The Poet's Poet by Elizabeth Atkins
page 238 of 367 (64%)
page 238 of 367 (64%)
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Adorn your life, and consecrate your fame.
[Footnote: _Lines to Mr. Addison_.] Middle-class didactic poetry of the Victorian era expresses the same view. Tupper is sure that the true poet will live With pureness in youth and religion in age. [Footnote: _What Is a Poet_.] since he conceives as the function of poetry To raise and purify the grovelling soul, * * * * * And the whole man with lofty thoughts to fill. [Footnote: _Poetry_.] This explanation may account for the piety of a Newman, a Keble, a Charles Wesley, but how can it be stretched to cover the average poet of the last century, whose subject-matter is so largely himself? Conforming his conduct to the theme of his verse would surely be no more efficacious than attempting to lift himself by his own boot straps. These two occasional arguments leave the real issue untouched. The real ground for the poet's faith in his moral intuitions lies in his subscription to the old Platonic doctrine of the trinity,--the fundamental identity of the good, the true and the beautiful. There is something in the nature of a practical joke in the facility with which Plato's bitter enemies, the poets, have fitted to themselves his superlative praise of the philosopher's virtue. [Footnote: See the |
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