I cannot quite see now how I found
time for even trying to do the things I had in hand
more or less. It is perfectly clear to me that
I did none of them well, though I meant at the time
to do none of them other than excellently. I
was attempting the study of no less than four languages,
and I presently added a fifth to these. I was
reading right and left in every direction, but chiefly
in that of poetry, criticism, and fiction. From
time to time I boldly attacked a history, and carried
it by a ’coup de main,’ or sat down before
it for a prolonged siege. There was occasionally
an author who worsted me, whom I tried to read and
quietly gave up after a vain struggle, but I must
say that these authors were few. I had got a
very fair notion of the range of all literature, and
the relations of the different literatures to one another,
and I knew pretty well what manner of book it was
that I took up before I committed myself to the task
of reading it. Always I read for pleasure, for
the delight of knowing something more; and this pleasure
is a very different thing from amusement, though I
read a great deal for mere amusement, as I do still,
and to take my mind away from unhappy or harassing
thoughts. There are very few things that I think
it a waste of time to have read; I should probably
have wasted the time if I had not read them, and at
the period I speak of I do not think I wasted much
time.
My day began about seven o’clock,
in the printing-office, where it took me till noon
to do my task of so many thousand ems, say four or
five. Then we had dinner, after the simple fashion
of people who work with their hands for their dinners.
In the afternoon I went back and corrected the proof
of the type I had set, and distributed my case for
the next day. At two or three o’clock I
was free, and then I went home and began my studies;
or tried to write something; or read a book.
We had supper at six, and after that I rejoiced in
literature, till I went to bed at ten or eleven.
I cannot think of any time when I did not go gladly
to my books or manuscripts, when it was not a noble
joy as well as a high privilege.
But it all ended as such a strain
must, in the sort of break which was not yet known
as nervous prostration. When I could not sleep
after my studies, and the sick headaches came oftener,
and then days and weeks of hypochondriacal misery,
it was apparent I was not well; but that was not the
day of anxiety for such things, and if it was thought
best that I should leave work and study for a while,
it was not with the notion that the case was at all
serious, or needed an uninterrupted cure. I passed
days in the woods and fields, gunning or picking berries;
I spent myself in heavy work; I made little journeys;
and all this was very wholesome and very well; but
I did not give up my reading or my attempts to write.
No doubt I was secretly proud to have been invalided
in so great a cause, and to be sicklied over with
the pale cast of thought, rather than by some ignoble
ague or the devastating consumption of that region.
If I lay awake, noting the wild pulsations of my heart,
and listening to the death-watch in the wall, I was
certainly very much scared, but I was not without
the consolation that I was at least a sufferer for
literature. At the same time that I was so horribly
afraid of dying, I could have composed an epitaph
which would have moved others to tears for my untimely
fate. But there was really not impairment of my
constitution, and after a while I began to be better,
and little by little the health which has never since
failed me under any reasonable stress of work established
itself.
I was in the midst of this unequal
struggle when I first became acquainted with the poet
who at once possessed himself of what was best worth
having in me. Probably I knew of Tennyson by extracts,
and from the English reviews, but I believe it was
from reading one of Curtis’s “Easy Chair”
papers that I was prompted to get the new poem of “Maud,”
which I understood from the “Easy Chair”
was then moving polite youth in the East. It
did not seem to me that I could very well live without
that poem, and when I went to Cleveland with the hope
that I might have courage to propose a translation
of Lazarillo to a publisher it was with the fixed
purpose of getting “Maud” if it was to
be found in any bookstore there.
I do not know why I was so long in
reaching Tennyson, and I can only account for it by
the fact that I was always reading rather the earlier
than the later English poetry. To be sure I had
passed through what I may call a paroxysm of Alexander
Smith, a poet deeply unknown to the present generation,
but then acclaimed immortal by all the critics, and
put with Shakespeare, who must be a good deal astonished
from time to time in his Elysian quiet by the companionship
thrust upon him. I read this now dead-and-gone
immortal with an ecstasy unspeakable; I raved of him
by day, and dreamed of him by night; I got great lengths
of his “Life-Drama” by heart; and I can
still repeat several gorgeous passages from it; I
would almost have been willing to take the life of
the sole critic who had the sense to laugh at him,
and who made his wicked fun in Graham’s Magazine,
an extinct periodical of the old extinct Philadelphian
species. I cannot tell how I came out of this
craze, but neither could any of the critics who led
me into it, I dare say. The reading world is
very susceptible of such-lunacies, and all that can
be said is that at a given time it was time for criticism
to go mad over a poet who was neither better nor worse
than many another third-rate poet apotheosized before
and since. What was good in Smith was the reflected
fire of the poets who had a vital heat in them; and
it was by mere chance that I bathed myself in his
second-hand effulgence. I already knew pretty
well the origin of the Tennysonian line in English
poetry; Wordsworth, and Keats, and Shelley; and I
did not come to Tennyson’s worship a sudden
convert, but my devotion to him was none the less complete
and exclusive. Like every other great poet he
somehow expressed the feelings of his day, and I suppose
that at the time he wrote “Maud” he said
more fully what the whole English-speaking race were
then dimly longing to utter than any English poet
who has lived.
One need not question the greatness
of Browning in owning the fact that the two poets
of his day who preeminently voiced their generation
were Tennyson and Longfellow; though Browning, like
Emerson, is possibly now more modern than either.
However, I had then nothing to do with Tennyson’s
comparative claim on my adoration; there was for the
time no parallel for him in the whole range of literary
divinities that I had bowed the knee to. For
that while, the temple was not only emptied of all
the other idols, but I had a richly flattering illusion
of being his only worshipper. When I came to
the sense of this error, it was with the belief that
at least no one else had ever appreciated him so fully,
stood so close to him in that holy of holies where
he wrought his miracles.
I say tawdily and ineffectively and
falsely what was a very precious and sacred experience
with me. This great poet opened to me a whole
world of thinking and feeling, where I had my being
with him in that mystic intimacy, which cannot be
put into words. I at once identified myself not
only with the hero of the poem, but in some so with
the poet himself, when I read “Maud”;
but that was only the first step towards the lasting
state in which his poetry has upon the whole been more
to me than that of any other poet. I have never
read any other so closely and continuously, or read
myself so much into and out of his verse. There
have been times and moods when I have had my questions,
and made my cavils, and when it seemed to me that
the poet was less than I had thought him; and certainly
I do not revere equally and unreservedly all that he
has written; that would be impossible. But when
I think over all the other poets I have read, he is
supreme above them in his response to some need in
me that he has satisfied so perfectly.
Of course, “Maud” seemed
to me the finest poem I had read, up to that time,
but I am not sure that this conclusion was wholly my
own; I think it was partially formed for me by the
admiration of the poem which I felt to be everywhere
in the critical atmosphere, and which had already
penetrated to me. I did not like all parts of
it equally well, and some parts of it seemed thin
and poor (though I would not suffer myself to say
so then), and they still seem so. But there were
whole passages and spaces of it whose divine and perfect
beauty lifted me above life. I did not fully
understand the poem then; I do not fully understand
it now, but that did not and does not matter; for
there something in poetry that reaches the soul by
other enues than the intelligence. Both in this
poem and others of Tennyson, and in every poet that
I have loved, there are melodies and harmonies enfolding
significance that appeared long after I had first
read them, and had even learned them by heart; that
lay weedy in my outer ear and were enough in their
Mere beauty of phrasing, till the time came for them
to reveal their whole meaning. In fact they could
do this only to later and greater knowledge of myself
and others, as every one must recognize who recurs
in after-life to a book that he read when young; then
he finds it twice as full of meaning as it was at first.
I could not rest satisfied with “Maud”;
I sent the same summer to Cleveland for the little
volume which then held all the poet’s work, and
abandoned myself so wholly to it, that for a year I
read no other verse that I can remember. The
volume was the first of that pretty blue-and-gold
series which Ticknor & Fields began to publish in 1856,
and which their imprint, so rarely affixed to an unworthy
book, at once carried far and wide. Their modest
old brown cloth binding had long been a quiet warrant
of quality in the literature it covered, and now this
splendid blossom of the bookmaking art, as it seemed,
was fitly employed to convey the sweetness and richness
of the loveliest poetry that I thought the world had
yet known. After an old fashion of mine, I read
it continuously, with frequent recurrences from each
new poem to some that had already pleased me, and
with a most capricious range among the pieces.
“In Memoriam” was in that book, and the
“Princess”; I read the “Princess”
through and through, and over and over, but I did not
then read “In Memoriam” through, and I
have never read it in course; I am not sure that I
have even yet read every part of it. I did not
come to the “Princess,” either, until
I had saturated my fancy and my memory with some of
the shorter poems, with the “Dream of Fair Women,”
with the “Lotus-Eaters,” with the “Miller’s
Daughter,” with the “Morte d’Arthur,”
with “Edwin Morris, or The Lake,” with
“Love and Duty,” and a score of other
minor and briefer poems. I read the book night
and day, in-doors and out, to myself and to whomever
I could make listen. I have no words to tell
the rapture it was to me; but I hope that in some more
articulate being, if it should ever be my unmerited
fortune to meet that ’sommo poeta’
face to face, it shall somehow be uttered from me to
him, and he will understand how completely he became
the life of the boy I was then. I think it might
please, or at least amuse, that lofty ghost, and that
he would not resent it, as he would probably have
done on earth. I can well understand why the
homage of his worshippers should have afflicted him
here, and I could never have been one to burn incense
in his earthly presence; but perhaps it might be done
hereafter without offence. I eagerly caught up
and treasured every personal word I could find about
him, and I dwelt in that sort of charmed intimacy with
him through his verse, in which I could not presume
nor he repel, and which I had enjoyed in turn with
Cervantes and Shakespeare, without a snub from them.
I have never ceased to adore Tennyson,
though the rapture of the new convert could not last.
That must pass like the flush of any other passion.
I think I have now a better sense of his comparative
greatness, but a better sense of his positive greatness
I could not have than I had at the beginning; and
I believe this is the essential knowledge of a poet.
It is very well to say one is greater than Keats, or
not so great as Wordsworth; that one is or is not
of the highest order of poets like Shakespeare and
Dante and Goethe; but that does not mean anything of
value, and I never find my account in it. I know
it is not possible for any less than the greatest
writer to abide lastingly in one’s life.
Some dazzling comer may enter and possess it for a
day, but he soon wears his welcome out, and presently
finds the door, to be answered with a not-at-home
if he knocks again. But it was only this morning
that I read one of the new last poems of Tennyson
with a return of the emotion which he first woke in
me well-nigh forty years ago. There has been no
year of those many when I have not read him and loved
him with something of the early fire if not all the
early conflagration; and each successive poem of his
has been for me a fresh joy.
He went with me into the world from
my village when I left it to make my first venture
away from home. My father had got one of those
legislative clerkships which used to fall sometimes
to deserving country editors when their party was
in power, and we together imagined and carried out
a scheme for corresponding with some city newspapers.
We were to furnish a daily, letter giving an account
of the legislative proceedings which I was mainly
to write up from material he helped me to get together.
The letters at once found favor with the editors who
agreed to take them, and my father then withdrew from
the work altogether, after telling them who was doing
it. We were afraid they might not care for the
reports of a boy of nineteen, but they did not seem
to take my age into account, and I did not boast of
my youth among the lawmakers. I looked three or
four years older than I was; but I experienced a terrible
moment once when a fatherly Senator asked me my age.
I got away somehow without saying, but it was a great
relief to me when my twentieth birthday came that winter,
and I could honestly proclaim that I was in my twenty-first
year.
I had now the free range of the State
Library, and I drew many sorts of books from it.
Largely, however, they were fiction, and I read all
the novels of Bulwer, for whom I had already a great
liking from ’The Caxtons’ and ‘My
Novel.’ I was dazzled by them, and I thought
him a great writer, if not so great a one as he thought
himself. Little or nothing of those romances,
with their swelling prefaces about the poet and his
function, their glittering criminals, and showy rakes
and rogues of all kinds, and their patrician perfume
and social splendor, remained with me; they may have
been better or worse; I will not attempt to say.
If I may call my fascination with them a passion at
all, I must say that it was but a fitful fever.
I also read many volumes of Zschokke’s admirable
tales, which I found in a translation in the Library,
and I think I began at the same time to find out De
Quincey. These authors I recall out of the many
that passed through my mind almost as tracelessly
as they passed through my hands. I got at some
versions of Icelandic poems, in the metre of “Hiawatha”;
I had for a while a notion of studying Icelandic,
and I did take out an Icelandic grammar and lexicon,
and decided that I would learn the language later.
By this time I must have begun German, which I afterwards
carried so far, with one author at least, as to find
in him a delight only second to that I had in Tennyson;
but as yet Tennyson was all in all to me in poetry.
I suspect that I carried his poems about with me a
great part of the time; I am afraid that I always
had that blue-and-gold Tennyson in my pocket; and I
was ready to draw it upon anybody, at the slightest
provocation. This is the worst of the ardent
lover of literature: he wishes to make every one
else share his rapture, will he, nill he. Many
good fellows suffered from my admiration of this author
or that, and many more pretty, patient maids.
I wanted to read my favorite passages, my favorite
poems to them; I am afraid I often did read, when
they would rather have been talking; in the case of
the poems I did worse, I repeated them. This seems
rather incredible now, but it is true enough, and
absurd as it is, it at least attests my sincerity.
It was long before I cured myself of so pestilent
a habit; and I am not yet so perfectly well of it that
I could be safely trusted with a fascinating book
and a submissive listener. I dare say I could
not have been made to understand at this time that
Tennyson was not so nearly the first interest of life
with other people as he was with me; I must often
have suspected it, but I was helpless against the wish
to make them feel him as important to their prosperity
and well-being as he was to mine. My head was
full of him; his words were always behind my lips;
and when I was not repeating his phrase to myself or
to some one else, I was trying to frame something
of my own as like him as I could. It was a time
of melancholy from ill-health, and of anxiety for the
future in which I must make my own place in the world.
Work, and hard work, I had always been used to and
never afraid of; but work is by no means the whole
story. You may get on without much of it, or you
may do a great deal, and not get on. I was willing
to do as much of it as I could get to do, but I distrusted
my health, somewhat, and I had many forebodings, which
my adored poet helped me to transfigure to the substance
of literature, or enabled me for the time to forget.
I was already imitating him in the verse I wrote;
he now seemed the only worthy model for one who meant
to be as great a poet as I did. None of the authors
whom I read at all displaced him in my devotion, and
I could not have believed that any other poet would
ever be so much to me. In fact, as I have expressed,
none ever has been.