Chapter 4
Stuart’s Laureates I: Poets and
Politics Perplext
The tension between love and reason explored in Sappho and Phaon
had a l ready been d ra mat ized by R obi nson t he prev ious yea r a s a n a l le-
gorical dialogue in a poem that first appeared on 12 February 1795
in the Tory newspaper the Tr u e B r iton, edited by Robinson’s friend
John Taylor. In this earlier poem, Love boasts of his power to subvert
Reason’s “pedant rules,” and to delude and subjugate the emotions of
mere mortals. Love’s power is factitiously carnivalesque: he is able to
“make the wisest fools” and “to Idiots lend a gleam of wit” (4, 7); he
makes “Deformity appear / More beauteous than the day!” (9–10).
Reason admits of this truth but, just as capricious, retorts that Love
succeeds only “where I refuse my aid” (19). In the end, though,
Reason wins. While the poem is not explicitly political, in its context
within the pages of the Tr u e B r iton it reads as fundamentally conser-
vative. Its promotion of maturity and sober wisdom accords with the
paper’s stance against reform and revolution. In February of 1795,
just months after Pitt’s suspension of habeas corpus, the execution of
Robespierre and the triumph of anti- Revolutionary sentiment, and
the acquittals of Hardy, Tooke, and Thelwall for treason, Robinson’s
assertion of reason over delusive passionate enthusiasm is a particularly
safe position to maintain. On its own, the poem is obviously a precur-
sor to her later critiques of excessive sensibility, such as that made by
Sappho and Phaon as noted in the previous chapter. Robinson later
would reprint this poem in her novel The Natural Daughter as the
composition of her heroine, Martha Morley, who, Robinson writes,
is “not one of those romantic females who are led from the paths of
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10.1057/9780230118034 - The Poetry of Mary Robinson, Daniel Robinson
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