John Hamilton Reynolds, reading about the impending publication, wrote a Wordsworth parody called
Peter Bell: a Lyrical Ballad, which appeared a week before the genuine
Peter Bell and stirred up enough public interest to ensure that Wordsworth's poem went into a second edition within a fortnight. In contemporary journals the poem was, like his previous publications, generally greeted with derision and contempt, critics being especially provoked by the deliberately flat diction and by the mundanity of its subject, as exemplified in Peter Bell's own prosaic name.
Leigh Hunt, writing in
The Examiner, condemned
Peter Bell as "a didactic little horror…founded on the bewitching principles of fear, bigotry, and diseased impulse". Other reviewers spoke of its "gross perversion of intellect" and "tincture of imbecility", and pronounced it "superlatively silly", "daudling, impotent drivel" and "of all Mr. Wordsworth's poems…decidedly the worst".
Byron, in his
Don Juan, sneered that Wordsworth "makes / Another outcry for 'a little boat', / And drivels seas to set it well afloat". Even close friends could offer little comfort.
Charles Lamb wrote to Wordsworth that though he liked the poem's subject "I cannot say that the style of it quite satisfies me. It is too lyrical," and he privately said that he thought it one of the worst of Wordsworth's works.
Henry Crabb Robinson feared Wordsworth had "set himself back ten years by the publication of this unfortunate work". In the months after the publication of Wordsworth's poem and Reynolds' skit a whole rash of Wordsworth parodies broke out, by
Keats and
Shelley among others. Wordsworth responded to this general damnation of
Peter Bell by revising it when he included it in his 1820 collected edition,
Miscellaneous Poems, though he also wrote a sonnet "On the Detraction which followed the Publication of a certain Poem" in which he told Peter "Heed not such onset!". Opinion was slow to change in
Peter Bells favour. In 1879
Matthew Arnold counted it among the poems which only a true Wordsworthian such as himself could read with pleasure, and in 1891
Oscar Wilde cited it as an example of the deleterious influence of Nature on Wordsworth's poetry. Modern Wordsworth critics generally rank
Peter Bell high among its author's works, full credit being given to its daring as a "radical experiment".
Duncan Wu numbered it among Wordsworth's greatest poems, while Mary Moorman called it "his most brilliant narrative poem". == Notes ==