"I Make the Whole World Answer to My Art": Alice Meynell's Poetic Identity (Critical Essay) "I Make the Whole World Answer to My Art": Alice Meynell's Poetic Identity (Critical Essay)

"I Make the Whole World Answer to My Art": Alice Meynell's Poetic Identity (Critical Essay‪)‬

Victorian Poetry 2003, Summer, 41, 2

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Publisher Description

IN "A POET OF ONE MOOD," LATE-VICTORIAN POET ALICE MEYNELL DESCRIBES herself as a poet of "wild ways" who commands the world's attention with poetry that emanates from "One thought that is the treasure of my years...And in mine arms, clasped, like a child in tears." (1) This "One thought" is the most prevalent feature of Meynell's poetry: a speaker who is obsessed with her identity as poet, which she repeatedly depicts in dual terms. She portrays the poet as a conglomeration of reflexive binaries, such as the everyday consciousness and the poet self (whether represented as another poet, a poem, a book, or a bird), mother and child, female and male, or poet and God. Meynell complicates the dilemma of the woman artist, portrayed with such dramatic effectiveness in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Aurora Leigh. During the Victorian period, women poets especially could not avoid the tangled web of contradictory gender ideologies that seemed to necessitate, with every act of poetic creation, their simultaneous reinfor cement and undercutting of patriarchal constructs of femininity. (2) Alice Meynell succeeded in constructing a female poetic voice that generates and affirms itself, rather than being defined by the Not-Male. She depicts the world as a reflection of her poetic greatness rather than as a hindrance to it. Meynell "make[s] the whole world answer to [her] art" (Poems, p. 44) because the world embodies her poetic self. This is the essence of Meynell's poetry: she answers to herself. Considered an accomplished poet, essayist, and journalist in her own day, Alice Meynell numbers among the neglected women writers of the Victorian period who have only recently begun to receive scholarly attention. As Jean Halladay explains, "During her lifetime she was touted for the laureateship....Today she is forgotten, dismissed as a minor 'nature' or, in some cases, as a 'Catholic' poet." (3) Essays by Halladay, Angela Leighton, Maria Frawley, Sharon Smulders, Talia Schaffer, and others treat Meynell as a writer of significance. (4) However, remarkably, no scholarly discussion of Meynell's poetry fully explores her preoccupation with her identity as a poet, despite the frequency of her references to poets and the recent surge of critical interest in literary and pictorial representations of women artists. This analysis is an attempt to fill that gap in Meynell scholarship by providing an account of the strategic patterns in her representations of a poet's complex, dynamically dialogic identity.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2003
22 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
29
Pages
PUBLISHER
West Virginia University Press, University of West Virginia
SIZE
218
KB

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