The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 2


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The author's observations on the artificial style," continued Ellison,  
are less objectionable. A mixture of pure art in a garden scene adds to  
it a great beauty. This is just; as also is the reference to the sense  
of human interest. The principle expressed is incontrovertible--but  
there may be something beyond it. There may be an object in keeping with  
the principle--an object unattainable by the means ordinarily possessed  
by individuals, yet which, if attained, would lend a charm to the  
landscape-garden far surpassing that which a sense of merely human  
interest could bestow. A poet, having very unusual pecuniary resources,  
might, while retaining the necessary idea of art or culture, or, as  
our author expresses it, of interest, so imbue his designs at once with  
extent and novelty of beauty, as to convey the sentiment of spiritual  
interference. It will be seen that, in bringing about such result, he  
secures all the advantages of interest or design, while relieving his  
work of the harshness or technicality of the worldly art. In the  
most rugged of wildernesses--in the most savage of the scenes of pure  
nature--there is apparent the art of a creator; yet this art is apparent  
to reflection only; in no respect has it the obvious force of a feeling.  
Now let us suppose this sense of the Almighty design to be one step  
depressed--to be brought into something like harmony or consistency with  
the sense of human art--to form an intermedium between the two:--let  
us imagine, for example, a landscape whose combined vastness and  
definitiveness--whose united beauty, magnificence, and strangeness,  
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