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A P R I L 1 8 9 6
The Works of Edgar Allan Poe
It is nearly fifty years since the death of Edgar Allan Poe, and his writings
are now for the first time gathered together with an attempt at accuracy and
completeness. The alleged reason for this indifference to the claims of a
writer who has received almost universal recognition is that the literary
executors of Dr. Rufus B. Griswold, Poe's first editor, held until recently the
copyright to his works. But in reading the various memoirs of which, at one
time or another, Poe has been the subject, it appears that other causes have
been at work. One and all, even the most flattering estimates of Poe's genius,
are pervaded by a curious antipathy to him as a man, and this prejudice, no
doubt, has been largely responsible for the absence of any serious demand on
the part of the public for a fair representation of the author in his works. A
part of the disfavor with which Poe is regarded is due to Dr. Griswold's
biography; for of all men Poe had best reason to pray that he might be
delivered from the hands of his friends. But still more is chargeable to the
extraordinary confusion of the man with his work--of the ethical with the
purely literary aspect--which is so characteristic of literary judgments in
this country.
This puritanical tang is to be detected even in a study so conscientious as the
Memoir by Professor Woodberry, which occupies the opening pages of the first
volume of the new edition. However, unlike his predecessor, Professor Woodberry
has not allowed his lack of sympathy with his subject to interfere with the
precision of his editing. Every care has been given to the preparation of the
text and the notes. Whenever obtainable, the exact date of publication of the
various papers has been ascertained, as well as other facts of interest
regarding them, although no new light is thrown upon the source of Poe's
inspiration.
Besides the Memoir by Professor Woodberry, the Tales, Criticisms, and Poems are
severally preceded by a critical introduction by Mr. E.C. Stedman. These essays
are distinguished by a very just appreciation of the merits and demerits of Poe
as a writer. In effect, Mr. Stedman pronounces him a critic of exceptional
ability, and agrees with the opinion of Mr. James Russell Lowell that Poe's
more dispassionate judgments have all been justified by time. As a
story-writer, Mr. Stedman considers that Poe's achievement fell short of his
possibilities; he lacked the faculty of observation of real life, a defect for
which his unique imaginative power in part compensated, but which will prevent
his being classed among the greatest writers of fiction of his century. These
qualities, however, appear in their proper aspect when he is regarded as a
poet; they then fall into their right relation to his work, and are seen to
have made him what he was, a master in his chosen field.
The imaginative illustrations have scarcely the quality of Poe's own creative
genius, but the edition is well supplied with portraits of Poe, his wife, and
his mother, as well as interesting views of places with which Poe's name is
associated.
This edition is supposed to include all of Poe's writings which are of value.
The Elk is here reprinted for the first time, while The Landscape Garden and
The Pinakidia, a collection of quotations which struck Poe as important or
suggestive, are omitted. Whatever may be thought of the omission of the first
paper, that of the second is surely an error. It is conceded that not more than
a half dozen of the tales, less than that number of the critical essays, and
not all of the poems are of interest to the public at large. The sole reason,
therefore, for publishing a complete edition of the works of Poe, as of any
other writer, must be to increase the facilities for the student of the
particular period in which he lived. To exclude writings in which an author has
recorded the influences, however slight, which have moulded his thought is
plainly to eliminate the chief reason for the compilation of such an edition.
In this case, it amounts to an assumption on the part of editors and publishers
alike that the last word in regard to Poe has been said. But as yet we have had
no critical history of the intellectual development in this country during the
past century. There remains, therefore, for the student of Poe's life and
times, a field of research practically unexplored; and as long as this is the
case it is impossible to form any conclusions in regard to him which can be
considered final.
For Poe was essentially the product of his time. The intellectual activity
which characterized the educated class in this country before 1860 was no
sporadic instance, but the logical result of influences which belong to
universal history. For example, when Goethe made his discovery of the unity of
structure in organic life, it gave to the philosophers a physiological argument
for the suppression of tyrants, and put the whole of creation on an equal
footing. The French Revolution pointed the moral most effectually, and to the
dullest mind brought a host of new deductions. These deductions necessarily
involved a realization of the dignity and value of the individual, whether man
or beast, and presented life in an entirely new aspect.
To us Americans these ideas came filtered through the mind of Coleridge,
vivified by his enthusiasm. They found a fertile soil, and resulted in a growth
of new ideas so vigorous and rapid that a kind of explosion of righteousness
took place, which effectually and permanently upset some ancient and
picturesque notions of might and right.
The so-called Transcendentalists of New England were the most conspicuous
result of this new enthusiasm for the individual. In spite of his scorn for
their pretensions, Edgar Allan Poe, in his way, was as deeply affected by the
enthusiasm as the most radical among them. He was not, indeed, a reformer in
the ordinary sense; he remained always, so to speak, just within the outer
fringe of this new humanist movement. Its effect upon him was purely
psychologic and the human mind became, in his estimation, a treasure-house of
undreamed-of possibilities, which was but the poet's version of the value of
the individual. Yet he was no more conscious of this than he was that Goethe's
researches in natural history actuated him when, in imitation of Coleridge, he
humanized his redoubtable raven. His mind was like a mirror in the precision
with which it reflected the prevailing tendencies of his time, and with no more
intention. The effect of Coleridge's influence on Poe has never been properly
estimated. Professor Woodberry, it is true, accuses him of "parroting
Coleridge," while Mr. James Russell Lowell also pointed out Poe's great
indebtedness to him. Both critics, however, failed to appreciate the extent of
this indebtedness. Not only did Coleridge exert a general influence, which Poe
shared with every other man of letters in this country, but he transmitted a
special and unique influence to him alone. This had already made of Coleridge a
great poet, while to it Poe owes the tardy measure of fame which has been
accorded him.
One aspect of the general influence which Coleridge exerted upon Poe is
curiously exemplified in his poems from the time that he began to write.
Coleridge was among the first to humanize nature. It was a fashion of the day,
and a part of those tendencies of thought already briefly indicated. It arose,
probably, from a haziness as to the limitations of self-consciousness. But
whatever its cause, the idea strongly affected the poets, and animals, birds,
plants, and insects were given human attributes, or were made to symbolize all
kinds of abstractions. Christabel, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, and many of
the political poems, such as The Destiny of Nations and The Raven, are evidence
of the attraction this notion possessed for Coleridge.
It apparently suited as well Poe's mystical turn of mind. The Raven is, of
course, the most conspicuous instance, and in the Philosophy of Composition Poe
assumes that a talking bird is the most natural thing in the world. In his
so-called Juvenile Poems, printed about 1831, thirteen years before The Raven
was published, he already makes use of birds as symbols of Nemesis or Destiny,
and many of the passages are nearly identical in thought with some of
Coleridge's lines. That Poe was familiar with the writings of Coleridge at that
time is shown by his eulogistic reference to him in the preface to this early
edition of his poems. The special influence which Coleridge had upon Poe
relates to the development of his own poetical genius, and, to be understood,
requires a short digression from the main subject.
About 1773, Gottfried August Bürger, a poor student at Göttingen, wrote a
ballad under the title of Lenore. The composition of this ballad was due to
Herder's famous appeal to the poets of Germany for the development of a
national spirit in poetry. Lenore was modeled upon the ancient ballad forms as
Bürger found them in the collections of Bishop Percy, Motherwell, and Ossian.
From these and other relics of folk-songs, as well as from the study of
Shakespeare, he evolved a theory as to the requirements of a poem which should
endure,--a poem, in short, which should possess a universal, and therefore a
national interest. The ballad was written in strict accord with the theory, and
its success justified its author's conclusions. It was sung and recited by all
classes throughout Germany, and its author, according to Madame de Staël, was
more famous than Goethe. The poem was translated into nearly every language. In
England it had seven different translators, among them Sir Walter Scott and Pye
the poet laureate. It was set to music in many forms, and is said to have
inspired The Erl King of Schubert. To the artists it was equally suggestive.
Ary Scheffer and Horace Vernet both painted pictures which had for their
subjects some episode in the poem, while two of the greatest illustrators of
the day, Maclise and Bartolozzi, found it worthy of their best efforts.
Nor did the poets escape its influence. In England, Keats, Shelley, Southey,
Coleridge, and Wordsworth either imitated or were inspired by it. Coleridge and
Wordsworth were of all most deeply affected by its influence. From the evidence
at hand it is apparent that the two poets based their famous new departure in
poetry upon Bürger's poetic theory, which had been formulated in the preface to
the second edition of his volume containing Lenore; also, that Coleridge's
greatest poems, including The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Christabel, were
its direct result. It is this theory which is the foundation of Poe's
Philosophy of Composition, and Poe was the third poet to be made famous by the
careful application of it to his work. It is a striking confirmation of these
facts that the productions in which Poe most faithfully conformed to the rules
laid down by Burger are of all his writings those which have been considered by
the critics as best worth preserving.
The famous theory whose effects have been so far-reaching is extremely simple.
It is based upon a fundamental principle of aesthetics, that art, to endure,
must deal with experiences common to all men. Simplicity of phrase, the
narrative form, the refrain, and particularly the use of the supernatural are
the ancient and essential means for the accomplishment of this end.
Bürger's poems were well known in this country before 1840, but Poe undoubtedly
received his knowledge of the theory from Madame de Staël and from The Lyrical
Ballads. This, it will be remembered, is the volume of poems whose publication
in 1798 marked the apostasy of Wordsworth and Coleridge from the classic
models. In the appendix to the second edition their reasons are set forth at
length, and Bürger's ideas are referred to with enthusiasm. It is this
explanation which Poe quotes in the introduction to his Juvenile Poems. The
succession therefore, is uninterrupted: Bürger formulated his theory in the
essay prefixed to the edition of his poems published in 1778; Coleridge and
Wordsworth applied it and quoted it in The Lyrical Ballads in 1800; while Poe,
in his turn quoted it, as adopted by Wordsworth and Coleridge, in the preface
to the edition of his poems in 1831, and finally by its complete application
made the chief success of his life.
It is clear from this that Poe was far from being the literary mountebank he is
generally pictured. From his earliest youth he seems to have been actuated by a
unity of purpose, an unswerving application of proven means to a desired end,
which indicates in him the possession of qualities that are even Philistine, so
respectable are they. As for Poe's weaknesses, some day, perhaps, they may
find a critic such as François Villon found in Stevenson, and Coleridge in
Walter Pater, who will judge them together with his genius as alike the
expression of a nature too keenly responsive to the exigencies of life.
In the mean time, satisfactory as the new edition of Poe's works undoubtedly is
to the general reader, we shall hope it may some day be supplemented by the
republication of the papers now omitted, with the suggestion of new light to be
thrown upon the tendencies of the period in which Poe lived.
The Atlantic Monthly; April, 1896; Volume 78, No.
462;
pages 551-554.
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