We learn from a memoir of Mr. Campbell in the magazines that he was born at Glasgow in the year 1777, and christened by the hand of the venerable Dr. Reid. He received the rudiments of his education at the grammar-school of his native city under the tuition of Dr. David Alison, a man equally celebrated for the skill and kindness of his mode of imparting knowledge; and at twelve was removed to the University in the same place. Here he became so diligent and successful, that he gained prizes every year. He particularly distinguished himself by translations from the Greek drama; some of which, perhaps, are those which he has preserved at the end of his Pleasures of Hope. The fondness is natural; but they are hardly worthy of their place. At Glasgow he also attended the philosophical lectures of Dr. Millar, by whom he is said to have been habituated to that liberality of opinion, which pervades all his writings. In these, we presume, are included some anonymous ones of a political nature, which he is supposed to have written more from a sense of duty than choice, but which are distinguished, we believe, for the freedom of their politics, Mr. Campbell being a Whig of the old school.—On quitting Glas-
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In his person Mr. Campbell is perhaps under the middle height, with a handsome face inclining to too much delicacy of features and a somewhat prim expression about the mouth. His eyes are keen and expressive; his voice apt to ascend into sharpness, with a considerable Scotch tone. He has experienced the usual sickness of the sedentary and industrious.
The writer of a sketch of Mr. Campbell’s life in the Magazines is inclined to attribute the best part of his poetry to his assiduous study at college; and to doubt, whether he would have made so great an impression on the public “had he not received precisely that education which he did.” We are inclined to suspect, on the other hand, that Mr. Campbell’s “precise” education was far from being the best thing in the world for a man of imagination and feeling. We cannot but think we see in it the main cause why he has not impressed the public still more, and ventured to entertain it oftener. Doubtless, it must have found in him something liable to be thus controulled. He had not the oily richness in him, which enabled Thomson to slip through the cold hands of critics and professors, and tumble into the sunnier waters. But we will venture to say, that if he had gained fewer prizes at college, or been less studious of Latin and lecturers, he would have given way more effectively to his poetical impulses, and not have reminded us so often of the critic and rhetorician. There was an inauspicious look in the title of his first production, the Pleasures of Hope. It seemed written not only because Mr. Rogers’s Pleasures of Memory had been welcomed into the critical circles, but because it was the next thing to writing a prose theme upon the Utility of Expectation. A youth might have been seduced into this by the force of imitation; but on reading the poem, it is impossible not to be struck with the willing union of the author’s genius and his rhetoric. When we took it up the other day, we had not read it for many years, and found we had done it injustice; but the rhetoric keeps a perverse pace with the poetry. The writer is eternally balancing his sentences, round his periods, epigrammatizing his paragraphs; and yet all the while he exhibits so much imagination and sensibility, that one longs to have rescued his too delicate wings from the clippings and stintings of the school, and set him free to wander about the universe. Rhyme, with him, becomes a real chain. He gives the finest glances about him, and afar off, like a bird; spreads his pinions as if to sweep to his object; and is pulled back by his string into a chirp and a flutter. He always seems daunted and anxious. His versification is of the most received fashion; his boldest imaginings recoil into the coldest and most customary personifications. If he could have given up his pretty finishing common-places, his sensibility would sometimes have wanted nothing of vigour as well as tenderness:—
Yes, at the dead of night by Lonna’s steep, The seaman’s cry was heard along the deep; There on his funeral waters, dark and wild, The dying father blest his darling child; Oh! Mercy shield her innocence, he cried, Spent on the prayer his bursting heart, and died. |
Yet there, perhaps, may darker scenes obtrude, Than Fancy fashions in her wildest mood; There shall he pause, with horrent brow, to rate What millions died—that Cæsar might
be great! Or learn the fate that bleeding thousands bore March’d by their Charles to
Dnieper’s swampy shore; First in his wounds, and shivering in the blast, The Swedish soldier sunk—and groan’d his last! File after file the stormy showers benumb, Freeze every standard-sheet, and hush the drum! Horsemen and horse confess’d the bitter pang, And arms and warriors fell with hollow clang! Yet ere he sunk in nature’s last repose, Ere life’s warm torrent in the fountain froze, The dying man to Sweden turn’d his eye, Thought of his home, and clos’d it with a sigh! Imperial Pride look’d sullen on his plight, And Charles beheld—nor shudder’d at the sight!
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We should not have said so much of this early poem, had the line been more strongly marked between the powers that produced it, and those of his later ones.
The Gertrude of Wyoming however is a higher thing, and has stuff in it that should have made it still better. The author here takes heart, and seems resolved to return to Spenser and the uncritical side of poetry; but his heart fails him. He only hampers himself with Spenser’s stanza, and is worried the more with classical inversions and gentilities. He does not like that his hero should wear a common hat and boots; so he spoils a beautiful situation after the following critical fashion:—
A steed, whose rein hung loosely o’er his arm, He led dismounted; ere his leisur’d pace, Amid the brown leaves, could her ear alarm, Close he had come, and worshipped for a space Those downcast features;—she her lovely face Uplift on one whose lineament, and frame Were youth and manhood’s intermingled grace: Iberian seem’d his boot—his race the same, And well his Spanish plume his lofty looks became. |
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“The stock-dove plaining through its gloom profound,” |
While, here and there, a solitary star Flush’d in the darkening firmament of June. |
The stoic of the woods—the man without a tear— |
—Like Morning brought by Night. |
Mr. Campbell’s favourite authors appear to be Virgil and Racine; which may serve to shew both the natural and artificial bent of his genius. He has imagination and tenderness, but he has also a great opinion of criticism; so he leans to those poets, ancient and modern, who have at once a genius from nature, and the most regular passports for the reputation of it from art. He forgets that what the critics most approve of in the long run, as distinguished from the more intuitive preferences of the uncritical lovers of poetry, obtains the approbation because it flatters their egotism with the nearest likeness to their own faculty. Mr. Campbell’s own criticism would be perhaps worse than it is in this respect, if it were really any thing else but ingenious and elegant writing. But there is a constant struggle in him between the poetical and the critical, which he doubtless takes for a friendly one; and in his prose he is always slipping from an exercise foreign to his nature into mere grace and fancy. After reading the Essay prefixed to his Selection of English Poetry, we recollected nothing but three things, which are characteristic enough;—first, that he seemed disagreeably mystified at the great praises bestowed on our old dramatists by certain living writers;—second, that he allows Shakspeare to put us wherever he pleases in a first act, but protests against a repetition of the illegality in a second; and third, that he has written a considerable number of beautiful similes.*
* Of the share, also characteristic, which Mr. Campbell has had in the unlucky controversy on Pope, we need not say any thing; especially after the
masterly settlement of it, to which we
referred in our last.
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