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Indeed the classical ovations which were awarded to successful poets, sink the triumphs of kings and consuls to the level of common spectacles. There was every thing intellectual in those early tributes to mental power returned from mental victory. There is an ever-during recollection that attaches itself to honors so won and so rendered. Considered as offerings to genius, they reflect glory alike on those who brought and those who received them. A dawn of moral light seems to be coincident with the morning of social life which such homage serves to indicate; and, though the tribute be purely mental, there comes with it a hope that the heart may awaken to truth, where there is such a stirring and pressing towards the shrine of mind. Certain it is that such exertions of powerful men, demanding such honors as they proceeded, were the first causes as well as the first proofs of improvement among the people from whom they stood distinguished: and it is to the poets of Greece and Italy, triumphing in laurel-wreath or the plaudits of their countrymen, that we are to look, we had almost said, as the solitary men who first kindled that spark, which eventually caused an illumination of their age, and has continued to transmit its light to the world.

The influence of poetry, in the hands of the masters of antiquity, was carried to an extent that may seem almost incredible. They may be said to have formed and trained the virtues of those who heard them. They shaped the national sentiment, they moulded the opinions and wielded the sympathies of their listeners, to a degree that cannot be surpassed. They interwove public events with the drama. They excited an ambition to excel in wisdom and valor; and, by force of genius and skill, they generated among the aspiring and young the sentiments of glory that fell from the lips of their heroes. Euripides was the idol of his time. By promoting a more effectual union than had yet subsisted between moral philosophy and tragic representation, he became an object of praise and admiration with his contemporaries. His verses were on the lips of all who answered to the name of Greek. History tells us, with an air of romance, that the fortunate introduction of some of his stanzas released. the soldiers of Nicias from the slavery which they incurred in the expedition of that general to Syracuse; and, as if to carry the magic of his name beyond all rivalry, it has been

pleasantly said, that of old the prisoner always found freedom by drafting his plea in the language of Euripides.

Surpassing, as these instances would almost seem to do, the fabled enchantment of Orpheus, we are not left to them and like ancient sources, alone, for proof of the high distinction ever held by the poet and his art. The golden age of every country, since the revival of letters, has been signalized by the light that poetry has shed upon it, and by the honors rendered to the inspired men who may be regarded as its stars. Italy, Spain, France, England, as the new morning of mind dawned upon them, successively beheld their mighty geniuses springing upon their paths, with a power which they delighted to reverence, and a brilliancy that could not fail to captivate. In all these lands, the history of literature proves decidedly the talent which this class of men possessed of infusing their own into the public sentiment, as well as of fixing the public eye on themselves; while it is enough, too, to convince us that they held important place on the scale of society, formed as they were to exert an influence on the growing character of their country.

But, while we perceive a singular power to have been sustained by the poets of high accomplishment in all ages, it is evident that in modern times the same power is either greatly modified, or holds a more quiet sway over the minds of the people. The principle of the power is the same. It is the power of an ardent, bold, creative nature, over spirits that cannot follow its march, but still bow to the dominion which has attended it. It is the power of a high-reaching, imaginative intellect over a passive one, yielded to the beautiful illusion which is thrown around it. It is the power of genius-penetrating to that subtle portion of the soul, which alone can claim sympathy, how remote soever it may be, with the master spirit which spells it-breathing upon it the breath of a new life, and calling it to the love of high deeds and splendid virtues, of which it had before but dull conception, or drowsy remembrance. Such is the power of poetry. Such is the gift of the poet; and to such power and such gifts has the world ever paid its admiration, where there have been poets to sing, or men to listen.

In the progress of things, the unity of this power has passed gradually away. Its distinctiveness has been lost in

the crowding interests of life; but its agency, though more secret and diffused, is still felt, with a vigor, indestructible as ever, and, when we consider the vast sphere in which it is called to operate, almost as wonderful. In the simplicity of the early, and the comparatively moral inaction of the middle ages, it was a necessary consequence of the state of the times, that the poet should hold a more discernible elevation, that the exercise of his power should be more direct, and consequently more effectual, upon the mass of mankind. As society advanced, he also, as the depositary of this power, lost his original superiority amongst men. They turned from him, to the sublime and elevating things which he had eloquently revealed, no longer to dream over, but to study, and pant after, and pursue them; until, by a gradation, the most natural in the world, the poet descended to diffuse among his fellows those beautiful and kindly influences, that, in older times, he had dispensed as favors from a superior to his followers. Then, you may say, poetry was leagued with superstitious dread. Now, it goes hand in hand with the charities of life. It was then a thing to wonder and tremble at-heard, in terrible distinctness, as a revelation, amid the forests and sacred groves of the gods. Now, it makes part of the music of the world. It enters into our dwellings and our hearts. It mingles with our social duties, and ennobles -purifies-endears our spirits and our memories. Then, the poet was honored, as almost a deity, and his numbers listened to as the breathings of prophecy, or with the chastened delight of hearts bowed continually to threatening and commanding genius. Now, he is honored, where he should be, as a man; and his works come abroad to animate us to our duties, or to cheer us in solitude-to charm us by their power, or to woo us by their beauty. Then, he was like a monarch on his throne, lording it over the kingdom of unawakened intellect. Now, he is but a gifted brother of the great family, bearing indeed the same brow of inspiration, the same wand of genius; but he mingles with the busy throng, and, with his harp upon his shoulder, scatters his music to his fellows, as he passes onward in the common pilgrimage.

So, too, as the mode in which the poetic influence was accustomed to operate, has changed with the changes of time and things, has the popularity of the poet found new sources

in the altered inclinations and feelings of his readers. Hence no modern writer may be said to bear at once and incontestably the palm of superiority, or is, like one of the ancient masters, placed, as if by acclamation, upon the pinnacle of poetic renown. Though his genius may entitle him to high rank, yet the conflicting struggles of aspirants round him, and the collisions of differing tastes and favoritisms, render his right for a season questionable, and his fame less brilliant. This is a natural consequence, where there are so many to share in the splendid rivalry.

Schools of poetry we have heard talked of, till their names, in some instances, have come to be familiar words. And these schools have actually engendered a party spirit in poetry-so that we find something like clanism meeting us even on the pathway of Parnassus. If Wordsworth, and Leigh Hunt, and Coleridge may be said to constitute the head of the Lake School, Pope was as certainly the head of the philosophical or metaphysical. We know not, that Byron, in short, has been unaptly termed the leader of the demoniac order. Certain it is, that each of these writers is distinguished by something peculiar to himself-and each one has his partisans. We know not, again, that this can be helped; nor, on the whole, that it is a fair subject of complaint. As a general rule, every man has a right to his taste, and a consequent privilege of praising him who best suits it. Still there is something to be regretted even in this. There is, after all, hardly as much latitude allowable in relation to governing principles, in the republic of letters, as in the body politic. It is more desirable to have such things as style and taste fixed, and amenable to a standard, than it is to have faith in matters of government squared by any particular creed. With regard to poetical schools, this evil of partisanship-a partisanship which has been carried to labored articles, and even to the enlistment of journals in favor of their different leaders, is decidedly destructive. It has made it still makes, mannerists of writers, and, as far as this goes, it is particularly fatal to the fine spirit of poetry.

It has been said, as though by way of excuse for its most unpardonable irregularities, that genius always has its characteristics. It may be so; but they are always essentially the same, where high and holy enthusiasm animates the votary. As to poetry, we believe that the glorious art receives

no additional dignity, either from the noisy blazonry of the merits of some who profess it, and whose claim to genius consists only in their peculiarities, or from consenting to submit itself to any of the working-day methods of gaining popularity. It strikes us, that far from conforming itself to the demands of a diseased taste, or the unhealthy fancies of society, poetry has but one eminent object before it to make men better by the spirit which it breathes around them. We believe that mere trickery of phrase, gilded imagery, and prettinesses of thought, constitute no vital portion of poetry; and we are unwilling to think that that verse is destined to live, which, at best, is a mere attempt at originality, or a mass of labored simplicity, in the worst signification of the word. We wish to see that kind of metrical composition alone recognised as poetry, which is such in the true sense of the term; made such by the combination of great thought with harmony of numbers, and whose music derives its greatest attractiveness from the sentiment. This we hold to be the true criterion; and, by this standard, we should point to him as the true Roscius of his art, who, in the best strains, best sings the deathless charms of virtue and honor; who stamps, in golden lines, upon his age, those sublime lessons of moral power, that of old sometimes lured the great to glory and the good to heaven; who comes upon the world in the swift coinage of thoughts that shall die only with time, because they bear about them and in them the vitality of truth. High place, it is true, has been attained by intellectual energy, where the moral principle had no visible ascendency in the individual. But it is false and inconclusive logic, to argue from the height that has been reached by certain powers, the impossibility of reaching one still higher, by the help of additional ones. The true reasoning is the reverse. Shakspeare is an exception to the remark that will apply here. Though of a spirit, certainly, that made no pretension to unction, still the wonderful lessons which his poetry embalms come home to our sympathies and our consciences with the effect of so many saintly homilies. His truths search us like sermons teeming with holiness. But Shakspeare is an anomaly. Who can speak in this strain of Burns or Byron? And yet who does not see what mighty things, above all that either has effected for the world, would have been accomplished by Burns and Byron, had the moral 11

SECOND SERIES, VOL. IV. NO. I.

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