the development of literature offers a singular paradox.
The further it goes back, the more sophisticated it
becomes; and it grows more and more natural as it
grows distant from the State of Nature. However
this may be, it is at least certain that the Romantic
revival peculiarly deserves to be called Naturalistic,
because it succeeded in bringing into vogue the operations
of the external world—’the Vegetable
Universe,’ as Blake called it—as
subject-matter for poetry. But it would have done
very little, if it had done nothing more than this.
Thomson, in the full meridian of the eighteenth century,
wrote poems upon the subject of Nature; but it would
be foolish to suppose that Wordsworth and Coleridge
merely carried on a fashion which Thomson had begun.
Nature, with them, was something more than a peg for
descriptive and didactic verse; it was the manifestation
of the vast and mysterious forces of the world.
The publication of
The Ancient Mariner is a
landmark in the history of letters, not because of
its descriptions of natural objects, but because it
swept into the poet’s vision a whole new universe
of infinite and eternal things; it was the discovery
of the Unknown. We are still under the spell of
The Ancient Mariner; and poetry to us means,
primarily, something which suggests, by means of words,
mysteries and infinitudes. Thus, music and imagination
seem to us the most essential qualities of poetry,
because they are the most potent means by which such
suggestions may be invoked. But the eighteenth
century knew none of these things. To Lord Chesterfield
and to Pope, to Prior and to Horace Walpole, there
was nothing at all strange about the world; it was
charming, it was disgusting, it was ridiculous, and
it was just what one might have expected. In
such a world, why should poetry, more than anything
else, be mysterious? No! Let it be sensible;
that was enough.
The new edition of the Lives, which Dr. Birkbeck
Hill prepared for publication before his death, and
which has been issued by the Clarendon Press, with
a brief Memoir of the editor, would probably have astonished
Dr. Johnson. But, though the elaborate erudition
of the notes and appendices might have surprised him,
it would not have put him to shame. One can imagine
his growling scorn of the scientific conscientiousness
of the present day. And indeed, the three tomes
of Dr. Hill’s edition, with all their solid
wealth of information, their voluminous scholarship,
their accumulation of vast research, are a little
ponderous and a little ugly; the hand is soon wearied
with the weight, and the eye is soon distracted by
the varying types, and the compressed columns of the
notes, and the paragraphic numerals in the margins.
This is the price that must be paid for increased efficiency.
The wise reader will divide his attention between the
new business-like edition and one of the charming
old ones, in four comfortable volumes, where the text
is supreme upon the page, and the paragraphs follow
one another at leisurely intervals. The type
may be a little faded, and the paper a little yellow;
but what of that? It is all quiet and easy; and,
as one reads, the brilliant sentences seem to come
to one, out of the Past, with the friendliness of
a conversation.