"On Poetry In General" 1
The best general notion which I can give of poetry is, that it is the natural impression of any object or event, by its vividness exciting an involuntary movement of imagination and passion, and producing, by sympathy, a certain modulation of the voice, or sounds, expressing it.
In treating of poetry, I shall speak first of the subject-matter of it, next of the forms of expression to which it gives birth, and afterwards of its connexion with harmony of sound.
Poetry is the language of the imagination and the passions. It relates to whatever gives immediate pleasure or pain to the human mind. It comes home to the bosoms and businesses of men; for nothing but what so comes home to them in the most general and intelligible shape, can be a subject for poetry. Poetry is the universal language which the heart holds with nature and itself. He who has a contempt for poetry, cannot have much respect for himself, or for anything else. It is not a mere frivolous accomplishment (as some persons have been led to imagine), the trifling amusement of a few idle readers or leisure hours -- it has been the study and delight of mankind in all ages. Many people suppose that poetry is something to be found only in books, contained in lines of ten syllables, with like endings: but wherever there is a sense of beauty, or power, or harmony, as in the motion of a wave of the sea, in the growth of a flower that 'spreads its sweet leaves to the air, and dedicates its beauty to the sun', -- there is poetry, in its birth. If history is a grave study, poetry may be said to be a graver: its materials lie deeper, and are spread wider. History treats, for the most part, of the cumbrous and unwieldy masses of things, the empty cases in which the affairs of the world are packed, under the heads of intrigue or war, in different states, and from century to century: but there is no thought or feeling that can have entered into the mind of man, which he would be eager to communicate to others, or which they would listen to with delight, that is not a fit subject for poetry. It is not a branch of authorship: it is 'the stuff of which our life is made'. The rest is 'mere oblivion', a dead letter: for all that is worth remembering in life, is the poetry of it. Fear is poetry, hope is poetry, love is poetry, hatred is poetry; contempt, jealousy, remorse, admiration, wonder, pity, despair, or madness, are all poetry. Poetry is that fine particle within us, that expands, rarefies, refines, raises our whole being: without it 'man's life is poor as beast's'. Man is a poetical animal: and those of us who do not study the principles of poetry, act upon them all our lives, like Moliere's Bourgeois Gentilhomme, who had always spoken prose without knowing it. The child is a poet in fact, when he first plays at hide-and-seek, or repeats the story of Jack the Giant-killer; the shepherd-boy is a poet, when he first crowns his mistress with a garland of flowers; the country-man when he stops to look at the rainbow; the city-apprentice, when be gazes after the Lord Mayor's show; the miser, when he hugs his gold; the courtier who builds his hopes upon a smile; the savage who paints his idol with blood; the slave who worships a tyrant, or the tyrant, who fancies himself a god; -- the vain, the ambitious, the proud, the choleric man, the hero.and the coward, the beggar and the king, the rich and the poor, the young and the old, all live in a world of their own making; and the poet does no more than describe what all the others think and act. If his art is folly and madness, it is folly and madness at second hand. There is warrant for it.' Poets alone have not 'such seething brains, such shaping fantasies, that apprehend more than cooler reason' can.
Poetry then is an imitation of nature, but the imagination and the passions are a part of man's nature. We shape things according to our wishes and fancies, without poetry; but poetry is the most emphatical language that can be found for those creations of the mind 'which ecstasy is very cunning in'. Neither a mere description of natural objects, nor a mere delineation of natural feelings, however distinct or forcible, constitutes the ultimate end and aim of poetry, without the heightenings of the imagination. The light of poetry is not only a direct but also a reflected light, that while it shows us the object, throws a sparkling radiance on all around it: the flame of the passions, communicated to the imagination, reveals to us, as with a flash of lightning, the inmost recesses of thought, and penetrates our whole being. Poetry represents forms chiefly as they suggest other forms; feelings, as they suggest forms or other feelings. Poetry puts a spirit of life and motion into the universe. It describes the flowing, not the fixed. It does not define the limits of sense, or analyse the distinctions of the understanding, but signifies the excess of the imagination beyond the actual or ordinary impression of any object or feeling. The poetical impression of any object is that uneasy, exquisite sense of beauty or power that cannot be contained within itself; that is impatient of all limit; that (as flame bends to flame) strives to link itself to some other image of kindred beauty or grandeur; to enshrine itself, as it were, in the highest forms of fancy, and to relieve the aching sense of pleasure by expressing it in the boldest manner, and by the most striking examples of the same quality in other instances. Poetry, according to Lord Bacon, for this reason, 'has something divine in it, because it raises the mind and hurries it into sublimity, by conforming the shows of things to the desires of the soul, instead of subjecting the soul to external things, as reason and history do.' It is strictly the language of the imagination; and the imagination is that faculty which represents objects, not as they are in themselves, but as they are moulded by other thoughts and feelings, into an infinite variety of shapes and combinations of power. This language is not the less true to nature, because it is false in point of fact; but so much the more true and natural, if it conveys the impression which the object under the influence of passion makes on the mind. Let an object, for instance, be presented to the senses in a state of agitation or fear -- and the imagination will distort or magnify the object, and convert it into the likeness of whatever is most proper to encourage the fear. 'Our eyes are made the fools' of our other faculties. This is the universal law of imagination,
Poetry is the high-wrought enthusiasm of fancy and feeling. As in describing natural objects, it impregnates sensible impressions with the forms of fancy, so it describes the feelings of pleasure or pain, by blending them with the strongest movements of passion, and the most striking forms of nature. Tragic poetry, which is the most impassioned species of it, strives to carry on the feeling to the utmost point of sublimity or pathos, by all the force of comparison contrast; loses the sense of present suffering in the imaginary exaggeration of it; exhausts the terror or pity by an unlimited indulgence of it; grapples with impossibilities in its desperate impatience of restraint; throws us back upon the past, forward into the future; brings every moment of our being or object of nature in startling review before us; and in the rapid whirl of events, lifts us from the depths of woe to the highest contemplations on human life. When Lear says of Edgar, ' Nothing but his unkind daughters could have brought him to this'; what bewildered amazement, what a wrench of the imagination, that cannot be brought to conceive of any other cause of misery than that which has bowed it down, and absorbs all other sorrow in its own! His sorrow, like a flood, supplies the sources of all other sorrow. Again, when he exclaims in the mad scene, 'The little dogs and all, Tray, Blanche, and Sweetheart, see, they bark at me!' it is passion lending occasion to imagination to make every creature in league against him, conjuring up ingratitude and insult in their least looked-for and most galling shapes, searching every thread and fibre of his heart, and finding out the last remaining image of respect or attachment in the bottom of his breast, only to torture and kill it! In like manner, the 'So I am' of Cordelia gushes from her heart like a torrent of tears, relieving it of a weight of love and of supposed ingratitude, which had pressed upon it for years. What a fine return of the passion upon itself is that in Othello -- with what a mingled agony of regret and despair he clings to the last traces of departed happiness -- when he exclaims,
Impassioned poetry is an emanation of the moral and intellectual part of our nature, as well as of the sensitive -- of the desire to know, the will to act, and the power to feel; and ought to appeal to these different, parts of our constitution, in order to be perfect. The domestic or prose tragedy, which is thought to be the most natural, is in this sense the least so, because it appeals almost exclusively to one of these faculties, our sensibility. The tragedies of Moore and Lillo, for this reason, however affecting at the time, oppress and lie like a dead weight upon the mind, a load of misery which it is unable to throw off: the tragedy of Shakespeare, which is true poetry, stirs our inmost affections; abstracts evil from itself by combining it with all the forms of imagination, and with the deepest workings of the heart, and rouses the whole man within us.
The pleasure, however, derived from tragic poetry, is not anything peculiar to it as poetry, as a fictitious and fanciful thing. It is not an anomaly of the imagination. It has its source and groundwork in the common love of strong excitement. As Mr. Burke observes, people flock to see a tragedy; but if there were a public execution in the next street, the theatre would very soon be empty. It is not then the difference between fiction and reality that solves the difficulty. Children are satisfied with the stories of ghosts and witches in plain prose: nor do the hawkers of full, true, and particular accounts of murders and executions about the streets, find it necessary to have them turned into penny ballads, before they can dispose of these interesting and authentic documents. The grave politician drives a thriving trade of abuse and calumnies poured out against those whom he makes his enemies for no other end than that he may live by them. The popular preacher makes less frequent mention of heaven than of hell. Oaths and nicknames are only a more vulgar sort of poetry or rhetoric. We are as fond of indulging our violent passions as of reading a description of those of others. We are as prone to make a torment of our fears, as to luxuriate in our hopes of good. If it be asked, Why we do so? the best answer will be, Because we cannot help it. The sense of power is as strong a principle in the mind as the love of pleasure. Objects of terror and pity exercise the same despotic control over it as those of love or beauty. It is as natural to hate as to love, to despise as to admire, to express our hatred or contempt, as our love or admiration.
Poetry is in all its shapes the language of the imagination and the passions, of fancy and will. Nothing, therefore, can be more absurd than the outcry which has been sometimes raised by frigid and pedantic critics, for reducing the language of poetry to the standard of common sense and reason: for the end and use of poetry, 'both at the first and now, was and is to hold the mirror up to nature', seen through the medium of passion and imagination, not divested of that medium by means of literal truth or abstract reason. The painter of history might as well be required to represent the face of a person who has just trod upon a serpent with the still-life expression of a common portrait, as the poet to describe the most striking and vivid impressions which things can be supposed to make upon the mind, in the language of common conversation. Let who will strip nature of the colours and the shapes of fancy, the poet is not bound to do so; the impressions of common sense and strong imagination, that is, of passion and indifference, cannot be the same, and they must have a separate language to do justice to either. Objects must strike differently upon the mind, independently of what they are in themselves, as long as we have a different interest in them, as we see them in a different point of view, nearer or at a greater distance (morally or physically speaking) from novelty, from old acquaintance, from our ignorance of them, from our fear of their consequences, from contrast, from unexpected likeness. We can no more take away the faculty of the imagination, than we can see all objects without light or shade. Some things must dazzle us by their preternatural light; others must hold us in suspense, and tempt our curiosity to explore their obscurity. Those who would dispel these various illusions, to give us their drab-coloured creation in their stead, are not very wise. Let the naturalist, if he will, catch the glow-worm, carry it home with him in a box, and find it next morning nothing but a little grey worm; let the poet or the lover of poetry visit it at evening, when beneath the scented hawthorn and the crescent moon it has built itself a palace of emerald light. This is also one part of nature, one appearance which the glow-worm presents, and that not the least interesting; so poetry is one part of the history of the human mind, though it is neither science nor philosophy. It cannot be concealed, however, that the progress of knowledge and refinement has a tendency, to circumscribe the limits of the imagination, and to clip the wings of poetry. The province of the imagination is principally visionary the unknown and undefined: the understanding restores things to their natural boundaries, and strips them of their fanciful pretensions. Hence the history of religious and poetical enthusiasm is much the same; and both have received a sensible shock from the progress of experimental philosophy. It is the undefined and uncommon that gives birth and scope to the imagination; we can only fancy what we do not know. As in looking into the mazes of a tangled wood we fill them with what shapes we please, with ravenous beasts, with caverns vast, and drear enchantments, so in our ignorance of the world about us, we make gods or devils of the first object we see, and set no bounds to the wilful suggestions of our hopes and fears.
Poetry in its matter and form is natural imagery or feeling, combined with passion and fancy. In its mode of conveyance, it combines the ordinary use of language with musical expression. There is a question of long standing, in what the essence of poetry consists; or what it is that determines why one set of ideas should be expressed in prose, another in verse. Milton has told us his idea of poetry in a single line --
An excuse might be made for rhyme in the same manner. It is but fair that the ear should linger on the sounds that delight it, or avail itself of the same brilliant coincidence and unexpected, recurrence of syllables, that have been displayed in the invention and collocation of images. It is allowed that rhyme assists the memory; and a man of wit and shrewdness has been heard to say, that the only four good lines of poetry are the well- known ones which tell the number of days in the months of the year.
All is not poetry that passes for such: nor does verse make the whole difference between poetry and prose. The Iliad does not cease to be poetry in a literal translation; and Addison's Campaign has been very properly denominated a Gazette in rhyme. Common prose differs from poetry, as treating for the most part either of such trite, familiar, and irksome matters of fact, as convey no extraordinary impulse to the imagination, or else of such difficult and laborious processes of the understanding, as do not admit of the wayward or violent movements either of the imagination or the passions.
I will mention three works which come as near to poetry as possible without absolutely being so, namely, the Pilgrim's Progress, Robinson Crusoe, and the Tales of Boccaccio. Chaucer and Dryden have translated some of the last into English rhyme, but the essence and the power of poetry was there before. That which lifts the spirit above the earth, which draws the soul out of itself with indescribable longings, is poetry in kind, and generally fit to become so in name, by being 'married to immortal verse '. If it is of the essence of poetry to strike and fix the imagination, whether we will or no, to make the eye of childhood glisten with the starting tear, to be never thought of afterwards with indifference, John Bunyan and Daniel Defoe may be permitted to pass for poets in their way. The mixture of fancy and reality in the Pilgrim's Progress was never equalled in any allegory. His pilgrims walk above the earth, and yet are on it. What zeal, what beauty, what truth of fiction! What deep feeling in the description of Christian's swimming across the water at last, and in the picture of the Shining Ones within the gates, with wings at their backs and garlands on their heads, who are to wipe all tears from his eyes! The writer's genius, though not 'dipped in dews of Castalie', was baptized with the Holy Spirit and with fire. The prints in this book are no small part of it. If the confinement of Philoctetes in the island of Lemnos was a subject for the most beautiful of all the Greek tragedies, what shall we say to Robinson Crusoe in his? Take the speech of the Greek hero on leaving his cave, beautiful as it is, and compare it with the reflections of the English adventurer in his solitary place of confinement. The thoughts of home, and of all from which he is for ever cut off, swell and press against his bosom, as the heaving ocean rolls its ceaseless tide against the rocky shore, and the very beatings of his heart become audible in the eternal silence that surrounds him. Thus he says:
"As I walked about, either in my hunting, or for viewing the country, the anguish of my soul at my condition would break out upon me on a sudden, and my very heart would die within me to think of the woods, the mountains, the deserts I was in; and how I was a prisoner, locked up with the eternal bars and bolts of the ocean, in an uninhabited wilderness, without redemption. In the midst of the greatest composures of my mind, this would break out upon me like a storm, and make me wring my hands, and weep like a child. Sometimes it would take me in the middle of my work, and I would immediately sit down and sigh, and look upon the ground for an hour or two together, and this was still worse to me, for if I could burst into tears or vent myself in words, it would go off, and the grief having exhausted itself abate."The story of his adventures would not make a poem like the Odyssey, it is true; but the relator had the true genius of a poet. It has been made a question Richardson's romances are poetry; and the answer perhaps is, that they are not poetry, because they are not romance. The interest is worked up to an number of little things, by incessant labour and calls upon the attention, by repetition of blows that have no rebound in them. The sympathy excited is not a voluntary contribution, but a tax. Nothing is unforced and spontaneous. There is a want of elasticity and motion. The story does not 'give an echo to the seat where love is throned.' The heart does not answer of itself like a chord in music. The fancy does not run on before the writer with breathless expectation, but is dragged along with an infinite number of pins and wheels, like those with which the Lilliputians dragged Gulliver pinioned to the royal palace. -- Sir Charles Grandison is a coxcomb. What sort of a figure would he son I Die poem, by. the side Of cut, translated into an epic poem by the side of Achilles? Clarissa, the divine Clarissa, is too interesting by half. She! is interesting in her ruffles, in her gloves, her samplers, her aunts and uncles -- she is interesting in all that is uninteresting. Such things, however intensely they may be brought home to us, are conductors to the imagination. There is infinite truth and feeling in Richardson; but it is extracted from a caput mortuum of circumstances: it does not evaporate of itself. His poetical genius is like Ariel confined in a pine-tree, and requires an artificial process to let it out. Shakespeare says --
The poetry of the Bible is that of imagination
and of faith: it is abstract and disembodied: it is
not the poetry of form, but of power; not of
multitude, but of immensity. It does not divide
into many, but aggrandizes into one. Its ideas of
nature are like its ideas of God. It is not the
poetry of social life, but of solitude: each man
seems alone in the world, with the original forms
of nature, the rocks, the earth, and the sky. It is
not the poetry of action or heroic enterprise, but
of faith in a supreme Providence, and resignation
to the power that governs the universe. As the
idea of God was removed farther from humanity
and a scattered polytheism, it became more profound
and intense, as it became more universal,
for the Infinite is present to everything: 'If we
fly into the uttermost parts of the earth, it there
also; if we turn to the east or the west, we cannot
escape from it.' Man is thus aggrandized in the
image of his Maker. The history of the patriarchs
is of this kind; they are founders of a chosen race
of people, the inheritors of the earth; they exist
in the generations which are to come after them.
Their poetry, like their religious creed, is vast,
unformed, obscure, and infinite; a vision is upon it --
an invisible hand is suspended over it. The spirit of
the Christian religion consists in the glory
hereafter to be revealed; but in the Hebrew
dispensation, Providence took an immediate share in the
affairs of this life. Jacob's dreams arose out of this
intimate communion between heaven and earth:
it was this that let down, in the sight of the
youthful patriarch, a golden ladder from the sky
to the earth, with angels ascending and descending
upon it, and shed a light upon the lonely
place, which can never pass away. The story of
Ruth, again, is as if all the depth of natural
affection in the human race was involved in her breast.
There are descriptions in the book of Job more
prodigal of imagery, more intense in passion, than
anything in Homer, as that of the state of his
prosperity, and of the vision that came upon him
by night. The metaphors in the Old Testament
are more boldly figurative. Things were collected
more into masses, and gave a greater momentum
to the imagination.
Dante was the father of modern poetry, and
be may therefore claim a place in this connexion.
His poem is the first great step from Gothic
darkness and barbarism; and the struggle of thought
in it to burst the thraldom in which the human
mind had been so long held, is felt in every page.
He stood bewildered, not appalled, on that dark
shore which separates the ancient and the modern
world; and saw the glories of antiquity dawning
through the abyss of time, while revelation opened
its passage to the other world. He was lost in
wonder at what had been done before him, and he
dared to emulate it. Dante seems to have been
indebted to the Bible for the gloomy tone of his
mind, as well as for the prophetic fury which exalts
and kindles his poetry; but he is utterly unlike
Homer. His genius is not a sparkling flame, but
the sullen heat of a furnace. He is power, passion,
self-will personified. In all that relates to the
descriptive or fanciful part of poetry, he bears no
comparison to many who had gone before, or who
have come after him; but there is a gloomy
abstraction in his conceptions, which lies like
a dead weight upon the mind; a benumbing
stupor, a breathless awe, from the intensity of the
impression; a terrible obscurity, like that which
oppresses us in dreams; an identity of interest,
which moulds every object to its own purposes,
and clothes all things with the passions and
imaginations of the human soul, -- that make
amends for all other deficiencies. The immediate
objects he presents to the mind are not much in
themselves, they want grandeur, beauty, and order;
but they become everything by the force of the
character he impresses upon them. His mind
lends its own power to the objects which it
contemplates, instead of borrowing it from them. He
takes advantage even of the nakedness and dreary
vacuity of his subject. His imagination peoples
the shades of death, and broods over the silent air.
He is the severest of all writers, the most hard and
impenetrable, the most opposite to the flowery
and glittering; who relies most on his own power,
and the sense of it in others' and who leaves most
room to the imagination of his readers. Dante's
only endeavour is to interest; and he interests by
exciting our sympathy with the emotion by which
he is himself possessed. He does not place before
us the objects by which that emotion has been
created; but he seizes on the attention, by showing
us the effect they produce on his feelings; and
his poetry accordingly gives the same thrilling
and overwhelming sensation, which is caught by
gazing on the face of a person who has seen some
object of horror. The improbability of the events,
the abruptness and monotony in the Inferno, are
excessive: but the interest never flags, from the
continued earnestness of the author's mind.
Dante's great power is in combining internal
feelings with external objects. Thus the gate of
hell, on which that withering inscription is written,
seems to be endowed with speech and consciousness,
and to utter its dread warning, not without
a sense of mortal woes. This author habitually
unites the absolutely local and individual with the
greatest wildness and mysticism. In the midst of
the obscure and shadowy regions of the lower
world, a tomb suddenly rises up with the
inscription, 'I am the tomb of Pope Anastasius the
Sixth': and half the personages whom be has
crowded into the Inferno are his own acquaintance.
All this, perhaps, tends to heighten the effect by
the bold intermixture of realities, and by an appeal,
as it were, to the individual knowledge and
experience of the reader. He affords few subjects
for picture. There is, indeed, one gigantic one,
that of Count Ugolino, of which Michael Angelo
made a bas-relief, and which Sir Joshua Reynolds
ought not to have painted.
Another writer whom I shall mention last, and
whom I cannot persuade myself to think a mere
modern in the groundwork, is Ossian. He is a
feeling and a name that can never be destroyed
in the minds of his readers. As Homer is the first
vigour and lustihead, Ossian is the decay and old
age of poetry. He lives only in the recollection
and regret of the past. There is one impression
which he conveys more entirely than all other
poets, namely, the sense of privation, the loss of
all things, of friends, of good name, of country --
he is even without God in the world. He converses
only with the spirits of the departed; with the
motionless and silent clouds. The cold moonlight
sheds its faint lustre on his head; the fox peeps
out of the ruined tower; the thistle waves its
beard to the wandering gale; and the strings
of his harp seem, as the hand of age, as the tale of
other times, passes over them, to sigh and rustle
like the dry reeds in the winter's wind! The
feeling of cheerless desolation, of the loss of the
pith and sap of existence, of the annihilation
of the substance, and the clinging to the shadow of
all things as in a mock-embrace, is here perfect.
In this way, the lamentation of Selma for the loss
of Salgar is the finest of all. If it were indeed
possible to show that this writer was nothing, it
would only be another instance of mutability,
another blank made, another void left in the heart,
another confirmation of that feeling which makes
him so often complain, 'Roll on, ye dark brown
years, ye bring no joy on your wing to Ossian!'
1 This essay of Hazlitt's served as an introduction to his work Lectures on the English Poets. first published in 1818.
2 Burke's writings are not poetry, notwithstanding
the vividness of the fancy, because the subject-matter
is abstruse and dry, not natural, but artificial. The
difference between poetry and eloquence is, that the
one is the eloquence of the imagination, and the other
of the understanding. Eloquence tries to persuade
the will, and convince the reason: poetry produces
its effect by instantaneous sympathy. Nothing is
a subject for poetry that admits of a dispute. Poets
are in general bad prose-writers because their images,
though fine in themselves, are not to the purpose,
and do not carry on the argument. The French
poetry wants the forms of the imagination. It is
didactic more than dramatic. And some of our own
poetry which has been most admired, is only poetry
in the rhyme, and in the studied use of poetic diction.
I shall conclude this general account with some
remarks on four of the principal works of poetry
in the world, at different periods of history, --
Homer, the Bible, Dante, and let me add, Ossian.
In Homer, the principle of action or life is
predominant; in the Bible, the principle of faith and
the idea of Providence; Dante is a personification
of blind will; and in Ossian we see the decay
of life, and the lag end of the world. Homer's
poetry is the heroic: it is full of life and action:
it is bright as the day, strong as a river. In the
vigour of his intellect, he grapples with all the
objects of nature, and enters into all the relations
of social life. He saw many countries, and the
manners of many men; and he has brought them
all together in his poem. He describes his heroes
going to battle with a prodigality of life, arising
from an exuberance of animal spirits: we see
them before us, their number, and their order of
battle, poured out upon the plain 'all plumed
like estriches, like eagles newly bathed, wanton
as goats, wild as young bulls, youthful as May,
and gorgeous as the sun at midsummer', covered
with glittering armour, with dust and blood;
while the Gods quaff their nectar in golden cups, or
mingle in the fray; and the old men assembled
on the walls of Troy rise up with reverence as
Helen passes by them. The multitude of things
in Homer is wonderful; their splendour, their
truth, their force, and variety. His poetry is, like
his religion, the poetry of number and form: he
describes the bodies as well as the souls of men.
Which issues whence 'tis nourished, our gentle flame
Provokes itself, and like the current flies
Each bound it chafes.2_______________________________
NOTES:
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2011 (2020)