Stone walls do not a prison make,
Nor Iron bars a Cage;
Minds innocent and quiet take
That for an Hermitage.
If I have freedom in my love,
And in my soul am free,
Angels alone, that soar above,
Enjoy such liberty.
It comes, of course, from To Althea, from Prison by Richard Lovelace. The whole poem is excellent but the last verse (which this is) raises it to a much higher level.
I even like the scansion of "an hermitage", which in my mind I always pronounce just as it's pronounced today. Whether it was pronounced differently in Lovelace's day, whether the last syllable was stressed, I don't know.
I think the beauty of the verse is beyond analysis. The parallelism of the first two lines, the timelessness of the imagery, the distinctly masculine gentleness of the whole thing...that's all a part of it. "Angel" is one of my very words in the language, and it's the focal point of the whole stanza, and thus the whole poem. I think the last line of a poem should "soar", should raise our thoughts and spirits to the heights, and it quite literally soars in this case.
The whole stanza is so beautifully crafted that there's no suggestion of artifice or of effort, it seems like an organic whole. Every word seems to follow every word with something close to inevitability.
And yet...even after such analysis, the brilliance of the stanza remains undiminished and unexplained. You could say all these things of many other stanzas of poetry, and yet this one seems to have something that surpasses any other-- for me, anyway.
By the way, I lied a little at the start of this poem. I haven't quite considered this my definitive favourite stanza of all time. For years, I've said it's a toss-up between this one and the following stanza from "The Walrus and the Carpenter" by Lewis Carroll. There was always an element of striving after comic effect in this, though, with the contrast between the two. (Not that anybody "in real life" shows any interest in anything I have to say about poetry, anyway. I needn't have bothered.) But today I've decided that Lovelace trumps Carroll, though I still love the Carroll stanza:
The time has come,' the Walrus said,
To talk of many things:
Of shoes — and ships — and sealing-wax —
Of cabbages — and kings —
And why the sea is boiling hot —
And whether pigs have wings.'
(Incidentally, I think the line "why the sea is boiling hot" is a brilliant prophetic satire of most social and political discourse today, especially in the mainstream media-- long earnest discussions that take as their assumption something that isn't true, that is observably untrue, that is ludicrously and patently untrue.)
I don’t know as much poetry as you do. I was recognized as a lover and writer of poetry very young and it actually ruined things because adults were always trying to encourage me by inundating me with famous poets and poetry that I disliked intensely. I had one English teacher in HS who I’m sure was burned out on drugs who made us write haikus all year (I admire haikus in Japanese but consider it generally ill-advised in English). So I appreciate your posts! So many poets have a single good poem and so far in life I’ve been unwilling to slog through to find the diamonds in the rough.
ReplyDeleteCarroll and Poe are my favorites but I long ago read their oeuvres. The usual epic poems- Iliad, Odyssey, Divine Comedy, Paradise Lost, Faust- I love, Shakespeare, Tolkien often…but it’s like the greats in poetry destroyed my patience. I used to get intensely angry listening to English language music because the lyrics are so lazy especially in meter.
Oh, and I also recite The Raven as a sort of party trick, though the parties are for the drama crowd that appreciate it more. The best way to gain appreciative followers of such thing is to raise them yourself.
I think you might know more about poetry than I do! I have never read Faust. Yes, music lyrics can be incredibly lazy, which is a pity because sometimes there are flashes of pure lyricism.
DeleteAnd I completely, completely, completely agree with you about haikus. Their introduction to English was a disaster!
And thanks for saying you appreciate my posts.
Funny story about Faust- in HS my husband was annoyed his mother read romance novels. Looking around for a way to edify her, he said "Well, have you read Faust?" "Oh, yes, in three languages," was her response. So he decided she was entitled to read whatever she liked now! I recommend it, even if it isn't a permanent cure for low-culture addiction.
DeleteMusic isn't required to have words, so without at least *one* flash of lyricism I don't see what business musicians have in pretending to write poetry. Plenty of great songs just go "Na-na-na" or whatever. And I'm not snooty! I had a poetry buddy in HS and one of our favorite lines from the popular music world at the time was "Girl, I love you like a fat kid loves candy." Fun, silly, surprising, crass even, all of that is fine, but fit the bloody meter and rhyme something other than "love" and "above!"
I don't mind musicians writing poetry, I don't even mind acknowledging that many music lyrics are poetic, but they're not poetry-- especially since they tend to be fragmentary and lack fluency.
DeleteYou're Faust story reminds me that many of my literary heroes, like G.K. Chesterton and W.B. Yeats, loved detective stories. I don't care. I still regard them with considerable disdain!