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This collection represents Clark's compilation of papers related to Robert Lowell
and
reflects their close friendship until Lowell's death in 1977. It is arranged in three
Series: Series I. Writings by and about Lowell, Series II. Correspondence, 1938-1983,
and
Series III. Information on Lowell. The papers provide significant insight into Lowell's
work
and relationships, especially with his second wife, Elizabeth Hardwick, with whom
Clark and
his wife Holly also shared a close friendship. This collection, especially the
correspondence, complements the Ransom Center's existing collections of Lowell and
Hardwick.
In addition, it provides the viewpoint of Lowell biographer Ian Hamilton who worked
with
Clark during his research and writing of Robert Lowell: A Biography
(Random House, 1982). |
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Series I. Writing by and about Lowell contains several undated
poems by Lowell, some in his own handwriting, for example, verse penciled on the back
of a
December 1938 letter from Lowell's psychiatrist Merrill Moore. Also of note are holograph
and typed drafts of "Santayana's Farewell to the Blue Sisters"
written just after his philosopher friend George Santayana, who had been in the care
of the
Blue Nuns in Rome, had died. Another typed but handcorrected poem reads in part "…my
final
bow is in the stars, or the cards; But I am alone and there are none to help!" A draft
of
Lowell's acceptance speech for the National Book Award for Life Studies is also present. Clark kept handwritten notes of
conversations he had with various people including Lowell, Hardwick, Lowell's first
wife
Jean Stafford, third wife Caroline Blackwood, friend Mary McCarthy, and others. These
notes
date from 1970-1978; some were found in a folder marked "for the memoirs." Drafts
of Clark's
1979 article on Lowell for The Harvard Advocate are also
present. The final piece in this series is an early work of poet Richard G. Eberhart,
Lowell's mentor at St. Mark's, who captures Lowell's angst of the 1930s and 1940s
in an
empathetic verse play "The Crystal Sepulcher" which was later revised
and printed as "The Mad Musician" in a volume of Eberhart's
collected plays. |
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Series II. Correspondence, 1938-1983 contains Clark's
correspondence with Lowell, Ian Hamilton, Elizabeth Hardwick, Jean Stafford, and letters
from others including Dr. Viola Bernard, Robert Giroux, Lowell's mother Charlotte,
Lowell's
1954 romantic interest Giovanna Madonia, and Martha Ritter who knew Lowell at Harvard
in
1969. Hamilton had access to and drew heavily upon this correspondence in the writing
of his
biography. Clark and Hamilton corresponded frequently, especially in the 1980s just
before
the biography was published. The Clark/Lowell letters number over fifty exchanges
between
the two friends from 1938-1976 with the heaviest concentration of letters in the early
1970s
during the breakup of Lowell's marriage with Hardwick and his marriage to Caroline
Blackwood. A similar number of letters are found in the Clark/Hardwick correspondence,
especially frequent in the mid-1950s while the Clarks were assigned to Paris. Jean
Stafford's letters to the Clarks are few in number, but her file includes several
articles
by and about her, including an article she wrote in The New Yorker the year after Lowell's death. The two Charlotte
Lowell letters are written to Jean Stafford in October and November of 1943. Robert
Lowell
was in jail at that time for declining service in the Armed Forces, after he addressed
a
"Declaration of Personal Responsibility" directly to President Roosevelt. |
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Series III. Information on Lowell contains articles on Lowell
and reviews of his works, especially The Dolphin, For Lizzie and
Harriet, and History. Also present are three audio cassette
interviews: Time magazine interview with Clark for a June 2,
1967 cover story on Lowell (issue included); a Sept. 29, 1982 Clark interview on Lowell
and
the Hamilton biography for The South Bank Show for ITV; and Hamilton interview on
NPR
Morning Edition, Nov. 29, 1982. Book reviews of the Hamilton biography, Lowell's obituaries,
order of service for the funeral, and photographs of Jean Stafford in 1940 and 1941
are also
included in this series. |
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This collection was donated to the Ransom Center through the generosity of Blair Clark's
widow Joanna Rostropowicz Clark. |