[Text: Edgar Allan Poe, Review of R. W. Griswold's The Female Poets
of America, from Southern Literary Messenger, February 1849,
pp. 126-127.]
[page 126:]
THE FEMALE
POETS OF AMERICA.
By Rufus Wilmot Griswold. Philadelphia: Carey & Hart.
This is a large volume, to match "The Poets and Poetry
of America," "The Prose Authors of America," and "The Poets and Poetry
of England" -- previous compilations of Mr. Griswold -- all of which have
been eminently and justly successful. "Compilations," however, is not precisely
the word; for these works have indisputable claims upon public attention
as critical summaries, at least, of literary merit and demerit. Their great
and most obvious value, as affording data or material for criticism --
as mere collections of the best specimens in each department and as records
of fact, in relation not more to books than to their authors -- has in
some measure overshadowed the more important merit of the series: for these
works have often, and in fact very generally, the positive merits of discriminative
criticism, and of honesty always the more negative merit of strong common-sense.
The best of the series is, beyond all question, "The Prose [column
2:] Authors of America." This is a book of which any critic
in the country might well have been proud, without reference to the mere
industry and research manifested in its compilation. These are truly remarkable;
-- but the vigor of comment and force of style are not less so; while more
independence and self-reliance are manifested than in any other of the
series. There is not a weak paper in the book; and some of the articles
are able in all respects. The truth is that Mr. Griswold's intellect is
more at home in Prose than Poetry. He is a better judge of fact than of
fancy, not that he has not shown himself quite competent to the task undertaken
in "The Poets and Poetry of America," or of England, or in the work now
especially before us. In this latter, he has done no less credit to himself
than to the numerous lady-poets whom he discusses -- and many of whom he
now first introduces to the public. We are glad, for Mr. Griswold's sake,
as well as for the interests of our literature generally, to perceive that
he has been at the pains of doing what Northern critics seem to be at great
pains; never to do -- that is to say, he has been at the trouble
of doing justice, in great measure, to several poetesses who have not had
the good fortune to be born in the North. The notices of the Misses Carey,
of the Misses Fuller, of the sisters Mrs. Warfield and Mrs. Lee, of Mrs.
Nichols, of Miss Welby, and of Miss Susan Archer Talley, reflect credit
upon Mr. Griswold and show him to be a man not more of taste than -- shall
we say it? -- of courage. Let our readers be assured that, (as matters
are managed among the four or five different cliques who control our whole
literature in controlling the larger portion of our critical journals,)
it requires no small amount of courage, in an author whose subsistence
lies in his pen, to hint, even, that any thing good, in a literary way,
can, by any possibility, exist out of the limits of a certain narrow territory.
We repeat that Mr. Griswold deserves our thanks, under such circumstances,
for the cordiality with which he has recognized the poetical claims of
the ladies mentioned above. He has not, however, done one or two of them
that full justice which, ere long, the public will take upon itself the
task of rendering them. We allude especially to the case of Miss Talley,
(the "Susan" of our own Messenger.) Mr. Griswold praises her highly; and
we would admit that it would be expecting of him too much, just at present,
to hope for his avowing, of Miss Talley, what we think of her, and what
one of our best known critics has distinctly avowed-that she ranks already
with the best of American poetesses, and in time will surpass them all
-- that her demerits are those of inexperience and excessive sensibility,
(betraying her, unconsciously, into imitation,) while her merits are those
of unmistakeable genius. We are proud to be able to say, moreover, in respect
to another of the ladies referred to above, that one of her poems is decidedly
the noblest poem in the collection-although the most distinguished poetesses
in the land have here included their most praiseworthy compositions. Our
allusion is to Miss Alice Carey's "Pictures of Memory." Let our readers
see it and judge for themselves. We speak deliberately: -- in all the higher
elements of poetry -- in true imagination -- in the power of exciting the
only real poetical effect -- elevation of the soul, in contradistinction
from mere excitement of the intellect or heart -- the poem in question
is the noblest in the book.
"The Female Poets of America" includes ninety-five
names -- commencing with Ann Bradstreet, the contemporary of the once world-renowned
Du Bartas -- him of the "nonsense-verses" -- the poet who was in the habit
of styling the sun the "Grand Duke of Candles" -- and ending with "Helen
Irving" -- a norm de plume of Miss Anna H. Phillips. Mr. Griswold gives
most space to Mrs. Maria Brooks, (Maria del Occidente,) not, we hope and
believe, merely because Southey has happened to commend her. The claims
of this lady we have not yet examined so thoroughly [page 127:]
as we could wish, and we will speak more fully of her hereafter, perhaps.
In point of actual merit -- that is to say of actual accomplishment, without
reference to mere indications of the ability to accomplish -- we would
rank the first dozen or so in this order -- (leaving out Mrs. Brooks for
the present.) Mrs. Osgood -- very decidedly first -- then Mrs Welby, Miss
Carey, (or the Misses Carey,) Miss Talley, Mrs. Whitman, Miss Lynch, Miss
Frances Fuller, Miss Lucy Hooper, Mrs. Oakes Smith, Mrs. Ellet, Mrs. Hewitt,
Miss Clarke, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Nichols, Mrs. Warfield, (with her sister,
Mrs. Lee,) Mrs. Eames and Mrs. Sigourney. If Miss Lynch had as much imagination
as energy of expression and artistic power, we would place her next to
Mrs. Osgood. The next skilful merely, of those just mentioned, are Mrs.
Osgood, Miss Lynch and Mrs. Sigourney. The most imaginative are Miss Carey,
Mrs. Osgood, Miss Talley and Miss Fuller. The most accomplished are Mrs.
Ellet, Mrs. Eames, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Whitman and Mrs Oakes Smith. The most
popular are Mrs. Osgood, Mrs. Oakes Smith and Miss Hooper. The most glaring
omissions are those of Mrs. C. F. Orne and Miss Mary Wells.
~~~ End of Text ~~~
[S:0 - SLM 1849]