Poe and "Young America"
by
Claude Richard
When Edgar Allan Poe moved to New York in April 1844, there is
no doubt that he was pursuing his life-long dream of launching a first-class
magazine — one which would, at last, be under his sole control. His
many frantic attempts to bring this recurrent dream to life bear testimony
to his dissatisfaction with his previous activities as a critic whether in
Richmond under the authority of Thomas W. White, or in Philadelphia
where William Burton's expediency and George Graham's
namby-pambiness had come to "disgust" him. In Philadelphia, however,
competition was tough and though the "Stylus," as he had decided to call
the magazine he was planning, was to strike a radically different note, the
odds were against success in a contest with the popular Godey's
Lady's Book cleverly edited by Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale and
Graham's Magazine which had succeded in appealing, thanks
largely to Poe's own contributions, both to a sentimental female audience
and to the more exacting
patronage of lawyers and wealthy gentlemen. New York offered better
opportunities than the conservative old capital for a thoroughly original
magazine with high intellectual ambitions.
Poe also realised that money was more likely to turn up in New York
than in Philadephia. He needed a backer but failed to find one: instead he
found a friend, Evert A. Duyckinck, the head of the so-called "Young
Americans," who in Arthur H. Quinn's words "provided what Poe needed,
an adviser and a manager."[1] The
best known result of the friendship with Duyckinck was the publication as
No. 2 of Wiley and Putnam's "Library of American Books" of Poe's
Tales in June 1845 and his The Raven and Other
Poems in November 1845. While commentators, influenced by
Poe's
objections to the selection[2] have
blamed Duyckinck for the omission of "Ligeia" and other masterpieces, it
might be more profitable to consider the problem from the publisher's and
the editor's point of view and wonder why Wiley and Putnam took the
obvious risk of publishing Poe's tales at all. The copyright of every book
in the series was assigned to the author (Poe was to get eight cents for each
copy sold) which implied the publication of books that might safely be
surmised to sell in reasonably large quantities. Such was not the case with
Poe's
Tales, despite the fact that his popularity had soared
after
the much discussed newspaper publication of "The Raven" in January,
1845. The collection included no new material, all of the tales having
previously appeared in widely circulated magazines.
[3] The name of Poe was less popular
with
the reading public than most of the names that were to appear in the series
(J. T. Headley, William Gilmore Simms, Cornelius Mathews, etc.).
Moreover, tales, as Carey, the Philadelphia publisher, once wrote John P.
Kennedy, sold poorly when the public demand was for huge novels.
[4] Duyckinck, who evidently was
given full
liberty by the firm and could select whatever title he pleased, was aware of
these difficulties. Why, then, did he choose to publish the tales of an
outsider to New York and to his own group with every chance that the
publication would be
a financial failure? His choice is puzzling. Friendliness alone cannot
account for such conspicuous favor from the leader of the "Young
Americans" and the editor of a series of literary works avowedly intended
to serve the cause of American letters.
Here in fact lies the core of the matter. Duyckinck was the
enthusiastic proponent of a truly national literature with a democratic
appeal, and he had preached his gospel with unmistakable fervor for more
than five years. He had created the Tetractys Club whose program was to
serve the promotion of a truly American literature; he had projected the
establishment of the Home Critic — the name speaks
for
itself —; he had launched, with his friend Cornelius Mathews, the
devoutly national Arcturus and even after its failure had risen
to prominence in New York as the defender of a new, independent
literature — a literature which, in contrast with the more aristocratic
and
European works of such writers as Longfellow and Washington Irving,
would strike a truly national note likely to win the average uncultured
American to the habit of reading and initiate him to the moral profits of art.
So far he shared nothing in common with Poe, except his scorn or rather
utter
misunderstanding of transcendentalism. But for a rather florid paragraph
written ten years before at the outset of his career as a critic,[5] Poe was anything but a champion
of a
national literature. He had handled Duyckinck's nearest allies, Cornelius
Mathews and William A. Jones,[6]
rather roughly and he was nothing of a Democrat: he had "battled with
right good will for Harrison" and he considered his "principles" to "have
always been as nearly as may be, with the existing administration" (Tyler's)
(Letters, I, 170). He had steadily denounced the degrading
influence of the idea of nationality on American criticism[7] and American taste.[8] Finally, no casuistry could so
misrepresent the truth of Poe's tales as to regard them as specifically
American, redolent of native life and expressing the genius of the American
people, in the manner of Simms's The
Wigwam and the Cabin or Mathews' Big Abel and the Little
Manhattan.[9] Some other link
must exist between Poe and the Young Americans, some alliance which
would explain the "quixotic" favors bestowed upon Poe by the editor of
"The Library of American Books."
The proof of Poe's allegiance to "Young America" is glaringly
written in an article in the Broadway Journal (July 19, 1845)
that has somehow escaped previous notice.[10] The brief paragraph is entitled
"Young
America" and runs thus: "Regretting the necessity of employing the phrase
which is not only borrowed, but redolent of affectation, we still have the
most earnest sympathy in all the hopes, and the firmest faith in the
capabilities of 'Young America.' We look upon its interests as our own,
and shall uniformly uphold them in this Journal. What these interests are
— what should be the aspirations of the new men in the country, and
of
the country through them in particular, it has been our intention to express
fully in our own words, at the first convenient opportunity — but we
have now lying before us an address which embodies all that there is any
necessity for saying.
"We allude to a paper read by Mr. Cornelius Mathews at the late
annual meeting of the Eucleian Society of the University of New York. We
shall be pardoned for making some extracts."[11] The excerpts from Mathews'
highflown
address cover two columns in small type and contain such frantically
nationalistic statements as the following: "I therefore, in behalf of this
Young America of ours, insist on nationality and true Americanism in the
books this country furnishes to itself and to the world: nationality in its
purest, highest, broadest sense" (pp. 26-27). The printing of large extracts
from Mathews' address is enough to prove Poe's goodwill towards "Young
America" and his gratitude towards Duyckinck. The tenor of the
introductory passage is complex: it is both a profession of faith ("we look
upon its interests as our own") and, as Poe's New York audience must have
at once perceived, a declaration of war. In pledging that his magazine
would serve the
interests of Young Americans, Poe was renouncing the middle-of-the-road
policy he and his co-editor Charles Frederick Briggs, who was sympathetic
to the Knickerbocker group, had maintained at the
Broadway Journal. By the end of June, Poe, after "a series
of
manoeuvres almost incomprehensible to [himself]" (Letters,
I,
299), had managed to get rid of Briggs who would soon find refuge in the
Sanctum; Poe wastes no time in proclaiming to which side he belongs: the
statement, under the editorial "we," coming not long after the
announcement that he is now sole literary editor, is clear enough. The
ousting of Briggs and Poe's
consequent freedom brought about the final break that had been threatening
for some time: on the one hand we have the
Knickerbocker
group, closely allied by links of kinship and political identity to Colton's
American (Whig) Review, with the help of Briggs's bitingly
satirical pen; on the other, the Democratic set led by Duyckinck and
Mathews in O'Sullivan's
Democratic Review, helped by the
even more caustic pen of the editor of the
Broadway Journal.
Thus, until the final collapse of the
Broadway Journal, Poe's
criticism is manifestly partisan: it either bestows fervid praise on the Young
Americans and every title in "The library of choice reading,"
[12] eagerly puffing William G. Simms
[13] who had joined the Democratic
set,
[14] or casts sharp barbs at whoever
appears
to belong to the other camp.
Thus if we find Poe advocating the Young American movement in his
first period of critical independence, would it not be logical to expect to
find covert or overt advocacy of that movement in his earlier critical
writings? His advocacies of these ideas will date from a period after his
initial contact with the conspicuous members of the Democratic set. Poe had
much to win, for Duyckinck's protection was as effective as the protection
of an eighteenth century patron. Who could reproach any half-starving
young critic with a dying wife for forcing and somewhat colouring in
brighter hues some of his opinions? Who would doubt Poe might yield to
such temptation?
The first indication of relationship between Poe and any member of
"Young America" is the arresting letter he sent to Cornelius Mathews on
March 15, 1844. Surprisingly enough Poe accuses himself of flippancy, a
reproach he often chafted under and makes light of the matter: "Could I
imagine that, at any moment, you regarded a certain impudent and flippant
critique as more than a matter to be laughed at, I would proffer an apology
on the spot." The touchy and haughty pride which was his customary
attitude is stifled under the painfully elaborate
protestations of "the Highest Respect & Esteem"
(
Letters, I,
245). It was not Poe's habit to apologize for his mordant reviews. The
following remark sums up his habitual attitude: "If I must call it a good
book to preserve the friendship of Prof. Ingraham — Prof. Ingraham
may
go to the devil" (
Letters, I, 71). Moreover the "impudent and
flippant critique" he mentions was a thorough study of Mathews' poem
"Wakondah," covering thirteen pages and including, among other
compliments, the following conclusion: "We should be delighted to proceed
— but how? to applaud — but what? Surely not this trumpery
declamation, this maudlin sentiment, this metaphor run mad, this twaddling
verbiage, this halting and doggerel rhythm, this unintelligible rant and cant"
(
Works, XI, 25-38). Poe had already clearly stated his
disagreement with Mathews' critical attitudes, particularly in an untitled
paragraph in
Graham's Magazine. This article, later called
"Exordium" by
Poe's editors,
[15] is written in answer
to the nationalistic manifestoes of the Young Americans which had appeared
in
Arcturus. Besides, he had repeatedly upheld the point of
view
that the whole controversy about a national literature had led the too
exclusively nationalistic critics into the worst excesses; they had gone even
so far as to pervert the taste of the American public by puffing such "trash"
as the selfsame "Wakondah" (
Works, XI, 26). The sudden
shift,
so far unexplained, is, to say the least, troubling. I am well aware that long
before he had anything to do with any of the members of Young America,
Poe professed some opinions that fitted very well with the new orthodoxy
of the literary democrats. This partial identity, his need of a backer for his
magazine and the natural tendency of the foes of Lewis Gaylord Clark to
unite are not enough to account for such blatant rejection of his previous
opinions. The previously undiscovered
fact that will help us to understand Poe's motives in writing this disturbing
letter and will eventually shed light on some of his major reviews is that his
letter is a response to another. Mathews' letter, if extant, has not, to my
knowledge, been located, but an excerpt from a letter quoted by Poe in
Graham's Magazine for January 1844 points to an early
correspondence between the two men. In January 1844, Poe announces a
forthcoming review of R. H. Horne's epic poem
Orion.
[16] With his usual journalistic
shrewdness he
hints the book has been sent directly from England and quotes from "a
letter now lying before us," intimating that the letter also comes from
England: "A rush of buyers . . . almost carried the publisher off his feet.
The public fell into an
especial ecstasy, and bought the poetry in its sleep — a thing it very
seldom does awake — and now the poet [R. H. Horne] brings out
his
fourth edition for a shilling (which the public buys too because it is not yet
wide awake) and promises a fifth for half a crown in a few days." Poe's
biographers, assuming that this letter had been sent to the poet, have
concluded that it was probably lost. I have however been able to find the
source of the extract quoted above in a letter from Elizabeth B. Barrett to
Cornelius Mathews.
[17] Miss Barrett
was a close friend of Mathews' who had first introduced her to the
American public.
[18] Because Mathews
had acted the part of an American literary agent with great effectiveness,
she believed him to be powerful with editors and publishers and enquired
whether he could be of any help to her professional friend Horne. On April
28, 1843 she offered Mathews some of Horne's poems for
publication in "Graham's Miscellany."
[19] Mathews must have taken the
affair in
hand and Graham must have agreed for on July 3, 1843 she mentions two
copies of
Orion she proposes to send — "one for
Graham's
Miscellany" (p. 52). This letter contains the paragraph quoted verbatim by
Poe about the original publication of the poem. Thus it is evident that
Mathews forwarded to Graham's office both the poem and probably a copy
or an extract of Miss Barrett's letter.
Poe, however, was no longer the editor of Graham's
Magazine and contributed only occasional reviews. It may thus be
assumed either that he received the book for review from Mathews, or that
Graham handed it over to him along with the letter. In both cases Poe must
have known that Mathews was the "importer" and sponsor of the poem
which he planned to publish in America. Poe wastes no time in advertising
it, inserting a brief but highly commendatory paragraph even before having
perused it attentively: ". . . as yet . . . we . . . have had opportunity to
glance at individual passages," letting naïvely slip the confession that:
"We must read and review 'Orion.'" In spite of that "the work . . . is,
beyond doubt, that of a man of genius."[20] Two months later — Poe
seems to be
waiting for something as he seldom delayed so long between the
announcement of a review and the review itself — appears the
glowing
tribute to Horne's poem.[21] This enthusiastic review is
generally considered as one of the most conspicuous lapses
in Poe's critical judgement. It is actually disturbing for not one of the
poem's features meets Poe's standards in spite of which the reviewer
declares that "'Orion' has never been excelled. Indeed we feel strongly
tempted to say it has never been equaled" (p. 266) and concludes that
"'Orion' will be admitted, by every man of genius, to be one of the noblest,
if not the very noblest poetical work of the age" (p. 275). Poe's
unaccountable enthusiasm is disturbing because he bestows praise on a long,
didactic, ethical, allegorical epic, thus apparently overlooking his clearest
previous dicta that a true poem is short, unconcerned with either truth or
ethics and spurning above all else allegory.
Although Poe acknowledges that "Mr. Horne, . . . is, in some
measure, infected" (p. 254) by the "cant of the day" (p. 253),
transcendentalism, an element the critic could never force himself to
commend, although he acknowledges that Horne "has been badgered into
the attempt at commingling the obstinate oils and waters of Poetry and
Truth" and "has weakly yielded his own poetic sentiment of the poetic
—
yielded it, in some degree, to the pertinacious opinion, and talk, of a
certain junto by which he is surrounded," yet, he opines that Horne is ". .
. unquestionably . . . a man of high, of the highest genius . . ." (p. 254).
One must note at once that Emerson had so far been simply ignored by
Poe, precisely because he indulged in the "cant of the day" and Longfellow
fails to elicit from Poe the label of genius for one sole reason: he insists on
commingling "the obstinate oils and waters of Poetry and Truth."
Overlooking these disparities between Horne's practise and his own
critical tenets, Poe proceeds to define once again what he now calls "pure
poetry" (p. 256). Leaning on his usual examples — Coleridge's
theory
of passion and poetry, Tennyson's "Locksley Hall," "Oenone" and "Morte
d'Arthur," Cousin's ideality — he evolves one of his most fruitful
definitions of the origins of poetry as "the thirst for a wilder beauty than
earth supplies" and of poetry as "the imperfect effort to quench this
immortal thirst by novel combinations of beautiful forms . . ."; concluding
after an approval of Coleridge's rejection of even love from poetry that
"Truth is, in its own essence, sublime — but her loftiest sublimity,
as
derived from man's clouded and erratic reason, is valueless — is
pulseless — is utterly ineffective when brought into comparison with
the
unerring sense of which we speak" (pp. 256-57). This is Poe at his best,
but the definition has nothing to do with Horne's work which is confessedly
a poem with a moral, that is to say, in Poe's
special vocabulary, concerned with Truth.
The next paragraph shows Poe at his worst. He now dedicates all his
logical powers to the vindication of Horne's shortcomings so that
the poem may seem to meet his own critical standards: "In setting about
'Orion', Mr. Horne proposed to himself, (in accordance with the views of
his junto) to 'elaborate a morality' — he ostensibly proposed this to
himself — for, in the depth of his heart, we know that he wished all
juntos and all moralities in Erebus. In accordance with the notions of his
set, however, he felt a species of shamefacedness in not making the
enforcement of some certain dogmas or doctrines (questionable or
unquestionable) about PROGRESS, the obvious or apparent object of his
poem" (p. 257). "Orion" is allegorical but so obscurely so that it shows ".
. . conclusively that the heart of the poet was not with it" (p. 258). As for
the narrative, it ". . . is beautiful indeed," but ". . . we have only to object
that the really magnificent abilities of Mr. Horne might have been better
employed in an entirely original conception" (p. 259). The whole structure
of the poem evinces an "uncertainty of purpose
which is the chief defect of the work" (p. 261), a meek remark from the
pen of the most thorough theoretician of Unity, who will harshly condemn
The Iliad and
Paradise Lost on the same
ground.
[22] After an unusually short
catalogue of the grammatical and metrical errors, a point upon which Poe
might have been expected, in his usual fashion, to dwell at greater length,
he simply dismisses those shortcomings as "mere inadvertences" (p. 265)
(an exceptionally lenient opinion). He then proceeds in his usual manner to
analyse "the beauties of this most remarkable poem" (p. 266), making his
point clear without further delay: "it is our deliberate opinion that, in all
that regards the loftiest and holiest attributes of the true Poetry, 'Orion' has
never been excelled" (p. 266). The following pages teem with
indications that, though candidly admiring such or such passage,
[23] Poe is at a loss to grasp and
convey
the elements of beauty of the poem: characteristically, he resorts to
high-flown style when attempting to impart the specific quality of the only
virtue he can point out: "Its imagination — that quality which is all
in all
— is of the most refined — the most elevating — the
most august
character" (p. 266). Then follow the usual apologies he offers whenever
anything baffles his analytical powers. Such sentences as: "And here we
deeply regret that the necessary limits of this review will prevent us from
entering, at length, into specification" (p. 266-67), or, "we conclude with
some brief quotations
at random, which we shall not pause to classify" (p. 273) are patent
confessions of powerlessness, whatever its cause. The general impression
therefore is that Poe is ill at ease, that he carefully avoids speaking of the
poem at all for almost half of the article and then apologizes for having no
space left for anything but a cursory review,
[24] that he refrains from listing the
many
obvious stylistic and metrical flaws of the poem and is as heedless as to
quote and italicize for commendation an obviously lame line:
Or, casting back the hammer heads till they
choked
The water's course, enjoy, if so he wished,
Midnight tremendous, silence, and iron sleep.[25]
The final flourish, so unlike his more candid assertions of enthusiasm
reinforces the impression that Poe is not at ease.
Now if we recall the date of the letter sent to Mathews we cannot but
be struck by a coincidence and we may perhaps re-read the first paragraph:
the "small parcel for Mr. Horne" is evidently the review, with Poe's tale,
"The Spectacles" he hopes to publish in England through Horne. Under the
pretence of asking for Horne's address, Poe lets Mathews know that the
mission he has been entrusted with — the writing of a favorable
review
of "Orion" — has been carried out, that he himself Poe has done the
job[26] and the apologies that follow
are consequently less bluntly humble than we might at first have thought.
They are not the words of a poor artist begging for protection but the last
concession of one of the parties towards a compromise. To Poe it was
important that Mathews should know the review was his, because Poe, it
would appear, had contracted to review the poem, perhaps for payment,
perhaps in return for some good offices he expected from
Mathews who had written to Horne that "there would be a review,"[27] perhaps because he was Mathews'
"debtor
for many little attentions" as he acknowledged in his letter of March 15,
1844 (I, 245). Thus Poe seems to have striven to show his good will
towards Young America
as early as the last days of 1843. The obvious question is therefore what
advantage he could derive from such alliance. In addition to the facts that
it was common talk Duyckinck was planning to launch a new magazine and
was the only New York patron that could be of any help to Poe, another
coincidence may explain Poe's tokens of good will. It is well-known that
he meant to issue a collection of his tales but that no publisher would run
the risk of publishing them.
[28] In
March 1844 a new and entirely original publishing project had been
advertised: the
Home Library, the history of which it is
perhaps
not useless to sketch out.
On August 23, 1843, Duyckinck, Mathews, William Cullen Bryant
and other less conspicuous figures had founded a club whose program was
"to procure the enactment of such law or laws as shall place the literary
relations of the United States and foreign countries, in reference to
copyright, on just, proper, and equitable grounds."[29] Poe's interest in the issue of
international
copyrights is well-known and any American author, particularly a
professional one, must have followed closely the evolution of the enterprise
and read the statement, signed by Bryant, Francis L. Hawks and Mathews,
of October 18, 1843. It stressed the necessity of a collection "at a price
which will satisfy the just demands of the author, and the rightful
expectations of the reader."[30] In the
winter of 1843-44 Poe could not but be cognizant of the activities of
Duyckinck, Bryant and Mathews that would lead to the publication of a
prospectus of the
Home Library in the New York Tribune dated
March 30, 1844.
This new publishing venture had been widely advertised and must
have been known to Poe on March 15, when he wrote to Mathews since the
prospectus advertised the first volume of the series as ". . . now ready at
all the book stores and periodical agencies . . ." Friendship with Mathews
and Duyckinck would be particularly helpful since they were in charge of
a collection whose plan was to include "COPYRIGHT WORK OF
AMERICAN AUTHORS, and new works of English writers, to be
published by mutual arrangement with them and for their benefit."[31] The Home Library
was a
failure and only two
volumes were published: Bryant's
The White Footed Deer
and
Headley's
Italy and the Italians, a name that would later
appear
as No. 3 in Duyckinck's "Library of American Books." Number two would
be Poe's
Tales. When one reconsiders Poe's critical reviews
during the span of time from the propitiatory letter to Mathews to the
statement of alliance with Young America in the
Broadway
Journal of July 19, 1845, one cannot fail to notice that the great
majority of his themes tally with the dearest opinions of the Democratic set.
Both his themes and his new tastes in literature suggest either Duyckinck's
influence or Poe's attempts to gain recognition as a reliable Young
American. With more energy than ever, he harps upon the themes of the
financial hardships of the truly American writer,
[32] of the devastating subserviency of
American critics to English opinions,
[33] on the artificiality of modern plays
plagued by imitation of the old models,
[34] on the urgent need for an
international
Copyright law,
[35] on the necessity of
a new, modern magazine-literature,
[36]
more adapted to a rapidly increasing reading public. That democratic public
he observed was not concerned with the leisurely, cultivated essay in the
English style of Lamb, that the Knickerbocker set's favorites, John Waters
[Henry Cary], George Templeton Strong, and Rufus Dawes, (three
"gentlemen of elegant leisure," an anti-democratic conception), were trying
to impose as the genuine literature of America. One of these themes,
imitation in literature, lay at the core of Young America's campaign for a
truly original literature.
[37] It should
be noticed that, contrary to what has been held, Poe fought the first
skirmish in the too famous "Longfellow war" under the banner of Young
America. The so-called war that
was to degenerate and lead Poe to utter some of his most
preposterous statements, originated in two reviews of Longfellow's
Waif published in the
New York Evening
Mirror on
January 13, and January 14, 1845.
[38]
In the concluding paragraph that roused such anger, Poe took issue with
Longfellow for "a very careful avoidance of all American poets who may
be supposed especially to interfere with the claims of Mr. Longfellow:
These men Mr. Longfellow can continuously imitate (is that the word?) and
yet never even incidentally commend."
[39] The only American poets who
could have
interfered with Longfellow's claims were, apart from Poe himself, the
democratic-minded ones who strove to refresh American poetry by a more
genuinely American style than the erudite Professor was able to achieve.
The most active were Cornelius Mathews with his pregnant theme of the
American Indian and a young, ardent romanticist, who was then seeking
inspiration in the popular traditions of his
country and, though he would later defect to the enemy, was an early friend
and favorite of Duyckinck's: James R. Lowell.
[40] Against which of the titans of
American
poetry ought an aggressive critic who desired to curry Duyckinck's favor
launch his weapons? Against Longfellow, of course, whose popularity
threatened the advent of the American "Master genius . . . who would
automatically be greater than Shakespeare."
[41]
As significant as both Poe's insistence on those themes and his attacks
on Aldrich and Longfellow are the many favorable allusions to once
despised Young Americans with which he sprinkled many of his articles.
His treatment of William Gilmore Simms is particularly illuminating: in
November 1844, Poe is given access to the columns of the fortress of the
Democrats, the Democratic Review. He is probably short of
matter, for these first two Marginalia are largely made up of
reprints and adaptations of his earlier reviews. These reprints however are
not selected at random: one of the adaptations is particularly interesting. It
concerns William G. Simms, the latest recruit of the Young Americans. Poe
had had frequent opportunities to express his
opinions of Simms: he had reviewed
The Partisan,
[42]
The Damsel of
Darien,
[43] and had included Simms in his
Autography sketches.
[44]
These reviews were very unfavorable, the review of the
Partisan
scathingly so. But in 1844, Simms is a Young American: consequently,
though he kept the good joke about the "poetical gaping oyster," Poe is
careful to select the most favorable passages in his previous articles and to
"edit them": he extracts the only two favorable remarks he had made and
prints them as two separate items.
[45]
To the sentence reading: "Mr. Simms has abundant faults," he now adds
the very ingratiating corrective note "or had." Then to a once unfavorable
passage he added the following sentence: ". . . leaving out the question of
Brockden Brown and Hawthorne, he is immeasurably the best writer of
fiction in America." Six months
later, in the
Broadway Journal, the sentence has been finally
adapted thus: ". . . the best novelist that this country has, upon the whole,
produced."
[46] As compared to Poe's
absolute frankness about his allegiance to Young America in the second half
of 1845 and to his downright puffery of Young Americans,
[47] those incidental compliments tend
to
suggest that, as late as January 1845, Poe had not come "under the wing"
of Duyckinck, but was striving to obtain his protection. Distrust on
Duyckinck's part was natural enough since Poe had never given any
incontestable proof of faithfulness. But, in January 1845, thanks to Lowell's
introducing him to Charles F. Briggs, Poe was given free access to the
columns of the
Broadway Journal: his very first contribution
was a thorough review of Elisabeth Barrett's [Browning]
The Drama
of Exile and Other Poems
[48]
which, when considered in
the light of Poe's relationship with Mathews and Duyckinck is revealing.
All Poe's critics consider the article to be favorable. Echoes of Poe's great
admiration for Miss Barrett crop up regularly.
[49] How can we account for the
critic's
concluding many dense
column inches of harsh exacting criticism with the judgement that Miss
Barrett "has done more, in poetry, than any woman, living or dead . . ."
and "has surpassed all her poetical contemporaries of either sex (with a
single exception) [Tennyson]" (
Works, XII, 32)? There is an
obvious gap between the harshly critical comments upon individual poems
on the one hand and the glowingly enthusiastic conclusion on the other.
Once again, Poe is ill at ease: the rigorously logical approach that is
customary with him dissolves into mere wordiness. To any one familiar
with Poe's chivalric sense of what a gentleman's behavior towards women
should be, the opening quotation is a warning: "'A WELL-BRED man,'
says Sir James Puckle, in his 'Gray Cap for a Green Head,' 'will never
give himself the liberty to speak ill of women'" (p. 1). At the very outset
of the review Poe seems to state that whatever the faults of the poetess's
poem, a gentlemanly critic will offer a favorable conclusion. Then,
in spite of his many previous statements that a review is nothing but a
discussion of the work considered, he devotes two pages to an examination
of what he regards as the excesses of other American comments upon
The Drama of Exile and Other Poems. Regretting that the
"limits of this 'Journal' will preclude the possibility of [his] speaking this
truth [about Miss Barrett] so fully, and so much in detail, as [he] could
wish" (p. 3), he starts a hardly necessary discussion of the weaknesses of
the Greek drama, in which he makes use of material written three years
before (
Works, X, 201), checking his sources rather
carelessly
and attributing Oedipus at Colonos to Aeschylus. Next comes a thorough
and brilliant examination of Miss Barrett's errors: the drawing of Eve's
character is feeble; ". . . she is a mystical something or nothing, enwrapped
in a fog of rhapsody about Transfiguration, and the Seed and the Bruising
of the Heel, or rather talk of a nature that no man ever
pretended to understand in plain prose, and which, when solar-microscoped
into poetry 'upon the model of the Greek Drama,' is about as convincing
as the Egyptian Lectures of Mr. Silk Buckingham . . ."
(
Works,
XII, 4-5).
The whole tone is transcendental and ". . . in nine cases out of ten,
the thought, when dug out, will be found very poorly to repay the labor of
the digging" (p. 5); which allows Poe to insert a contrastingly vigorous,
though unconnected paragraph about the justified use of obscurity in the
creation of the fantastic.
The "Drama of Exile" "opens with a very palpable bull" (p. 6)
—
a long, turgid, self-contradictory stage direction — whose obvious
awkwardness Poe minutely discusses in thirty lines. His apologies for
"alluding to these niaiseries at all" is that they allow him to put "in the
clearest light the mass of inconsistency and antagonism in which her subject
has inextricably involved her" (p. 7). The plot receives no better treatment:
". . . it is something even worse than incongruity which affronts: —
a
continuous mystical train of ill-fitting and exaggerated allegory — if,
indeed, allegory is not much too respectable a term for it" (p. 8). Poe's
delightful satirical verve here betrays his sincerity: "Innumerable other
spirits discourse successively after the same fashion, each ending every
stanza of his lamentation with the 'yet I wail!' When at length they have
fairly made an end, Eve touches Adam upon the elbow, and hazards, also,
the profound and pathetic observation —
'Lo, Adam, they wail!' — which is nothing more than the simple
truth
— for they do — and God deliver us from such wailing
again!" (p.
9).
The "Drama of Exile" is then merely dismissed in strong plain words:
"It is our purpose, however, to demonstrate what every reader of these
volumes will have readily seen self-demonstrated — the utter
indefensibility of the 'Drama of Exile', considered uniquely as a work of
art" (p. 9). After quoting one eighteen-line extract for commendation, Poe
insists that it is ". . . the longest quotable passage in the drama, not
disfigured with blemishes of importance," which leads him to the
conclusion that ". . . neither are there, in any of her poems, any long
commendable paragraphs nor are there any individual compositions which
will bear the slightest examination as consistent art-products" (p. 10), for
Poe, the most damning of all judgments; yet, he follows immediately with
an utter non sequitur, the observation that she is ". . . unhesitatingly, the
greatest — the most glorious of her sex" (p. 11).
To the didacticism of the "Vision of Poets," he, of course, objects,
but grants the poem to be "thoughtful, vivid, epigrammatic and abundant
in just observation" (p. 12). He had always counted one of these,
epigrammaticism, the most perilous pitfall of short poems. Thoughtfulness,
vividness and justness of observation are critical clichés he had
always
been wary to avoid. With obvious relief he now turns to the opinions of a
"reviewer in Blackwood's Magazine" and devotes two full pages to the
minute and tedious corrections of Christopher North's misconstruing of
three unimportant quotations. Then he gets rid of the twenty sonnets and
nineteen remaining poems in two or three sentences containing such
statements as: "In general, the themes are obtrusively metaphysical, or
didactic" (p. 14).
A week later he continues in the same vein: after a brief favorable
analysis of "The Cry of the Human" and "Lady Geraldine's Courtship,"
ending with a delicate hint — for Poe, a very delicate hint —
that the
latter contains borrowings from Tennyson's "Locksley Hall," Poe manages
a noncommittal defense of Miss Barrett by a schoolmaster analysis of what
he knows best: Professor Wilson's blunders in his review of the collection
of poems. Having picked out a line Wilson had selected "for special
animadversion" he studies it exhaustively to show that ". . . from the entire
range of poetical literature there shall not, in a century, be produced a more
sonorous — a more vigorous verse — a juster — a
nobler — a
more ideal — a more magnificent — . . ." (pp. 18-19) and
passes on
to a surprisingly long, accurate and justified listing of all her shortcomings:
the language is affected, though the quaintness of some phrases is duly
commended and worked into a defense of Poe's
own belief in the virtues of old-fashioned oddity; the imagery is
occasionally farfetched "which is reprehensible in the extreme" (p. 21),
sometimes verging on ". . . nonsense, and nothing more," sometimes
"repulsive" (p. 22); knotty paradoxes, platitudes, synecdoches, inartistical
and undecorous conceptions are duly listed; repetitions, mannerisms are
"multitudinous" (p. 25), and we are given a complete list of the
"pet-words," "down" and "to lean," though her grammar is unexceptionable
and her style, in Poe's limited meaning, ". . . exceedingly chaste, vigorous
and comprehensive . . ." (p. 27). In his strictures upon her inattention to
rhythm he does not mean "the multiplicity of inadmissible rhymes," though
he gives twenty-seven examples, so much as the metrical deficiencies that
make the ". . . metre . . . intended . . . nearly impossible to determine .
. . in some cases . . ." (p. 27). The double rhymes have no special value;
breaks are forced after the fourth trochee, the
division of the poem into quatrains serves no prosodic purpose. Poe
obviously enjoys himself, indulges gleefully in metrical games, printing a
quatrain in a new typographical disposition to bring out in relief the
artificiality of the seven-foot line, then printing another one in prose to call
attention to the deficiency of the foot pattern. He had never been more
accurate, more thorough and more convincing.
But he now "make[s] an end of [his] fault-finding" and turns to the
"beauties" of the book (p. 29). As he puts it: "Alas! here, indeed, we feel
the impotence of the pen" (p. 29). His clear-cut sentences dwindle into
blurred rhetoric: "We have already said that the supreme excellence of the
poetess whose work we review, is made up of the multitudinous sums of
lofty merits" (p. 29). He painfully succeeds in quoting four isolated
specimens worthy of admiration:
"an example of keen insight into our psychal nature" — "an instance
of
the purest and most radiant imagination" — "a specimen of wild
Dantesque vigor in combination with pathos never excelled" — "a
passage embodying the most elevated sentiment most tersely and musically
expressed" but confesses his powerlessness to account for the value of the
book and "to the book, then, with implicit confidence [he] appeal[s]" (pp.
30-31). Psychological insight in poetry he had never before associated with
the loftiest order of poetry; imagination, he is accustomed to qualify by
more accurate adjectives than either "pure," by which he means unspoilt by
didacticism, a reproach he has insistently levelled at Miss Barrett
throughout the review, or "radiant," an "indefinite" word hovering in his
mind at the time, better suited to the "indefinitiveness" of poetical
suggestion than accurate critical analysis; "wild Dantesque vigor" is a
reminiscence of Mathews' review of the poems of Miss Barrett
in the
Democratic Review
[50] that Poe had evidently read, since
he
mentions it twice in his own review. Still, to the utter bewilderment of the
attentive reader he goes on to say it "will scarcely be questioned . . . that
Miss Barrett has done more in poetry, than any woman, living or dead" (p.
32). What she had done in poetry is less than evident in the very critical
comments in the preceding pages. And Poe is aware that it is not evident
in these pages as we can see in his protestation that ". . . that she has
surpassed all her poetical contemporaries of either sex (with an exception)
[Tennyson] is our deliberate opinion — not idly entertained, we
think,
nor founded on any visionary basis" (p. 32).
Thus, out of thirty-two pages, Poe is able to devote only two, largely
made up of extracts, to the analysis of the truly poetic essence of the work
under review and his praise has been shown to be clumsy, patently
half-hearted and unnaturally high-flown, at times even bombastic. And
when he undertakes, in the concluding paragraph, to trace Miss Barrett's
affiliation to her English predecessors, the contrast between the deep insight
into Shelley's and Tennyson's creative processes and the flat unsupported
statements of Miss Barrett's genius leaves a durable impression of
unconvincing exaggeration of the merits of the poetess, the more so as close
examination of the final arguments reveals they contain a contradiction and
are partly adapted from Horne's paragraph on Miss Barrett in the
New
Spirit of the Age.[51]
The sincere admiration Poe shows for some of E. B. Barrett's poetic
qualities in the body of the article would hardly lead us to expect the
unbridled enthusiasm of the last paragraph. He is manifestly puzzled by this
"mystic" poetry, at a loss to express his complex feelings. He resorts to
easy schoolmaster's criticism, betraying as he goes along, his utter
powerlessness at accounting for the enthusiasm he professes to show. In
spite of what is generally assumed, he had never so far taken interest in E.
B. Barrett's poetry, though it was already widely circulated. He had
mentioned her once only[52] as a
contributer to R. H. Horne's Chaucer Modernized
(Works, XI, 250). Besides why should he write a review, so
long after the publication of the work[53] that he feels compelled to
apologize for
the delay (Works, XII, 3)? In January 1845, he badly wanted
money and may have swelled the article to get an extra
dollar a page (Quinn, p. 452). He may have wanted to please Graham, in
whose magazine most of Miss Barrett's poetry had appeared and was still
appearing and whose editor, Griswold, was begging for reviews of
The Drama of Exile and Other Poems.[54] He may have tried, as he did with
Horne,
to gain Miss Barrett's gratitude with a view to her helping to introduce his
tales in England. Both, however, the circumstances of the American
publication of The Drama of Exile and Other Poems, and
some
obscure allusions in the review, suggest Poe's desire to please the Young
Americans. It is not perhaps uninteresting to recall that the fame of Miss
Barrett in the United States had been the result of the "wonderful"[55] exertions of Cornelius
Mathews.
The prospectus of the Home Library issued on March
30,
1844,[56] mentioned among the works
intended for publication in the poetical series, "A new Volume of poems by
E. B. Barrett of England" (Good-speed, p. 113) that "of course" was "to
be secured through the good offices of Mathews" (p. 116). Mathews'
correspondence with Miss Barrett had already put them on a friendly
footing. The first criticism of her works ever to appear in the United States
appeared in Arcturus
for February 1841. It is by Evert A. Duyckinck. The highly laudatory
review was the keynote of the campaign of laudation the Young American
followers of Duyckinck were to conduct on Miss Barrett's behalf. They
prided themselves on having "discovered" her and they were indeed
gratified when the prestigious
North American Review
followed
their lead and published a commendatory review of her poetry. But
Mathews had already "staked his claim" to E. B. Barrett: in December
1841 the two editors of
Arcturus had forwarded the volume
containing Duyckinck's review with word that her verse would be "heartily
received by the lovers of poetry in America."
[57] In July 1842, the delighted Miss
Barrett
sent four sonnets and "The Cry of the Human." They arrived too late to
save
Arcturus which had collapsed in May 1842. Cornelius
Mathews then took the matter in hand: he sold "The Cry of the Human" to
Nathan Hale Junior, in whose
Boston
Miscellany for November 1842
[58] it appeared not far from Poe's
review of
Griswold's "American Poetry" (pp. 218-221). The four sonnets were sent
to Philadelphia where they appeared in
Graham's Magazine
for
December 1842.
[59] In the "Editor's
Table" of the same issue (p. 343) Graham printed an enthusiastic notice
after the following paragraph: "Miss Barrett — In this number will
be
found a series of sonnets by Elizabeth B. Barrett, among the first of her
contributions to any American periodical. They were originally intended for
'Arcturus,' to which magazine they were sent: but arriving after the
discontinuance of that periodical, its editors placed them at our disposal,
'thinking the good company into which they would be introduced in
'Graham' would be every way agreeable to the fair authoress.'"
Thus Poe, who still lived in Philadelphia and occasionally contributed
to Graham's Magazine, was very likely to have read this
notice,
to have learned that Miss Barrett was the protegée of the Young
Americans and to have gathered from the raving tone of the puff that the
literary man who wanted to curry the favor of Young Americans would be
well advised to treat Miss Barrett with cordiality.[60] Moved by Mathews' tokens of
kindness,
Miss Barrett promised a volume of her poems: "Whenever I print another
volume you shall have it, if
Messrs. Wiley and Putnam will convey it to you,"
[61] and wished every kind of success
to ". .
. the Society of Help in New York of which you are secretary."
[62] Then, in March and July, she sent
her
most heartful thanks for the troubles he had taken on her behalf in making
arrangements with H. G. Langley for an American Edition of her
Poems,
1844.
[63] She was to get "ten per cent of the
net
proceeds of the sales"
[64] and the
edition would come out simultaneously with the English publication to avoid
piracy.
[65] She is fully aware of the
extraordinary favor bestowed upon her by an American publisher
[66] who could have got her poems or
any
novel by Dickens or Walter Scott for nothing within days after the
publication of the English edition.
[67]
She is explicit in
acknowledging her debt to Mathews and Mathews only.
[68] H. G. Langley was, of course, the
publisher of the
Democratic Review.
Miss Barrett's instant popularity constituted a demonstration of the
critical acuity of the Young Americans who had discovered her. She had
been hailed in England, accepted by the North American
Review, but now her name was inextricably linked to Young
America: prepublication of the "Drama of Exile" appeared in the
Democratic Review for July and August 1844 together with
two
sonnets in August and September[69]
and two highly laudatory articles in July and October 1844.[70]
Again and again, in her letters, she dwells on that "wonderful"
kindness and urges Mathews not to sacrifice his "critical faculty" to his
"interest in [her] (proved in so many ways)."[71] By the end of the year the
Poems,
1844 had received almost unanimous praise in England and
America.
By that time, since Miss Barrett acknowledged her association with Young
America in the preface to the American edition of her book where she
speaks kindly of her American editor, Mathews, Young Americans were
able to use her fame as the most incontestable proof of their critical
acumen. They cleverly organised her publicity,[72] for her fame bore such
indisputable
testimony of the superiority of their critical insight over any other critical
school — the Knickerbocker's in particular. To Poe,
the
newcomer, this was a convenient occasion to show his sympathy at a
particularly opportune period when the plan for the "Library of
American Books" was under way. Prudence was required, however, for the
gossiping busybody of the world of literati, Poe's old enemy, Lewis
Gaylord Clark, lay in wait, hoping to catch Poe contradicting himself.
Briggs, however, was at this time not
utterly opposed to Young America and was willing to go so far as to accept
a very favorable article on that staunch Young American, William A.
Jones, by Dyckinck.
[73] Hence he
would not refuse an apparently very objective one about Young America's
protegée, the more so as the article, whether he noticed it or not,
was
peppered with cryptic allusions.
First, Poe did not fail to remark that the edition was an "American
edition," emphasizing the phrase by quotation marks though he had already
noticed that the American edition of Miss Barrett's works is "published
under the superintendence of an American author" (Works,
XII,
2), a sentence that had been made conspicuous by Duyckinck's note in his
article in the American Review (I [January 1845], 38); the
allusion in Poe's review is an obvious commendation of the achievements
of the gentlemen of the Copyright Club and of their secretary, Cornelius
Mathews, the self-same "American author." In examining American
opinions of Miss Barrett, Poe mentions that the only critique evincing any
degree of objectivity — this can hardly be a coincidence — is
that of
the Democratic Review, Mathews', of course. On the
contrary,
the most flattering article to appear, one which is so dithyrambic that it is
"an insult well intended" (Works, XII, 2), had been published
in the Journal of the foes: the newly born American Review.
This, however, may have been a blunder which, I believe, suggests that Poe
was not yet an acknowledged member of the group let into all the secrets,
that he was a newcomer not yet quite cognizant of the subtle intricacies in
the pattern of alliances on New York stage: as we have seen, the unsigned
article he disparaged was by Duyckinck. Who on earth, familiar with
Duyckinck's "true blue" Democratic trends, would expect the leader of
Young America to be given access to the first number of a magazine that
contained in its announcement to the public a violent diatribe against the
Democratic Party, that "other great political division . . . essentially
anarchical in its principles and tendencies."[74] The announcement flatly stated the
aim
of the new review was to ". . . support freely and openly the principles and
measures of the Whig Party . . ." (p. 3) and exploded Duyckinck's pet
idea, a
truly new national literature, in these words: "we are a people eager for
novelty: we care more for the newness of a thing than for its authority.
This is a trait which . . . has an unfavorable influence upon us in many
respects . . . It especially affects, what must
have all these [morals — philosophy — speculative belief
— regular
formation of national customs — characters] for a partial foundation
—
the growth of our national literature. For, if tastes may change and customs
be laid aside with the hour, and opinions be held no longer than they are
able to excite, and faith be considered a matter of choice, it is obvious that
our literature must be forever unsubstantial and fugitive" (p. 4).
The paragraph amounted to a manifesto meant to counterbalance the
pernicious influence of all Young America's jabbering about the rejection
of models as the first step toward attaining a national literature. There were
some facts that Poe, still rather green for the "literary butcher-shop" was
unaware of: Colton's personal friendship with Duyckinck, their tacit
agreement that an anonymous article of a different trend in a professedly
partisan journal could not fail to brighten up the reputation for fairness of
the magazine and attract uncommitted readers. More precisely still, Poe was
too much of an outsider both to New York and to the Young Americans to
realize how fast political commitments may shift and that a temporary truce
has just been made between such broadminded Whigs as Colton (who
naïvely hoped to keep politics apart from literature) and such
undoctrinaire Democrats as Duyckinck because they both disapproved of the
annexation of Texas and of the war with Mexico,
and both supported the notion of protection by an international copyright.
"Hence," in Perry Miller's words, "in New York many Whigs found that
they could be friendly with 'loco-foco' Democrats like Duyckinck. . .."[75]
This typical New York rapprochement, Poe, the provincial American
in New York, grasped after some delay. There were however in Poe's
review enough tokens of good will to atone for the blunders: the
typographical errors were charged to the English edition, Poe assimilated
himself to the "friends" of Miss Barrett; the exposition of the pernicious
influence of the imitation of the ancient drama was a faithful echo of
Mathews' campaign for a truly American Drama rejecting models of any
kind. The assertion that the modern public at large was able to think and
judge, an idea quite unlike Poe's conception of a pyramid-shaped society
in which adequate judgement is transmitted down the scales to the "rabble"
(one of his favorite words that had strangely disappeared from his
vocabulary at the time) must ring pleasantly in Duyckinck's ears. Winding
up the whole with another allusion to the critic in the Democratic
Review (Works, XII, 16), regular insertions of flat
statements
of Miss Barrett's supreme, though
unanalysed, genius, Poe had managed to say his word about that poetry
without obscuring his real meaning. For, as early as February 1, praise
poured on Poe from Young American quarters.
Of course, Poe's article was unsigned. How did then Poe manage to
let Young Americans know of his authorship? First, we must note that in
style it was unmistakably his and that Lowell identified the author at first
glance.[76] Then one must recall that
January and February 1845 were precisely the two months when Duyckinck
and Briggs were on most friendly terms.[77] Moreover, on January 11, again,
the very
date of the second instalment of Poe's review of Miss Barrett, the
New York Weekly News published an estimate of the
Broadway Journal indicating Poe as the author of the review:
". . . Miss Barrett (rather painfully to us) is put to the question by Mr. Poe
with his usual critical acumen and force of style."[78] The editor of the New York
Weekly
News was O'Sullivan, Duyckinck's old friend and ally, and
Duyckinck held an unofficial position on the board of editors of the
New York Weekly News. Finally, on February 1, 1845 came
Duyckinck's recognition of Poe in terms of the warmest commendation:
Graham's Magazine for February is illustrated by a portrait of Edgar
A. Poe, with an accompanying biography by Lowell. We cordially give a
welcome to this distinct recognition of Mr. Poe's merits. Whenever his
name is mentioned it has been with the comment that he is a remarkable
man, a man of genius. Few knew precisely what he had written, his name
was not on Library catalogues or any of his books on the shelves. His
influence has been felt while the man was unknown. Lowell's article
removes the anonymous and exhibits the author of some of the most
peculiar and characteristic productions in our literature.
[79]
It seems therefore that this puzzling review has puzzled everyone but the
man for whom it was intended: E. A. Duyckinck. Such recognition,
presented so objectively and so thoroughly, of Young America's Egeria by
the harshest critic in the United States was really ingratiating.
The other person involved, Miss Barrett herself, was astonished and
provided the best commentaries. Her official answer, sent to Poe through
Horne, is generally quoted: it is interesting to notice that the ordinarily glib
and easy letter writer is unsettled to the point of writing twice to Horne on
the same day: "You will certainly think me mad, dear Mr. Horne, for
treading upon my own heels [illegible] in another letter. But I am
uncomfortable about my message to Mr. Poe, lest it should not be grateful
enough in the sound of it."[80] Her
first reaction had been to consider the review unfavorable — which
it was
— her sure instinct having told her that the strictures ring far truer
than
the praises. But her commentaries to her personal friends, in her more
natural mischievous manner are more revealing. To Horne a few hours
before the letter quoted above she had written: "Your friend, Mr. Poe, is
a speaker of strong words 'in both kinds' . . . But
Mr. Poe seems to me in a great mist on the subject of meter."[81] To Robert Browning she wrote on
December 1, 1845: "He [Poe] wrote a review of me — the two
extremes
of laudation and reprehension, folded in on one another. You would have
thought that it had been written by a friend and foe, each stark mad with
love and hate, and writing the alternate paragraphs — a most curious
production indeed." Of course she felt something odd in this rabid
admiration so clumsily supported by such harsh strictures. But when she
heard of the dedication of The Raven and Other Poems, she
was
utterly bewildered. Because Poe's attitude was more ambiguous than ever:
"And think of Mr. Poe, with that great Roman justice of his (if not rather
American!) dedicating a book to one and abusing one in the preface of the
same."[82]
It seems as if he had, for some reason or other, to give public
testimony of his esteem for her but tried at the same time to convey his real
meaning. The surprise is that when we turn to the preface of The
Raven and Other Poems, we find no derogatory opinion of Miss
Barrett, not a word about her or anybody else. She too was surprised when
she received the book — so much so that she considered the
very improbable possibility that the copy under her eyes had been specially
printed for her own use: "I have just received Mr. Edgar Poe's book
—
and I see that the deteriorating preface which was to have saved me from
the vanity-fever produceable by the dedication is cut down and away
—
perhaps in this particular copy only."
[83] What had happened? Of course,
it was
Mathews himself who had sent her the news. On December 3, 1845 she
wrote to him: "You amuse me when you say that Mr. Poe has dedicated a
book to me and abused me in the preface of it."
[84]
There are only two possibilities: either Mathews had lied, or he or
someone else had prevailed upon Poe to cut out the unfavorable remarks on
Miss Barrett. In this literary milieu where the value of puffery was
unquestioned, it was obviously in Mathews' interest to try and erase those
unfavorable sentences, since he was planning to reprint Miss Barrett's
Prose Miscellanies
[85]
and
looked to Poe for help in promoting them. Thus if Mathews' hint is no
downright lie (and what possible reason for lying could be he have had?),
there may exist an unknown draft of Poe's preface to his The Raven
and Other Poems and the very publication of the book may be the
result of an arrangement with the Young Americans. May we venture to
surmise that Duyckinck, though willing to publish Poe's poems,[86] imposed or suggested the
dedication as a
condition; that Poe half-heartedly accepted but attempted to make his
opinion clear in
the preface; and that he was finally prevailed upon by Mathews to cross out
any allusions to Miss Barrett with the idea they might harm the sale of his
forthcoming reprint of the Prose Miscellanies? Two facts
support this surmise: as everyone knows Poe argues in a note prefixed to
the "Poems Written in Youth" included in the same edition that "Private
reasons — some of which have reference to the sin of plagiarism,
and
others to the date of Tennyson's first poems — have induced me to
re-publish
these, the crude composition of my earliest childhood"
(
Works,
VII, xlix). The note is an attempt to exculpate himself from the accusation
of plagiarism from Tennyson.
[87] But
there had also been rumors of his borrowing some details for "The Raven"
from Miss Barrett's "Lady Geraldine's Courtship."
[88] How like Poe it would have been
to
exonerate himself of the charge of having plagiarized her poem by taking
her to task in the preface of the first printing of "The Raven" in a collection
of his poems. This was probably the theme of those unfavorable remarks
hinted at by Mathews.
Moreover, close examination of Poe's later criticism reveals that,
once his poems were published, with their most humble and enthusiastic
dedication, Poe lost all interest in Miss Barrett.[89] Her name often appeared in Poe's
later
criticism but not once does he qualify or reconsider his previous opinions.
He plunders his own article and either reprints verbatim or "edits" his
excerpts from his own review to fit them into a new reasoning but never
further than replacing the editorial "we" by "I," changing a few
conjunctions or omitting a word or phrase.[90] Again his glowing respect for her
does not
prevent him from "editing" her letter of thanks in a much more significant
manner and of using it as a puff. She wrote: "After which [the foregoing]
imperfect acknowledgement of my personal obligation may I thank you as
another reader would thank you for this vivid writing, this power which is
felt! Your 'Raven' has produced a
sensation, a 'fit horror,' here in England. Some of my friends are taken by
the fear of it and some by the music. I hear of persons haunted by the
nevermore . . . I think you will like to be told that our great poet, Mr.
Browning, the author of 'Paracelsus' and the 'Bells and Pomegranates' was
much
struck by the rhythm of that poem."
[91]
To Joseph M. Field, editor of the
Saint Louis Reveille he
sent,
with request to insert "editorially" under the title: "The British literary
journals are admitting Mr. Poe's merits, in the most unequivocal manner"
the following adaptation: "The world's greatest poetess,
Elizabeth
Barrett Barrett, says of Mr. Poe: — 'This
vivid
writing; — this power
which is felt! 'The Raven' has
produced a
sensation — a 'fit horror' — here
in England.
Some of my friends are taken by the yias [sic] of it and some by the music
— but all are taken. I hear of persons absolutely
haunted by
the 'Nevermore' . . . Our great poet, Mr. Browning, the author of
'Paracelsus,' 'The Pomegranates' etc. is enthusiastic in his admiration of
the rhythm" (
Letters, II, 319-20). He sent the same "edited"
text to P. P. Cooke, with a request to print it in Cooke's notice on Poe as
an extract from a
British magazine.
[92]
The first reaction of the Democratic papers to the Barrett review was
dubious; as we have seen, O'Sullivan in the New York Weekly
News deemed it "rather painful" for his taste and the New
York
Morning News for January 14, 1845 carried a lukewarm estimate
of
Poe's review. Poe believed the notice to have been by Duyckinck and was
scared. He hurried to print a corrective note for the enlightenment of
Duyckinck which brings additional proof that the latter's opinion was what
Poe really cared for: "We observe, in a notice of the Broadway
Journal, a new aspirant for public favor, that Mr. D. speaks of a
review of Miss Barrett's Poems as if it were condemnatory. We should be
sorry indeed, if any general disparagement were intended of the most
extraordinary woman of her age — perhaps of any age. Our
impression,
however, is that the critic of the Broadway Journal meant
only,
by a few unimportant objections, to place her pre-eminent merits in the best
light.
But perhaps this is Mr. D's impression also, and we have misconceived
him."[93] Evert A. Duyckinck loathed
puffery as much as Poe himself (though he made an exception for his
bosom-friend, Mathews) and admired above all the dignity of the dauntless
critic who was not afraid of speaking out the truth however harmful to
himself. To him, the review, apparently by a great admirer of Miss Barrett
lucid enough to point out her weaknesses, must have appeared as the
archetype of critical honesty. He may have said so to his obedient troops
and allies for after his own glowing recognition of Poe's genius in the
Weekly News for February 1, 1845, the chorus of Young
Americans sang the praises of Poe and the
Broadway
Journal.
[94] Moreover three
journals whose editors were friends of Duyckinck's, opened their columns
to Poe's poems and tales; the
American Review published
"The
Raven" in its February number,
[95]
"Some Words with a Mummy" and "The Valley of Unrest" in April,
"Eulalie" in July, "The Facts in the Case of Mr. Valdemar" in December;
O'Sullivan (
New York Morning News) reprinted "The
Raven"
on February 3, 1845, "The Purloined Letter" on January 21 and 24, and
"The Oval Portrait" on May 1.
[96] He
also reprinted "The Raven" and the two tales in the
Weekly
News on February 8, January 25 and May 30, 1845.
[97]
By March 15, 1845, W. G. Simms, having come to understand that
Poe had been adopted, hastened to congratulate Duyckinck.[98] In February
Poe had smashed to pieces Rochietti's "Why a national literature cannot
flourish in the United States."
[99] At
last, on March 8, when Nathaniel P. Willis's authority was no longer a
hindrance and Poe's new position as associate editor of the
Broadway
Journal allowed him to state clearly his allegiance, he made haste
to
publish a sort of manifesto in a letter "To the editor of the Broadway
Journal." Down with the blind critics who ruin American letters by their
incompetence or dishonesty — this is the tenor of the paragraph
—
down with the indiscriminate pretended friends of National literature and
hail to "the Willises — the O'Sullivans — the Duyckincks
— to the
choice and magnamimous few . . ."
[100] that have supported him and
whose aim
is so similar to his. The paragraph being a letter to the editor is
exceptionally signed E. A. P. Is the presence of the most ardent locofocos
in this short list of the savers
of American literature fortuitous? In all likelihood, February 1845 saw the
sealing of Poe's alliance with Young America. In June 1845, the
Tales, edited by Duyckinck, appeared. On June 26, the
Broadway Journal was about to collapse: Poe offered it for
sale
to Duyckinck or Mathews (
Letters, I, 290). "Or, if this
cannot
be effected, might I venture to ask for an advance of $50 on the faith of the
'American Parnassus'?" Duyckinck lent fifty dollars and saved the
Broadway Journal.
[101]
On
July 19, Poe published his "profession of faith" in the
Broadway
Journal and from now onwards systematically puffed anything by
Duyckinck, J. T. Headley, Mathews and Simms, as well as all the numbers
of the "Library of Choice Reading" and the "Library of American
Books."
[102]
In the New York and Boston magazines for 1845 and 1846, there is
ample proof that Poe was universally considered as a staunch Young
American: Lewis Gaylord Clark often referred to him as a member of the
"Mutual Admiration Society";[103] in
a review of "Simms's Stories and Reviews" printed in the North
American Review for October 1846, C. C. Felton disposed of Poe
in one sentence along with Cornelius Mathews, J. T. Headley and other
Young Americans: "The Tales by Edgar A. Poe and the lucubrations of
Mr. J. T. Headly, the former belonging to the forcible-feeble and the
shallow-profound school . . ., are poor enough materials for an American
Library."[104] Another proof of Poe's
association with Young America is provided by Charles F. Briggs in his
hilarious description of the literary party he included in his satire on New
York life: The Trippings of Tom Pepper (1847-50). It is
interesting to note that Austin
Wicks (Edgar A. Poe) arrives at the party in the company of Mr. Ferocious
(Cornelius Mathews) and Mr. Tribbings (Evert A. Duyckinck): they are the
best friends in the world. Poe is then presented as the mouthpiece of Young
America and the hero of Mr. Tribbings until he drinks one glass of wine
and quarrels with Ferocious whom he calls an ass (I, 162). Since the
instalment including the literary party appeared in the New York
Mirror on February 27, 1847, it is reasonable to conclude that the
final break between Poe and the Young Americans took place towards the
fall of 1846. This dating is confirmed by Poe's strictures on Young
Americans in his unpublished manuscript on 'The living writers of
America' which can be safely dated to the second half of 1846. In fact from
the end of 1846 onward, Poe was to deny all those favorable opinions of
Young Americans and to deal frankly and devastatingly
with Mathews, Headley and Simms.
[105] Moreover, in his manuscript
notes for
his great critical work on 'The living writers of America,' he adopted
Lewis Gaylord Clark's derogatory phrase whenever he referred to Young
America: "want of centralisation gives birth to a peculiar cliquism whose
separate penchants render it nearly impossible to get at the truth . . . The
M[utual] AD[miration] Society Mathews, Duyckinck, Jones, Cheever etc
once — now reduced to Mathews and Duyckinck."
[106] More significantly, he completely
rejected the idea of nationality in letters and clearly named Duyckinck and
Mathews as its proponents: "What is a true nationality — the cant of
the
M[utual] A[miratio]n Society ab[ou]t it — there should be no
nationality
. . . Nationality means according to Mathews, toadying Americans and
abusing foreigners right or wrong. . . ." After Griswold had made Poe's
opinion of Duyckinck's selection of the
Tales appear to have been hostile to the point of insult,
Duyckinck struck back with his well known charge that Poe was "a literary
attorney, who pleaded according to his fee" (Quinn, p. 677); there was
perhaps more truth in his opinion than is generally assumed.
Thus most of the glaring contradictions or erratic judgements in Poe's
critical work belong to the period when he strove to please Duyckinck, the
final outcome being that those contradictory statements are not so much the
proof of a muddled mind as a reflection of the hardships of an artist's life
in the 1840's when literature and criticism were still for so many
Americans, the domain of "gentlemen of elegant leisure." The explanation
of such contradictions or erratic reviews will finally illuminate the great
consistency of Poe's critical output, which is not necessarily a point in his
favor; such explanations may help to show that the precepts laid down by
the very young poet in 1831 in the "Letter to Mr. ____ ____" continued to
dominate the critical thought of the mature writer. That writer applied those
precepts with more unswerving and unqualified rigor than is generally
thought.
The complexity of motives, aesthetic, economic and personal which
lay behind Poe's critical pronouncements throughout his career are nowhere
better exemplified than in the record of his years in New York. His years
in Baltimore, Richmond and Philadelphia, however,
remain to be examined in detail before critics can reach reliable conclusions
about which of his reviews deserve to be taken seriously as revealing his
genuine convictions on literary questions and which are to be dismissed as
insincere or frivolous. Only after such a study has been made shall we be
able to assess the worth of Poe's accomplishment as critic with
accuracy.
Notes