The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame

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20 The Poetry of Mary Robinson

a text and their relation to the person writing” (890). Of course,
Griffin’s point—and Foucault’s—more directly applies to the autho-
rial concept that is “Mrs. Mary Robinson,” an identity which ulti-
mately assimilates (or attempts to) the various signatures. Robinson’s
avatars, in a sense, allegorize the “aspect of the author- function”
Griffin describes. Furthermore, the nature of the avatar is to evade
any attempt to render a coherent writerly subjectivity; the avatar is
protean, a refraction of identity, one potentially of many.
Robinson deploys a range of avatars depending on text, context,
or whim. Robinson’s signatures, I contend, are formal features of the
poems to which they are attached. I read them as incidental attributes
of the literary text; so, as such, they resound in paratextual, contex-
tual, and intertextual voices and echoes. We may read the pseudony-
mous signature attached to a poem just as we read its title, epigraph,
or footnote. I tend to resist, therefore, imagining a fictional authorial
persona or character that Robinson is performing—except when it is
clear she is doing that. But even then, as we shall see, attempting to
understand the signature as a coherent character can be exasperating.
Even trying to slot Robinson’s pseudonymity into a taxonomy such
as the useful one Paula R. Feldman suggests for Romantic- period
women poets is problematic (“Women” 286–7). The only reliable
way to read Robinson’s pseudonymous signature is to understand its
textual presence as a formal choice the poet has made, like choosing to
write a sonnet instead of an ode. Robinson’s pseudonyms are unique
because of their multiplicity in the context of the newspapers with
which she was affiliated and also because of the way each instance
of a pseudonym attached to a poem involves its particular textual
circumstance and does not necessarily involve other instances of the
same pseudonym. As I will show in what follows, Robinson’s Oberon
avatar is rich with allusion but is not a character that informs the
group of poems that carry the “Oberon” signature. Each signature
contributes to a Venn diagram of multiple referents for its specific
instance. Building on Pascoe’s and Feldman’s explanations, I want to
demonstrate how f luid and amorphous Robinson’s pseudonyms are;
they sometimes mean this, they sometimes mean that, but ultimately
they mean “Mary Robinson”—whatever that is.
Robinson’s avatars allow for a kind of fantastic ludic play while
also representing the propagation of her poetic self for professional
aggrandizement and for literary fame. She learned this from Della
Crusca. I use the term avatar because I want to distinguish the Della
Cruscan use of pen names from the trope of pseudonym- as- costume,

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