though Longfellow, in "Evangeline" and "Hiawatha," and the "New
England Tragedies," sought his topics in the history and traditions
of the New World.
To me "Hiawatha" seems by far the best of his longer efforts; it is
quite full of
sympathy with men and women, nature, beasts, birds,
weather, and wind and snow. Everything lives with a human breath,
as everything should live in a poem
concerned with these wild folk,
to whom all the world, and all in it, is personal as themselves. Of
course there are lapses of style in so long a piece. It jars on us
in the lay of the
mystic Chibiabos, the boy Persephone of the Indian
Eleusinia, to be told that
"the gentle Chibiabos
Sang in tones of deep emotion!"
"Tones of deep emotion" may pass in a novel, but not in this epic of
the wild wood and the wild kindreds, an epic in all ways a worthy
record of those dim,
mournful races which have left no story of
their own, only here and there a ruined
wigwam beneath the forest
leaves.
A poet's life is no affair, perhaps, of ours. Who does not wish he
knew as little of Burn's as of Shakespeare's? Of Longfellow's there
is nothing to know but good, and his
poetry testifies to it--his
poetry, the voice of the kindest and gentlest heart that poet ever
bore. I think there are not many things in poets' lives more
touching than his silence, in verse, as to his own chief sorrow. A
stranger intermeddles not with it, and he kept secret his brief lay
on that insuperable and incommunicable regret. Much would have been
lost had all poets been as reticent, yet one likes him better for it
than if he had given us a new "Vita Nuova."
What an
immense long way I have wandered from "Sordello," my dear
Mainwaring, but when a man turns to his books, his thoughts, like
those of a boy, "are long, long thoughts." I have not written on
Longfellow's
sonnets, for even you, impeccable
sonneteer, admit that
you admire them as much as I do.
A FRIEND OF KEATS
To Thomas Egerton, Esq., Lothian College, Oxford.
Dear Egerton,--Yes, as you say, Mr. Sidney Colvin's new "Life of
Keats" {3} has only one fault, it's too short. Perhaps, also, it is
almost too studiously free from
enthusiasm. But when one considers
how Keats (like Shelley) has been gushed about, and how easy it is
to gush about Keats, one can only thank Mr. Colvin for his example
of reserve. What a good fellow Keats was! How really manly and, in
the best sense, moral he seems, when one compares his life and his
letters with the vagaries of
contemporary poets who lived longer
than he, though they, too, died young, and who left more work,
though not better, never so good, perhaps, as Keats's best.
However, it was not of Keats that I wished to write, but of his
friend, John Hamilton Reynolds. Noscitur a sociis--a man is known
by the company he keeps. Reynolds, I think, must have been
excellent company, if we may judge him by his
writings. He comes
into Lord Houghton's "Life and Letters of Keats" very early (vol. i.
p. 30). We find the poet
writing to him in the April of 1817, from
the Isle of Wight. "I shall
forthwith begin my 'Endymion,' which I
hope I shall have got some way with before you come, when we will
read our verses in a
delightful place I have set my heart upon, near
the castle." Keats ends "your
sincere friend," and a man to whom
Keats was a
sincere friend had some occasion for pride.
About Reynolds's life neither time nor space permits me to say very
much, if I knew very much, which I don't. He was the son of a
master in one of our large schools. He went to the Bar. He married
a sister of Thomas Hood. He wrote, like Hood, in the London
Magazine. With Hood for ally, he published "Odes and Addresses to
Great People;" the third
edition, which I have here, is of 1826.
The late relations of the brothers-in-law were less happy; possibly
the ladies of their families quarrelled; that is usually the way of
the
belligerent sex.
Reynolds died in the
enjoyment of a
judicial office in the Isle of
Wight, some thirty years later than his famous friend, the author of
"Endymion." "It is to be lamented," says Lord Houghton, "that Mr.
Reynolds's own
remarkable verse is not better known." Let us try to
know it a little better.
I have not succeeded in getting Reynolds's first
volume of poems,
which was published before "Endymion." It
contained some Oriental
melodies, and won a
careless good word from Byron. The earliest
work of his I can lay my hand on is "The Fancy, a Selection from the
Poetical Remains of the late Peter Corcoran, of Gray's Inn, Student
at Law, with a brief
memoir of his Life." There is a motto from
Wordsworth:
"Frank are the sports, the stains are fugitive." {4}
It was the old palmy time of the Ring. Every one knows how Byron
took lessons from Jackson the boxer; how Shelley had a fight at Eton
in which he quoted Homer, but was licked by a smaller boy; how
Christopher North whipped the
professional pugilist; how Keats
himself never had enough of fighting at school, and beat the butcher
afterwards. His friend Reynolds, also, liked a set-to with the
gloves. His
imaginarycharacter, Peter Corcoran, is a
poetical lad,
who becomes possessed by a
passion for prize-fighting. It seems odd
in a poet, but "the stains are fugitive."
We would liefer see a young man
rejoicing in his strength and
improving his science, than loafing about with long hair and giving
anxious thought to the colour of his
necktie. It is a disinterested
preference, as fighting was never my forte, any more than it was
Artemus Ward's. At school I was "more
remarkable for what I
suffered than for what I achieved."
Peter Corcoran "fought nearly as soon as he could walk,"
wherein he
resembled Keats, and part of his
character may even have been
borrowed from the author of the "Ode to the Nightingale." Peter
fell in love, wrote
poetry, witnessed a "mill" at the Fives-Court,
and became the Laureate of the Ring. "He has made a good set-to
with Eales, Tom Belcher (the
monarch of the gloves!), and Turner,
and it is known that he has parried the difficult and ravaging hand
even of Randall himself." "The difficult and ravaging hand"--there
is a style for you!
Reynolds has himself the
enthusiasm of his hero; let us remember
that Homer, Virgil, and Theocritus have all described spirited
rallies with
admiration and good taste. From his dissipation in
cider-cellars and coal-holes, this rival of Tom and Jerry wrote a
sonnet that applies well enough to Reynolds's own career:
"Were this a
feather from an eagle's wing,
And thou, my
tablet white! a
marble tile
Taken from ancient Jove's
majestic pile -
And might I dip my
feather in some spring,
Adown Mount Ida threadlike wandering:-
And were my thoughts brought from some
starry isle
In Heaven's blue sea--I then might with a smile
Write down a hymn to fame, and
proudly sing!
"But I am
mortal: and I cannot write
Aught that may foil the fatal wing of Time.
Silent, I look at Fame: I cannot climb
To where her Temple is--Not mine the might:-
I have some glimmering of what is
sublime -
But, ah! it is a most inconstant light."
Keats might have written this
sonnet in a
melancholy mood.
"About this time he (Peter) wrote a slang
description of a fight he
had witnessed to a lady." Unlucky Peter! "Was ever woman in this
manner wooed?" The lady "glanced her eye over page after page in
hopes of meeting with something that was intelligible," and no
wonder she did not care for a long letter "devoted to the subject of