Papers, for whom Longfellow is as a compatriot, who even are familiar with the names of Whittier and Bryant, would be amazed to hear of James Russell Lowell as among the world's poets. Yet he is. The Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell. Household Edition. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1882. 1 A Fable for Critics, p. 337. 3 Threnodia (Earlier Poems), p. 2. 2 The Cathedral, p. 434. On the Death of a Friend's Child (Miscellaneous Poems), pp. 99-100. 5 The Darkened Mind (Under the Willows), p. 398. • Hunger and Cold (Miscellaneous Poems), p. 70. The Forlorn (Earlier Poems), p. 16. The Street (Sonnets), p. 28. • The Shepherd of King Admetus (Miscellaneous Poems), p. 50. 10 The Fountain of Youth (Under the Willows), p. 395. 11 To the Dandelion (ibid.), pp. 94-5. 12 Yussouf (ibid.), p. 397. 13 An Ember Picture (Under the Willows), pp. 410-11. 14 In the Twilight (ibid.), pp. 412–13. EDWARD FITZGERALD 1809-1883 It is at once easy and hard to account for the FitzGeraldCult. The fervour of many believers in the gospel propounded, according to Edward FitzGerald,' by the Persian astronomer-poet, is intelligible enough. The faith is that of Epicurus without the incubus of a philosophical system. None could be simpler, or more cheerfully practised. Live your life on earth as if earth, not you, were eternal; as if there were neither Heaven, nor Hell. Live for the day, without concern for the morrow, if there be a morrow; any more for that than for yesterday. Play, if you can find no better diversion, with whatever theories or dogmas, religious or otherwise, you please. Never, at all events, allow them to colour or cloud your fleeting moments. Your active business is to take advantage of the pleasures of the body, while you have a body. Especially, enjoy music and drinking; if in a garden of roses, so much the better. Therein lies all your duty, which is only to yourself. Never was a more unethereally agreeable creed preached. But many students of FitzGerald who abhor Omar Khayyam's philosophy enthusiastically appreciate the verse; and it is much less difficult to explain acceptance of the one than why the other satisfies to the point of rapture. FitzGerald interpolated into the laborious indolence he loved a bare modicum of poetical work. Of the pieces directly original the most important is Bredfield Hall. The description of the home of successive squires of his race is deliciously simple: Lo, an English mansion founded With well-timber'd lawns and gardens, Where the hare and pheasant feed. Flanked it is with goodly stables, So it lifts its honest gables Toward the distant German seas; Where it once discern'd the smoke Of old sea-battles far away; Saw victorious Nelson's topmasts Anchoring in Hollesley Bay. But whatever storm might riot, Cannon roar, and trumpet ring, Still amid these meadows quiet Did the yearly violet spring; Still Heaven's starry hand suspended That light balance of the dew, That each night on earth descended, And each morning rose anew; And the ancient House stood rearing Undisturb'd her chimneys high, And her gilded vanes still veering Toward each quarter of the sky: While like wave to wave succeeding Through the world of joy and strife, Household after household speeding Handed on the torch of life. Here they lived, and here they greeted, Maids and matrons, sons and sires, Wandering in its walks, or seated Round its hospitable fires; Till the bell that not in vain Had summoned them to weekly prayer, To the Church-and left them there! So they pass-while thou, old Mansion, How like the foliage of thy summers To most thou stand'st a record sad, To one whose youth is buried here, Unto him the fields around thee O'er the solemn woods that bound thee Sighs the selfsame breeze of morning One same crocus breaks the mould. Yet the secret worm ne'er ceases, And farewell to Bredfield Hall!1 In general he preferred to track and develop other imaginations, in the way of Translation, Paraphrase, or Metaphrase'. Thus he printed versions of six of Calderon's plays, and of three Greek tragedies, Oedipus, in Thebes, and at Athens, and Agamemnon. He added one of Virgil's garden, and renderings of Omar Khayyám's Rubáiyát, and Jaimi's Salaman and Abjal. All testify to unsparing pains, and an extraordinary gift in him for imagining himself into his author. At times we might almost say that he was the author; as in the tale by the Argive Chorus in the Agamemnon, 'taken from Aeschylus,' of the use by Fate of the passions of Gods and Men to accomplish its dread decrees. That magnificent Ode laid a spell upon me when long ago I came upon it; and the charm works still: Soon or late sardonic Fate With Man against himself conspires; Puts on the mask of his desires : Up the steps of Time elate Leads him blinded with his pride, To weep his fåll, nor lip to sigh For him a prayer; or, if there were, The children have to pay for the sin of the father, and sire for the guilt of son: Thus with old Priam, with his royal line, Kindred and people; yea, the very towers |