From Many Times And Lands
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F. L. Lucas Frank Laurence Lucas (28 December 1894 – 1 June 1967) was an English Classics, classical scholar, literary critic, poet, novelist, playwright, political polemicist, Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and intelligence officer at Bletchley Pa ...
's ''From Many Times and Lands'' (1953) is a volume of some one hundred original poems, mostly dramatic monologues, vignettes, and narratives, based on historical episodes "that seem lastingly alive".Lucas, F. L., ''Journal Under the Terror, 1938'' (London, 1939), p.229-230 Varying in length from sixteen pages to a few lines (most are two or three pages long), and written largely between 1935 and 1953, the poems were intended to show, in Lucas's words in the Preface, that "The Greeks were right. The essential theme is men in action. ''That'' has been the greatness of the West."Lucas, F. L., Preface to ''From Many Times and Lands'' (London, 1953), p.11-13 They were thus a reaction to the "soul-scratching" interiority of mid-20th century modernist verse (''
The Times Literary Supplement ''The Times Literary Supplement'' (''TLS'') is a weekly literary review published in London by News UK, a subsidiary of News Corp. History The ''TLS'' first appeared in 1902 as a supplement to ''The Times'' but became a separate publication ...
s phrase). Lucas quotes approvingly "the wise Acton": 'History must be our deliverer, not only from the undue influence of other times, but from the undue influence of our own'. In one of the poems ('Ivan the Terrible') he has the explorer
Anthony Jenkinson Anthony Jenkinson (1529 – 1610/1611) was born at Market Harborough, Leicestershire. He was one of the first Englishmen to explore Tsardom of Russia, Muscovy and present-day Russia. Jenkinson was a traveller and explorer on behalf of the ...
discuss with a number of English poets and playwrights in a London tavern in 1597 the authority of Marlowe's ''
Tamburlaine ''Tamburlaine the Great'' is a play in two parts by Christopher Marlowe. It is loosely based on the life of the Central Asian emperor Timur (Tamerlane/Timur the Lame, d. 1405). Written in 1587 or 1588, the play is a milestone in English liter ...
'' as history: : ... Give ''me'' a poet ays Jenkinson:That holds the mirror, not to his own features, :But to the infinite mystery of men... :Often I think – 'Why should not poets be :Truthful as histories - and historians :Visioned as poets?' :''You'' feed upon your dreams; they, on the world. :You live for feeling; and for knowledge they. :And each, alone, grows barren. Jenkinson then goes on to speak of the impressions he took away from his meetings with
Tsar Ivan IV Ivan IV Vasilyevich (; – ), commonly known as Ivan the Terrible,; ; monastic name: Jonah. was Grand Prince of Moscow and all Russia from 1533 to 1547, and the first Tsar and Grand Prince of all Russia from 1547 until his death in 1584. I ...
.


Title and subtitle

The book's title is taken from Swinburne's '
The Garden of Proserpine "The Garden of Proserpine" is a poem by Algernon Charles Swinburne, published in '' Poems and Ballads'' in 1866. Proserpine is the Latin spelling of Persephone, a goddess married to Hades, god of the underworld. According to some accounts, she ...
'. The dust-cover and back-strip of the first edition (but not the title-page) carried the subtitle 'Poems of Legend and History'. "They are not always factually true," wrote Lucas of these pieces. "But what men could believe, even falsely, is also part – and not the least part – of human history. Wherever historic facts are concerned, I have tried to distort them as little as possible. Where episodes are invented, I have tried to keep them true to the spirit of their time."


Sources and dates

Approximate or exact dates appear below poem titles. Sources for incidents are given in footnotes to about half the poems. The note to 'Olver Barnakarl', for example, reads: :Cf. the Icelandic Landnáma-Bóc, V. 13. i: 'Olver Barnakarl was a nobleman in Norway. He would not let children be thrown on spearpoints, as was the Vikings' custom. Therefore he was called "Barnakarl" Bairns' man'


Some subjects treated


Themes

A number of the longer poems explore the techniques of handling, one-to-one, dangerous people in positions of absolute power. Cases in point include the court poet Yuan Shen and Emperor Ming Huang in 'The Smile that cost an Empire'; Sir John Cornwall and Henry V (after the death of Sir John's son at the Siege of Maux) in 'King Hal'; Anthony Jenkinson and Tsar Ivan in 'Ivan the Terrible'; and counsellor Yeliu Chutsai and Genghiz Khan in 'The End of Genghiz'. Typical in its message is 'The Last Hope of Constantinople', telling the story of the fast Greek sailing boat sent from Constantinople during the desperate last days of the siege in 1453, to scour the Greek coasts for news of the promised Venetian fleet coming to the city's rescue – and to report back. But there is no fleet. The captain, Michaelis Imvriotis, tells his eleven-man Greek crew that it is their duty to return to the doomed city. A heated debate on deck follows, with some men arguing that to return would be futile. The captain closes the argument with the words :"And yet when a man has lost all pride, :How can he still live happy? We were honest men till now. :What use is life, if each must dread :To meet men's eyes? Must hear in bed :His pillow whisper 'Coward !' – and his sick soul cry 'Amen !'? :Afraid are we all. Yet our call is clear." A vote is taken – two against ten. A few days later, the boat is sighted slipping back through Turkish lines to the Neorion Quay. There is momentary joy in the city: surely the crew would only have returned if they had good news? But the cheering falters: :Men saw how watched eleven faces, :Pale and silent in their places, :Answering not to cheers nor praises – :In pity for that lost people, forgetting their own despair. The missing crew member, Spiridion Sathas, who had argued for flight, has stolen away by night in the row-boat. He marries "a rich Venetian dame", and thirty years later dies a "noble merchant" in Venice.The story comes from ''Giornale dell' assedio di Costantinopoli, 1453'', the diary of Nicolò Barbaro, who lived through the siege.


Verse forms

A variety of stanzaic forms, rhyme-schemes and
metres The metre (or meter in US spelling; symbol: m) is the base unit of length in the International System of Units (SI). Since 2019, the metre has been defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of of ...
are employed, as well as heroic couplets, blank verse, accentual verse, and free verse. The last stanza of 'The dead of Oran', on the funerals of French sailors killed in the Royal Navy's destruction of the French Fleet in 1940: :Far to the north the great men sit; ::Laval in Vichy plies his pen. :But here a different greatness lives — :The faith, the courage, that forgives — ::In simpler men.


Reception

''The Times Literary Supplement'' wrote of the volume: "The excitement is unequalled by any but a very few volumes of verse published these last few years. This is poetry written to be read aloud, to be relished for its information, to be taken to bed and read, like a detective novel, for the relaxation that comes from a good story well told... These are stories in poetry. The poetry is not the worse for the story, but the story is infinitely more compelling for being set in verse."'Stories in Verse', ''The Times Literary Supplement'', 31 July 1953 A notable example of such "compelling" story-telling occurs in 'A Tale of Two Centuries'. At the
Revolutionary Tribunal The Revolutionary Tribunal (; unofficially Popular Tribunal) was a court instituted by the National Convention during the French Revolution for the trial of political offenders. In October 1793, it became one of the most powerful engines of ...
in 1793 the public prosecutor
Fouquier-Tinville Antoine Quentin Fouquier de Tinville (, 10 June 17467 May 1795), also called Fouquier-Tinville and nicknamed posthumously the Provider of the Guillotine was a French lawyer and accusateur public of the Revolutionary Tribunal during the French Rev ...
, aware that the judges of the Comte de Custine are well disposed towards him because of the beauty of his daughter-in-law, Delphine de Custine, who attends the trial with him, has arranged for a mob to kill her as she leaves the ''Palais de Justice'': :Below its steps, a crowd was waiting there — :Louche ruffians, women with wolfish stare: :And there above, Delphine! — white face beneath golden hair. :At once she guessed: the worst of all her fears :Had been of crowds, even from earlier years; :And now to her mind the memory rose grim :Of the Princesse de Lamballe, torn limb from limb :By bony claws like these. And yet she knew :Courage alone perhaps might win her through... :Down those long steps she passed with tranquil tread. :How fast it narrowed now, the space between! :Then a voice howled — "The daughter of Custine :The traitor! Down with her!" Still on she passed, :Thinking "Oh, courage! Courage to the last — " ... :And now she was amidst them — by her side :There brushed a ragged fishwife, babe at breast; :She heard her own voice say, as if possessed, :"How sweet he is!" The woman met her look :And whispered "Take him!" With blind arms she took :That tiny burden, and passed on her way; :Quiet on her bosom that small saviour lay. :Face bent above him, through those wolves she came..." The mob, momentarily dumb and bewildered by "some awe of womanhood, some touch of shame", watch her go, gain her carriage in the street below, silently pass the baby back to its mother, and drive away, "Saved by a child she nevermore would see".


Reprints

A number of the poems were reprinted in mid-20th century anthologies, notably two of the most gruesome: 'The Repentance of Gabrino Fondolo, Lord of Cremona', a Browning-esque dramatic monologue about Fondolo's regret, as he awaits execution, at the opportunity he missed of throwing the
Pope The pope is the bishop of Rome and the Head of the Church#Catholic Church, visible head of the worldwide Catholic Church. He is also known as the supreme pontiff, Roman pontiff, or sovereign pontiff. From the 8th century until 1870, the po ...
, the
Holy Roman Emperor The Holy Roman Emperor, originally and officially the Emperor of the Romans (disambiguation), Emperor of the Romans (; ) during the Middle Ages, and also known as the Roman-German Emperor since the early modern period (; ), was the ruler and h ...
, and the
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from the top of
Cremona Cremona ( , , ; ; ) is a city and (municipality) in northern Italy, situated in Lombardy, on the left bank of the Po (river), Po river in the middle of the Po Valley. It is the capital of the province of Cremona and the seat of the local city a ...
tower on their joint visit to his city as guests; and 'Spain, 1809', the story of a village woman's revenge on some French soldiers during the
Peninsular War The Peninsular War (1808–1814) was fought in the Iberian Peninsula by Kingdom of Portugal, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, United Kingdom against the invading and occupying forces of the First French ...
, which Margaret Wood turned into a stage-play, ''A Kind of Justice'' (1966). Among poems reprinted that were based on legend rather than history was 'The Destined Hour' (1953), a re-telling in verse of the old Arabic 'Appointment in Samarra' fable.


Background

In the mid-1930s the new
Cambridge University Library Cambridge University Library is the main research library of the University of Cambridge. It is the largest of over 100 libraries Libraries of the University of Cambridge, within the university. The library is a major scholarly resource for me ...
opened next door to Lucas's home in West Road, giving him quick access to legal deposit books. "Looking back," he wrote in 1960, "I realise that I never enjoyed reading more than when writing ''From Many Times and Lands''. To be able to read up connectedly, with an abundant library at hand, things like Egyptian or pre-Islamic Arab literature, or Chinese or Persian poetry, or the history of Genghiz or Tsar Ivan, made me realise what unsuspected treasure lies off the beaten track."Lucas, F. L., 'Of Books', in ''The Greatest Problem, and other essays'' (London, 1960), p.173


Notes


References

{{F. L. Lucas Historical poems The Bodley Head books 1953 poems