SENSUOUS AND SCHOLARLY READING IN KEATS'S ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S HOMER' / Thomas Day
SENSUOUS AND SCHOLARLY READING IN KEATS'S ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S HOMER' / Thomas Day
SENSUOUS AND SCHOLARLY READING IN KEATS'S ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S HOMER' / Thomas Day
1
Jack Stillinger, ed., The Poems of John Keats (London: Heinemann, 1978),
64.
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2
Walter Jackson Bate, John Keats (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of
Harvard University Press, 1963), 88.
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3
Charles Cowden Clarke, Recollections of Writers (Fontwell, Sussex:
Centaur Press, 1969), 130.
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4
Francis Turner Palgrave, ed., The Golden Treasury of the Best Songs and
Lyrical Poems in the English Language. (1861; rpt. New York: Walter J. Black,
Inc., 1932), 298.
5
C. V. Wicker, ‘Cortez – Not Balboa’. College English 17.7 (1956): 383-387
(383).
6
Charles J. Rzepka, Selected Studies in Romantic and American Literature,
History, and Culture: Inventions and Interventions (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate,
2010).
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he did. But towards the end of the chapter Rzepka makes a related
but different suggestion, and an intriguing one: ‘[Keats] might even
have been aware of the possibility that his stereoscopic allusion to
7
Balboa could be mistaken for a mistake by inattentive readers’. If
Keats meant Cortez to seem like a mistake in order to pull up his
readers for not spotting it, wouldn’t that be an endorsement of the
scholarly reader/reading of his poem, Keats’s sloppiness in this
respect having a heuristic function? Rzepka’s reading of the poem
suggests so, his reference to ‘inattentive readers’ sounding a note of
schoolmasterly reprimand akin to Tennyson’s, which complements
his sense of a speaker conscious of having fallen behind with his
homework. But Keats could have meant Cortez to seem like a
mistake for the opposite reason: to lampoon the irritable reaching
after fact and reason so alien to his poetic sensibility that informs
the scholarly reading. That is a possibility given some credence by
Jerome McGann, who infers a playfulness that means to preserve
the moment of childlike wonder – the ‘Rosebud moment’ as he
characterizes it (invoking Citizen Kane) – against the more mature
readerly mindsets that would stifle it: ‘The poem’s absurd error is
the sign that it has pledged its allegiance to what would mortally
embarrass a grown-up consciousness. (And so scholarship, than
which nothing else is more grown up, hastens to explain away the
8
error.)’ But ‘absurd’ surely overplays what many have found
entirely plausible, and it invests the poem with a level of irony,
ironically, that sits uneasily with the Rosebud moment, as I have
already suggested. My own feeling is that the question of whether
or not Keats meant Cortez, or whether he meant Cortez to seem
like a mistake, is one that ‘On First Looking Into Chapman’s
Homer’ poses to subtle effect. Keats’s expunged first thought ‘Yet
never could I judge what men could mean’ could almost read as a
comment on the difficulty of judging the poem in terms of
intention (as well as being both a reader and a writer in this poem,
Keats sees through the eyes of his own reader). That the line was
expunged may owe in part to its coming to seem to Keats too bald
a statement of intentional fallacy. Besides, it is not quite an
intentional fallacy that Keats is after. For in order to fully enter into
7
Selected Studies in Romantic and American Literature, 246.
8
Jerome McGann, The Poetics of Sensibility: A Revolution in Literary Style
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996), 123.
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the drama of the poem and the act of reading it mediates I think
we do need to weigh the innocence of a mistake against the
strategies of the scholar and/or pseudo-scholar – to weigh them in
a way, though, that shows us capable of being in mysteries,
uncertainties, doubts.
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