The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame

(ff) #1
Introduction 5

performing Perdita in Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale is immediately
familiar to us. We have peculiar access, moreover, to Robinson’s sex
life—real and imagined. Her husband’s adultery and her own liai-
sons with several powerful men of her day, including not only the
Prince but also Whig statesman Charles James Fox and her long- time
companion Colonel Banastre Tarleton, she herself confirmed; these
activities and relationships featured prominently in newspaper gossip
columns and satirical prints—in some cases depicting Robinson as
exposing her breasts or, in one particularly vitriolic print, as being
vaginally impaled. In the case of the Prince and Fox, among other
presumed lovers, pornographers narrated Robinson’s sexual encoun-
ters with them.^6 What other Romantic- period writer appears to us
in such sexually explicit representations? And without any real evi-
dence, scholars accept as fact the supposition that the debilitating
illness which left her paralyzed and immobile for the final fifteen
years of her life was the result of a miscarriage. While certainly pos-
sible, this supposition reveals a tendency to imagine the more titil-
lating scenario when Robinson’s body is at issue. Most significant
to Robinson’s cultural status is the fact that her physical beauty was
captured by the leading portraitists of the period—John Hoppner,
George Romney, Thomas Gainsborough, and Joshua Reynolds, who
painted her twice—and all of this before she began her literary career
in earnest. But even t hen her presence manifests itself in innumerable
newspaper puffs, hyperbolic verse tributes by her friends, beautiful
printings of her books, and not least of all in the rhythms, sounds,
and shapes of her poetry.^7
My study of Robinson’s poetry picks up in the aftermath of her
previous celebrity, which continues to resonate throughout her career;
but I want to foreground Robinson as a working poet in the instant
of her poems’ publicity, most often as they first appeared in newspa-
pers attached to various pseudonyms. As Pascoe observes, Robinson
employed her pseudonyms “to proliferate herself” (Romantic 174).
My i ntere st i n t hat po et r y i s to exa m i ne f a me a s a po et ic t rope, a rec u r-
ring motif even, through the course of her career as a poet. Although
this book is about fame, it is not really a cultural study of celebrity;
that work is well underway.^8 Focusing on her poetry, I do not see
Robinson as a shameless self- promoter capitalizing on her fame and
on her infamy so much as I see her as a former celebrity attempting to
do something more meaningful and lasting with her talents. In what
follows, I mean to draw a distinction between her cultural celebrity
and her quest for literary fame—not because I believe she, as a public

9780230100251_02_int.indd 59780230100251_02_int.indd 5 12/28/2010 11:08:07 AM12/28/2010 11:08:07 AM


10.1057/9780230118034 - The Poetry of Mary Robinson, Daniel Robinson

Cop

yright material fr

om www

.palgra

veconnect.com - licensed to Univer

sitetsbib

lioteket i

Tr
omso - P

algra

veConnect - 2011-04-
Free download pdf