24 October 2009

Andrew Marvell, Upon Appleton House

Here are the notes I took on it in the basement of Alderman:

MAR-vuhl

  • prospective poem (like "Cooper's Hill"; also bring in Cindy on description?)
  • rural shit—"Georgics," "The Task," but there are HUMANS in "Appleton House"
  • buildings and their ruins and STRUCTURE—of building described, AND of poem—Pamela as a story about the interiors of buildings/characterological interiority. And trying to get inside buildings as an allegory for rape—Pamela, Shamela, Evelina.
"Height with a certaing race doees bend,
But low things clownishly ascend." (59-60)
—something about satire, maybe even Burney's mockery of middle-class pretensions in Evelina
later men become grasshoppers in "the abyss.../Of that unfathomable grass"—poetry about the English Civil War, class-warfare, the Levellers/Diggers had a rebellion that Lord Fairfax (Appleton's owner) was involved in squashing. Will Hume's history of the Civil War explain enough of this to me???

Puritan woodpeckers chopped down the royalist oak with their beaks 'cause it was rotten inside.
  • Building as chastity belt:
XII
And oft she spent the summer suns
Discoursing with the subtle nuns.
Whence in these words one to her weaved,
(As 'twere by chance) thoughts long conceived.

XIII
'Within this holy leisure we
Live innocently as you see.
These walls restrain the world without,
But hedge our liberty about.
These bars inclose the wider den
Of those wild creatures, callèd men.
The cloister outward shuts its gates,
And, from us, locks on them the grates.'
(93-104)

Allegories of temptation—the evil prioress wants Isabella Thwaites to become a lesbian slut nun
  • and "Paradise Lost"
  • and Pilgrim's Progress
  • allegory of the Protestant Reformation in England—but how does work with contemporary Puritan/Anglican stuff?
This is the same year Leviathan comes out—what can I say about THAT???

Does a Herrick and has a sexy dream about ivy:
And ivy, with familiar trails,
Me licks, and clasps, and curls, and hales.
Under this antic rope I move
Like some great prelate of the grove.
Then languishing with ease, I toss
On pallets swoll'n of velvet moss. (591-6)
What??? Why is the speaker an embodied person here? Is this an appropriate move for young Maria Fairfax's tutor to make in a poem? What is Marvell doing? (naughty tutors and sex in gardens: see Julie)