''Spoon River Anthology'' (1915), by
Edgar Lee Masters, is a collection of short
free verse
Free verse is an open form of poetry, which in its modern form arose through the French '' vers libre'' form. It does not use consistent meter patterns, rhyme, or any musical pattern. It thus tends to follow the rhythm of natural speech.
Defini ...
poems that collectively narrates the
epitaph
An epitaph (; ) is a short text honoring a deceased person. Strictly speaking, it refers to text that is inscribed on a tombstone or plaque, but it may also be used in a figurative sense. Some epitaphs are specified by the person themselves be ...
s of the residents of Spoon River, a fictional small town named after the
Spoon River
The Spoon River is a U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map accessed May 13, 2011 tributary of the Illinois River
The Illinois River ( mia, Inoka Siipiiwi) is a principal tributary ...
, which ran near Masters' home town of
Lewistown, Illinois
Lewistown is a city in Fulton County, Illinois, United States. It was named by its founder, Ossian M. Ross, after his oldest son, Lewis W. Ross. The population was 2,384 at the 2010 census, down from 2,522 at the 2000 census. It is the county s ...
. The aim of the poems is to demystify rural and small town American life. The collection includes 212 separate characters, in all providing 244 accounts of their lives, losses, and manner of death. Many of the poems contain cross-references that create an unabashedly candid tapestry of the community. The poems originally were published in 1914 in the St. Louis, Missouri, literary journal ''
Reedy's Mirror'', under the pseudonym Webster Ford.
Content
The first poem serves as an introduction:
"The Hill"
Where are Elmer, Herman, Bert, Tom and Charley,
The weak of will, the strong of arm, the clown, the boozer, the fighter?
All, all are sleeping on the hill.
One passed in a fever,
One was burned in a mine,
One was killed in a brawl,
One died in a jail,
One fell from a bridge toiling for children and wife—
All, all are sleeping, sleeping, sleeping on the hill.
Where are Ella, Kate, Mag, Lizzie and Edith,
The tender heart, the simple soul, the loud, the proud, the happy one?—
All, all are sleeping on the hill.
One died in shameful child-birth,
One of a thwarted love,
One at the hands of a brute in a brothel,
One of a broken pride, in the search for heart's desire;
One after life in far-away London and Paris
Was brought to her little space by Ella and Kate and Mag—
All, all are sleeping, sleeping, sleeping on the hill.
Where are Uncle Isaac and Aunt Emily,
And old Towny Kincaid and Sevigne Houghton,
And Major Walker who had talked
With venerable men of the revolution?—
All, all are sleeping on the hill.
They brought them dead sons from the war,
And daughters whom life had crushed,
And their children fatherless, crying—
All, all are sleeping, sleeping, sleeping on the hill.
Where is Old Fiddler Jones
Who played with life all his ninety years,
Braving the sleet with bared breast,
Drinking, rioting, thinking neither of wife nor kin,
Nor gold, nor love, nor heaven?
Lo! he babbles of the fish-frys of long ago,
Of the horse-races of long ago at Clary's Grove,
Of what Abe Lincoln said
One time at Springfield.
Each of the following poems is an autobiographical epitaph of a dead citizen, delivered by the dead themselves. Characters include Tom Merritt, Amos Sibley, Carl Hamblin, Fiddler Jones and A.D. Blood. They speak about the sorts of things one might expect: Some recite their histories and turning points, others make observations of life from the outside, and petty ones complain of the treatment of their graves, while few tell how they really died. The subject of afterlife receives only the occasional brief mention, and even those seem to be contradictory. Speaking without reason to lie or fear the consequences, they construct a picture of life in their town that is shorn of façades. The interplay of various villagers — such as a bright and successful man crediting his parents for all he's accomplished, and an old woman weeping because he is secretly her illegitimate child — forms a gripping, if not pretty, whole.
Composition and publication history
Many of the characters who make appearances in ''Spoon River Anthology'' were based on people that Masters knew or heard of in the two towns in which he grew up:
Petersburg
Petersburg, or Petersburgh, may refer to:
Places Australia
*Petersburg, former name of Peterborough, South Australia
Canada
* Petersburg, Ontario
Russia
*Saint Petersburg, sometimes referred to as Petersburg
United States
*Peterborg, U.S. Virg ...
and
Lewistown, Illinois
Lewistown is a city in Fulton County, Illinois, United States. It was named by its founder, Ossian M. Ross, after his oldest son, Lewis W. Ross. The population was 2,384 at the 2010 census, down from 2,522 at the 2000 census. It is the county s ...
. Masters sometimes substantially disguised the names of these real-life inspirations, but he sometimes disguised them only barely and, in a few cases, not at all.
Most notable is
Anne Rutledge, regarded in local legend to be
Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln ( ; February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865) was an American lawyer, politician, and statesman who served as the 16th president of the United States from 1861 until his assassination in 1865. Lincoln led the nation thro ...
's early love interest (though there is no actual proof of such a relationship); Masters heard this legend from his grandfather.
Rutledge's grave can be found in a Petersburg cemetery, and a tour of graveyards in both towns, especially
Oak Hill Cemetery in Lewistown, reveals most of the surnames that Masters applied to his characters.
After growing up and leaving Lewistown for Chicago, Masters met and befriended
William Marion Reedy, the owner, publisher and editor of the St. Louis-based literary magazine ''
Reedy's Mirror.''
By the time Masters wrote the poems that became ''Spoon River Anthology,'' he had published some poetry with some success; these prior poems, however, were more conventional in style and subject matter.
Masters later wrote that it was Reedy, through his criticism and friendship, who encouraged him to write "something more distinctive than what I was doing, somehow, someway, but without telling me how to do it."
Masters in particular credited Reedy with introducing him to the ''
Greek Anthology,'' a collection of classical period
epigram
An epigram is a brief, interesting, memorable, and sometimes surprising or satirical statement. The word is derived from the Greek "inscription" from "to write on, to inscribe", and the literary device has been employed for over two mille ...
s, to which ''Spoon River Anthology'' is stylistically similar.
''Spoon River Anthology'' originally was published in serial form in ''Reedy's Mirror'' from May 29, 1914 until January 5, 1915. The poems were attributed initially to the pseudonym Webster Ford.
William Marion Reedy, owner, publisher and editor of the magazine revealed the poems' true authorship in November 1914, after 21 weekly entries.
The first bound edition of ''Spoon River Anthology'' was published by
The Macmillan Company in 1915 with a total of 213 poems. Masters added 33 new poems in the 1916 edition, expanding on new characters with connections to some of the originals. Among these new additions were "Andy the Night-Watch", "Isa Nutter," "Plymouth Rock Joe" and "The Epilogue."
Critical reception and legacy
''Spoon River Anthology'' was a critical and commercial success.
Ezra Pound
Ezra Weston Loomis Pound (30 October 1885 – 1 November 1972) was an expatriate American poet and critic, a major figure in the early modernist poetry movement, and a fascist collaborator in Italy during World War II. His works includ ...
's review of the Spoon River poems begins: "At last! At last America has discovered a poet."
Carl Sandburg
Carl August Sandburg (January 6, 1878 – July 22, 1967) was an American poet, biographer, journalist, and editor. He won three Pulitzer Prizes: two for his poetry and one for his biography of Abraham Lincoln. During his lifetime, Sandburg ...
's review is similarly glowing: "Once in a while a man comes along who writes a book that has his own heart-beats in it. The people whose faces look out from the pages of the book are the people of life itself, each trait of them as plain or as mysterious as in the old home valley where the writer came from. Such a writer and book are realized here."
The book sold 80,000 copies over four years, making it an international bestseller by the standards of the day.
Meanwhile, those who lived in the Spoon River region objected to their portrayal in the anthology, particularly as so many of the poems' characters were based on real people. The book was banned from Lewistown schools and libraries until 1974.
Even Masters's mother, who sat on the Lewistown library board, voted for the ban.
(Masters claimed "My mother disliked
he anthology my father adored it."
) Despite this, the anthology remained widely read in Lewistown; local historian Kelvin Sampson notes that "Every family in Lewistown probably had a sheet of paper or a notebook hidden away with their copy of the ''Anthology,'' saying who was who in town."
Masters capitalized on the success of ''The Spoon River Anthology'' with the 1924 sequel ''The New Spoon River'', in which Spoon River became a suburb of Chicago and its inhabitants have been urbanized. The second work was less successful and received poorer reviews.
In 1933, Masters wrote a retrospective essay on the composition of ''The Spoon River Anthology'' and the response it received, entitled "The Genesis of Spoon River."
He recounts, among other things, the "exhaustion of body" that befell him while writing, which eventually manifested in pneumonia and a year-long bout of illness as the work was being prepared for publication. He claims that the Lewistown residents who strove to identify the poems' characters with real people did so only "with poor success."
More recently, Lewistown celebrated its relationship to Masters's poetry. The
Oak Hill Cemetery features a memorial statue of Masters and offers a self-guided walking tour of the graves that inspired the poems. In 2015, the town celebrated the 100th anniversary of the anthology's publication with tours, exhibitions, and theatrical performances.
Today ''Spoon River Anthology'' often is assigned in high school and college literature classes and as a source of monologues for theatrical auditions.
It is also often used in second-year characterization work in the
Meisner technique of actor training.
''Spoon River Anthology'' is credited as an initial inspiration for the "audio log" storytelling device in video games as it first appeared in the game
System Shock
''System Shock'' is a 1994 first-person action-adventure video game developed by LookingGlass Technologies and published by Origin Systems. It was directed by Doug Church with Warren Spector serving as producer. The game is set aboard a spa ...
, a narrative technique that became a standard trope of narrative games.
Adaptations
*
Percy Grainger
Percy Aldridge Grainger (born George Percy Grainger; 8 July 188220 February 1961) was an Australian-born composer, arranger and pianist who lived in the United States from 1914 and became an American citizen in 1918. In the course of a long an ...
wrote three arrangements (for piano, two pianos and orchestra) of a fiddle tune called "Spoon River", inspired by the Anthology and dedicated to Masters;
* In 1943, the book was published in Italy (translated by
Fernanda Pivano). This version was issued on LP by the Italian Cetra label in 1959, the readers being Paolo Carlini, Arnoldo Foa, Vera Gherarducci and Elsa Merlini.
* In 1951,
La Scala premiered Mario Pergallo's ''La Colline'' (The Hill), which set several of Masters' poems in operatic form.
* In 1952, Swedish composer
Laci Boldemann set 4 poems from the anthology as "Epitaphs (4), for mezzo-soprano & string orchestra, Op. 10" recorded in 2008 by
Anne Sofie von Otter
Anne Sofie von Otter (born 9 May 1955) is a Swedish mezzo-soprano. Her repertoire encompasses lieder, operas, oratorios and also rock and pop songs.
Early life
Von Otter was born in Stockholm, Sweden. Her father was Göran von Otter, a Swe ...
.
* In 1956, the German composer (October 25, 1894 - December 15, 1972) set a selection of four poems as a song cycle for baritone and accordion titled "Die Toten von Spoon River."
* On June 2, 1957, the CBS Radio Network broadcast a radio adaptation of ''Spoon River Anthology'', "Epitaphs", as part of its ''
CBS Radio Workshop'' series. The adaptation was directed and narrated by
William Conrad, with a cast including
Virginia Gregg,
Jeanette Nolan,
Parley Baer,
Richard Crenna,
John Dehner and
John McIntire
John Herrick McIntire (June 27, 1907 – January 30, 1991) was an American character actor who appeared in 65 theatrical films and many television series. McIntire is well known for having replaced Ward Bond, upon Bond's sudden death in Nov ...
.
* In 1963,
Charles Aidman adapted ''Spoon River Anthology'' into a theater production that is still widely performed today.
* From 1964 to 1974, photographer Mario Giacomelli produced "Omaggio a Spoon River," a series of abstract photographs inspired by Edgar Lee Master's collection of poems.
* In 1971, Italian songwriter
Fabrizio De André
Fabrizio Cristiano De André (; 18 February 1940 – 11 January 1999) was an Italian singer-songwriter, the most prominent '' cantautore'' of his time. His 40-year career reflects his interests in concept albums, literature, poetry, political pr ...
released ''
Non al denaro non all'amore né al cielo
''Non al denaro non all'amore né al cielo'' (''Neither to money, nor to love, nor to Heaven'') is an album released by Fabrizio De André. It was issued in 1971 by Produttori Associati and reissued several times by Ricordi and BMG. It is a conc ...
'', a concept album inspired by ''Spoon River Anthology''.
* In 1985, British composer
Andrew Downes set a selection of five poems as a song cycle entitled "Songs from Spoon River."
* In 1987, Spanish writer
Jon Juaristi wrote a poem titled ''Spoon River, Euskadi'' (included in his book ''Suma de varia intención'') to denounce the crimes of the Basque separatist group
ETA
Eta (uppercase , lowercase ; grc, ἦτα ''ē̂ta'' or ell, ήτα ''ita'' ) is the seventh letter of the Greek alphabet, representing the close front unrounded vowel . Originally denoting the voiceless glottal fricative in most dialects, ...
.
* In 2000,
alt-country
Alternative country, or alternative country rock (sometimes alt-country, insurgent country, Americana, or y'allternative), is a loosely defined subgenre of country music and/or country rock that includes acts that differ significantly in style ...
singer
Richard Buckner adapted eighteen poems of the ''Spoon River Anthology'' into songs for his album ''
The Hill
''The'' () is a grammatical article in English, denoting persons or things that are already or about to be mentioned, under discussion, implied or otherwise presumed familiar to listeners, readers, or speakers. It is the definite article in ...
''. Nine are sung, and nine are represented by instrumentals.
* In 2004,
Walter Dean Myers
Walter Dean Myers (born Walter Milton Myers; August 12, 1937 – July 1, 2014) was an American writer of children's books best known for young adult literature. He was born in Martinsburg, West Virginia, but was raised in Harlem. A tough childh ...
published ''Here in Harlem,'' a collection of poems inspired by ''Spoon River Anthology''.
* Since 2004, writer and songwriter Mariana Figueroa and artist and author Francisco Tomsich have worked on the Rio Cuchara project, a cycle of songs based on ''Spoon River Anthology'' poems.
* In 2005, the Utah State University's Creative Learning Environment Lab created a
serious game
A serious game or applied game is a game designed for a primary purpose other than pure entertainment. The "serious" adjective is generally prepended to refer to video games used by industries like defense, education, scientific exploration, he ...
titled Voices of Spoon River, in which the player explores an environment and solved puzzles based on the Spoon River Anthology.
*Songwriter
Michael Peter Smith's song "Spoon River" is loosely based on ''Spoon River Anthology.''
* In 2011 "Spoon River Anthology" was adapted by Tom Andolora into a theatre production with music, called The Spoon River Project. It was performed at the
Green-Wood Cemetery
Green-Wood Cemetery is a cemetery in the western portion of Brooklyn, New York City. The cemetery is located between South Slope/ Greenwood Heights, Park Slope, Windsor Terrace, Borough Park, Kensington, and Sunset Park, and lies several ...
in
Brooklyn
Brooklyn () is a borough of New York City, coextensive with Kings County, in the U.S. state of New York (state), New York. Kings County is the most populous Administrative divisions of New York (state)#County, county in the State of New York, ...
. It is published by Playscripts.
* In 2014, Toronto's
Soulpepper theatre launched the musical production ''Spoon River'', adapted by Mike Ross and artistic director
Albert Schultz. The musical opened
Off Broadway in July 2017.
* In 2015, Arkansan poet
samm binns exhibited "Larger Than Life," an adaptation featuring photos and poems in response to the 100th anniversary of ''Spoon River Anthology.''
* In 2015, "Spoon River Anthology" was adapted by Maureen Lucy O'Connell into a play with music called "Spoon River: the Cemetery on the Hill." The adaptation included traditional songs as well as original material written by O'Connell. It was produced at the Eclectic Company Theatre in Valley Village, California.
* On November 26, 2015, the documentary ''Ritorno a Spoon River'', directed by Francesco Conversano and Nene Grignaffini, premiered at the
Torino Film Festival. The documentary, filmed in Lewistown, celebrates the centennial of the anthology.
* In 2017, ''Return to Spoon River'', a musical adapted from the anthology by Martin Tackel, premiered at the Lion Theatre at Theatre Row in New York City.
* On March 13, 2021, 'Spoon River Anthology' was presented as online verse reading by the Oxford University Dramatic Society, accompanied by a limited edition booklet illustrated by students of the Ruskin.
References
External links
*
*
* {{librivox book , title=Spoon River Anthology , author=Edgar Lee MASTERS
''Ho Orchestra - Spoon River A Lakeside Concert''* Hartley, Lois Teal
''Spoon River Revisted'' 1963
"Spoon River: The Cemetery On The Hill" Video Preview 2015
"Spoon River: The Cemetery On The Hill" Edge Media Review by Michelle Sandoval" 2015
"Spoon River: The Cemetery On The Hill" Biter Lemons Review 2015
"Spoon River: The Cemetery On The Hill" Review by Tom Waldman, NOHO Arts District 2015
2021
Adaptation authors
William Willinghton— official William Willinghton website
Fernanda PivanoFabrizio De AndréKarl W. SchindlerTom Andolora
Fulton County, Illinois
American poetry collections
Illinois society
Illinois in fiction
Works originally published in Reedy's Mirror