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Reassessing Robert Lowell's Catholic Poetry

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Reassessing Robert Lowell's Catholic Poetry By Ross Labrie Thesis Statment Lowell's retrospective assessment invites one to take a second look at his Catholic poetry ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reassessing Robert Lowell's Catholic Poetry


1
Reassessing Robert Lowell's Catholic Poetry
  • By Ross Labrie

2
Thesis Statment
  • Lowell's retrospective assessment invites one to
    take a second look at his Catholic poetry, which
    is largely contained in the two early volumes,
    The Land of Unlikeness (1944) and Lord Weary's
    Castle (1946), in order to examine the kind and
    strength of the poet's religious feeling there.
    What one finds is a vigorous and passionate faith
    that contrasts markedly with the subdued and
    often sardonic approach to religion manifested in
    the later verse.

3
Speaking of Lowells Catholicism
  • Mazzaro and O'Malleys overemphasis on the
    influence of Catholicism and they overlook the
    presence of Calvinist or Puritan elements.
  • The truth is that Lowell was a hybrid
    theologically, as can readily be seen in the
    greatest of the early poems, "The Quaker
    Graveyard in Nantucket.
  • unlike his Catholic friend and mentor, Allen
    Tate, Lowell was unvarying in perceiving the
    world as a dark and probably unredeemable place.
    Yet, Lowell was persuaded by Tate to adopt
    formalism in LWC.

4
Early Poetic Technique
  • In the early poems, rather like Tate, Lowell also
    attempted to interweave Catholic and classical
    allusions, thereby reflecting the most salient
    influences on his own intellectual formation.
    ("The Holy Innocents" is a good example.)

5
Hybrid
  • The mingling of Catholic and Puritan elements can
    be seen in a number of the poems of the 1940s,
    most notably in "The Quaker Graveyard in
    Nantucket.
  • Turn Puritan ? Catholicism
  • Stew his formalism, his preoccupation with
    American historyespecially Puritanism--his
    opposition to the second world war, and his
    Catholicism.

6
The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket(1)
  • The Epigraph human history is depicted as a
    scorning of the gift of life itself.
  • Epic Dimension
  • the creation ? WW2 ? 19th America
  • (violent language ? Gods mercy)
  • (Puritan ?? Catholicism)
  • Irony Quakers cradle humankind

7
The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket(2)
  • Of the poem's seven sections only one is given a
    title, Section 6, "Our Lady of Walsingham."
  • the language in this section is comparatively
    bland and the tone neutral
  • from the unity of medieval secular and religious
    life to the fragmentation of contemporary secular
    culture

8
The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket(3)
  • The fact that Lowell changes the setting from
    America to England is also part of the surprise
    felt by the reader, who is thereby given another
    world, as well as another time, by which to judge
    American culture
  • The mysticism of the passage is prepared for by
    the detail of the statue of Mary being too small
    for its canopy, a symbol of her humility and a
    sign that her abode is elsewhere.

9
The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket(4)
  • In the final section of "The Quaker Graveyard in
    Nantucket" Lowell synoptically recalls his
    principal motifs, the violence of the
    Puritan/world war axis and the silence of the
    otherworldly.
  • dualistic and ambiguous outcome sixteen are dark
    and violent, the last, is piously hopeful

10
The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket(5)
  • In the final section, it might be argued that God
    as creator is involved in the unfolding violence
    of evolving life. In any case, whether as a
    result of creation or humanity's fall from grace,
    the world and God are as widely separated as they
    can be in these final lines, a sign of the
    ascendancy of Puritan rather than Catholic
    consciousness.

11
Conclusion
  • Lowell's Puritan division of the world into light
    and darkness, good and evil combined with the
    Catholic spirituality of the appeal to Mary in
    the Walsingham section, the poem can be seen as
    something of a theological hybrid, although
    Lowell's conscious allegiance is clearly to Roman
    Catholicism. At the end, the solace of Lowell's
    final line, so logically inconsistent with the
    despairing lines that precede it, is indicative
    of the trusting, rather simple faith he possessed
    at this time.
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