neither have they the interest of his occasional simple,
lucky beauty. Burns having fortunately been rescued
by his humble station from the contaminating society
of the “Best models,” wrote well and naturally
from the first. Had he been unfortunate enough
to have had an educated taste, we should have had
a series of poems from which, as from his letters,
we could sift here and there a kernel from the mass
of chaff. Coleridge’s youthful efforts give
no promise whatever of that poetical genius which
produced at once the wildest, tenderest, most original
and most purely imaginative poems of modem times.
Byron’s “Hours of Idleness” would
never find a reader except from an intrepid and indefatigable
curiosity. In Wordsworth’s first preludings
there is but a dim foreboding of the creator of an
era. From Southey’s early poems, a safer
augury might have been drawn. They show the patient
investigator, the close student of history, and the
unwearied explorer of the beauties of predecessors,
but they give no assurances of a man who should add
aught to stock of household words, or to the rarer
and more sacred delights of the fireside or the arbor.
The earliest specimens of Shelley’s poetic mind
already, also, give tokens of that ethereal sublimation
in which the spirit seems to soar above the regions
of words, but leaves its body, the verse, to be entombed,
without hope of resurrection, in a mass of them.
Cowley is generally instanced as a wonder of precocity.
But his early insipidities show only a capacity for
rhyming and for the metrical arrangement of certain
conventional combinations of words, a capacity wholly
dependent on a delicate physical organization, and
an unhappy memory. An early poem is only remarkable
when it displays an effort of
reason, and the
rudest verses in which we can trace some conception
of the ends of poetry, are worth all the miracles of
smooth juvenile versification. A school-boy,
one would say, might acquire the regular see-saw of
Pope merely by an association with the motion of the
play-ground tilt.
Mr. Poe’s early productions show that he could
see through the verse to the spirit beneath, and that
he already had a feeling that all the life and grace
of the one must depend on and be modulated by the will
of the other. We call them the most remarkable
boyish poems that we have ever read. We know
of none that can compare with them for maturity of
purpose, and a nice understanding of the effects of
language and metre. Such pieces are only valuable
when they display what we can only express by the
contradictory phrase of innate experience. We
copy one of the shorter poems, written when the author
was only fourteen. There is a little dimness in
the filling up, but the grace and symmetry of the
outline are such as few poets ever attain. There
is a smack of ambrosia about it.
TO HELEN
Helen, thy beauty is to me
Like those Nicean barks of yore,
That gently, o’er a perfumed sea,
The weary, way-worn wanderer bore
To his own native shore.