Stay Lit
Join Miles Ellison and Cambria Shaw on Stay Lit, your go-to podcast for diving into English Literature! They unpack short stories, poems, and plays, exploring their themes, meanings, and why they still resonate today. From timeless classics to hidden gems, each episode sparks lively discussions that bring literature to life for everyone— whether you're a book lover or just curious. Tune in and stay lit with the power of stories!
Stay Lit
Behind the Smile: The Tragedy of Richard Cory
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
In this third edition of Stay Lit, Miles Ellison and Cambria Shaw explore Edwin Arlington Robinson’s classic poem “Richard Cory.” First published in 1897, this deceptively simple narrative captures the quiet tragedy behind appearances. Richard Cory is admired, envied—even idealized—as he moves among the townspeople with wealth, charm, and grace. But beneath the surface lies a deeper, darker reality. How happy is he, really? And what does the poem say about the assumptions we make about others? Join us as we examine how this short piece still speaks a universal—and unsettling—truth.
Hey everyone, I'm Miles Ellison.
SPEAKER_00And I'm Cambria Shaw.
SPEAKER_01Today we're getting a deep dive into, well, a really classic American poem. It's been grabbing readers for what, over a century now?
SPEAKER_00Easily, yeah.
SPEAKER_01It's short, but uh it packs a serious punch, especially about how we see the world and maybe you know how we see each other.
SPEAKER_00Absolutely. We're talking about Richard Corey, uh, written by Edwin Arlington Robinson, way back in 1896.
SPEAKER_01Right, published in 1897.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. And Robinson, he just had this incredible knack, didn't he? Totally. For these really concise, almost like miniature dramas, all about people in these small New England villages.
SPEAKER_01Like Tilbury Town in this poem.
SPEAKER_00Tilbury Town, exactly. Which was fictional, but uh apparently really close to Gardner mean, where Robinson actually grew up.
SPEAKER_01Interesting. So our mission today really is to peel back the layers here. We want to get into what it's showing us about, well, human nature, perception, and that um that tricky thing called happiness.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, what's Robinson actually trying to tell us in just these, what, 16 lines?
SPEAKER_01Okay, let's jump in.
SPEAKER_00Show.
SPEAKER_01How does it start? It puts us right there with the townspeople, doesn't it? The we people on the pavement.
SPEAKER_00Right away. They're watching this guy. The opening lines kind of set it all up.
SPEAKER_01Whenever Richard Corey went downtown, we people on the pavement looked at him.
SPEAKER_00See, there's this intense focus immediately. They're not just glancing, they're a looking. They're like fixated whenever he shows up. He just has this aura.
SPEAKER_01Definitely commands attention. And the way they describe him, so deliberate. He was a gentleman from soul to crown, clean favored, and imperially slim.
SPEAKER_00A gentleman from soul to crown. I mean, that's more than just nice shoes and a hat, or oh, for sure.
SPEAKER_01It's like breeding, civility, grace, something innate.
SPEAKER_00And soul to crown. It just screams royalty, doesn't it? Like a king, head to toe. That imagery.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. That kingly vibe is there right from the start.
SPEAKER_00And it keeps going with imperially slim.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00So clean favored. Okay, he's good looking, attractive. Right. But adding imperially, again, it's aristocracy, it's regal, almost like an unattainable ideal makes him sound incredibly alluring.
SPEAKER_01So physically he sounds perfect.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_01What about, you know, how he acted, how he carried himself? The poem goes on. And he was always quietly arrayed.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Quietly arrayed. So nice clothes, but understated. Good taste.
SPEAKER_01Not flashy.
SPEAKER_00No, but he knows quality. And then this line, and he was always human when he talked. That's fascinating, isn't it?
SPEAKER_01It really is. It tells you he wasn't like stuck up or distant.
SPEAKER_00Right. He actually talked to people. He was approachable on some level.
SPEAKER_01But even just him saying good morning, listen to this. But still he fluttered pulses when he said good morning, and he glittered when he walked.
SPEAKER_00Wow. Even a simple good morning made hearts beat faster.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. It just shows how powerful his presence was, even in these tiny interactions.
SPEAKER_00And the glittered when he walked? What do you think that is, literally?
SPEAKER_01Well, it feels like the clearest sign of his wealth, right? He's wearing jewelry, maybe.
SPEAKER_00Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_01A watch chain, cuff lengths, something catching the light.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, adorned with his status. And the poem doesn't uh doesn't beat around the bush about it either. It says it's straight out.
SPEAKER_01And he was rich, yes, richer than a king.
SPEAKER_00Bam. There's the king thing again. But tied directly to money this time. Immense wealth.
SPEAKER_01And admirably schooled in every grace.
SPEAKER_00That just seals the deal, doesn't it? The outward perfection, perfect manners, knew how to act in any situation, just flawless.
SPEAKER_01So if you put all that together, how did the townspeople see him? What was the final verdict?
SPEAKER_00Well, the poem sums it up perfectly.
SPEAKER_01On Fine, we thought that he was everything to make us wish that we were in his place.
SPEAKER_00He was it. The absolute embodiment of success, happiness, everything they wanted.
SPEAKER_01Wealth, looks, manners seemed nice enough, but still special.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. He was the dream, the person they thought had it all figured out, the ideal they wished they could be.
SPEAKER_01Okay, so hold that image of Richard Corey. Now let's pivot to the townspeople themselves, the ones doing the watching. The poem shifts perspective right after that line.
SPEAKER_00Mm-hmm. And it's a stark contrast. So on we worked and waited for the light, and went without the meat, and cursed the bread.
SPEAKER_01Oof. That's the daily grind, isn't it? You can feel it.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. These are people working hard, probably struggling. Check to check, maybe.
SPEAKER_01Waiting for the light.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Just hoping things get better, some kind of relief.
SPEAKER_00Seems like it. Waiting for a break, maybe. A future that feels just out of reach. And they're not just putting up with it, they're cursing the bread.
SPEAKER_01That's real frustration. Deep unhappiness with their situation. Going without basics, like meat.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. Constant hard work, maybe poverty, feeling the weight of it all. And then they look at Richard Corey.
SPEAKER_01The guy who glittered.
SPEAKER_00Who was richer than a king, who had it all from their perspective. And they just desperately wish they could swap live.
SPEAKER_01Seeing his perfection probably made their own struggles feel even worse.
SPEAKER_00You'd think so. Yeah. And then comes the twist. The moment that just shatters that entire image, the final two lines.
SPEAKER_01It hits like a ton of bricks.
SPEAKER_00And Richard Corey, one calm summer night, went home and put a bullet through his head.
SPEAKER_01Just like that. The man who seemed perfect, the one everyone envied.
SPEAKER_00Takes his own life. It's so sudden, so devastating in the context of the poem.
SPEAKER_01And the timing. One calm summer night. It's kind of unsettling.
SPEAKER_00It is, isn't it? You might almost expect, you know, a dark, stormy winter cliche for something like this.
SPEAKER_01Right. Despair matches the weather.
SPEAKER_00But no. Robinson chooses calm summer. Some people suggest maybe that adds a weird kind of dignity.
SPEAKER_01Oh, so.
SPEAKER_00Like even in this final awful act, he was still composed, deliberate, not frantic. Someone said even in his suicide, he did it dignified. I don't know, it's just a thought, but it makes it haunting.
SPEAKER_01It really does. And this massive gap, this irony, that's the core of why this poem sticks with you, right?
SPEAKER_00Absolutely. The huge, unbelievable difference between how Corey looked on the outside, how everyone saw him.
SPEAKER_01And what must have been going on inside. His inner reality, total despair.
SPEAKER_00And what's really powerful, I think, is that the poem never tells us why.
SPEAKER_01No reason given.
SPEAKER_00Nope. No backstory, no explanation for the despair. It just gives us the fact, and that forces us, the readers, to wrestle with it, to wonder.
SPEAKER_01We only see him from the outside, through their eyes. But clearly, the inside was a whole different story.
SPEAKER_00Outwardly, a huge success. Inwardly, a complete failure, in a way.
SPEAKER_01And this whole situation, this paradox, it points to some really fundamental things about being human, doesn't it? Things that still feel true.
SPEAKER_00Definitely. So what are the big takeaways? What does Robinson force us to think about?
SPEAKER_01Well, number one, right off the bat, earthly things alone cannot give happiness.
SPEAKER_00Seems obvious, but Corey is the perfect example. He had everything they thought guaranteed happiness: money, status, looks, admiration.
SPEAKER_01Everything.
SPEAKER_00And it wasn't enough. Something inside, his core, as you might say, was deeply wrong.
SPEAKER_01It's such a blunt reminder that, you know, external success doesn't just magically fill you up inside.
SPEAKER_00Which leads right into the next point, I think. People we envy often have our problems too. Maybe different ones, but problems nonetheless.
SPEAKER_01That's so true, isn't it? We look at someone's curated life, maybe on social media today, or just someone who seems to have it all. Mm-hmm. And we assume it's all perfect. We project. But this poem just rips that apart. Behind the shiny surface, everyone, no matter how lucky they seem, can be struggling.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Dealing with loneliness or despair or who knows what. We're probably more alike in our hidden struggles than our outward appearances suggest.
SPEAKER_01And maybe that leads to a third point. Like, no one truly escapes some kind of despair.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. By making Corey seem so perfect, almost unreal, his ending is even more shocking. Right. It hammers home that even the person who seems to have won the lottery of life isn't immune. Not immune to suffering, to the dark stuff. He's elegant, mysterious, sure, but ultimately tragic because of that inner reality he couldn't escape.
SPEAKER_01And the big theme tying it all together is that classic one: appearance versus reality.
SPEAKER_00It's everywhere in literature and life. That gap between the public face and the private self. Corey just embodies it so, so dramatically. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01You mentioned his core earlier. What about his name? Richard Corey? Is there something there?
SPEAKER_00People have definitely thought about that. It feels intentional, doesn't it?
SPEAKER_01How so?
SPEAKER_00Well, Richard. Pretty straightforward, right? Suggests rich money. Wealth.
SPEAKER_01Okay. Makes sense. And Corey.
SPEAKER_00Corey. Could that point to the core? The heart, the inner essence of a person. Interesting. The poem is saying to really know someone, you need to see their core. Not just the surface stuff, the money, the looks, the nice manners.
SPEAKER_01And in Richard Corey's case.
SPEAKER_00The richness was all external, the inner richness, the richness of the heart. Maybe that's what was missing. Tragically missing.
SPEAKER_01So this huge divide between his public life and his private life. The guy walking down the street versus the guy alone at home.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. And you know, this isn't just some quaint observation about the 1890s. We see this disconnect all the time, maybe even more now.
SPEAKER_01How do you mean?
SPEAKER_00Well, think about hugely famous people, people who seem to have everything the world says you should want. Uh like Marilyn Monroe, maybe.
SPEAKER_01Marilyn Monroe. How did she fit?
SPEAKER_00Well, think about it. Incredible fame, money, beauty. She had everything society screams is success, right? Still an icon.
SPEAKER_01Definitely.
SPEAKER_00But from everything we hear, reports suggest she was deeply unhappy inside, struggled a lot, allegedly used drugs to cope near the end. It's that same pattern, isn't it?
SPEAKER_01Wow, yeah. The glittering exterior.
SPEAKER_00And the inner turmoil. You could probably point to lots of figures like that throughout history, unfortunately.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell It really drives home that, I guess, universal truth, that real happiness, contentment.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_01It doesn't just come from outside stuff.
SPEAKER_00No, it has to come from within. Inner peace, joy from the inside, from your core, not just based on what you own or how you look or what other people think.
SPEAKER_01The townspeople thought Cordy's external riches equaled internal happiness. And the poem just Yeah, brutally exposes that mistake.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell So why? Why does this little poem, over 120 years old, about some guy in a fictional town still hit so hard today?
SPEAKER_01I think because the themes are just timeless. Yeah. We still live in a world obsessed with appearances, right?
SPEAKER_00Oh yeah. Social media feeds, reality TV.
SPEAKER_01We make snap judgments based on the surface, the job title, the car, the profile picture. And we absolutely fall into that trap of comparing our messy insides to someone else's polished outside.
SPEAKER_00Constantly.
SPEAKER_01It really makes you pause and think, doesn't it? Like, what do we really value? How quick are we to assume or to feel envy based on almost nothing? And what might the people around us, people we see every day, be carrying silently?
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_01What assumptions do you make about the folks you pass on the uh metaphorical pavement?
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell It's a tragic poem, no doubt about it. But it's such a powerful, almost uncomfortable reminder. Appearances are deceiving. External success does not guarantee internal well-being.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. It leaves you with a lot to chew on long after you read those final lines. And the poem, it doesn't tell us what Corey was thinking, does it? No. But it kind of pushes us to wonder what do you think was going through Richard Corey's mind just before? Yeah, we can only guess, obviously. But just asking that question makes us look past the glitter. Try to imagine that hidden inner world.
SPEAKER_00And that effort, that trying to look deeper with some compassion. Maybe that's the most important thing the poem asks us to do. Stay lit.