Panton, Mary
By Laura Mandell
Critical Essay
Panton's poetry is light, at moments awful,
sometimes revealing genius at narrative compression (130-1). What is most
interesting about Eloise and Other Poems, published in 1815, is that it
is the work of a woman who was a "wreader," in George Landow's terms,
of eighteenth-century popular verse. Mary Panton, about whom we know nothing, is
an exemplary reader of gift-book poetry, and several hints in this collection of
poetry suggest her class as well as what she is reading. Although one poem
suggests that she fears "Cold poverty's chill blast" (76), that these
fears are more melancholically poetic than real is suggested by the poem's form:
it is nearly a villanelle. Panton knows something about form, using poetic terms
such as "canto," "sonnet," and "bout-rhymé," and
about mainstay poetic devices such as anaphora. But she doesn't know too much:
some of her sonnets are sonnets in rhyme scheme only, metrically not iambic
pentameter but the tetrameters and alternating tetrameter / trimeter of the
ballad stanzaic forms. Her poetic diction signals knowledge of poetry — her
poems are filled with eolian harps, vernal flowers, and parian stone — but
deviates toward the hackneyed, since tears and dew "begem" everything.
Thus, the poems that accord with the poetic evidence and situate her in terms of
class are, first, her very funny poem about a thunderstorm, "Stanzas
Written at Midnight," which shows that she is in no danger of being left
out in it, and her "Address to Fortune" in which she asks for what is
a decidedly lower but middle-class existence. In this last poem she asks for
books - not in a library, but in "A neat and simple little press"
(151), a cabinet that was often used for storing milk in Scottish homes. If
Panton inhabited Jane Austen's world, the world of
Panton hopes that her press will be "Of
choicest authors full," and here if nowhere else we get our sense that she
is a reader of gift books, whose prefaces if not their titles habitually
designate their poems as "choicest." But there are other indications
as well that Panton is the reader of gift books par excellence, stimulated by
them to write: a "wreader." There are only two direct literary
allusions. One poem is written on the occasion of "reading the life and
poems of H. K. White" (72), about whom I can find nothing except that
Southey published in 1823 The Remains of Henry Kirke White. With an Account
of his Life. Since Panton's Eloise is published in 1815, she may not have
learned about him through Southey, or if she did so, Southey's volumes must have
also been printed at an earlier date; but suffice it to say that something about
this "uneducated poet" clearly inspired her. And the second explicit
allusion is a poem avowedly "In Imitation of 'My Mother'" (127). My
Mother: a Poem was first published as "by a Lady" in 1807, an
embellished and obviously expensive book containing a poem written by Ann Taylor
who was imitating William Cowper's "To Mary." That Panton does not
care to cite Cowper's poem as the original text imitated (though Taylor mentions
it, at least in subsequent editions) but instead this popular and expensively
packaged poem shows her to be a middle-class reader who derives no benefit from
showing off her erudition (in contrast, that is, to women who were financially
worse off but had pretensions as members of the literati such as Mary Hays and
Eliza Fenwick). Moreover, her imitation results in a serious poem,
showing that Panton in no way approximates (nor cares to) the
P.S. — Can't accept your courteous offer.
For Orford [Horace Walpole] and for Waldegrave
You give much more than me you gave;
Which is not fairly to behave
My Murray!
Because if a live dog, 'tis said,
Be worth a Lion fairly sped,
A live lord must be worth two dead,
My Murray!
Byron makes fun of Ann Taylor, and, in thinking of the form for "My Murray," suggests his knowledge of the original, since Cowper's refrain is "My Mary." In contrast, Panton loved Taylor's embellished poem, not caring where the form originated and reusing it in her own poetry, thrilled with its cleverness rather than sardonic about it, as is Byron.
That Mary Panton was a lower middle class woman
writer, schooled by gift books, with no literary ambitions — her poetry
suggests repeatedly that she writes in order to ease people's pain (119, 153),
including her own (vii) — makes these poems most interesting as artifacts
perhaps revealing conflicts caused by gender and class. Clearly all the
"Reverend" subscribers of Queen's College, Oxford — Anglican clergy
— found in these poems the virtue they would hope to instill in future
parishioners. Panton's "The Soldier," for instance, tells a sordid
tale about the sacrifice of a young country man to British nationalism, but, so
far from indicting the monarchy for its foreign policy, the poem turns tragic
death from sacrifice for the rich general, whose life the poor boy saves, into a
tale of lost love: though Panton's soldier does "sigh" as he dies, it
is for his true love Emma - his sigh does NOT, therefore, "Run in blood
down palace walls." "War"
The way the poems treat loss itself is fascinating, and clearly produced by ideological conflict. The ethos of the gift book, and of the poem as expensive word, appears indirectly in Panton's poetry. Economical issues appear here insofar as people are metonyms, and metonyms are signs for universal plots. Every person appears as a bosom, a hand, a heart, a breast, a tear, just as the factory worker is "a hand" in Adam Smith's description of pin-making: the people in these poems are alienated by poetic techniques endemic to gift-book writing, as workers are alienated by repetitive motions on the assembly line. Plots such as youth, lost love, and death are evoked on the cheap with metonymical economy. "The bud," "the storm," "the grave" pretty much give you "the" life with the greatest economy possible, since you see all of it in one particular item rendered universal by the article "the" preceding these metonyms; the bourgeois worldview is universally applied and also compacted into things that seem natural. This poetry's investment in things that can be possessed appears thematically as well: it is not possible in Panton's world to lose anything without going mad. The Anglican subscribers probably thrilled at this aspect of Panton's work. She portrays virtuous constancy with a vengeance: you are either mothered, married, and true, or dead / insane (preferably both).
That said, these poems are interesting for the
ways they articulate desires beyond ideology as well. "Mad Marian"
gives us a female Othello; we have one insane jilted lover who is male (122);
and "Rosaly" is not punished for her faithlessness as much as is
"the son of revelry" who tricked her into it. Eloise itself
starts in formal, English,
Notes
1. To John Murray, 23 August 1821