Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Critical and Biographical Essay by Alfred H. MilesJohn Keble (17921866)
J
Keble’s poems are contained in three volumes of verse: “The Christian Year” (1827); “Lyra Innocentium; Thoughts in Verse on Christian Children, their Ways and Privileges” (1846); and “Miscellaneous Poems,” with a Preface by Canon Moberly, published posthumously in 1869. “The Christian Year” had its origin in the accumulation of a number of poems written at different times on Church festivals, and the idea, on the part of the poet, that a complete series of such poems on the successive seasons of the Church year would help to religious edification and stimulate Church life. Published anonymously in two volumes, in 1827, the work became an immediate success. Ninety-five editions of several thousand copies each were called for during the poet’s lifetime, and many editions have been issued since his death. It is upon this work that Keble’s reputation as a poet will rest. “If there is one quality which, more than another, may be said to mark his writings,” says Canon Moberly, in his Preface to the posthumous volume of Keble’s poems, “it is their intense and absolute veracity. Never for a moment is the very truth sacrificed to effect. I will venture to say with confidence that there is not a sentiment to be found elevated or amplified beyond what he really felt; nor, I would add, even an epithet that goes beyond his actual and true thought. What he was in life and character, that he was, transparently, in every line he wrote,—entirely, always, reverently true.” This characteristic will probably account for both the excellences and the defects of his work, as well as for its popularity. Absolute sincerity counts for much in an appeal to the public mind, and the man who has no doubts is, other characteristics being equal, always surest of a popular following. The poet’s fidelity to the principle of truth made him faithful in his treatment of nature, which he none the less penetrated with a seer’s insight, and transfigured with a poet’s imagination. On the other hand, his determination to preserve literal accuracy in phrase and epithet while trammelled with the difficulties of rhyme and rhythm, may be responsible for the crudities and obscurities which mar his work. “Wordsworth,” says Canon Moberly, “having read ‘The Christian Year,’ expressed his high sense of its beauty and also of the occasional imperfections of the verse, in the following characteristic terms: ‘It is very good,’ he said; ‘so good, that, if it were mine, I would write it all over again.’” Dr. Pusey alleged that Wordsworth actually proposed to Keble that they should go over the work together with a view to removing the blemishes. Notwithstanding drawbacks, however, Keble stands admittedly among the foremost of the sacred poets of the century, and he does so by reason of his superior poetic equipment.
Many writers of sacred verse employ poetic forms for didactic purposes, because they find them effective for inculcating doctrine and disseminating truth: they are churchmen first and poets afterwards. But Keble was much more than a writer of hymns and poems upon sacred subjects. Nature made him a poet, and circumstances made him a churchman; and had circumstances predisposed him otherwise he would still have been a poet, and might still have won distinction by his verse. Dean Stanley, in Ward’s “English Poets,” says, “Keble was not a sacred, but in the best sense of the word, a secular poet. It is not David only, but the Sibyl, whose accents we catch in his inspirations. The ‘sword in myrtle drest,’ of Harmodius and Aristogeiton, ‘The many twinkling smile of ocean,’ from Æschylus, are images as familiar to him as ‘Bethlehem’s glade,’ or ‘Carmel’s haunted strand.’ Not George Herbert or Cowper, but Wordsworth, Scott, and perhaps more than all Southey, are the English poets that kindled his flame and coloured his diction.” But though it may be easily proved that Keble was more than a sacred poet, and that he is one of the few writers of sacred verse who are entitled to rank among the general poets, it is clear that his proper classification is with those who consecrate their powers to religious purposes and didactic ends. Dean Stanley pointed out how in his writings the poet is often broader than the churchman; but this is only another way of saying that the man was better than his creed, and this might well be where the man was so true and the creed so narrow.
In the “Lyra Innocentium” there is a short poem on “The Death of the New Baptized.”
One saddens to think that were the rite of baptism but unperformed, according to Keble the doctrinaire, the simile of Keble the poet could not apply. But if this shows the narrowness of the churchman, the following verses from his poem, “The Waterfall,” in the same work, will show the breadth of the poet:—