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devise a standard to graduate with precision their relative merit. But there are names which Time and "Truth, the daughter not of Time but of Heaven," separate from the multitude, and among these a further discrimination may be attempted. It is the result of mature reflection, when we express the conviction, that the five centuries of English poetry have produced five poets of the highest order-Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Milton, and Wordsworth. They are named in the succession of time, for we frankly acknowledge a greater difficulty in estimating their relative rank, than in reaching the belief that below them a welldefined line may be drawn. In this enumeration we have chiefly echoed the judgment of time, for the fame of the first four great poets is established. The mind may not, however, be prepared to find a living bard placed by their side. We are sensible that there may be something startling in a classification which, purporting to rest on some principle, passes from the names of Shakspeare and Milton to Wordsworth. We cannot pause to explain the omission of other names of great celebrity; our purpose is to show, that in the poetry of Wordsworth there is a principle of fame, vital enough to sustain his memory in the highest region of English poetry. To this opinion is opposed the preliminary prejudice, arising from the mere fact that age has given none of its honors. In placing one of our own times in the select company of those who were glorious to our young imaginations, and who had been honored in the thoughts of our fathers and our fathers' fathers, an undefined sentiment of presumption is suggested, which would fain recoil from treading lightly on sacred dust. But in reality this may be a sentiment of superstition. Is it not a frailty in our nature, which withholds honor from the prophet familiarly living in the present household of the world? Between the language of fame and courtesy there seems, too, to be a mutual repugnance; for while we smile at the awkward designation, in an old volume, of "Mr. Shakspeare," or "Mr. Milton," we encounter a kindred embarrassment in realizing the fame of those towards whom the dialect of courtesy is still employed. We advert to these considerations to defeat the influence of a natural but unfounded prejudice.

In speaking of poetry of the highest order, we may appear to use a phrase too comparative to suggest a very definite conception. But to claim for a poet a place among those whose rank is universally recognised, is a convenient mode of appealing to the sense of fame. Pointing to the familiar glory of Chaucer, Spen

ser, Shakspeare, and Milton, we speak intelligibly when we avow the belief that Wordsworth is native to the same region of poetic inspiration, and that if this generation falter in the judgment, another, sooner or later, will do him justice. It is in no rash spirit of passionate partiality that we speak thus confidently of a living author, but from a conviction, sinking deeper into the heart at each thoughtful communing with his works, that the permanent fame reserved for Wordsworth is not fully realized by even his truest admirers. It may be thought that the poet's cause would be more discreetly advocated, were we to plead more cautiously. It is not our desire to deal so with the reader, or to apply the ordinary tactics of the rhetorician, for it would be unworthy to affect a reserve or timidity which is not felt. Why should the strong sense of the poet's genius be disguised-or why should the expression be guarded, and surrounded with qualifications and conditions, which betray the consciousness of insecurity, whenever error shares the citadel with truth? We have classed Wordsworth with such as Shakspeare and Milton, not for the senseless purpose of direct comparison, but as a simple and explicit mode of indicating, that amidst the vast variety of poets-the winged race of powers so multitudinous- he may be joined to those, whose flight is sustained in the highest and purest regions of poetry. There is a glowing rhapsody of Coleridge on the multiplicity of poetic power, as honorable to his humility, as it is in itself illustrative of that genius, which was diverted from verse to the teaching of Christian philosophy:

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"I have too clearly before me the idea of a poet's genius to deem myself other than a very humble poet; but in the very possession of the idea I know myself so far a poet, as to feel assured that I can understand and interpret a poem in the spirit of poetry, and with the poet's spirit. Like the ostrich, I cannot fly, yet have I wings that give me the feeling of flight; and, as I sweep along the plain, can look up toward the bird of Jove, and can follow him and say: Sovereign of the air, who descendest on thy nest in the cleft of the inaccessible rock, who makest the mountain pinnacle thy perch and halting-place, and, scanning with steady eye the orb of glory right above thee, imprintest thy lordly talons in the stainless snows that shoot back and scatter round his glittering shafts, I pay thee homage. Thou art my king. I give honor due to the vulture, the falcon, and all thy noble baronage; and no less to the lowly bird, the skylark, whom thou permittest to visit thy court, and chant her matin song within its cloudy curtains; yea, the linnet, the thrush,

the swallow, are my brethren;-but still I am a bird, though but a bird of the earth. Monarch of our kind, I am a bird, even as thou; and I have shed plumes which have added beauty to the beautiful, and grace to terror, waving over the maiden's brow and on the helmed head of the warrior chief; and majesty to grief, drooping o'er the car of death!"- Literary Remains, vol. iii. p. 170.

It would be no strained fancy that this was conceived, with the vision of the Excursion, or some of Wordsworth's lofty odes, floating before the enraptured imagination of that friend who had apprehended the poet's genius from the moment that it dawned upon him. Yes, though Wordsworth's meekness might aptly be emblemed in the caged dove, or the lark delighting not less in his lowly nest on the bosom of the very earth than in bathing his wings in the light of the upper air, the symbol of his power is the eagle's flight.

But what is this high order of poetry? Some standard must be looked for, by which opinion may be put to the test, for what can be more vague than the popular notions of poetry, and what more purposeless than criticism not controlled by some principles? The light of philosophy is needed to guide us over a tract where a thousand paths are open to mislead; nay, more, we want some rays from a higher fountain of light to reveal how holy a thing the power of a poet is, and to win us from the service of idols that have been set up in its place by passion, and prejudice, and folly. The canons of a contracted criticism, that can look at nothing but little defects, are vainly applied to the nobler productions of inspiration and art; what is it but casting aside the instruments of science to measure mountains with a pocket-rule? The question has been often asked—what is poetry?-but, like Pilate's interrogatory, it seems doomed to go unmated with an answer. The visionary faculty sends forth its creations, like nature, and like nature it eludes the grasp of definition. Still, difficult as it may be to characterize it in words, we cannot doubt the existence of one eternal idea of poetry, which, for instance, gave the impulse to the spirit of Shakspeare, and fashioned and controlled its creations;-the same which, taking early hold of the heart of Milton, and kindling his aspirations in manhood as well as youth—giving ever and anon light to the fierceness of his polemic prose, and haunting him, no doubt, at the parliamentary council board, at length, in the darkness of blindness and the seclusion of political disfavor, came forth in the deathless form of the Paradise Lost. Now, in

the study of such models, we might learn what is this archetype, which, when it reveals itself in language, puts on such glorious shape. Or, looking into the depths of the heart, and discovering there a spiritual faculty which never fails to be responsive to the voice of genuine poetry, we might, perhaps, perceive what that power is which can thus sway our common humanity. We are not ambitious of adding another to the many attempted definitions of poetry; indeed, so various are its functions and so numerous the faculties marshalled in its service, that it may well be doubted whether there is not something unphilosophical in such attempts. On this subject we desire to appeal to authority, and, happily, from oracles of philosophy we can gather some sentences of wisdom to illustrate the characteristics of poetry, the duties of the poet's high vocation, and the purposes for which his spirit is endowed. When Lord Bacon took that survey of human knowledge which has been a chart for inquiry, he did not forget "that part of learning styled poesy," but saw in it the aspirations of "the spirit of man for a more ample greatness, a more exact goodness, the world being in proportion inferior to the soul." "Poesy," he continues, in a sentence which shows that the light of truth was in his heart, "serveth and conferreth to magnanimity, morality, and to delectation. And, therefore, it was ever thought to have some participation of divineness, because it doth raise and erect the mind, by submitting the shews of things to the desires of the mind." This authority may be wholesome physic for that modern school which sets up its materialized notions, and, measuring the philosophic vision of Lord Verulam by their own short sight, would tempt the credulous to think that the world of the senses can yield an all sufficient philosophy, and that in the scheme he shadowed forth, no thought was taken of the inner world of the human soul-the affections, the will, the fancy, and that much mistaken faculty, which, in its purest state, makes man "in apprehension so like a god"-the imagination. These passages have been quoted to sustain by the authority of a sage the lofty estimate of poetry for which we are contending. The philosophy of Bacon is itself instinct with processes of imagination, and, when in search of another authority we turn to Shakspearefrom the volume of philosophy to the volume of poetry-it is no unnatural transition, for, in the inventive faculty there is a bond of brotherhood between them. We have often regarded it as a remarkable evidence of Shakspeare's powers of philosophical analysis, and of his deep insight into his own great endowment, that in a few lines-incidentally too, as a mere il

lustration - he should have put into the mouth of one of his characters one of the finest descriptions on record of the principle and functions of poetic genius. The passage has been sadly blunted by the frequency of thoughtless quotation, but we require it now as a philosophical authority. First, to distinguish the processes of imagination from those of "cool reason" - the calculating faculty-he groups together" the lunatic, the lover, and the poet, of imagination all compact," and then, after glancing at the diseased vision of madness, and the enthralled eyes of love, he sets before us the action of a sane though fervid imagination :

"The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling,

Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;
And as imagination bodies forth

The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen

Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing

A local habitation and a name."

When Spenser sent forth his immortal allegory, his high aim appears from the explanatory letter to Raleigh, that "the general end of all the Booke is to fashion a gentleman or noble person in vertuous and gentle discipline," and thus he "moralized in song." In all his laments too-heart-broken as he probably was-is it not plain that not so much for personal neglect was he sorrowing, but that the voice of the muse found not a welcome in the minds of his countrymen ?

"O, pierlesse poesie! where is then thy place?
If nor in princes' pallace thou doest sit,
(And yet is princes' pallace the most fit,)
Ne brest of baser birth doth thee embrace,
Then make thee wings of thine aspiring wit,

And whence thou camest, flie backe to heaven apace."

In the same age, Spenser's patron, the matchless Sidney, composed that Defence of Poetry, which cannot become obsolete, so long as the weakness of men's spirits suffers the sensual to usurp dominion in them over the ideal, and so to bow the poet's godlike function to the earthy knowledge, that enters by the eye and the ear, and is wrought by the hand. We cannot forbear adding, that if, in the sixteenth century, when the christian faith had, by the blessing of God, returned to the innocence of its childhood-when the apathy of a decrepid superstition just cast off, the pulse of protestant England was beating with the flush of youth-when loyalty and chivalry and the sense of danger

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