Morley actually compliments Warton for agreeing with Wordsworth: Wordsworth him- self could say no more.6

    The same dynamic is at work in the fate of Cowper, for Wordsworth would eventually assume the place in the romantic paradigm that had once been held by the earlier poet. Chalmers, in 1810, wrote that Cowper, above all poets of recent times, has become the universal favourite of his nation. Jeffrey, in 1811, repeated his estimate of 1803: Cowper is, and is likely to continue, the most popular of all who have written for the present or the last generation. Coleridge in I817 named the most recent era of English poetry, from Cowper to the present

    Robert J. Grifin 801

  • day. 7 But already by 1852 Wordsworths reputation appears to have eclipsed Cowpers with the consequence that Cowpers priority was eclipsed as well. A reviewer thus protests against distortions of literary history:

    It is constantly asserted that he [that is, Wordsworth] effected a reform in the language of poetry, that he found the public bigoted to a vicious and flowery diction which seemed to mean a great deal and really meant nothing, and that he led them back to sense and simplicity. The claim appears to us to be a fanciful assumption, refuted by the facts of literary history. Feebler poetasters were no doubt read when Wordsworth began to write than would now com- mand an audience, however small, but they had no real hold on the public, and Cowper was the only popular bard of the day. His masculine and unadorned English was relished in every cultivated circle in the land, and Wordsworth was the child, and not the father of the reaction, which after all, has been greatly exaggerated.8

    My interest in the genealogy of literary values, in telling the story of the story -telling, that is, not how mirror became lamp, but how this particular episode of literary history came to be constructed in that way-focuses on the disjunction between todays dominant un- derstanding of the relation between the Romantics and the eighteenth century, and the very different perspective that historical reconstruc- tion opens up. In turning to the Wartons, it is useful to recall that Francis Jeffrey, writing in the early nineteenth century, took their place in history for granted: The Whartons [sic], both as critics and as poets, were of considerable service in discrediting the high pre- tensions of the former race [that is, the Augustans], and in bringing back to public notice the great stores and treasures of poetry which lay hid in the records of our older literature. The exposure of the pretenders to the throne, Dryden-Addison-Pope, and the reinstate- ment of the true line of inheritance is, in fact, the constitutive gesture of that narrative of history we call romanticism. Everything follows from this.

    In this essay I focus on Thomas Wartons The Pleasures of Mel- ancholy for the insights it gives into the genesis of a romantic con- struction of literary history. The relegation of Thomas Warton to the category of pre- by our standard literary histories is richly suggestive. From a more oblique angle, the prefix conjures up an archaeological level of romantic consciousness that has been labeled in order to be forgotten because it is meant to serve as a foundation we can confidently build upon in our discussions of what really matters. The uncanny, as defined by Freud, involves a confrontation with something strange, yet familiar, something that awakens in us something we thought was

    Pleasures of Melancholy

  • long put to rest. The notable obscurity of a figure like Thomas Warton holds forth the possibility of moments of uncanny recognition on the margin -uncanny not simply because they appear so often as repressed doubles of our own discourse, but also because of the way they repeat Pope in the very act of displacing him.

    I

    Thomas Wartons The Pleasures of Melancholy, written in 1745, a year after Popes death, is a poem referred to more often than read. In the last forty years it has been addressed infrequently, twice as a rough draft for Keatss Ode on Melancholy.l Dismissing pre- romanticism as the logic of the contradictions inherent in romanticism proper, I find that nowhere is the genesis of romanticism better studied than in Wartons poem.

    Drawing upon I1 Penseroso (and implicitly LAllegro) for its structure, The Pleasures of Melancholy constructs itself around the allegorical opposition between Day and Night, Mirth and Melancholy. The noise of the city is opposed to the quiet of nature, vice to virtue, summer to winter, bright sunshine to fogs, gloom, and rain. The speak- ers preference for solitude and night, emblems for virtue, expresses itself further in his choice between fictional women, emblems for their authors. In this erotics of reading, Warton prefers Spensers Una, alone in the wilderness, to Popes Belinda, launched at noon on the silver Thames.

    Thro POPES soft song though all the Graces breathe, And happiest art adorn his Attic page; Yet does my mind with sweeter transport gloY As at the root of mossy trunk reclind, In magic SPENSERS wildy-warbled song I see deserted UNA wander wide Through wasteful solitudes, and lurid heaths Weary, forlorn; than when the fated fair, Upon the bright bosom of silver Thames, Launches in all the lustre of brocade, Amid the splendors of the laughing Sun. The gay description palls upon the sense, And coldly strikes the mind with feeble bliss.

    Oh, wrap me then in shades of darksome pine, Bear me to caves of desolation brown, To dusky vales and hermit-haunted rocks!

    (153-68)l

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  • To identify Pope with his ironic heroine, Belinda, is rather ten- dentious because it collapses the distance signaled by Popes satire. But if we read the poem simply as a statement of preference for The Fairie Queene over The Rape ofthe Lock, there is no point in quibbling, nor are standards of taste here the real issue. What is more to the point is an examination of the evidence the poem provides for the grounds of evaluation. Wartons poem is intensely interesting because it reveals the contradictions at the very heart of the ideological con- struction we recognize as romanticism. For the poem cannot sustain its own dichotomy between a sunny classicism that is attractive but superficial - Pope, Belinda, Attic art-and a melancholy Gothicism that offers deeper pleasures - Spensers Una, Miltons Penseroso. The poem itself gives evidence that Pope, master of classic forms, is also the primary revivalist and transmitter of Gothic gloom.

    Structured as it is by opposing Mirth to Melancholy, Day to Night, and Spenser-Milton to Pope, the logic of the poem breaks down in several places. First of all, Pope is represented not just by Belinda, but also by his Eloisa and the Unfortunate Lady, both of whom are recruited to the side of pensive Melancholy. It is worth noting that these two figures were the ones Blake, too, recalled when representing Pope for a series of English authors [see fig. 11. The opening lines of Popes Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady (1717) read as follows:

    What beckning ghost, along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade? ~ Tis she!-but why the bleeding bosom gord, Why dimly gleams the visionary sword?12

    The ghost appears with sword and bleeding bosom, we discover, be- cause she is the spirit of a principled young woman who chose death rather than marry against her wishes in order to enrich her guardian. Thomas Warton, apparently, saw the same ghost during his own imag- ined midnight vigils:

    But when the world Is clad in Midnights raven-colord robe, In hollow charnel let me watch the flame Of taper dim, while airy voices talk Along the glimmering walls, or ghostly shape At distance seen, invites with beckning hand.

    (4449, emphasis added)

    804 Pleasures of Melancholy

  • Eloisa, unlike the Unfortunate Lady, is named explicitly, but before turning to that passage it is useful to reread the much-admired set piece on Melancholy from Popes Eloisa to Abelard (1717):

    The darksome pines that oer yon rocks reclind Wave high, and murmur to the hollow wind, The wandring streams that shine between the hills, The grots that echo to the tinkling rills, The dying gales that pant upon the trees, The lakes that quiver to the curling breeze; No more these scenes my meditation aid, Or lull to rest the visionary maid. But oer the twilight groves and dusky caves, Long-sounding isles, and intermingled graves, Black Melancholy sits, and round her throws A death-like silence, and a dread repose: Her gloomy presence saddens all the scene, Shades evry flower, and darkens evry green, Deepens the murmur of the falling floods, And breathes a browner horror on the woods.

    (155-70)

    Here is Warton, 28 years later:

    Few know the elegance of soul refind, Whose soft sensation feels a quicker joy From Melancholys scenes, than the dull pride Of tasteless splendor and magnificence Can eer afford. Thus Eloise, whose mind Had languished to the pangs of melting love, More genuine transport found, as on some tomb Reclind, she watchd the tapers of the dead; Or through the pillard iles, amid pale shrines Of imagd saints, and intermingled graves, Musd a veild votaress; than Flavia feels, As through the mazes of festive balls, Proud of her conquering charms, and beautys blaze, She floats amid the silken sons of dress, And shines the fairest of the fair.

    (2nd ed., 93-106)

    Wartons allusion to Eloisa imbeds her within an opposition to a Belinda-like coquette, picking up verbal echoes from both poems. Notice that the thematic structure in this passage is the same as in the lines preferring Una-Spenser to Belinda-Pope. If we follow War- tons synecdochal method of associating characters with their authors, the explicit opposition Eloisa/Flavia signifies the implicit opposition

    806 Pleasures of Melancholy

  • of Pope to himself, Pope/Pope. Since this passage (Pope/Pope) occurs some fifty lines before the one in which authors are openly named and evaluated (Spenser/Pope), and since the thematic content of the two passages is identical, the difference between them, the substitution of Una for Eloisa in the second passage, is highly significant. For it is this substitution that allows Warton to displace Pope altogether. When Pope/Pope becomes Spenser/Pope, the preference expressed between two characters in Pope has been transformed into a preference for Spenser over a Pope now wholly identified with one of his own satiric creations.

    The internal contradiction by which Pope is dissociated from Eloisa but identified with Belinda is the crucial, foundational move. For it is in the disjunctive space created by that substitution and displace- ment, and indeed by the dissociation of Pope from himself, that the ideology of what later will be called romanticism grows and flour- ishes.13 In Eloisa Pope drew upon Ovids Her&es for a genre of the womans lament, but he transposed it to the Gothic Middle Ages. Thomas Warton, however, separates out the gothic and the classical strands in Pope, and then attributes what is valued more highly, in this case gothic, to someone else. This constitutive contradiction and displacement, of course, is a symptom of Wartons intense identification with Pope, who is apparently both Muse and rival. The misrecognition that brings romanticism into being is, at bottom, a response to the anxiety of Popes influence.

    In this erotics of reading that substitutes the female character as object of desire for the male author as inspiring muse, Wartons iden- tification with, his desire to be, Pope is made quite clear in his sub- sequent use of Eloisa. After claiming that Popes description of Belinda coldly strikes the mind with feeble bliss, Warton turns away and cries, in lines Ive cited above: Oh, wrap me then in shades of dark- some pine. . . . The darksome pines, of course, are those with which Pope surrounded Eloisas convent in the other passage already cited: The darksome pines that oer yon rock reclind. . . . Thus, Warton turns coldly from Belinda to rush into the arms of Eloisa. In the continuation of these lines Wartons use of Eloisa is revealing.

    Gothic settings are congenial to ghosts and phantoms, and these poems are no exception. Popes Unfortunate Lady opens, as we noted, with an apparition; in Eloisa, too, the heroines desire for Abelard produces in her the delusion of his presence. She rushes after the phantom, only to be returned abruptly to her forlorn condition. Eloisa:

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  • Sudden you mount! you beckon from the skies; Clouds interpose, waves roar, and winds arise. I shriek, start up, the same sad prospect find, And wake to all the griefs I left behind.

    (254-58)

    Warton rewrites this incident, but in his version the you refers reflexively to the speaker who recounts his experience of waking from delusion:

    Sudden you start- the imagined joys recede, The same sad prospect opens on your sense.

    (186-87)

    The close verbal repetitions suggest that the narrator writes from the place of Eloisa. The ghost he chases, however, is not Abelard, but one Sapphira, and the experience, unlike the painful awakening of Eloisa, is for Warton one of the pleasures of melancholy:

    These are delights that absence drear has made Familiar to my soul, ere since the form Of young Sapphira, beauteous as the Spring, When from her violet-woven couch awaked By frolic Zephyrs hand, her tender cheek Graceful she lifts, and blushing from her bower, Issues to clothe in gladsome-glistering green The genial globe, first met my dazzled sight.

    (191-98)

    According to the logic of the poem, Sapphira should not really be attractive to Warton because she so clearly personifies the LAllegro chain of associations that he shuns (day, sunshine, greenness, spring- summer). Not just beauteous as the Spring, she actually embodies the Springs power for it is she who issues to clothe in gladsome- glistering green / The genial globe, But the speaker had already told us: I choose the pale Decembers foggy glooms (74). Now we see that he was driven to melancholy by his love for Sapphira, that, indeed, one of its pleasures is the contemplation of her glad, green, spring- dayness from his retreat. Penseroso, so far from holding Allegr[a] in contempt, has been dazzled by her and nurses his wound in solitude; the Penseroso character is, in Wartons version, brought into being simultaneously with his desire for Allegra.

    If we correlate this section with Wartons literary historical allegory, the contempt he displays for Belinda is the defensive reaction-formation of his desire for her. The explicit aggression against Pope-Belinda in

    808 Pleasures of Melancholy

  • the earlier passage suggests, in the light of this later one, a parallel between Warton and the Baron who plots to clip Belindas lock, and whose only wish in battling her is to die upon his foe. For surely, Sapphira, as goddess and power of nature, is a pastoralized, or rather pasteurized form of Belinda, launched forth on the Thames and shining brighter than the sun, in that her toxic elements have been neu- tralized.

    This episode rehearses Eloisas hallucinatory sorrow over Abelards absence (and ultimately, of course, over the crucial absence signified by his castration), but with a difference, for now we have a male Eloisa contemplating in retreat a sublimated, idealized, and thus more ac- ceptable image of Belinda, duly transferred from a social to a pastoral garden. The contradictions in Wartons text suggest that the poem accomplishes for him the first stages of a disengagement from Pope, while the fact that he retreats into Eloisas role at all reveals the strength of the original attachment.

  • Romanticism, therefore, originates in a two-fold strategy: arising from a primal reading of Pope, it misrepresents him on a doctrinal level, while transposing him into a less threatening, pastoral version of himself on the level of imagery. The doctrinal necessity of opposing Pope to Spenser, or to Milton, ensures that explicit references to Eloisa will eventually drop out. Thus, although Popes mediation of the early Milton in Eloisa to Abelard leads to the valorization of the penseroso figure as the characteristic romantic protagonist, Popes role as trans- mitter of gothic alienation (and this describes Eloisa more appro- priately than it does Miltons poem) will nonetheless be gradually forgotten, even though it remains open to be read in Wartons poem.

    II

    Both Wartons quickly became jealously possessive of Milton and began to consider Pope as a usurper of the poetic tradition. They came to construct Pope as no more than the poet of witty rhyme and polished couplet whose dominance actually prevented Miltons I1 Penseroso from being appreciated. They, of course, revived the true line, and thus, as Thomas said in his 1785 Preface to an edition of Miltons minor poems, the school of Milton rose in emulation of the school of Pope.15 An anecdote told by both brothers about the relation of Popes Eloisa to Miltons Penseroso takes us to the heart of romantic literary history.

    According to the Wartons, Pope owed his knowledge of Miltons minor poems to their father, Thomas Warton the Elder, who brought them to his attention through Digby, a mutual acquaintance. Very shortly after, Popes Eloisa appeared with passages, Tom Warton claims,

    pilfered from COMUS and the IWVSEROSO. He was however conscious, that he might borrow from a book then scarcely remem- bered, without the hazard of discovery, or the imputation of pla- giarism .

    Having made the accusation, Warton backs off a little:

    Yet the theft was so slight, as hardly to deserve the name: and it must be allowed, that the experiment was happily and judiciously applied, in delineating the sombrous scenes of the pensive Eloisas convent, the solitary Paraclete. l6

    Whether Popes troping upon Milton deserves the name of theft or not, it is curious that the charge comes from the writer who drew so liberally upon Pope when writing The Pleasures of Melancholy. It

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  • is odd also that it appears in an edition of Milton, the overstuffed notes of which call our attention to parallel passages in authors ancient and modern.

    Tom Warton recurs to this story in his discussion of Comus, and manages to insinuate that it is an odd thing altogether that Popes poem ever came into existence because it isnt like him:

    It is strange that Pope, by no means of a congenial spirit, should be the first who copied Comus and 1I Penseroso. But Pope was a gleaner of Old English poets; and he was pilfering from obsolete English poetry, without the least fear or danger of being detected. l7

    The problem with such a narrative, of course, is that it is false, not just in its larger claims, but also in the very details of the transmission. In actual fact Pope possessed an edition of Miltons minor poems (1645) at least as early as 1705, when he was seventeen, some twelve years before Eloisa, and before the Elder Warton is supposed to have mentioned the volume to Digby. We know this because William Trum- ball, former secretary of state under William III and Popes neighbor, sent Pope a letter, dated 19 October I-705, thanking him for the loan of the book. Internal evidence, furthermore, shows that influences of Penseroso appear as early as Popes first published work, The Pas- torals (1709), as the Twickenham edition records. The elder Warton, apparently, lent Pope a rare copy of Gorbuduc in the summer of 1717, but the probability is that Warton came to the early Milton through Pope, not the other way around. l8

    There are two conclusions I draw from these facts. First, Miltons minor poems were rarely read, but Pope assimilated them and trans- mitted their strain in his work. Second, the Wartons cannot give Pope credit for this; instead they transfer the source of proper taste to their father, while accusing Pope of being both an alien (uncongenial, literally, not of the same spirit) and a thief. While the Wartons are defenders of true poetry, Pope is the usurper who came to the early Milton through the Elder Warton and stole from it shamelessly. This anecdote, in erary his torv

    fact, encodes in miniature the paradigm of romantic lit- operative in Francis Jeffrey and many others, according

    to which it is the Wartons who revived Milton in opposition to Pope. lg Francis Jeffrey simply repeats the Wartons, as others will repeat Jeffrey. Wordsworth recalls the anecdote when he comments on Miltons early poems, which, he says, though on their first appearance they were praised by a few of the judicious, were afterwards neglected to that degree, that Pope in his youth could borrow from them without risk

    Robert J. Grif$n 811

  • of its being known. 20 Gosse retells this story in the early twentieth century, but adds, extraordinarily, that Eloisa never was a favorite among Popes admirers, probably, he speculates, because of its horror. The only thing missing, but found elsewhere in the Wartons, Jeffrey, Coleridge and others, is the corollary that Popes line is a French deviation from English stock. Northrop Frye echoes this es- sentially eighteenth-century Wartonian view, but in a different context, when he says in 1963 that criticism, having recognized its true lineage in romanticism, has returned to its proper channe1.21

    III

    The denials that work themselves out in the foundation of the War- tonian version of literary history need, perhaps, no further explanation. But some ironies are too rare, too significant, and too representative, to let pass. One of these involves, again, the elder Warton, who, as it happens, was born in the same year as Pope, 1688. A few years after their fathers death in 1745, the dutiful sons, pressed for funds, hit upon the idea of publishing a collection of their fathers verse by subscription to friends and relatives as a kind of memorial. Occasionally, scholars have looked into the collection to discover signs of pre- romanticism and found them. But it also possible to find there a poem like The Ode to Taste, which pays tribute to Pope. The opening stanza, addressed to Taste, reads as follows:

    Leave not Brittanias Isle; since Pope is fled To meet his Homer in Elysian Bowers,

    What Bard shall dare presume His various-sounding Harp?

    Let not resistless Dulness oer us spread Deep Gothic night; for lo! the Fiend appears

    To blast each blooming Bay That decks our barren Shores .22

    Pope, according to this stanza, was the last bulwark of Taste against the spread of Dulnesss Gothic night. Now that he is gone, Britain appears to be in bad way, for no worthy successor has appeared to take up his instrument, so that the loss threatens an apocalyptic breach with true standards, The poem, in fact, constructs Pope in the very terms he had fashioned for himself in The Dun&ad. It is fair to assume he would have been pleased. Since Pope fled to Elysian Bowers in 1744, this clearly had to have been written in the final year of the Elder Wartons life.

    812 Pleasures of Melancholy

  • However, the most remarkable thing about this poem is that it was not written by the Elder Warton at all, but by Thomas, Jr. roughly about the same time that he wrote The Pleasures of Melancholy. David Fairer, by examining the manuscripts, determined that, since the fathers corpus was not large enough to make up a volume, his pious sons contributed about ten poems of their own, generously do- nating them in their fathers name. Subsequent investigations by Chris- tina Le Prevost led-her to conclude that nineteen poems were certainly by the brothers, and probably fourteen others, leaving the father with less than a third of the volume, not even counting the fact that some . of those were revised by Joseph.23

    Fairer concludes from his evidence that, since poems showing pre- romantic tendencies (whatever that might mean) were actually written by the sons, the Elder Warton can no longer be legitimately considered a lone pre-romantic voice in Popes generation. He does not deal with The Ode to Taste except to identify it as Thomas, Jr.s. But Fairers scholarship, and Le Prevosts even more so, adds evidence to my own thesis that romanticism begins in a love-hate relation to Pope. When Warton assigned his ode to his father, he simply transferred his own earlier self, one cathected to Pope, to the previous generation, and then began a series of polemics against it.

    Tel Aviv University

    NOTES

    Review of William Hayleys Lifk of Cowper in Edinburgh Review (April 1803), in Francis Jeffrey, Contributions to the Edinburgh Review, 4 ~01s. (London, 1844), 1:411. Jeffreys th is-will-never-do review of The Excursion is the infamous and standard example of the forces Wordsworth had to overcome in order to obtain recognition.

    2 I wrote this sentence before I discovered that my words echo Marlon Rosss similar formulation: In other words, romantic ideology began to dominate the literary estab- lishment before the romantic canon, as we know it, was established (54). Two differ- ences: first, my phrase refers to literary history rather than ideology because I assume throughout that ideological values require a narrative framework for their expression; second, Rosss statement occurs in a discussion of Wordsworths reputation circa 1820, whereas the burden of my argument is that we find essentially the same romantic paradigm operative in literary history before Wordsworth was born. For Rosss very rich and wide-ranging book see The Contours of Masculine Desire: Ro- manticism and the Rise of Womens Poetry (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1989).

    3 Lord Byron, Selected Prose, ed. Peter Gunn (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1972), 406.

    See Douglas Lane Patey, review of Forming the Critical Mind: Dryden to Coledrige, by James Engell, Eighteenth Century Studies 23 (1989-90): 205-211. See also Henry Knight Miller, The Whig Interpretation of Literary History, Eighteenth Century Studies 6 (1972): 60-84, especially 78. Marshall Brown defends the notion of teleology in a new book, Preromanticism (Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press, 1991). He offers a reading of Youngs Night Thoughts, but does not address the Wartons at all.

    Robert J. Gri#in 813

  • Edwin Stein, commenting on Wordsworths early long poems, exemplifies the general application of this conceptual frame: The mixture of naturalism and vision in these poems is evident in its cruder pre-Romantic form; see Wordsworths Art of AZZusion (University Park: Pennsylvania State Univ. Press, 1988), 194. Stein, of course, is in good company, for very few critics of the Romantics have seriously questioned the term. Ernest Bernbaum provides the crudest, most naive example of the logic of pre-romanticism when he gives us a Chronological Table of the Chief Pre-Romantic Works. The list begins with 1696 and includes aZZ of the major and minor eighteenth- century writers of every possible genre- the only exceptions are Dryden, Pope, Swift, Fielding, and Johnson (Guide through the Romantic Mouemcnt, 2nd ed. [New York: Ronald Press, 19491, 6-7).

    6 Edith Morley, Joseph Warton: A Comparison of His Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope with His Edition of Popes Works, Essays and Studies, vol. 9, ed. W. P. Ker (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924), 102,

    7 See Chalmers Life of Cowper in The Works of the English Poets from Chaucer to Cowper, ed. Alexander Chalmers, 21~01s. (London: J. Johnson, ISlO), 17:602. For Jeffrey see his review of John Ford, Edinburgh Review (August lSll), in Jeffrey (note l), 2:294. Coleridges comment appears in Biographia Liter-aria, The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, VOL. 7, ed. James Engell and W. Jackson Bate (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1983), 7:~.

    8 Within the last few years a scholar has concluded, oddly from my point of view, that the review itself is of minor interest in the history of Wordsworth scholarship; see Thomas C. Richardson, Lockhart and Elwin on Wordsworth, Wordsworth CircZe 20 (1989): 156. Richardson traces the influence of Lockhart on Whitwell Elwin, the author of the review in the QuartcrZy Review (December 1852): 182-236. My citation is taken from page 233.

    g Jeffreys review of Scotts edition of Swift, Edinburgh Review (September 1816), (note l), 1:166.

    lo See Oliver Ferguson, Warton and Keats: Two Views of Melancholy, Keats and Shelley Journal 18 (1969): 12-15; and Nathaniel Teich, A Comparative Approach to Periodization: Forms of Self-Consciousness in Wartons The Pleasures of Melancholy and Keatss Ode on Melancholy, in Proceedings of the Xth Congress of the Inter- nationaL Comparative Literature Association, VOL. 1: GeneraZ ProbZems of Literary History (New York: Garland, 1982): 158-63. This volume provides much evidence that romantic literary history continues to thrive. In relation to Teich, I would only suggest that it may be more useful to compare forms of self-consciousness in two major poets, rather than pitting a major one against a minor one, especially in this case since Wartons poem was raw material for Keats. The best overview of both Wartons, and the place to begin, is Lawrence Lipkings The Ordering of the Arts in Eighteenth-Century England (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1970). For a selection of scholarship, see John A. Vance, Joseph and Thomas War-ton: An Annotated Bibliography (New York: Garland, 1983).

    l1 Although written in 1745, the poem was first published in 1747; a revised version was printed by Dodsley in 1755. The first edition is reprinted in Eighteenth Century Poetry and Prose, ed. Louis I. Bredvold, Alan D. McKillop, and Lois Whitney (New York: Ronald Press, 1939), 565-70. I quote from this anthology except where I indicate the 2nd edition, which I cite from Dodsleys A CoLLection of Poems, in Six VoZumes, by SeveraL Hands, with Notes, (London, 1782), 4:224-35.

    l2 My text for Eloisa and The Unfortunate Lady is Twickenham Edition: The Poems of ALexunder Pope, ed. John Butt (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1963), 252- 61, 262-64.

    l3 It may be useful here to cite Freud on the mechanism of repression: In this connection it becomes comprehensible that those objects to which men give their preference, that is, their ideals, originate in the same perceptions and experiences as those objects of which they have the most abhorrence, and that the two originally

    814 Pleasures of Melancholy

  • differed from one another only by slight modifications. Indeed, . . . it is possible for the original instinct-presentation to be split into two, one part undergoing repression, while the remainder, just on account of its intimate association with the other undergoes idealization (Repression [ 19151, in General Psychological Theory: Papers on Meta- psychology, ed. Philip Rieff [New York: Collier, 19631, 108).

    l4 My analysis here draws directly upon Patricinio Schweickarts observations on Joyce: Relevant here is Levi-Strausss theory that woman functions as currency ex- changed between men. The woman in the text converts the text into a woman, and the &culation of this text/woman becomes the central ritual that establishes the bond between the author and his male readers. See Patricinio Schweickart, Reading Our- selves: Toward a Feminist Theory of Reading, in Gender and Reading: Essays on Readers, Texts, and Contexts, ed. Elizabeth A. Flynn and Patricinio P. Schweickart (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1986), 31-62. The quotation is taken from the reprint of this article in Contemporary Literary Criticism: Literary and Cultural Stud- ies, ed. Robert Con Davis and Ronald Schleifer, 2nd ed. (New York: Longman, 1989), 126.

    l5 John Milton, Poems upon SeveraL Occasions, ed. Thomas Warton (London: Dods- ley, 1785), xi.

    l6 Warton introduces the anecdote by saying, My brother remembers to have heard my father say. . . . (Milton [note 151, viii-ix).

    l7 Milton, 186. l8 Arthur H. Scouten discusses this incident in The Warton Forgeries and the

    Concept of Preromanticism in English Literature, Etudes Anglaises 40 (1987): 438. lg After the establishment of romanticism in the nineteenth century, the Wartons

    were forgotten until, at the end of the century, scholars began to search for precursors to the romantic movement . Phelps (1893), Beers (1898), and Courthope (1905) are some of the literary historians who call attention to the Wartons. Courthope wrote that Joseph and Th omas were the pioneers of the Romantic Movement. Shortly afterwards the concept of pre-romanticism, part of a certain politicized version of French history, was applied to the literary history of Europe by Van Tieghem (1924), and to English literary history by Legouis and Cazamian (1924). A few years later, Bernbaums Guide Through the Romantic Movement (1930) provided an extensive discussion of pre- romanticism. For details see Arthur H. Scouten, The Warton Forgeries and the Concept of Preromanticism in English Literature, Etudes Anglaises 40 (1987): 434- 47.

    2o Wordsworth, Essay, Supplementary to the Preface, in The Prose Works of Wil- ham Wordsworth, ed. W. J. B. Owen and Jane Worthington Smyser, 3 ~01s. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, I974), 3:7O.

    21 The anti-Romantic movement in criticism. which in Britain and America followed the Hulme-Eliot-Pound broadsides of the early twenties, is now over and done with, and criticism has got its sense of literary tradition properly in focus again (Foreword to the collection of English Institute essays, Romanticism Reconsidered, ed. Nothrop Frye [New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 19631, v), It is here that Frye simply takes for granted the standard construction of romantic literary history: It is a datum of literary experience that when we cross the divide of 1798 we find ourselves in a different kind of poetic world, darker in color, so to speak, than what has preceded it (v-vi).

    22 Thomas Warton the Elder, Poems on Several Occasions (1748) (New York: Facsimile Text Society, 1930), 180.

    23 See David Fairer, The Poems of Thomas Warton the Elder? Review of English Studies 26 (1975): 287-300, 395406; together with The Poems of Thomas Warton the Elder?-A Postscript, Review of English Studies 29 (1978): 61-65. For Christina Le Prevost, see More Unacknowledged Verse by Joseph Warton, Review of English Studies 37 (1986): 31447.

    Robert J. Grifin 815