A friend once wrote to me: “What do you know about a poet who signs his name John B. Tabb, his poems are delicious?” My answer was, that I knew nothing of his personal history, but that his poems had found their way into my aristocratic scrap-book. Here I might pause to whisper that the adjective aristocratic, in my sense, has nothing haughty about it. When joined to the noun scrap-book, a good commentator—they are scarce—would freely translate the phrase the indwelling of good poetry. Since then my personal knowledge of the poet has grown slowly, a slight stock and no leaves. Even that, like my old coat, is second-handed. Such material, no matter how highly recommended by the keepers of “John B. Tabb, (I quote) was born in Virginia, when or where I know not. Becoming a Catholic he studied for the priesthood and was ordained.” Here my data fails me. At present he is the professor of literature in St. Charles’ College, Maryland. It is something in his favor, this scanty biographical fare. Where the biography is long, laudatory, and in rounded periods, it is approached as one would a snake in the grass, with a kind of fear that in the end you may be bitten. “May I be skinned alive,” said that master of word-selection and phrase-juggler, Flaubert, “before I ever turn my private feelings to literary account.” And the reader, with the stench of recent keyhole biography in his nostrils, This brings us to write of Fr. Tabb’s It is easy to trace in Fr. Tabb’s poetry the influence of Sidney Lanier. It has “All gracious curves of slender wings, Bark mottlings, fibre spiralings, Fern wavings and leaf flickerings. Yea, all fair forms and sounds and lights, And warmths and mysteries and mights, Of Nature’s utmost depths and heights.” The defects of this school are best seen in the founder. He was a musician before a poet, and helplessly strove to catch shades by words that can only be rendered by What could illustrate the peculiar genius of our poet better than the delicious gem that he has called “The White Jessamine.” I knew she lay above me, Where the casement all the night Shone, softened with a phosphor glow Of sympathetic light, And that her fledgling spirit pure Was pluming fast for flight. Each tendril throbbed and quickened As I nightly climbed apace, And could scarce restrain the blossoms When, anear the destined place, Her gentle whisper thrilled me I waited, darkling, till the dawn Should touch me into bloom, While all my being panted To outpour its first perfume, When, lo! a paler flower than mine Had blossomed in the gloom! “Content” is another gem of exquisite thought and workmanship. Content. Were all the heavens an overladen bough Of ripened benediction lowered above me, What could I crave, soul-satisfied as now, That thou dost love me? The door is shut. To each unsheltered blessing Henceforth I say, “Depart! What wouldst thou of me?” Beggared I am of want, this boon possessing, That thou dost love me. “Photographed” may well make the trio in the more fully illustrating his genius:— Photographed. For years, an ever-shifting shade The sunshine of thy visage made; Then, spider-like, the captive caught In meshes of immortal thought. E’en so, with half-averted eye, Day after day I passed thee by, Till, suddenly, a subtler art Enshrined thee in my heart of heart. “Not even the infinite surfeit of Columbus literature of the last six months can deprive Fr. Tabb’s tribute in Lippincott’s of its sweetness and light,” says the Review of Reviews: With faith unshadowed by the night, Undazzled by the day, With hope that plumed thee for the flight And courage to assay, God sent thee from the crowded ark, Christ bearer, like the dove, To find, o’er sundering waters dark, New lands for conquering love. As a final selection, we may well conclude these brief notes on a poet with staying powers by quoting a poem, contributed to the Cosmopolitan, called “Silence;” a poem permeated with his fine spiritual sense: Temple of God, from all eternity Alone like Him without beginning found; Of time, and space, and solitude the bound, Yet in thyself of all communion free. Is, then, the temple holier than he That dwells therein? Must reverence surround With barriers the portal, lest a sound Profane it? Nay; behold a mystery! What was, remains; what is, has ever been: The lowliest the loftiest sustains. A silence, by no breath of utterance stirred— Virginity in motherhood—remains, Clear, midst a cloud of all-pervading sin, The voice of Love’s unutterable word. |