W.B. Yeats: A Life, Volume 2: The Arch-Poet 1915-1939
by Roy Foster ISBN: 0198184654
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: W.B. Yeats: A Life II: The Arch-Poet 1915-1939 by Keith GarebianThinking that biography was inevitable and important, William Butler
Yeats assiduously revised or rearranged his autobiographies, memoirs,
and subsequent commentaries, settling scores with antagonists in
the later part of his life, and ensuring that the importance of his
own life would not be lost on future generations. As his latest
biographer, R.F. Foster, reveals: "He constantly instructed
his collaborator Augusta Gregory about the importance of the way
their lives would be interpreted for the history of their times,
and of their country." But a problem for a modern biographer
is how to deal with Yeats's public poses, enduring need for audiences,
assorted idiosyncrasies and foibles, and his legendary omnivorous
intellect. In other words, the primary question for a biographer
is just what sort of biography to write for WBY. Foster (Carroll
Professor of Irish History at the University of Oxford) notes that
Sean O'Faolain had tried to do a life-study but gave up because WBY
(in O'Faolain's words) "had, in his time, dived down so many
caverns of knowledge and as quickly returned, bringing many pearls
with him." Virginia Woolf (also cited by Foster) concurred,
remarking that WBY's mental world was like an immense thicket of
undergrowth where "every twig was real." Moreover, WBY
lived during a hectic period of Irish history, so a biography would
have to deal with the thick turmoil of Irish politics and with
Yeats's public life, not simply with his poetry or circle of family,
friends, acquaintances, and rivals.
Yeats has never lacked for biographies, though, unlike the present
one, these have expectedly been literary in nature-the best probably
Richard Ellmann's The Man and the Masks. Following the perspective
of the late F.S.Lyons, Foster elects to write a biography correlated
to WBY's poetic development by way of public events. He does not
neglect the philosophy or personality, but his prime emphasis is
on Yeats as a public figure and the "accidents" of his
life that elucidate the poetry. Foster's biography is the culmination
of almost seventeen years of research. The result is a double mansion
of biography: the first, The Apprentice Mage (winner of the James
Tait Black Memorial Prize), restricts itself to the years 1865-1914,
encompassing such topics as the Celtic Twilight, Yeats as lyric
poet, dramatist, and political force. This volume makes a solid
case for Yeats as a shaping or, at least, a dominant force in
literary circles in Dublin and London, where he developed coteries
for his early writing. Foster carefully notes character traits that
define the poet from decade to decade, controversy to controversy,
and he disentangles Yeats's complex relationships with Maud Gonne,
Lady Gregory, George Russell (AE), Shaw, Synge, et cetera.
The second biographical mansion, The Arch-Poet (1915-1939), completes
Foster's feat of engineering and architecture; it begins with WBY
at fifty, and charts both the poet's and his country's vicissitudes.
It is spacious, scrupulously supervised with authority, occasional
wit and eloquence, well furnished with historical curios, official
and unofficial portraits, and its gleaming floor is in-laid with
intricate patterns of Anglo-Irish socio-political design. It is the
sort of mansion that is more hospitable to serious scholars and
academics than to cultural tourists, for it rewards slow, meticulous
inspection rather than swift survey. Its doors open to many wide,
well-lit rooms, in which even the corners and hidden recesses are
subject to a thorough cleaning. The attic of family history is
scoured (though corners are missed), as is the boudoir, and the
basement never springs a leak from a weak foundation. However-and
this is a significant caveat-this mansion has so many visitors from
Yeats's life, so many divertissements and political issues, that
even Yeats himself tends to get lost in the traffic, especially
when the atmospheric lighting fades and the biographer-guide gets
carried away by his own knowledge and preoccupations.
I have used the metaphor of a house deliberately, for as Foster
indicates, Yeats felt the need to root himself, and one way of doing
this was by buying a house. He extended his holding at Woburn
Buildings (where the floor and woodwork in his study were painted
black and the room hung with orange), next bought Ballylee, a
mediaeval tower-house or castle-keep in a river-valley near Coole
which released his lyric spirit (in contrast to Dublin which engulfed
him in conflict and controversy), and kept "shabby but atmospheric
rooms" in London, situated between the British Museum (for
intellectual stimulation) and Euston Station (for the boat-train
back to Ireland). Foster painstakingly records how WBY's sojourns
in various houses and dwellings inspired some of his poetry and
prose, though the biographer's details result in a rather plodding
pace.
The Arch-Poet describes Yeats's uncertainty, vanity, marriage,
finances, health, hunger for self-knowledge, social life, literary
involvements and feuds (especially with Pound, George Moore, and
Austin Clarke), love-life, and spiritual interests. But there is
so much name-dropping and so many cursory appearances by hordes of
minor characters that the reader is swallowed by the text-as in
this excerpt:
"On WBY's crowded visit in early April, he also met Shaw and
carried the plan for an Irish Academy of Letters forward a stage;
he saw old friends, and extended his London circle into the world
of Edith Sitwell and her ramshackle Bayswater galere. One of the
attractions was high-class gossip about his old friend Lady Cunard's
daughter Nancy and her black lover; but WBY's genuine admiration
for much of Sitwell's poetry was a sign that his infatuation with
the work of Wyndham Lewis, her enemy and traducer, was over. More
exciting still, he at last met the Swami (first through Stuart
Moore, and then at tea with Olivia Shakespear) and was entranced
by him.A group of [the Swami's] influential supporters, including
the explorer Sir Francis Younghusband and the mystically inclined
Lady Elizabeth Pelham, would shortly form the Institute of
Mysticism"
While there is a succinct quality to the summary of the visit and
Yeats' social world, there is a blurring of identities. Some of the
characters receive no distinct annotation till much later in the
text.
The Arch-Poet has many admirable elements, not the least of which
is the case (contra O'Faolain) it makes for WBY's being more than
a great lyric poet. Foster uses non-poetic works to prove this,
especially unpublished tracts (such as "Leo Africanus"),
essays, lectures, and talks (particularly "If I Were
Four-and-Twenty", "The Irish Dramatic Movement", and
"Modern Ireland"), and philosophical reflections such as
Per Amica Silentia Lunae, On the Boiler, and A Vision. Foster shows
how Yeats, despite his avowal to have no part in politics, was
interested in a new political order. His poems sometimes had the
force and texture of manifestoes, and they frequently recorded a
complex and passionate relationship between the poet and his country's
history. Indeed, Volume II begins after Yeats had published his
first version of Responsibilities on a note of introspective
disillusionment and with a desire to write poetry (as in Shelley)
that would be a criticism of life. By 1919, established with a wife
(George Hyde Lees), home, and children (Anne and Michael), Yeats
was writing poetry with a vigour that he had once believed was lost
to him. But though he recognized Ireland as a country of oppression
and censorship and wanted some form of self-government, he rejected
the idea of violent sacrifice and fanaticism ("a terrible
beauty is born"), thereby earning the displeasure of Maud Gonne
and other Irish revolutionaries who thought him radically affected
and un-Irish in (what Foster calls) his "idiosyncratic style
of slightly bohemian grandeur." It was one thing for him to
condemn World War I as the worst outbreak of ignorance and stupidity
the world had yet seen; it was quite another for him to sneer at
the Sinn Fein. Hardline republicans branded him pro-imperial;
Catholic zealots condemned him as a heretic with a stagnant mind.
Such attacks simply pushed him farther to the right, from where he
challenged the pieties of the new Irish dispensation. He turned to
his art for a sanctuary where he could work on poems about hatred
and history, charged by his admiration for Swift, Goldsmith, Burke,
and Berkeley. Time would eventually pass a positive verdict on his
political resilience, recognizing that political controversy
(including his brief association with the "Blueshirt"
fascists, his defence of Parnell, and his disenchantment with the
new Irish Free State founded in 1922) was simply one nuance in a
life of multiple surfaces, edges, and textures.
In looking at the full life of Yeats, Foster challenges Ellmann and
Jeffares who viewed WBY's life as "a drama of painful
self-creation." Foster tends to see an ambitious man on the
make-one who turned professionally vicious in old age, even to the
extent of eliminating the competition in his selections and
Introduction for The Oxford Book of Modern Verse. However, his
biography does not indulge in demolition. It is too stately and
self-respecting for that. What it offers are genesis and evolution
of thought, polemic, and art, following Yeats's own belief that art
is "not the chief end of life but an accident in one's search
for reality"-a search, that Foster claims, took WBY repeatedly
back to his governing preoccupations with death and sex.
The Arch-Poet yields a rich archive of Yeats's erotic life-especially
in his later years when liaisons with various women (including a
German swim champion, an American tennis star, Lady Gwyneth Foden
who adored Indian temple dancing, mediocre poet Dorothy Wellesley,
actress Margot Ruddock, the Marxist sex-reformer Ethel Mannin,
outrageously eccentric Elizabeth Pelham, and Edith Shackleton Heald
who eventually turned to lesbianism) prompted his wife George to
play the role of Emer, the understanding wife, to the end. Foster
associates Yeats's creative surges with erotic excitement, though
he could just as easily have accounted for these surges by pointing
out the poet's interest in Hinduism, the occult, and eugenics. The
fact is that despite his prowling about for erotic gratification,
Yeats had (as Sean O'Faolain maintained) "one of the most
complex and solitary minds among lyric poets since the death of
Keats." Contrary to Foster's apparent presumption, Yeats's
greatest poetry cannot be explained by some neurotic episode in
politics or sex. The impulses of great poetry have far more mysterious
sources.
Indeed, it is Yeats's poetry that becomes a problem in the biography
because Foster's readings of it are overwhelmingly thematic. Foster
seeks to summarize and explain ideas rather than explore the poet's
techniques, and though readers could be grateful for the generous
quotations from Yeats's writing, they may be disappointed by the
poverty of analysis. Foster tells us nothing about Yeats's style,
apart from his deployment of certain images (houses, swans, old
men, legendary figures) and his skill with compression and concreteness.
This is a serious defect for a biography of a great poet. There is
far more insight and incisive commentary to be had in a single
paragraph of Babette Deutsch or Helen Vendler on "Leda and the
Swan" than in an entire chapter in the biography.
So what, then, is the distinction of this book? It is in the
uncovering of Yeats's ambivalences and anomalies, his philosophy
that conceived of life as tragedy, his tenacious belief in the
soul's journey back to life. As a life-study, The Arch-Poet is what
Seamus Heaney said of The Apprentice Mage: "a mighty argosy
of scholarship." It is in its marshalling of fact that this
book finds its greatest triumph. As such, it is truly an old-fashioned
book of reference rather than a fashionable biographical romance
of a poet who, in any case, thought of himself as a classicist
rather than a romantic.
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