Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Critical and Biographical Essay by Alfred H. MilesCharles Dent Bell (18191898)
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It is somewhat difficult to represent Canon Bell’s poetry within necessary limits, owing to its variety, and to the length of many of its best examples. His poems of nature, “The Rosy Dawn,” “Spring,” and the “Ambleside” group are refreshing, as nature is refreshing. He could scarcely have lived in the Wordsworth country for so long as he did without coming under the influence, if not of Wordsworth, at least of the conditions which influenced Wordsworth. The nature poems are, however, freer from Wordsworthian influences than are the blank verse narrative poems which provoke disadvantageous comparison with those of the master poet. In the “Dream of Pilate’s Wife” we have a dramatic study which won commendation from Whittier, but which, beginning strongly, scarcely sustains its power to the end. One of Canon Bell’s best poems is “In the Escurial,” a poem describing the burial of Alfonso XII., December 10th, 1885. There is true dignity and fine pictorial power in this poem. The subject of death is one which finds felicitous treatment at Canon Bell’s hands, as the poems “Before” and “After,” “Dying Words,” and the Rondeaux here evidence.