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Cathy Curtis,  _ A Splendid Intelligence: The Life of Elizabeth Hardwick _  (NY: Norton). More than Nora Joyce or Vera Nabokov, even more than Proust ’ s mother, Robert Lowell’s wife


Elizabeth Hardwick (1916-2007, pictured above) deserves a book of her own. Cathy Curtis overrates what she calls Hardwick ’ s splendid intelligence, formidable character, sharp wit and


brilliant work to justify her subject. But assertions are not evidence, and she does not substantiate these exalted claims. Hardwick ’ s closest friends were all educated at prestigious


colleges. Elizabeth Bishop and Mary McCarthy went to Vassar, Adrienne Rich and Barbara Epstein to Radcliffe, Susan Sontag to Chicago. Hardwick, daughter of a plumber, went disadvantageously


to the University of Kentucky in her Bourbon-drinking, horse-racing town of Lexington. Though she could hold her own with all of them, McCarthy, her main rival, was more glamorous, had a


greater intellect, perception and style, and ranged more widely with travel and political books. Since Hardwick ’ s letters have not been published, Curtis uses them as her main source and


chronological guide. She often repeats, “ she wrote . . . Cal [Lowell] had written” and “ Cal wrote to Elizabeth Bishop that Harriet and Elizabeth. . .” Hardwick ’ s dutiful, sanitised


letters to Lowell ’ s mother and to his wealthy Cousin Harriet are particularly dull. But they paid off after the Lowells gave Harriet ’ s name to their daughter (born when Hardwick was


forty) and she left her grand summer house in Castine, Maine to Hardwick. She adopted a Southern belle persona, became an iron-willed Blanche Dubois, and one observer said that of all the


women in their crowd she was “ the prettiest and sexiest and easiest to have a love affair with.” But in this book Hardwick never quite comes alive. Curtis treats her sex life in the most


cursory and tantalising fashion, and dismisses each lover in a sentence. While a student in Lexington and at Columbia University, Hardwick had a six-year on-and-off relationship with a


medical student. In New York she had “ two affairs that resulted in abortions.” Later on, her husband Robert Lowell was jealous when she invited men from her past to their party. Hardwick


slept with older influential lovers — Allen Tate (editor of the _ Sewanee Review _ ) and Philip Rahv (editor of the _Partisan Review_) — to advance her literary career, though Rahv said he


didn ’ t like sex with her and she confirmed his judgment. After Lowell left her, she had a “ gratifying relationship with an extraordinary [unidentified] friend.” Her brief romance with a


tax lawyer fizzled out and she dropped a penny-pinching philanthropist. Curtis doesn ’ t even mention Arthur Koestler ’ s liaison with Hardwick, who could not sustain a love affair. When


Hardwick and Lowell married in 1949 they were surprisingly poor, constantly worried about money, and traveled third-class on trains and ships while frantically racing around Europe and


teaching all over America. Hardwick was emotionally battered and crushed by her horrible mother-in-law, as well as by the manic and repeatedly unfaithful Lowell. (She was even bullied by


Harriet ’ s nursemaid who allowed her to play with her baby for only half an hour each day.) The snobbish, luxury-loving and hysterical Charlotte Lowell had sex with Cal ’ s psychiatrist and


discussed her son in bed. Her visits were predictably disastrous and her “ horrid reality” spoiled Hardwick ’ s life in Boston. She could hardly believe that death could overcome the


formidable Charlotte, but her serendipitous extinction in 1954 released her long-awaited trust fund and paid for their more lavish way of life. Lowell described Hardwick as “ slipshod, good


humoured, malicious (harmless) and humorous — full of high spirits, rattling a lot of sense, very good company.” They frequently had violent fights, fuelled by too much gin, even when he was


sane. When she misbehaved he threatened “ to put her in a crate with a glass of water and a copy of _Partisan Review,_” and send her back to Kentucky. When he was manic, she compared him to


Dostoyevsky ’ s deranged characters and lamented that his “ brutality knows no bounds where his own wishes were concerned.” Robert Lowell, the poet, whom Hardwick married in 1949 Always


guilt-ridden and regretful when he recovered, Lowell wondered how she could stand him. He could say, like Othello, “ she loved me for the dangers I had passed / and I loved her that she did


pity them.” She could say, like Miranda in _The Tempest_, “ I have suffered with those I saw suffer.” She even exclaimed, “ I would kill myself if it would cure you.” Hardwick, the tragic


heroine of his life, was both admired for her masochistic self-sacrifice and scorned for her slavish subservience to the genius she loved. Lowell left her in 1970, and three years later he


publicly humiliated her by cruelly exploiting her anguished letters in _The Dolphin_. Lowell thought _his_ poems were worth _her_ pain. If Lowell had lived after his return to Hardwick in


1977, which coincided with his fatal heart attack, she would have suffered even more torturous years with him. Their life would have been complicated by his still passionate bond with


Hardwick ’ s successor, the dazzling beauty, aristocrat and heiress Caroline Blackwood, who was fifteen years younger. After his sudden death, Hardwick treasured the prestige and power of


remaining Mrs. Robert Lowell and became an influential player in the American literary scene. She served on many committees, bountifully handing out prizes and money while securing quite a


few rewards of her own, along with lucrative lectures and honorary degrees. When Cathy Curtis loses the well known template of Lowell ’ s life seen from Hardwick ’ s point of view, she


treats her last unfamiliar thirty years in only sixty pages. Strangely, Curtis does not discuss Hardwick ’ s close friendship with Robert Silvers, editor of the _New York Review of Books_,


who paid as much as $4,000 for an article in 1997. Curtis does not explain Silvers ’ rare lung disease, his sad parting from a lover and why Hardwick went to an unnamed Cleveland museum with


him. Curtis doesn ’ t mention the older Hardwick ’ s desperate attempt to look young with dyed red hair, theatrical makeup and flashy clothes. Instead, she offers brief references to the


declining health — the hearing aid, vague tooth and foot problems, cataract, pacemaker, cane and wheelchair — of the woman who lived to 91. She gives a rather plodding run-through of


Hardwick ’ s writing, mainly in the _Partisan Review_ and the _New York Review of Books_, with no extended discussion of her best novel _Sleepless Nights_ (1979). She merely quotes, but does


not analyse, Lowell ’ s major poems about Hardwick. “ Man and Wife”, set in their marriage bed, with neither sex nor sleep, reveals the horrid gulf between their past love and present


torments. In “ To Speak of Woe That is in Marriage” the wife complains that her drunken husband is unfaithful and stays out all night with whores, but is impotent when he attempts clumsy sex


with her and “ stalls above me like an elephant.” Curtis also fails to explain or even comment on several of Hardwick ’ s bizarre statements. How is Rio de Janeiro ’ s tropical climate “


much . like Maine”? How was the liberal presidential candidate Senator Hubert Humphrey “ similar to” his political opposite Richard Nixon? Why couldn ’ t “ modern-day Russians pursue space


exploration in their cold climate”? How could Hardwick, after thirty years with Lowell, possibly believe that the mad satyr feared women and wanted to repress his sexuality? Nor does Curtis


discuss how Hardwick ’ s “ lack of feminist consciousness” and description of the Movement as “ bad writing, bald simplicity and simple-mindedness” seriously hurt her reputation. Curtis


thanks her editors, but they did a terrible job on this deeply flawed book, which does not do justice to Hardwick and contains more than ten serious errors. Asheville is misspelled (p 6),


Giroux ’ s first name is Robert (not Roger, p153), Stephen Spender is a poet (not a novelist, p17), Jean Stafford was born in Colorado (p57), Ian Hamilton did not write a life of Arthur


Koestler (p369), Lowell ’ s play _The Old Glory_ is not experimental (p176), Hardwick ’ s “ Back Issues” is a story (p267), she edited William James (not Henry, p141), Baldpate Hospital is


in Massachusetts (p327), there ’ s no motel on Harvard Square (p135) and Madrid fell to the fascists in March 1939, not 1938, (p9). Even the publication date on the verso of the title page


is incorrect. Curtis can ’ t decide whether to use “coloured”, “Negro”, “Black” or “ African-American ” and wavers between them. She repeats, four times, that Hardwick had no way of knowing


what would happen, though she couldn ’ t possibly foresee the future. Curtis contradicts herself by stating that Hardwick ’ s father was amiable and that her parents quarrelled endlessly;


that it was too late for Harriet ’ s school interview and (on the next page) that Hardwick took Harriet to an interview. Curtis misses some important allusions that illuminate Hardwick ’ s


meaning. Maximilian was the French Emperor of Mexico, executed by revolutionaries in 1867; “ childish things” comes from 1 Corinthians 13:11; the title of her story “ On the Eve” is from a


novel by Ivan Turgenev; “ Domestic Manners” from a travel book by Frances Trollope; her view that biography explains why “ it doesn ’ t pay to die” echoes Oscar Wilde ’ s “ biography adds a


new terror to death.” “Sad friend, you cannot change” in “ North Haven,” Elizabeth Bishop ’ s elegy to Lowell, reverses Rilke ’ s “ you must change your life.” Curtis pads her book with many


trivial details — shops in Lexington and small towns in Kentucky, concerts attended and grass cut — but doesn ’ t explain many important things. Why did Hardwick ’ s Presbyterian parents


have eleven children? How was Hardwick both malicious and charming? What sharp-tongued remarks did she later regret? How was she “ transported by Spinoza ’ s _Ethics_”? Why did she “ not


care to enjoy sex, only to have it”? (She may have liked attracting men more than the physical act.) Why did Edna Millay have a “ hopeless, killing bitterness about her place in literature”?


How did Hardwick hang a painting from her balcony? Which two Vermeer-like pictures did she buy? Why did the Lowells, living in New York, spend New Year ’ s Eve with Peter Taylor in Columbus


— and was he in Georgia or Ohio? Why did she dislike the recordings of Van Cliburn and the plays of Arthur Miller? Why — absurdly — did she say there were no contemporary playwrights “


better than Aeschylus”? Why should Robert Gottlieb, who replaced William Shawn, “ step down” as editor of the _New Yorker_? What did Hardwick and David Heymann discuss when he interviewed


her but “ asked her no questions about Cal ’ s life” ? I can supply some of her missing information. Swimming isn ’ t good in Castine, Maine because the water is very cold in summer; the


Renoir painting of a dancing couple is _Dance at Bougival_ (1883); Philip Rahv ’ s journal was _ Modern Occasions _ ; Nabokov ’ s “ odd translation” of Pushkin ’ s _ Eugene Onegin _ was


awkwardly literal; Mary McCarthy translated Simone Weil ’ s _The Iliad, or the Poem of Force_ (1945); McCarthy “ inexplicably changed” the executrix of her will because Hannah Arendt was her


closest friend; the Italian radical gunned down in Manhattan in 1943 was Carlo Tresca; the most famous Kentucky authors, left out of Curtis ’s  list, are Allen Tate and Robert Penn Warren;


Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., I. A. Richards and William Alfred taught at Harvard; Hardwick and Lowell lectured in Greensboro, North Carolina because their friend Randall Jarrell taught there;


Jarrell congratulated Lowell on his separation from Hardwick because he thought she was insincere and dishonest; Harriet did marry the chemical engineer she was dating. The best part of


Curtis ’s  book  — based on interviews with many of Hardwick ’ s talented and successful students: Susan Minot, Anna Quindlen and Daphne Merkin —  is her account of Hardwick ’ s popular


writing course at Barnard College in Columbia University. Hardwick admired the offbeat stories of Renata Adler, Guy Davenport and Kurt Vonnegut. Her essential principle was “ you have to


have something to say and then you do have to have a gift of language. You have to be _interesting_.” But she could be severe and insisted, “ I don ’ t want to encourage someone when it ’ s


not good work.” She never criticised Lowell, but displaced her malice onto friends. She horrified the novelist Mary Gordon, who disagreed with her about a writer, by exclaiming, “ What would


you know about it? You ’ ve never written an interesting sentence in your life.” Mary McCarthy said: “ Lizzie ’ s tongue rattles like a child ’ s toy, sometimes making amusing sounds.” But


Hardwick was known for her wit and should have the last word. Her grim winter in Amsterdam gave her “ the kind of anxiety usually felt only for the Last Judgment.” Financiers were “ trim


from the rigours of the conference call.” Meeting Bernard Berenson was like “ seeing the matinée of a play that had been running for eight decades.” She did not describe sex in her own work,


and zeroed in on the faults of Ana ï s Nin, who was “ mercilessly pretentious,” with a “ penchant for using vague, mystical phrases to create a spurious aura of sexual revelation.” _


Jeffrey Meyers, author of three books on Lowell, received four letters from Hardwick, one of which praised his “ fine work on Hemingway”. She reviewed his life of Edmund Wilson in the _ New


Yorker, _  May 8, 1995 _ _Due to a technical problem, earlier today this article was incorrectly attributed. It was written by Jeffrey Meyers_ _and is his work alone. We are happy to make


this clear._