| RAJGOPAL NIDAMBOOR
Great literature is simply language
charged with meaning to the utmost possible degree.
Do you know that
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth got together
and published Lyrical Ballads With A Few Other Poems,
in an edition of 500 copies, over 200+ years ago? Maybe, you
sure do. Maybe, you'd also know that the whole idea was exciting,
all right. But, it wasn't an earth-shattering event, really.
Rather, it was a humble beginning. But, beneath the surface
it masked a great future, all the same. Funny isn't it? Yes,
because it was an age of literature driven by factors other
than mere, or exaggerated, hype and hoopla.
More than being a momentous artistic union
between two of the most gifted, youthful writers, Lyrical
Ballads brought in its wake a nuclear explosion -- something
that wasn't common to literature in the 1790s. And, as the
duo set out to change and transform the content, language,
and direction of poetry, the result was not just outstanding,
but amazingly successful. It bid fair to a new milestone --
poetry of the people. It was also the evolution of a novel
era, or fresh poetic sensibility and, most importantly, the
birth of the Romantics.
The forerunner to Lyrical Ballads
was, indeed, Coleridge's The Ancient Mariner, formulated
at almost the same time: a watershed, all right. It introduced
a memorable character, with a glittering eye and skinny hand,
who halts a restless wedding guest to relate his gripping
tale of a voyage too strange -- in the form of a brilliant
narrative poem. In so doing, it also more than subscribed
to Wordsworth's celebrated, sublime theory: "that passion,
rather than reason, is the realm of poetic muse."
Interestingly, it was no small wonder
why Wordsworth wrote in his preface to Lyrical Ballads
that the majority of its poems were experiments, "written
chiefly to ascertain how far the language of conversation
in the middle and lower classes of society is adapted to the
purposes of poetic pleasure." His explanatory note was
defensive. But, it was also a categorical declaration of his
artistic intentions to depart from the past -- of the previous
era's poetic form.
The structure of Lyrical Ballads
was also in sharp contrast to English poetry of the mid-1700s,
exemplified by Alexander Pope's rhyming couplets -- couplets
that employed elevated, witty sounds, and an urban tenor,
to please or satirise the social elite. Wordsworth called
such excursions "gaudiness and inane phraseology in poetry."
He, therefore, called upon his readers not to let poetry stand
in the way of their gratification, and exemplified his 'credo'
in his foreword to the 1800 edition of the volume: "All
good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings;
it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity."
As good literature would have it, Lyrical
Ballads soon became an influential book of poetry to gifted
minds. William Hazlitt, then a young essayist, was cock-a-hoop,
with its "sense of a new style and a new spirit."
He declared: "It had to me something of the effect that
arises from turning up of the fresh soil, or of the first
welcome breath of Spring." Hazlitt's clear commendation
summarised the shape of things to come -- the starting point
for the Romantic Movement. It was what the doctor had ordered
for the likes of P B Shelley, Lord Byron, John Keats et
al to explore and chart a new territory -- one that led
them to tinker with new poetic consciousness.
It's time we culled something from the
dazzling chemistry of Lyrical Ballads -- its opening,
and closing, poems, just to celebrate the apparent.
It is an ancyent Marinere,
And he stoppeth one of three:
'By thy long grey beard and thy glittering eye
'Now wherefore stoppest me?
'
-- Coleridge, The Rime Of The Ancyent
Marinere
And now, with gleams of half-extinguish'd
thought,
With many recognitions dim and faint,
And somewhat of a sad perplexity,
The picture of the mind revives again:
While here I stand, not only with the sense
Of present pleasure, but with pleasing thoughts
That in this moment there is life and food
For future years.
-- Wordsworth, Lines Written A Few Miles
Above Tintern Abbey
As a matter of fact, Coleridge and Wordsworth
were more than just great friends. They walked together the
same path -- with words. Both had attended Cambridge, and each
had launched writing careers -- because, there was nothing
else to do. Success, for them, did not come easily -- on a
platter. The catalyst to their great friendship was Wordsworth's
charming sister, Dorothy, who started a journal as witness
to their frequent trysts. She was a good listener; gifted
too. She made copious notes [for her brother's poems] whenever
William walked and dictated things -- nature being his psychical
backdrop.
Lyrical Ballads was conceived and created
on strolls, with 'Let-nature-be-your-teacher' sort of contemplative
parable -- the essential of the essentials. It was very much
a case of 'action replay' of The Ancient Mariner, which
had also evolved during the now famous Coleridge-Wordsworth
walks in Somersetshire -- one that was also, very interestingly,
more than a 'coming-into-being' spin-off for their collaboration
with Lyrical Ballads.
Wordsworth and Coleridge's psyche were
empathetic: one that accorded them a new plan of action, and
a book of "the charm of novelty to things of every day,"
to quote Wordsworth. For Coleridge, the work more than represented
"persons and characters supernatural, or at least romantic."
In today's world, both would have hit the jackpot, not to
speak of a fat advance, much media embellishment, or build-up,
and what not. Or, nothing of the kind. Difficult to say, nevertheless.
However, the early reviews for Lyrical Ballads, a book
of twenty-three poems, were complacent, and even indifferent.
Be that as it may, that the 'promising'
duo had found a publisher, Joseph Cottle, himself a would-be-poet,
was not just passé. Cottle, thanks to his disposition
for lavishness, had even paid thirty guineas for the copyright.
It was a decision he regretted later. When sales figures were
unimpressive, Cottle was only too happy to transfer the copyright
back to the authors. He even called the book "worth nothing."
It was, of course, not good management, or marketing savvy.
As new editions of the book began to roll, appreciation for
it began to diffuse. The authors soon found their mark, or
niche. A little while later, Lyrical Ballads also became
valuable property -- a literary touchstone like no other. But,
something had to go amiss. Sort of. Blame it on human 'fallibility,'
if not egoistic pretensions. In the later editions, Wordsworth,
"a very great man," downplayed Coleridge's contribution,
and began to add new lyrics of his own -- to pursue his own
personal goals. Fortunately, his 'excursions' did not undermine
the fulsome truth behind the collaboration, or the book.
All the same, Lyrical Ballads was
quite truly a literary revolution. It still is -- for those
who salute good books. It will, doubtless, continue to hold
its charm so long as the world of words, in print, or E-medium,
exists. Reason? Notwithstanding several editions, including
facsimiles, the book has cast a lasting impression, and remained
a treasured piece of art -- a subject related to general and
scholarly interest. More than that, it's a ground-breaking
work that changed the course of literary history. It was to
the Romantic Movement, what the microchip was to Bill Gates, music to Amadeus Wolfgang Mozart, and the pole-vault
to Sergei Bubka.
Two centuries+ of Lyrical Ballads
are, therefore, a literary landmark.
It is also more than a reminder of how
things were in the Golden Age: of how inferior we would all be
without its presence, even if it be too distant from the
'make-believe' expanse of our time.
|