The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame

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26 The Poetry of Mary Robinson

poem. On 17 March 1792, the Oracle printed an unsigned response,
“Oberon and Titania,” written by playwright James Boaden, who also
worked on the paper. This response is a playful dialogue in which the
fairy queen jealously interprets Robinson’s poem, signed “Oberon,”
as a seduction poem; a minor quarrel ensues, and the poem con-
cludes with Oberon’s assurance that Titania need not doubt his fidel-
ity and that he was merely soothing “a mother’s fears.”^3 Later, on 27
March, Robinson prints “Oberon to Maria on Seeing Her Gather
Some Pensees,” which might seem to run the risk of rekindling
Titania’s jealousy (1: 171–2). When Robinson republished these two
poems in her 1794 Poems, they are transformed into poems about
her daughter recovering from a distressing illness; the first poem is
re- titled as “Invocation, Written on the Recovery of My Daughter
from Inoculation, and First Published with the Signature of Oberon”
and the second as “Stanzas to My Beloved Daughter, On Seeing Her
Gather Some Pensées.” The former is greatly expanded but not in such
a way as to emphasize the reading established by the new title and dif-
ferent context. The latter poem, which remains largely unchanged,
also presents a fatherly Oberon who admonishes the girl for picking
and thus killing the flowers and teaches the lesson, “Take not what
bounteous NATURE gave / But learn to cherish—and to save” (1: 172;
22–3). This Oberon bears no relation to Shakespeare’s Oberon or to
Robinson’s previous poems; instead, he seems to be a more generally
mythical figure, as the gathering of f lowers, in English folklore, is
associated with fairies.
But why would Robinson write poems for her daughter as Oberon?
In the Memoirs, Robinson’s poetic composition is associated with her
efforts “to cheer and amuse” her daughter, Maria Elizabeth, during
an illness (7: 276). The Oberon avatar for these poems is particularly
curious, especially given the dispute in Shakespeare’s play between
Oberon and Titania over the changeling boy whose mother left under
Titania’s care. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Oberon intends to dis-
rupt Titania’s maternal role by taking the boy from her to be one of his
henchmen. These poems would seem to radically revise the character of
Oberon. Robinson’s Oberon, as it turns out, is just as much inf luenced
by Frances Greville’s “A Prayer for Indifference,” sometimes printed
as “Ode to Indifference,” as by Shakespeare’s character. Greville’s
poem, memorably examined by Jerome McGann in The Poetics of
Sensibility, is indeed a key text in that tradition, inspiring responses by
both Hannah More and Helen Maria Williams.^4 In Greville’s poem,
the speaker invokes Oberon in the hope that he may provide some
opiate, “the sovereign balm” or the “nymph Indifference bring,” as

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

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