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Gentleman's Magazine 1850 part 1 p.669
his twenty-sixth. A congeniality of pursuit soon ripened
into intimacy; and in September, 1798, accompanied by Miss
Wordsworth, they made a tour in Germany.
Wordsworth's next publication was the first volume of his
Lyrical Ballads, published in the summer of 1798 by Mr.
Joseph Cottle, of Bristol, who purchased the copyright for
thirty guineas. It made no way with the public, and Cottle
was a loser by the bargain. So little, indeed, was thought
of the volume that when Cottle's copyrights were transferred
to the Messrs. Longman the Lyrical Ballads was thrown in as
a valueless volume in the mercantile idea of the term. The
copyright was afterwards returned to Cottle; and by him
again transferred to the poet, who lived to see it of real
money value in the market of successful publications.
Disappointed but not disheartened by the very indifferent
success of his Lyrical Ballads, years elapsed before Mr.
Wordsworth again appeared as a poet. But he was not idle. He
was every year maturing his own principles of poetry, and
making good the remark of Coleridge, that to admire on
principle is the only way to imitate without loss of
originality. In the very year which witnessed the failure of
his Lyrical Ballads, he wrote his Peter Bell - the most
strongly condemned of all his poems. The publication of this
when his name was better known (for he kept it by him till,
he says, "it nearly survived its minority,") brough a shower
of contemptuous criticisms on his head.
Wordsworth married in the year 1803 Miss Mary Hutchinson of
Penrith, and settled among his beloved Lakes - first at
Grasmere, and afterwards at Rydal Mount. Southey's
subsequent retirement to the same beautiful county and
Coleridge's visits to his brother poets originated the name
of the Lake School of Poetry - "the school of whining and
hypochondriacal poets that haunt the Lakes" - by which the
opponents of their principles and the admirers of the
"Edinburgh Review" distinguished the three great poets whose
names have long been and will still continue to be
connected.
Wordsworth's fame increasing, slowly it is true but
securely, he put forth in 1807 two volumes of his poems.
They were reviewed by Byron, then a young man of nineteen,
and as yet not even a poet in print, in the Monthly Literary
Recreations for the August of that year. "The poems before
us," says the reviewer, "are by the author of Lyrical
Ballads, a collection which has not undeservedly met with a
considerable share of public applause. The characteristics
of Mr. Wordsworth's muse are, simple and flowing, though
occasionally inharmonious verse, strong and sometimes
irresistible appeals to the feelings, with unexceptionable
sentiments. Though the present work may not equal his former
efforts, many of the poems possess a native elegance,
natural and unaffected, totally devoid of the tinsel
embellishments and abstract hyperboles of several
contemporary sonneteers. The Song at the Feasting of
Brougham Castle. The Seven Sisters, The Affliction of
Margaret ---, of ---, possess all the beauties and few of
the defects of this writer. The pieces least worthy of the
author are those entitled Moods of My Own Mind. We certainly
wish these moods had been less frequent." Such is a sample
of Byron's criticism, - and of the criticising indeed till
very recently of a large class of people misled by the
caustic notices of the Edinburgh Review, the pungent satires
of Byron, and the admirable parody of the poet's occasional
style contained in the Rejected Addresses.
His next publication was The Excursion, dedicated to the
Earl of Lonsdale. This was originally intended for the
central portion of a poem to be called The Recluse, in which
the author proposed to pursue his musings.
On Man, on Nature, and on Human Life.
The Excursion was printed in quarto in the autumn of 1814.
The critics were hard upon it. "This will never do," was the
memorable opening of the reviewer in Edinburgh. Men who
thought for themselves thought highly of the poem; but few
dared to speak out. Jeffrey boasted wherever he went that he
had crushed it in its birth. "He crush The Excursion!" said
Southey, "Tell him he might as easily crush Skiddaw." What
Coleridge often wished, that the first two books of The
Excursion had been printed separately, under the name of The
Deserted Cottage, was a happy idea, and one, if it had been
carried into execution, that would have removed many of the
trivial objections made at the time to its unfinished
character.
While The Excursion was still dividing the critics, Peter
Bell appeared, to throw amongst them yet greater differences
of opinion. The author was evidently aware that the poem,
from the novelty of its construction, and the still greater
novelty of its hero, required some protection, and this
protection he sought behind the name of Southey, with which,
he tells us in the Dedication, his own hand had often
appeared "both for good and evil." The deriders of the poet
laughed still louder
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