The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame

(ff) #1
Stuart’s Laureates I 185

his position as such. Since the 1990 publication of The Feminist
Companion to Literature in English, where she was first identified
as “poetry editor” (916), more than a dozen scholars, again includ-
ing myself, have made the assertion, in nearly identical words, that
Robinson succeeded Southey as poetry editor for the Morning Post.
Ta k i ng t h i s f o r g r a nte d , a s I pr e p a r e d my e d it ion of R ob i n s on’s p o e t r y,
I expected one day to go through the newspapers again to examine
more carefully the other poetry that appeared during her tenure as
“poetry editor,” figuring that this would provide new insight into
Robinson’s taste and literary judgment. I also assumed that Southey,
as her predecessor, would have performed similar duties, not just com-
posing but also selecting, rejecting, soliciting, and editing poetry for
the Post’s “Poet ica l Depa r t ment.” Th is representat ion of her as poet r y
editor most likely originates in Robert D. Bass’s The Green Dragoon:
The Lives of Banastre Tarleton and Mary Robinson (1957), which was
until recently the only remotely reliable biographical source available.
Bass twice refers to her as being responsible for editing the poetry page
(386, 394). Although Bass provides no citations for the source of this
information, he likely read a long biographical essay on Tarleton in
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine for October of 1874 that describes
Robinson has having “been promoted to the superintendence of the
poetical department of the ‘Morning Post’ ” (“Sir Banastre Tarleton”
447). A similar remark appears in Smucker’s 1874 A History of the
Four Georges, Kings of England (327). So, since 1990, the claim that
Robinson was poetry editor has been repeated in almost every book
or article that discusses Robinson’s poetry and now even appears in
the headnotes to selections by Robinson in both the Norton and the
Longman anthologies of English literature.^12 Of the recent commen-
taries, Stuart Curran’s account thus is the most accurate, writing that
Robinson “succeeded [Southey] as Daniel Stuart’s chief correspon-
dent to the ‘Poetical Department’ of the Morning Post when he left
for Portugal at the end of 1799” (“Mary Robinson’s Lyrical Tales”
19). Calling the position “poetry editor” makes Robinson sound
important, but no one working on Southey, to my knowledge, has
ever referred to his work for Stuart in this way.
As it turns out, neither of them was anything like what we think of
a “poetry editor” as being. Admittedly, calling Robinson “poetry edi-
tor” is an innocuous shorthand and is not completely inaccurate. And
it certainly does not depreciate the value of the most significant dis-
cussions of Robinson’s Morning Post period, such as in Judith Pascoe’s
Romantic Theatricality (163–83) or Judith Hawley’s essay “Romantic
Patronage: Mary Robinson and Coleridge Revisited.” Hawley, for

9780230100251_06_ch04.indd 1859780230100251_06_ch04.indd 185 12/28/2010 11:08:53 AM12/28/2010 11:08:53 AM


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