A
MID
the vague
mythology of
Egypt, the voluptuous scenery of her Nile, and the gigantic mysteries
of
her pyramids, Anacreon Moore has found all of that striking
materiel
which he so much delights in working up, and which he has embodied in
the
poem before us. The design of the story (for plot it has none) has been
a less consideration than its facilities, and is made subservient to
its
execution. The subject is comprised in five epistles. In the first,
Alciphron,
the head of the Epicurean sect at Athens, writes, from Alexandria, to
his
friend Cleon, in the former city. He tells him (assigning a reason for
quitting Athens and her pleasures) that, having fallen asleep one night
after protracted festivity, he beholds, in a dream, a spectre, who
tells
him that, beside the sacred Nile, he, the Epicurean, shall find that
Eternal
Life for which he had so long been sighing. In the second, from the
same
to the same, the traveller speaks, at large, and in rapturous terms, of
the scenery of Egypt; of the beauty of her maidens; of an approaching
Festival
of the Moon; and of a wild hope entertained that
[page 375:]
amid the subterranean chambers of some huge pyramid lies the secret
which
he covets, the secret of Life Eternal. In the third letter, he relates
a love adventure at the Festival. Fascinated by the charms of one of
the
nymphs of a procession, he is first in despair at losing sight of her,
then overjoyed at again seeing her in Necropolis, and finally traces
her
steps until they are lost near one of the smaller pyramids. In epistle
the fourth, (still from the same to the same,) he enters and explores
the
pyramid, and, passing through a complete series of Eleusinian
mysteries,
is at length successfully initiated into the secrets of Memphian
priestcraft;
we learning this latter point from letter the fifth, which concludes
the
poem, and is addressed by Orcus, high priest of Memphis, to Decius, a
prœtorian
prefect.
* Alciphron, a Poem.
By Thomas Moore,
Esq., author of Lalla Rookh, etc., etc. Carey and Hart, Philadelphia.
[[This
footnote appears at the bottom of page 374.]]
A new poem from Moore calls to mind that
critical opinion
respecting him which had its origin, we believe, in the dogmatism of
Coleridge
— we mean the opinion that he is essentially the poet of
fancy
— the term being employed in contradistinction to
imagination.
"The fancy,'' says the author of the "Auncient Mariner,'' in his
Biographia Literaria, "the fancy combines, the imagination
creates.''
And this was intended, and has been received, as a distinction. If so
at
all, it is one without a difference; without even a difference of
degree. The fancy as nearly creates as the imagination; and neither
creates in any respect. All novel conceptions are merely unusual
combinations.
The mind of man can
imagine nothing which has not really
existed;
and this point is susceptible of the most positive demonstration — see
the Baron de Bielfeld, in his
Premiers Traits de L'Erudition
Universelle,
1767. It will be said, perhaps, that we can imagine a
griffin,
and that a griffin does not exist. Not the griffin certainly, but its
component
parts. It is a mere compendium of known limbs and features — of known
qualities.
Thus with all which seems to be
new — which appears to be
a
creation of intellect. It is re-soluble into the old.
The
wildest and most vigorous effort of mind cannot stand the test of this
analysis.
We might make a distinction,
of degree,
between the fancy and the imagination, in saying that the latter is the
former
loftily employed. But experience proves this
distinction
to be unsatisfactory. What we
feel and
know
to
be fancy, will be found still only
[page 376:] fanciful,
whatever be the theme which engages it. It retains its idiosyncrasy
under
all circumstances. No
subject exalts it into the ideal. We
might exemplify this by reference to the writings of one whom our
patriotism,
rather than our judgment, has elevated to a niche in the Poetic Temple
which he does not becomingly fill, and which he cannot long
uninterruptedly
hold. We allude to the late Dr. Rodman Drake, whose puerile abortion,
"The
Culprit Fay,'' we examined, at some length, in a
critique
elsewhere; proving it, we think, beyond all question, to belong to that
class of the pseudo-ideal, in dealing with which we find ourselves
embarrassed
between a kind of half-consciousness that we ought to admire, and the
certainty
that we do not. Dr. Drake was employed upon a good subject — at least
it
is a subject precisely identical with those which Shakspeare was wont
so
happily to treat, and in which, especially, the author of "Lilian'' has
so wonderfully succeeded. But the American has brought to his task a
mere
fancy, and has grossly failed in doing what many suppose him to
have
done — in writing an ideal or imaginative poem. There is not one
particle
of the true [[Greek text:]]
poihsiV
[[:Greek
text]] about "The Culprit Fay.'' We say that the subject, even at its
best
points, did not aid Dr. Drake in the slightest degree. He was never
more
than
fanciful. The passage, for example, chiefly cited by
his admirers, is the account of the "Sylphid Queen;'' and to show the
difference
between the false and true ideal, we collated, in the review just
alluded
to, this, the most admired passage, with one upon a similar topic by
Shelley.
We shall be pardoned for repeating here, as nearly as we remember them,
some words of what we then said.
The description of the Sylphid Queen
runs thus:
But oh, how fair the shape that lay
Beneath a rainbow bending bright;
She seemed to the entranced Fay,
The loveliest of the forms of light;
Her mantle was the purple rolled
At twilight in the west afar;
'Twas tied with threads of dawning gold,
And buttoned with a sparkling star.
Her face was like the lily roon
That veils the vestal planet's hue;
Her eyes two beamlets from the moon
Set floating in the welkin blue. [page
377:]
Her hair is like the sunny beam,
And the diamond gems which round it gleam
Are the pure drops of dewy even
That ne'er have left their native heaven.
In the
Queen Mab of Shelley, a Fairy is thus
introduced:
Those who had looked upon the sight,
Passing all human glory,
Saw not the yellow moon,
Saw not the mortal scene,
Heard not the night-wind's rush,
Heard not an earthly sound,
Saw but the fairy pageant,
Heard but the heavenly strains
That filled the lonely dwelling —
And thus described —
The Fairy's frame was slight; yon fibrous cloud
That catches but the palest tinge of even,
And which the straining eye can hardly seize
When melting into eastern twilight's shadow,
Where scarce so thin, so slight; but the fair star
That gems the glittering coronet of morn,
Sheds not a light so mild, so powerful,
As that which, bursting from the Fairy's form,
Spread a purpureal halo round the scene,
Yet with an undulating motion,
Swayed to her outline gracefully.
In these exquisite lines the faculty of mere
comparison
is but little exercised — that of ideality in a wonderful degree. It is
probable that in a similar case Dr. Drake would have formed the face of
the fairy of the "fibrous cloud,'' her arms of the "pale tinge of
even,''
her eyes of the "fair stars,'' and her body of the "twilight shadow.''
Having so done, his admirers would have congratulated him upon his
imagination,
not taking the trouble to think that they themselves could at any
moment
imagine a fairy of materials equally as good, and
conveying an equally
distinct idea. Their mistake would be precisely analogous to that of
many
a schoolboy who admires the imagination displayed in Jack the
Giant-Killer,
and is finally rejoiced at discovering his own imagination to surpass
that
of the author, since the monsters destroyed by Jack are only about
forty
feet in height, and he himself has no trouble in imagining some of one
hundred and forty. It will be seen that the fairy of Shelley is not a
mere
compound of incongruous natural objects, inartificially put together,
and
unaccompanied by any
moral sentiment — but a being, in the
illustration
[page 378:] of whose nature some
physical elements
are used collaterally as adjuncts, while the main conception springs
immediately,
or thus apparently springs, from the brain of the poet, enveloped
in
the moral sentiments of grace, of color, of motion — of the beautiful,
of the
mystical, of the august — in short, of the ideal.
The truth is that the just
distinction between the
fancy and the imagination (and which is still but a distinction
of
degree)
is involved in the consideration of the
mystic. We give
this
as an idea of our own, altogether. We have no authority for our opinion
— but do not the less firmly hold it. The term
mystic is here
employed
in the sense of Augustus William Schlegel, and of most other German
critics.
It is applied by them to that class of composition in which there lies
beneath the transparent upper current of meaning, an under or
suggestive
one. What we vaguely term the
moral of any sentiment is its
mystic
or secondary expression. It has the vast force of an accompaniment in
music.
This vivifies the air; that spiritualizes the
fanciful
conception,
and lifts it into the
ideal.
This theory will bear, we think, the
most rigorous
tests which can be made applicable to it, and will be acknowledged as
tenable
by all who are themselves imaginative. If we carefully examine those
poems,
or portions of poems, or those prose romances, which mankind have been
accustomed to designate as
imaginative, (for an instinctive
feeling
leads us to employ properly the term whose full import we have still
never
been able to define,) it will be seen that all so designated are
remarkable
for the
suggestive character which we have discussed. They
are strongly
mystic — in the proper sense of the word. We
will here only call to the reader's mind, the
Prometheus Vinctus
of Æschylus; the
Inferno of Dante; the
Destruction of
Numantia
by Cervantes; the
Comus of Milton; the
Auncient Mariner,
the
Christabel, and the
Kubla Khan, of Coleridge;
the
Nightingale of Keats; and, most especially, the
Sensitive
Plant
of Shelley, and the
Undine of De La Motte Fouqué. These
two
latter poems (for we call them both such) are the finest possible
examples
of the purely
ideal. There is little of fancy here, and every
thing
of imagination. With each note of the lyre is heard a ghostly, and not
always a distinct, but an august and soul-exalting
echo. In
every
glimpse of beauty presented,
[page 379:] we catch,
through long and wild vistas, dim bewildering visions of a far more
ethereal
beauty
beyond. But not so in poems which the world has always
persisted
in terming
fanciful. Here the upper current is often
exceedingly
brilliant and beautiful; but then men
feel that this upper
current
is all. No Naiad voice addresses them
from below. The notes
of the air of the song do not tremble with the according tones of the
accompaniment.
It is the failure to perceive these
truths which
has occasioned that embarrassment which our critics experience while
discussing
the topic of Moore's station in the poetic world that hesitation with
which
we are obliged to refuse him the loftiest rank among the most noble.
The
popular voice, and the popular heart, have denied him that happiest
quality,
imagination — and here the popular voice (
because for once it
has
gone with the popular heart) is right — but yet only relatively so.
Imagination
is not the leading feature of the poetry of Moore; but he possesses it
in no little degree.
We will quote a few instances from the poem
now before
us — instances which will serve to exemplify the distinctive feature
which
we have attributed to ideality.
It is the
suggestive force
which exalts and
etherealizes the passages we copy.
Or is it that there lurks, indeed,
Some truth in man's prevailing creed,
And that our guardians from on high,
Come, in that pause from toil and sin,
To put the senses' curtain by,
And on the wakeful soul look in!
Again —
The eternal pyramids of Memphis burst
Awfully on my sight — standing sublime
'Twixt earth and heaven, the watch-towers of time,
From whose lone summit, when his reign hath past,
From earth for ever, he will look his last.
And again —
Is there for man no hope — but this which dooms
His only lasting trophies to be tombs!
But 'tis not so — earth, heaven, all nature shows
He may become immortal, may unclose
The wings within him wrapt, and proudly rise
Redeemed from earth a creature of the skies!
And here —
The pyramid shadows, stretching from the light,
Look like the first colossal steps of night, [page 380:]
Stalking across the valley to invade
The distant hills of porphyry with their shade!
And once more —
There Silence, thoughtful God, who loves
The neighborhood of Death, in groves
Of asphodel lies hid, and weaves
His hushing spell among the leaves.
Such lines as these, we must admit, however, are not
of frequent occurrence in the poem — the sum of whose great beauty is
composed
of the several sums of a world of minor excellences.
Moore has always been renowned for
the number and
appositeness, as well as novelty, of his similes; and the renown thus
acquired
is strongly indicial of his deficiency in that nobler merit — the
noblest
of them all. No poet thus dis-tinguished was ever richly ideal. Pope
and
Cowper are remarkable instances in point. Similes (so much insisted
upon
by the critics of the reign of Queen Anne) are never, in our opinion,
strictly
in good taste, whatever may be said to the contrary, and certainly can
never be made to accord with other high qualities, except when
naturally
arising from the subject in the way of illustration — and, when thus
arising,
they have seldom the merit of novelty. To be novel, they must fail in
essential
particulars. The higher minds will avoid their frequent use. They form
no portion of the ideal, and appertain to the fancy alone.
We proceed with a few random
observations upon Alciphron.
The poem is distinguished throughout by a very happy facility which has
never been mentioned in connection with its author, but which has much
to do with the reputation he has obtained. We allude to the facility
with
which he recounts a poetical story in a
prosaic way. By
this
is meant that he preserves the tone and method of arrangement of a
prose
relation, and thus obtains great advantages over his more stilted
compeers.
His is no poetical
style, (such, for example, as the
French
have — a distinct style for a distinct purpose,) but an easy and
ordinary
prose manner,
ornamented into poetry. By means of this he
is enabled to enter, with ease, into details which would baffle any
other
versifier of the age, and at which La Martine would stand aghast. For
any
thing that we see to the contrary, Moore might solve a cubic equation
in
verse, or go through with the three several demonstrations of the
binomial
theorem, one after the other, or indeed all at the same time. His
facility
in this respect is truly admirable, and is, no
[page 381:]
doubt, the result of long practice after mature deliberation. We refer
the reader to page 50, of the pamphlet now reviewed; where the minute
and
conflicting incidents of the descent into the pyramid are detailed with
absolutely
more precision than we have ever known a
similar
relation detailed with in prose.
In general dexterity and melody of
versification
the author of Lalla Rookh is unrivalled; but he is by no means at all
times
accurate, falling occasionally into the common foible of throwing
accent
upon syllables too unimportant to sustain it. Thus, in the lines which
follow, where we have italicized the weak syllables:
And mark 'tis nigh; already the sun
bids —
While hark from all the temples a rich swell
I rushed into the cool night air —
He also too frequently draws out the word Heaven
into
two syllables — a protraction which it
never will support.
His English is now and then
objectionable, as, at
page 26, where he speaks of
lighted barks
That down Syene's cataract shoots,
making
shoots rhyme with flutes, below; also at page 6, and
elsewhere,
where the word
none has improperly a singular, instead of
a plural force. But such criticism as this is somewhat captious, for in
general he is most highly polished.
At page 27, he has stolen his "woven
snow'' from
the
ventum textilem of Apuleius.
At page 8, he either himself has
misunderstood the
tenets of Epicurus, or wilfully misrepresents them through the voice of
Alciphron. We incline to the former idea, however; as the philosophy of
that most noble of the sophists is habitually perverted by the moderns.
Nothing could be more spiritual and less sensual than the doctrines we
so torture into wrong. But we have drawn out this notice at somewhat
too
great length, and must conclude. In truth, the exceeding beauty of
"Alciphron''
has bewildered and detained us. We could not point out a poem in any
language
which, as a whole, greatly excels it. It is far superior to Lalla
Rookh.
While Moore does not reach, except in rare snatches, the height of the
loftiest qualities of some whom we have named, yet he has written finer
poems than any, of equal length, by the
[page 382:]
greatest of his rivals. His radiance, not always as bright as some
flashes
from other pens, is yet a radiance of equable glow, whose total amount
of light exceeds, by very much, we
think, that total amount in the case
of any cotemporary writer whatsoever. A vivid fancy; an epigrammatic
spirit;
a fine taste; vivacity, dexterity and a musical ear; have made him very
easily what he is, the most popular poet now living — if not the most
popular
that ever lived — and, perhaps, a slight modification at birth of that
which phrenologists have agreed to term
temperament, might
have made him the truest and noblest votary of the muse of any age or
clime.
As it is, we have only casual glimpses of that
mens divinior
which is assuredly enshrined within him.