Editors Note: "Seems to have
lived in Edinburgh" (Jackson) Walter Scott subscribed to Tranquillity.
Edgar, Mary, fl. 1810-1824
By Stephen C. Behrendt
Critical Essay
In 1810 appeared a volume of some 136 pages of poetry, ambitiously titled Tranquillity; A Poem. to which are added, Other Original Poems, and Translations from the Italian. Printed in Dundee, it was sold in Edinburgh by the major booksellers Archibald Constable and John Ballantyne, as well as by agents in Glasgow, Aberdeen, and Montrose. The collection bore no author's name. Fourteen years later, however, when a second edition (in 258 pages, and now containing translations also from Spanish) was published by subscription, the author was identified as "Miss Edgar." Among the subscribers to this later, larger edition was Walter Scott, who pledged for two copies.
Virtually nothing is known about "Miss
Edgar." Neither the 1810 nor the 1824 edition appears to have been reviewed
in the periodical press, and there are no reliable biographical records of the
author. Internal evidence in the title poem suggests that her Christian name may
have been Mary (25). She seems to have been well read among English and Scottish
authors, and the presence in both volumes of translations suggest that she was
also relatively well educated, although there is no evidence that her skills in
languages extended beyond the modern to the classical, something that would of
course not be unusual for a period during which women were generally excluded
from advanced education. Among the Anglophone writers she mentions in "Tranquillity"
are Pope, Thomas Campbell, Goldsmith, Gray, and Scott, along with "hapless
BURNS, to Genius dear" (19), "JOHNSON strong, and SHENSTONE
sweet" (20). These names help to define the neoclassical orientation of
much of her verse. At the same time, however, Edgar is
Not proud, or jealous, or severe,
But ever candid, kind, sincere.
Few such there are; but this to you
My grateful tribute G**** is due.
While others act a borrow'd part,
By mingled vanity and art,
Talents with piety combine,
And in thy life conspicuous shine. (25)
Directly addressing this person, whom she calls "Virtue's friend," Edgar couches her praise thus:
Blush not to find thy honour'd name
In a poor verse unknown to fame:
For interested venal praise
Has ne'er polluted M**Y's lays;
Nor would she forfeit G****'s esteem
For aught that worldlings precious deem. (25)
Anne Grant was, we know, actively involved in
literary circles in Stirling and then in Edinburgh after her husband's death in
1801, corresponding with many publishing and aspiring writers. Indeed, one of
her daughters, Mary Grant, was herself a poet. Might "G****" have been
Anne Grant, then? Certainly it is hard to dismiss the possibility, especially in
light of what Pam Perkins has written about Grant elsewhere in this electronic
archive:
The 1810 volume contains a preface that both
follows and resists the paradigm of special pleading prefaces that were the
hallmark of many women writers during the period. It begins with the familiar
authorial declaration that "none of [the poems] were originally composed
with a view of meeting the public eye," but then suggests that unspecified
"peculiar circumstances" led the author to consider publishing not
just the present poems but in fact a larger volume. These "peculiar
circumstances" would most likely have involved some sort of financial
reversals or other economic distress, given what this sort of language typically
denotes in such prefaces. She
Miss Edgar's poems are, for the most part,
unremarkable. Most of them are too long for what they attempt to do,
intellectually or poetically. Thus "over-written," they desensitize
their readers with their abundant didactic moralizing (a characteristic also of
the poetry of William Hamilton for which she professes admiration), as well as
with a surfeit of minor and often inconsequential detail. The title poem, "Tranquillity,"
for instance, runs some 27 pages and is organized in four parts, each with a
prefatory descriptive sketch of the sequence of rhymed octosyllabic couplets
that follow. These summaries in fact help the reader navigate the often rambling
discursive verse, whose theme is the emotionally, intellectually, and
spiritually healthy state of tranquillity, which state constitutes the preferred
alternative both to "joy" and to "its opposite[:] excessive
joy" that "always agitates both body and mind; leaving them in that
comfortless, exhausted state, which leads directly to the opposite extreme of
Melancholy" that is in turn "but too frequently productive of
misery" (1). This is a renunciation of enthusiasm and sensibility of which
Dr. Johnson (whom Edgar numbers among her luminaries) would be proud. Indeed, he
would applaud the poem's moral agenda generally, for Edgar counsels as the
antidote
Devotion, rational and pure!
Thou canst eternal joys insure;
And, even while here, on us bestow
A healing balm for every woe.
And Fortitude, by sorrows tried,
Is ever near thy sacred side;
And Resignation, still composed, —
To bind the wounds by Pity closed;
Till, sooth'd and cheer'd, again we see
The smiling fair Tranquillity, —
Perpetual inmate of the mind,
Which pure Devotion makes resign'd
To each event of adverse fate,
And humble in the happiest state. (33)
The capitalized nouns and liberal use of
interjections, exclamation points, and em-dashes
The 1810 volume contains twenty-two poems, including "Tranquillity," twelve sonnets, several miscellaneous works (including a satire on fashionable life, "The 'Home' of Ton; 1809"), and seven short poems translated from Italian originals. Edgar's twelfth and final sonnet, "Sensibility," examines that power's multifaceted nature in a particularly interesting way. An "enchantress wild," Sensibility is said to possess "various powers" to delineate "soften'd features," "stormy passions," and "dire Calamity" in the poet's "votive verse." But it responds as well to less tempestuous impulses when "vernal prospects shine"; then "the thronging thoughts combine" in a single "tumultuous whirl of joy." Edgar sees in Sensibility, which is such a catch-word during the period, what she calls an "all-dubious gift" of questionable value, a power that can as easily lead to misery as to joy: "for what wert thou design'd? — / To bliss, torment, expand, or warp the mind?" (115). In this direct question — a question that might as well be addressed to human free will and to humanity's perilous postlapsarian existence generally — we glimpse again the distinctively moral underpinning of Edgar's poetry.
Edgar clearly wishes to direct this
"all-dubious" power of Sensibility to constructive purposes, as she
does in different ways in the two most interesting poems in her volume,
"Elegiac Verse, to the Memory of Lieutenant-General Sir John Moore"
and "Reflections on a Harvest Storm." The former poem commemorates the
death of Sir John Moore (1761-1809), the circumstances of whose death she
compares explicitly to those of General James Wolfe (1727-59), whose death at
the very moment of apparent victory at the Siege of Quebec on 13 September 1759
had been the subject of countless poems and visual works, including Benjamin
West's
According to Edgar's poem, Moore, like Wolfe, has been "snatch'd away / In the meridian of his brilliant day" from the nation he had loved and served (55). And despite the fatigues of their "forced retreat" and the decampment that followed, the fate of Moore and his troops was not without its heroism. In circumstances that eerily anticipate those which Tennyson immortalized in his "Charge of the Light Brigade" (1854), they are described as making a heroic stand, though outnumbered. Indeed, in relating how their gallant stand "the course of glory rendered] thus complete," Edgar even anticipates Tennyson's language and rhetorical gestures:
When press'd by numbers, in the unequal field,
Our British heroes nobly scorn'd to yield:
But, all the astonish'd adverse host withdrawn,
With haste dispatchful, ere the morning dawn,
Their sick removed, — the brave venturous band
Regain'd their ships, and sought their native land. (52)
Even though victory is thus snatched from the
jaws of defeat, according to Edgar, "Still from a double source our
feelings flow, / And shouts of triumph mingle with our woe" (53). For
together with the patriotic fervor that attends Britain's participation in
Spain's liberation from Napoleonic occupation comes both the public, national
grief that attends the death of a hero and the private, personal grief of the
hero's "afflicted mother," the "poor widowed mourner" whose
grief is at once assuaged and increased by the public rituals of mourning. War
spares no one.
And still Britannia shines in armour braced,
To humble tyrants and support the oppress'd.
May gracious Heaven her generous efforts crown
With full success, and safety, and renown! (57)
"Reflections on a Harvest Storm" was,
the author's note tells us, "among the author's first attempts in
verse." Despite its early genesis, however, she tells us that even in 1810
"she is still inclined to regard [it] as one of the best of what she must
term her mediocre compositions" (46). It is not clear whether Edgar
means by this that she sees among her works two classes, one mediocre and the
other significantly better, or whether she is employing conventional
self-deprecation in calling all her poems mediocre and then singling this
one out as above par. Either way, the poem is better than most of the
others, both in content and in style. The poem, which she says is founded on
fact, examines the actual and the imagined effects of a sudden late-season storm
upon late-maturing crops held by Scottish small farmers and peasants. An October
storm descends on the opening pastoral scene, threatening the crop and therefore
the lives of those who depend upon it for their winter's subsistence. Driven
from the fields by the storm's fury, "the harvest's deary train advance, /
Who late with light enlivening hopes were borne / To lead their sprightly
partners in the dance, / Or jocund reap the richly waving corn" (40). This
reversal threatens the entire community and produces general anxiety about the
prospect of famine and
If then the gathering clouds should ceaseless pour
Their noxious treasures o'er the foodful land,
Till ghastly famine rise amid the shower, —
Ye blest of Heaven! assist the expecting band. (41)
Edgar continues in this vein, appealing for the assistance of both the fortunate wealthy and the "benignant God" (43) in protecting and preserving the less fortunate whose existence is so perilous. And indeed, characteristically, she turns her tale to a moral one. For not only does the storm pass as quickly as it had arrived, it actually enhances what it might have destroyed; the sun sets now on a glorious scene:
The burnish'd corn with emulous beauty shines;
The glittering grass assumes a livelier green. (44)
Moreover, the threat proves to be a blessing (only slightly disguised) not only to those who have experienced it, but also to those for whom it is yet to come, as the final stanza tells us:
The etherial bow with brilliant colouring glows, —
Its varying dyes by beauteous azure borne;
While grateful millions hie to soft repose,
In sweet expectance of the approaching storm. (44)
As it did after the Deluge, the rainbow signals
God's compact with humanity and the promise
Despite the artificiality of diction that everywhere characterizes her poetry (as indeed it does all the passages quoted in this essay), Edgar manages at her best moments to create interesting and even compelling images. In the passage quoted earlier, there is real daring in her reference to the rains as the clouds' "noxious treasures." Not mere oxymoron, this figure alerts the attentive reader to the ways in which phenomena may be perceived and interpreted in entirely different fashion, depending upon the circumstances of those who are affected. This oxymoronic character, which recurs fairly often in Edgar's verse, is of course itself part and parcel of moral discourse, in which there is often only a thin line between a blessing and a curse. Indeed, it is the same character that is visible in the final stanza, quoted above, in which the "grateful millions" (who as yet have no reason to be grateful) go to their rest in "sweet expectance" (my emphases) of the storm that has not yet reached them. In a passage like this one (and there are others in poems like the verses on Moore), Edgar conflates past and future in a poetic present that is informed by an understanding (real or assumed) of the unfailing providential presence of God in the affairs of humanity. If Miss Edgar's poems are frequently artificial, over-written, and didactic, they are nevertheless filled with a remarkable optimism about humanity, God, and the dignity of human existence.
Works Cited
Dictionary of National Biography. Ed.
Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee. 22 vols. London: Oxford UP, 1917; 13:813-19.
Edgar, Miss [Mary]. Tranquillity; a Poem. to which are added, Other Original
Poems, and Translations from the Italian.
Dundee/Edinburgh/Glasgow/Aberdeen/Montrose: James Chalmers/Archibald Constable
and Co., and John Ballantyne and Co./Brash and Reid/A. Brown/G. Murray, 1810.
—. Tranquillity; a Poem. To which are Added Other Original Poems, and
Translations from the Italian and Spanish. "Second Edition."
Edinburgh/London: John Anderson, Jr./Simpkin and Marshall, 1824.
Perkins, Pam. "Anne Grant ." Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic
Period. Ed. Stephen C. Behrendt and Nancy Kushigian. Alexander Street Press,
2002.