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Gentleman's Magazine 1851 part 2 p.109
understanding of all the mysteries and all the majesty of
the beautiful land in which he dwelt, daily contemplation of
nature under every aspect of turbulence and repose was
essential to the poet. His habits of composition more nearly
resembled those of an ancient Scald than of an English bard
of the nineteenth century. He went "booing" his verses, as
his Cumbrian neighbours phrased it, under solstice and
equinox indifferently, and through each intermediate change
of the rolling seasons, over the mountain-lawns and beside
the mountain-torrents, in the heart of mists and under the
clear mirror of brumal frost, at earliest dawn when the
sheep-fold was opening, and when "Hesper issued forth from
the fulgent west." One day a stranger, having walked round
the garden and grounds of Rydal Mount, asked one of the
female servants, who happened to be at the door, permission
to see her master's study. "This," said she, leading him
forward, "is my master's library, where he keeps his
books; but his study is out of doors." After long
absences from home, his cottage-neighbours would say, "Well,
there he is; we are glad to hear him 'booing' about again."
Long before the pen of the female inmates of his household
was called in requisition to transcribe, his murmured verse
had been poured forth, formed and polished; and could it,
like Retif de la Bretorme's novels, have been transferred at
once to type, Wordsworth would probably have left as few
manuscripts as "blind Melesigenes" himself. Yet, in despite
of his method of composition, he was anything rather than an
improviser. At times, indeed, when forcibly impressed by new
objects, or by a familiar scene under unusual irradiation,
the "divine afflatus" would seize him, and he would pour
forth streams of unpremeditated verse. But these occasions
were rare: and still more rarely were such impromptus
exposed to the public eye. As regarded harmony of sound,
Wordsworth describes himself as "an Epicurean." We should
not have accorded him this especial attribute, since his
blank verse we think on the whole inferior to Cowper's, and
his lyrical poems occasionally display both laxity and
roughness of cadence. In one so devoted to his art, however,
such inequalities may have been as much the result of a
theory as of haste or negligence; and that they were not
undesigned, but purposed breaks of smoothness, is the more
probable from their recurring most frequently in the poems
which he composed according to the doctrine of his critical
prefaces. In English poetry, Wordsworth was very deeply
read. It was, perhaps, his only very profound learning; and
his "booing" was as often bestowed upon repetition of
favourite passages as upon original composition. He had,
however, studied critically the most artistic of the Latin
poets, and his poems entitles "Dion," and "Laodamia," and
"Lycoris," afford abundant proofs that whatever his
scholarship may have been, he entered profoundly into the
spirit of antiquity. But no verse had he so deeply explored
or would so willingly analyse in conversation as his own.
Vanity, we believe, had little or no share in this
introspection of his own productions. He had consciously
aimed at, he had partially achieved, a great revolution in
poetic diction, and the purity of his own idiom, or the
truth and beauty of his own images, were the documents and
title-deeds of his claim to be a reformer of poesy.
Of comtemporary poets, indeed, Wordsworth seems to have
spoken with but cold approval, - always, indeed, with the
exception of Coleridge, whom he appears to us to overrate.
Coleridge was endowed with the metrical faculty in a very
unusual measure, and, to speak in tripos-phrase, might be
bracketted with Fletcher for the sweetness and variety of
his modulations. In this respect Wordsworth was by no means
equal to the author of "Christabel," and accordingly by no
unnatural inference ascribed to him other poetic functions
in proportion. Wordsworth thought that metaphysical
speculations had kept Coleridge from verse; but no poet was
ever long turned aside from his vocation, if the "mens
divinior" were really part of his being. The whole phalanx
of school-men, banded with all the iterminable squadrons of
French and German metaphysics, would not drive Tennyson from
a single outpost. Scott, Southey, and Crabbe, receive very
slender praise from the oracle of Rydal Mount.
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