Cart
Free Shipping in the UK
Proud to be B-Corp

The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem Peter Murphy

The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem By Peter Murphy

The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem by Peter Murphy


£17.00
New RRP £25.99
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem Summary

The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem: Reading and Remembering Thomas Wyatt by Peter Murphy

Thomas Wyatt didn't publish They Flee from Me. It was written in a notebook, maybe abroad, maybe even in prison. Today it is in every poetry anthology. How did it survive? That is the story Peter Murphy tells-in vivid and compelling detail-of the accidents of fate that kept a great poem alive across 500 turbulent years. Wyatt's poem becomes an occasion to ask and answer numerous questions about literature, culture, and history. Itself about the passage of time, it allows us to consider why anyone would write such a thing in the first place, and why anyone would care to read or remember the person who wrote it. From the deadly, fascinating circles of Henry VIII's court to the contemporary classroom, The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem also introduces us to a series of worlds. We meet antiquaries, editors, publishers, anthologizers, and critics whose own life stories beckon. And we learn how the poem came to be considered, after many centuries of neglect, a model of the best English has to offer and an ideal object of literary study. The result is an exploration of literature in the fine grain of the everyday and its needs: in the classroom, in society, and in the life of nations.

The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem Reviews

We take great poems to have survived history by virtue of their excellence. Peter Murphy shows how wrong we are. He tells a vivid, compelling story of one poem's survival across five centuries of reckless printers, contentious critics, warring editors, and devoted readers, and of all the good luck that's kept it alive. -- Jeff Dolven * Princeton University *
Murphy turns the story of a single work into a moving, lyrical meditation on the vicissitudes of poetry as it enters the unpredictable worlds of readers, collectors, editors, and scholars. Beautifully attuned to what can and cannot be known about a poem's history, this book provides a model for understanding what it means for literature to endure. -- Andrew Elfenbein * University of Minnesota *
Beautifully written and utterly original, Peter Murphy's study of Wyatt's 'They Flee From Me' as it passes through the hands and minds of readers from the sixteenth century to the present is a profound meditation on how we remember and forget the past, on everything that makes us truly human. -- John Guillory * New York University *
Peter Murphy's superb book takes Wyatt's perhaps most famous poem, They flee from me,' and turns it into a parable of loss, rediscovery, and the fragility and chance of how the lyric poem's small proportions generate capacious meaning over time and vastly different cultural contexts. Murphy's work is admirable in so many ways it is hard to know where to begin....[It] provides singular access to the 'vse of Poesie' as the original cause for what it means to be human. -- Daniel Fischlin * Renaissance and Reformation *
Murphy's study and style are subtly and pleasurably convincing in their discussion of fine prosodic and stylistic distinctions....[One] of the most interesting provocations in the English Renaissance this year. -- Ryan Netzley * Studies in English Literature *

About Peter Murphy

Peter Murphy is John Hawley Roberts Professor of English at Williams College.

Table of Contents

Contents and AbstractsPart I: Thomas Wyatt Writes a Poem and Shows It to Others chapter abstract

The first section of the First Part is about the making of They Flee from Me and its participation in the daily life of people nearby. It focuses on the manuscript books in which They Flee from Me is first recorded, the Egerton and Devonshire manuscripts, and describes the performance and transformation of traditional poetic modes that Thomas Wyatt accomplishes. It then moves to a discussion of the first printing of the poem in Tottel's Miscellany. This part ends with a discussion of the poem's lapsing out of culture and memory, conducted by considering a seventeenth-century user of the Egerton manuscript who wrote over and crossed out many of the poems. Broader questions about the functions of poetry are raised through a consideration of some algebra written next to the poem and a comparison of the languages of poetry and mathematics.

Part II: A Century of Learning, and the Invention of Literature chapter abstract

The Second Part begins by discussing the first reprinters of Thomas Wyatt's poetry, circa 1720, and uses these reprintings to present the many challenges and impossibilities involved in trying to represent the past accurately. It then moves to the story of the main focus of the Second Part, the eighteenth-century cleric and editor Thomas Percy, whose career provides an opportunity to show how reprinting old poetry gets entangled with the eighteenth-century project of nation and empire building. The troubled nature of Percy's work is dramatized through his bitter conflict with Joseph Ritson, a rival editor and a fierce, contrarian Jacobin. Percy also writes on the page in the Egerton manuscript on which They Flee from Me appears, and meditation on this use of the manuscript allows for broader consideration of issues of editing, printing, poetry, and personal ambition.

Part III: More Learning, the British Library, and the Song of the Professor chapter abstract

The Third Part traces the profound reanimation of old poetry that coincides with the invention of English Literature as a school subject. The first section of this part concerns George Frederic Nott, a gifted editor who comprehensively reprinted Wyatt's poetry and They Flee from Me along the way. Further reflection on the life of the Egerton manuscript provides a context for the entry of the manuscript into the British Library, its current home. This part concludes by discussing the work of Arthur Quiller-Couch, the editor of the Oxford Book of English Verse and the first Professor of English at Cambridge University. The modern University and its associated culture is depicted as a new kind of Court, and the Professor as a new kind of (cultural) courtier, using poetry as the subject and object of ambition.

Part IV: Coming to America and Making it Big chapter abstract

In the twentieth century They Flee from Me becomes the Wyatt poem people know and reprint, when it becomes a kind of hero of the burgeoning industry of English teaching. This Part describes the full maturation of academic culture in the twentieth-century United States and the important place the study of old poetry was given in this culture. It focuses on Cleanth Brooks, a Yale English Professor who put They Flee from Me in his profoundly influential first textbook, in 1936. This Part argues that while methods have changed since the demise of Brooks and his New criticism, the reading and reprinting of old poetry are still primarily driven by the elaborate culture of testing, evaluation, and moral instruction, both for Professors and for students, resident in the contemporary education industry. The last reprinting considered at length is that of Stephen Greenblatt, in his era-creating Renaissance Self-Fashioning.

Conclusions chapter abstract

The final part meditates on several of the big questions that have been in play throughout the book. Is an old poem a form of heritable knowledge? Do people get better at poetry? Is it possible to be right when saying what an old poem is about and what function it had in the past? What kind of object does an old poem become when it is the target of schooling and evaluation? It argues that the reprinting of old poetry is always instrumental and always both wrong and right about the abject and triumphant individual old poem. It argues that They Flee from Me survived because it functions so well in the environment of the school and university-and that is because this environment is so similar to the (deadly, interesting) environment of Henry VIII's court.

Additional information

GOR013612898
9781503609280
1503609286
The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem: Reading and Remembering Thomas Wyatt by Peter Murphy
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Stanford University Press
20190827
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Long Public Life of a Short Private Poem