Part I
Susan Settlemyre Williams: This is Susan
Williams. I'm in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Virginia Commonwealth
University. And I'm in Charlottesville, Virginia. It's Thursday, March
14, 2002, and I am interviewing Eleanor Ross Taylor.
My first question was that I do think of you as
being part of one of the most brilliant and influential literary circles
in the twentieth century, with writers and critics like Robert Penn
Warren, John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, Randall Jarrell, Robert Lowell,
your own husband, Peter Taylor. And I wonder if you would just talk
a little bit about what that was like? How it affected your life and
how it affected your writing to be in a group like that?
Eleanor Ross Taylor: Well, it made all the
difference in the world, and it began with my being a student of Allen
Tate and Caroline Gordon [Tate] in Greensboro at the Women's College
of the University of North Carolina [now the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro]that wonderful President Jackson there, who decided
that we couldn't compete with Chapel Hill except in the arts, and so
he got the Tates. And they were so encouraging to me from the very beginning,
and really that was the beginning. I guess then I got a scholarship
to Vanderbilt to study with Donald Davidson, and Allen Tate of course
got me that, and he did all sorts of things for me.
And then later on, after Peter and I were married,
Peter had a job at Kenyon College, and we got to know the Ransoms very
well, and that was a wonderful period for us, though I don't that think
there was a literary influence in any way. But Peter had known Allen
Tate as a student at Southwestern. After he had dropped out of Vanderbilt
and had his little stint in real estate, he took some classes at Southwestern,
and one in writing and he met them there. So Peter and I met in Monteagle
[TN] when we both visited Allen Tate and Caroline Gordon; and the Tates
had taken a cottage that winter with Robert Lowell and Jean Stafford;
and they were all writing books, you know. And so we were up there for
the weekend, and that's when Peter and I met. And then later on, after
we were married, I had long admired Randall Jarrell, not only for his
poetry, but for his brilliant reviews in the magazines; and I knew that
Peter had been at Vanderbilt at the same time he was, and so I made
Peter look Randall up. And I wanted to be introduced to Randall Jarrell
and admire him, and then Peter got Randall a job at Greensboro, where
we were at that time, my alma mater.
SSW: To my everlasting gratitude, in fact.
Were any of the other . . .
ERT: Robert Penn Warren . . . he came to
an arts forum in Greensboro when the Tates were there, and that was
my first meeting with him. But then we did see them off and on over
the years, and he was just such a wonderfully gregarious man, you know.
In fact, he was instrumental in helping my brothers have their novels
published by Houghton Mifflin, with Houghton Mifflin fellowships.
SSW: What were your brothers' books?
ERT: My brother James' book is called They
Don't Dance Much, and it's supposed to be a little classic noir
fiction and Higgins is always mentioning it when he writes reviews.
But I introduced him to the Tates because he was writing this novel.
The girl he was in love with had just jilted him, so the only thing
he could do was write a novel. And they liked it, and they liked his
writing, and they helped him get printed in the Partisan Review and
got his novel published.
SSW: That's wonderful. So they were very
supportive?
ERT: They were wonderful to students, and
Caroline particularly always said, "You owe it to young writers
to help them." And she did. And, of course, they helped Robert
Lowell.
SSW: Oh, yes. That's wonderful when there
are people who will do that, and not everybody does. Were any of the
others particularly close?
ERT: The Jarrells were; Peter and CalLowellroomed
together at Kenyon, so they were close, very close over the years, and
we had lots of visits back and forth with the Lowells and with Cal by
himself, with both his wives. And then our friendship with the Jarrells
was very close too. Mackie Jarrellwe shared a duplex with Randall's
first wife Mackie and with him when our daughter was just a baby in
Greensboro and just saw them constantly. Nothing could be nicer than
to have close contact with one of the really poetic geniuses, as I think
Randall was. Don't you?
SSW: Oh, yes. Yes, indeed. He was the reason
I went to UNC-G.
ERT: Did you have a class with him?
SSW: He died before I was eligible for his
first class.
ERT: Those were very unhappy years for him.
Mackie was an interesting person. They had met in Texas, but she was
not a writer; she was a scholar.
SSW: He was married to Mary Jarrell when
I was there, and I didn't know her. I mean, I saw her around campus.
Since you've mentioned Jarrell, and I do always think of Taylors and
Jarrells sort of inseparably, I wonder if you'll talk a little bit about
your relationship with Jarrell? I know he admired your work enormously.
Did look at each other's work?
ERT: Well, we were living in that duplex
together. Of course, I had written poems for a long time, and I began
writing poems again; and Peter said, "You ought to show these to
Randall." And I was reluctant, and so he took me over across the
hall to the Jarrell duplex and said, "I've taken the little girl
by the hand and brought her here to show you her poems." And Randall
read them, and he was very nice about them, and he actually got my poems
printed. He sent some of them to various magazines. Accent was
the first magazine I think I ever printed in, because Randall sent them
there. And then he wrote an introduction, as you may know, to my first
book.
SSW: Yes, and he was not necessarily the
kindest of critics sometimes.
ERT: Oh no, he wasn't. But I remember once
when he took me to his office to seriously go over a whole batch of
poems with me and how marvelous he was at understanding exactly what
you meant when you were writing a poem. He really had so much insight
into the meaning of a poem. And he had wonderful little suggestionslike
he'd say, "In this line, I think you might repeat that word, just
to make an echo in that line." And it was always a wonderful suggestion.
It slowed it down and emphasized it.
SSW: So you learned a lot from him?
ERT: So I learned a lot from him, really.
But he was not didactic in any way.
SSW: Was it more in the matter of technique
or in the approach to poetry in general?
ERT: I'm not sure. I don't think it was technique.
I think it was just putting me on the right track and saying, "I
don't think this poem works," and the others that did.
SSW: That's a wonderful gift to have.
ERT: It is.
SSW: The adjectives that I see most often
and that come to my mind most often about your work are words like "unique"
and "original." Sometimes I see you mentioned in the same
sentence with Emily Dickinson or Marianne Moore or Elizabeth Bishop,
but not usually with the suggestion that you were influenced by them,
just more that you were all exemplars of originality. But I wondered
if there were poets that you considered to be an influence on your work?
ERT: Well, the firstof course I loved
Emily Dickinson and read a lot of Emily Dickinson earlybut the
first poet that really made me feel that poetry was contemporary and
could relate to me right now, in the way that you know that all those
wonderful heroines of poetry and heroes do, was Edna St. Vincent Millay.
I read her as a teenager in school and just fell in love with her poems.
I think it gave me a feeling of being able to approach current, everyday
life.
As for being original, I think that every poet in
a way is original because I think that a work of art really reflects
the psyche of the artist. And sometimes it's a problem, and sometimes
it'sdon't you think?a sort of joy or something like that.
And oftentimes the artist doesn't really know what it is they're
getting rid of or expressing in a poem. They're reaching for understanding,
I think, lots of times, whether they know it or not. And this is what
makes themdon't you think?original.
SSW: I've heard people say too, and I find
this myself, that I don't know where a poem is going when I start on
it; I just know I'm engaged by it.
ERT: It's almost as though there's a voice
leading you in these things, and there really isit sounds ridiculous
but . . .
SSW: I always have to be a little careful
using the word "channeling," but that does come to mind sometimes.
So how old were you when you started writing poetry?
ERT: I think the first poem I ever wrote
was when I was nine years old and The Norwood News offered a
prize to the student who wrote a poem they would print in the paper,
and so I won.
SSW: Well, congratulations.
ERT: And then later on The Charlotte Observer,
did you see The Charlotte Observer?
SSW: We used to get The Charlotte Observer.
ERT: But you don't date back to the Sunshine
Page, which was a kind of children's supplement in which young people,
children really, could print stories and poems. And they paidlet's
see, they paid two dollars for the prize one and one dollar for the
second prize or something like that; and let me tell you, that meant
a lot to a child on the farm in the Depression.
SSW: Oh, yeah, that was good money then.
ERT: So I sent in a lot of things to that.
SSW: I wondered, because it seems to me that
so many people who write poetry in particular start very young.
ERT: Well, I did.
SSW: And I'm wondering, because you had mentioned
Millay and Dickinson particularly, it seems to me that the climate for
women poets has changed enormously for the better in the past thirty
years. And I just wondered what it was like being a woman poet back
in the 'fifties, say, when things were very conservative? Was it harder
to get published?
ERT: I didn't think so. I never felt any
discrimination at all. I never suffered from that in any way that I
know of. Of course I didn't send poems out. I really did not. Because
my productive [period], when I began printing, was after I was married
and after I had a baby; and my husband's career really came first. And
I didn't press my career at all, so it was not something that I worried
about or thought about, whether I was being discriminated against or
whether I was having a hard time.
SSW: So Wilderness of Ladies didn't
come out until, what, 1960?
ERT: I think it was '60.
SSW: I had wondered because I had something
of a sense sometimes in college that there were poets and then there
were women poets. And there was a difference.
ERT: I must say I do feel that Edna St Vincent
Millay was discriminated against by some of the New Criticsdon't
you think so?in some of those essays, and really unfairly just
because it was a kind of inherited prejudice against women.
SSW: That's what I've wondered because we
were sometimes given the impression that we didn't study women poets,
I think Emily Dickinson was the only woman poet that was taught when
I was at UNC-G.
ERT: But I never felt it. I didn't.
SSW: I was just curious about that because
clearly some people like Bishop managed to transcend it without feeling
the effect.
ERT: And I think by the time she came along
too, there was . . . And you know Randall was one of the most
enthusiastic people about women poets, he really was. And he loved Elizabeth
Bishop's poems. He was always praising them, you know,
privately and publicly.
Part II
SSW: This is Susan Williams. I'm in the MFA
Program in Creative Writing at Virginia Commonwealth University. And
I'm in Charlottesville, Virginia. It's Thursday, March 14, 2002, and
I am interviewing Eleanor Ross Taylor.
One thing that I have enjoyed about
your poemsthis actually reminds me a little bit of Bishop toois
the way you are able to work in some really down-home expressions and
events, episodes and characters, into work that isn't really folksy
at all. I think that's a difficult trick to pull off.
ERT: I'm flattered that you
say that. I do think that some of those early poems that had so many
characters in them, that did have the expressions that you refer to,
were sort of frustrated short stories, because I had also written stories
when I was in college and fiction. And after I was married there, just
was not time; fiction takes so much more time. So I do think that some
of that was channeled into the poems in a way.
SSW: But they come across as
poems, not poetic short stories.
ERT: That's true.
SSW: I've always been intrigued
by how you can compress narrative and suggest it without having to spell
it out. That's not an easy thing to do either.
ERT: I wasn't really conscious
of how I was doing it.
SSW: It did seem to me that,
in those sort of narrative or quasi-narrative poems, you were honoring
your heritage.
ERT: I've come to feel now that
those poems are much too long. And, of course, as one progresses, one
does write different kinds of things over a lifetime. But, well, Donald
Justice said a few years ago, poems should be one page, no more than
one page. And I've come to feel that too. I feel that a long poem is
not a successoftentimes. And when I pick up a magazine and see
a great many poems that run two or three pages, it seems to me that
they ought to be one page. You don't have this feeling?
SSW: My poems tend to be a little
longer than they should be. But you see it as a paring down as you've
grown with your poetry?
ERT: I think in a way, and,
as I said, the whole business of being a frustrated fiction writer has
sort of disappeared.
SSW: I did come across a short
story that you'd written in an early issue of Shenandoah.
ERT: I've printed five or six
stories, I guessmaybe enough for a book, I'm not sure, some before
I was married and then just shortly after I was married. I had one in
Best American Short Stories one year.
SSW: Did you feel that there
was a conflict and that writing short stories took awayyou lost
a poem in the process of writing of a short story?
ERT: I didn't actually feel
that. I think in a way that you write fiction, the best fiction, because
you have something to say, and you know what it is, and you're saying
it. You may be saying it obliquely, but you're on the track of something,
a message almost. And it seems to me that, in a poem, it's much more
unconscious, but this may be my individual weakness. You're searching
in the poem. Now, my husband, whose stories are better than mine, said
that he wrote stories to find out what he thought. And that's, in a
way, I guess, is what I write poems for. So it may be that it's just
whatever you do.
SSW: So with a story you really
know from the start how you want it to go?
ERT: I think so.
SSW: And the poem is something
of an adventure?
ERT: It's a search. I think
it is, but this is just my feeling about it.
SSW: I think that rings true,
certainly to me. And then another quality of your poetrythis is
my last question that I have on the list, but we'll see what happensand
another quality that invites comparison with Elizabeth Bishop is that
sort of self-effacement, with the poet almost disappearing behind the
poem. And, since Confessionalism, that approach has been pretty rare;
and I'm just curious if you'd comment about some of the aesthetic choicesthe
writerly choices, not the personal choicesbehind your use of personae
and an "I" which is more a pair of eyes than an actor in the
poems?
ERT: Well, I don't think that
I'm very conscious of that, but this makes me think of something that
I am conscious of a lot, and that is that I think a poet like Sylvia
Plath, for all her genius, is somebody that I don't really like to go
back to because I feel that there is so much bitterness and anger in
the poems. And I feel that, when you have that, that comes between you
and
do you understand?
SSW: Personally I do.
ERT: And I think of other poets
too, and I feel that there is hatred in the poems and resentment and
warfare, as it were; and I feel that they may be brilliant, and the
poet writing them may have [a] terrific gift, but they're not pleasant
to go back to. And I find that I don't.
SSW: You find that the anger
is sort of unresolved and unworked-through?
ERT: I do.
SSW: I know from myself that,
when I am dealing with an emotional subject, I often find myself using
more of a formal technique, using rhyme to give me some control.
ETR: That's a good idea, that's
right. It seems to me that Tate and Ransom and Warren really, though
he changed a little bit, and Edna St Vincent Millaythe poets up
until Frost really began to make his influence felt, I thinkwere
formalists; and then Frost was just so wonderful. And I think Randall
had a moment when he turned away from Tate and those people and adoptedhe
decided the idiom he wanted to communicate, that everyday idiom and
conversational tone was important; and that was what he was going for.
And it makes his poems wonderful, I think, because there is so much
brilliance in them that, if they were also formal, they would almost
be inaccessible, I think.
SSW: Some of his persona poems
are very believable because you can hear the characters.
ERT: Yes, they are. And I think
it was deliberate on his part.
SSW: I know I've read that it
was a struggle with Lowell to get past
ERT: to break away
SSW: Yeah, to change his style
as well as what he was talking about.
ERT: Well, you know, LowellI
know that he is a great poet in that there are people who are better
critics than I am who probably do go back to him, but he is not somebody
that I go back to at all in the way that I do, for example, to just
little quotations from Jarrell's poems that come to me from time to
time. I don't mean to denigrate him, but I do think that he was a
made poet, that he was determined to be a poet; and I do think that
drive has a lot to do . . . and sometimes there are born poets who throw
their talent away. Don't you think so?
SSW: Oh, yes.
ERT: And then I think there
are people who have just the most modest gifts who are absolutely determined
to be writers; and they write novels, and they write poems, and they
work at it so hard that sometimes they almost invent talent and become
good.
SSW: And you would consider
Lowell one of those?
ERT: I really do, but that's
just my personal opinion. And you have to hand it to him, anybody who
devotes his life to doing that. And oh, he was well-read too and wonderful.
SSW: I remember reading some
of his early poems in a biography and thinking they were terrible.
ERT: They are, absolutely. I
agree.
SSW: It was encouraging to think
that you could overcome that. Are there poets writing now that you particularly
admire?
ERT: I'm ashamed to say that
I just read very little poetry now. I do subscribe to a good many of
the little magazines, and I flip through them, and now and then I take
a whole issue and read the whole thing just to kind of see, but names
don't come to me. I think that somebody I've liked a lot is Jeredith
Merrin. Do you know her poems at all?
SSW: I don't.
ERT: And I have much likedhe
just diedHerbert Morris, but he's somebody that . . . he absolutelyI
don't know whybut he stayed absolutely out of the whole network
of editors and reviewers and other poets and writing conferences. He
was just a solitary figure up there in Philadelphia writing his poems,
and they're long meditations, and I am just mad about them, and
I think someday they will be appreciated. Tony Hecht appreciated him,
and I think James Merrill did too. And when I asked Richard Wilbur once
in Key West just who Herbert Morris was, he said, "Oh, he's somebody
about our age who's just never cared to enter into the literary world."
And he agreed that he was a good poet.
SSW: More power to him.
ERT: But you know we have good
poets here, some good young poets here at [the University of] Virginia,
I think Deborah Nystrom is good, and Steve Cushman is good, and, of
course, Gregory Orr. These are the ones that I feel some kinship with,
and there are other poets that I feel kinship with that might not be
flattered at my feeling kinship with them. Because, well, for one thing,
a lot of them are women, and they have a Southern background that they
look at with ambivalent feelings, I think. People like Ellen [Bryant]
Voigt and Betty Adcock and Elizabeth [Seydel] Morgan.
SSW: All people that I admire
very much.
ERT: And I think Jane Cooper
is one of those too. I think she really is.