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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift
>
Lesser Verse Writers
> His Versification
His light Satirical Verse and its excellence
His productions in Prose:
Essays,
and
Dialogues of the Dead
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.
VI.
Lesser Verse Writers
.
§ 9. His Versification.
Priors epigrams are not uniformly good and, occasionally, wanting in restraint; perhaps, his genius as a writer lacked the concentration necessary for the epigram proper; his happiest effort in this direction, the celebrated lines
Written in the Beginning of Mezerays History of France,
part cited above, is, after all, less an epigram than a train of thought suggested by the subject. As a whole, Priors shorter poems, of which the entire series seems at last to be in our hands, mark him as the earliest, as he was one of the most consummate, masters of English familiar verse. In his own age, he had no rival in this kind of composition but Swift; that his success in it was more rapid and more widespread than Swifts may be attributed to his greater sympathy with the ordinary moods of the human mind, though it was primarily due to his more diversified skill in the management of metre and to his originality in the use of it.
15
In his
History of English Prosody,
23
Saintsbury has entered very fully into this aspect of Priors poetic genius, which, though it had of course not escaped the attention of critics, had hardly before received full consideration. He has directed attention to the fact that, though Prior wrote, not only his
Henry and Emma
and not a little of his other amorous poetry, but, also, his
Solomon,
which he esteemed his masterpiece, in the heroic couplet, he was far from entertaining a preference for the metre to which Dryden had assured its prerogative position.
24
In the
Preface
to
Solomon,
he goes out of his way to dwell on its shortcomings. He explains how the Heroic with continued Rhime, as used by Donne and his contemporaries carrying the Sense of one Verse most commonly into another, was found too dissolute and wild, and came very often too near Prose. On the other hand, the same couplet as Davenant and Waller corrected, and Dryden perfected it, appears to him too confined for the freedom, and too broken and weak for the grandeur, of epic, as well as tedious in a poem of any considerable length. These objections he endeavoured, in his own practice, to meet in various ways. Like most of the poets of his own age and of that immediately preceding it, he sought refuge in the wide haven of pindarics, not without a certain amount of success, but without leaving his mark upon this measure, of which the day was on the wane in English poetry. In the conviction that he who writes in Rhimes, dances in Fetters, he also essayed blank verse; but his efforts in this metre cannot be called successful; they comprise his translations of
The First and Second Hymns of Calliomachus,
as well as the
Prelude to a Tale from Boccace
and another fragment from
The Georgics.
25
The characteristic mark of his blank verse in the longer pieces is an excessive use of double-endings, which arrest, rather than promote, its flow. Of more significance is his endeavour to employ, and to improve, the Spenserian stanza, for which, in the preface to his
Ode to the Queen,
he expresses high admiration, however imperfect may be the parallel which he draws between the genius of Spenser and that of Horace. The change introduced by him into the scheme of rimes cannot be said to contribute to sustain the rise of the stanza towards its close; but the comparative failure of the attempt was mainly owing to Priors inability to rise, even with the help of an occasional archaism, to the grand manner of Spenser.
26
16
Note 23
. Vol. ii, pp. 4235.
[
back
]
Note 24
. See above as to Priors feeling towards Dryden, which it would be absurd to describe as jealousy, but which was certainly, in a measure, antipathetic.
[
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]
Note 25
. Waller, vol. ii, pp. 339 and 537.
[
back
]
Note 26
. Over his attempt to imitate Chaucer, it is better to draw a veil. It may be worth nothing that his
Translation of an Epitaph upon Glanville, Bishop of Rochester
(
ibid.,
vol. ii, p. 356) is an amusing effort in English hexameters.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
His light Satirical Verse and its excellence
His productions in Prose:
Essays,
and
Dialogues of the Dead
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