The Poet's Poet by Elizabeth Atkins
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page 30 of 367 (08%)
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has been followed by many expressions of the same thought, at first wholly sympathetic, lately, it must be confessed, somewhat ironical. Consciousness of partnership with God in composition naturally lifts the poet, in his own estimation, at least, to a super-human level. The myth of Apollo disguised as a shepherd strikes him as being a happy expression of his divinity. [Footnote: See James Russell Lowell, _The Shepherd of King Admetus._] Thus Emerson calls singers Blessed gods in servile masks. [Footnote: _Saadi._] The hero of John Davidson's _Ballad in Blank Verse on the Making of a Poet_ soars to a monotheistic conception of his powers, asserting Henceforth I shall be God, for consciousness Is God. I suffer. I am God. Another poet-hero is characterized: He would reach the source of light, And share, enthroned, the Almighty's might. [Footnote: Harvey Rice, _The Visionary_ (1864). In recent years a few poets have modestly disclaimed equality with God. See William Rose Benet, _Imagination,_ and Joyce Kilmer, _Trees._ The kinship of poets and the Almighty is the theme of _The Lonely Poet_ (1919), by John Hall Wheelock.] |
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