21. Poems. By JEAN INGELOW. Boston: Roberts Brothers. 1863 pp. 256. "JEAN INGELOW" has such a very odd look that one feels inclined, at first, to believe it a pseudonyme. It sounds very much like one of those names which a young author might choose for his heroine after the fashion that came in with "Jane Eyre," plain but not vulgar, musical in an unpretending way, and attractive by a spice of oddity to ears somewhat palled by the high-sounding titles that were once the mode. A doubt about the name might lead us to suspect that the sex also was a device. If these poems are written by a woman, they are remarkable for a certain firmness of thought and style; if by a man, for sweetness and delicacy of sentiment. This is already saying a great deal in their praise. Assuming them to be the first productions of a young woman, they are full of promise, for they have a simplicity that is very uncommon in female verse-writing. It is rather singular that women, who write letters with so much ease and grace as to have almost a monopoly of writing them well, are apt to seek originality in poetry in quaintness of phrase and overstraining of sentiment. They seem to mistake vehemence for force, and become harsh in endeavoring to escape the control of that refinement of organization which gives to their intellect its most charming quality. Mrs. Browning, in some of her later poems, was as rugged and obscure as the elder Edda, and Miss Rossetti seems to us in danger of throwing away a really fine imagination by choosing to be whimsical when she might be original. There is no falser axiom than that which denies sex to mind. The poems of Miss Ingelow, like those of all young writers, show traces of the influence of the prevailing school. There are tricks of verse and turns of phrase which she has caught of Tennyson and Charles Kingsley, and there is too much of that landscape-painting which applies the principles of Pre-Raphaelitism to poetry, where they are out of place, and gives all the particulars that can be found by an eye at leisure instead of the few essential features into which a scene is generalized by a mind under strong emotion. Miss Ingelow, as young poets are wont, strives to say all that can be said, rather than to leave out all but what must be said. But making all the allowances which an honest criticism should, there is quite enough in her volume to give her a place among the better poets of the day. There is a genuine originality in her choice of subjects and her conception of situations and motives. She has a true eye for what is lovely and touching, both in the outward world and the inward one of the emotions, and a fine instinct of the way in which each reproduces itself in the other, giving or taking, as the case may be, the hue of its own sentiment. Some of her lyrics have the highest charm of feeling and measure; fresh and full of unexpected turns, they have the freedom and simplicity, the delightful nonchalance, of nursery rhymes, but such as are sung only by the Muse over the cradles of her favorites. They have that exhilarating want of purpose, that singing for mere singing's sake, that seemed to be lost since the day of the Old Dramatists. Miss Ingelow raises high expectations, which we have no doubt her maturer powers will fully justify. 22. Poems in the Dorset Dialect. By WILLIAM BARNES. Boston: Crosby and Nichols. 1864. 12mo. pp. viii. and 207. We need do no more than announce the republication of this volume, for it comes to us with its reputation already made. Mr. Barnes is not a peasant writing in his native patois, but a scholar who has made himself perfect master of a dialect, for such the language of Dorsetshire almost deserves to be called; not quite in the same sense as Lowland Scotch, the French of Jasmin, the German of Hebel, or the Italian of Meli, but still a dialect in its retention of archaic forms and words peculiar to itself. These poems, laying no claim to any very high imaginative power, have the merit, almost as rare, of nature and simplicity. Mr. Barnes, with a true sense of his own strong point, called a former volume "Homely Rhymes." But his verse is homely only in the best sense, that it deals with household sentiment and the mirth or sadness of the fireside. He writes, like Robert de Brunne, "For the luf of symple men, That strange English can not ken, That the Latyn ne Frankys conn." People that are reasonably tired of metaphysics in rhyme, who have tastes not yet so dulled that they need to have even passion red-peppered for them, will find real solace and refreshment in these poems. In subject and treatment, they are sweet, kindly, and rural. Nor is the dialect such as to make them hard reading. There is hardly a stanza in the volume which cannot be made English by a change of spelling, a curious illustration of what we said before, - that Mr. Barnes writes in a language which he has acquired, and not to which he was born. This fact, however, as the tongue is neither foreign nor dead, does not in the least detract from the perfectly easy naturalness of the poems. EDITORIAL NOTE. THE publishers of the North American Review have had the honor of receiving the following letter from the President of the United States. "MESSRS. CROSBY AND NICHOLS : "EXECUTIVE MANSION, Washington, January 16, 1864. "GENTLEMEN: The number for this month and year of the North American Review was duly received, and for which please accept my thanks. Of course I am not the most impartial judge; yet, with due allowance for this, I venture to hope that the article entitled 'The President's Policy' will be of value to the country. I fear I am not quite worthy of all which is therein kindly said of me personally. "The sentence of twelve lines, commencing at the top of page 252, I could wish to be not exactly as it is. In what is there expressed, the writer has not correctly understood me. I have never had a theory that Secession could absolve States or people from their obligations. Precisely the contrary is asserted in the Inaugural Address; and it was because of my belief in the continuation of these obligations, that I was puzzled, for a time, as to denying the legal rights of those citizens who remained individually innocent of treason or rebellion. mean no more now than to merely call attention to this point. "Yours respectfully, But I "A. LINCOLN.” The sentence to which the President refers is the following: "Even so long ago as when Mr. Lincoln, not yet convinced of the danger and magnitude of the crisis, was endeavoring to persuade himself of Union majorities at the South, and to carry on a war that was half peace, in the hope of a peace that would have been all war, - while he was still enforcing the Fugitive Slave Law, under some theory that Secession, however it might absolve States from their obligations, could not escheat them of their claims under the Constitution, and that slaveholders in rebellion had alone, among mortals, the privilege of having their cake and eating it at the same time, — the enemies of free government were striving to persuade the people that the war was an Abolition crusade. To rebel without reason was proclaimed as one of the rights of man, while it was carefully kept out of sight that to suppress rebellion is the first duty of government." [Nothing could have been further from the intention of the Editors than to misrepresent the opinions of the President. They merely meant that, in their judgment, the policy of the Administration was at first such as practically to concede to any rebel who might choose to profess loyalty, rights under the Constitution whose corresponding obligations he repudiated.] INDEX TO THE NINETY-EIGHTH VOLUME OF THE North American Review. A Chacun selon ses Euvres, Mgr. l'Évêque Alice of Monmouth, Stedman's, noticed, 292. Ambrose, The ship, 151. Ambulance System, The, article on, 74-86 Ambulance System in the Crimean vehicles and men, 81, 82- evils of Astronomy, Manual of Spherical and Prac- Barnard, J. G., his Report of Engineer Barnes, W., his Poems in the Dorset Dia- Barry, W. F., his Report of Engineer and Beecher, Lyman, his Autobiography, no- Bible and Slavery, The, article on, 48- -- society, 58 - Bible, Dictionary of the, Smith's, noticed, 582. Bible View of Slavery, Hopkins's, re- Bibliotheca Sacra, The, article on, 87–104 96 - its origin, 88-Professor Park's edi- Brace, Charles L., his Races of the Old British Army and Miss Nightingale, The, Butler, General, in New Orleans, Parton's, Carlyle, W. H. Prescott's estimate of, 45. Chaucer's Legende of Good Women, no- Chauvenet, William, his Manual of Astron- Child, F. J., his Observations on the Lan- Christianity, the Religion of Nature, Pea- Clark, Edward L., his Daleth, noticed, 604. Constitution, The, Addresses of Morse, Cur- - - - - Craik, George L., his English of Shake- Cudjo's Cave, Trowbridge's, noticed, 614. Daleth, Clark's, noticed, 604. Dawson, Henry, his edition of the Foederal- De Bow's Review, referred to, 112. Dictionary of the Bible, Smith's, noticed, 582. Didot, Ambr. Firmin, his Memoirs of Dred Scott Decision, the, referred to, 55. Edgewood, My Farm of, noticed, 288. Edwards, Professor, as a scholar, 89. English, J. L., his references to W. H. English Literature, History of Craik's, no- Evangelists, Hours with the, Nichols's, no- Examen Critique de la Vie de Jésus de M. Felix, R. P., his M. Renan et sa Vie de Federalist, The, Dawson's edition of, no- Fones, Thomas, 143 - Mary, Martha, Sam- Freedmen, New England Educational Com- Heard, Isaac V. D., his History of the Sioux History of English Literature, Craik's, no- Hopkins, John H., his Bible View of Slav- Hoyt, Joseph G., his Miscellaneous Writ- Hunt, Charles Haven, his Life of Edward Huss, John, Gillett's Life and Times of, Immorality in Politics, article on, 105–127 |