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‘Of Modern English Poetry’, Letters on Literature (1889)

from 3 - ON WRITERS AND WRITING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2017

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Summary

To Mr. Arthur Wincott, Topeka, Kansas.

Dear Wincott, –You write to me, from your ‘bright home in the setting sun,’ with the flattering information that you have read my poor ‘Letters to Dead Authors.’ You are kind enough to say that you wish I would write some ‘Letters to Living Authors;’ but that, I fear, is out of the question.

A thoughtful critic in the Spectator has already remarked that the great men of the past would not care for my shadowy epistles – if they could read them. Possibly not; but, like Prior, ‘I may write till they can spell’– an exercise of which ghosts are probably as incapable as was Matt's little Mistress of Quality. But Living Authors are very different people, and it would be perilous, as well as impertinent, to direct one's comments on them literally, in the French phrase, ‘to their address.’ Yet there is no reason why a critic should not adopt the epistolary form.

Our old English essays, the papers in the Tatler and Spectator, were originally nothing but letters. The vehicle permits a touch of personal taste, perhaps of personal prejudice. So I shall write my ‘Letters on Literature,’ of the present and of the past, English, American, ancient, or modern, to you, in your distant Kansas, or to such other correspondents as are kind enough to read these notes.

Poetry has always the precedence in these discussions. Poor Poetry! She is an ancient maiden of good family, and is led out first at banquets, though many would prefer to sit next some livelier and younger Muse, the lady of fiction, or even the chattering soubrette of journalism. Seniores priores: Poetry, if no longer very popular, is a dame of the worthiest lineage, and can boast a long train of gallant admirers, dead and gone. She has been much in courts. The old Greek tyrants loved her; great Rhamses seated her at his right hand; every prince had his singers. Now we dwell in an age of democracy, and Poetry wins but a feigned respect, more out of courtesy, and for old friendship's sake, than for liking. Though so many write verse, as in Juvenal's time, I doubt if many read it. ‘None but minstrels list of sonneting.’ The purchasing public, for poetry, must now consist chiefly of poets, and they are usually poor.

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The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Selected Writings of Andrew Lang
Literary Criticism, History, Biography
, pp. 143 - 151
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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