Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence Between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell
R**J
Words in Air Are Many
Reading the published letters exchanged between two important figures in twentieth-century American literature, among many things, has allowed me the proper venue for being a voyeur! The details Lowell and Bishop reveal about themselves, their families, and friends is astounding. The entire enterprise took me the better part of six months, not because I was a particularly slow reader or because I found the reading boring but because each time I opened the book I was only able to take in ten or twenty pages before becoming saturated. By reading nearly every footnote and making a note on every book or poem or piece of music or work of art that these two fine artists recommended or alluded to, I was slowed to the pace of enjoying a box of chocolates, a bit at a time.Elizabeth Bishop herself cites composer Virgil Thompson: ââone of the strange things about poets is the way they keep warm by writing to one another all over the worldââ (494). Indeed, these two keep each other warm for thirty years, from 1947, when both are beginning to experience success, to 1977, when Robert Lowell dies of a heart attack in a âtaxi from Kennedy Airport on his return to New York on September 12â (xli). Bishop dies on September 21 âin the early evening of a cerebral aneurysmâ (xli). No one, absolutely no one, writes letters like these any longer, not even literati. Or if they do, they are not saving them in boxes. As soon as a party dies, unless he or she has made copies of their emails there shall remain no record. And do those electronic memoranda even count as letters?I would love to share the thousands of bits of information that Lowell and Bishop leave us by way of their letters, but I shall confine my nuggets to several categories of information: Literary Criticism, Keen Observations, the Personal, and Gossip.Nuggets:EB: âThereâs a little Catholic girl named Flannery OâConnor here now [Yaddo], who will remain if she canâa real writer, I think one of the best to be when she is a little older. Very moral (in your sense) and wittyâwhom Iâm sure youâd likeâ (79).EB: âGood lordâthereâs a fifteen year old girl next door whose voice & general personality is just about as restful as a stuck automobile hornâ (85).EB: âMarianne [Moore] is wonderful, thatâs all. If I donât mention my health she writes implying that she knows Iâm concealing my dying throes from her. If I say Iâve never felt better in my life (Godâs truth) she writes âBrave Elizabeth!â (Lota [EBâs longtime companion] says itâs a form of aggression). She used to send one rather stolid, timid friend of ours on Errands of Mercy, to people heâd never met. She told him that âpoor Peter Monro Jackâ was in desperate straits, sick, lonely, heaven knows what all, and the friend went to call, probably taking a bag of groceries or a bunch of flowers, and found a large gay party going on, with everyone in evening dressâ (189).EB: âLl showed me a long verse-letter, very obscene, heâd received from Dylan T[homas] before Dâs last trip here [New York]âvery clever, but it really canât be published for a long, long time, heâs decided. About people D. met in the U.S. etc.âone small sample: A Streetcar Named Desire is referred to as âA truck called Fââââ (215).RL: âPsycho-therapy is rather amazingâsomething like stirring up the bottom of an aquariumâchunks of the past coming up at unfamiliar angles, distinct and then indistinctâ (92).RL: âI have just finished the Yeats Lettersâ900 & something pagesâalthough some Iâd read before. He is so Olympian always, so calm, so really unrevealing, and yet I was fascinatedâ (160).RL: âProbably you forget, and anyway all that is mercifully changed and all has come right since you found Lota. But at the time everything, I guess (I donât want to overdramatize) our relations seemed to have reached a new place. I assumed that would be just a matter of time before I proposed and I half believed that you would accept. Yet I wanted it all to have the right build-up. Well, I didnât say anything thenâ (225).EB: âso I suppose I am just a born worrier, and that when the personal worries of adolescence and the years after it have more or less disappeared I promptly have to start worrying about the decline of nations . . . But I really canât bear much of American life these daysâsurely no country has ever been so filthy rich and so hideously uncomfortable at the same timeâ (229). 8/28/57EB: âWe actually did go through the Doldrumsâa day of them. The water absolutely slick and flat and the flying fish making sprays of long scratches across it, exactly like finger-nail scratches. Aruba is a little hell-like island, very strange. It rarely if ever rains there, and thereâs nothing but cactus hedges and prickly trees and goats and one broken-off miniature dead volcano. Itâs set in miles of oil slicks and oil rainbows and black gouts of oil suspended in the water, crude oilâand Onassisâ tankers on all sides, flying the flags of Switzerland, Panama, and Liberiaâ (245).RL: âThe man next to me is [in McLeanâs, a mental health facility] a Harvard Law professor. One day, he is all happiness, giving the plots of Trollope novels, distinguishing delicately between the philosophies of Holmes and Brandeis, reminiscing wittily about Frankfurter. But on another day, his depression blankets himâ (252).RL: âYou must read the [Boris] Pasternak Dr. Zhivago, badly translated but dwarfing all other post-war novels except Mann. Everyone says itâs great but too lyrical to be a novel. I feel shaken and haunted by the main characterâ (267). âbigger perhaps than anything by Turgenev and something that alters both the old Russia and the new for usâalters our own world too.â (271).EB: âWhen your letter came I was reading Dr. Jivago (Zhivago, in English)âin French. I stopped part way through because the bookâs owner wanted it back, and I think Iâll finish it in English. I agree with you completely, I even liked the poems at the end, as much as one could tell about themâ (274).RL: âFred Dupee, and James Baldwin (the colored writer) [sic] and I talked at Brandeis last week. We were each paid $200 and had limp little audiences of about thirty wriggling students. I like Baldwinâs Negro [sic] essays very muchâno blarney like [Richard] Wrightâs when he isnât giving a real scene and has to generalize. I am now trying to obliterate my abolitionist pangs before seeing [Jarrell] Randallâ (291).RL: âThe other night [Allen] Ginsberg, [Gregory] Corso, and [Peter] Orlovsky came to call on me. As you know, our house, as Lizzie [Hardwick] says, is nothing if not pretentious. Planned to stun people. When they came in, they all took off their wet shoes and tiptoed upstairs. They are phony in a way because they have made a lot of publicity out of very little talent. But in another way, they are pathetic and doomed . . . there was an awful lot of subdued talk about their being friends and lovers, and once Ginsberg and Orlovsky disappeared in unison to the john and reappeared on each otherâs shoulders . . . I think theyâll die of TBâ (297-8).EB: âAlso Ned Rorem wrote me heâd seen you in Buffalo. Heâs quite a good song writer, I believe (& he thinks so, too)â (307). Meow!EB: âThat Anne Sexton I think still has a bit too much romanticism and what I think of as the âour beautiful old silverâ school of female writing which is really boasting about how âniceâ we were. V[irginia] Woolf, K[atherine] Anne Porter, [Elizabeth] Bowen, R[ebecca] West, etc.âthey are all full of it. They have to make quite sure that the reader is not going to mis-place them socially, firstâand that nervousness interferes constantly with what they think theyâd like to say . . . I wrote a story at Vassar that was too much admired by Miss Rose Peebles, my teacher, who was very proud of being an old-school Southern lady, and suddenly this fact about womenâs writing dawned on me, and has haunted me ever sinceâ (333).RL: âthereâs just a queer, half-apocalyptic, nuclear feeling in the air, as tho nations had died and were now anachronistic, yet in their anarchic death-throes would live on for ages troubling us, threatening the likelihood of life continuingâ (381).RL: âI was rather on tiptoe that my poems had been intrusive, and read you letter with great relief. Your suggestions on âWaterâ might be great improvements. By the way, the mermaid wasnât your Millay parody, but something in one of your letters, inspired by Wiscasset probably. Glad this and my tampering with âIn the Villageâ didnât annoy you. When âThe Screamâ is published Iâll explain, itâs just a footnote to your marvelous storyâ (405).EB: âYour piece on Frost is awfully nice, Cal [RLâs nickname]. And âBuenos Airesâ is certainly The Latin CityâIâll have to go there, I see why you liked it so much. I like the first stanzas best. But I DONâT like the phallic monument, Cal. This has nothing to do with the preceding paragraphâit is just that I think it is unoriginal. It seems to me Iâve read so many âPhallic monumentsâ in poetryâSpend used to use it ad nauseam, for one. Oh I know itâs the Idea, and Peron, and Power, etc.âit couldnât be more appropriate. But I feel that you can surprise us better than that.â I hope you wonât mind my saying thisâ The first part has so many enlightening images, then I found âphallusâ too expectedâ (448).RL: âThe Stone Phallus was meant to be awfully raw and obvious, but maybe the poem ought to end earlierâ (455).RL: âWhat you say about the âUnion deadâ poem is subtly true, must be a huge hunk of health that has survived and somehow increased through all these breakdown[s], eight or nine, I think, in about fifteen years. Pray god thereâll be no moreâ (559).EB: âI seem to get to places at just the wrong timeâbefore that I spent four days at the University of Oklahoma. That was really fun; I had a wonderful timeâbut the desolation of that scenery, at that time of year, is incredible.â Iâve seen âlonely New England farmhousesââbut nothing can compare to a lonely, small-sized, ranch-house in Oklahoma. One can see for milesâall pale tanâonly the pumping oil-wells lend animation to the sceneâeven the âWild Life Reservationââpumping away like lost lunaticsââ (741).RL: âI see us still when we first met, both at Randallâs and then for a couple of years later. I see you as rather tall, long brown-haired, shy but full of des[cription] and anecdote as now. I was brown haired and thirty I guess and I donât know what. I was largely invisible to myself, and nothing I knew how to look at. But the fact is we were swimming in our young age, with the water coming down on us, and we were gulping. I canât go on. It is better now only thereâs a steel cord stretch[ed] tense at about arms-length above us, and what we look forward to must be accompanied by our less grace and strength. Well, no more dies irae; I wonder if Christians believing in immortality saw their lives as less circularâ (776).EB: âHowever, Cal dear, maybe your memory is failing!â Never, never was I âtallââas you wrote remembering me. I was always 5 ft 4 and Âź inchesânow shrunk to 5 ft 4 inchesâ The only time Iâve ever felt all was in Brazil. And I never had âlong brown hairâ either!â (778).RL: âI still thrill to your visit. After a little, it seemed as if almost thirty years had rolled back, and we were talking, brownhaired, callow and new in New York, Washington or Maine. Voice and image seemed much more what we were than what we areâor is the essence as it was?â (793).
J**.
Book was delivered in terrible condition!
I'm very much enjoying the writing and content however, the book appeared to have been used and arrived very damaged. I was leaving for a trip and wanted to take it with me so didn't bother to return. Very disappointed in the condition of the book itself!
J**E
Interesting Book of letters by two great poets
Books were received quickly, in good condition and the letters between the two writers are interesting and reflect much of their lives.
A**N
Dear Elizabeth, Dear Cal
Lowell's mania, Bishop's rootlessness, it's all here. A unique window into mid-century American poetry
S**Y
Five Stars
Fascinating individuals and their correspondence. A must have for studying their poetry.
P**E
Five Stars
It was just fine and the service was good
R**N
Five Stars
awesome
K**E
My rating of Words in Air.
Glad I did'nt order the hardcover version, this is a BIG book. Looking forward to leasurly reading, learning about an interesting couple.
W**N
excellent in all regards; indeed beyond excellent. SUBLIME [inartistic and moral senses ]
this is a very great correspondence and it is a privilege to read it . Could not be more highly recommended. Human generosity and high intelligence can live in the same soul.
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