Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Critical and Biographical Essay by Alexander B. GrosartHenry Ellison (18111880)
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“Mad Moments, or First Verse Attempts, by a Born Natural, addressed respectfully to the light-headed of Society at large, but intended more particularly for the use of that World’s Madhouse, London. By Henry Ellison, of Christchurch, Oxford, 1833. 2 vols. Price 8s. 6d.” (A third volume is promised at the end of the “Siberian Exile’s Tale.”)
Had Dr. John Brown in his Horæ Subsecivæ given full recognition to the fact that the press was a foreign one, it would have saved him from his egregious blundering over the author’s supposed intentional running of words into those singular conglomerations on which he exercises his wit though not his wisdom. Besides, had the genial essayist’s knowledge of his author not been extremely superficial, he would have known of the later editions, wherein an English press puts right all these and innumerable other mistakes and misprints, not without objurgation and lamentation of the poet over his Maltese printer’s performances. His next book was entitled “Man and Nature in their Poetical Relations” (2 vols., 1838?), whereof he thus speaks in “Address to the Readers” in another volume that shall be described immediately:—
“These trifles are conceived in the same spirit, and for the same purpose as my larger work, entitled, ‘Man and Nature in their Poetical Relations.’… This larger work contains in two volumes as much as usually forms four, there being not less than 26,000 lines therein.”
Singularly enough, in no public library—from British Museum to the Bodleian and his own college of Christchurch—is a copy of this work to be found; while I have personally sought by agencies and advertisements over many years in vain for it. Was ever disappearance of a modern book more extraordinary? I have a strong impression that the entire edition lies somewhere in unappreciative hands id est that it fell (practically) still-born from the press, much as later did “Stones from the Quarry.”
Following this seeming-lost book came “Touches on the Harp of Nature, in the same key as Burns’ grand anthem (‘A Man’s a man for a’ that’). London: William Edward Painter, 342, Strand. 1839.” In 1844 he published “The Poetry of Real Life: A new edition, much enlarged and improved. (First Series.) By Henry Ellison. Nihil humani a me alienum puto. London. Published for the Author by John Lee, 440, West Strand.
“Stones from the Quarry; or, Modes of Mind.” By Henry Browne. London: Provost & Co., Henrietta Street, Covent Garden (pp. xix., 380).
Such is the small sum of our biographic and bibliographic data concerning Henry Ellison, save that he was married to a Miss Wells, who predeceased him some years—childless, and that he died on the 13th of February, 1880, in his sixty-ninth year. He was buried at Boultham near Lincoln, in the family ground. I have searched fruitlessly all likely sources without happing upon a single memorial-word. He seems to have slipped out of life like a knotless thread through a needle (if the homely metaphor be permissible). Not only so, but congruous with all this is the absolute ignorance of him on the part of otherwise well-informed critics, so that nowhere does one come on any quotation from his relatively numerous volumes. To Dr. John Brown, therefore, belongs the distinction of having first called attention to the remarkable poetry of Henry Ellison; and it is pleasant to the lovers of both that, after every abatement—some of the abatements finical and unseeing—his verdict was high and unmistakable. He thus puts his final judgment:—
“Yet our Born-natural’s two thick and closely-printed volumes are as full of poetry as is an ‘impassioned grape’ of its noble liquor. He is a true poet.” If he owned any for Master it was Wordsworth.
That in all the known volumes of Henry Ellison there are grave faults and tantalising flaws even in the most consummate poems, audacities of eccentricity, violations of rhyme and rhythm, over-recurrence of the same rhyme-words, weak endings, carelessness of structure and construction, and sheer defiances of public opinion and sentiment, it were vain to deny. But whoso will take his five known volumes (whatever the lost ones may contain) and in patience of faith read on and on and through—pausing at times to ponder—will not lose his reward. He will find himself in contact with a singularly penetrative intellect, before which rose far more than the eyes see of the mysteries of God’s universe and nature and human nature, a wealth of high-thinking,—introspective and prescient,—bursts of lofty imagination, and hues of subtle fancy, and often and often felicities of wording and phrasing of the finest art. Nor was he without the salt of wit and humour, as the following hitherto unpublished lines by him, with which I have been favoured by a nephew of his, will show.