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Thoroughly Modern Millay.(What Lips My Lips Have Kissed: The Loves and Love Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay)(Review)

National Review

| November 05, 2001 | HART, JEFFREY | COPYRIGHT 2001 National Review, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

What Lips My Lips Have Kissed: The Loves and Love Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay, by Daniel Mark Epstein (Holt, 299 pp., $26)

Readers of National Review are now becoming acquainted with the poetry of Daniel Mark Epstein; his very fine "Helen" appears in this issue (p. 62). Epstein is one of the strongest poets now writing in English. He is also a musician and a scholar; and, as his new book makes clear, an expert biographer.

The book invites us to reconsider Edna St. Vincent Millay both as a person and as a poet. He judges her to be a major poet, mostly a love poet, and I am willing to be persuaded that he is right. This is culturally interesting. The explosion on the scene of the great modernists around 1907-1913 (from Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon to the Armory Show) has tended to occlude our sense of those writers, painters, architects, and so on who were not exactly modernists. But, in painting, we are now re-seeing such American realists as Thomas Eakins, Robert Henri, George Bellows, and Edward Hopper. Cezanne and Braque will never fade, but the world has also been seen with other eyes. There is Yeats and there is Joyce and there is Eliot; Epstein wishes us to realize that there is also Millay.

Besides being a writer, however, she was also a "figure." Her allure was captured gloriously by Edmund Wilson, one of her multitude of sex partners, in his 1952 book The Shores of Light. Wilson talked with an old friend about Edna, or Vincent as her close friends called her; and "she told me of seeing her years ago in Greenwich Village running around the corner of Macdougal Street, flushed and laughing 'like a nymph,' with her hair swinging. Floyd Dell, also laughing, pursued her . . . And I leave this image here at the end to supplement my firsthand impressions-a glimpse of Edna as the fleeing and challenging Daphne of her poem 'Figs from Thistles'-from the time when I did not know her, when she had first come down from Vassar to the Village." Wilson had really loved her; we hear it in this prose. When I first read these sentences from Wilson in 1952, I sort of loved her spiritedness myself.

Vincent (she had been named after St. Vincent's Hospital, which supposedly had saved the life of a relative) was a poor girl from Camden, Maine, and not only a rising poet but an immensely theatrical personality. She hit Vassar, in 1913, like a tsunami. She was tiny, with floor-length red hair, and her delivery of lines was in the grand style, a la Sarah Bernhardt. Stanislavsky and naturalism would not be invited here. Her voice was a powerful contralto, she spoke with feeling from her toes up, and on her recordings she sounds rather British; her enunciation of syllables was razor sharp, no slurs. She was a grand diva who almost brought Vassar to its knees, breaking rules at will and attracting a devoted cult following of young women who joyfully went to bed with her. She was a heroine to the entire student body. As soon as she was out of Vassar, however, she put aside the lesbianism; consigning girls to the past, she now sought to dominate men.

And if I loved you Wednesday,

Well, what is that to you?

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