664 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
664 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
1844-49
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MARGINALIA
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by Edgar Allan Poe
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MARGINALIA
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DEMOCRATIC REVIEW, November, 1844
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In getting my books, I have been always solicitous of an ample
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margin; this not so much through any love of the thing in itself,
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however agreeable, as for the facility it affords me of pencilling
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suggested thoughts, agreements, and differences of opinion, or brief
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critical comments in general. Where what I have to note is too much to
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be included within the narrow limits of a margin, I commit it to a
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slip of paper, and deposit it between the leaves; taking care to
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secure it by an imperceptible portion of gum tragacanth paste.
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All this may be whim; it may be not only a very hackneyed, but a
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very idle practice;- yet I persist in it still; and it affords me
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pleasure; which is profit, in despite of Mr. Bentham, with Mr. Mill on
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his back.
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This making of notes, however, is by no means the making of mere
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memorandum- a custom which has its disadvantages, beyond doubt "Ce que
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je mets sur papier," says Bernadine de St. Pierre, "je remets de ma
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memoire et par consequence je l'oublie;"- and, in fact, if you wish to
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forget anything upon the spot, make a note that this thing is to be
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remembered.
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But the purely marginal jottings, done with no eye to the Memorandum
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Book, have a distinct complexion, and not only a distinct purpose, but
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none at all; this it is which imparts to them a value. They have a
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rank somewhat above the chance and desultory comments of literary
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chit-chat- for these latter are not unfrequently "talk for talk's
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sake," hurried out of the mouth; while the marginalia are deliberately
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pencilled, because the mind of the reader wishes to unburthen itself
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of a thought;- however flippant- however silly- however trivial- still
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a thought indeed, not merely a thing that might have been a thought in
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time, and under more favorable circumstances. In the marginalia,
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too, we talk only to ourselves; we therefore talk freshly- boldly-
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originally- with abandonnement- without conceit- much after the
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fashion of Jeremy Taylor, and Sir Thomas Browne, and Sir William
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Temple, and the anatomical Burton, and that most logical analogist,
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Butler, and some other people of the old day, who were too full of
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their matter to have any room for their manner, which, being thus left
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out of question, was a capital manner, indeed,- a model of manners,
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with a richly marginalic air.
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The circumscription of space, too, in these pencillings, has in it
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something more of advantage than of inconvenience. It compels us
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(whatever diffuseness of idea we may clandestinely entertain), into
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Montesquieu-ism, into Tacitus-ism (here I leave out of view the
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concluding portion of the "Annals")- or even into Carlyle-ism- a thing
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which, I have been told, is not to be confounded with your ordinary
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affectation and bad grammar. I say "bad grammar," through sheer
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obstinacy, because the grammarians (who should know better) insist
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upon it that I should not. But then grammar is not what these
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grammarians will have it; and, being merely the analysis of
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language, with the result of this analysis, must be good or bad just
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as the analyst is sage or silly- just as he is Horne Tooke or a
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Cobbett.
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But to our sheep. During a rainy afternoon, not long ago, being in a
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mood too listless for continuous study, I sought relief from ennui
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in dipping here and there, at random, among the volumes of my library-
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no very large one, certainly, but sufficiently miscellaneous; and, I
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flatter myself, not a little recherche.
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Perhaps it was what the Germans call the "brain-scattering" humor of
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the moment; but, while the picturesqueness of the numerous
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pencil-scratches arrested my attention, their helter-skelter-iness
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of commentary amused me. I found myself at length forming a wish
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that it had been some other hand than my own which had so bedevilled
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the books, and fancying that, in such case, I might have derived no
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inconsiderable pleasure from turning them over. From this the
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transition- thought (as Mr. Lyell, or Mr. Murchison, or Mr.
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Featherstonhaugh would have it) was natural enough:- there might be
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something even in my scribblings which, for the mere sake of
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scribblings would have interest for others.
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The main difficulty respected the mode of transferring the notes
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from the volumes- the context from the text- without detriment to that
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exceedingly frail fabric of intelligibility in which the context was
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imbedded. With all appliances to boot, with the printed pages at their
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back, the commentaries were too often like Dodona's oracles- or
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those of Lycophron Tenebrosus- or the essays of the pedant's pupils,
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in Quintilian, which were "necessarily excellent, since even he (the
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pedant) found it impossible to comprehend them":- what, then, would
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become of it- this context- if transferred?- if translated? Would it
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not rather be traduit (traduced) which is the French synonym, or
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overzezet (turned topsy-turvy) which is the Dutch one?
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I concluded, at length, to put extensive faith in the acumen and
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imagination of the reader:- this as a general rule. But, in some
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instances, where even faith would not remove mountains, there seemed
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no safer plan than so to re-model the note as to convey at least the
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ghost of a conception as to what it was all about. Where, for such
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conception, the text itself was absolutely necessary, I could quote
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it, where the title of the book commented upon was indispensable, I
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could name it. In short, like a novel-hero dilemma'd, I made up my
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mind "to be guided by circumstances," in default of more
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satisfactory rules of conduct.
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As for the multitudinous opinion expressed in the subjoined farrago-
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as for my present assent to all, or dissent from any portion of it- as
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to the possibility of my having, in some instances, altered my mind-
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or as to the impossibility of my not having altered it often- these
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are points upon which I say nothing, because upon these there can be
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nothing cleverly said. It may be as well to observe, however, that
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just as the goodness of your true pun is in the direct ratio of its
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intolerability, so is nonsense the essential sense of the Marginal
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Note.
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I have seen many computations respecting the greatest amount of
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erudition attainable by an individual in his life-time, but these
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computations are falsely based, and fall infinitely beneath the truth.
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It is true that, in general we retain, we remember to available
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purpose, scarcely one-hundredth part of what we read; yet there are
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minds which not only retain all receipts, but keep them at compound
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interest forever. Again:- were every man supposed to read out, he
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could read, of course, very little, even in half a century; for, in
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such case, each individual word must be dwelt upon in some degree.
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But, in reading to ourselves, at the ordinary rate of what is called
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"light reading," we scarcely touch one word in ten. And, even
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physically considered, knowledge breeds knowledge, as gold gold; for
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he who reads really much, finds his capacity to read increase in
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geometrical ratio. The helluo librorum will but glance at the page
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which detains the ordinary reader some minutes; and the difference
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in the absolute reading (its uses considered), will be in favor of the
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helluo, who will have winnowed the matter of which the tyro mumbled
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both the seeds and the chaff. A deep-rooted and strictly continuous
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habit of reading will, with certain classes of intellect, result in an
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instinctive and seemingly magnetic appreciation of a thing written;
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and now the student reads by pages just as other men by words. Long
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years to come, with a careful analysis of the mental process, may even
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render this species of appreciation a common thing. It may be taught
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in the schools of our descendants of the tenth or twentieth
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generation. It may become the method of the mob of the eleventh or
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twenty-first. And should these matters come to pass- as they will-
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there will be in them no more legitimate cause for wonder than there
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is, to-day, in the marvel that, syllable by syllable, men comprehend
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what, letter by letter, I now trace upon this page.
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Is it not a law that need has a tendency to engender the thing
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needed?
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Moore has been noted for the number of appositeness, as well as
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novelty of his similes; and the renown thus acquired is indicial of
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his deficiency in that noble merit- the noblest of all. No poet thus
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distinguished was ever richly ideal. Pope and Cowper are instances.
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Direct similes are of too palpably artificial a character to be
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artistical. An artist will always contrive to weave his
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illustrations into the metaphorical form.
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Moore has a peculiar facility in prosaically telling a poetical
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story. By this I mean that he preserves the tone and method of
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arrangement of a prose relation, and thus obtains great advantage,
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in important points, over his more stilted compeers. His is no
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poetical style (such as the French have- a distinct style for a
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distinct purpose) but an easy and ordinary prose manner, which rejects
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the licenses because it does not require them, and is merely
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ornamented into poetry. By means of this manner he is enabled to
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encounter, effectually, details which would baffle any other versifier
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of the day; and at which Lamartine would stand aghast. In
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"Alciphron" we see this exemplified. Here the minute and perplexed
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incidents of the descent into the pyramid, are detailed, in verse,
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with quite as much precision and intelligibility as could be
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attained even by the coolest prose of Mr. Jeremy Bentham.
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Moore has vivacity; verbal and constructive dexterity; a musical ear
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not sufficiently cultivated; a vivid fancy; an epigrammatic spirit;
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and a fine taste- as far as it goes.
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Democratic Review, December, 1844
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I am not sure that Tennyson is not the greatest of poets. The
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uncertainty attending the public conception of the term "poet" alone
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prevents me from demonstrating that he is. Other bards produce effects
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which are, now and then, otherwise produced than by what we call
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poems; but Tennyson an effect which only a poem does. His alone are
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idiosyncratic poems. By the enjoyment or non-enjoyment of the "Morte
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D'Arthur" or of the "Oenone," I would test any one's ideal sense.
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There are passages in his works which rivet a conviction I had
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long entertained, that the indefinite is an element in the true
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poiesis. Why do some persons fatigue themselves in attempts to unravel
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such fantasy-pieces as the "Lady of Shalott"? As well unweave the
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"ventum textilem." If the author did not deliberately propose to
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himself a suggestive indefinitiveness of meaning with the view of
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bringing about a definitiveness of vague and therefore of spiritual
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effect- this, at least, arose from the silent analytical promptings of
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that poetic genius which, in its supreme development, embodies all
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orders of intellectual capacity.
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I know that indefinitiveness is an element of the true music- I mean
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of the true musical expression. Give to it any undue decision- imbue
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it with any very determinate tone- and you deprive it at once of its
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ethereal, its ideal, its intrinsic and essential character. You dispel
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its luxury of dream. You dissolve the atmosphere of the mystic upon
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which it floats. You exhaust it of its breath of fiery. It now becomes
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a tangible and easily appreciable idea- a thing of the earth,
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earthy. It has not, indeed, lost its power to please, but all which
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I consider the distinctiveness of that power. And to the
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uncultivated talent, or to the unimaginative apprehension, this
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deprivation of its most delicate air will be, not unfrequently, a
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recommendation. A determinateness of expression is sought- and often
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by composers who should know better- is sought as a beauty rather than
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rejected as a blemish. Thus we have, even from high authorities,
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attempts at absolute imitation in music. Who can forget the
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silliness of the "Battle of Prague"? What man of taste but must
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laugh at the interminable drums, trumpets, blunderbusses, and thunder?
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"Vocal music," says L'Abbate Gravina, who would have said the same
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thing of instrumental, "ought to imitate the natural language of the
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human feelings and passions, rather than the warblings of canary
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birds, which our singers, now-a-days, affect so vastly to mimic with
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their quaverings and boasted cadences." This is true only so far as
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the "rather" is concerned. If any music must imitate anything, it were
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assuredly better to limit the imitation as Gravina suggests.
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Tennyson's shorter pieces abound in minute rhythmical lapses
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sufficient to asure me that- in common with all poets living or
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dead- he has neglected to make precise investigation of the principles
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of metre; but, on the other hand, so perfect is his rhythmical
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instinct in general that, like the present Viscount Canterbury, he
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seems to see with his ear.
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Godey's Lady's Book, September, 1845
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The increase, within a few years, of the magazine literature, is
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by no means to be regarded as indicating what some critics would
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suppose it to indicate- a downward tendency in American taste or in
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American letters. It is but a sign of the times, an indication of an
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era in which men are forced upon the curt, the condensed, the
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well-digested in place of the voluminous- in a word, upon journalism
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in lieu of dissertation. We need now the light artillery rather than
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the peace-makers of the intellect. I will not be sure that men at
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present think more profoundly than half a century ago, but beyond
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question they think with more rapidity, with more skill, with more
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tact, with more of method and less of excrescence in the thought.
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Besides all this, they have a vast increase in the thinking
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material; they have more facts, more to think about. For this
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reason, they are disposed to put the greatest amount of thought in the
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smallest compass and disperse it with the utmost attainable
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rapidity. Hence the journalism of the age; hence, in especial,
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magazines. Too many we cannot have, as a general proposition; but we
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demand that they have sufficient merit to render them noticeable in
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the beginning, and that they continue in existence sufficiently long
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to permit us a fair estimation of their value.
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Broadway Journal, Oct. 4, 1845
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Much has been said, of late, about the necessity of maintaining
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a proper nationality in American Letters; but what this nationality
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is, or what is to be gained by it, has never been distinctly
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understood. That an American should confine himself to American
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themes, or even prefer them, is rather a political than a literary
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idea- and at best is a questionable point. We would do well to bear in
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mind that "distance lends enchantment to the view." Ceteris paribus, a
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foreign theme is, in a strictly literary sense, to be preferred. After
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all, the world at large is the only legitimate stage for the
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autorial histrio.
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But of the need of that nationality which defends our own
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literature, sustains our own men of letters, upholds our own
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dignity, and depends upon our own resources, there can not be the
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shadow of a doubt. Yet here is the very point at which we are most
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supine. We complain of our want of International Copyright on the
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ground that this want justifies our publishers in inundating us with
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British opinion in British books; and yet when these very
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publishers, at their own obvious risk, and even obvious loss, do
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publish an American book, we turn up our noses at it with supreme
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contempt (this is a general thing) until it (the American book) has
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been dubbed "readable" by some literate Cockney critic. Is it too much
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to say that, with us, the opinion of Washington Irving- of Prescott-
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of Bryant- is a mere nullity in comparison with that of any
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anonymous sub-sub-editor of the Spectator, the Athenaeum, or the
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London Punch? It is not saying too much to say this. It is a solemn-
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an absolutely awful fact. Every publisher in the country will admit it
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to be a fact. There is not a more disgusting spectacle under the sun
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than our subserviency to British criticism. It is disgusting, first
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because it is truckling, servile, pusilanimous- secondly, because of
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its gross irrationality. We know the British to bear us little but ill
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will- we know that, in no case, do they utter unbiased opinions of
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American books- we know that in the few instances in which our writers
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have been treated with common decency in England, these writers have
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either openly paid homage to English institutions, or have had lurking
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at the bottom of their hearts a secret principle at war with
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Democracy:- we know all this, and yet, day after day, submit our necks
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to the degrading yoke of the crudest opinion that emanates from the
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fatherland. Now if we must have nationality, let it be a nationality
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that will throw off this yoke.
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The chief of the rhapsodists who have ridden us to death like the
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Old Man of the Mountain, is the ignorant and egotistical Wilson. We
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use the term rhapsodists with perfect deliberation; for, Macaulay, and
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Dilke, and one or two others, excepted, there is not in Great
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Britain a critic who can be fairly considered worthy the name. The
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Germans and even the French, are infinitely superior. As regards
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Wilson, no man ever penned worse criticism or better rhodomontade.
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That he is "egotistical" his works show to all men, running as they
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read. That he is "ignorant" let his absurd and continuous school-boy
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blunders about Homer bear witness. Not long ago we ourselves pointed
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out a series of similar inanities in his review of Miss Barret's [sic]
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poems- a series, we say, of gross blunders, arising from sheer
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ignorance- and we defy him or any one to answer a single syllable of
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what we then advanced.
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And yet this is the man whose simple dictum (to our shame be it
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spoken) has the power to make or to mar any American reputation! In
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the last number of Blackwood, he has a continuation of the dull
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"Specimens of the British Critics," and makes occasion wantonly to
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insult one of the noblest of our poets, Mr. Lowell. The point of the
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whole attack consists in the use of slang epithets and phrases of
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the most ineffably vulgar description. "Squabashes" is a pet term.
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"Faugh!" is another. "We are Scotsmen to the spiner" says Sawney- as
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if the thing were not more than self-evident. Mr. Lowell is called a
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"magpie," an "ape," a "Yankee cockney," and his name is
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intentionally mis-written John Russell Lowell. Now were these
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indecencies perpetrated by an American critic, that critic would be
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sent to Coventry by the whole press of the country, but since it is
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Wilson who insults, we, as in duty bound, not only submit to the
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insult, but echo it, as an excellent jest, throughout the length and
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breadth of the land. "Quamdiu Catilina?" We do indeed demand the
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nationality of self-respect. In Letters as in Government we require
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a Declaration of Independence. A better thing still would be a
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Declaration of War- and that war should be carried forthwith "into
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Africa."
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Graham's Magazine, March, 1846
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Some Frenchman- possibly Montaigne- says: "People talk about
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thinking, but for my part I never think except when I sit down to
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write." It is this never thinking, unless when we sit down to write,
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which is the cause of so much indifferent composition. But perhaps
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there is something more involved in the Frenchman's observation than
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meets the eye. It is certain that the mere act of inditing tends, in a
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great degree, to the logicalisation of thought. Whenever, on account
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of its vagueness, I am dissatisfied with a conception of the brain,
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I resort forthwith to the pen, for the purpose of obtaining, through
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its aid, the necessary form, consequence, and precision.
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How very commonly we hear it remarked that such and such thoughts
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are beyond the compass of words! I do not believe that any thought,
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properly so called, is out of the reach of language. I fancy,
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rather, that where difficulty in expression is experienced, there
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is, in the intellect which experiences it, a want either of
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deliberateness or of method. For my own part, I have never had a
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thought which I could not set down in words, with even more
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distinctness than that with which I conceived it:- as I have before
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observed, the thought is logicalised by the effort at (written)
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expression.
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There is, however, a class of fancies, of exquisite delicacy,
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which are not thoughts, and to which, as yet, I have found it
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absolutely impossible to adapt language. I use the word fancies at
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random, and merely because I must use some word; but the idea commonly
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attached to the term is not even remotely applicable to the shadows of
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shadows in question. They seem to me rather psychal than intellectual.
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They arise in the soul (alas, how rarely!) only at its epochs of
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most intense tranquillity- when the bodily and mental health are in
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perfection- and at those mere points of time where the confines of the
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waking world blend with those of the world of dreams. I am aware of
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these "fancies" only when I am upon the very brink of sleep, with
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the consciousness that I am so. I have satisfied myself that this
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condition exists but for an inappreciable point of time- yet it is
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crowded with these "shadows of shadows"; and for absolute thought
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there is demanded time's endurance.
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These "fancies" have in them a pleasurable ecstasy, as far beyond
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the most pleasurable of the world of wakefulness, or of dreams, as the
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Heaven of the Northman theology is beyond its Hell. I regard the
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visions, even as they arise, with an awe which, in some measure
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moderates or tranquillises the ecstasy- I so regard them, through a
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conviction (which seems a portion of the ecstasy itself) that this
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ecstasy, in itself, is of a character supernal to the Human Nature- is
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a glimpse of the spirit's outer world; and I arrive at this
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conclusion- if this term is at all applicable to instantaneous
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intuition- by a perception that the delight experienced has, as its
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element, but the absoluteness of novelty. I say the absoluteness-
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for in the fancies- let me now term them psychal impressions- there is
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really nothing even approximate in character to impressions ordinarily
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received. It is as if the five senses were supplanted by five myriad
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others alien to mortality.
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Now, so entire is my faith in the power of words, that at times I
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have believed it possible to embody even the evanescence of fancies
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such as I have attempted to describe. In experiments with this end
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in view, I have proceeded so far as, first, to control (when the
|
|
bodily and mental health are good), the existence of the condition:-
|
|
that is to say, I can now (unless when ill), be sure that the
|
|
condition will supervene, if I so wish it, at the point of time
|
|
already described: of its supervention until lately I could never be
|
|
certain even under the most favorable circumstances. I mean to say,
|
|
merely, that now I can be sure, when all circumstances are
|
|
favorable, of the supervention of the condition, and feel even the
|
|
capacity of inducing or compelling it:- the favorable circumstances,
|
|
however, are not the less rare- else had I compelled already the
|
|
Heaven into the Earth.
|
|
|
|
I have proceeded so far, secondly, as to prevent the lapse from
|
|
the Point of which I speak- the point of blending between
|
|
wakefulness and sleep- as to prevent at will, I say, the lapse from
|
|
this border- ground into the dominion of sleep. Not that I can
|
|
continue the condition- not that I can render the point more than a
|
|
point- but that I can startle myself from the point into
|
|
wakefulness; and thus transfer the point itself into the realm of
|
|
Memory- convey its impressions, or more properly their
|
|
recollections, to a situation where (although still for a very brief
|
|
period) I can survey them with the eye of analysis.
|
|
|
|
For these reasons- that is to say, because I have been enabled to
|
|
accomplish thus much- I do not altogether despair of embodying in
|
|
words at least enough of the fancies in question to convey to
|
|
certain classes of intellect, a shadowy conception of their character.
|
|
|
|
In saying this I am not to be understood as supposing that the
|
|
fancies or psychal impressions to which I allude are confined to my
|
|
individual self- are not, in a word, common to all mankind- for on
|
|
this point it is quite impossible that I should form an opinion- but
|
|
nothing can be more certain than that even a partial record of the
|
|
impressions would startle the universal intellect of mankind, by the
|
|
supremeness of the novelty of the material employed, and of its
|
|
consequent suggestions. In a word- should I ever write a paper on this
|
|
topic, the world will be compelled to acknowledge that, at last, I
|
|
have done an original thing.
|
|
|
|
Democratic Review, April, 1846
|
|
|
|
In general, our first impressions are true ones- the chief
|
|
difficulty is in making sure which are the first. In early youth we
|
|
read a poem, for instance, and are enraptured with it. At manhood we
|
|
are assured by our reason that we had no reason to be enraptured.
|
|
But some years elapse, and we return to our primitive admiration, just
|
|
as a matured judgment enables us precisely to see what and why we
|
|
admired.
|
|
|
|
Thus, as individuals, we think in cycles, and may, from the
|
|
frequency, or infrequency of our revolutions about the various
|
|
thought-centres, form an accurate estimate of the advance of our
|
|
thought toward maturity. It is really wonderful to observe how
|
|
closely, in all the essentials of truth, the child- opinion
|
|
coincides with that of the man proper- of the man at his best.
|
|
|
|
And as with individuals so, perhaps, with mankind. When the world
|
|
begins to return, frequently, to its first impressions, we shall
|
|
then be warranted in looking for the millennium- or whatever it is:-
|
|
we may safely take it for granted that we are attaining our maximum of
|
|
wit, and of the happiness which is thence to ensue. The indications of
|
|
such a return are, at present, like the visits of angels- but we
|
|
have them now and then- in the case, for example, of credulity. The
|
|
philosophic, of late days, are distinguished by that very facility
|
|
in belief which was the characteristic of the illiterate half a
|
|
century ago. Skepticism in regard to apparent miracles, is not, as
|
|
formerly, an evidence either of superior wisdom or knowledge. In a
|
|
word, the wise now believe- yesterday they would not believe- and
|
|
day before yesterday (in the time of Strabo, for example) they
|
|
believed, exclusively, anything and everything:- here, then, is one of
|
|
the indicative cycles of discretion. I mention Strabo merely as an
|
|
exception to the rule of his epoch- (just as one in a hurry for an
|
|
illustration, might describe Mr. So and So to be as witty or as
|
|
amiable as Mr. This and That is not- for so rarely did men reject in
|
|
Strabo's time, and so much more rarely did they err by rejection, that
|
|
the skepticism of this philosopher must be regarded as one of the most
|
|
remarkable anomalies on record.
|
|
|
|
I have not the slightest faith in Carlyle. In ten years- possibly in
|
|
five- he will be remembered only as a butt for sarcasm. His linguistic
|
|
Euphuisms might very well have been taken as prima facie evidence of
|
|
his philosophic ones; they were the froth which indicated, first,
|
|
the shallowness, and secondly, the confusion of the waters. I would
|
|
blame no man of sense for leaving the works of Carlyle unread merely
|
|
on account of these Euphuisms; for it might be shown a priori that
|
|
no man capable of producing a definite impression upon his age or
|
|
race, could or would commit himself to such inanities and
|
|
insanities. The book about 'Hero-Worship'- is it possible that it ever
|
|
excited a feeling beyond contempt? No hero-worshipper can possess
|
|
anything within himself. That man is no man who stands in awe of his
|
|
fellow-man. Genius regards genius with respect- with even enthusiastic
|
|
admiration- but there is nothing of worship in the admiration, for
|
|
it springs from a thorough cognizance of the one admired- from a
|
|
perfect sympathy, the result of the cognizance; and it is needless
|
|
to say, that sympathy and worship are antagonistic. Your
|
|
hero-worshippers, for example- what do they know about Shakespeare?
|
|
They worship him- rant about him- lecture about him- about him, him
|
|
and nothing else- for no other reason than that he is utterly beyond
|
|
their comprehension. They have arrived at an idea of his greatness
|
|
from the pertinacity with which men have called him great. As for
|
|
their own opinion about him- they really have none at all. In
|
|
general the very smallest of mankind are the class of men-worshippers.
|
|
Not one out of this class have ever accomplished anything beyond a
|
|
very contemptible mediocrity.
|
|
|
|
Carlyle, however, has rendered an important service (to posterity,
|
|
at least) in pushing rant and cant to that degree of excess which
|
|
inevitably induces reaction. Had he not appeared we might have gone on
|
|
for yet another century, Emerson-izing in prose, Wordsworth-izing in
|
|
poetry, and Fourier-izing in philosophy, Wilson-izing in criticism-
|
|
Hudson-izing and Tom O'Bedlam-izing in everything. The author of the
|
|
'Sartor Resartus,' however, has overthrown the various arguments of
|
|
his own order, by a personal reductio ad absurdum. Yet an Olympiad,
|
|
perhaps, and the whole horde will be swept bodily from the memory of
|
|
man- or be remembered only when we have occasion to talk of such
|
|
fantastic tricks as, erewhile, were performed by the Abderites.
|
|
|
|
Graham's Magazine, January, 1848
|
|
|
|
If any ambitious man have a fancy a revolutionize, at one
|
|
effort, the universal world of human thought, human opinion, and human
|
|
sentiment, the opportunity is his own- the road to immortal renown
|
|
lies straight, open, and unencumbered before him. All that he has to
|
|
do is to write and publish a very little book. Its title should be
|
|
simple- a few plain words- "My Heart Laid Bare." But- this little book
|
|
must be true to its title.
|
|
|
|
Now, is it not very singular that, with the rabid thirst for
|
|
notoriety which distinguishes so many of mankind- so many, too, who
|
|
care not a fig what is thought of them after death, there should not
|
|
be found one man having sufficient hardihood to write this little
|
|
book? To write, I say. There are ten thousand men who, if the book
|
|
were once written, would laugh at the notion of being disturbed by its
|
|
publication during their life, and who could not even conceive why
|
|
they should object to its being published after their death. But to
|
|
write it- there is the rub. No man dare write it. No man ever will
|
|
dare write it. No man could write it, even if he dared. The paper
|
|
would shrivel and blaze at every touch of the fiery pen.
|
|
|
|
Southern Literary Messenger, April, 1849
|
|
|
|
I blush to see, in the--, an invidious notice of Bayard Taylor's
|
|
"Rhimes of Travel." What makes the matter worse, the critique is
|
|
from the pen of one who, although undeservedly, holds, himself, some
|
|
position as a poet:- and what makes the matter worst, the attack is
|
|
anonymous, and (while ostensibly commending) most zealously
|
|
endeavors to damn the young writer "with faint praise." In his whole
|
|
life, the author of the criticism never published a poem, long or
|
|
short, which could compare, either in the higher merits, or in the
|
|
minor morals of the Muse, with the worst of Mr. Taylor's compositions.
|
|
|
|
Observe the generalizing, disingenuous, patronizing tone:-
|
|
|
|
"It is the empty charlatan, to whom all things are alike impossible,
|
|
who attempts everything. He can do one thing as well as another, for
|
|
he can really do nothing.... Mr. Taylor's volume, as we have
|
|
intimated, is an advance upon his previous publication. We could
|
|
have wished, indeed, something more of restraint in the rhetoric,
|
|
but," &c., &c., &c.
|
|
|
|
The concluding sentence, here, is an excellent example of one of the
|
|
most ingeniously malignant of critical ruses- that of condemning an
|
|
author, in especial, for what the world, in general, feel to be his
|
|
principal merit. In fact, the "rhetoric" of Mr. Taylor, in the sense
|
|
intended by the critic, is Mr. Taylor's distinguishing excellence.
|
|
He is, unquestionably, the most terse, glowing, and vigorous of all
|
|
our poets, young or old- in point, I mean, of expression. His
|
|
sonorous, well-balanced rhythm puts me often in mind of Campbell (in
|
|
spite of our anonymous friend's implied sneer at "mere jingling of
|
|
rhymes, brilliant and successful for the moment,") and his rhetoric in
|
|
general is of the highest order:- By "rhetoric, I intend the mode
|
|
generally in which thought is presented. When shall we find more
|
|
magnificent passages than these?
|
|
|
|
First queenly Asia, from the fallen thrones
|
|
|
|
Of twice three thousand years
|
|
|
|
Came with the woe a grieving Goddess owns
|
|
|
|
Who longs for mortal tears.
|
|
|
|
The dust of ruin to her mantle clung
|
|
|
|
And dimmed her crown of gold,
|
|
|
|
While the majestic sorrow of her tongue
|
|
|
|
From Tyre to Indus rolled.
|
|
|
|
Mourn with me, sisters, in my realm of woe
|
|
|
|
Whose only glory streams
|
|
|
|
From its lost childhood like the Arctic glow
|
|
|
|
Which sunless winter dreams.
|
|
|
|
In the red desert moulders Babylon
|
|
|
|
And the wild serpent's hiss
|
|
|
|
Echoes in Petra's palaces of stone
|
|
|
|
And waste Persepolis.
|
|
|
|
Then from her seat, amid the palms embowered
|
|
|
|
That shade the Lion-land,
|
|
|
|
Swart Africa in dusky aspect towered,
|
|
|
|
The fetters on her hand.
|
|
|
|
Backward she saw, from out the drear eclipse,
|
|
|
|
The mighty Theban years,
|
|
|
|
And the deep anguish of her mournful lips
|
|
|
|
Interpreted, her tears.
|
|
|
|
I copy these passages first, because the critic in question has
|
|
copied them, without the slightest appreciation of their grandeur- for
|
|
they are grand; and secondly, to put the question of "rhetoric" at
|
|
rest. No artist who reads them will deny that they are the
|
|
perfection of skill in their way. But thirdly, I wish to call
|
|
attention to the glowing imagination evinced in the lines. My very
|
|
soul revolts at such efforts, (as the one I refer to,) to depreciate
|
|
such poems as Mr. Taylor's. Is there no honor- no chivalry left in the
|
|
land? Are our most deserving writers to be forever sneered down, or
|
|
hooted down, or damned down with faint praise, by a set of men who
|
|
possess little other ability than that which assures temporary success
|
|
to them, in common with Swaim's Panaces or Morrison's Pills? The
|
|
fact is, some person should write, at once, a Magazine paper exposing-
|
|
ruthlessly exposing, the dessous de cartes of our literary affairs. He
|
|
should show how and why it is that ubiquitous quack in letters can
|
|
always "succeed," while genius, (which implies self-respect with a
|
|
scorn of creeping and crawling,) must inevitably succumb. He should
|
|
point out the "easy arts" by which any one, base enough to do it,
|
|
can get himself placed at the very head of American Letters by an
|
|
article in that magnanimous Journal, "The Review." He should
|
|
explain, too, how readily the same work can be induced (in the case of
|
|
Simms,) to vilify personally, any one not a Northerner, for a trifling
|
|
"consideration." In fact, our criticism needs a thorough regeneration,
|
|
and must have it.
|
|
|
|
Southern Literary Messenger, June, 1849
|
|
|
|
I have sometimes amused myself by endeavoring to fancy what
|
|
would be the fate of any individual gifted, or rather accursed, with
|
|
an intellect very far superior to that of his race. Of course, he
|
|
would be conscious of his superiority; nor could he (if otherwise
|
|
constituted as man is) help manifesting his consciousness. Thus he
|
|
would make himself enemies at all points. And since his opinions and
|
|
speculations would widely differ from those of all mankind- that he
|
|
would be considered a madman, is evident. How horribly painful such
|
|
a condition! Hell could invent no greater torture than that of being
|
|
charged with abnormal weakness on account of being abnormally strong.
|
|
|
|
In like manner, nothing can be clearer than that a very generous
|
|
spirit- truly feeling what all merely profess- must inevitably find
|
|
itself misconceived in every direction- its motives misinterpreted.
|
|
Just as extremeness of intelligence would be thought fatuity, so
|
|
excess of chivalry could not fail of being looked upon as meanness
|
|
in its last degree- and so on with other virtues. This subject is a
|
|
painful one indeed. That individuals have so soared above the plane of
|
|
their race, is scarcely to be questioned; but, in looking back through
|
|
history for traces of their existence, we should pass over all
|
|
biographies of "the good and the great," while we search carefully the
|
|
slight records of wretches who died in prison, in Bedlam, or upon
|
|
the gallows.
|
|
|
|
THE END
|
|
.
|