[Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature by Margaret Ball]@TWC D-Link bookSir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature CHAPTER IV 10/25
I could have made a very different hand of it, indeed, had the order of the day been _pour dechirer_."[279] If Scott had to make an effort in writing the review, he made it with abundant energy.
Some absurdities are indeed mentioned, but various particular passages are characterized in the most enthusiastic way, with such phrases as "horribly sublime," "impressive and affecting," "reminds us of the Satan of Milton, yet stands the comparison," "all the gloomy power of Dante." It may be noted that Scott used Milton's name rather freely in comparisons, and that for Dante his admiration was altogether unimpassioned,[280] but the review, after all, is on the whole very laudatory.[281] In it Scott awards to Southey the palm for a surpassing share of imagination, which he elsewhere gave to Coleridge.
Possibly Scott was the less inclined to be severe over the absurdities of _Kehama_ because Southey agreed with his own theory as to the evil of fastidious corrections.[282] At any rate he seems to have been quite sincere in saying to Southey, in connection with the poet-laureateship which, according to Scott's suggestion, was offered to him in 1813, "I am not such an ass as not to know that you are my better in poetry, though I have had, probably but for a time, the tide of popularity in my favour."[283] Much as Scott admired Southey, Wordsworth, and Coleridge, he considered Byron the great poetical genius of the period.
He once spoke of Byron as the only poet of transcendent talents that England had had since Dryden.[284] At another time his comment was: "He wrote from impulse, never from effort; and therefore I have always reckoned Burns and Byron the most genuine poetical geniuses of my time, and half a century before me.
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