EXCEPTING on the ground that youth
is the age of vain fantasy, there is no accounting
for the fact that young men and young women of poetical
temperament should so frequently assume to look upon
an early demise for themselves as the most desirable
thing in the world. Though one may incidentally
be tempted to agree with them in the abstract, one
cannot help wondering. That persons who are exceptionally
fortunate in their environment, and in private do
not pretend to be otherwise, should openly announce
their intention of retiring at once into the family
tomb, is a problem not easily solved. The public
has so long listened to these funereal solos that
if a few of the poets thus impatient to be gone were
to go, their departure would perhaps be attended by
that resigned speeding which the proverb invokes on
behalf of the parting guest.
The existence of at least one magazine
editor would, I know, have a shadow lifted from it.
At this writing, in a small mortuary basket under
his desk are seven or eight poems of so gloomy a nature
that he would not be able to remain in the same room
with them if he did not suspect the integrity of their
pessimism. The ring of a false coin is not more
recognizable than that of a rhyme setting forth a simulated
sorrow.
The Miss Gladys who sends a poem entitled
“Forsaken,” in which she addresses death
as her only friend, makes pictures in the editor’s
eyes. He sees, among other dissolving views,
a little hoyden in magnificent spirits, perhaps one
of this season’s social buds, with half a score
of lovers ready to pluck her from the family stem a
rose whose countless petals are coupons. A caramel
has disagreed with her, or she would not have written
in this despondent vein. The young man who seeks
to inform the world in eleven anæmic stanzas of terze
rime that the cup of happiness has been forever
dashed from his lip (he appears to have but one) and
darkly intimates that the end is “nigh”
(rhyming affably with “sigh"), will probably
be engaged a quarter of a century from now in making
similar declarations. He is simply echoing some
dysthymic poet of the past reaching out
with some other man’s hat for the stray nickel
of your sympathy.
This morbidness seldom accompanies
genuine poetic gifts. The case of David Gray,
the young Scottish poet who died in 1861, is an instance
to the contrary. His lot was exceedingly sad,
and the failure of health just as he was on the verge
of achieving something like success justified his
profound melancholy; but that he tuned this melancholy
and played upon it, as if it were a musical instrument,
is plainly seen in one of his sonnets.
In Monckton Milnes’s (Lord Houghton’s)
“Life and Letters of John Keats” it is
related that Keats, one day, on finding a stain of
blood upon his lips after coughing, said to his friend
Charles Brown: “I know the color of that
blood; it is arterial blood; I cannot be deceived.
That drop is my death-warrant. I must die.”
Who that ever read the passage could forget it?
David Gray did not, for he versified the incident as
happening to himself and appropriated, as his own,
Keats’s comment:
Last night, on coughing
slightly with sharp pain,
There came arterial
blood, and with a sigh
Of absolute grief I
cried in bitter vein,
That drop is my death-warrant;
I must die.
The incident was likely enough a personal
experience, but the comment should have been placed
in quotation marks. I know of few stranger things
in literature than this poet’s dramatization
of another man’s pathos. Even Keats’s
epitaph Here lies one whose name
was writ in water finds an echo
in David Gray’s Below lies one whose name
was traced in sand. Poor Gray was at least
the better prophet.