Samuel Wesley (1662 - April 5, 1735), is now known as the father of
a great religious leader, John Wesley; in his own time he was known to many as a poet and a writer of controversial prose.
His poetic career began in 1685 with
the publication of Maggots, a collection of juvenile verses on trivial subjects,
the preface to which, a frothy concoction, apologizes to the reader
because the book is neither grave nor gay. The first poem, "On a Maggot,"
is composed in hudibrastics, with a diction obviously Butlerian, and it is
followed by facetious poetic dialogues and by Pindarics of the Cowleian sort
but on such subjects as "On the Grunting of a Hog." In 1688 Wesley took his
B.A, at Exeter College, Oxford, following which he became a naval chaplain
and, in 1690, rector of South Ormsby; he became rector of Epworth in 1695.
During the run of the Athenian Gazette (1691-1697) he joined with [[Richard
Sault]] and John Norris in assisting John Dunton , the promoter of the undertaking.
His second venture in poetry, the Life of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour,
an epic largely in heroic couplets with a prefatory discourse on heroic
poetry, appeared in 1693, was reissued in 1694, and was honored with a second
edition in 1697. In 1695 he dutifully came forward with Elegies, lamenting
the deaths of Queen Mary II and Archbishop Tillotson. An Epistle to a Friend
concerning Poetry (1700) was followed by at least four other volumes of verse,
the last of which was issued in 1717. His poetry appears to have had readers
on a certain level, but it stirred up little pleasure among wits, writers,
or critics. Judith Drake confessed that she was lulled to sleep by
Blackmore's Prince Arthur and by Wesley's "heroics" (Essay in Defence of the
Female Sex, 1696, p. 50). And he was satirized as a mare poetaster in Garth's
Dispensary, in Swift's The Battle of the Books, and in the earliest issues
of the Dunciad. Nobody today would care to defend his poetry for its esthetic
merits.
For a few years in the early eighteenth century Wesley found himself
in the vortex of controversy. Brought up in the dissenting tradition, he
had swerved into conformity at some point during the 1680's, possibly under
the influence of Tillotson, whom he greatly admired (of. Epistle to a
Friend, pp. 5-6). In 1702 there appeared his Letter from a Country Divine
to his friend in London concerning the education of dissenters in their private
academies, apparently written about 1693. This attack upon dissenting
academies was published at an unfortunate time, when the public mind
was inflamed by the intolerance of overzealous churchmen. Wesley was furiously
answered; he replied in A Defence of a Letter (1704), and again in
A Reply to Mr. Palmer's Vindication (1707). It is scarcely to Wesley's credit
that in this quarrel he stood shoulder to shoulder with that most hot-headed
of all contemporary bigots, Henry Sacheverell. His prominence in
the controversy earned him the ironic compliments of Defoe, who recalled
that our "Mighty Champion of this very High-Church Cause" had once written
a poem to satirize frenzied Tories (Review, II, no. 87, Sept. 22, 1705).
About a week later Defoe, having got wind of a collection being taken up,
for Wesley--who in consequence of a series of misfortunes was badly in
debt--intimated that High-Church pamphleteering had turned out very profitably
for both Lesley and Wesley (Oct. 2, 1705). But in such snarling
and bickering Wesley was out of his element, and, he seems to have avoided
future quarrels.
His literary criticism is small in bulk. But though it is neither
brilliant nor well written (Wesley apparently composed at a break-neck
clip), it is not without interest. Pope observed in 1730 that he was a
"learned" man (letter to Swift, in Works, ed. Elwin-Courthope, VII, 184).
The observation was correct, but it should be added that Wesley matured
at the end of an age famous for its great learning, an age whose most distinguished
poet was so much the scholar that he appeared more the pedant
than the gentleman to critics of the succeeding era; Wesley was not singular
for erudition among his seventeenth-century contemporaries.
The "Essay on Heroic Poetry," serving as Preface to The Life of Our
Blessed Lord and Saviour, reveals something of its author's erudition.
Among the critics, he was familiar with Aristotle, Horace, Longinus, Dlonysius
of Halicarnasseus, Heinsius, Bochart, Balzac, Rapin, Le Bossu, and
Boileau. But this barely hints at the extent of his learning. In the
notes on the poem itself the author displays an interest in classical
scholarship, Biblical commentary, ecclesiastical history, scientific inquiry,
linguistics and philology, British antiquities, and research into the
history, customs, architecture, and geography of the Holy Land; he shows,
an intimate acquaintance with Grotius, Henry Hammond, Joseph Mede, Spanheim,
Sherlock, Lightfoot, and Gregory, with Philo, Josephus, Fuller,
Walker, Camden, and Kircher; and he shows an equal readiness to draw upon
Cudworth's True Intellectual System and Boyle's new theories concerning
the nature of light. In view of such a breadth of knowledge it is somewhat
surprising to find him quoting as extensively as he does in the "Essay"
from Le Bossu and Rapin, and apparently leaning heavily upon them.
The "Essay" was composed at a time when the prestige of Rymer and
neo-Aristotelianism in England was already declining, and though Wesley
expressed some admiration for Rapin and Le Bossu, he is by no means docile
under their authority. Whatever the weight of authority, he says,
"I see no cause why Poetry should not be brought to the Test [of reason],
as well as Divinity...." As to the sacred example of Homer, who based his
great epic on mythology, Wesley remarks, "But this [mythology] being now
antiquated, I cannot think we are oblig'd superstitiously to follow his
Example, any more than to make Horses speak, as he does that of Achilles."
To the question of the formidable Boileau, "What Pleasure can it be to
hear the howlings of repining Lucifer?" our critic responds flippantly,
"I think 'tis easier to answer than to find out what shew of Reason he had
for asking it, or why Lucifer mayn't howl as pleasantly as either Cerberus,
or Knoeladus." Without hesitation or apology he takes issue with
Rapin's conception of Decorum in the epic. But Wesley is empiricist as
well as rationalist, and the judgment of authority can be upset by appeal
to the court of experience. To Balzac's suggestion that, to avoid difficult
and local proper names in poetry, generalized terms be used, such as
Ill-luck for the Fates and the Foul Fiend for Lucifer, our critic replies with jaunty irony, "... and whether this wou'd not sound extreamly Heroical,
I leave any Man to judge," and thus he dismisses the matter. Similarly,
when Rapin objects to Tasso's mingling of lyric softness in the
majesty of the epic, Wesley points out sharply that no man of taste will
part with the fine scenes of tender love in Tasso, Dryden, Ovid, Ariosto,
and Spenser "for the sake of a fancied Regularity." He had set out to defend
the Biblical epic, the Christian epic, and the propriety of Christian
machines in epic, and no rules or authority could deter him. As good an example
as any of his independence of mind can be seen In a note on Bk. I,
apropos of the poet's use of obsolete words (Life of Our Blessed Lord, 1697,
p. 27): It may be in vicious imitation of Milton and Spenser, he says in effect,
but I have a fondness for old words, they please my ear, and that is
all the reason I can give for employing them.
Wesley's resistance to a strict application of authority and the rules
grew partly out of the rationalistic and empirical temper of Englishmen in
his age, but it also sprang from his learning. From various sources he drew
the theory that Greek and Latin were but corrupted forms of ancient Phoenician,
and that the degeneracy of Greek and Latin in turn had produced all,
or most, of the present European tongues (ibid., p. 354). In addition, he believed
that the Greeks had derived some of their thought from older civilizations,
and specifically that Plato had received many of his notions from
the Jews (ibid., p. 230)--an idea which recalls the argument that Dryden in
Religio Laioi had employed against the deists, furthermore, he had, like
many of his learned contemporaries, a profound respect for Hebrew culture and
the sublimity of the Hebrew scriptures, going so far as to remark in the "Essay
on Heroic Poetry" that "most, even of [the heathen poets'] beat Fancies
and Images, as well as Names, were borrow'd from the Antient Hebrew Poetry
and Divinity." In short, however faulty his particular conclusions, he had
arrived at an historical viewpoint, from which it was no longer possible to
regard the classical standards--much less the standards of French critics--as
having the holy sanction of Nature herself.
Some light is shed on the literary tastes of his period by Epistle to a friend concerning poetry (1700) and the Essay on Heroic Poetry" (1697), which with a few exceptions were in accord with the
prevailing current. The Life of Our Blessed Lord" shows strongly the influence
of Cowley's Davideis. Wesley's great admiration persisted after the tide had
turned away from Cowley; and his liking for the "divine Herbert" and for
Crashaw represented the tastes of sober and unfashionable readers. In spite
of the fact that he professed unbounded admiration for Homer as the greatest
genius in nature, in practise he seemed more inclined to follow the lead
of Cowley, Virgil, and Vida. Although there was much in Ariosto that he enjoyed,
he preferred Tasso; the irregularities in both, however, he felt bound
to deplore. To Spenser's Faerie Queene he allowed extraordinary merit. If
the plan of it was noble, he thought, and the mark of a comprehensive genius,
yet the action of the poem seemed confused. Nevertheless, like Prior later,
Wesley was inclined to suspend judgment on this point because the poem had
been left incomplete. To Spenser's "thoughts" he paid the highest tribute,
and to his "Expressions flowing natural and easie, with such a prodigious
Poetical Copia as never any other must expect to enjoy." Like most of the
Augustans Wesley did not care greatly for Paradise Regained, but he partly
atoned by his praise for Paradise Lost, which was an "original" and therefore
"above the common Rules." Though defective in its action, it was resplendent
with sublime thoughts perhaps superior to any in Virgil or Homer, and
full of incomparable and exquisitely moving passages. In spite of his belief
that Milton's blank verse was a mistake, making for looseness and incorrectness,
he borrowed lines and images from it, and in Bk. IV of The Life of Our
Blessed Lord he incorporated a whole passage of Milton's blank verse in the
midst of his heroic couplets.
Wesley's attitude toward Dryden deserves a moment's pause. In the "Essay
on Heroic Poetry" he observed that a speech of Satan's in Paradise Lost
is nearly equalled in Dryden's State of Innocence. Later in the same essay
he credited a passage in Dryden's King Arthur with showing an improvement
upon Tasso. There is no doubt as to his vast respect for the greatest living
poet, but his remarks do not indicate that he ranked Dryden with Virgil,
Tasso, or Milton; for he recognized as well as we that the power to embellish
and to imitate successfully does not constitute the highest excellence
in poetry. In the Epistle to a Friend he affirmed his admiration for Dryden's
matchless style, his harmony, his lofty strains, his youthful fire,
and even his wit--in the main, qualities of style and expression. But by
1700 Wesley had absorbed enough of the new puritanism that was rising in
England to qualify his praise; now he deprecated the looseness and indecency
of the poetry, and called upon the poet to repent. One other point calls
for comment. Wesley's scheme for Christian machinery in the epic, as described
in the "Essay on Heroic Poetry," is remarkably similar to Dryden's.
Dryden's had appeared in the essay on satire prefaced to his translation of
Juvenal, published late in October, 1692; Wesley's scheme appeared soon after
June, 1693.
The Epistle to a Friend concerning Poetry is neither startling nor contemptible;
it has, in fact, much more to say than the rhymed treatises on
verse by Roscommon and Buckinghamshire. Ita remarks on Genius are fresh,
though tantalizing in their brevity, and it defends the Moderns with both
neatness and energy. Much of its advice is cautious and commonplace--but
such was the tradition of the poetical treatise on verse. Appearing within
two years of Collier's first attack upon the stage, it reinforces some of
that worthy's contentions, but we are not aware of its having had much effect.
Source
This material was originally from the introduction of Augustan Reprint Society's edition of Epistle to a friend concerning poetry (1700) and the Essay on Heroic Poetry (second edition, 1697), volume 5 in the Augustan Reprint series, part of series 2, Essay on Poetry: No. 2, first printed in 1947. It was written by Edward Niles Hooker. It was published in the US without a copyright notice, which at the time meant it fell into the public domain.
Last updated: 05-21-2005 17:11:06