THE COURIER. MR. HOWELLS DISCOVERS A POET IN PAUI. DUNBAR-A NEGRO. At last an intellectual bridge has been cast across the chasm dividing the black from the white race! At last, for the liret time in the liintory of this country or, eo far bb we are aware, in the history of any other country a man of pure African blood has arisen to speak for his people in the person of Mr. Paul Lawrence Dunbar. For several years poems bearing this name have been appearing in the lead ing magazines, but they bore on the sur face no racial mark, aud the fact that some of them were in the negro dialect counted for nothing, since many white writers have attempted that, although with less success. It was not, there fore, until a slender, quiet, shabby little volume of veree, dateless, placeless and without a publisher, drifted out of the west and accidentally reached Mr Howells who is nlwajs quick to see and never reluctant to praise what is really good that the young Africo American poet was introduced to the larger audience which the importance of his work deserved. Only then did it become generally known that the author waa black, that liis parents were slaves who learned to read atter they were free, and that ho himeelf had stood shoulder to shoulder with the heaviest laden of his rao. He was educated in the public schools of his birthplace, Dayton, O., and was un til recently an elevator boy. As these facts came out, the signifi cance of Mr. Dunbar's poetry stood re vealed, and it was recognized not only for its intrinsic worth, for "its lyric beauty and metrical quality, which are quite enough to lift it into prominence, but as the first authoritative utterance of the inner iife of a race which had hitherto been dumb. The little book thus voicing what had never before been spoken was privately printed and called "Majors and Minors," the Majors being in English and the Minors in dialect, sometimes the dialect of the middle south negroes and sometimes the middle south whites, and in the case of the negro dialect reproduced with a perfec tion that no white writer has attained. These pcmB, covering a wide range of thought and feeling, have been gath ered with a number of new poems into a much larger volume Boon to be pub lishec by Dodd, Mead fc Co. Mr. How ells has written an introduction to the new work, aud in it says: "What struck me in reading Mr. Dun bar's poetry was what had already struck his friends in Ohio and Indiana, in Kentucky and Illinois. They had felt as I felt, that however gifted his race bad proven itself in music, in ora tory, in several other arts, here was the first instance of an American negro who had evinced innate literature. In my criticism of his book I had alleged Dumas in France, and had forgotten to allege the far greater Pushkin in Rus sia, but these were both mulattoes, who might have supposed to derive their qualities from white blood vastly more artitic than ours, and who were the creatures of an environment more fav orable to their literary development. So far as I could remember, Paul Dunbar was the only man of pure African blood And American civilization to feel the negro life aesthetically and express it lyrically. It seemed to me that this had come to its most modern consciousness . in him, and that his brilliant and unique achievement was to have studied the American negro objectively, and to have represented him as he found him to be, with humor, with sympathy, and yet with what the reader must instinctively feel to be entire truthfulness.' "I said that a race which had come to this effect in any member of it had obtained civilzation in him, and I permitted myself the imaginative prophecy that the hostilities and the prejudices which had 60 long constrained iiis race were destine' to vameh in the arte; that these were to be the final proof that God had made of one blood all nations of men. I thought his merits positive and not comparative; and I held that if his black poems had been written by a white man I should not have found them less admirable. I ac cepted them as an evidence of the es sential unity of the human race, which docs not think or feel black in one and white in another, but humanly in all. And, if the poems appeal eo power fully and seem bo profoundly significant to one who has never, perhaps, been personally in touch with types, the idaels, the emotions, the traditions, the surroundings and the environments of the negro race, the work must in the very nature of things find equal if not fuller appreciation among Soutbern readers. To the Southern mind the Majors will surely come as the first lift ing of an impenetrable curtain which has always hung between the black and the white race. In the Southern heart the Minors must certainly stir deep and mingled memories of the old order which neither white nor black would have back again; memories in which laughter contends with tears, as the lines of the first Africian poet waver between humor and pathos. It is a curious fact that until the acceptance of this book Dun bar had never earned any money by his literary work. He had lived entirely oc his pay as an elevator boy. The few books he wrote and which gave him a reputation were published at the ex pense of himself and friends, and brought him no immediate profit. His rise has been a hard struggle with dis couraging conditions. When the accep tance of his new book of poems was an nounced it wa& accompanied by a sum of $400. This amount was in the form of four crisp $100 bills, of the new de sign. The poet had never been the pos sessor of so much money in his life, and its unexpected receipt sent him into a state of eestacy. His success, however, has not made any change for the worse in the simple and unaffected youth, who until recently guidea the destinies of an elevator. See the new Photochromes at Cran cer & Curtice Co.'s, 207 South 11th street, the newest thine in pictures. T!" 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