The Lytle-Tate Letters : The title: Correspondence of Andrew Lytle and Allen Tate Lytle, Andrew Nelson.; Tate, Allen; Young, author: Thomas Daniel; Sarcone, Elizabeth publisher: University Press of Mississippi isbn10 | asin: 0878053263 print isbn13: 9780878053261 ebook isbn13: 9780585233710 language: English Lytle, Andrew Nelson,--1902- -- Correspondence, Southern States-- subject Intellectual life--20th century, Tate, Allen,- -1899- --Correspondence, Authors, American--20th century--Correspondence. publication date: 1987 lcc: PS3523.Y88Z497 1987eb ddc: 816/.52/08 Lytle, Andrew Nelson,--1902- -- Correspondence, Southern States-- subject: Intellectual life--20th century, Tate, Allen,- -1899- --Correspondence, Authors, American--20th century--Correspondence. Page iii The Lytle-Tate Letters The Correspondence of Andrew Lytle and Allen Tate Edited by Thomas Daniel Young and Elizabeth Sarcone University Press Of Mississippi Jackson & London Page iv Copyright © 1987 by the University Press of Mississippi All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. British Library Cataloguing in Publication data is available. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Lytle, Andrew Nelson, 1902 The Lytle-Tate letters: the correspondence of Andrew Lytle and Allen Tate/edited by Thomas Daniel Young and Elizabeth Sarcone. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 0878053263 (alk. paper) 1. Lytle, Andrew Nelson, 1902 Correspondence. 2. Tate, Allen, 1899 Correspondence. 3. Authors, American20th centuryCorrespondence. I. Tate, Allen, 1899 . II. Young. Thomas Daniel, 1919 . III. Sarcone, Elizabeth, 1947 . IV. Title. PS3523.Y88Z497 1987 816'.52'08dc19 87-16014 CIP Page v Contents Introduction vii Chronologies xiii The Letters I 3 19271939 II 149 19401949 III 219 19501959 IV 293 19601968 Appendixes 365 Index 383 Page vii Introduction These letters reveal that a closer, more personal relationship existed between Andrew Lytle and Allen Tate than that between any of the other Nashville writers. In fact one would have to search carefully through literary history to find two other writers who confided so completely in each other. Tate wrote many letters to other poets, critics, and novelists. In fact after searching through the collections of letters at Princeton and Vanderbiltand there are many to and from him elsewhereone begins to wonder how Tate had time to produce nearly fifty books,which included more than two hundred poems and nearly as many essays. In every genre in which he worked, furthermore, including fiction, he is one of the most original and influential artists in modern American literature. In a closely printed volume of more than four-hundred pages of The Selected Letters of John Crowe Ransom, about half of the letters are to Tate, and there is sufficient evidence to support the supposition that Tate answered every letter he received. Few of these letters, however, were personal letters. Many of them were devoted to developing a theory of the nature and function of poetry or to discussing ways in which one could best employ an influential literary quarterly. The correspondence between Tate and Donald Davidson makes a book of more than four-hundred pages. Although there is some discussion of personal matters, particularly to poems, essays, and books that both men had written, the most interesting and informative of the letters are those devoted to the activities of the Fugitives and the Agrarians. For nearly thirty years Tate corresponded with John Peale Bishop, and it is true that some of the letters were devoted to quasi-personal Page viii matters, but most of them were concerned with close and helpful readings of each other's poems or to the state of the vocation of letters in America. This is not to say that there was not a feeling of admiration and respect between the two men. Bishop admitted more than once that had it not been for Tate, he probably would have given up the writing of poetry while he was a young man. Tate's admiration for Bishop, as man and poet, is obvious, not only in his letters but in the essays he wrote about Bishop, and the edition of his friend's poetry he edited after Bishop's death. These three men are not the only ones to whom Tate wrote. There were also T. S. Eliot, Fitzgerald, Harriet Monroe, Marianne Moore, and many, many others. The letters to Lytle, however, are different. Not only did these two discuss in minute details the poems, stories, essays, novels, or plays that the other was writing, they wrote about I'll Take My Stand, Who Owns America? and Southern art, culture and social institutions. They discussed frankly, and not always uncritically, their mutual friends: Davidson, Ransom, and Robert Penn Warren. The correspondence gets off to a slow start. There is no evidence to indicate that Lytle and Tate were close friends at Vanderbilt. Lytle was never a member of the Fugitives, though he did attend one or two meetings of the group and he published an undistinguished poem, "Edward Graves," in The Fugitive as well as one or two in Driftwood Flames, the undergraduate literary magazine. At Vanderbilt Lytle's primary literary interest was drama, and immediately after graduation he enrolled in George Pierce Baker's school of drama at Yale. About the same time Tate went to New York to try to earn his living at freelance journalism. Lytle appeared as an actor a few times in Off- Broadway Theaters, Tate attended as many of the performances as he could, and wrote Lytle complimentary letters about his presentation of his roles, although he always protested that he knew nothing about drama and surely could not offer any helpful criticism. Then Tate, apparently lonely and wanting some reminder of his Nashville days, began writing Lytle to visit him and his wife, Caroline Gordon, so there are many notes of invitation and acceptance or regrets. There are also many apologies because promises were not kept. Tate and Lytle began to realize that they were kindred spirits, however, after Lytle moved back to Tennessee and was living either in Murfreesboro or at Cornsilk, the family plantation near Guntersville, Page ix Alabama. Although Tate was in France on a Guggenheim Fellowship, he and Lytle began to exchange views about the proposed symposium defending the South and its culture. They agreed from the first in their opposition to the emphasis that modern society has placed on technology and consumer economics. They believed such emphasis had tended to dehumanize man so that he could no longer create an intellectual climate in which Christian values could exist. They did not believe that the problems of modern man could be solved by science or the planned society of some social scientists. Man should not accept change in the name of progress. He should be convinced that that which he was accepting was superior to that which he was rejecting. All of these things and more, both agreed on completely, but they discovered how close their agreement was only after their detailed discussion of these matters in their letters. Along with Robert Penn Warren, they strongly opposed calling the symposium I'll Take My Stand because they thought a phrase from a popular song was little more than a Madison Avenue advertising slogan, intended to attract attention, and did little to suggest the nature and intensity of their protests. Although it must be said that the title suggested by the dissentersTracts Against Communismwas little more appropriate than the one used. The agreement between Tate and Lytle on the essential purpose of the dissent was firmly established, however; therefore when Tate and Herbert Agar were planning Who Owns America? (1936), Lytle was Tate's principal advisor. Lytle and Tate were not in complete agreement, however, on the means by which one could acquire the good life. Lytle was convinced that being firmly settled on a piece of land and practicing subsistence farming was the only way one could be sure of avoiding the dehumanizing effects of uncontrolled acquisitive materialism. In his young and middle years, therefore, he was searching for a small farm on which he could raise most of his food and have sufficient time left
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