
Charles Mahoney, Romantics
and Renegades: The Poetics of Political Reaction. New York: Palgrave, 2003. x + 266pp. $90.00 (Hdbk;
ISBN: 0-333-96849-2).
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: On the Discrimination of Apostasies
1. "The Laureate Hearse Where Lyric Lies": The Making of Romantic Apostasy
2. The Mausoleum of Independence
3. "Lawless Sway," Pendulous Politics
4. Facing the Past: Spectral Apostasies
5. Upstaging the Fall: The Spectacle of Romantic Apostasy
6. Criticism on the Verge
Appendix: Overview of The Complete Works of William Hazlitt
Notes
Bibliobraphy
Index
Bibliographic Citation: Lapp, Robert
K. "On Charles Mahoney, Romantics and Renegades: The Politics of Political
Reaction." [date of access]. Romantic Circles Reviews 8.1
(2005): 8 pars. 28 Feb. 2005.
<http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/mahoney.html>.
Reviewed by
Robert K. Lapp
Mount
Allison University
- Skip over the title of this book to glance at the table of contents, where the key terms
"Hazlitt" and "Apostasy" point directly toward its major strengths.
"Repeatedly taking its bearings from Hazlitt's critical interventions of the
1810s" (2), this book makes a substantial contribution to Hazlitt studies by
reinforcing a trend toward the positive revaluation of his Regency writings, in particular
his relentless exposure of the political tergiversations of Wordsworth, Coleridge, and
Southey. More than this, Mahoney advances our understanding of the intersection of
literary and political discourse during the Regency by focussing on Hazlitt's master-term
"apostasy," discerning in it a far more resonant figure than its negative
connotations might suggest. By "pressuring" the term's "obliquely impacted
etymological resonances" (3), and by applying these to a series of nuanced and
illuminating close readings, Mahoney discovers that apostasy, in the writings of romantic
authors, comes to name something more than a mere "standing-off" or a
"standing-away" from a previously held political or religious principle.
Instead, "it repeatedly figures a standing so precarious as finally to be
indistinguishable from a fallingand not an isolated fall at that, but an
always-falling which can be seen to occur with reference not merely to political
principle, but, more unpredictably, literary language" (2). Readers alert to the
deconstructive turn will detect in this "always-falling" the familiar vertigo of
"an uncontainable falling characteristic of figurative language" in general, and
thus an inevitable swerve away from historical particularity toward the risky claim that
"romantic apostasy designates less a postrevolutionary historical phenomenon than an
abiding crisis in literary signification" (12). For now, however, let us set this
point aside, and instead hasten to note that Mahoney balances his figural analysis with
"detailed historical assessments of English literary and political culture from the
revolutionary decade of the 1790s through the reactionary years of the Regency" (4).
In this context, "romantic apostasy" comes more convincingly to name "a
particularly romantic anxiety concerning the precarious relation between literary language
and ideology," especially "those features of [such] language which seemingly
precipitate a falling in with power" (5).
- This analysis enables Mahoney to juxtapose meticulously constructed re-readings of such
familiar texts as Coleridge's 1790s odes and Wordsworth's sonnets with such defining
episodes in Regency culture as the appointment of Southey to the Laureateship in 1813,
Kemble's 1816 production of Coriolanus, and the entertaining twists and turns of
the "Wat Tyler affair" of 1817. Along the way we encounter not just
Hazlitt but also Leigh Hunt, not just The Examiner and The Courier but also The
Yellow Dwarf, and not just Abrams, Bate, and E. P. Thompson, but also Christensen,
Curran, Erdman, and Liu.
- To illustrate Mahoney's approach at its best, let us pause for a moment over Chapter 3,
"'Lawless Sway,' Pendulous Politics," which focuses primarily on Wordsworth's
"Sonnets, dedicated to Liberty." The phrase "Lawless Sway" is taken
from Wordsworth's "Sonnet on Milton," an indication that Mahoney is willing (and
able) to take on the huge topic areas of Milton's iconic status for the Romantics in
general, and Wordsworth's self-construction as Milton's poetic heir in particular. Yet it
also introduces a previously unexamined key term from Wordsworth's sonnets
("Sway"), which Mahoney is able to read in Wordsworth's primary sense of
"dominion" and in its usefully submerged secondary meaning of "the action
of swinging (pendulously)" (101)the figure that will most efficiently encode
Wordsworth's form of apostasy. The chapter then proceeds to shed new light on the massive
Wordsworth-Milton nexus by taking its bearings from one of Hazlitt's most apparently
egregious attacks on Wordswortha brief paragraph and footnote at the end of a
theatre review of Comus in The Examiner that contrasts Milton's consistency
of principle with Wordsworth's shifting politics, as evidenced in the latter's recently
collected Poems (1815). These, of course, Hazlitt has read with typical vigilance,
and discovered that not only has Wordsworth included a newly sycophantic "Sonnet to
the King" ("November, 1813"), "complimenting him on 'his royal
fortitude'" in the war with Napoleon, but he has "struck out of the
collection" some key lines from his 1790s "story of the Female Vagrant, which
very beautifully and affectingly describes the miseries brought on the lower classes by
war" (80).
- Mahoney then puts Hazlitt's incisive observation to work in a number of usefully
illuminating ways. He shows, for example, how it makes Hazlitt (from Wordsworth's point of
view) one of the poet's most "politically unfit readers" (122), thus contesting
the traditional view of Hazlitt as one of Wordsworth's most ideal readers (a view dating
back to Abrams's Natural Supernaturalism and based on selective quotation of
Hazlitt's remarks on the "revolutionary" poetics of the Lyrical Ballads).
But Hazlitt's comments in the essay on Comus also show how he participates in the
larger tendency at the time to think of Wordsworth and Milton in terms of one another.
Mahoney treats Wordsworth's own promotion of this identity in a detailed analysis of his
sonnets, supplementing Liu with Hazlitt in order to show that "the vaunting 'sway' of
Wordsworth's sonnets is not merely the dominion which the poet would check (Napoleon's)
or, later, celebrate (Wellington's), but also the vacillation of the poet who, in
educating power (clarifying the constitution of 'true Sway' for the imperial governor),
falls under its sway" (104). Finally, he is able to juxtapose Hazlitt's attack on the
1815 Poems with Leigh Hunt's striking retraction of it one week later in The
Examiner. Hunt, it seems, had fallen under Wordsworth's "sway" during the
latter's promotional visit to Hampstead, and Mahoney uses the details of this visit, and
the division of opinion it created between Hunt and Hazlitt, to determine that "the
most potent political implications of romantic criticisms of Wordsworth . . . can be read
in the conflicted constructions of Wordsworth as cultural property" (119). In a
brilliant coda to the chapter, he aligns this idea of "property" with the
patronage of Sir George Beaumont, as well as with Wordsworth's own enclosure of his
growing literary estate in the 1815 Poems, and finally with some of the lines from
the suppressed portion of the "The Female Vagrant" that depict "the
expulsion of the narrator and her father from their land" when they fall under the
"sway" of "a mansion proud" (122). As Mahoney makes clear in his
introduction, "the point of such a critique is not to expose the apostasies of the
Lake poets . . . but to analyse the formal and rhetorical structures of their
writings . . . which seemingly precipitate a falling in with power" (5).
- Though this brief summary does no justice to the intricate surface of Mahoney's
argument, it will give some sense of its range and structure. And the other chapters
contain similar feats of reading, whether it be to unpack the implications of Coleridge's
fascination with his own adage "Once a Jacobin always a Jacobin," Hazlitt's
witty inversion of this into "Once an Apostate and always an Apostate," the
epithet "renegado" flung at Southey in the context of the "Wat Tyler
affair," or the way Kemble's Coriolanus turns the sheer tenacity of standinghis
refusal to "bend"into tragic falling. Mahoney's innovation in each case is
to place emphasis less on the "political construction of apostasy (as an ethical
dereliction or betrayal)" and more on "its rhetorical status (as an
uncontainable falling characteristic of figurative language)" (5). As suggested at
the outset, this emphasis constitutes one of the strengths of the book, but also a point
of vulnerability. One promising feature of this approach, for example, is the
inevitability that Hazlitt himselfthat hero of unflinching consistency of
principlewill also be subject to the figurative "sway" of romantic
apostasy, that he will turn out to be, in Mahoney's suggestive phrase, a "closeted
Coriolanus" (146).
- This is precisely the aim of the final, climactic chapter, "Criticism on the
Verge," and yet this turns out to be the least satisfying dimension of Mahoney's
argument. Having been warned in the introduction to the book that "the critic cannot
but fail in any attempt to arrest the fall of apostasy," and that "[s]uch
fallings-off constitute the irony of romantic apostasy" (3), it is therefore ironic
that when it comes to Hazlitt, Mahoney's approach is precisely "to arrest the fall of
apostasy" by claiming that "apostasy emerges in Hazlitt's writing not as a
matter of political opinion, but rhetorically, as a product of the irrepressible
vehemencethat is to say, of the forceof language" (168). In other words,
in this one case, Mahoney will turn away completely from any attention to a
"political construction of apostasy," in effect taking Hazlitt at his own word
that he never once flinched or bent or swayed from his adherence to the "good
cause" of "civil and religious liberty."1 And what Mahoney adduces in support of his purely rhetorical
reading of Hazlitt's apostasy is certainly true as far as its goes: that Hazlitt's
fascination with the sublime force of Burke's style, for example, and his efforts to
produce an answerable equivalent, bring him to a sort of fractal "verge" at
which "the language of power is no longer distinguishable from the language of
power" (188). But why save Hazlitt from pitching over this verge into
political apostasy as well? Why prevent the "uncontainable falling," "the
seeming inevitability of indicting oneself in the exposure of another's apostasy"?
(5, 3). After all, this is where the deconstructive logic of the figure would take us,
setting loose a truly "vertiginous,"2
ahistorical collapse of all language into an "abiding crisis of literary
signification" (12), a seeming black hole of "romantic apostasy" that will
quickly obliterate any frail verge "between poetry and prose, politics and
literature, gravity and levity" (185) and ensure that Hazlitt's writingand
Mahoney's too (not to mention that of this review)will always already be indicted in
some discernible form of "always-falling," ideological as well as discursive,
ideological because discursive.
- At the risk of further irony, let us arrest this fall and return instead to historical
particularity in order to suggest some of the ways we may indeed track Hazlitt's fall over
the verge into political as well as rhetorical apostasy. Klancher has shown that the
"Reading Public" addressed by Hazlitt in the periodical press is not uniform but
plural, and therefore Hazlitt's political opinions will discernibly "sway" when
he is performing (at sixteen guineas a sheet) for Francis Jeffrey of the Whig Edinburgh
Review as opposed to writing sharp copy for the "querulous" Leigh Hunt of The
Examiner (116). This synchronic swaying can in fact be measured by comparing his two
reviews of Coleridge's Statesman's Manual in the Examiner and The
Edinburgh.3 Can his principles be
said to shift diachronically as well? What might it mean, for example, for Hazlitt to
invoke the nostalgic mode in his essays for Scott's London Magazine during the
prosperous 1820s (that "age of talkers, and not of doers"4), a nostalgia that can be shared across former postrevolutionary
political divisions by all (middling-class) "men of letters," but not, for
example, by laboring-class readers sent underground by the Six Acts?
- Such questions, of course, are meant to supplement rather than undermine Mahoney's
achievement, and to keep those discussions going that he has both launched and refined. To
this end, all readers interested in Hazlitt and in the intricate conjugations of the
political and the rhetorical during the Regency are encouraged to consult this book, and
to add "romantic apostasy," as Mahoney has freshly redefined it, to the lexicon
of critical terms at our collective disposal.
Notes
1. William Hazlitt, The Complete Works of
William Hazlitt, ed. P.P. Howe, Vol. 17 (London: J.M. Dent, 1930-4), 107, 110. (Back)
2. The word "vertiginous" is used
countless times throughout the book (35, 42, 44, 48, 49, 57, 68, 127, 136, 145 [2x],
etc.), along with cognates of "precipitous" (8, 12, 29, 32, 35, 53, 78, etc.)
and the word "economy," as in "economy of falling" (8, 29, 77, 136,
etc.) or the "economy of Coleridgean apostasy" (38, 48, 54, 79). This
repetitiousness of usage might be overlooked if it were not also for the repetition of
entire passages (on pages 4 and 11, 29 and 102, 165 and 166, 180 and 183). Some readers
may also be put off by Mahoney's indulgence in dubious etymologies ("the seeming necessity
of falling which lurks in falloir" [29]) and outrageous puns (as when
"the tantalizing figure of the 'eddy'" in Talfourd's description of Hazlitt's
prose suddenly becomes "that other Eddie," Edmund Burke, thus creating "the
eddy of Eddie" [190]). I suspect even Derrida would cringe at some of these stylistic
moves, and Hazlitt would call them "cant." (Back)
3. See Contest for Cultural Authority:
Hazlitt, Coleridge, and the Distresses of the Regency (Wayne State UP, 1999), chapter
4 passim. (Back)
4. Hazlitt, Complete Works, Vol. 11, 28.
(Back)
Romantic
Circles Reviews
Editors,
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Snodgrass
Associate
Editor, Jeffrey Ritchie
Review
published: March 2005.
Romantic
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Winter 2005 - Charles
Mahoney, Romantics
and Renegades: The
Poetics of Political
Reaction
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