decision in that great moment;--for the rest, that he much wished to
learn
reading and
writing, and find some way of life above ground
instead of below. By aid of the Misses Fox and the rest of that
family, a
subscription (
modest _Anti_-Hudson testimonial) was raised
to this Methodist hero: he emerged into
daylight with fifty pounds in
his pocket; did strenuously try, for certain months, to learn
readingand
writing; found he could not learn those arts or either of them;
took his money and bought cows with it,
wedding at the same time some
religious likely
milkmaid; and is, last time I heard of him, a
prosperous
modest dairyman,
thankful for the upper light and safety
from the wrath to come. Sterling had some hand in this affair: but,
as I said, it was the two young ladies of the family that
mainly did
it.
In the end of 1841, after many hesitations and revisals, _The
Election_ came out; a tiny Duodecimo without name attached;[24] again
inquiring of the public what its
suffrage was; again to little
purpose. My vote had never been loud for this step, but neither was
it quite
adverse; and now, in
reading the poor little Poem over again,
after ten years' space, I find it, with a
touchingmixture of pleasure
and
repentance,
considerably better than it then seemed to me. My
encouragement, if not to print this poem, yet to proceed with Poetry,
since there was such a
resolution for it, might have been a little
more decided!
This is a small Piece, but aims at containing great things; a _multum
in parvo_ after its sort; and is executed here and there with
undeniable success. The style is free and flowing, the rhyme dances
along with a certain
joyfultriumph; everything of due brevity
withal.
That
mixture of
mockery on the surface, which
finely relieves the real
earnestness within, and flavors even what is not very
earnest and
might even be insipid
otherwise, is not ill managed: an amalgam
difficult to effect well in
writing; nay, impossible in
writing,--unless it stand already done and effected, as a general
fact, in the
writer's mind and
character; which will betoken a certain
ripeness there.
As I said, great things are intended in this little Piece; the motto
itself foreshadowing them:--
"_Fluellen_. Ancient Pistol, I do
partly understand your
meaning.
_Pistol_. Why, then,
rejoice therefor."
A
stupidcommonplace English Borough has lost its Member suddenly, by
apoplexy or
otherwise; resolves, in the usual
explosivetemper of
mind, to
replace him by one of two others;
whereupon strange
stirring-up of rival-
attorney and other human interests and
catastrophes. "Frank Vane" (Sterling himself), and "Peter Mogg," the
pattern English blockhead of elections: these are the candidates.
There are, of course,
fierce rival
attorneys; electors of all creeds
and complexions to be canvassed: a poor
stupid Borough thrown all
into red or white heat; into blazing paroxysms of activity and
enthusiasm, which render the inner life of it (and of England and the
world through it) luminously
transparent, so to speak;--of which
opportunity our friend and his "Muse" take dexterous
advantage, to
delineate the same. His pictures are uncommonly good; brief, joyous,
sometimes conclusively true: in rigorously
compressed shape; all is
merry
freshness and exuberance: we have leafy summer embowering red
bricks and small human interests, presented as in glowing
miniature; a
mock-heroic action fitly interwoven;--and many a clear glance is
carelessly given into the deepest things by the way. Very happy also
is the little love-episode; and the
absorption of all the interest
into that, on the part of Frank Vane and of us, when once this gallant
Frank,--having fairly from his barrel-head stated his own (and John
Sterling's) views on the aspects of the world, and of course having
quite broken down with his
attorney and his public,--handsomely, by
stratagem, gallops off with the fair Anne; and leaves free field to
Mogg, free field to the Hippopotamus if it like. This
portrait of
Mogg may be considered to have merit:--
"Though short of days, how large the mind of man;
A
godlike force enclosed within a span!
To climb the skies we spurn our nature's clog,
And toil as Titans to elect a Mogg.
"And who was Mogg? O Muse! the man declare,
How excellent his worth, his parts how rare.
A younger son, he
learnt in Oxford's halls
The spheral harmonies of billiard-balls,
Drank, hunted, drove, and hid from Virtue's frown
His venial follies in Decorum's gown.
Too wise to doubt on
insufficient cause,
He signed old Cranmer's lore without a pause;
And knew that logic's
cunning rules are taught
To guard our creed, and not invigorate thought,--
As those
bronze steeds at Venice, kept for pride,
Adorn a Town where not one man can ride.
"From Isis sent with all her loud acclaims,
The Laws he
studied on the banks of Thames.
Park, race and play, in his
capacious plan,
Combined with Coke to form the finished man,
Until the wig's ambrosial influence shed
Its last full glories on the lawyer's head.
"But vain are
mortal schemes. The
eldest son
At Harrier Hall had
scarce his stud begun,
When Death's pale courser took the Squire away
To lands where never dawns a
hunting day:
And so, while Thomas vanished 'mid the fog,
Bright rose the morning-star of Peter Mogg."[25]
And this little picture, in a quite opposite way:--
"Now, in her
chamber all alone, the maid
Her polished limbs and shoulders disarrayed;
One little taper gave the only light,
One little mirror caught so dear a sight;
'Mid hangings dusk and shadows wide she stood,
Like some pale Nymph in dark-leafed solitude
Of rocks and
gloomy waters all alone,
Where
sunshinescarcely breaks on stump or stone
To scare the
dreamyvision. Thus did she,
A star in deepest night,
intent but free,
Gleam through the eyeless darkness, heeding not
Her beauty's praise, but musing o'er her lot.
"Her garments one by one she laid aside,
And then her knotted hair's long locks untied
With
careless hand, and down her cheeks they fell,
And o'er her
maiden bosom's blue-veined swell.
The
right-hand fingers played
amidst her hair,
And with her reverie wandered here and there:
The other hand sustained the only dress
That now but half concealed her loveliness;
And pausing, aimlessly she stood and thought,
In
virgin beauty by no fear distraught."
Manifold, and beautiful of their sort, are Anne's musings, in this
interesting attitude, in the summer
midnight, in the
crisis of her
destiny now near;--at last:--
"But Anne, at last her mute devotions o'er,
Perceived the feet she had forgot before
Of her too
shocking nudity; and shame
Flushed from her heart o'er all the snowy frame:
And, struck from top to toe with burning dread,
She blew the light out, and escaped to bed."[26]
--which also is a very pretty movement.
It must be owned
withal, the Piece is crude in parts, and far enough
from perfect. Our good
painter has yet several things to learn, and
to unlearn. His brush is not always of the finest; and dashes about,
sometimes, in a recognizably sprawling way: but it hits many a
feature with
decisiveaccuracy and
felicity; and on the palette, as
usual, lie the richest colors. A grand merit, too, is the brevity of
everything; by no means a
spontaneous, or quite common merit with
Sterling.
This new
poetic Duodecimo, as the last had done and as the next also
did, met with little or no
recognition from the world: which was not
very inexcusable on the world's part; though many a poem with far less
proof of merit than this offers, has run, when the accidents favored
it, through its tens of editions, and raised the
writer to the
demigods for a year or two, if not longer. Such as it is, we may take
it as marking, in its small way, in a noticed or unnoticed manner, a
new
height arrived at by Sterling in his Poetic course; and almost as