REVIEWS Warren Stevenson, Poetic Friends: A Study of Literary Relations During the English Romantic Period (New York: Peter Lang, 1990). 195. $35.95 US. This compact book focusses on the theme of intellectual friendship in the Romantic period, specifically how three poets — Blake, Coleridge, Shelley — gave poetic form to their relationships with, respectively, Hayley, Words worth, and Byron/Keats. This is interesting and potentially fruitful ter ritory. While much has been written about biographical and intertextual dynamics of individual relationships in the Romantic period, room remains for a good book that would synthesize existing research and construct a the oretical framework for the subject, for example by extending to other poets Gene Ruoff’s careful intertextual method in dealing with the friendship of Coleridge and Wordsworth or by applying historicist methods to determine how and why friendship became such a culturally powerful concept in the Romantic period. Unfortunately, this is not that book. Poetic Friends purports to steer a humanist mid-course between “the heaven of archetypal criticism and the hell of deconstruction” (1), but it offers no coherent theory or methodology, and pays scarcely any attention to relevant criticism on the subject. Indeed, this is not really a scholarly book at all, at least not in the modern sense of the term. In both tone and substance, it is reminiscent of the academic lecture of yesteryear, in which a genial professor delivers, amid a good deal of biographical anecdote, plot summary, personal witticism and generaliza tion, a series of eccentric readings of isolated passages and poems, based on unfounded assumptions and haphazard research, and decorated by a few touches of poorly digested myth criticism and neo-Freudian psychoanalysis. Poetic Friends has a tripartite structure, with one part devoted to each of Blake and Hayley, Coleridge and Wordsworth, and Shelley, Byron, and Keats. Insofar as Stevenson has a thesis, it is that a battle for poetic and pyschosexual dominance animates these relationships and takes poetic form in the work of one of its members. (Stevenson asserts that the literary transformation of friendship is evident only in the work of Blake, Coleridge, and Shelley, as “Hayley, Wordsworth, and Byron did not reciprocate this 355 ‘forming’ to any significant degree” (3), a questionable statement given the amount of material written on Wordsworth’s dialogue with Coleridge alone.) What Stevenson means by “forming” appears to differ among the sections. In the first two sections he is concerned with the transformation of a conflict laden relationship into dramatic, symbolic, or mythic terms, as, for example, in his reading of the symbolic personages in Blake’s Jerusalem, as aspects of Blake’s difficult relationship with Hayley. In the final, less successful section, forming appears to be a simple synonym for portraying or influencing, as in the statement that Shelley formed Byron by “dosing” him with Wordsworth at a crucial stage in his poetic career (133). Each part is divided into several relatively self-contained subsections or mini-essays offering biographical information on the relationship and bring ing that information to bear on individual poems. In the first two sections, this generates allegorical interpretations of Blake’s Milton and Jerusalem and Coleridge’s “Ancient Mariner” and “Christabel.” Here Stevenson’s method seems to be the finding of images or passages in the poems that he can identify with a biographical event or feature of the relationship (e.g., Satan’s relationship with Elynittria, in Milton, is a dramatization of Hayley ’s putative attraction to Blake’s wife; the word “askance,” used thrice for the way Geraldine looks at Christabel, also appears in Coleridge’s notebook description of Wordsworth looking at him). By accumulating these details he attempts to construct a coherent interpretation of a particular charac ter or poem as an allegorical portrait of the friend (thus Satan in Blake’s Milton is Hayley, or at least the set of attitudes he represents, while Geral dine in “Christabel” is Wordsworth, or at least the way Coleridge dramatizes Wordsworth’s dominance over him). While the readings in these sections are eccentric, and too often overstated, reductive, superficial, and/or unfounded in their use of evidence, they are at least memorable. This cannot be said for the essays...