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William Empson: Among the Mandarins PDF

734 Pages·2009·12.47 MB·English
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WILLIAM EMPSON was the foremost English literary critic of his generation and a poet of fascinating intensity and virtuosity. If his career as a poet was sadly shortlived the poems themselves sent out shockwaves fromtheirepicentrethatinfluencedagenerationandstillregisterasnewto readerstoday.Empsonwasindeedamanofhugeenergyandcuriosity.A genuine eccentric, he remained imperturbable in the face of all the extraordinary circumstances in which he found himself. The discovery of contraceptivesinhispossessionbyabedmakerledtohisbeingrobbedofa promised Fellowship and his expulsion from Cambridge University. Yet Seven Types of Ambiguity, drafted while he was still an undergraduate, promptly brought him worldwide fame. Empson invented modern literary criticism in English. He acted too as a culturalfifth-columnist,challengingreceiveddoctrineinlifeandliterature. ‘It is a very good thing for a poet ... to be saying something which is consideredveryshockingatthetime,’hemaintained.‘Tobecomemorally independent of one’s formative society ... is the grandest theme of all literature, because it is the only means of moral progress.’ Hispubliclifetookhimthroughmanyofthemajorpoliticaleventsofthe modernworld—theriseofimperialisminJapan,theSino-Japanesewarin China, wartime propaganda for the BBC, and the Chinese civil war and Communist takeover of Peking in 1949. His friends and critical sparring partners included I. A. Richards, Kathleen Raine, J. B. S. Haldane, Humphrey Jennings, George Orwell, Robert Lowell, Dylan Thomas, Stephen Spender, Helen Gardner, and T. S. Eliot. ‘It is of great importance now that writers should try to keep a certain world-mindedness,’heinsisted.‘Withouttheliteraturesyoucannothavea sense of history, and history is like the balancing-pole of the tightrope- walker ... ;andnowadaysweverymuchneed thelongerbalancing-pole of not national but world history.’ His passionate world-mindedness, and his humanism, combativeness, and wit, are fully in evidence in this, the first of two volumes exploring his remarkable life and work. John Haffenden is Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield. His published books include the two-volume definitive biog- raphy of Empson, as well as The Life of John Berryman; W. H. Auden: The Critical Heritage; Viewpoints: Poets in Conversation; and Novelists in Interview. He haseditedBerryman’sShakespeareandseveralcollectionsofworksbyWilliam Empson including Complete Poems and Selected Letters. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. This page intentionally left blank W I L L I A M E M P S O N AMONG THE MANDARINS JOHN HAFFENDEN 1 3 GreatClarendonStreet,Oxfordox26dp OxfordUniversityPressisadepartmentoftheUniversityofOxford. IffurtherstheUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellenceinresearch,scholarship, andeducationbypublishingworldwidein Oxford NewYork Auckland CapeTown DaresSalaam HongKong Karachi KualaLumpur Madrid Melbourne MexicoCity Nairobi NewDelhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto WithoYcesin Argentina Austria Brazil Chile CzechRepublic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore SouthKorea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam PublishedintheUnitedStates byOxfordUniversityPressInc.,NewYork (cid:1)JohnHaffenden2005 Themoralrightsoftheauthorhavebeenasserted DatabaserightOxfordUniversityPress(maker) Firstpublished2005 Firstpublishedinpaperback2009 Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans, withoutthepriorpermissioninwritingofOxfordUniversityPress, orasexpresslypermittedbylaw,orundertermsagreedwiththeappropriate reprographicsrightsorganization.Enquiriesconcerningreproduction outsidethescopeoftheaboveshouldbesenttotheRightsDepartment, OxfordUniversityPress,attheaddressabove Youmustnotcirculatethisbookinanyotherbindingorcover andyoumustimposethissameconditiononanyacquirer BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData Dataavailable LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData Dataavailable TypesetbySPIPublisherServices,Pondicherry,India PrintedinGreatBritainonacid-freepaperby CPIAntonyRowe,Chippenham,Wiltshire ISBN978–0–19–953991–8(Pbk.) 978–0–19–927659–2(Hbk.) 13579108642 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Ihave incurred many debts while researching this biography, in Great Britain, the USA, China, and Japan. The task began, in some sort, as early as 1982, when I plucked up the courage to ask Sir William Empson whether he proposed to write his memoirs. ‘Possibly, possibly,’ he responded. ‘Er, do you really think you will?’ I pressed on (I had spent many weeks nerving myself to this moment). ‘Oh, probably not,’ he granted. ‘Then would you mind if I begin to gather materials towards a biography...?’(LaterIwoulddiscoveralettertohisfriendandpublisher Ian Parsons, written long before I asked my impertinent question—on 16 January 1973—in which he anticipated, though with little enthusiasm, the far-oV time when his life’s work might be polished oV and he could beginonanautobiography:‘WhenIampastanythingelsemaybeIwillbe abletodictatemymemoirs.’)Idon’trecallwhetheritwasthatdayorona later occasion that he Wnally gave me his permission, which essentially consisted of a handwritten note requesting librarians and others to make availabletomeanylettersorotherpapersintheircontrol.Idoremember asking him further, ‘Perhaps you’d like to read my biography of John Berryman?’‘Oh,I’vereaditalready,’hepromptlycameout.‘Ireaditwith great interest and admiration...The only trouble is, these Americans seem to have kept all their letters and diaries. I haven’t.’ The last was saidwithapalpablenoteofglee.SometimeafterhisdeathIwastoldhe’d onceexpressedtheviewthathisbiographywasnow‘insafehands’,which Ithinkhastobetakenasoneofhismoreaccomplishedandperhapsmost mischievous ambiguities. One other exchange of which I have a vivid memory is when I temer- ariously(Iwasbraverinthosedays)askedhimwhether—giventhatIhad undertakentoresearchhislifeevenwhilehewasstillalive—hewantedany ground rules: whether I should draw short of investigating his private life (I did not then realize that even the Empsons’ private life tended to be vi Acknowledgements conducted in a rather public fashion). He was not much given to eye contact—he could often look hooded or abstracted, or roll his eyes over the ceiling while he considered a matter; or else he would appear to be directinghisvoiceintothefurofthegingercat,calledjust‘Cat’,thatsaton his lap—but on this occasion he looked me suddenly straight in the eye. ‘Ground rules? Certainly not! Just get on with it.’ Ithankhimforhisfaith;sotooHetta,LadyEmpson,forsustainingthat unconditionaltrustovertheyears,andthroughmanyamusingandsome- timesunnervingvisitstoherhomeatStudioHouseinHampstead.Likeso many biographers, I resolved at an early stage to try to avoid putting myselfintotoogreatadebttomysubjectandhisfamily,incasetheidealof disinterested scholarship should somehow be compromised in conse- quence. However, after quite a while—at a period when I was visiting Hampstead about once a month to spend a day or so going over some of the papers that Empson did happily leave stockpiled in his den—one evening proved to be so lavish with alcohol that I was almost incapable of making my way elsewhere for the night. I was bidden to sleep in William’s bed. Later, while swimming on his bed and skimming through someofhisnotebooks,Isuddenlyspottedonthedeskatall,buV-coloured carton. Indulging the biographer’s besetting nosiness, and somehow as- suming in my grossly fuddled state that this mysterious package must contain something special like a bottle of malt whisky, I proceeded to pull up the tab, only to discover, with something approaching a galvanic shock, a label bearing the name ‘william empson’. Worse still, at that precisemoment,thedoorXewopenandHettaEmpson’sarmXashedout toseizethevesselfromme.‘Whateverelseyoudo,you’renotsleepingwith William!’she pronounced like a Wildean dowager. It turned out that she had forgotten for many weeks to collect his ashes from the crematorium: onlyonthatdayhadshefulWlledthatduty;andonlyinthesmallhoursdid shethinkthatImightnotwishtospendthenightwithmysubjectinquite such a state. I am grateful to the Empson family for their long patience, their friendliness, and their tremendous hospitality, and for continuing to en- trustmewiththistaskafterthedeathofHettaEmpson:primarily,Moga- dor Empson and Jacob Empson, and their wives; Simon Duval Smith, Saul Empson, Benjamin Empson, James Empson, the late Charles Emp- son, the late Sir Charles Empson, and the late Lady (Monica) Empson. I am indebted to the British Academy for a Research Readership in 1989–91, and for a later grant-in-aid; and no less to the Arts Council of GreatBritain,theSocietyofAuthors,andtheResearchFundofSheYeld Acknowledgements vii University for awards towards the costs of my research over the years. I simply could not have progressed with the job without such help. Many libraries and other organizations and institutions have been equally generous in aVording me accommodation, or in providing re- search facilities of one sort or another. I am eager Wrst of all to thank the HoughtonLibrary,HarvardUniversity(custodiansince1986oftheEmp- son Papers), and in particular Leslie Morris (Curator of Manuscripts), RodneyG.Dennis(formerCurator),andElizabethA.Falsey(whounder- tooktheawesomejobofpreparinganinventoryofthepapers).Iamdeeply grateful too to the authorities of Peking University, Peking, who kindly hosted my initial visit in 1984; the British Embassy, Peking (Alan Maley, First Secretary, Cultural Section, British Embassy, and Martin Davidson; David Marler, Cultural Counsellor, British Council Representative in China); the British Council, London (Angela Udall, Leigh Gibson, Spe- cialist Tours Department; Martin Carney; Adrian Johnson, Cultural Counsellor and British Council Representative, Peking); the British Embassy Cultural Department, the British Council, Tokyo (Katsumi Higashida);BBCWrittenArchivesCentre,Caversham,Reading(Jacque- line Kavanagh, Written Archives OYcer; Gwyniver Jones, Assistant-in- Charge, Enquiries; John Jordan, Enquiry Assistant); Beinecke Library, Yale University; British Film Institute; Department of Manuscripts, The British Library; Butler Library, Columbia University (Bernard Crystal, Librarian for Rare Books and Manuscripts; Kenneth A. Lohf, former Librarian); Chalmers Memorial Library, Kenyon College (Thomas B. Greenslade, College Archivist); Chatto & Windus; School Library, Eton College(M.C.Meredith);DistrictProbateRegistry,York;Embassyofthe People’s Republic of China (Ji Chaozhu, Ambassador; Chen Huaizhi, Cultural Department); Exeter University Library (Alistair Patterson); GooleLibrary;HaileyburyCollege;HarryRansomHumanitiesResearch Center, University of Texas at Austin (Ellen S. Dunlap, Research Librar- ian;CathyHenderson,ResearchAssociate);HumbersideCountyRecord OYce, Beverley; King’s College, Cambridge (Dr Michael Halls, former archivist); the Library of Congress, Washington, DC; Magdalen College, Oxford; Magdalene College, Cambridge; Mills Memorial Library, McMaster University (Carl Spadoni, Research Collections Librarian); theNationalArchives,Washington,DC(KathieNicastro);Library/Infor- mation Service, National Sound Archive, British Library (Lee Taylor); Newnham College Library, Cambridge; Registrar of the Roll, Newnham College; North Yorkshire County Library, York; Princeton University Library (Jean F. Preston, Curator of Manuscripts); the Public Record viii Acknowledgements OYce, London; Reading University Library (Michael Bott); Rockefeller ArchiveCentre,Tarrytown,NewYork;StJohn’sCollege,Oxford;School ofOrientialandAfricanStudies,London;theSocietyofAuthors;theSouth ChinaMorningPost;TrinityCollege,Cambridge;theLibrary,Universityof Victoria, Canada (Chris Petter, University Archivist and Head of Special Collections); Victoria & Albert Museum Archives; Wilson Library, Uni- versityofMinnesota;WinchesterCollege(DrRogerCustance,Archivist); WrenLibrary,TrinityCollege,Cambridge(DrDavidMcKitterick);York- shire County Archives, Beverley; and Yunnan Normal University, Kun- ming (which generously invited me to attend the celebrations in October 1988markingtheWftiethanniversaryoftheSouthwestAssociatedUniver- sity). IndividualswhohavemostkindlyaVordedmeinformation,adviceand assistance in various capacities include Professor Peter Alexander, A. Alvarez, Sir Michael and Lady Atiyah, Dr Charles Aylmer, Professor Bao Zhi-yi, Jonathan Barker, Sebastian Barker, Robert J. Bertholf (Cur- ator,ThePoetry/RareBooksCollection,StateUniversityofNewYorkat BuValo), Andrew Best, the late Professor Bian Zhi Lin, the late Professor Max Black, Dr Sidney Bolt, the late Ronald Bottrall, Mrs Margaret Bottrall, Gordon Bowker, the late Professor Muriel Bradbrook, Baroness Brigstocke, Mrs J. J. Brodrick, Sally Brown, the late Arthur Calder- Marshall, James Campbell, Professor John Carey, Professor Owen Chadwick,ChangChu-Tse(whogenerouslyundertooktobemycicerone inthecityofKunminginthespringof1984),ProfessorChaoChao-hsiung, Diana Chardin, Igor ChroustchoV, Chien Chung-shu, Ci Ji-wei, Patrick Clapham, Dr Colin Clark, Dr John Constable, the late Alistair Cooke, ArthurCooper,LauraPietersCordy,CliveW.Cornell(W.HeVer&Sons Ltd), Sir Hugh Cortazzi, Jenny Cowan, Mrs C. Cruickshank (Archivist, Faber & Faber), Peter Currie, Dr Gordon Daniels, the late Hugh Sykes Davies, Professor Frank Day, the late Lord Devlin, Professor Martin Dodsworth,L. K. DuV, the late Elsie Duncan-Jones, Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones, Professor Svetlana Rimsky-Korsakov Dyer, H. J. Easter- ling,ProfessorRichardEberhart,MrsValerieEliot,thelateD.J.Enright, Feng Cun-li, the late Professor Feng You-lan, the late Professor C.P.Fitzgerald,DrChrisFletcher,ProfessorValerieFlint,DrShirleyFoster, D.C.R.Francombe,MrsPaddyFraser,MrsRintaroFukuhara,Professor David Fuller, John Fuller, Milla Gapanovich, Helen Gardner (Society of Authors), Margaret Gardiner, Professor Stephen Garrett, Kathleen Gibberd, the late Roma Gill, Reginald Goodchild, Adrian Goodman, Professor W. Terrence Gordon, T. W. Graham, Professor Gayle Greene, Acknowledgements ix DrEricGriYths,RuthGunstone,DrMichaelHalls,thelateIanHamilton, JasonHarding,ClaireHarman,SelinaHastings,thelateProfessorChris- topher Hawkes, Professor David Hawkes, the late Sir William Hayter, GeoVrey Hazelden, Professor He Zhao-wu, Christopher Heywood, Andrew and Geraldine Hillier, Charles Hobday, Professor Philip Hobs- baum, Anthony Hobson, Theodore Hofmann, Dr Eric Homberger, the late Michael Hope, the late Professor Graham Hough, Hsu¨ Yuan-chung, ProfessorHuangMing-yie,ProfessorHuangZhong-hua,AllegraHuston, Professor Kazuo Irie, Professor Yukio Irie, Professor John Israel, Kevin Jackson, Mark Jacobs, Lord Jay, Elizabeth Jenkins, Dr Nicholas Jenkins, Mary-LouJennings,JiChaozhu,ProfessorJinDi,ProfessorJinFa-xin,the late Professor Jin Yue Lin, James Joll, the late John Henry (David) Jones, Professor Kai Yuzuru, Professor Ryuichi Kajiki, Kang Hong-qiu, Paul Keegan, Anne Kelly, Professor Richard J. Kelly, Professor Sir Frank Kermode,GraceMargerieKey,thelateDavidKidd,Rev.H.P.Kingdon, Robert Lazarus, the late Sir Desmond Lee, the late Lady Lee, Dr E. S. Leedham-Green, the late Professor Peter Levi, the late Professor Li Fu- ning, Professor Li Zhiwei, H. Lintott, the late Lord Listowel, Professor JamesJ.Y.Liu,MrsLiuRuoduan,LiuYuanZi,DrRichardLuckett,Jim McCue,AnneMcDermid,thelateDrEricMackerness,thelateProfessor Ian MacKillop, Lachlan Mackinnon, Mrs Miriam MacIver, Alan and Robin Maclean, the late Professor Charles Madge, Dr D. H. Marrian, thelateJeremyMaule,ProfessorGiorgioMelchiori,M.C.Meredith,Mrs Sybil Meredith, M. F. Micklethwait, Seitoku Minagawa (Division of Administrative AVairs, University of Tsukuba), Mineo Moriya (The Rising Generation),SirJeremyMorse,MarjorieMosby,ProfessorAndrewMotion, ProfessorShigehisaNarita,StellaMaryNewton,YoshioNakano,Professor Christopher Norris, Professor Kazuo Ogawa, Sumie Okada, Timothy O’Sullivan, A. E. B. Owen, Dr Barbara Ozieblo, Maggie Fitzgerald, the lateIanParsons,LucyPascocello(RightsandPermissionsManager,Har- court Brace & Company), Mrs Peng Jing-fu, Peng Wen-lan, Dr Seamus Perry, David M. Petherbridge (General Manager, Ardsley Moat House, Barnsley),DrDavidPirie,DrKatePrice,EdwinPritchard,QiSheng-qiao, QienXuexi,QuanHui-sien,thelateSirPeterQuennell,DrE.A.Radice, Craig Raine, the late Dr Kathleen Raine, Peter Robinson, the late Theodore Redpath, the late Dorothea Richards, Professor Christopher Ricks, Susan Rieger, Professor Andrew Roberts, Professor Neil Roberts, LisaA.Rodensky,DerekRoper,SachiyoRound,thelateDrA.L.Rowse, Professor John Paul Russo, Ray Ryan, the late Dr George Rylands, JamesSabben-Clare,LeoSalingar,JohnSaxby,ProfessorEitaroSayama,

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William Empson was the foremost English literary critic of the twentieth century. He was a man of huge energy and curiosity, and a genuine eccentric who remained imperturbable in the face of all the extraordinary circumstances in which he found himself. The discovery of contraceptives in his possess
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