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UT English Library]
Poetry and prose edited by members of the Department of English at the University of Toronto from 1912 to 1996
¶1
§1
According to one mode of regarding those two classes of mental
action which are called Reason and Imagination, the former
may be considered as mind contemplating the relations borne
by one thought to another, however produced; and the latter
as mind, acting upon those thoughts so as to colour them with
its own light, and composing from them as from elements,
other thoughts, each containing within itself the principle
of its own integrity. §2 The one is the to poiein,
or the principle of synthesis and has for its objects those
forms which are common to universal nature and existence itself; the
other is the to-logizein or principle of analysis
and its action regards the relations of things, simply as relations;
considering thoughts, not in their integral unity but as the
algebraical representations which conduct to certain general
results. §3 Reason is the enumeration of quantities
already known; Imagination [[is]] the perception of the
value of those quantities, both seperately and as a whole.
§4 Reason respects the differences, and Imagination the
similitudes of things. §5 Reason is to Imagination as the
instrument to the agent, as the body to the spirit, as the shadow
to the substance.
¶2
§6
Poetry, in a general sense, may be defined to be "the expression of
the Imagination:" and Poetry is connate with the origin of man.
§7 Man is an instrument over which a series of external
and internal impressions are driven, like the alternations of an
ever-changing wind over an Æolian lyre; which move it, by their
motion, to ever-changing melody. §8 But there is a
principle within the human being and perhaps within all sentient
beings, which acts otherwise than in the lyre, and produces not
melody alone, but harmony, by an internal adjustment of the sounds
or motions thus excited to the impressions which excite them.
§9 It is as if the lyre could accomodate its chords to the
motions of that which strikes them, in a determined proportion of
sound; even as the musician can accomodate his voice to the sound
of the lyre. §10 A child at play by itself will express
its delight by its voice and motions; and every inflexion of tone
and every gesture will bear exact relation to a corresponding
antitype in the pleasurable impressions which awakened it; it will
be the reflected image of that impression; and as the lyre trembles
and sounds after the wind has died away, so the child seeks by
prolonging in its voice and motions the duration {{Sig. 1v}} of
the effect, to prolong also a consciousness of the cause.
§11 In relation to the objects which delight a child, these
expressions are, what Poetry is to higher objects. §12 The
savage (for the savage is to ages what the child is to years)
expresses the emotions produced in him by surrounding objects in a
similar manner; and language and gesture, together with plastic or
pictorial imitation, become the image of the combined effect of
those objects and of his apprehension of them. §13 Man in
society, with all his passions and his pleasures, next becomes the
object of the passions and pleasures of man; an additional class of
emotions produces an augmented treasure of expressions, and
language, gesture and the imitative arts become at once the
representation and the medium, the pencil and the picture, the
chisel and the statue, the chord and the harmony. §14 The
social sympathies, or those laws from which as from its elements
society results, begin to develope themselves from the moment that
two human beings co-exist; the future is contained within the
present as the plant within the seed; and equality, diversity,
unity, contrast, mutual dependance become the principles alone
capable of affording the motives according to which the will of a
social being is determined to action, inasmuch as he is social; and
constitute pleasure in sensation, virtue in sentiment, beauty in
art, truth in reasoning, and love in the intercourse of kind.
§15 Hence men, even in the infancy of society, observe a
certain order in their words and actions, distinct from that of the
objects and the impressions represented by them[[,]]. all
expression being subject to the laws of that from which it
proceeds. §16 But let us dismiss those more general
considerations which might involve an enquiry into the principles
of society itself, and restrict our view to the manner in which the
imagination is expressed upon its forms.
¶3
§17
In the youth of the world men dance and sing and imitate natural
objects, observing in these actions, as in all others, a certain
rhythm or order. §18 And, although all men observe a
similar, they observe not the same order in the motions of the
dance, in the melody of the song, in the combinations of language,
in the series of their imitations of natural objects.
§19 For there is a certain order or rhythm belonging to
each of these classes of mimetic representation, from which the
hearer and the spectator receive an intenser and a purer pleasure
than from any other: the sense of an approximation to this order
has been called taste, by modern writers. §20 Every man,
in the infancy of art, observes an order which approximates more or
less closely to that from which this highest delight results: but
the diversity is not sufficiently marked, as that its gradations
should be sensible, except in those instances where the
{{Sig. 2r}} predominance of this faculty of approximation to the
beautiful (for so we may be permitted to name the relation between
this highest pleasure and its cause) is very great.
§21 Those in whom it exists in excess are poets, in the
most universal sense of the word; and the pleasure resulting from
the manner in which they express the influence of society or nature
upon their own minds, communicates itself to others, and gathers a
sort of reduplication from that community. §22 Their
language is vitally metaphorical; that is it marks the before
unapprehended relations of things, and perpetuates their
apprehension, until the words which re present them become through
time signs for portions and classes of thoughts, instead of
pictures of integral thoughts; and then, if no new poets should
arise to create afresh the associations which have been thus
disorganized, language will be dead to all the nobler purposes of
human intercourse. §23 These similitudes or relations are
finely said by Lord Bacon to be "the same footsteps of nature
impressed upon the various subjects of the world
* --" and he considers the faculty which
receives them as the storehouse of axioms common to all knowledge.
§24 In the infancy of society every author is necessarily
a poet, because language itself is poetry; and to be a poet is to
apprehend the true and the beautiful, in a word the good which
exists in the relation, subsisting, first between existence and
perception, and secondly between perception and expression.
§25 Every original language near to its source is in itself the chaos of a
cyclic poem: the copiousness of lexicography and the distinctions
of grammar are the works of a later age, and are merely the
catalogue and the form of the creations of Poetry.
* De Augment. Scient. Cap. I Lib 3.
¶4
§26
But Poets, or those who imagine and express this indestructible
order, are not only the authors of language and of music, of the
dance and architecture and statuary and painting; they are the
institutors of laws |&| the founders of civil society and the
inventors of the arts of life and the teachers, who draw into a
certain propinquity with the beautiful and the true that partial
apprehension of the agencies of the invisible world which is called
religion. §27 Hence all original religions are allegorical
or susceptible of allegory, and like Janus have a double face of
false and true. §28 Poets, according to the circumstances
of the age and nation in which they appeared were called in the
earlier epochs of the world legislators or prophets: a poet
essentially comprises and unites both these characters.
§29 For he not only beholds intensely the present as it
is, and discovers those laws according to which present things
ought to be ordered, but he beholds the future in the present, and
his thoughts are the forms of {{Sig. 2v}} the flower and the fruit
of latest time. §30 Not that I assert poets to be prophets
in the gross sense of the word, or that they can fortell the form
as surely as they foreknow the spirit of events: such is the
pretence of superstition which would make poetry an attribute of
prophecy, rather than prophecy an attribute of poetry.
§31 A Poet participates in the eternal, the infinite and
the one; as far as relates to his conceptions time and place and
number are not. §32 The grammatical forms which express
the moods of time, and the difference of persons and the
distinction of place are convertible with respect to the highest
poetry without injuring it as poetry, and the choruses of
Æschylus, and the book of Job, and Dante's Paradise would afford
more than any other writings examples of this fact, if the limits
of this paper did not forbid citation. §33 The creations
of sculpture, painting and music are illustrations still more
decisive.
¶5
§34
Language, colour, form, and religious and civil habits of action
are all the instruments and materials of poetry; they may be called
poetry by that figure of speech which considers the effects as a
synonime of the cause. §35 But poetry in a more restricted
sense expresses those arrangements of language, and especially
metrical language which are created by that imperial faculty whose
throne is curtained within the invisible nature of man.
§36 And this springs from the nature itself of language
which is a more direct representation of the actions and the
passions of our internal being, and is susceptible of more various
and delicate combinations than colour, form or motion, and is more
plastic and obedient to the controul of that faculty of which it is
the creation. §37 For language is arbitrarily produced by
the Imagination and has relation to thoughts alone; but all other
materials, instruments and conditions of art have relations among
each other, which limit and interpose between conception and
expression. §38 The former is as a mirror which reflects,
the latter as a cloud which enfeebles, the light of which both are
mediums of communication. §39 Hence the fame of sculptors,
painters and musicians, although the intrinsic powers of the great
masters of these arts, may yield in no degree to that of those who
have employed language as the hieroglyphic of their thoughts, has
never equalled that of poets in the restricted sense of the term;
as two performers of equal skill will produce unequal effects from
a guitar and a harp. §40 The fame of legislators and
founders of religions, so long as their institutions last, alone
seems to exceed that of poets in the restricted sense: but it can
scarcely be a question whether if we deduct the celebrity which
their flattery of the gross opinions of the vulgar usually
conciliates, together with that which belonged to them in their
higher character of poets {{Sig. 3r}} any excess will remain.
¶6
§41
We have thus circumscribed the word Poetry within the limits of
that art which is the most familiar and the most perfect expression
of the faculty itself. §42 It is necessary however to make
the circle still narrower, and to determine the distinction between
measured and unmeasured language; for the popular division into
prose and verse, is inadmissible in accurate philosophy.
¶7
§43 Sounds as well as thoughts have relation both between
each other and towards that which they represent, and a perception
of the order of those relations, has always been found connected
with a perception of the order of the relations of thoughts.
§44 Hence the language of poets has ever affected a
certain uniform and harmonious recurrence of sound without which it
were not poetry, and which is scarcely less indispensible to the
communication of its influence, than the words themselves without
reference to that peculiar order. §45 Hence the vanity of
translation; it were as wise to cast a violet into a crucible that
you might discover the formal principle of its colour and odour, as
seek to transfuse from one language into another the creations of a
poet. §46 The plant must spring again from its seed or it
will bear no flower -- and this is the burthen of the curse of
Babel.
¶8
§47
An observation of the regular mode of the occurrence of this
harmony, in the language of poetical minds, together with its
relation to music, produced metre, or a certain system of
traditional forms of harmony and language. §48 Yet it is
by no means essential that a poet should accomodate his language to
this traditional form, so that the harmony which is its spirit, be
observed. §49 The practise is indeed convenient and
popular and to be preferred, especially in such composition as
includes much action: but every great poet must inevitably innovate
upon the example of his predecessors in the exact structure of his
peculiar versification. §50 The distinction between poets
and prose-writers is a vulgar error. §51 The distinction
between philosophers and poets has been anticipated.
§52 Plato was essentially a poet -- the truth and
splendour of his imagery and the melody of his language is the most
intense that it is possible to conceive. §53 He
{{Sig. 3v}} rejected the measure of the epic, dramatic and lyrical
forms, because he sought to kindle a harmony in thoughts divested
of shape and action, and he forebore to invent any regular plan of
rhythm which would include under determinate forms, the varied
pauses of his style. §54 Cicero sought to imitate the
cadence of his periods but with little success. §55 Lord
Bacon was a poet. * His
language has a sweet and majestic rhythm which satisfies the sense
no less than the almost superhuman wisdom of his philosophy
satisfies the intellect; it is a strain which distends, and then
bursts the circumference of the readers' mind and pours itself
forth together with it into the universal element with which it has
perpetual sympathy. §56 -- All the Authors of revolutions
in opinion are not only necessarily poets as they are inventors,
nor even as their words unveil the permanent analogy of things by
images which participate in the life of truth; but as their periods
are harmonious and rhythmical and contain in themselves the
elements of verse; being the echo of the eternal music.
§57 Nor are those supreme poets, who have employed
traditional forms of rhythm on account of the form and action of
their subjects, less incapable of perceiving and teaching the truth
of things, than those who have omitted that form.
§58 Shakespear, Dante and Milton (to confine ourselves to
modern writers.) are philosophers of the very loftiest powers.
* See the Filium Labyrinthi, and the Essay of Death particularly.
¶9
§59
A Poem is the very image of life expressed in its eternal truth.
§60 There is this difference between a story and a poem,
that a story is a catalogue of detached facts, which have no other
bond of connexion than time, place, circumstance, cause and effect;
the other is the creation of actions according to the unchangeable
forms of human nature, as existing in the mind of the creator,
which is itself the image of all other minds. §61 The one
is partial, and applies only to a definite period of time, and a
certain combination of events which can never again recur; the
other is universal and contains within itself the germ of a
relation to whatever motives or actions have place in the possible
varieties of {{Sig. 4r}} human nature. §62 Time, which
destroys the beauty and the use of the story of particular facts,
stript of the poetry which should invest them, augments that of
Poetry and forever developes new and wonderful applications of the
eternal truth which it contains. §63 Hence epitomes have
been called the moths of just history; they eat out the poetry of
it. §64 A story of particular facts is as a mirror which
obscures and distorts that which should be beautiful: Poetry is a
mirror which makes beautiful that which is distorted.
¶10
§65
The parts of a composition may be poetical, without the composition
as a whole being a poem. §66 A single sentence may be
considered as a whole though it may be found in the midst of a
series of unassimilated portions; a single word even may be a spark
of inextinguishable thought. §67 And thus all the great
historians, Herodotus, Plutarch, Livy, were poets; and although the
plan of these writers, especially that of Livy, constrained them
from developing this faculty in its highest degree they make
copious and ample amends for their subjection, by filling all the
interstices of their subjects with living images.
¶11
§68
Having determined what is poetry, and who are poets, let us proceed
to estimate its effects upon society.
¶12
§69
Poetry is ever accompanied with pleasure: all spirits on which it
falls, open themselves to receive the wisdom which is mingled with
its delight. §70 In the infancy of the world, neither
poets themselves nor their auditors are fully aware of the
excellency of poetry: for it acts in a divine and unapprehended
manner, beyond and above consciousness: and it is reserved for
future generations to contemplate and measure the mighty cause and
effect in all the strength and splendour of their union.
§71 Even in modern times, no living poet ever arrived at
the fulness of his fame; the jury which sits in judgement upon a
poet, belonging as he does to all time, must be composed of his
peers: it must be [[impanelled]] in pannelled by Time from
the selectest of the wise of many generations. §72 A Poet
is a nightingale who sits in darkness, and sings to cheer its own
solitude with sweet sounds; his auditors {{Sig. 4v}} are as men
entranced by the melody of an unseen musician, who feel that they
are moved and softened, yet know not whence or why.
§73 The poems of Homer and his contemporaries were the
delight of infant Greece; they were the elements of that social
system which is the column upon which all succeeding civilization
has reposed. §74 Homer embodied the ideal perfection of
his age in human character; nor can we doubt that those who read
his verses were awakened to an ambition of becoming like to
Achilles, Hector and Ulysses: the truth and beauty of friendship,
patriotism and persevering devotion to an object, were unveiled to
the depths in these immortal creations: the sentiments of the
auditors must have been refined and enlarged by a sympathy
[[with]] which such great and lovely impersonations until
from admiring they imitated, and from imitation they identified
themselves with the objects of their admiration. §75 Nor
let it be objected, that these characters are remote from moral
perfection, and that they can by no means be considered as edyfying
paterns for general imitation. §76 Every epoch under names
more or less specious has deified its peculiar errors; Revenge is
the naked Idol of the worship of a semi barbarous age; and
self-deceit is the veiled Image of unknown evil before which luxury
and satiety lie prostrate. §77 But a poet considers the
vices of his contemporaries as the temporary dress in which his
creations must be arrayed, and which cover without concealing the
eternal proportions of their beauty. §78 An epic or
dramatic personage is understood to wear them around his soul, as
he may the antient armour or the modern uniform around his body;
whilst it is easy to conceive a dress more graceful than either.
§79 The beauty of the internal nature cannot be so far
concealed by its accidental vesture, but that the spirit of its
form shall communicate itself to the very disguise; and indicate
the shape it hides from the manner in which it is worn.
§80 A majestic form, and graceful motions will express
themselves through the most barbarous and tasteless costume.
§81 Few poets of the highest class have chosen to exhibit
the beauty of their conceptions in its naked truth and splendour;
and it is doubtful whether the alloy of costume, habit etc. be not
necessary to temper this planetary music for mortal ears.
{{Sig. 5r}}
¶13
§82
The whole objection however of the immorality of poetry rests upon
a misconception of the manner in which poetry acts to produce the
moral improvement of man. §83 Ethical science arranges the
elements which poetry has created, and propounds schemes and
proposes examples of civil and domestic life: nor is it for want of
admirable doctrines that men hate, and despise, and censure, and
deceive, and subjugate one another. §84 But poetry acts in
another and a diviner manner. §00 It awakens and enlarges
the mind itself by rendering it the receptacle of a thousand
unapprehended combinations of thought. §85 Poetry lifts
the veil from the hidden beauty of the world; and makes familiar
objects be as if they were not familiar; it re-produces all that it
represents, and the impersonations clothed in its Elysian light
stand thenceforward in the minds of those who have once
contemplated them, as memorials of that gentle and exalted content
which extends itself over all thoughts and actions with which it
co-exists. §86 The great secret of morals is Love; or a
going out of our own nature, and an identification of ourselves
with the beautiful which exists in thought, action or person, not
our own. §87 A man to be greatly good, must imagine in
tensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of
another and of many others; the pains and pleasures of his species
must become his own. §88 The great instrument of moral
good is the imagination: and poetry administers to the effect by
acting upon the cause. §89 Poetry enlarges the
circumference of the imagination by replenishing it with thoughts
of ever new delight, which have the power of attracting and
assimilating to their own nature all other thoughts, and which form
new intervals and interstices whose void forever craves fresh food.
§90 Poetry strengthens the faculty which is the organ of
the moral nature of man in the same manner as exercise strengthens
a limb. §91 A Poet therefore would do ill to embody his
own conceptions of right and wrong which are usually those of his
place and time in his poetical {{Sig. 5v}} creations, which
participate in neither. §92 By this assumption of the
inferior office of interpreting the effect, in which perhaps after
all he might acquit himself but imperfectly, he would resign a
glory in a participation in the cause. §93 There was
little danger that Homer or any of the eternal poets, should have
so far misunderstood themselves as to have abdicated this throne of
their widest dominion. §94 Those in whom the poetical
faculty, though great, is less intense as Euripedes, Lucan, Tasso,
Spencer have frequently affected a moral aim and the effect of
their poetry is diminished in exact proportion to the degree in
which they compel us to advert to this purpose.
¶14
§95
Homer and the cyclic poets were followed at a certain interval by
the dramatic and lyrical Poets of Athens; who flourished
[[contemporaneously]] contemporaneosly with all that is
most perfect in the kindred expressions of the poetical faculty;
architecture, painting, music, the dance, sculpture, philosophy,
and we may add the forms of civil life. §96 For although
the scheme of Athenian society was deformed by many imperfections
which the poetry existing in Chivalry and Christianity have erased
from the habits and institutions of modern Europe; yet never at any
other period has so much energy, beauty and virtue been developed;
never was blind strength and stubborn form so disciplined and
rendered subject to the will of man, or that will less repugnant to
the dictates of the beautiful and the true, as during the century
which preceeded the death of Socrates. §97 Of no other
epoch in the history of our species have we records and fragments
stamped so visibly with the image of the divinity in man.
§98 But it is Poetry alone, in form, in action or in
language which has rendered this epoch memorable above all others,
and the storehouse of examples to everlasting time.
§99 For written poetry existed at that epoch
simultaneously with the other arts, and it is an idle enquiry to
demand which gave and which received the light, which all as from a
common focus have scattered over the darkest periods of succeeding
time. §100 We know no more of cause and effect than a
constant conjunction of events: Poetry is ever found to coexist
with whatsoever other arts contribute to the happiness and
perfection of man. §101 I appeal to what has already been
established to distinguish between the cause and the effect.
¶15
§102
{{Sig. 6r}} It was at the period here adverted to, that the Drama
had its birth; and however a succeeding writer may have equalled or
surpassed those few great specimens of the Athenian drama which
have been preserved to us, it is indisputable that the art itself
never was under stood or practised according to the true philosophy
of it, as at Athens. §103 For the Athenians employed
language, action, music, painting, the dance, and religious
institutions, to produce a common effect in the representation of
the highest idealisms of passion and of power; each division in the
art was made perfect in its kind by artists of the most consummate
skill, and was disciplined into a beautiful pro portion and unity
one towards the other. §104 On the modern stage a few only
of the elements capable of expressing the image of the poets
conception are employed at once. §105 We have tragedy
without music and dancing; and music and dancing without the
highest impersonation of which they are the fit accompaniment, and
both without religion and solemnity. §106 Religious
institution has indeed been usually banished from the stage.
§107 Our system of divesting the actor's face of a mask,
on which the many expressions appropriated to his dramatic
character might be moulded into one permanent and unchanging
expression, is favourable only to a partial and inharmonious
effect; it is fit for nothing -- but a monologue where all the
attention may be directed to some great master of ideal mimicry.
§108 The modern practise of blending comedy with tragedy,
though liable to great abuse in point of practise, is undoubtedly
an extension of the dramatic circle; but the comedy should be as in
King Lear, universal, ideal and sublime. §109 It is
perhaps the intervention of this principle which determines the
balance in favour of King Lear against the dipus Tyrannus or
the Agamemnon, or, if you will, the trilogies with which they are
connected; unless the intense power of the choral poetry,
especially that of the latter, should be considered as restoring
the equilibrium. §110 King Lear, if it can sustain the
comparison, may be judged to be the most perfect specimen of the
dramatic art existing in the world; in spite of the narrow
conditions to which the poet was subjected by the ignorance of the
philosophy of the Drama which has prevailed in Modern Europe.
§111 Calderon in his religious Autos has attempted to
fulfil some of the high conditions of dramatic representation
neglected by Shakespear; such as the establishing a
{{Sig. 6v}} relation between the drama and religion, and the
accomodating them to music and dancing, but he omits the
observation of conditions still more important, and more is lost
than gained by a substitution of the rigidly defined and ever
repeated idealisms of a distorted superstition for the living
impersonations of the truth of human passion.
¶16
§112
But we digress. §113 -- The connexion of scenic
exhibitions with the improvement or corruption of the manners of
men, has been universally recognized: in other words the presence
or absence of poetry in its most perfect and universal form has
been found to be connected with good and evil in conduct or habit.
§114 The corruption which has been imputed to the drama as
an effect begins, when the poetry employ in its constitution, ends:
I appeal to the history of manners whether the [[periods]]
of the growth of the one and the decline of the other have
not corresponded with an exactness equal to any other example of
moral cause and effect.
¶17
§115
The drama at Athens or wheresoever else it may have approached to
its perfection, ever co-existed with the moral and intellectual
greatness of the age. §116 The tragedies of the Athenian
poets are as mirrors in which the spectator beholds himself, under
a thin disguise of circumstance, stript of all, but that ideal
perfection and energy which every one feels to be the internal type
of all that he loves, admires and would become. §117 The
imagination is enlarged by a sympathy with pains and passions so
mighty that they distend in their conception the capacity of that
by which they are [[conceived]] concieved; the good
affections are strengthened by pity, indignation, terror and
sorrow; and an exalted calm is prolonged from the satiety of this
high exercise of them into the tumult of familiar life; even crime
is disarmed of half its horror and all its contagion by being
represented as the fatal consequence of the unfathomable agencies
of {{Sig. 7r}} nature; error is thus divested of its wilfulness;
men can no longer cherish it as the creation of their choice.
§118 In a drama of the highest order there is little food
for censure or hatred: it teaches rather self knowledge and
self-respect. §119 Neither the eye or the mind can see
itself unless reflected upon that which it resembles.
§120 The drama so long as it continues to express poetry,
is as a prismatic and many sided mirror, which collects the
brightest rays of human nature and divides and reproduces them from
the simplicity of these elementary forms; and touches them with
majesty and beauty, and multiplies all that it reflects, and endows
it with the power of propagating its like wherever it may fall.
¶18
§121
But in periods of the decay of social life, the drama sympathizes
with that decay. §122 Tragedy becomes a cold imitation of
the form of the great master-pieces of antiquity, divested of all
harmonious accompaniment of the kindred arts; and often the very
form misunderstood: or a weak attempt to teach certain doctrines,
which the writer considers as moral truths; and which are usually
no more than specious flatteries of some gross vice or weakness
with which the author in common with his auditors are infected.
§123 Hence what has been called the classical and the
domestic drama. §00 Addison's Cato is a specimen of the
one, and would it were not superfluous to cite examples of the
other! §124 To such purposes Poetry cannot be made
subservient. §00 Poetry is a sword of lightning ever
unsheathed, which consumes the scabbard that would contain it.
§125 And thus we observe that all dramatic writings of
this nature are unimaginative in a singular degree; they affect
sentiment and passion: which divested of imagination are other
names for caprice and appetite. §126 The period in our own
history of the greatest degradation of the drama is the reign of
Charles II when all forms in which poetry had been accustomed to be
expressed become hymns to the triumph of kingly power over liberty
and virtue. §127 Milton stood alone illuminating an age
unworthy of him. §00 At such periods the calculating
principle pervades all the forms of dramatic exhibition, and poetry
ceases to be expressed upon them. §128 Comedy loses its
ideal universality: wit succeeds to humour; we laugh from self
complacency and triumph instead of pleasure; malignity, sarcasm |&|
contempt succeeds to sympathetic merriment; we hardly laugh, but we
smile. §129 Obscenity, which is ever blasphemy against
the divine beauty in life, becomes, from the very veil which it
assumes, more active if less disgusting: {{Sig. 7v}} it is a
monster for which the corruption of society for ever brings forth
new food; which it devours in secret.
¶19
§130 The Drama being that form under which
a greater number of modes of expression of poetry are susceptible
of being combined than any other; the connexion of beauty and
social good, is more observable in the drama than in what ever
other form: and it is indisputable that the highest perfection of
human society has ever corresponded with the highest dramatic
excellence: and that the corruption or the extinction of the drama
in a nation where it has once flourished is a mark of a corruption
of manners, and an extinction of the energies which sustain the
soul of social life. §131 But, as Machiavelli says of
political institutions, that life may be preserved and renewed, if
men should arise capable of bringing back the drama to its
principles. §132 And this is true with respect to poetry
in its most extended sense: all language, institution and form
require not only to be produced but to be sustained: the office and
character of a poet participates in the divine nature as regards
providence no less than as regards creation.
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§133
Civil war, the spoils of Asia, and the fatal predominance first of
the Macedonian, and then of the Roman arms were so many symbols of
the extinction or suspension of the creative faculty in Greece.
§134 The bucolic writers who found patronage under the
lettered tyrants of Sicily and gypt were the latest
representatives of its most glorious reign. §135 Their
poetry is intensely melodious; like the odour of the tuberose it
overcomes and sickens the spirit with excess of sweetness; whilst
the poetry of the preceding age was as a meadow-gale of June which
mingles the fragrance of all the flowers of the field and adds a
quickening and harmonizing spirit of its own which endows the sense
with a power of sustaining its extreme delight. §136 The
bucolic and erotic delicacy in written poetry is correlative with
that softness in statuary, music, and the kindred arts, and even in
manners and institutions which distinguished the epoch to which we
now refer. §137 Nor is it the poetical faculty itself or
any misapplication of it to which this want of harmony is to be
imputed. §138 An equal sensibility to the influence of the
senses |&| the affections is to be found in the writings of Homer
and Sophocles. §139 the {{Sig. 8r}} former especially has
clothed sensual and pathetic images with irresistible attractions.
§140 Their superiority over these succeeding writers
consists in the presence of those thoughts which belong to the
inner faculties of our nature, not in the absence of those which
are connected with the external: their incomparable perfection
consists in a harmony of the union of all. §141 lt is not
what the erotic poets have, but what they have not, in which their
imperfection consists. §142 It is not inasmuch as they
were Poets, but inasmuch as they were not Poets, that they can be
considered with any plausibility as connected with the corruption
of their age. §143 Had that corruption availed so as to
extinguish in them the sensibility to pleasure, passion and natural
scenery, which is imputed to them as an imperfection, the last
triumph of evil would have been atchieved. §144 For the
end of social corruption is to destroy all sensibility to pleasure;
and therefore it is corruption. §145 It begins at the
imagination and the intellect as at the core, and distributes
itself thence as a paralyzing venom, through the affections into
the very appetites, until all become a torpid mass in which hardly
sense survives. §146 At the approach of such a period,
Poetry ever addresses itself to those faculties which are the last
to be destroyed, and its voice is heard, like the foot steps of
Astræa, departing from the world. §147 Poetry ever
communicates all the pleasure which men are capable of receiving:
it is ever still the light of life; the source of whatever
beautiful, or generous, or true can have place in an evil time.
§148 It will readily [[be]] confessed that those
among the luxurious citizens of Syracuse and Alexandria who were
delighted with the poems of Theocritus were less cold, cruel and
sensual than the remnant of their tribe. §149 But
corruption must utterly have destroyed the fabric of human society
before Poetry can ever cease. §150 The sacred links of
that chain have never been entirely disjoined, which descending
through the minds of many men is attached to those great minds
whence as from a magnet the invisible effluence is sent forth which
at once connects, animates and sustains the life of all.
§151 It is the faculty which contains within itself the
seeds at once of its own and of social renovation.
§152 And let us not circumscribe the effects of the
bucolic and erotic poetry within the limits of the sensibility of
those to whom it was addressed. §153 They may have
perceived the beauty {{Sig. 8v}} of these immortal compositions,
simply as fragments and isolated portions: those who are more
finely organized, or born in a happier age, may recognize them as
episodes to that great poem, which all poets like the co-operating
thoughts of one great mind have built up since the beginning of the
world.
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This edition does not note the manuscript page numbers, keep to the original lineation, or
make a point of indicating text that Shelley deleted, substituted or added,
or transcribe manuscript marks such as the caret.
This text represents Shelley's apparently final version,
without evidence of how he arrived at it.
Suggested editorial additions and emendations appear in square brackets at the start of the
affected point. Suggested editorial deletions are in triple square brackets. Text within
double braces is editorial.
Old spelling is retained except for ligatured letters, which are
normalized. Italics is retained, but not small capitals and the text of catchwords,
signatures, and running titles. Reference citations are by signatures and editorial
through-text paragraph- and sentence-numbers at the left margin.
Greek is transliterated according to the following scheme:
§154 The same revolutions within a
narrower sphere had place in Antient Rome: but the actions and
forms of its social life never seem to have been perfectly
saturated with the poetical element. §155 The Romans
appear to have considered the Greeks as the selectest treasuries of
the selectest forms of manners and of nature and to have abstained
from creating in measured language, sculpture, music or
architecture any thing which might bear a particular relation to
their own condition whilst it should bear a general one to the
universal constitution of the world. §156 But we judge
from partial evidence, and we judge perhaps partially.
§157 Ennius, Varro, Pacuvius and Accius, all great poets,
have been lost. §158 Lucretius is in the highest, and
Virgil in a very high sense, a creator. §00 The chosen
delicacy of the expressions of the latter are as a mist of light
which conceal from us the intense and exceeding truth of his
conceptions of nature. §159 Livy is instinct with poetry.
§00 Yet Horace, Catullus, Ovid, and generally the other
great writers of the Virgilian age, saw man and nature in the
mirror of Greece. §160 The institutions also and the
religion of Rome were less poetical than those of Greece, as the
shadow is less vivid than the substance. §161 Hence Poetry
in Rome seemed to follow rather than accompany the perfection of
political and domestic society. §162 The true Poetry of
Rome lived in its [[institutions]] instituons; for whatever
of beautiful, true and majestic they contained could have sprung
only from the faculty which creates the order in which they
consist. §163 The life of Camillus; the death of Regulus;
the expectation of the senators in their godlike state of the
victorious Gauls; the refusal of the republic to make peace with
Hannibal after the battle of Cannæ, were not the consequences of
a refined calculation of the probable personal advantage to result
from such a rhythm and order in the shews of life, to those who
were at once the poets and the actors of these
im
§167
At length the antient system of religion and manners had
[[fulfilled]] fufilled the circle of its revolutions.
§168 And the world would have fallen into utter anarchy
and darkness, but that there were found poets among the authors of
the Christian and Chivalric systems of manners and religion, who
created forms of opinion and action never before conceived; which
copied into the imaginations of men became as generals to the
bewildered armies of their thoughts. §169 It is foreign to
the present purpose to touch upon the evil produced by these
systems: except that we protest, on the ground of the principles
already established, that no portion of it can be attributed to the
poetry they contain.
§170
It is probable that the poetry of Moses, Job, David, Solomon and
Isaiah had produced a great effect upon the mind of Jesus and his
disciples. §171 The scattered fragments preserved to us by
the biographers of this extraordinary person, are all instinct with
the most vivid poetry. §172 But his doctrines seem to have
been quickly distorted. §173 At a certain period after the
prevalence of a system of opinions founded upon those promulgated
by him, the three forms into which Plato had distributed the
faculties of mind underwent a sort of apotheosis, and became the
object of the worship of the civilised world. §174 Here it
is to be confessed that -- "Light seems to thicken,[["]]
{{Shakespeare, Macbeth III.ii.50-53.}}
Good things of day begin to droop and drowze
And nights black agents to their preys do rouze.
{{Shakespeare, Macbeth III.ii.50-53}}
§175
But mark how beautiful an order has sprung from the dust and blood
of this fierce chaos! §176 how the World, as from a
resurrection, balancing itself on the golden wings of knowledge and
of hope, has reassumed its yet unwearied flight into the Heaven of
time! §177 Listen to {{Sig. 9v}} the music, unheard by
outward ears, which is as a ceaseless and invisible wind nourishing
its everlasting course with strength and swiftness.
§178
The poetry in the doctrines of Jesus Christ, and the mythology and
institutions of the Celtic conquerors of the Roman Empire, out
lived the darkness and the convulsions connected with their growth
and victory, and blended themselves into a new fabric of manners
and opinions. §179 It is an error to impute the ignorance
of the dark ages to the Christian doctrines or to the predominance
of the Celtic nations. §180 Whatever of evil their
agencies may have contained sprung from the extinction of the
poetical principle, connected with the progress of despotism and
superstition. §181 Men, from causes too intricate to be
here discussed, had become insensible and selfish: their own will
had become feeble and yet they were its slaves, and thence the
slaves of the will of others: lust, fear, avarice, cruelty and
fraud characterised a race amongst whom no one was to be found
capable of
§184
It was not until the eleventh century that the effects of the
poetry of the Christian and the Chivalric systems began to manifest
them selves. §185 The principle of equality had been
discovered and applied by Plato in his republic, as the theoretical
rule of the mode in which the materials of pleasure and of power
produced by the common skill and labour of human beings ought to be
distributed among them. §186 The limitations of this rule
were asserted by him to be determined only by the sensibility of
each, or the utility to result to all. §187 Plato,
following the doctrines of Timæus and Pythagoras, taught also a
moral and intellectual system of doctrine comprehending at once the
past, the present and the future condition of man.
§188 Jesus Christ divulged the sacred and eternal truths
contained in these views to mankind, and Christianity, in its
abstract purity, became {{Sig. 10r}} the exoteric expression of
the esoteric doctrines of the poetry and wisdom of antiquity.
§189 The incorporation of the Celtic nations with the
exhausted population of the South, impressed upon it the figure of
the poetry existing in their mythology and institutions.
§190 The result was a sum of the action and reaction of
all the causes included in it; for it may be assumed as a maxim
that no nation or religion can supersede any other without
incorporating into itself a portion of that which it supersedes.
§191 The abolition of personal and domestic slavery, and
the emancipation of women from a great part of the degrading
restraints of antiquity were among the consequences of these
events.
§192
The abolition of personal slavery is the basis of the highest
political hope that it can enter into the mind of man to conceive.
§193 The freedom of women produced the poetry of sexual
love. §194 Love became a religion, the idols of whose
worship were ever present. §00 It was as if the statues of
Apollo, and the muses had been endowed with life and motion and had
walked forth among their worshippers; so that earth became peopled
by the inhabitants of a diviner world. §195 The familiar
appearance and proceedings of life became wonderful and heavenly;
and a paradise was created as out of the wrecks of Eden.
§196 And as this creation itself is poetry, so its
creations were poets; and language was the instrument of their art:
"Galeotto fu il libro, e chi lo scrisse". {{Dante, Inferno V.137}} The Provençal
Trouveurs, or inventors preceeded Petrarch, whose verses are as
spells which unseal the inmost enchanted fountains of the delight
which is in the grief of Love. §197 It is impossible to
feel them without becoming a portion of that beauty which we
contemplate: it were superfluous to explain how the gentleness and
the elevation of mind connected with these sacred emotions can
render men more amiable, more generous, and wise, and lift them out
of the dull vapours of the little world of self. §198
Dante understood the secret things of love even more than Petrarch.
§00 His Vita Nuova is an inexhaustible fountain of purity
of sentiment and language: it is the idealized history of that
period, and those intervals of his life which were dedicated to
love. §199 His apotheosis of Beatrice in Paradise and the
gradations of his own love and her loveliness by which as by steps
he feigns himself to have ascended to the throne of the Supreme
Cause, is the most {{Sig. 10v}} glorious imagination of modern
poetry. §200 The acutest critics have justly reversed the
judgement of the vulgar and the order of the great acts of the
"Divine Drama" in the measure of the admiration which they accord
to the Hell, Purgatory and Paradise. §201 The latter is a
perpetual hymn of everlasting love. §202 Love which found
a worthy poet in Plato alone of all the antients has been
celebrated by a chorus of the greatest writers of the renovated
world; and the music has penetrated the caverns of society, and its
echoes still drown the dissonance of arms, and superstition.
§203 At successive intervals Ariosto, Tasso, Shakespear,
Spenser, Calderon, Rousseau and the great writers of our own age
have celebrated the dominion of love; planting as it were trophies
in the human mind of that sublimest victory over sensuality and
force. §204 The true relation borne to each other by the
senses into which human kind is distributed has become less
misunderstood; and if the error which confounded diversity with in
equality of the powers of the two sexes has been partially
recognized in the opinions and institutions of modern Europe, we
owe this great benefit to the worship of which Chivalry was the
law, and poets the prophets.
§205
The poetry of Dante may be considered as the bridge thrown over the
stream of time which unites the modern and the antient world.
§206 The distorted notions of invisible things which Dante
and his rival Milton have idealised, are merely the mask and the
mantle in which these great poets walk through eternity enveloped
and disguised. §207 It is a difficult question to
determine how far they were conscious of the distinction which must
have subsisted in their minds between their own creeds and that of
the people. §208 Dante at least appears to wish to mark
the full extent of it by placing Riphæus whom Virgil calls
§218
Homer was the first, and Dante the second epic poet: that is, the
second poet the series of whose creations bore a defined and
intelligible relation to the knowledge, and sentiment, and
religion, and political condition of the age in which he lived, and
of the ages which followed it: developing itself in correspondence
with their developement. §219 For Lucretius had limed the
wings of his swift spirit in the dregs of the sensible world: and
Virgil with a modesty that ill became his genius, had affected the
fame of an imitator even whilst he created anew all that he copied;
and none among the flock of mock birds, though their notes were
sweet, Apollonius Rhodius, Quintus Calaber, Smyrnæus, Nonnus,
Lucan, Statius or Claudian have sought even to fulfil a single
condition of epic truth. §220 Milton was the third Epic
Poet: for if the title of epic in its highest sense be refused to
the Æneid still less can it be conceded to the Orlando Furioso,
the Gerusalemme Liberata, the Lusiad or the Fairy Queen.
§221
Dante and Milton were both deeply penetrated with the antient
religion of the civilized world; and its spirit exists in their
poetry, probably in the same proportion as its forms survived in
the unreformed worship of modern Europe. §222 The one
preceeded and the other followed, the Reformation at almost equal
intervals. §223 Dante was the first religious reformer,
and Luther surpassed him rather in the rudeness and acrimony, than
in the boldness of his censures of papal usurpation.
§224 Dante was the first awakener of entranced Europe; he
created a language in itself music and persuasion out of a chaos of
inharmonious barbarisms. §225 He was the congregator of
those great spirits who presided over the restoration of learning;
the Lucifer of that starry flock which in the thirteenth century
shone forth from republican Italy, as from a heaven, into the
darkness of the benighted world. §226 His very words are
instinct with spirit; each is as a spark, a burning atom of
inextinguishable thought; and many yet lie covered in the ashes of
their birth, and pregnant with a lightning which has yet found no
conductor. §227 All high poetry is infinite; it is as the
first acorn which contained all oaks potentially.
§228 Veil after veil may be undrawn and the inmost naked
beauty of the meaning never exposed. §229 A great Poem is
a fountain for ever overflowing with the waters of wisdom and
delight; and after one person and one age has exhausted all its
divine effluence which their peculiar relations enable them to
share; another and yet another succeeds, and new relations are ever
developed, the source of an unforseen and an unconceived delight.
§230
The age immediately succeeding to that of Dante, Petrarch and
{{Sig. 12r}} Boccaccio was characterised by a revival of painting,
sculpture, music and architecture. §231 Chaucer caught the
sacred inspiration, and the superstructure of English literature is
based upon the materials of Italian invention.
§232
But let us not be betrayed from a defence into a critical history
of poetry and its influence on society. §233 Be it enough
to have pointed out the effects of poets in the large and true
sense of the word upon their own and all succeeding times.
§234
But poets have been challenged to resign the civic crown to
reasoners and mechanists on another plea. §235 It is
admitted that the exercise of the imagination is most delightful,
but it is alledged that that of reason is more useful.
§236 Let us examine as the ground of this distinction what
is here meant by Utility. §237 Pleasure or good in a
general sense, is that which the consciousness of a sensitive and
intelligent being seeks, and in which when found it acquiesces.
§238 There are two kinds of pleasure, one durable,
universal and permanent; the other transitory and particular.
§239 Utility may either express the means of producing the
former, or the latter. §00 In the former sense whatever
strengthens and purifies the affections, enlarges the imagination,
and adds spirit to sense, is useful. §240 But the meaning
in which the author of the Four Ages of Poetry seems to have
employed the word utility is the narrower one of banishing the
importunity of the wants of our animal nature, the surrounding men
with security of life, the dispersing the grosser delusions of
superstition, and the conciliating such a degree of mutual
forbearance among men as may consist with the motives of personal
advantage.
§241
Undoubtedly the promoters of utility in this limited sense, have
their appointed office in society. §242 They follow the
[[footsteps]] foosteps of poets, and copy the sketches of
their creations into the book of common life. §243 They
make space and give time. §00 Their exertions are of the
highest value so long as they confine their administration of the
concerns of the inferior {{Sig. 12v}} powers of our own nature
within the limits [[[of is]]] due to the superior ones.
§244 But whilst the sceptic destroys gross superstitions,
let him spare to deface, as some of the French writers have
defaced, the eternal truths charactered upon the imaginations of
men. §245 Whilst the mechanist abridges, and the political
conomist combines, labour, let them beware that their
speculations, for want of correspondance with those first
principles which belong to the imagination, do not tend, as they
have in modern England, to exasperate at once the extremes of
luxury and want. §246 They have exemplified the saying;
"To him that hath, more shall be
given; and from him that hath not the little that he hath shall be
taken away." {{Mark, NT: Mark 4.25}} §247 -- The rich have
become richer, and the poor have become poorer; and the vessel of
the state is driven between the Scylla and Charybdis of anarchy and
despotism. §248 Such are the effects which must ever flow
from an unmitigated exercise of the calculating faculty.
§249
It is difficult to define pleasure in its highest sense; the
definition involving a number of apparent paradoxes.
§250 For, from an inexplicable defect of harmony in the
constitution of human nature, the pain of the inferior is
frequently connected with the pleasures of the superior portions of
our being. §251 Sorrow, terror, anguish, despair itself
are often the chosen expressions of an approximation to the highest
good. §252 Our sympathy in tragic fiction, depends on this
principle: tragedy delights by affording a shadow of the pleasure
which exists in pain. §253 This is the source also of the
melancholy which is inseperable from the sweetest melody.
§254 The pleasure that is in sorrow, is sweeter than the
pleasure of pleasure itself. §255 And hence the saying,
"It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to the house of mirth."
{{OT: Ecclesiastes 7.2}} §256 Not that this highest species
of pleasure is necessarily linked with pain. §257 The
delight of love and friendship, the extacy of the admiration of
nature, the joy of the perception, and still more of the creation
of poetry is often wholly unalloyed.
§258
The production and assurance of pleasure in this highest sense is
true utility. §259 Those who produce and preserve this
pleasure are poets or poetical philosophers.
§260
The exertions of Locke, Hume, Gibbon, Voltaire, Rousseau
{{Sig. 13r}} * and their disciples in favour
of oppressed and deluded humanity are entitled to the gratitude
{{Sig. 13v}} of mankind? §261 Yet it is easy to calculate
the degree of moral and intellectual improvement which the world
would have exhibited, had they never lived. §262 A little
more nonsense would have been talked for a century or two; and
perhaps a few more men, women and children burnt as heretics.
§263 We might not at this moment have been congratulating
each other on the abolition of the Inquisition in Spain.
§264 But it exceeds all imagination to conceive what would
have been the moral condition of the world if neither Dante,
Petrarch, Boccaccio, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Calderon, Lord Bacon,
nor Milton had ever existed; if Raphael and Michael Angelo had
never been born; if the Hebrew poetry had never been translated; if
a revival of the study of Greek Literature had never taken place;
if no monuments of antient sculpture had been handed down to us;
and if the poetry of the religion of the antient world had been
extinguished together with its belief. §265 The human mind
could never, except by the intervention of these excitements, have
been awakened to the invention of those grosser sciences, and that
application of analytical reasoning to the aberrations of society,
which it is now attempted to exalt over the direct expression of
the inventive and creative faculty itself.
§266
We have more moral, political and historical wisdom than we know
how to reduce into practice: we have more scientific and
conomical knowledge than can be accommodated to the just
distribution of the produce which it multiplies. §267 The
poetry, in these systems of thought, is concealed by the
accumulation of facts and calculating processes.
§268 There is no want of knowledge respecting what is
wisest and best in morals, government and political conomy, or
at least what is wiser and better than what men now practise and
endure. §269 But we "let I dare not wait upon
I would, "like the poor cat in the adage".
{{Shakespeare, Macbeth I.vii.44-45}}
§270 We want the creative faculty to imagine that
which we know; we want the generous impulse to act that which we
imagine; we want the poetry of life: our calculations have outrun
conception; we have eaten more than we can digest. §271 The
cultivation of those sciences which have enlarged the limits of the
empire of man over the external world has, for want of the poetical
faculty, proportionally circumscribed those of the internal world,
and man, having enslaved the elements, remains himself a slave.
§272 To what but a cultivation of the mechanical arts in a
degree disproportioned to the presence of the creative faculty
which is the basis of all knowledge is to be attributed the abuse
of all invention for abridging and combining labour, to the
exasperation of the inequality of mankind? §273 From what
other cause has it arisen that the discoveries which should have
lightened, have added a weight to the curse imposed on Adam?
§274 Poetry, and the principle of Self, of which money is
the visible incarnation, are the God and the Mammon of the world.
§275
The functions of the poetical faculty are two fold: by one it
creates new materials of knowledge, and power, and pleasure; by the
other it engenders in the mind a desire to reproduce and arrange
them according to a certain rhythm and order, which may be called
the beautiful and the good. §276 The cultivation of poetry
is never more to be desired than at periods when from an excess of
the selfish and calculating principle, the accumulation of the
materials of external life exceed the quantity of the power of
assimilating them to the internal laws of human nature.
§277 The body has then become too unwieldy for that which
animates it.
§278
Poetry is indeed something divine. §279 It is at once the
centre and circumference of knowledge; it is that which comprehends
all science, and that to which all science must be referred.
§280 It is at the same time the root and the blossom of
all other systems of thought: it is that from which all spring, and
that which adorns all; and that which if blighted denies the fruit
and the seed, and withholds from the barren world the nourishment
and the succession of the scions of the tree of life.
§281 It is the perfect and consummate surface and bloom of
things; it is as the odour and the colour of the rose to the
texture of the elements which compose it; as the form and splendour
of unfaded beauty, to the secrets of anatomy and corruption.
§282 What were Virtue, Love, Patriotism, Friendship --
What were the scenery of this beautiful universe which we inhabit -
- what were our consolations on this side the grave -- and what
were our aspirations beyond it -- if Poetry did not ascend to bring
light and fire from those eternal regions where the owl-winged
faculty of calculation, dare not ever soar? §283 Poetry
is not like reasoning, a power to be exerted according to the
determination of the will. §284 A man cannot say, "I will
compose poetry." §285 The greatest poet even cannot say
it: for the mind in creation is as a fading coal which some
invisible influence, like an inconstant wind, awakens to transitory
brightness; this power arises from within, like the colour of a
flower which fades and changes as it is developed, and the
conscious portions of our natures are unprophetic either of its
approach or its departure. Could this influence be durable in its
original purity and grace, it is impossible to predict the
greatness of the results; but when composition {{Sig. 14r}} begins
inspiration is already on the decline, and the most glorious poetry
that has ever been communicated to the world is probably a feeble
shadow of the original conceptions of the poet. §286 I
appeal to the greatest Poets of the present day, whether it be not
an error to assert that the greatest passages of poetry are
produced by labour and study. §287 The toil and the delay
recommended by critics can be justly interpreted to mean no more
than a careful observation of the inspired moments and an
artificial connection of the spaces between [[their]] thier
suggestions by the intertexture of conventional expressions; a
necessity only imposed by a limitedness of the poetical faculty
itself. §288 For Milton conceived the Paradise Lost as a
whole before he executed it in portions. §289 We have his
own authority also for the Muse having "dictated" to him
"the unpremeditated song." {{Milton, Paradise Lost}} §290 And let this be an
answer to those who would alledge the fifty six various readings of
the first line of the Orlando Furioso. §291 Compositions
so produced are to poetry what mosaic is to painting.
§292 This instinct and intuition of the poetical faculty
is still more observable in the plastic and pictorial arts: a great
statue or picture grows under the power of the artist as a child in
the mother's womb, and the very mind which directs the hands in
formation is incapable of accounting to itself for the origin, the
gradations, or the media of the process.
§293
Poetry is the record of the happiest and best moments of the
happiest and best minds. §294 We are aware of evanescent
visitations of thought and feeling sometimes associated with place
or person, sometimes regarding our own mind alone, and always
arising unforseen and departing unbidden; but elevating and
delightful beyond all expression: so that even in the desire and
the regret they leave there cannot but be pleasure, participating
as it does in the nature of its object. §295 It is as it
were the interpenetration of a diviner nature through our own, but
its footsteps are like those of a wind over the sea, which the
coming calm erases, and whose traces remain only as on the wrinkled
sand which paves it. §296 These and corresponding
conditions of being are experienced principally by those of the
most delicate sensibility and the most enlarged imagination.
§297 And the state of mind produced by them is at war with
every base desire. §298 The enthusiasm of virtue, love,
patriotism, and friendship is essentially linked with such
emotions; and whilst they last self appears as what it is, an atom
to an Universe.
§299
{{Sig. 14v}} Poets are not only subject to these experiences as
spirits of the most refined organization, but they can colour all
that they combine with the evanescent hues of this etherial world;
a word, a trait in the representation of a scene or a passion will
touch the enchanted chord, and reanimate in those who have ever
experienced these emotions the sleeping, the cold, the buried image
of the past. §300 Poetry thus makes immortal all that is
best and most beautiful in the world; it arrests the vanishing
apparitions which haunt the interlunations of life; and veiling
them or in language or in form sends them forth among mankind
bearing sweet news of kindred joy to those with whom their sisters
abide -- abide because there is no portal of expression from the
caverns of the spirit which they inhabit into the universe of
things. §301 Poetry redeems from decay the visitations of
the divinity in man.
§302
Poetry turns all things to loveliness: it exalts the beauty of that
which is most beautiful, and it adds beauty to that which is most
deformed: it marries exultation and horror; grief and pleasure,
eternity and change; it subdues to union under its light yoke all
irreconcilable things. §303 It transmutes all that it
touches, and every form moving within the radiance of its presence
is changed by wondrous sympathy to an incarnation of the spirit
which it breathes: its secret alchemy turns to potable gold the
poisonous waters which flow from death through life; it strips the
veil of familiarity from the world, and lays bare the naked and
sleeping beauty which is the spirit of its forms.
§304
All things exist as they are perceived; at least in relation to the
percipient -- "The mind is its
own place, and of itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of
Heaven." {{Milton, Paradise Lost}} §305 But Poetry defeats the
curse which binds us to be subjected to the accident of surrounding
impressions. §306 And whether it spreads its own figured
curtain or withdraws life's dark veil from before the scene of
things, it equally creates for us a being within our being.
§307 It makes us the inhabitants of a world to which the
familiar world is a chaos. §308 It reproduces the common
Universe of which we are portions and percipients, and it urges
from our inward sight the film of familiarity which obscures from
us the wonder of our being. §309 It compels us to feel
that which we perceive, and to imagine that which we know.
§00 It creates anew the universe after it has been
annihilated in our minds by the recurrence of impressions blunted
by re-iteration. §310 It {{Sig. 15r}} justifies that bold
and true word of Tasso:
§311
A Poet, as he is the author to others of the highest wisdom,
pleasure, virtue and glory so he ought personally to be the
happiest‚ the best, the wisest and the most illustrious of men.
§312 As to his glory let Time be challenged to declare
whether the fame of any other institutor of human life be
comparable to that of a poet. §313 That he is the wisest,
the happiest and the best, in as much as he is a poet, is equally
incontrovertible: the greatest Poets have been men of the most
spotless virtue, of the most consummate prudence, and, if we would
look into the interior of their lives, the most fortunate of men:
and the exceptions as they regard those who possessed the poetic
faculty in a high yet inferior degree will be found on
consideration to confine rather than destroy the rule.
§314 Let us for a moment stoop to the arbitration of
popular breath, and usurping and uniting in our own persons the
incompatible characters of accuser, witness, judge and executioner,
let us decide without trial, testimony or form that certain motives
of those who are "there
sitting where we dare not soar" {{Milton, Paradise Lost IV.829}} are
reprehensible. §315 Let us assume that Homer was a
drunkard, that Virgil was a flatterer, that Lord Bacon was a
peculator, that Raphael was a libertine, that Spencer was a poet
laureate. §316 It is inconsistent with this division of
our subject to cite living poets, but Posterity has done ample
justice to the great names now referred to. §317 Their
errors have been weighed and found to have been dust in the
balance; if their sins were as scarlet they are now white as snow:
they have been washed in the blood of the mediator and redeemer
Time. §318 Observe in what a ludicrous chaos the
imputations of real and of fictitious crime have been confused in
the contemporary calumnies against poetry and poets; consider how
little is as it appears, or appears as it is; look to your own
motives, and judge not, lest ye be judged {{NT: Matthew 7.1}}
§319
Poetry, as has been said, differs in this respect from logic that
it is not subject to the controul of the active powers of the mind,
and that its birth and recurrence has no necessary connexion with
consciousness or will. §320 It is presumptuous to
determine that these are the necessary conditions of all mental
causation when mental effects are experienced
insus{{Sig. 15v}} ceptible of being referred to them.
§321 The frequent recurrence of the poetical power, it is
obvious to suppose may produce in the mind an habit of order and
harmony correlative with its own nature and with its effects upon
other minds. §322 But in the intervals of inspiration, and
they may be frequent without being durable, a Poet becomes a man
and is abandoned to the sudden reflux of the influences under which
others habitually live. §323 But as he is more delicately
organized than other men and sensible to pain and pleasure both his
own and that of others in a degree unknown to them: he will avoid
the one and pursue the other with an ardour proportioned to this
difference. §324 And he renders himself obnoxious to
calumny, when he neglects to observe the circumstances under which
these objects of universal pursuit and flight have disguised
themselves in one another's garments.
§325
But there is nothing necessarily evil in this error and thus
cruelty, envy, revenge, avarice, and the passions purely evil, have
never formed any portion of the popular imputations on the lives of
poets.
§326
I have thought it most favourable to the cause of truth to set down
these remarks according to the order in which they were suggested
to my mind by a consideration of the subject itself, instead of
observing the formality of a polemical reply; but if the view which
they contain be just, they will be found to [[involve]]in
volve a refutation of the arguers against Poetry, -- so far
at least as regards the first division of the subject.
§327 I can readily conjecture what should have moved the
gall of some learned and intelligent writers who quarrel with
certain versifiers. §328 I confess myself like them
unwilling to be stunned by the Theseids of the hoarse Codri of the
day. §329 Bavius and Mævius undoubtedly are, as they
ever were, insufferable persons. §330 But it belongs to a
philosophical critic to distinguish rather than confound.
§331
The first part of these remarks has related to poetry in its
elements and principles; and it has been shewn, as well as the
narrow limits assigned them would permit, that what is called
poetry in a restricted sense has a common source with all other
forms of order and of beauty according to which the materials of
human life are susceptible of being arranged; and which is Poetry
in an universal sense.
§332
The second part will have for its object an application of these
{{Sig. 16r}} principles to the present state of the cultivation of
Poetry, and a defence of the attempt to idealize the modern forms
of manners and opinion, and compel them into a subordination to the
imaginative and creative faculty. §333 For the literature
of England, an energetic developement of which has ever preceded or
accompanied a great and free developement of the national will, has
arisen as it were from a new birth. §334 In spite of the
lowthoughted envy which would undervalue contemporary merit, our
own will be a memorable age in intellectual atchievements, and we
live among such philosophers and poets as surpass beyond comparison
any who have appeared since the last national struggle for civil
and religious liberty. §335 The most unfailing herald,
companion and follower of the awakening of a great people to work a
beneficial change in opinion or institution, is Poetry.
§336 At such periods there is an accumulation of the power
of communicating and receiving intense and impassioned conceptions
respecting man and nature. §337 The persons in whom this
power resides, may often as far as regards many portions of their
nature have little apparent correspondence with that spirit of good
of which they are the ministers. §338 But even whilst they
deny and abjure, they are yet compelled to serve, the Power which
is seated on the throne of their own soul. §339 It is
impossible to read the compositions of the most celebrated writers
of the present day without being startled with the electric life
which burns within their words. §340 They measure the
circumference and sound the depths of human nature with a
comprehensive and all penetrating spirit, and they are themselves
perhaps the most sincerely astonished at its manifestations, for it
is less their spirit than the spirit of the age.
§341 Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended
inspiration, the mirrors of the gigantic shadows which futurity
casts upon the present, the words which express what they
understand not, the trumpets which sing to battle and feel not what
they inspire: the influence which is moved not, but moves.
§342 Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the World.
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