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+<title>The Rhythm of Life</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Rhythm of Life, by Alice Meynell</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Rhythm of Life, by Alice Meynell
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Rhythm of Life
+
+Author: Alice Meynell
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2005 [eBook #1276]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RHYTHM OF LIFE***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1893 John Lane edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1>The Rhythm of Life and Other Essays</h1>
+<p>Contents</p>
+<p>The Rhythm of Life<br />
+Decivilised<br />
+A Remembrance<br />
+The Sun<br />
+The Flower<br />
+Unstable Equilibrium<br />
+The Unit of the World<br />
+By the Railway Side<br />
+Pocket Vocabularies<br />
+Pathos<br />
+The Point of Honour<br />
+Composure<br />
+Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes<br />
+James Russell Lowell<br />
+Domus Angusta<br />
+Rejection<br />
+The Lesson of Landscape<br />
+Mr. Coventry Patmore&rsquo;s Odes<br />
+Innocence and Experience<br />
+Penultimate Caricature</p>
+<h2>THE RHYTHM OF LIFE</h2>
+<p>If life is not always poetical, it is at least metrical.&nbsp; Periodicity
+rules over the mental experience of man, according to the path of the
+orbit of his thoughts.&nbsp; Distances are not gauged, ellipses not
+measured, velocities not ascertained, times not known.&nbsp; Nevertheless,
+the recurrence is sure.&nbsp; What the mind suffered last week, or last
+year, it does not suffer now; but it will suffer again next week or
+next year.&nbsp; Happiness is not a matter of events; it depends upon
+the tides of the mind.&nbsp; Disease is metrical, closing in at shorter
+and shorter periods towards death, sweeping abroad at longer and longer
+intervals towards recovery.&nbsp; Sorrow for one cause was intolerable
+yesterday, and will be intolerable tomorrow; today it is easy to bear,
+but the cause has not passed.&nbsp; Even the burden of a spiritual distress
+unsolved is bound to leave the heart to a temporary peace; and remorse
+itself does not remain&mdash;it returns.&nbsp; Gaiety takes us by a
+dear surprise.&nbsp; If we had made a course of notes of its visits,
+we might have been on the watch, and would have had an expectation instead
+of a discovery.&nbsp; No one makes such observations; in all the diaries
+of students of the interior world, there have never come to light the
+records of the Kepler of such cycles.&nbsp; But Thomas &agrave; Kempis
+knew of the recurrences, if he did not measure them.&nbsp; In his cell
+alone with the elements&mdash;&lsquo;What wouldst thou more than these?
+for out of these were all things made&rsquo;&mdash;he learnt the stay
+to be found in the depth of the hour of bitterness, and the remembrance
+that restrains the soul at the coming of the moment of delight, giving
+it a more conscious welcome, but presaging for it an inexorable flight.&nbsp;
+And &lsquo;rarely, rarely comest thou,&rsquo; sighed Shelley, not to
+Delight merely, but to the Spirit of Delight.&nbsp; Delight can be compelled
+beforehand, called, and constrained to our service&mdash;Ariel can be
+bound to a daily task; but such artificial violence throws life out
+of metre, and it is not the spirit that is thus compelled.&nbsp; <i>That</i>
+flits upon an orbit elliptically or parabolically or hyperbolically
+curved, keeping no man knows what trysts with Time.</p>
+<p>It seems fit that Shelley and the author of the <i>Imitation</i>
+should both have been keen and simple enough to perceive these flights,
+and to guess at the order of this periodicity.&nbsp; Both souls were
+in close touch with the spirits of their several worlds, and no deliberate
+human rules, no infractions of the liberty and law of the universal
+movement, kept from them the knowledge of recurrences.&nbsp; <i>Eppur</i>
+<i>si</i> <i>muove</i>.&nbsp; They knew that presence does not exist
+without absence; they knew that what is just upon its flight of farewell
+is already on its long path of return.&nbsp; They knew that what is
+approaching to the very touch is hastening towards departure.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;O wind,&rsquo; cried Shelley, in autumn,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;O wind,<br />
+If winter comes, can spring be far behind?&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>They knew that the flux is equal to the reflux; that to interrupt
+with unlawful recurrences, out of time, is to weaken the impulse of
+onset and retreat; the sweep and impetus of movement.&nbsp; To live
+in constant efforts after an equal life, whether the equality be sought
+in mental production, or in spiritual sweetness, or in the joy of the
+senses, is to live without either rest or full activity.&nbsp; The souls
+of certain of the saints, being singularly simple and single, have been
+in the most complete subjection to the law of periodicity.&nbsp; Ecstasy
+and desolation visited them by seasons.&nbsp; They endured, during spaces
+of vacant time, the interior loss of all for which they had sacrificed
+the world.&nbsp; They rejoiced in the uncovenanted beatitude of sweetness
+alighting in their hearts.&nbsp; Like them are the poets whom, three
+times or ten times in the course of a long life, the Muse has approached,
+touched, and forsaken.&nbsp; And yet hardly like them; not always so
+docile, nor so wholly prepared for the departure, the brevity, of the
+golden and irrevocable hour.&nbsp; Few poets have fully recognised the
+metrical absence of their Muse.&nbsp; For full recognition is expressed
+in one only way&mdash;silence.</p>
+<p>It has been found that several tribes in Africa and in America worship
+the moon, and not the sun; a great number worship both; but no tribes
+are known to adore the sun, and not the moon.&nbsp; For the periodicity
+of the sun is still in part a secret; but that of the moon is modestly
+apparent, perpetually influential.&nbsp; On her depend the tides; and
+she is Selene, mother of Herse, bringer of the dews that recurrently
+irrigate lands where rain is rare.&nbsp; More than any other companion
+of earth is she the Measurer.&nbsp; Early Indo-Germanic languages knew
+her by that name.&nbsp; Her metrical phases are the symbol of the order
+of recurrence.&nbsp; Constancy in approach and in departure is the reason
+of her inconstancies.&nbsp; Juliet will not receive a vow spoken in
+invocation of the moon; but Juliet did not live to know that love itself
+has tidal times&mdash;lapses and ebbs which are due to the metrical
+rule of the interior heart, but which the lover vainly and unkindly
+attributes to some outward alteration in the beloved.&nbsp; For man&mdash;except
+those elect already named&mdash;is hardly aware of periodicity.&nbsp;
+The individual man either never learns it fully, or learns it late.&nbsp;
+And he learns it so late, because it is a matter of cumulative experience
+upon which cumulative evidence is lacking.&nbsp; It is in the after-part
+of each life that the law is learnt so definitely as to do away with
+the hope or fear of continuance.&nbsp; That young sorrow comes so near
+to despair is a result of this young ignorance.&nbsp; So is the early
+hope of great achievement.&nbsp; Life seems so long, and its capacity
+so great, to one who knows nothing of all the intervals it needs must
+hold&mdash;intervals between aspirations, between actions, pauses as
+inevitable as the pauses of sleep.&nbsp; And life looks impossible to
+the young unfortunate, unaware of the inevitable and unfailing refreshment.&nbsp;
+It would be for their peace to learn that there is a tide in the affairs
+of men, in a sense more subtle&mdash;if it is not too audacious to add
+a meaning to Shakespeare&mdash;than the phrase was meant to contain.&nbsp;
+Their joy is flying away from them on its way home; their life will
+wax and wane; and if they would be wise, they must wake and rest in
+its phases, knowing that they are ruled by the law that commands all
+things&mdash;a sun&rsquo;s revolutions and the rhythmic pangs of maternity.</p>
+<h2>DECIVILISED</h2>
+<p>The difficulty of dealing&mdash;in the course of any critical duty&mdash;with
+decivilised man lies in this: when you accuse him of vulgarity&mdash;sparing
+him no doubt the word&mdash;he defends himself against the charge of
+barbarism.&nbsp; Especially from new soil&mdash;transatlantic, colonial&mdash;he
+faces you, bronzed, with a half conviction of savagery, partly persuaded
+of his own youthfulness of race.&nbsp; He writes, and recites, poems
+about ranches and canyons; they are designed to betray the recklessness
+of his nature and to reveal the good that lurks in the lawless ways
+of a young society.&nbsp; He is there to explain himself, voluble, with
+a glossary for his own artless slang.&nbsp; But his colonialism is only
+provincialism very articulate.&nbsp; The new air does but make old decadences
+seem more stale; the young soil does but set into fresh conditions the
+ready-made, the uncostly, the refuse feeling of a race decivilising.&nbsp;
+American fancy played long this pattering part of youth.&nbsp; The New-Englander
+hastened to assure you with so self-denying a face he did not wear war-paint
+and feathers, that it became doubly difficult to communicate to him
+that you had suspected him of nothing wilder than a second-hand dress
+coat.&nbsp; And when it was a question not of rebuke, but of praise,
+the American was ill-content with the word of the judicious who lauded
+him for some delicate successes in continuing something of the literature
+of England, something of the art of France; he was more eager for the
+applause that stimulated him to write romances and to paint panoramic
+landscape, after brief training in academies of native inspiration.&nbsp;
+Even now English voices, with violent commonplace, are constantly calling
+upon America to begin&mdash;to begin, for the world is expectant.&nbsp;
+Whereas there is no beginning for her, but instead a continuity which
+only a constant care can guide into sustained refinement and can save
+from decivilisation.</p>
+<p>But decivilised man is not peculiar to new soil.&nbsp; The English
+town, too, knows him in all his dailiness.&nbsp; In England, too, he
+has a literature, an art, a music, all his own&mdash;derived from many
+and various things of price.&nbsp; Trash, in the fulness of its in simplicity
+and cheapness, is impossible without a beautiful past.&nbsp; Its chief
+characteristic&mdash;which is futility, not failure&mdash;could not
+be achieved but by the long abuse, the rotatory reproduction, the quotidian
+disgrace, of the utterances of Art, especially the utterance by words.&nbsp;
+Gaiety, vigour, vitality, the organic quality, purity, simplicity, precision&mdash;all
+these are among the antecedents of trash.&nbsp; It is after them; it
+is also, alas, because of them.&nbsp; And nothing can be much sadder
+than such a proof of what may possibly be the failure of derivation.</p>
+<p>Evidently we cannot choose our posterity.&nbsp; Reversing the steps
+of time, we may, indeed, choose backwards.&nbsp; We may give our thoughts
+noble forefathers.&nbsp; Well begotten, well born our fancies must be;
+they shall be also well derived.&nbsp; We have a voice in decreeing
+our inheritance, and not our inheritance only, but our heredity.&nbsp;
+Our minds may trace upwards and follow their ways to the best well-heads
+of the arts.&nbsp; The very habit of our thoughts may be persuaded one
+way unawares by their antenatal history.&nbsp; Their companions must
+be lovely, but need be no lovelier than their ancestors; and being so
+fathered and so husbanded, our thoughts may be intrusted to keep the
+counsels of literature.</p>
+<p>Such is our confidence in a descent we know.&nbsp; But, of a sequel
+which of us is sure?&nbsp; Which of us is secured against the dangers
+of subsequent depreciation?&nbsp; And, moreover, which of us shall trace
+the contemporary tendencies, the one towards honour, the other towards
+dishonour?&nbsp; Or who shall discover why derivation becomes degeneration,
+and where and when and how the bastardy befalls?&nbsp; The decivilised
+have every grace as the antecedent of their vulgarities, every distinction
+as the precedent of their mediocrities.&nbsp; No ballad-concert song,
+feign it sigh, frolic, or laugh, but has the excuse that the feint was
+suggested, was made easy, by some living sweetness once.&nbsp; Nor are
+the decivilised to blame as having in their own persons possessed civilisation
+and marred it.&nbsp; They did not possess it; they were born into some
+tendency to derogation, into an inclination for things mentally inexpensive.&nbsp;
+And the tendency can hardly do other than continue.&nbsp; Nothing can
+look duller than the future of this second-hand and multiplying world.&nbsp;
+Men need not be common merely because they are many; but the infection
+of commonness once begun in the many, what dulness in their future!&nbsp;
+To the eye that has reluctantly discovered this truth&mdash;that the
+vulgarised are not <i>un</i>civilised, and that there is no growth for
+them&mdash;it does not look like a future at all.&nbsp; More ballad-concerts,
+more quaint English, more robustious barytone songs, more piecemeal
+pictures, more anxious decoration, more colonial poetry, more young
+nations with withered traditions.&nbsp; Yet it is before this prospect
+that the provincial overseas lifts up his voice in a boast or a promise
+common enough among the incapable young, but pardonable only in senility.&nbsp;
+He promises the world a literature, an art, that shall be new because
+his forest is untracked and his town just built.&nbsp; But what the
+newness is to be he cannot tell.&nbsp; Certain words were dreadful once
+in the mouth of desperate old age.&nbsp; Dreadful and pitiable as the
+threat of an impotent king, what shall we name them when they are the
+promise of an impotent people?&nbsp; &lsquo;I will do such things: what
+they are yet I know not.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2>A REMEMBRANCE</h2>
+<p>When the memories of two or three persons now upon earth shall be
+rolled up and sealed with their records within them, there will be no
+remembrance left open, except this, of a man whose silence seems better
+worth interpreting than the speech of many another.&nbsp; Of himself
+he has left no vestiges.&nbsp; It was a common reproach against him
+that he never acknowledged the obligation to any kind of restlessness.&nbsp;
+The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, but as he did none there was
+nothing for it but that the kingdom of heaven should yield to his leisure.&nbsp;
+The delicate, the abstinent, the reticent graces were his in the heroic
+degree.&nbsp; Where shall I find a pen fastidious enough to define and
+limit and enforce so many significant negatives?&nbsp; Words seem to
+offend by too much assertion, and to check the suggestions of his reserve.&nbsp;
+That reserve was life-long.&nbsp; Loving literature, he never lifted
+a pen except to write a letter.&nbsp; He was not inarticulate, he was
+only silent.&nbsp; He had an exquisite style from which to refrain.&nbsp;
+The things he abstained from were all exquisite.&nbsp; They were brought
+from far to undergo his judgment, if haply he might have selected them.&nbsp;
+Things ignoble never approached near enough for his refusal; they had
+not with him so much as that negative connexion.&nbsp; If I had to equip
+an author I should ask no better than to arm him and invest him with
+precisely the riches that were renounced by the man whose intellect,
+by integrity, had become a presence-chamber.</p>
+<p>It was by holding session among so many implicit safeguards that
+he taught, rather than by precepts.&nbsp; Few were these in his speech,
+but his personality made laws for me.&nbsp; It was a subtle education,
+for it persuaded insensibly to a conception of my own.&nbsp; How, if
+he would not define, could I know what things were and what were not
+worthy of his gentle and implacable judgment?&nbsp; I must needs judge
+them for myself, yet he constrained me in the judging.&nbsp; Within
+that constraint and under that stimulus, which seemed to touch the ultimate
+springs of thoughts before they sprang, I began to discern all things
+in literature and in life&mdash;in the chastity of letters and in the
+honour of life&mdash;that I was bound to love.&nbsp; Not the things
+of one character only, but excellent things of every character.&nbsp;
+There was no tyranny in such a method.&nbsp; His idleness justified
+itself by the liberality it permitted to his taste.&nbsp; Never having
+made his love of letters further a secondary purpose, never having bound
+the literary genius&mdash;that delicate Ariel&mdash;to any kind of servitude,
+never having so much as permitted himself a prejudice whereby some of
+his delights should be stinted while others were indulged beyond the
+sanctions of modest reason, he barely tolerated his own preferences,
+which lay somewhat on the hither side of full effectiveness of style.&nbsp;
+These the range of his reading confessed by certain exclusions.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless it was not of deficiencies that he was patient: he did
+but respect the power of pause, and he disliked violence chiefly because
+violence is apt to confess its own limits.&nbsp; Perhaps, indeed, his
+own fine negatives made him only the more sensible of any lack of those
+literary qualities that are bound in their full complement to hold themselves
+at the disposal of the consummate author&mdash;to stand and wait, if
+they may do no more.</p>
+<p>Men said that he led a <i>dilettante</i> life.&nbsp; They reproached
+him with the selflessness that made him somewhat languid.&nbsp; Others,
+they seemed to aver, were amateurs at this art or that; he was an amateur
+at living.&nbsp; So it was, in the sense that he never grasped at happiness,
+and that many of the things he had held slipped from his disinterested
+hands.&nbsp; So it was, too, in this unintended sense; he loved life.&nbsp;
+How should he not have loved a life that his living made honourable?&nbsp;
+How should he not have loved all arts, in which his choice was delicate,
+liberal, instructed, studious, docile, austere?&nbsp; An amateur man
+he might have been called, too, because he was not discomposed by his
+own experiences, or shaken by the discovery which life brings to us-that
+the negative quality of which Buddhism seems to accuse all good is partaken
+by our happiness.&nbsp; He had always prayed temperate prayers and harboured
+probable wishes.&nbsp; His sensibility was extreme, but his thought
+was generalised.&nbsp; When he had joy he tempered it not in the common
+way by meditation upon the general sorrow but by a recollection of the
+general pleasure.&nbsp; It was his finest distinction to desire no differences,
+no remembrance, but loss among the innumerable forgotten.&nbsp; And
+when he suffered, it was with so quick a nerve and yet so wide an apprehension
+that the race seemed to suffer in him.&nbsp; He pitied not himself so
+tenderly as mankind, of whose capacity for pain he was then feelingly
+persuaded.&nbsp; His darkening eyes said in the extreme hour: &lsquo;I
+have compassion on the multitude.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2>THE SUN</h2>
+<p>Nowhere else does the greater light so rule the day, so measure,
+so divide, so reign, make so imperial laws, so visibly kindle, so immediately
+quicken, so suddenly efface, so banish, so restore, as in a plain like
+this of Suffolk with its enormous sky.&nbsp; The curious have an insufficient
+motive for going to the mountains if they do it to see the sunrise.&nbsp;
+The sun that leaps from a mountain peak is a sun past the dew of his
+birth; he has walked some way towards the common fires of noon.&nbsp;
+But on the flat country the uprising is early and fresh, the arc is
+wide, the career is long.&nbsp; The most distant clouds, converging
+in the beautiful and little-studied order of cloud-perspective (for
+most painters treat clouds as though they formed perpendicular and not
+horizontal scenery), are those that gather at the central point of sunrise.&nbsp;
+On the plain, and there only, can the construction&mdash;but that is
+too little vital a word; I should rather say the organism&mdash;the
+unity, the design, of a sky be understood.&nbsp; The light wind that
+has been moving all night is seen to have not worked at random.&nbsp;
+It has shepherded some small flocks of cloud afield and folded others.&nbsp;
+There&rsquo;s husbandry in Heaven.&nbsp; And the order has, or seems
+to have, the sun for its midst.&nbsp; Not a line, not a curve, but confesses
+its membership in a design declared from horizon to horizon.</p>
+<p>To see the system of a sky in fragments is to miss what I learn to
+look for in all achieved works of Nature and art: the organism that
+is unity and life.&nbsp; It is the unity and life of painting.&nbsp;
+The Early Victorian picture&mdash;(the school is still in full career,
+but essentially it belongs to that triumphal period)&mdash;is but a
+dull sum of things put together, in concourse, not in relation; but
+the true picture is <i>one</i>, however multitudinous it may be, for
+it is composed of relations gathered together in the unity of perception,
+of intention, and of light.&nbsp; It is organic.&nbsp; Moreover, how
+truly relation is the condition of life may be understood from the extinct
+state of the English stage, which resembles nothing so much as a Royal
+Academy picture.&nbsp; Even though the actors may be added together
+with something like vivacity (though that is rare), they have no vitality
+in common.&nbsp; They are not members one of another.&nbsp; If the Church
+and Stage Guild be still in existence, it would do much for the art
+by teaching that Scriptural maxim.&nbsp; I think, furthermore, that
+the life of our bodies has never been defined so suggestively as by
+one who named it a living relation of lifeless atoms.&nbsp; Could the
+value of relation be more curiously set forth?&nbsp; And one might penetrate
+some way towards a consideration of the vascular organism of a true
+literary style in which there is a vital relation of otherwise lifeless
+word with word.&nbsp; And wherein lies the progress of architecture
+from the stupidity of the pyramid and the dead weight of the Cyclopean
+wall to the spring and the flight of the ogival arch, but in a quasi-organic
+relation?&nbsp; But the way of such thoughts might be intricate, and
+the sun rules me to simplicity.</p>
+<p>He reigns as centrally in the blue sky as in the clouds.&nbsp; One
+October of late had days absolutely cloudless.&nbsp; I should not have
+certainly known it had there been a hill in sight.&nbsp; The gradations
+of the blue are incalculable, infinite, and they deepen from the central
+fire.&nbsp; As to the earthly scenery, there are but two &lsquo;views&rsquo;
+on the plain; for the aspect of the light is the whole landscape.&nbsp;
+To look with the sun or against the sun&mdash;this is the alternative
+splendour.&nbsp; To look with the sun is to face a golden country, shadowless,
+serene, noble and strong in light, with a certain lack of relief that
+suggests&mdash;to those who dream of landscape&mdash;the country of
+a dream.&nbsp; The serried pines, and the lighted fields, and the golden
+ricks of the farms are dyed with the sun as one might paint with a colour.&nbsp;
+Bright as it is, the glow is rather the dye of sunlight than its luminosity.&nbsp;
+For by a kind of paradox the luminous landscape is that which is full
+of shadows&mdash;the landscape before you when you turn and face the
+sun.&nbsp; Not only every reed and rush of the salt marshes, every uncertain
+aspen-leaf of the few trees, but every particle of the October air shows
+a shadow and makes a mystery of the light.&nbsp; There is nothing but
+shadow and sun; colour is absorbed and the landscape is reduced to a
+shining simplicity.&nbsp; Thus is the dominant sun sufficient for his
+day.&nbsp; His passage kindles to unconsuming fires and quenches into
+living ashes.&nbsp; No incidents save of his causing, no delight save
+of his giving: from the sunrise, when the larks, not for pairing, but
+for play, sing the only virginal song of the year&mdash;a heart younger
+than Spring&rsquo;s in the season of decline&mdash;even to the sunset,
+when the herons scream together in the shallows.&nbsp; And the sun dominates
+by his absence, compelling the low country to sadness in the melancholy
+night.</p>
+<h2>THE FLOWER</h2>
+<p>There is a form of oppression that has not until now been confessed
+by those who suffer from it or who are participants, as mere witnesses,
+in its tyranny.&nbsp; It is the obsession of man by the flower.&nbsp;
+In the shape of the flower his own paltriness revisits him&mdash;his
+triviality, his sloth, his cheapness, his wholesale habitualness, his
+slatternly ostentation.&nbsp; These return to him and wreak upon him
+their dull revenges.&nbsp; What the tyranny really had grown to can
+be gauged nowhere so well as in country lodgings, where the most ordinary
+things of design and decoration have sifted down and gathered together,
+so that foolish ornament gains a cumulative force and achieves a conspicuous
+commonness.&nbsp; Stem and petal and leaf&mdash;the fluent forms that
+a man has not by heart but certainly by rote&mdash;are woven, printed,
+cast, and stamped wherever restlessness and insimplicity have feared
+to leave plain spaces.&nbsp; The most ugly of all imaginable rooms,
+which is probably the parlour of a farm-house arrayed for those whom
+Americans call summer-boarders, is beset with flowers.&nbsp; It blooms,
+a dry, woollen, papery, cast-iron garden.&nbsp; The floor flourishes
+with blossoms adust, poorly conventionalised into a kind of order; the
+table-cover is ablaze with a more realistic florescence; the wall-paper
+is set with bunches; the rigid machine-lace curtain is all of roses
+and lilies in its very construction, over the muslin blinds an impotent
+sprig is scattered.&nbsp; In the worsted rosettes of the bell-ropes,
+in the plaster picture-frames, in the painted tea-tray and on the cups,
+in the pediment of the sideboard, in the ornament that crowns the barometer,
+in the finials of sofa and arm-chair, in the finger-plates of the &lsquo;grained&rsquo;
+door, is to be seen the ineffectual portrait or to be traced the stale
+inspiration of the flower.&nbsp; And what is this bossiness around the
+grate but some blunt, black-leaded garland?&nbsp; The recital is wearisome,
+but the retribution of the flower is precisely weariness.&nbsp; It is
+the persecution of man, the haunting of his trivial visions, and the
+oppression of his inconsiderable brain.</p>
+<p>The man so possessed suffers the lot of the weakling&mdash;subjection
+to the smallest of the things he has abused.&nbsp; The designer of cheap
+patterns is no more inevitably ridden by the flower than is the vain
+and transitory author by the phrase.&nbsp; But I had rather learn my
+decoration of the Japanese, and place against the blank wall one pot
+plain from the wheel, holding one singular branch in blossom, in the
+attitude and accident of growth.&nbsp; And I could wish abstention to
+exist, and even to be evident, in my words.&nbsp; In literature as in
+all else man merits his subjection to trivialities by a kind of economical
+greed.&nbsp; A condition for using justly and gaily any decoration would
+seem to be a certain reluctance.&nbsp; Ornament&mdash;strange as the
+doctrine sounds in a world decivilised&mdash;was in the beginning intended
+to be something jocund; and jocundity was never to be achieved but by
+postponement, deference, and modesty.&nbsp; Nor can the prodigality
+of the meadows in May be quoted in dispute.&nbsp; For Nature has something
+even more severe than moderation: she has an innumerable singleness.&nbsp;
+Her butter-cup meadows are not prodigal; they show multitude, but not
+multiplicity, and multiplicity is exactly the disgrace of decoration.&nbsp;
+Who has ever multiplied or repeated his delights? or who has ever gained
+the granting of the most foolish of his wishes&mdash;the prayer for
+reiteration?&nbsp; It is a curious slight to generous Fate that man
+should, like a child, ask for one thing many times.&nbsp; Her answer
+every time is a resembling but new and single gift; until the day when
+she shall make the one tremendous difference among her gifts&mdash;and
+make it perhaps in secret&mdash;by naming one of them the ultimate.&nbsp;
+What, for novelty, what, for singleness, what, for separateness, can
+equal the last?&nbsp; Of many thousand kisses the poor last&mdash;but
+even the kisses of your mouth are all numbered.</p>
+<h2>UNSTABLE EQUILIBRIUM</h2>
+<p>It is principally for the sake of the leg that a change in the dress
+of man is so much to be desired.&nbsp; The leg, completing as it does
+the form of man, should make a great part of that human scenery which
+is at least as important as the scenery of geological structure, or
+the scenery of architecture, or the scenery of vegetation, but which
+the lovers of mountains and the preservers of ancient buildings have
+consented to ignore.&nbsp; The leg is the best part of the figure, inasmuch
+as it has the finest lines and therewith those slender, diminishing
+forms which, coming at the base of the human structure, show it to be
+a thing of life by its unstable equilibrium.&nbsp; A lifeless structure
+is in stable equilibrium; the body, springing, poised, upon its fine
+ankles and narrow feet, never stands without implying and expressing
+life.&nbsp; It is the leg that first suggested the phantasy of flight.&nbsp;
+We imagine wings to the figure that is erect upon the vital and tense
+legs of man; and the herald Mercury, because of his station, looks new-lighted.&nbsp;
+All this is true of the best leg, and the best leg is the man&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+That of the young child, in which the Italian schools of painting delighted,
+has neither movement nor supporting strength.&nbsp; In the case of the
+woman&rsquo;s figure it is the foot, with its extreme proportional smallness,
+that gives the precious instability, the spring and balance that are
+so organic.&nbsp; But man should no longer disguise the long lines,
+the strong forms, in those lengths of piping or tubing that are of all
+garments the most stupid.&nbsp; Inexpressive of what they clothe as
+no kind of concealing drapery could ever be, they are neither implicitly
+nor explicitly good raiment.&nbsp; It is hardly possible to err by violence
+in denouncing them.&nbsp; Why, when a bad writer is praised for &lsquo;clothing
+his thought,&rsquo; it is to modern raiment that one&rsquo;s nimble
+fancy flies&mdash;fain of completing the beautiful metaphor!</p>
+<p>The human scenery: yes, costume could make a crowd something other
+than the mass of sooty colour&mdash;dark without depth&mdash;and the
+multiplication of undignified forms that fill the streets, and demonstrate,
+and strike, and listen to the democrat.&nbsp; For the undistinguished
+are very important by their numbers.&nbsp; These are they who make the
+look of the artificial world.&nbsp; They are man generalised; as units
+they inevitably lack something of interest; all the more have they cumulative
+effect.&nbsp; It would be well if we could persuade the average man
+to take on a certain human dignity in the clothing of his average body.&nbsp;
+Unfortunately he will be slow to be changed.&nbsp; And as to the poorer
+part of the mass, so wretched are their national customs&mdash;and the
+wretchedest of them all the wearing of other men&rsquo;s old raiment&mdash;that
+they must wait for reform until the reformed dress, which the reformers
+have not yet put on, shall have turned second-hand.</p>
+<h2>THE UNIT OF THE WORLD</h2>
+<p>The quarrel of Art with Nature goes on apace.&nbsp; The painters
+have long been talking of selecting, then of rejecting, or even, with
+Mr. Whistler, of supplanting.&nbsp; And then Mr. Oscar Wilde, in the
+witty and delicate series of inversions which he headed &lsquo;The Decay
+of Lying,&rsquo; declared war with all the irresponsibility naturally
+attending an act so serious.&nbsp; He seems to affirm that Nature is
+less proportionate to man than is architecture; that the house is built
+and the sofa is made measurable by the unit measure of the body; but
+that the landscape is set to some other scale.&nbsp; &lsquo;I prefer
+houses to the open air.&nbsp; In a house we all feel of the proper proportions.&nbsp;
+Egotism itself, which is so necessary to a proper sense of human dignity,
+is absolutely the result of indoor life.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nevertheless,
+before it is too late, let me assert that though nature is not always
+clearly and obviously made to man&rsquo;s measure, he is yet the unit
+by which she is measurable.&nbsp; The proportion may be far to seek
+at times, but the proportion is there.&nbsp; Man&rsquo;s farms about
+the lower Alps, his summer pastures aloft, have their relation to the
+whole construction of the range; and the range is great because it is
+great in regard to the village lodged in a steep valley in the foot
+hills.&nbsp; The relation of flower and fruit to his hands and mouth,
+to his capacity and senses (I am dealing with size, and nothing else),
+is a very commonplace of our conditions in the world.&nbsp; The arm
+of man is sufficient to dig just as deep as the harvest is to be sown.&nbsp;
+And if some of the cheerful little evidences of the more popular forms
+of teleology are apt to be baffled, or indefinitely postponed, by the
+retorts that suggest themselves to the modern child, there remains the
+subtle and indisputable witness borne by art itself: the body of man
+composes with the mass and the detail of the world.&nbsp; The picture
+is irrefutable, and the picture arranges the figure amongst its natural
+accessories in the landscape, and would not have them otherwise.</p>
+<p>But there is one conspicuous thing in the world to which man has
+not served as a unit of proportion, and that one thing is a popularly
+revered triumph of that very art of architecture in which Mr. Oscar
+Wilde has confidence for keeping things in scale.&nbsp; Human ingenuity
+in designing St. Peter&rsquo;s on the Vatican, has achieved this one
+exception to the universal harmony&mdash;a harmony enriched by discords,
+but always on one certain scale of notes&mdash;which the body makes
+with the details of the earth.&nbsp; It is not in the landscape, where
+Mr. Oscar Wilde has too rashly looked for contempt and contumely, but
+in the art he holds precious as the minister to man&rsquo;s egotism,
+that man&rsquo;s Ego is defied.&nbsp; St. Peter&rsquo;s is not necessarily
+too large (though on other grounds its size might be liable to correction);
+it is simply out of relation to the most vital thing on the earth&mdash;the
+thing which has supplied some secret rod to measure the waves withal,
+and the whales, the sea-wall cliffs, the ears of wheat, the cedar-branches,
+pines and diamonds and apples.&nbsp; Now, Emerson would certainly not
+have felt the soft shock and stimulus of delight to which he confesses
+himself to be liable at the first touch of certain phrases, had not
+the words in every case enclosed a promise of further truth and of a
+second pleasure.&nbsp; One of these swift and fruitful experiences visited
+him with the saying&mdash;grown popular through him&mdash;that an architect
+should have a knowledge of anatomy.&nbsp; There is assuredly a germ
+and a promise in the phrase.&nbsp; It delights us, first, because it
+seems to recognise the organic, as distinct from the merely constructive,
+character of finely civilised architecture; and next, it persuades us
+that Vitruvius had in truth discovered the key to size&mdash;the unit
+that is sometimes so obscurely, yet always so absolutely, the measure
+of what is great and small among things animate and inanimate.&nbsp;
+And in spite of themselves the architects of St. Peter&rsquo;s were
+constrained to take something from man; they refused his height for
+their scale, but they tried to use his shape for their ornament.&nbsp;
+And so in the blankest dearth of fancy that ever befel architect or
+builder they imagined human beings bigger than the human beings of experience;
+and by means of these, carved in stone and inlaid in mosaic, they set
+up a relation of their own.&nbsp; The basilica was related to the colossal
+figure (as a church more wisely measured would have been to living man),
+and so ceased to be large; and nothing more important was finally achieved
+than transposal of the whole work into another scale of proportions&mdash;a
+scale in which the body of man was not the unit.&nbsp; The pile of stones
+that make St. Peter&rsquo;s is a very little thing in comparison with
+Soracte; but man, and man&rsquo;s wife, and the unequal statures of
+his children, are in touch with the structure of the mountain rather
+than with that of the church which has been conceived without reference
+to the vital and fundamental rule of his inches.</p>
+<p>Is there no egotism, ministering to his dignity, that man, having
+the law of the organism of the world written in his members, can take
+with him, out of the room that has been built to accord with him, into
+the landscape that stands only a little further away?&nbsp; He has deliberately
+made the smoking chair and the table; there is nothing to surprise him
+in their ministrations.&nbsp; But what profounder homage is rendered
+by the multitudinous Nature going about the interests and the business
+of which he knows so little, and yet throughout confessing him!&nbsp;
+His eyes have seen her and his ears have heard, but it would never have
+entered into his heart to conceive her.&nbsp; His is not the fancy that
+could have achieved these woods, this little flush of summer from the
+innumerable flowering of grasses, the cyclic recreation of seasons.&nbsp;
+And yet he knows that he is imposed upon all he sees.&nbsp; His stature
+gives laws.&nbsp; His labour only is needful&mdash;not a greater strength.&nbsp;
+And the sun and the showers are made sufficient for him.&nbsp; His furniture
+must surely be adjudged to pay him but a coarse flattery in comparison
+with the subjection, yet the aloofness, of all this wild world.&nbsp;
+This is no flattery.&nbsp; The grass is lumpy, as Mr. Oscar Wilde remarks
+with truth: Nature is not man&rsquo;s lacquey, and has no preoccupation
+about his more commonplace comforts.&nbsp; These he gives himself indoors;
+and who prizes, with any self-respect, the things carefully provided
+by self-love?&nbsp; But when that <i>farouche</i> Nature, who has never
+spoken to him, and to whom he has never had the opportunity of hinting
+his wishes or his tastes&mdash;when she reveals the suggestions of his
+form and the desire of his eyes, and amongst her numberless purposes
+lets him surprise in her the purpose to accord with him, and lets him
+suspect further harmonies which he has not yet learnt to understand&mdash;then
+man becomes conscious of having received a token from her lowliness,
+and a favour from her loveliness, compared with which the care wherewith
+his tailor himself has fitted him might leave his gratitude cool.</p>
+<h2>BY THE RAILWAY SIDE</h2>
+<p>My train drew near to the Via Reggio platform on a day between two
+of the harvests of a hot September; the sea was burning blue, and there
+were a sombreness and a gravity in the very excesses of the sun as his
+fires brooded deeply over the serried, hardy, shabby, seaside ilex-woods.&nbsp;
+I had come out of Tuscany and was on my way to the Genovesato: the steep
+country with its profiles, bay by bay, of successive mountains grey
+with olive-trees, between the flashes of the Mediterranean and the sky;
+the country through the which there sounds the twanging Genoese language,
+a thin Italian mingled with a little Arabic, more Portuguese, and much
+French.&nbsp; I was regretful at leaving the elastic Tuscan speech,
+canorous in its vowels set in emphatic <i>l&rsquo;s</i> and <i>m&rsquo;s</i>
+and the vigorous soft spring of the double consonants.&nbsp; But as
+the train arrived its noises were drowned by a voice declaiming in the
+tongue I was not to hear again for months&mdash;good Italian.&nbsp;
+The voice was so loud that one looked for the audience: Whose ears was
+it seeking to reach by the violence done to every syllable, and whose
+feelings would it touch by its insincerity?&nbsp; The tones were insincere,
+but there was passion behind them; and most often passion acts its own
+true character poorly, and consciously enough to make good judges think
+it a mere counterfeit.&nbsp; Hamlet, being a little mad, feigned madness.&nbsp;
+It is when I am angry that I pretend to be angry, so as to present the
+truth in an obvious and intelligible form.&nbsp; Thus even before the
+words were distinguishable it was manifest that they were spoken by
+a man in serious trouble who had false ideas as to what is convincing
+in elocution.</p>
+<p>When the voice became audibly articulate, it proved to be shouting
+blasphemies from the broad chest of a middle-aged man&mdash;an Italian
+of the type that grows stout and wears whiskers.&nbsp; The man was in
+<i>bourgeois</i> dress, and he stood with his hat off in front of the
+small station building, shaking his thick fist at the sky.&nbsp; No
+one was on the platform with him except the railway officials, who seemed
+in doubt as to their duties in the matter, and two women.&nbsp; Of one
+of these there was nothing to remark except her distress.&nbsp; She
+wept as she stood at the door of the waiting-room.&nbsp; Like the second
+woman, she wore the dress of the shopkeeping class throughout Europe,
+with the local black lace veil in place of a bonnet over her hair.&nbsp;
+It is of the second woman&mdash;O unfortunate creature!&mdash;that this
+record is made&mdash;a record without sequel, without consequence; but
+there is nothing to be done in her regard except so to remember her.&nbsp;
+And thus much I think I owe after having looked, from the midst of the
+negative happiness that is given to so many for a space of years, at
+some minutes of her despair.&nbsp; She was hanging on the man&rsquo;s
+arm in her entreaties that he would stop the drama he was enacting.&nbsp;
+She had wept so hard that her face was disfigured.&nbsp; Across her
+nose was the dark purple that comes with overpowering fear.&nbsp; Haydon
+saw it on the face of a woman whose child had just been run over in
+a London street.&nbsp; I remembered the note in his journal as the woman
+at Via Reggio, in her intolerable hour, turned her head my way, her
+sobs lifting it.&nbsp; She was afraid that the man would throw himself
+under the train.&nbsp; She was afraid that he would be damned for his
+blasphemies; and as to this her fear was mortal fear.&nbsp; It was horrible,
+too, that she was humpbacked and a dwarf.</p>
+<p>Not until the train drew away from the station did we lose the clamour.&nbsp;
+No one had tried to silence the man or to soothe the woman&rsquo;s horror.&nbsp;
+But has any one who saw it forgotten her face?&nbsp; To me for the rest
+of the day it was a sensible rather than a merely mental image.&nbsp;
+Constantly a red blur rose before my eyes for a background, and against
+it appeared the dwarf&rsquo;s head, lifted with sobs, under the provincial
+black lace veil.&nbsp; And at night what emphasis it gained on the boundaries
+of sleep!&nbsp; Close to my hotel there was a roofless theatre crammed
+with people, where they were giving Offenbach.&nbsp; The operas of Offenbach
+still exist in Italy, and the little town was placarded with announcements
+of <i>La</i> <i>Bella</i> <i>Elena</i>.&nbsp; The peculiar vulgar rhythm
+of the music jigged audibly through half the hot night, and the clapping
+of the town&rsquo;s-folk filled all its pauses.&nbsp; But the persistent
+noise did but accompany, for me, the persistent vision of those three
+figures at the Via Reggio station in the profound sunshine of the day.</p>
+<h2>POCKET VOCABULARIES</h2>
+<p>A serviceable substitute for style in literature has been found in
+such a collection of language ready for use as may be likened to a portable
+vocabulary.&nbsp; It is suited to the manners of a day that has produced
+salad-dressing in bottles, and many other devices for the saving of
+processes.&nbsp; Fill me such a wallet full of &lsquo;graphic&rsquo;
+things, of &lsquo;quaint&rsquo; things and &lsquo;weird,&rsquo; of &lsquo;crisp&rsquo;
+or &lsquo;sturdy&rsquo; Anglo-Saxon, of the material for &lsquo;word-painting&rsquo;
+(is not that the way of it?), and it will serve the turn.&nbsp; Especially
+did the Teutonic fury fill full these common little hoards of language.&nbsp;
+It seemed, doubtless, to the professor of the New Literature that if
+anything could convince him of his own success it must be the energy
+of his Teutonisms and his avoidance of languid Latin derivatives, fit
+only for the pedants of the eighteenth century.&nbsp; Literature doubtless
+is made of words.&nbsp; What then is needful, he seems to ask, besides
+a knack of beautiful words?&nbsp; Unluckily for him, he has achieved,
+not style, but slang.&nbsp; Unluckily for him, words are not style,
+phrases are not style.&nbsp; &lsquo;The man is style.&rsquo;&nbsp; O
+good French language, cunning and good, that lets me read the sentence
+in obverse or converse as I will!&nbsp; And I read it as declaring that
+the whole man, the very whole of him, is his style.&nbsp; The literature
+of a man of letters worthy the name is rooted in all his qualities,
+with little fibres running invisibly into the smallest qualities he
+has.&nbsp; He who is not a man of letters, simply is not one; it is
+not too audacious a paradox to affirm that doing will not avail him
+who fails in being.&nbsp; &lsquo;Lay your deadly doing down,&rsquo;
+sang once some old hymn known to Calvinists.&nbsp; Certain poets, a
+certain time ago, ransacked the language for words full of life and
+beauty, made a vocabulary of them, and out of wantonness wrote them
+to death.&nbsp; To change somewhat the simile, they scented out a word&mdash;an
+earlyish word, by preference&mdash;ran it to earth, unearthed it, dug
+it out, and killed it.&nbsp; And then their followers bagged it.&nbsp;
+The very word that lives, &lsquo;new every morning,&rsquo; miraculously
+new, in the literature of a man of letters, they killed and put into
+their bag.&nbsp; And, in like manner, the emotion that should have caused
+the word is dead for those, and for those only, who abuse its expression.&nbsp;
+For the maker of a portable vocabulary is not content to turn his words
+up there: he turns up his feelings also, alphabetically or otherwise.&nbsp;
+Wonderful how much sensibility is at hand in such round words as the
+New Literature loves.&nbsp; Do you want a generous emotion?&nbsp; Pull
+forth the little language.&nbsp; Find out moonshine, find out moonshine!</p>
+<p>Take, as an instance, Mr. Swinburne&rsquo;s &lsquo;hell.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+There is, I fear, no doubt whatever that Mr. Swinburne has put his &lsquo;hell&rsquo;
+into a vocabulary, with the inevitable consequences to the word.&nbsp;
+And when the minor men of his school have occasion for a &lsquo;hell&rsquo;
+(which may very well happen to any young man practising authorship),
+I must not be accused of phantasy if I say that they put their hands
+into Mr. Swinburne&rsquo;s vocabulary and pick it.&nbsp; These vocabularies
+are made out of vigorous and blunt language.&nbsp; &lsquo;What hempen
+homespuns have we swaggering here?&rsquo;&nbsp; Alas, they are homespuns
+from the factory, machine-made in uncostly quantities.&nbsp; Obviously,
+power needs to make use of no such storage.&nbsp; The property of power
+is to use phrases, whether strange or familiar, as though it created
+them.&nbsp; But even more than lack of power is lack of humour the cause
+of all the rankness and the staleness, of all the Anglo-Saxon of commerce,
+of all the weary &lsquo;quaintness&rsquo;&mdash;that quaintness of which
+one is moved to exclaim with Cassio: &lsquo;Hither comes the bauble!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Lack of a sense of humour betrays a man into that perpetual too-much
+whereby he tries to make amends for a currency debased.&nbsp; No more
+than any other can a witty writer dispense with a sense of humour.&nbsp;
+In his moments of sentiment the lack is distressing; in his moments
+of wit it is at least perceptible.&nbsp; A sense of humour cannot be
+always present, it may be urged.&nbsp; Why, no; it is the lack of it
+that is&mdash;importunate.&nbsp; Other absences, such as the absence
+of passion, the absence of delicacy, are, if grievous negatives, still
+mere negatives.&nbsp; These qualities may or may not be there at call,
+ready for a summons; we are not obliged to know; we are not momentarily
+aware, unless they ought to be in action, whether their action is possible.&nbsp;
+But want of power and want of a sense of the ridiculous: these are lacks
+wherefrom there is no escaping, deficiencies that are all-influential,
+defects that assert themselves, vacancies that proclaim themselves,
+absences from the presence whereof there is no flying; what other paradoxes
+can I adventure?&nbsp; Without power&mdash;no style.&nbsp; Without a
+possible humour,&mdash;no style.&nbsp; The weakling has no confidence
+in himself to keep him from grasping at words that he fancies hold within
+them the true passions of the race, ready for the uses of his egoism.&nbsp;
+And with a sense of humour a man will not steal from a shelf the precious
+treasure of the language and put it in his pocket.</p>
+<h2>PATHOS</h2>
+<p>A fugitive writer wrote but lately on the fugitive page of a minor
+magazine: &lsquo;For our part, the drunken tinker [Christopher Sly]
+is the most real personage of the piece, and not without some hints
+of the pathos that is worked out more fully, though by different ways,
+in Bottom and Malvolio.&rsquo;&nbsp; Has it indeed come to this?&nbsp;
+Have the Zeitgeist and the Weltschmerz and the other things compared
+to which &lsquo;le spleen&rsquo; was gay, done so much for us?&nbsp;
+Is there to be no laughter left in literature free from the preoccupation
+of a sham real-life?&nbsp; So it would seem.&nbsp; Even what the great
+master has not shown us in his work, that your critic convinced of pathos
+is resolved to see in it.&nbsp; By the penetration of his intrusive
+sympathy he will come at it.&nbsp; It is of little use now to explain
+Snug the joiner to the audience: why, it is precisely Snug who stirs
+their emotions so painfully.&nbsp; Not the lion; they can see through
+that: but the Snug within, the human Snug.&nbsp; And Master Shallow
+has the Weltschmerz in that latent form which is the more appealing;
+and discouraging questions arise as to the end of old Double; and Argan
+in his nightcap is the tragic figure of Monomania; and human nature
+shudders at the petrifaction of the intellect of Mr. F.&rsquo;s aunt.&nbsp;
+<i>Et</i> <i>patati</i>, <i>et</i> <i>patata</i>.</p>
+<p>It may be only too true that the actual world is &lsquo;with pathos
+delicately edged.&rsquo;&nbsp; For Malvolio living we should have had
+living sympathies: so much aspiration, so ill-educated a love of refinement;
+so unarmed a credulity, noblest of weaknesses, betrayed for the laughter
+of a chambermaid.&nbsp; By an actual Bottom the Weaver our pity might
+be reached for the sake of his single self-reliance, his fancy and resource
+condemned to burlesque and ignominy by the niggard doom of circumstance.&nbsp;
+But is not life one thing and is not art another?&nbsp; Is it not the
+privilege of literature to make selection and to treat things singly,
+without the after-thoughts of life, without the troublous completeness
+of the many-sided world?&nbsp; Is not Shakespeare, for this reason,
+our refuge?&nbsp; Fortunately unreal is his world when he will have
+it so; and there we may laugh with open heart at a grotesque man: without
+misgiving, without remorse, without reluctance.&nbsp; If great creating
+Nature has not assumed for herself she has assuredly secured to the
+great creating poet the right of partiality, of limitation, of setting
+aside and leaving out, of taking one impression and one emotion as sufficient
+for the day.&nbsp; Art and Nature are separate, complementary; in relation,
+not in confusion, with one another.&nbsp; And all this officious cleverness
+in seeing round the corner, as it were, of a thing presented by literary
+art in the flat&mdash;(the borrowing of similes from other arts is of
+evil tendency; but let this pass, as it is apt)&mdash;is but another
+sign of the general lack of a sense of the separation between Nature
+and the sentient mirror in the mind.&nbsp; In some of his persons, indeed,
+Shakespeare is as Nature herself, all-inclusive; but in others&mdash;and
+chiefly in comedy&mdash;he is partial, he is impressionary, he refuses
+to know what is not to his purpose, he is an artist.&nbsp; And in that
+gay, wilful world it is that he gives us&mdash;or used to give us, for
+even the world is obsolete&mdash;the pleasure of <i>oubliance</i>.</p>
+<p>Now this fugitive writer has not been so swift but that I have caught
+him a clout as he went.&nbsp; Yet he will do it again; and those like-minded
+will assuredly also continue to show how much more completely human,
+how much more sensitive, how much more responsible, is the art of the
+critic than the world has ever dreamt till now.&nbsp; And, superior
+in so much, they will still count their superior weeping as the choicest
+of their gifts.&nbsp; And Lepidus, who loves to wonder, can have no
+better subject for his admiration than the pathos of the time.&nbsp;
+It is bred now of your mud by the operation of your sun.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis
+a strange serpent; and the tears of it are wet.</p>
+<h2>THE POINT OF HONOUR</h2>
+<p>Not without significance is the Spanish nationality of Velasquez.&nbsp;
+In Spain was the Point put upon Honour; and Velasquez was the first
+Impressionist.&nbsp; As an Impressionist he claimed, implicity if not
+explicity, a whole series of delicate trusts in his trustworthiness;
+he made an appeal to the confidence of his peers; he relied on his own
+candour and asked that the candid should rely upon him; he kept the
+chastity of art when other masters were content with its honesty, and
+when others saved artistic conscience he safeguarded the point of honour.&nbsp;
+Contemporary masters more or less proved their position, and convinced
+the world by something of demonstration; the first Impressionist simply
+asked that his word should be accepted.&nbsp; To those who would not
+take his word he offers no bond.&nbsp; To those who will, he grants
+the distinction of a share in his responsibility.&nbsp; Somewhat unrefined,
+in comparison to his lofty and simple claim to be believed on a suggestion,
+is the commoner painter&rsquo;s production of his credentials, his appeal
+to the sanctions of ordinary experience, his self-defence against the
+suspicion of making irresponsible mysteries in art.&nbsp; &lsquo;You
+can see for yourself,&rsquo; the lesser man seems to say to the world,
+&lsquo;thus things are, and I render them in such manner that your intelligence
+may be satisfied.&rsquo;&nbsp; This is an appeal to average experience&mdash;at
+the best the cumulative experience; and with the average, or with the
+sum, art cannot deal without derogation.&nbsp; The Spaniard seems to
+say: &lsquo;Thus things are in my pictorial sight.&nbsp; Trust me, I
+apprehend them so.&rsquo;&nbsp; We are not excluded from his counsels,
+but we are asked to attribute a certain authority to him, master of
+the craft as he is, master of that art of seeing pictorially which is
+the beginning and not far from the end&mdash;not far short of the whole&mdash;of
+the art of painting.&nbsp; So little indeed are we shut out from the
+mysteries of a great Impressionist&rsquo;s impression that Velasquez
+requires us to be in some degree his colleagues.&nbsp; Thus may each
+of us to whom he appeals take praise from the praised: He leaves my
+educated eyes to do a little of the work.&nbsp; He respects my responsibility
+no less&mdash;though he respects it less explicitly&mdash;than I do
+his.&nbsp; What he allows me would not be granted by a meaner master.&nbsp;
+If he does not hold himself bound to prove his own truth, he returns
+thanks for my trust.&nbsp; It is as though he used his countrymen&rsquo;s
+courteous hyperbole and called his house my own.&nbsp; In a sense of
+the most noble hostship he does me the honours of his picture.</p>
+<p>Because Impressionism is so free, therefore is it doubly bound.&nbsp;
+Because there is none to arraign it, it is a thousand times responsible.&nbsp;
+To undertake this art for the sake of its privileges without confessing
+its obligations&mdash;or at least without confessing them up to the
+point of honour&mdash;is to take a vulgar freedom: to see immunities
+precisely where there are duties, and an advantage where there is a
+bond.&nbsp; A very mob of men have taken Impressionism upon themselves
+in this our later day.&nbsp; It is against all probabilities that more
+than a few among these have within them the point of honour.&nbsp; In
+their galleries we are beset with a dim distrust.&nbsp; And to distrust
+is more humiliating than to be distrusted.&nbsp; How many of these landscape-painters,
+deliberately rash, are painting the truth of their own impressions?&nbsp;
+An ethical question as to loyalty is easily answered; truth and falsehood
+as to fact are, happily for the intelligence of the common conscience,
+not hard to divide.&nbsp; But when the <i>dubium</i> concerns not fact
+but artistic truth, can the many be sure that their sensitiveness, their
+candour, their scruple, their delicate equipoise of perceptions, the
+vigilance of their apprehension, are enough?&nbsp; Now Impressionists
+of late have told us things as to their impressions&mdash;as to the
+effect of things upon the temperament of this man and upon the mood
+of that&mdash;which should not be asserted except on the artistic point
+of honour.&nbsp; The majority can tell ordinary truth, but they should
+not trust themselves for truth extraordinary.&nbsp; They can face the
+general judgment, but they should hesitate to produce work that appeals
+to the last judgment, which is the judgment within.&nbsp; There is too
+much reason to divine that a certain number of those who aspire to derive
+from the greatest of masters have no temperaments worth speaking of,
+no point of view worth seizing, no vigilance worth awaiting, no mood
+worth waylaying.&nbsp; And to be, <i>de</i> <i>parti</i> <i>pris</i>,
+an Impressionist without these!&nbsp; O Velasquez!&nbsp; Nor is literature
+quite free from a like reproach in her own things.&nbsp; An author,
+here and there, will make as though he had a word worth hearing&mdash;nay,
+worth over-hearing&mdash;a word that seeks to withdraw even while it
+is uttered; and yet what it seems to dissemble is all too probably a
+platitude.&nbsp; But obviously, literature is not&mdash;as is the craft
+and mystery of painting&mdash;so at the mercy of a half-imposture, so
+guarded by unprovable honour.&nbsp; For the art of painting is reserved
+that shadowy risk, that undefined salvation.&nbsp; May the gods guard
+us from the further popularising of Impressionism; for the point of
+honour is the simple secret of the few.</p>
+<h2>COMPOSURE</h2>
+<p>Tribulation, Immortality, the Multitude: what remedy of composure
+do these words bring for their own great disquiet!&nbsp; Without the
+remoteness of the Latinity the thought would come too close and shake
+too cruelly.&nbsp; In order to the sane endurance of the intimate trouble
+of the soul an aloofness of language is needful.&nbsp; Johnson feared
+death.&nbsp; Did his noble English control and postpone the terror?&nbsp;
+Did it keep the fear at some courteous, deferent distance from the centre
+of that human heart, in the very act of the leap and lapse of mortality?&nbsp;
+Doubtless there is in language such an educative power.&nbsp; Speech
+is a school.&nbsp; Every language is a persuasion, an induced habit,
+an instrument which receives the note indeed but gives the tone.&nbsp;
+Every language imposes a quality, teaches a temper, proposes a way,
+bestows a tradition: this is the tone&mdash;the voice&mdash;of the instrument.&nbsp;
+Every language, by counter-change, replies to the writer&rsquo;s touch
+or breath his own intention, articulate: this is his note.&nbsp; Much
+has always been said, many things to the purpose have been thought,
+of the power and the responsibility of the note.&nbsp; Of the legislation
+and influence of the tone I have been led to think by comparing the
+tranquillity of Johnson and the composure of Canning with the stimulated
+and close emotion, the interior trouble, of those writers who have entered
+as disciples in the school of the more Teutonic English.</p>
+<p>For if every language be a school, more significantly and more educatively
+is a part of a language a school to him who chooses that part.&nbsp;
+Few languages offer the choice.&nbsp; The fact that a choice is made
+implies the results and fruits of a decision.&nbsp; The French author
+is without these.&nbsp; They are of all the heritages of the English
+writer the most important.&nbsp; He receives a language of dual derivation.&nbsp;
+He may submit himself to either University, whither he will take his
+impulse and his character, where he will leave their influence, and
+whence he will accept their education.&nbsp; The Frenchman has certainly
+a style to develop within definite limits; but he does not subject himself
+to suggestions tending mainly hitherwards or thitherwards, to currents
+of various race within one literature.&nbsp; Such a choice of subjection
+is the singular opportunity of the Englishman.&nbsp; I do not mean to
+ignore the necessary mingling.&nbsp; Happily that mingling has been
+done once for all for us all.&nbsp; Nay, one of the most charming things
+that a master of English can achieve is the repayment of the united
+teaching by linking their results so exquisitely in his own practice,
+that words of the two schools are made to meet each other with a surprise
+and delight that shall prove them at once gayer strangers, and sweeter
+companions, than the world knew they were.&nbsp; Nevertheless there
+remains the liberty of choice as to which school of words shall have
+the place of honour in the great and sensitive moments of an author&rsquo;s
+style: which school shall be used for conspicuousness, and which for
+multitudinous service.&nbsp; And the choice being open, the perturbation
+of the pulses and impulses of so many hearts quickened in thought and
+feeling in this day suggests to me a deliberate return to the recollectedness
+of the more tranquil language.&nbsp; &lsquo;Doubtless there is a place
+of peace.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>A place of peace, not of indifference.&nbsp; It is impossible not
+to charge some of the moralists of the last century with an indifference
+into which they educated their platitudes and into which their platitudes
+educated them.&nbsp; Addison thus gave and took, until he was almost
+incapable of coming within arm&rsquo;s-length of a real or spiritual
+emotion.&nbsp; There is no knowing to what distance the removal of the
+&lsquo;appropriate sentiment&rsquo; from the central soul might have
+attained but for the change and renewal in language, which came when
+it was needed.&nbsp; Addison had assuredly removed eternity far from
+the apprehension of the soul when his Cato hailed the &lsquo;pleasing
+hope,&rsquo; the &lsquo;fond desire;&rsquo; and the touch of war was
+distant from him who conceived his &lsquo;repulsed battalions&rsquo;
+and his &lsquo;doubtful battle.&rsquo;&nbsp; What came afterwards, when
+simplicity and nearness were restored once more, was doubtless journeyman&rsquo;s
+work at times.&nbsp; Men were too eager to go into the workshop of language.&nbsp;
+There were unreasonable raptures over the mere making of common words.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;A hand-shoe! a finger-hat! a foreword!&nbsp; Beautiful!&rsquo;
+they cried; and for the love of German the youngest daughter of Chrysale
+herself might have consented to be kissed by a grammarian.&nbsp; It
+seemed to be forgotten that a language with all its construction visible
+is a language little fitted for the more advanced mental processes;
+that its images are material; and that, on the other hand, a certain
+spiritualising and subtilising effect of alien derivations is a privilege
+and an advantage incalculable&mdash;that to possess that half of the
+language within which Latin heredities lurk and Romanesque allusions
+are at play is to possess the state and security of a dead tongue, without
+the death.</p>
+<p>But now I spoke of words encountering as gay strangers, various in
+origin, divided in race, within a master&rsquo;s phrase.&nbsp; The most
+beautiful and the most sudden of such meetings are of course in Shakespeare.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Superfluous kings,&rsquo; &lsquo;A lass unparalleled,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;Multitudinous seas:&rsquo; we needed not to wait for the eighteenth
+century or for the nineteenth to learn the splendour of such encounters,
+of such differences, of such nuptial unlikeness and union.&nbsp; But
+it is well that we should learn them afresh.&nbsp; And it is well, too,
+that we should not resist the rhythmic reaction bearing us now somewhat
+to the side of the Latin.&nbsp; Such a reaction is in some sort an ethical
+need for our day.&nbsp; We want to quell the exaggerated decision of
+monosyllables.&nbsp; We want the poise and the pause that imply vitality
+at times better than headstrong movement expresses it.&nbsp; And not
+the phrase only but the form of verse might render us timely service.&nbsp;
+The controlling couplet might stay with a touch a modern grief, as it
+ranged in order the sorrows of Canning for his son.&nbsp; But it should
+not be attempted without a distinct intention of submission on the part
+of the writer.&nbsp; The couplet transgressed against, trespassed upon,
+shaken off, is like a law outstripped, defied&mdash;to the dignity neither
+of the rebel nor of the rule.&nbsp; To Letters do we look now for the
+guidance and direction which the very closeness of the emotion taking
+us by the heart makes necessary.&nbsp; Shall not the Thing more and
+more, as we compose ourselves to literature, assume the honour, the
+hesitation, the leisure, the reconciliation of the Word?</p>
+<h2>DR. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES</h2>
+<p>It is good to go, now and again&mdash;let the American phrase be
+permitted&mdash;&lsquo;back of&rsquo; some of our contemporaries.&nbsp;
+We never desired them as co&euml;vals.&nbsp; We never wished to share
+an age with them; we share nothing else with them.&nbsp; And we deliver
+ourselves from them by passing, in literature, into the company of an
+author who wrote before their time, and yet is familiarly modern.&nbsp;
+To read Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, then, is to go behind the New Humorist&mdash;into
+a time before he was, or his Humour.&nbsp; Obviously we go in like manner
+behind many another, but the funny writer of the magazines is suggested
+because in reference to him our act has a special significance.&nbsp;
+We connect him with Dr. Holmes by a reluctant ancestry, by an impertinent
+descent.&nbsp; It may be objected that such a connection is but a trivial
+thing to attribute, as a conspicuous incident, to a man of letters.&nbsp;
+So it is.&nbsp; But the triviality has wide allusions.&nbsp; It is often
+a question which of several significant trivialities a critic shall
+choose in his communication with a reader who does not insist that all
+the grave things shall be told him.&nbsp; And, by the way, are we ever
+sufficiently grateful for that reader, whom the last few years have
+given to us, or to whom we have been given by the last few years?&nbsp;
+A trivial connexion has remote and negative issues.&nbsp; To go to Dr.
+Oliver Wendell Holmes&rsquo;s period is to get rid of many things; to
+go to himself is especially to get rid of the New Humour, yet to stand
+at its unprophetic source.&nbsp; And we love such authors as Dickens
+and this American for their own sake, refusing to be aware of their
+corrupt following.&nbsp; We would make haste to ignore their posterity,
+and to assure them that we absolve them from any fault of theirs in
+the bastardy.</p>
+<p>Humour is the most conspicuous thing in the world, which must explain
+why the little humour in <i>Elsie</i> <i>Venner</i> and the <i>Breakfast</i>
+<i>Table</i> series is not only the first thing the critic touches but
+the thing whereby he relates this author to his following and to the
+world.&nbsp; The young man John, Colonel Sprowle with his &lsquo;social
+entertainment,&rsquo; the Landlady and her daughter, and the Poor Relation,
+almost make up the sum of the comic personages, and fifty per cent.
+of the things they say&mdash;no more&mdash;are good enough to remain
+after the bloom of their vulgarity has worn off.&nbsp; But that half
+is excellent, keen, jolly, temperate; and because of that temperance&mdash;the
+most stimulating and fecundating of qualities&mdash;the humour of it
+has set the literature of a hemisphere to the tune of mirth.&nbsp; Like
+Mr. Lowell&rsquo;s it was humour in dialect&mdash;not Irish dialect
+nor negro, but American; and it made New England aware of her comedy.&nbsp;
+Until then she had felt within herself that there was nothing to laugh
+at.&nbsp; &lsquo;Nature is in earnest when she makes a woman,&rsquo;
+says Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes.&nbsp; Rather, she takes herself seriously
+when she makes the average spiritual woman: as seriously as that woman
+takes herself when she makes a novel.&nbsp; And in a like mood Nature
+made New England and endowed her with purpose, with mortuary frivolities,
+with long views, with energetic provincialism.</p>
+<p>If we remember best <i>The</i> <i>Wonderful</i> <i>One</i>-<i>Hoss</i>
+<i>Shay</i>, we do so in spite of the religious and pathetic motive
+of the greater part of Dr. Holmes&rsquo;s work, and of his fancy, which
+should be at least as conspicuous as his humour.&nbsp; It is fancy rather
+than imagination; but it is more perfect, more definite, more fit, than
+the larger art of imagery, which is apt to be vague, because it is intellectual
+and adult.&nbsp; No grown man makes quite so definite mental images
+as does a child; when the mind ages it thinks stronger thoughts in vaguer
+pictures.&nbsp; The young mind of Dr. Holmes has less intellectual imagination
+than intelligent fancy.&nbsp; For example: &lsquo;If you ever saw a
+crow with a king-bird after him, you will get an image of a dull speaker
+and a lively listener.&nbsp; The bird in sable plumage flaps heavily
+along his straightforward course, while the other sails round him, over
+him, under him, leaves him, comes back again, tweaks out a black feather,
+shoots away once more, never losing sight of him, and finally reaches
+the crow&rsquo;s perch at the same time the crow does;&rsquo; but the
+comparison goes on after this at needless length, with explanations.&nbsp;
+Again: &lsquo;That blessed clairvoyance which sees into things without
+opening them: that glorious licence which, having shut the door and
+driven the reporter from the keyhole, calls upon Truth, majestic Virgin!
+to get off from her pedestal and drop her academic <i>poses</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And this, of the Landlady: &lsquo;She told me her story once; it was
+as if a grain that had been ground and bolted had tried to individualise
+itself by a special narrative.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;The riotous tumult
+of a laugh, which, I take it, is the mob-law of the features.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Think of the Old World&mdash;that part of it which is the seat
+of ancient civilisation! . . . A man cannot help marching in step with
+his kind in the rear of such a procession.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Young
+folk look on a face as a unit; children who go to school with any given
+little John Smith see in his name a distinctive appellation.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And that exquisitely sensitive passage on the nervous outward movement
+and the inward tranquillity of the woods.&nbsp; Such things are the
+best this good author gives us, whether they go gay with metaphor, or
+be bare thoughts shapely with their own truth.</p>
+<p>Part of the charm of Dr. Holmes&rsquo;s comment on life, and of the
+phrase wherein he secures it, arises from his singular vigilance.&nbsp;
+He has unpreoccupied and alert eyes.&nbsp; Strangely enough, by the
+way, this watchfulness is for once as much at fault as would be the
+slovenly observation of an ordinary man, in the description of a horse&rsquo;s
+gallop, &lsquo;skimming along within a yard of the ground.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Who shall trust a man&rsquo;s nimble eyes after this, when habit and
+credulity have taught him?&nbsp; Not an inch nearer the ground goes
+the horse of fact at a gallop than at a walk.&nbsp; But Dr. Holmes&rsquo;s
+vigilance helps him to somewhat squalid purpose in his studies of New
+England inland life.&nbsp; Much careful literature besides has been
+spent, after the example of <i>Elsie</i> <i>Venner</i> and the <i>Autocrat</i>,
+upon the cottage worldliness, the routine of abundant and common comforts
+achieved by a distressing household industry, the shrillness, the unrest,
+the best-parlour emulation, the ungraceful vanity, of Americans of the
+country-side and the country-town; upon their affections made vulgar
+by undemonstrativeness, and their consciences made vulgar by demonstrativeness&mdash;their
+kindness by reticence, and their religion by candour.</p>
+<p>As for the question of heredity and of individual responsibility
+which Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes proposes in <i>Elsie</i> <i>Venner</i>,
+it is strange that a man whom it had sincerely disquieted should present
+it&mdash;not in its own insolubility but&mdash;in caricature.&nbsp;
+As though the secrets of the inherited body and soul needed to be heightened
+by a bit of burlesque physiology!&nbsp; It is in spite of our protest
+against the invention of Elsie&rsquo;s horrible plight&mdash;a conception
+and invention which Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes should feel to be essentially
+frivolous&mdash;that the serpent-maiden moves us deeply by her last
+&lsquo;Good night,&rsquo; and by the gentle phrase that tells us &lsquo;Elsie
+wept.&rsquo;&nbsp; But now, if Dr. Holmes shall succeed in proposing
+the question of separate responsibility so as to convince every civilised
+mind of his doubts, there will be curiously little change wrought thereby
+in the discipline of the world.&nbsp; For Dr. Holmes incidentally lets
+us know that he cherishes and values the instinct of intolerance and
+destructiveness in presence of the cruel, the self-loving, and the false.&nbsp;
+Negation of separate moral responsibility, when that negation is tempered
+by a working instinct of intolerance and destructiveness, will deal
+with the felon, after all, very much in the manner achieved by the present
+prevalent judicialness, unscientific though it may be.&nbsp; And to
+say this is to confess that Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes has worked, through
+a number of books, to futile purpose.&nbsp; His books are justified
+by something quite apart from his purpose.</p>
+<h2>JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL</h2>
+<p>The United States have produced authors not a few; among some names
+not the most famous, perhaps, on the popular tongue, are two or three
+names of their poets; but they have hardly given to the world more than
+one man of letters&mdash;judicious, judicial, disinterested, patient,
+happy, temperate, delighted.&nbsp; The colonial days, with the &lsquo;painful&rsquo;
+divines who brought the parish into the wilderness; the experimental
+period of ambition and attempts at a literature that should be young
+as the soil and much younger than the race; the civil-war years, with
+a literature that matched the self-conscious and inexpert heroism of
+the army;&mdash;none of these periods of the national life could fitly
+be represented by a man of letters.&nbsp; And though James Russell Lowell
+was the contemporary of the &lsquo;transcendentalists,&rsquo; and a
+man of middle age when the South seceded, and though indeed his fame
+as a Yankee humourist is to be discerned through the smoke and the dust,
+through the gravity and the burlesque, of the war, clear upon the other
+side, yet he was virtually the child of national leisure, of moderation
+and education, an American of the seventies and onwards.&nbsp; He represented
+the little-recognised fact that in ripeness, not in rawness, consists
+the excellence of Americans&mdash;an excellence they must be content
+to share with contemporary nations, however much it may cost them to
+abandon we know not what bounding ambitions which they have never succeeded
+in definitely describing in words.&nbsp; Mr. Lowell was a refutation
+of the fallacy that an American can never be American enough.&nbsp;
+He ranked with the students and the critics among all nations, and nothing
+marks his transatlantic conditions except, perhaps, that his scholarliness
+is a little anxious and would not seem so; he enriches his phrases busily,
+and yet would seem composed; he makes his allusions tread closely one
+upon another, and there is an assumed carelessness, and an ill-concealed
+vigilance, as to the effect their number and their erudition will produce
+upon the reader.&nbsp; The American sensitiveness takes with him that
+pleasantest of forms; his style confesses more than he thinks of the
+loveable weakness of national vanity, and asks of the stranger now and
+again, &lsquo;Well, what do you think of my country?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Declining, as I do, to separate style in expression from style in
+the thought that informs it&mdash;for they who make such a separation
+can hardly know that style should be in the very conception of a phrase,
+in its antenatal history, else the word is neither choice nor authentic&mdash;I
+recognise in Mr. Lowell, as a prose author, a sense of proportion and
+a delicacy of selection not surpassed in the critical work of this critical
+century.&nbsp; Those small volumes, <i>Among</i> <i>My</i> <i>Books</i>
+and <i>My</i> <i>Study</i> <i>Windows</i>, are all pure literature.&nbsp;
+A fault in criticism is the rarest thing in them.&nbsp; I call none
+to mind except the strange judgment on Dr. Johnson: &lsquo;Our present
+concern with the Saxons is chiefly a literary one. . . Take Dr. Johnson
+as an instance.&nbsp; The Saxon, as it appears to me, has never shown
+any capacity for art,&rsquo; and so forth.&nbsp; One wonders how Lowell
+read the passage on Iona, and the letter to Lord Chesterfield, and the
+Preface to the Dictionary without conviction of the great English writer&rsquo;s
+supreme art&mdash;art that declares itself and would not be hidden.&nbsp;
+But take the essay on Pope, that on Chaucer, and that on one Percival,
+a writer of American verse of whom English readers are not aware, and
+they prove Lowell to have been as clear in judging as he was exquisite
+in sentencing.&nbsp; His essay &lsquo;On a Certain Condescension in
+Foreigners&rsquo; is famous, but an equal fame is due to &lsquo;My Garden
+Acquaintance&rsquo; and &lsquo;A Good Word for Winter.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+His talk about the weather is so full of wit that one wonders how prattlers
+at a loss for a topic dare attempt one so rich.&nbsp; The birds that
+nest in his syringas seem to be not his pensioners only, but his parishioners,
+so charmingly local, so intent upon his chronicle does he become when
+he is minded to play White of Selborne with a smile.&nbsp; And all the
+while it is the word that he is intent upon.&nbsp; You may trace his
+reading by some fine word that has not escaped him, but has been garnered
+for use when his fan has been quick to purge away the chaff of commonplace.&nbsp;
+He is thus fastidious and alert in many languages.&nbsp; You wonder
+at the delicacy of the sense whereby he perceives a choice rhyme in
+the Anglo-Norman of Marie de France or a clang of arms in the brief
+verse of Peire de Bergerac, or touches sensitively a word whereby Dante
+has transcended something sweet in Bernard de Ventadour, or Virgil somewhat
+noble in Homer.&nbsp; In his own use, and within his own English, he
+has the abstinence and the freshness of intention that keep every word
+new for the day&rsquo;s work.&nbsp; He gave to the language, and did
+not take from it; it gained by him, and lost not.&nbsp; There are writers
+of English now at work who almost convince us of their greatness until
+we convict them on that charge: they have succeeded at an unpardonable
+cost; they are glorified, but they have beggared the phrases they leave
+behind them.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless Lowell was no poet.&nbsp; To accept his verse as a poet&rsquo;s
+would be to confess a lack of instinct, and there is no more grievous
+lack in a lover of poetry.&nbsp; Reason, we grant, makes for the full
+acceptance of his poems, and perhaps so judicial a mind as his may be
+forgiven for having trusted to reason and to criticism.&nbsp; His trust
+was justified&mdash;if such justification avails&mdash;by the admiration
+of fairly educated people who apparently hold him to have been a poet
+first, a humourist in the second place, and an essayist incidentally.&nbsp;
+It is hard to believe that he failed in instinct about himself.&nbsp;
+More probably he was content to forego it when he found the ode, the
+lyric, and the narrative verse all so willing.&nbsp; They made no difficulty,
+and he made none; why then are we reluctant to acknowledge the manifest
+stateliness of this verse and the evident grace of that, and the fine
+thought finely worded?&nbsp; Such reluctance justifies itself.&nbsp;
+Nor would I attempt to back it by the cheap sanctions of prophecy.&nbsp;
+Nay, it is quite possible that Lowell&rsquo;s poems may live; I have
+no commands for futurity.&nbsp; Enough that he enriched the present
+with the example of a scholarly, linguistic, verbal love of literature,
+with a studiousness full of heart.</p>
+<h2>DOMUS ANGUSTA</h2>
+<p>The narrow house is a small human nature compelled to a large human
+destiny, charged with a fate too great, a history too various, for its
+slight capacities.&nbsp; Men have commonly complained of fate; but their
+complaints have been of the smallness, not of the greatness, of the
+human lot.&nbsp; A disproportion&mdash;all in favour of man&mdash;between
+man and his destiny is one of the things to be taken for granted in
+literature: so frequent and so easy is the utterance of the habitual
+lamentation as to the trouble of a &lsquo;vain capacity,&rsquo; so well
+explained has it ever been.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Thou hast not half the power to do me harm<br />
+That I have to be hurt,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>discontented man seems to cry to Heaven, taking the words of the
+brave Emilia.&nbsp; But inarticulate has been the voice within the narrow
+house.&nbsp; Obviously it never had its poet.&nbsp; Little elocution
+is there, little argument or definition, little explicitness.&nbsp;
+And yet for every vain capacity we may assuredly count a thousand vain
+destinies, for every liberal nature a thousand liberal fates.&nbsp;
+It is the trouble of the wide house we hear of, clamorous of its disappointments
+and desires.&nbsp; The narrow house has no echoes; yet its pathetic
+shortcoming might well move pity.&nbsp; On that strait stage is acted
+a generous tragedy; to that inadequate soul is intrusted an enormous
+sorrow; a tempest of movement makes its home within that slender nature;
+and heroic happiness seeks that timorous heart.</p>
+<p>We may, indeed, in part know the narrow house by its inarticulateness&mdash;not,
+certainly, its fewness of words, but its inadequacy and imprecision
+of speech.&nbsp; For, doubtless, right language enlarges the soul as
+no other power or influence may do.&nbsp; Who, for instance, but trusts
+more nobly for knowing the full word of his confidence?&nbsp; Who but
+loves more penetratingly for possessing the ultimate syllable of his
+tenderness?&nbsp; There is a &lsquo;pledging of the word,&rsquo; in
+another sense than the ordinary sense of troth and promise.&nbsp; The
+poet pledges his word, his sentence, his verse, and finds therein a
+peculiar sanction.&nbsp; And I suppose that even physical pain takes
+on an edge when it not only enforces a pang but whispers a phrase.&nbsp;
+Consciousness and the word are almost as closely united as thought and
+the word.&nbsp; Almost&mdash;not quite; in spite of its inexpressive
+speech, the narrow house is aware and sensitive beyond, as it were,
+its poor power.</p>
+<p>But as to the whole disparity between the destiny and the nature,
+we know it to be general.&nbsp; Life is great that is trivially transmitted;
+love is great that is vulgarly experienced.&nbsp; Death, too, is a heroic
+virtue; and to the keeping of us all is death committed: death, submissive
+in the indocile, modest in the fatuous, several in the vulgar, secret
+in the familiar.&nbsp; It is destructive because it not only closes
+but contradicts life.&nbsp; Unlikely people die.&nbsp; The one certain
+thing, it is also the one improbable.&nbsp; A dreadful paradox is perhaps
+wrought upon a little nature that is incapable of death and yet is constrained
+to die.&nbsp; That is a true destruction, and the thought of it is obscure.</p>
+<p>Happy literature corrects all this disproportion by its immortal
+pause.&nbsp; It does not bid us follow man or woman to an illogical
+conclusion.&nbsp; Mrs. Micawber never does desert Mr. Micawber.&nbsp;
+Considering her mental powers, by the way, an illogical conclusion for
+her would be manifestly inappropriate.&nbsp; Shakespeare, indeed, having
+seen a life whole, sees it to an end: sees it out, and Falstaff dies.&nbsp;
+More than Promethean was the audacity that, having kindled, quenched
+that spark.&nbsp; But otherwise the grotesque man in literature is immortal,
+and with something more significant than the immortality awarded to
+him in the sayings of rhetoric; he is predurable because he is not completed.&nbsp;
+His humours are strangely matched with perpetuity.&nbsp; But, indeed,
+he is not worthy to die; for there is something graver than to be immortal,
+and that is to be mortal.&nbsp; I protest I do not laugh at man or woman
+in the world.&nbsp; I thank my fellow-mortals for their wit, and also
+for the kind of joke that the French so pleasantly call <i>une</i> <i>joyeuset&eacute;</i>;
+these are to smile at.&nbsp; But the gay injustice of laughter is between
+me and the book.</p>
+<p>That narrow house&mdash;there is sometimes a message from its living
+windows.&nbsp; Its bewilderment, its reluctance, its defect, show by
+moments from eyes that are apt to express none but common things.&nbsp;
+There are allusions unawares, involuntary appeals, in those brief glances.&nbsp;
+Far from me and from my friends be the misfortune of meeting such looks
+in reply to pain of our inflicting.&nbsp; To be clever and sensitive
+and to hurt the foolish and the stolid&mdash;wouldst thou do such a
+deed for all the world?&nbsp; Not I, by this heavenly light.</p>
+<h2>REJECTION</h2>
+<p>Simplicity is not virginal in the modern world.&nbsp; She has a penitential
+or a vidual singleness.&nbsp; We can conceive an antique world in which
+life, art, and letters were simple because of the absence of many things;
+for us now they can be simple only because of our rejection of many
+things.&nbsp; We are constrained to such a vigilance as will not let
+even a master&rsquo;s work pass unfanned and unpurged.&nbsp; Even among
+his phrases one shall be taken and the other left.&nbsp; For he may
+unawares have allowed the habitualness that besets this multitudinous
+life to take the pen from his hand and to write for him a page or a
+word; and habitualness compels our refusals.&nbsp; Or he may have allowed
+the easy impulse of exaggeration to force a sentence which the mere
+truth, sensitively and powerfully pausing, would well have become.&nbsp;
+Exaggeration has played a part of its own in human history.&nbsp; By
+depreciating our language it has stimulated change, and has kept the
+circulating word in exercise.&nbsp; Our rejection must be alert and
+expert to overtake exaggeration and arrest it.&nbsp; It makes us shrewder
+than we wish to be.&nbsp; And, indeed, the whole endless action of refusal
+shortens the life we could desire to live.&nbsp; Much of our resolution
+is used up in the repeated mental gesture of adverse decision.&nbsp;
+Our tacit and implicit distaste is made explicit, who shall say with
+what loss to our treasury of quietness?&nbsp; We are defrauded of our
+interior ignorance, which should be a place of peace.&nbsp; We are forced
+to confess more articulately than befits our convention with ourselves.&nbsp;
+We are hurried out of our reluctances.&nbsp; We are made too much aware.&nbsp;
+Nay, more: we are tempted to the outward activity of destruction; reviewing
+becomes almost inevitable.&nbsp; As for the spiritual life&mdash;O weary,
+weary act of refusal!&nbsp; O waste but necessary hours, vigil and wakefulness
+of fear!&nbsp; &lsquo;We live by admiration&rsquo; only a shortened
+life who live so much in the iteration of rejection and repulse.&nbsp;
+And in the very touch of joy there hides I know not what ultimate denial;
+if not on one side, on the other.&nbsp; If joy is given to us without
+reserve, not so do we give ourselves to joy.&nbsp; We withhold, we close.&nbsp;
+Having denied many things that have approached us, we deny ourselves
+to many things.&nbsp; Thus does <i>il</i> <i>gran</i> <i>rifiuto</i>
+divide and rule our world.</p>
+<p>Simplicity is worth the sacrifice; but all is not sacrifice.&nbsp;
+Rejection has its pleasures, the more secret the more unmeasured.&nbsp;
+When we garnish a house we refuse more furniture, and furniture more
+various, than might haunt the dreams of decorators.&nbsp; There is no
+limit to our rejections.&nbsp; And the unconsciousness of the decorators
+is in itself a cause of pleasure to a mind generous, forbearing, and
+delicate.&nbsp; When we dress, no fancy may count the things we will
+none of.&nbsp; When we write, what hinders that we should refrain from
+Style past reckoning?&nbsp; When we marry&mdash;.&nbsp; Moreover, if
+simplicity is no longer set in a world having the great and beautiful
+quality of fewness, we can provide an equally fair setting in the quality
+of refinement.&nbsp; And refinement is not to be achieved but by rejection.&nbsp;
+One who suggests to me that refinement is apt to be a mere negative
+has offered up a singular blunder in honour of robustiousness.&nbsp;
+Refinement is not negative, because it must be compassed by many negations.&nbsp;
+It is a thing of price as well as of value; it demands immolations,
+it exacts experience.&nbsp; No slight or easy charge, then, is committed
+to such of us as, having apprehension of these things, fulfil the office
+of exclusion.&nbsp; Never before was a time when derogation was always
+so near, a daily danger, or when the reward of resisting it was so great.&nbsp;
+The simplicity of literature, more sensitive, more threatened, and more
+important than other simplicities, needs a guard of honour, who shall
+never relax the good will nor lose the good heart of their intolerance.</p>
+<h2>THE LESSON OF LANDSCAPE</h2>
+<p>The landscape, like our literature, is apt to grow and to get itself
+formed under too luxurious ideals.&nbsp; This is the evil work of that
+<i>little</i> <i>more</i> which makes its insensible but persistent
+additions to styles, to the arts, to the ornaments of life&mdash;to
+nature, when unluckily man becomes too explicitly conscious of her beauty,
+and too deliberate in his arrangement of it.&nbsp; The landscape has
+need of moderation, of that fast-disappearing grace of unconsciousness,
+and, in short, of a return towards the ascetic temper.&nbsp; The English
+way of landowning, above all, has made for luxury.&nbsp; Naturally the
+country is fat.&nbsp; The trees are thick and round&mdash;a world of
+leaves; the hills are round; the forms are all blunt; and the grass
+is so deep as to have almost the effect of snow in smoothing off all
+points and curving away all abruptness.&nbsp; England is almost as blunt
+as a machine-made moulding or a piece of Early-Victorian cast-iron work.&nbsp;
+And on all this we have, of set purpose, improved by our invention of
+the country park.&nbsp; There all is curves and masses.&nbsp; A little
+more is added to the greenness and the softness of the forest glade,
+and for increase of ornament the fat land is devoted to idleness.&nbsp;
+Not a tree that is not impenetrable, inarticulate.&nbsp; Thick soil
+below and thick growth above cover up all the bones of the land, which
+in more delicate countries show brows and hollows resembling those of
+a fine face after mental experience.&nbsp; By a very intelligible paradox,
+it is only in a landscape made up for beauty that beauty is so ill achieved.&nbsp;
+Much beauty there must needs be where there are vegetation and the seasons.&nbsp;
+But even the seasons, in park scenery, are marred by the <i>little</i>
+<i>too</i> <i>much</i>: too complete a winter, too emphatic a spring,
+an ostentatious summer, an autumn too demonstrative.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Seek to have less rather than more.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is a counsel
+of perfection in <i>The</i> <i>Imitation</i> <i>of</i> <i>Christ</i>.&nbsp;
+And here, undoubtedly, is the secret of all that is virile and classic
+in the art of man, and of all in nature that is most harmonious with
+that art.&nbsp; Moreover, this is the secret of Italy.&nbsp; How little
+do the tourists and the poets grasp this latter truth, by the way&mdash;and
+the artists!&nbsp; The legend of Italy is to be gorgeous, and they have
+her legend by rote.&nbsp; But Italy is slim and all articulate; her
+most characteristic trees are those that are distinct and distinguished,
+with lines that suggest the etching-point rather than a brush loaded
+with paint.&nbsp; Cypresses shaped like flames, tall pines with the
+abrupt flatness of their tops, thin canes in the brakes, sharp aloes
+by the road-side, and olives with the delicate acuteness of the leaf&mdash;these
+make keen lines of slender vegetation.&nbsp; And they own the seasons
+by a gentle confession.&nbsp; Rather than be overpowered by the clamorous
+proclamation of summer in the English woods, we would follow June to
+this subtler South: even to the Campagna, where the cycle of the seasons
+passes within such narrow limitations that insensitive eyes scarcely
+recognise it.&nbsp; In early spring there is a fresher touch of green
+on all the spaces of grass, the distance grows less mellow and more
+radiant; by the coming of May the green has been imperceptibly dimmed
+again; it blushes with the mingled colours of minute and numberless
+flowers&mdash;a dust of flowers, in lines longer than those of ocean
+billows.&nbsp; This is the desert blossoming like a rose: not the obvious
+rose of gardens, but the multitudinous and various flower that gathers
+once in the year in every hand&rsquo;s-breadth of the wilderness.&nbsp;
+When June comes the sun has burnt all to leagues of harmonious seed,
+coloured with a hint of the colour of harvest, which is gradually changed
+to the lighter harmonies of winter.&nbsp; All this fine chromatic scale
+passes within such modest boundaries that it is accused as a monotony.&nbsp;
+But those who find its modesty delightful may have a still more delicate
+pleasure in the blooming and blossoming of the sea.&nbsp; The passing
+from the winter blue to the summer blue, from the cold colour to the
+colour that has in it the fire of the sun, the kindling of the sapphire
+of the Mediterranean&mdash;the significance of these sea-seasons, so
+far from the pasture and the harvest, is imperceptible to ordinary senses,
+as appears from the fact that so few stay to see it all fulfilled.&nbsp;
+And if the tourist stayed, he would no doubt violate all that is lovely
+and moderate by the insistence of his descriptions.&nbsp; He would find
+adjectives for the blue sea, but probably he would refuse to search
+for words for the white.&nbsp; A white Mediterranean is not in the legend.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless it blooms, now and then, pale as an opal; the white sea
+is the flower of the breathless midsummer.&nbsp; And in its clear, silent
+waters, a few days, in the culmination of the heat, bring forth translucent
+living creatures, many-shaped jelly-fish, coloured like mother-of-pearl.</p>
+<p>But without going so far from the landscape of daily life, it is
+in agricultural Italy that the <i>little</i> <i>less</i> makes so undesignedly,
+and as it were so inevitably, for beauty.&nbsp; The country that is
+formed for use and purpose only is immeasurably the loveliest.&nbsp;
+What a lesson in literature!&nbsp; How feelingly it persuades us that
+all except a very little of the ornament of letters and of life makes
+the dulness of the world.&nbsp; The tenderness of colour, the beauty
+of series and perspective, and the variety of surface, produced by the
+small culture of vegetables, are among the charms that come unsought,
+and that are not to be found by seeking&mdash;are never to be achieved
+if they are sought for their own sake.&nbsp; And another of the delights
+of the useful laborious land is its vitality.&nbsp; The soil may be
+thin and dry, but man&rsquo;s life is added to its own.&nbsp; He has
+embanked the hill to make little platforms for the growth of wheat in
+the light shadows of olive leaves.&nbsp; Thanks to the m&eacute;tayer
+land-tenure, man&rsquo;s heart, as well as his strength, is given to
+the ground, with his hope and his honour.&nbsp; Louis Blanc&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;point of honour of industry&rsquo; is a conscious impulse&mdash;it
+is not too much to say&mdash;with most of the Tuscan contadini; but
+as each effort they make for their master they make also for the bread
+of their children, it is no wonder that the land they cultivate has
+a look of life.&nbsp; But in all colour, in all luxury, and in all that
+gives material for picturesque English, this lovely scenery for food
+and wine and raiment has that <i>little</i> <i>less</i> to which we
+desire to recall a rhetorical world.</p>
+<h2>MR. COVENTRY PATMORE&rsquo;S ODES</h2>
+<p>To most of the great poets no greater praise can be given than praise
+of their imagery.&nbsp; Imagery is the natural language of their poetry.&nbsp;
+Without a parable she hardly speaks.&nbsp; But undoubtedly there is
+now and then a poet who touches the thing, not its likeness, too vitally,
+too sensitively, for even such a pause as the verse makes for love of
+the beautiful image.&nbsp; Those rare moments are simple, and their
+simplicity makes one of the reader&rsquo;s keenest experiences.&nbsp;
+Other simplicities may be achieved by lesser art, but this is transcendent
+simplicity.&nbsp; There is nothing in the world more costly.&nbsp; It
+vouches for the beauty which it transcends; it answer for the riches
+it forbears; it implies the art which it fulfils.&nbsp; All abundance
+ministers to it, though it is so single.&nbsp; And here we get the sacrificial
+quality which is the well-kept secret of art at this perfection.&nbsp;
+All the faculties of the poet are used for preparing this naked greatness&mdash;are
+used and fruitfully spent and shed.&nbsp; The loveliness that stands
+and waits on the simplicity of certain of Mr. Coventry Patmore&rsquo;s
+Odes, the fervours and splendours that are there, only to be put to
+silence&mdash;to silence of a kind that would be impossible were they
+less glorious&mdash;are testimonies to the difference between sacrifice
+and waste.</p>
+<p>But does it seem less than reasonable to begin a review of a poet&rsquo;s
+work with praise of an infrequent mood?&nbsp; Infrequent such a mood
+must needs be, yet it is in a profound sense characteristic.&nbsp; To
+have attained it once or twice is to have proved such gift and grace
+as a true history of literature would show to be above price, even gauged
+by the rude measure of rarity.&nbsp; Transcendent simplicity could not
+possibly be habitual.&nbsp; Man lives within garments and veils, and
+art is chiefly concerned with making mysteries of these for the loveliness
+of his life; when they are rent asunder it is impossible not to be aware
+that an overwhelming human emotion has been in action.&nbsp; Thus <i>Departure</i>,
+<i>If</i> <i>I</i> <i>were</i> <i>Dead</i>, <i>A</i> <i>Farewell</i>,
+<i>Eurydice</i>, <i>The</i> <i>Toys</i>, <i>St</i>. <i>Valentine&rsquo;s</i>
+<i>Day</i>&mdash;though here there is in the exquisite imaginative play
+a mitigation of the bare vitality of feeling&mdash;group themselves
+apart as the innermost of the poet&rsquo;s achievements.</p>
+<p>Second to these come the Odes that have splendid thought in great
+images, and display&mdash;rather than, as do the poems first glanced
+at, betray&mdash;the beauties of poetic art.&nbsp; Emotion is here,
+too, and in shocks and throes, never frantic when almost intolerable.&nbsp;
+It is mortal pathos.&nbsp; If any other poet has filled a cup with a
+draught so unalloyed, we do not know it.&nbsp; Love and sorrow are pure
+in <i>The</i> <i>Unknown</i> <i>Eros</i>; and its author has not refused
+even the cup of terror.&nbsp; Against love often, against sorrow nearly
+always, against fear always, men of sensibility instantaneously guard
+the quick of their hearts.&nbsp; It is only the approach of the pang
+that they will endure; from the pang itself, dividing soul and spirit,
+a man who is conscious of a profound capacity for passion defends himself
+in the twinkling of an eye.&nbsp; But through nearly the whole of Coventry
+Patmore&rsquo;s poetry there is an endurance of the mortal touch.&nbsp;
+Nay, more, he has the endurance of the immortal touch.&nbsp; That is,
+his capacity for all the things that men elude for their greatness is
+more than the capacity of other men.&nbsp; He endures therefore what
+they could but will not endure and, besides this, degrees that they
+cannot apprehend.&nbsp; Thus, to have studied <i>The</i> <i>Unknown</i>
+<i>Eros</i> is to have had a certain experience&mdash;at least the impassioned
+experience of a compassion; but it is also to have recognised a soul
+beyond our compassion.</p>
+<p>What some of the Odes have to sing of, their author does not insist
+upon our knowing.&nbsp; He leaves more liberty for a well-intentioned
+reader&rsquo;s error than makes for peace and recollection of mind in
+reading.&nbsp; That the general purpose of the poems is obscure is inevitable.&nbsp;
+It has the obscurity of profound clear waters.&nbsp; What the poet chiefly
+secures to us is the understanding that love and its bonds, its bestowal
+and reception, does but rehearse the action of the union of God with
+humanity&mdash;that there is no essential man save Christ, and no essential
+woman except the soul of mankind.&nbsp; When the singer of a Song of
+Songs seems to borrow the phrase of human love, it is rather that human
+love had first borrowed the truths of the love of God.&nbsp; The thought
+grows gay in the three <i>Psyche</i> odes, or attempts a gaiety&mdash;the
+reader at least being somewhat reluctant.&nbsp; How is it?&nbsp; Mr.
+Coventry Patmore&rsquo;s play more often than not wins you to but a
+slow participation.&nbsp; Perhaps because some thrust of his has left
+you still tremulous.</p>
+<p>But the inequality of equal lovers, sung in these Odes with a Divine
+allusion, is a most familiar truth.&nbsp; Love that is passionate has
+much of the impulse of gravitation&mdash;gravitation that is not falling,
+as there is no downfall in the precipitation of the sidereal skies.&nbsp;
+The love of the great for the small is the passionate love; the upward
+love hesitates and is fugitive.&nbsp; St. Francis Xavier asked that
+the day of his ecstasy might be shortened; Imogen, the wife of all poetry,
+&lsquo;prays forbearance;&rsquo; the child is &lsquo;fretted with sallies
+of his mothers kisses.&rsquo;&nbsp; It might be drawing an image too
+insistently to call this a centrifugal impulse.</p>
+<p>The art that utters an intellectual action so courageous, an emotion
+so authentic, as that of Mr. Coventry Patmore&rsquo;s poetry, cannot
+be otherwise than consummate.&nbsp; Often the word has a fulness of
+significance that gives the reader a shock of appreciation.&nbsp; This
+is always so in those simplest odes which we have taken as the heart
+of the author&rsquo;s work.&nbsp; Without such wonderful rightness,
+simplicity of course is impossible.&nbsp; Nor is that beautiful precision
+less in passages of description, such as the landscape lines in <i>Amelia</i>
+and elsewhere.&nbsp; The words are used to the uttermost yet with composure.&nbsp;
+And a certain justness of utterance increases the provocation of what
+we take leave to call unjust thought in the few poems that proclaim
+an intemperate scorn&mdash;political, social, literary.&nbsp; The poems
+are but two or three; they are to be known by their subjects&mdash;we
+might as well do something to justify their scorn by using the most
+modern of adjectives&mdash;and call them topical.&nbsp; Here assuredly
+there is no composure.&nbsp; Never before did superiority bear itself
+with so little of its proper, signal, and peculiar grace&mdash;reluctance.</p>
+<p>If Mr. Patmore really intends that his Odes shall be read with minim,
+or crochet, or quaver rests, to fill up a measure of beaten time, we
+are free to hold that he rather arbitrarily applies to liberal verse
+the laws of verse set for use&mdash;cradle verse and march-marking verse
+(we are, of course, not considering verse set to music, and thus compelled
+into the musical time).&nbsp; Liberal verse, dramatic, narrative, meditative,
+can surely be bound by no time measures&mdash;if for no other reason,
+for this: that to prescribe pauses is also to forbid any pauses unprescribed.&nbsp;
+Granting, however, his principle of catalexis, we still doubt whether
+the irregular metre of <i>The</i> <i>Unknown</i> <i>Eros</i> is happily
+used except for the large sweep of the flight of the Ode more properly
+so called.&nbsp; <i>Lycidas</i>, the <i>Mrs</i>. <i>Anne</i> <i>Killigrew</i>,
+the <i>Intimations</i>, and Emerson&rsquo;s <i>Threnody</i>, considered
+merely for their versification, fulfil their laws so perfectly that
+they certainly move without checks as without haste.&nbsp; So with the
+graver Odes&mdash;much in the majority&mdash;of Mr. Coventry Patmore&rsquo;s
+series.&nbsp; A more lovely dignity of extension and restriction, a
+more touching sweetness of simple and frequent rhyme, a truer impetus
+of pulse and impulse, English verse could hardly yield than are to be
+found in his versification.&nbsp; And what movement of words has ever
+expressed flight, distance, mystery, and wonderful approach, as they
+are expressed in a celestial line&mdash;the eighth in the ode <i>To</i>
+<i>the</i> <i>Unknown</i> <i>Eros</i>?&nbsp; When we are sensible of
+a metrical cheek it is in this way: To the English ear the heroic line
+is the unit of metre, and when two lines of various length undesignedly
+add together to form a heroic line, they have to be separated with something
+of a jerk.&nbsp; And this adding&mdash;as, for instance, of a line of
+four syllables preceding or following one of six&mdash;occurs now and
+then, and even in such a masterly measure of music as <i>A</i> <i>Farewell</i>.&nbsp;
+It is as when a sail suddenly flaps windless in the fetching about of
+a boat.&nbsp; In <i>The</i> <i>Angel</i> <i>in</i> <i>the</i> <i>House</i>,
+and other earlier poems, Mr. Coventry Patmore used the octosyllabic
+stanza perfectly, inasmuch as he never left it either heavily or thinly
+packed.&nbsp; Moreover those first poems had a composure which was the
+prelude to the peace of the Odes.&nbsp; And even in his slightest work
+he proves himself the master&mdash;that is, the owner&mdash;of words
+that, owned by him, are unprofaned, are as though they had never been
+profaned; the capturer of an art so quick and close that it is the voice
+less of a poet than of the very Muse.</p>
+<h2>INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE</h2>
+<p>I shall not ask the commentators whether Blake used these two words
+in union or in antithesis.&nbsp; They assuredly have an inseverable
+union in the art of literature.&nbsp; The songs of Innocence and Experience
+are for each poet the songs of his own separate heart and life; but
+to take the cumulative experiences of other men, and to use these in
+place of the virginal fruit of thought&mdash;whereas one would hardly
+consent to take them for ordering even the most habitual of daily affairs&mdash;is
+to forego Innocence and Experience at once and together.&nbsp; Obviously,
+Experience can be nothing except personal and separate; and Innocence
+of a singularly solitary quality is his who does not dip his hands into
+other men&rsquo;s histories, and does not give to his own word the common
+sanction of other men&rsquo;s summaries and conclusions.&nbsp; Therefore
+I bind Innocence and Experience in one, and take them as a sign of the
+necessary and noble isolation of man from man&mdash;of his uniqueness.&nbsp;
+But if I had a mind to forego that manner of personal separateness,
+and to use the things of others, I think I would rather appropriate
+their future than their past.&nbsp; Let me put on their hopes, and the
+colours of their confidence, if I must borrow.&nbsp; Not that I would
+burden my prophetic soul with unjustified ambitions; but even this would
+be more tolerable than to load my memory with an unjustifiable history.</p>
+<p>And yet how differently do the writers of a certain kind of love-poetry
+consider this matter.&nbsp; These are the love-poets who have no reluctance
+in adopting the past of a multitude of people to whom they have not
+even been introduced.&nbsp; Their verse is full of ready-made memories,
+various, numerous, and cruel.&nbsp; No single life&mdash;supposing it
+to be a liberal life concerned with something besides sex&mdash;could
+quite suffice for so much experience, so much disillusion, so much <i>d&eacute;ception</i>.&nbsp;
+To achieve that tone in its fulness it is necessary to take for one&rsquo;s
+own the <i>praeterita</i> (say) of Alfred de Musset and of the men who
+helped him&mdash;not to live but&mdash;to have lived; it is necessary
+to have lived much more than any man lives, and to make a common hoard
+of erotic remembrances with all kinds of poets.</p>
+<p>As the Franciscans wear each other&rsquo;s old habits, and one Friar
+goes about darned because of another&rsquo;s rending, so the poet of
+a certain order grows cynical for the sake of many poets&rsquo; old
+loves.&nbsp; Not otherwise will the resultant verse succeed in implying
+so much&mdash;or rather so many, in the feminine plural.&nbsp; The man
+of very sensitive individuality might hesitate at the adoption.&nbsp;
+The Franciscan is understood to have a fastidiousness and to overcome
+it.&nbsp; But these poets so triumph over their repugnance that it does
+not appear.&nbsp; And yet, if choice were, one might wish rather to
+make use of one&rsquo;s fellowmen&rsquo;s old shoes than put their old
+secrets to use, and dress one&rsquo;s art in a motley of past passions.&nbsp;
+Moreover, to utilise the mental experience of many is inevitably to
+use their verse and phrase.&nbsp; For the rest, all the traits of this
+love-poetry are familiar enough.&nbsp; One of them is the absence of
+the word of promise and pledge, the loss of the earliest and simplest
+of the impulses of love: which is the vow.&nbsp; &lsquo;Till death!&rsquo;
+&lsquo;For ever!&rsquo; are cries too simple and too natural to be commonplace,
+and in their denial there is the least tolerable of banalities&mdash;that
+of other men&rsquo;s disillusions.</p>
+<p>Perfect personal distinctness of Experience would be in literature
+a delicate Innocence.&nbsp; Not a passage of cheapness, of greed, of
+assumption, of sloth, or of any such sins in the work of him whose love-poetry
+were thus true, and whose <i>pudeur</i> of personality thus simple and
+inviolate.&nbsp; This is the private man, in other words the gentleman,
+who will neither love nor remember in public.</p>
+<h2>PENULTIMATE CARICATURE</h2>
+<p>There has been no denunciation, and perhaps even no recognition,
+of a certain social immorality in the caricature of the mid-century
+and earlier.&nbsp; Literary and pictorial alike, it had for its notice
+the vulgarising of the married woman.&nbsp; No one now would read Douglas
+Jerrold for pleasure, but it is worth while to turn up that humourist&rsquo;s
+serial, <i>Mrs</i>. <i>Caudle&rsquo;s</i> <i>Curtain</i> <i>Lectures</i>,
+which were presumably considered good comic reading in the <i>Punch</i>
+of that time, and to make acquaintance with a certain ideal of the grotesque.&nbsp;
+Obviously to make a serious comment on anything which others consider
+or have considered humorous is to put one&rsquo;s-self at a disadvantage.&nbsp;
+He who sees the joke holds himself somewhat the superior of the man
+who would see it, such as it is, if he thought it worth his eyesight.&nbsp;
+The last-named has to bear the least tolerable of modern reproaches;
+but he need not always care.&nbsp; Now to turn over Douglas Jerrold&rsquo;s
+monologues is to find that people in the mid-century took their mirth
+principally from the life of the <i>arri&egrave;re</i> <i>boutique</i>.&nbsp;
+On that shabby stage was enacted the comedy of literature.&nbsp; Therefore
+we must take something of the vulgarity of Jerrold as a circumstance
+of the social ranks wherein he delighted.&nbsp; But the essential vulgarity
+is that of the woman.&nbsp; There is in some old <i>Punch</i> volume
+a drawing by Leech&mdash;whom one is weary of hearing named the gentle,
+the refined&mdash;where the work of the artist has vied with the spirit
+of the letter-press.&nbsp; Douglas Jerrold treats of the woman&rsquo;s
+jealousy, Leech of her stays.&nbsp; They lie on a chair by the bed,
+beyond description gross.&nbsp; And page by page the woman is derided,
+with an unfailing enjoyment of her foolish ugliness of person, of manners,
+and of language.&nbsp; In that time there was, moreover, one great humourist;
+he bore his part willingly in vulgarising the woman; and the part that
+fell to him was the vulgarising of the act of maternity.&nbsp; Woman
+spiteful, woman suing man at the law for evading her fatuous companionship,
+woman incoherent, woman abandoned without restraint to violence and
+temper, woman feigning sensibility&mdash;in none of these ignominies
+is woman so common, foul, and foolish for Dickens as she is in child-bearing.</p>
+<p>I named Leech but now.&nbsp; He was, in all things essential, Dickens&rsquo;s
+contemporary.&nbsp; And accordingly the married woman and her child
+are humiliated by his pencil; not grossly, but commonly.&nbsp; For him
+she is moderately and dully ridiculous.&nbsp; What delights him as humorous
+is that her husband&mdash;himself wearisome enough to die of&mdash;is
+weary of her, finds the time long, and tries to escape her.&nbsp; It
+amuses him that she should furtively spend money over her own dowdiness,
+to the annoyance of her husband, and that her husband should have no
+desire to adorn her, and that her mother should be intolerable.&nbsp;
+It pleases him that her baby, with enormous cheeks and a hideous rosette
+in its hat&mdash;a burlesque baby&mdash;should be a grotesque object
+of her love, for that too makes subtly for her abasement.&nbsp; Charles
+Keene, again&mdash;another contemporary, though he lived into a later
+and different time.&nbsp; He saw little else than common forms of human
+ignominy&mdash;indignities of civic physique, of stupid prosperity,
+of dress, of bearing.&nbsp; He transmits these things in greater proportion
+than he found them&mdash;whether for love of the humour of them, or
+by a kind of inverted disgust that is as eager as delight&mdash;one
+is not sure which is the impulse.&nbsp; The grossness of the vulgarities
+is rendered with a completeness that goes far to convince us of a certain
+sensitiveness of apprehension in the designer; and then again we get
+convinced that real apprehension&mdash;real apprehensiveness&mdash;would
+not have insisted upon such things, could not have lived with them through
+almost a whole career.&nbsp; There is one drawing in the <i>Punch</i>
+of years ago, in which Charles Keene achieved the nastiest thing possible
+to even the invention of that day.&nbsp; A drunken citizen, in the usual
+broadcloth, has gone to bed, fully dressed, with his boots on and his
+umbrella open, and the joke lies in the surprise awaiting, when she
+awakes, the wife asleep at his side in a nightcap.&nbsp; Every one who
+knows Keene&rsquo;s work can imagine how the huge well-fed figure was
+drawn, and how the coat wrinkled across the back, and how the bourgeois
+whiskers were indicated.&nbsp; This obscene drawing is matched by many
+equally odious.&nbsp; Abject domesticity, ignominies of married life,
+of middle-age, of money-making; the old common jape against the mother-in-law;
+ill-dressed men with whisky&mdash;ill-dressed women with tempers; everything
+that is underbred and decivilised; abominable weddings: in one drawing
+a bridegroom with shambling sidelong legs asks his bride if she is nervous;
+she is a widow, and she answers, &lsquo;No, never was.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+In all these things there is very little humour.&nbsp; Where Keene achieved
+fun was in the figures of his schoolboys.&nbsp; The hint of tenderness
+which in really fine work could never be absent from a man&rsquo;s thought
+of a child or from his touch of one, however frolic or rowdy the subject
+in hand, is absolutely lacking in Keene&rsquo;s designs; nevertheless,
+we acknowledge that here is humour.&nbsp; It is also in some of his
+clerical figures when they are not caricatures, and certainly in &lsquo;Robert,&rsquo;
+the City waiter of <i>Punch</i>.&nbsp; But so irresistible is the derision
+of the woman that all Charles Keene&rsquo;s persistent sense of vulgarity
+is intent centrally upon her.&nbsp; Never for any grace gone astray
+is she bantered, never for the social extravagances, for prattle, or
+for beloved dress; but always for her jealousy, and for the repulsive
+person of the man upon whom she spies and in whom she vindicates her
+ignoble rights.&nbsp; If this is the shopkeeper the possession of whom
+is her boast, what then is she?</p>
+<p>This great immorality, centring in the irreproachable days of the
+Exhibition of 1851, or thereabouts&mdash;the pleasure in this particular
+form of human disgrace&mdash;has passed, leaving one trace only: the
+habit by which some men reproach a silly woman through her sex, whereas
+a silly man is not reproached through his sex.&nbsp; But the vulgarity
+of which I have written here was distinctively English&mdash;the most
+English thing that England had in days when she bragged of many another&mdash;and
+it was not able to survive an increased commerce of manners and letters
+with France.&nbsp; It was the chief immorality destroyed by French fiction.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RHYTHM OF LIFE***</p>
+<pre>
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+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/1276.txt b/1276.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/1276.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Rhythm of Life, by Alice Meynell
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Rhythm of Life
+
+Author: Alice Meynell
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2005 [eBook #1276]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RHYTHM OF LIFE***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1893 John Lane edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+
+The Rhythm of Life and Other Essays
+
+
+Contents
+
+The Rhythm of Life
+Decivilised
+A Remembrance
+The Sun
+The Flower
+Unstable Equilibrium
+The Unit of the World
+By the Railway Side
+Pocket Vocabularies
+Pathos
+The Point of Honour
+Composure
+Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes
+James Russell Lowell
+Domus Angusta
+Rejection
+The Lesson of Landscape
+Mr. Coventry Patmore's Odes
+Innocence and Experience
+Penultimate Caricature
+
+
+
+
+THE RHYTHM OF LIFE
+
+
+If life is not always poetical, it is at least metrical. Periodicity
+rules over the mental experience of man, according to the path of the
+orbit of his thoughts. Distances are not gauged, ellipses not measured,
+velocities not ascertained, times not known. Nevertheless, the
+recurrence is sure. What the mind suffered last week, or last year, it
+does not suffer now; but it will suffer again next week or next year.
+Happiness is not a matter of events; it depends upon the tides of the
+mind. Disease is metrical, closing in at shorter and shorter periods
+towards death, sweeping abroad at longer and longer intervals towards
+recovery. Sorrow for one cause was intolerable yesterday, and will be
+intolerable tomorrow; today it is easy to bear, but the cause has not
+passed. Even the burden of a spiritual distress unsolved is bound to
+leave the heart to a temporary peace; and remorse itself does not
+remain--it returns. Gaiety takes us by a dear surprise. If we had made
+a course of notes of its visits, we might have been on the watch, and
+would have had an expectation instead of a discovery. No one makes such
+observations; in all the diaries of students of the interior world, there
+have never come to light the records of the Kepler of such cycles. But
+Thomas a Kempis knew of the recurrences, if he did not measure them. In
+his cell alone with the elements--'What wouldst thou more than these? for
+out of these were all things made'--he learnt the stay to be found in the
+depth of the hour of bitterness, and the remembrance that restrains the
+soul at the coming of the moment of delight, giving it a more conscious
+welcome, but presaging for it an inexorable flight. And 'rarely, rarely
+comest thou,' sighed Shelley, not to Delight merely, but to the Spirit of
+Delight. Delight can be compelled beforehand, called, and constrained to
+our service--Ariel can be bound to a daily task; but such artificial
+violence throws life out of metre, and it is not the spirit that is thus
+compelled. _That_ flits upon an orbit elliptically or parabolically or
+hyperbolically curved, keeping no man knows what trysts with Time.
+
+It seems fit that Shelley and the author of the _Imitation_ should both
+have been keen and simple enough to perceive these flights, and to guess
+at the order of this periodicity. Both souls were in close touch with
+the spirits of their several worlds, and no deliberate human rules, no
+infractions of the liberty and law of the universal movement, kept from
+them the knowledge of recurrences. _Eppur si muove_. They knew that
+presence does not exist without absence; they knew that what is just upon
+its flight of farewell is already on its long path of return. They knew
+that what is approaching to the very touch is hastening towards
+departure. 'O wind,' cried Shelley, in autumn,
+
+ 'O wind,
+ If winter comes, can spring be far behind?'
+
+They knew that the flux is equal to the reflux; that to interrupt with
+unlawful recurrences, out of time, is to weaken the impulse of onset and
+retreat; the sweep and impetus of movement. To live in constant efforts
+after an equal life, whether the equality be sought in mental production,
+or in spiritual sweetness, or in the joy of the senses, is to live
+without either rest or full activity. The souls of certain of the
+saints, being singularly simple and single, have been in the most
+complete subjection to the law of periodicity. Ecstasy and desolation
+visited them by seasons. They endured, during spaces of vacant time, the
+interior loss of all for which they had sacrificed the world. They
+rejoiced in the uncovenanted beatitude of sweetness alighting in their
+hearts. Like them are the poets whom, three times or ten times in the
+course of a long life, the Muse has approached, touched, and forsaken.
+And yet hardly like them; not always so docile, nor so wholly prepared
+for the departure, the brevity, of the golden and irrevocable hour. Few
+poets have fully recognised the metrical absence of their Muse. For full
+recognition is expressed in one only way--silence.
+
+It has been found that several tribes in Africa and in America worship
+the moon, and not the sun; a great number worship both; but no tribes are
+known to adore the sun, and not the moon. For the periodicity of the sun
+is still in part a secret; but that of the moon is modestly apparent,
+perpetually influential. On her depend the tides; and she is Selene,
+mother of Herse, bringer of the dews that recurrently irrigate lands
+where rain is rare. More than any other companion of earth is she the
+Measurer. Early Indo-Germanic languages knew her by that name. Her
+metrical phases are the symbol of the order of recurrence. Constancy in
+approach and in departure is the reason of her inconstancies. Juliet
+will not receive a vow spoken in invocation of the moon; but Juliet did
+not live to know that love itself has tidal times--lapses and ebbs which
+are due to the metrical rule of the interior heart, but which the lover
+vainly and unkindly attributes to some outward alteration in the beloved.
+For man--except those elect already named--is hardly aware of
+periodicity. The individual man either never learns it fully, or learns
+it late. And he learns it so late, because it is a matter of cumulative
+experience upon which cumulative evidence is lacking. It is in the after-
+part of each life that the law is learnt so definitely as to do away with
+the hope or fear of continuance. That young sorrow comes so near to
+despair is a result of this young ignorance. So is the early hope of
+great achievement. Life seems so long, and its capacity so great, to one
+who knows nothing of all the intervals it needs must hold--intervals
+between aspirations, between actions, pauses as inevitable as the pauses
+of sleep. And life looks impossible to the young unfortunate, unaware of
+the inevitable and unfailing refreshment. It would be for their peace to
+learn that there is a tide in the affairs of men, in a sense more
+subtle--if it is not too audacious to add a meaning to Shakespeare--than
+the phrase was meant to contain. Their joy is flying away from them on
+its way home; their life will wax and wane; and if they would be wise,
+they must wake and rest in its phases, knowing that they are ruled by the
+law that commands all things--a sun's revolutions and the rhythmic pangs
+of maternity.
+
+
+
+
+DECIVILISED
+
+
+The difficulty of dealing--in the course of any critical duty--with
+decivilised man lies in this: when you accuse him of vulgarity--sparing
+him no doubt the word--he defends himself against the charge of
+barbarism. Especially from new soil--transatlantic, colonial--he faces
+you, bronzed, with a half conviction of savagery, partly persuaded of his
+own youthfulness of race. He writes, and recites, poems about ranches
+and canyons; they are designed to betray the recklessness of his nature
+and to reveal the good that lurks in the lawless ways of a young society.
+He is there to explain himself, voluble, with a glossary for his own
+artless slang. But his colonialism is only provincialism very
+articulate. The new air does but make old decadences seem more stale;
+the young soil does but set into fresh conditions the ready-made, the
+uncostly, the refuse feeling of a race decivilising. American fancy
+played long this pattering part of youth. The New-Englander hastened to
+assure you with so self-denying a face he did not wear war-paint and
+feathers, that it became doubly difficult to communicate to him that you
+had suspected him of nothing wilder than a second-hand dress coat. And
+when it was a question not of rebuke, but of praise, the American was ill-
+content with the word of the judicious who lauded him for some delicate
+successes in continuing something of the literature of England, something
+of the art of France; he was more eager for the applause that stimulated
+him to write romances and to paint panoramic landscape, after brief
+training in academies of native inspiration. Even now English voices,
+with violent commonplace, are constantly calling upon America to begin--to
+begin, for the world is expectant. Whereas there is no beginning for
+her, but instead a continuity which only a constant care can guide into
+sustained refinement and can save from decivilisation.
+
+But decivilised man is not peculiar to new soil. The English town, too,
+knows him in all his dailiness. In England, too, he has a literature, an
+art, a music, all his own--derived from many and various things of price.
+Trash, in the fulness of its in simplicity and cheapness, is impossible
+without a beautiful past. Its chief characteristic--which is futility,
+not failure--could not be achieved but by the long abuse, the rotatory
+reproduction, the quotidian disgrace, of the utterances of Art,
+especially the utterance by words. Gaiety, vigour, vitality, the organic
+quality, purity, simplicity, precision--all these are among the
+antecedents of trash. It is after them; it is also, alas, because of
+them. And nothing can be much sadder than such a proof of what may
+possibly be the failure of derivation.
+
+Evidently we cannot choose our posterity. Reversing the steps of time,
+we may, indeed, choose backwards. We may give our thoughts noble
+forefathers. Well begotten, well born our fancies must be; they shall be
+also well derived. We have a voice in decreeing our inheritance, and not
+our inheritance only, but our heredity. Our minds may trace upwards and
+follow their ways to the best well-heads of the arts. The very habit of
+our thoughts may be persuaded one way unawares by their antenatal
+history. Their companions must be lovely, but need be no lovelier than
+their ancestors; and being so fathered and so husbanded, our thoughts may
+be intrusted to keep the counsels of literature.
+
+Such is our confidence in a descent we know. But, of a sequel which of
+us is sure? Which of us is secured against the dangers of subsequent
+depreciation? And, moreover, which of us shall trace the contemporary
+tendencies, the one towards honour, the other towards dishonour? Or who
+shall discover why derivation becomes degeneration, and where and when
+and how the bastardy befalls? The decivilised have every grace as the
+antecedent of their vulgarities, every distinction as the precedent of
+their mediocrities. No ballad-concert song, feign it sigh, frolic, or
+laugh, but has the excuse that the feint was suggested, was made easy, by
+some living sweetness once. Nor are the decivilised to blame as having
+in their own persons possessed civilisation and marred it. They did not
+possess it; they were born into some tendency to derogation, into an
+inclination for things mentally inexpensive. And the tendency can hardly
+do other than continue. Nothing can look duller than the future of this
+second-hand and multiplying world. Men need not be common merely because
+they are many; but the infection of commonness once begun in the many,
+what dulness in their future! To the eye that has reluctantly discovered
+this truth--that the vulgarised are not _un_civilised, and that there is
+no growth for them--it does not look like a future at all. More ballad-
+concerts, more quaint English, more robustious barytone songs, more
+piecemeal pictures, more anxious decoration, more colonial poetry, more
+young nations with withered traditions. Yet it is before this prospect
+that the provincial overseas lifts up his voice in a boast or a promise
+common enough among the incapable young, but pardonable only in senility.
+He promises the world a literature, an art, that shall be new because his
+forest is untracked and his town just built. But what the newness is to
+be he cannot tell. Certain words were dreadful once in the mouth of
+desperate old age. Dreadful and pitiable as the threat of an impotent
+king, what shall we name them when they are the promise of an impotent
+people? 'I will do such things: what they are yet I know not.'
+
+
+
+
+A REMEMBRANCE
+
+
+When the memories of two or three persons now upon earth shall be rolled
+up and sealed with their records within them, there will be no
+remembrance left open, except this, of a man whose silence seems better
+worth interpreting than the speech of many another. Of himself he has
+left no vestiges. It was a common reproach against him that he never
+acknowledged the obligation to any kind of restlessness. The kingdom of
+heaven suffereth violence, but as he did none there was nothing for it
+but that the kingdom of heaven should yield to his leisure. The
+delicate, the abstinent, the reticent graces were his in the heroic
+degree. Where shall I find a pen fastidious enough to define and limit
+and enforce so many significant negatives? Words seem to offend by too
+much assertion, and to check the suggestions of his reserve. That
+reserve was life-long. Loving literature, he never lifted a pen except
+to write a letter. He was not inarticulate, he was only silent. He had
+an exquisite style from which to refrain. The things he abstained from
+were all exquisite. They were brought from far to undergo his judgment,
+if haply he might have selected them. Things ignoble never approached
+near enough for his refusal; they had not with him so much as that
+negative connexion. If I had to equip an author I should ask no better
+than to arm him and invest him with precisely the riches that were
+renounced by the man whose intellect, by integrity, had become a presence-
+chamber.
+
+It was by holding session among so many implicit safeguards that he
+taught, rather than by precepts. Few were these in his speech, but his
+personality made laws for me. It was a subtle education, for it
+persuaded insensibly to a conception of my own. How, if he would not
+define, could I know what things were and what were not worthy of his
+gentle and implacable judgment? I must needs judge them for myself, yet
+he constrained me in the judging. Within that constraint and under that
+stimulus, which seemed to touch the ultimate springs of thoughts before
+they sprang, I began to discern all things in literature and in life--in
+the chastity of letters and in the honour of life--that I was bound to
+love. Not the things of one character only, but excellent things of
+every character. There was no tyranny in such a method. His idleness
+justified itself by the liberality it permitted to his taste. Never
+having made his love of letters further a secondary purpose, never having
+bound the literary genius--that delicate Ariel--to any kind of servitude,
+never having so much as permitted himself a prejudice whereby some of his
+delights should be stinted while others were indulged beyond the
+sanctions of modest reason, he barely tolerated his own preferences,
+which lay somewhat on the hither side of full effectiveness of style.
+These the range of his reading confessed by certain exclusions.
+Nevertheless it was not of deficiencies that he was patient: he did but
+respect the power of pause, and he disliked violence chiefly because
+violence is apt to confess its own limits. Perhaps, indeed, his own fine
+negatives made him only the more sensible of any lack of those literary
+qualities that are bound in their full complement to hold themselves at
+the disposal of the consummate author--to stand and wait, if they may do
+no more.
+
+Men said that he led a _dilettante_ life. They reproached him with the
+selflessness that made him somewhat languid. Others, they seemed to
+aver, were amateurs at this art or that; he was an amateur at living. So
+it was, in the sense that he never grasped at happiness, and that many of
+the things he had held slipped from his disinterested hands. So it was,
+too, in this unintended sense; he loved life. How should he not have
+loved a life that his living made honourable? How should he not have
+loved all arts, in which his choice was delicate, liberal, instructed,
+studious, docile, austere? An amateur man he might have been called,
+too, because he was not discomposed by his own experiences, or shaken by
+the discovery which life brings to us-that the negative quality of which
+Buddhism seems to accuse all good is partaken by our happiness. He had
+always prayed temperate prayers and harboured probable wishes. His
+sensibility was extreme, but his thought was generalised. When he had
+joy he tempered it not in the common way by meditation upon the general
+sorrow but by a recollection of the general pleasure. It was his finest
+distinction to desire no differences, no remembrance, but loss among the
+innumerable forgotten. And when he suffered, it was with so quick a
+nerve and yet so wide an apprehension that the race seemed to suffer in
+him. He pitied not himself so tenderly as mankind, of whose capacity for
+pain he was then feelingly persuaded. His darkening eyes said in the
+extreme hour: 'I have compassion on the multitude.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN
+
+
+Nowhere else does the greater light so rule the day, so measure, so
+divide, so reign, make so imperial laws, so visibly kindle, so
+immediately quicken, so suddenly efface, so banish, so restore, as in a
+plain like this of Suffolk with its enormous sky. The curious have an
+insufficient motive for going to the mountains if they do it to see the
+sunrise. The sun that leaps from a mountain peak is a sun past the dew
+of his birth; he has walked some way towards the common fires of noon.
+But on the flat country the uprising is early and fresh, the arc is wide,
+the career is long. The most distant clouds, converging in the beautiful
+and little-studied order of cloud-perspective (for most painters treat
+clouds as though they formed perpendicular and not horizontal scenery),
+are those that gather at the central point of sunrise. On the plain, and
+there only, can the construction--but that is too little vital a word; I
+should rather say the organism--the unity, the design, of a sky be
+understood. The light wind that has been moving all night is seen to
+have not worked at random. It has shepherded some small flocks of cloud
+afield and folded others. There's husbandry in Heaven. And the order
+has, or seems to have, the sun for its midst. Not a line, not a curve,
+but confesses its membership in a design declared from horizon to
+horizon.
+
+To see the system of a sky in fragments is to miss what I learn to look
+for in all achieved works of Nature and art: the organism that is unity
+and life. It is the unity and life of painting. The Early Victorian
+picture--(the school is still in full career, but essentially it belongs
+to that triumphal period)--is but a dull sum of things put together, in
+concourse, not in relation; but the true picture is _one_, however
+multitudinous it may be, for it is composed of relations gathered
+together in the unity of perception, of intention, and of light. It is
+organic. Moreover, how truly relation is the condition of life may be
+understood from the extinct state of the English stage, which resembles
+nothing so much as a Royal Academy picture. Even though the actors may
+be added together with something like vivacity (though that is rare),
+they have no vitality in common. They are not members one of another. If
+the Church and Stage Guild be still in existence, it would do much for
+the art by teaching that Scriptural maxim. I think, furthermore, that
+the life of our bodies has never been defined so suggestively as by one
+who named it a living relation of lifeless atoms. Could the value of
+relation be more curiously set forth? And one might penetrate some way
+towards a consideration of the vascular organism of a true literary style
+in which there is a vital relation of otherwise lifeless word with word.
+And wherein lies the progress of architecture from the stupidity of the
+pyramid and the dead weight of the Cyclopean wall to the spring and the
+flight of the ogival arch, but in a quasi-organic relation? But the way
+of such thoughts might be intricate, and the sun rules me to simplicity.
+
+He reigns as centrally in the blue sky as in the clouds. One October of
+late had days absolutely cloudless. I should not have certainly known it
+had there been a hill in sight. The gradations of the blue are
+incalculable, infinite, and they deepen from the central fire. As to the
+earthly scenery, there are but two 'views' on the plain; for the aspect
+of the light is the whole landscape. To look with the sun or against the
+sun--this is the alternative splendour. To look with the sun is to face
+a golden country, shadowless, serene, noble and strong in light, with a
+certain lack of relief that suggests--to those who dream of landscape--the
+country of a dream. The serried pines, and the lighted fields, and the
+golden ricks of the farms are dyed with the sun as one might paint with a
+colour. Bright as it is, the glow is rather the dye of sunlight than its
+luminosity. For by a kind of paradox the luminous landscape is that
+which is full of shadows--the landscape before you when you turn and face
+the sun. Not only every reed and rush of the salt marshes, every
+uncertain aspen-leaf of the few trees, but every particle of the October
+air shows a shadow and makes a mystery of the light. There is nothing
+but shadow and sun; colour is absorbed and the landscape is reduced to a
+shining simplicity. Thus is the dominant sun sufficient for his day. His
+passage kindles to unconsuming fires and quenches into living ashes. No
+incidents save of his causing, no delight save of his giving: from the
+sunrise, when the larks, not for pairing, but for play, sing the only
+virginal song of the year--a heart younger than Spring's in the season of
+decline--even to the sunset, when the herons scream together in the
+shallows. And the sun dominates by his absence, compelling the low
+country to sadness in the melancholy night.
+
+
+
+
+THE FLOWER
+
+
+There is a form of oppression that has not until now been confessed by
+those who suffer from it or who are participants, as mere witnesses, in
+its tyranny. It is the obsession of man by the flower. In the shape of
+the flower his own paltriness revisits him--his triviality, his sloth,
+his cheapness, his wholesale habitualness, his slatternly ostentation.
+These return to him and wreak upon him their dull revenges. What the
+tyranny really had grown to can be gauged nowhere so well as in country
+lodgings, where the most ordinary things of design and decoration have
+sifted down and gathered together, so that foolish ornament gains a
+cumulative force and achieves a conspicuous commonness. Stem and petal
+and leaf--the fluent forms that a man has not by heart but certainly by
+rote--are woven, printed, cast, and stamped wherever restlessness and
+insimplicity have feared to leave plain spaces. The most ugly of all
+imaginable rooms, which is probably the parlour of a farm-house arrayed
+for those whom Americans call summer-boarders, is beset with flowers. It
+blooms, a dry, woollen, papery, cast-iron garden. The floor flourishes
+with blossoms adust, poorly conventionalised into a kind of order; the
+table-cover is ablaze with a more realistic florescence; the wall-paper
+is set with bunches; the rigid machine-lace curtain is all of roses and
+lilies in its very construction, over the muslin blinds an impotent sprig
+is scattered. In the worsted rosettes of the bell-ropes, in the plaster
+picture-frames, in the painted tea-tray and on the cups, in the pediment
+of the sideboard, in the ornament that crowns the barometer, in the
+finials of sofa and arm-chair, in the finger-plates of the 'grained'
+door, is to be seen the ineffectual portrait or to be traced the stale
+inspiration of the flower. And what is this bossiness around the grate
+but some blunt, black-leaded garland? The recital is wearisome, but the
+retribution of the flower is precisely weariness. It is the persecution
+of man, the haunting of his trivial visions, and the oppression of his
+inconsiderable brain.
+
+The man so possessed suffers the lot of the weakling--subjection to the
+smallest of the things he has abused. The designer of cheap patterns is
+no more inevitably ridden by the flower than is the vain and transitory
+author by the phrase. But I had rather learn my decoration of the
+Japanese, and place against the blank wall one pot plain from the wheel,
+holding one singular branch in blossom, in the attitude and accident of
+growth. And I could wish abstention to exist, and even to be evident, in
+my words. In literature as in all else man merits his subjection to
+trivialities by a kind of economical greed. A condition for using justly
+and gaily any decoration would seem to be a certain reluctance.
+Ornament--strange as the doctrine sounds in a world decivilised--was in
+the beginning intended to be something jocund; and jocundity was never to
+be achieved but by postponement, deference, and modesty. Nor can the
+prodigality of the meadows in May be quoted in dispute. For Nature has
+something even more severe than moderation: she has an innumerable
+singleness. Her butter-cup meadows are not prodigal; they show
+multitude, but not multiplicity, and multiplicity is exactly the disgrace
+of decoration. Who has ever multiplied or repeated his delights? or who
+has ever gained the granting of the most foolish of his wishes--the
+prayer for reiteration? It is a curious slight to generous Fate that man
+should, like a child, ask for one thing many times. Her answer every
+time is a resembling but new and single gift; until the day when she
+shall make the one tremendous difference among her gifts--and make it
+perhaps in secret--by naming one of them the ultimate. What, for
+novelty, what, for singleness, what, for separateness, can equal the
+last? Of many thousand kisses the poor last--but even the kisses of your
+mouth are all numbered.
+
+
+
+
+UNSTABLE EQUILIBRIUM
+
+
+It is principally for the sake of the leg that a change in the dress of
+man is so much to be desired. The leg, completing as it does the form of
+man, should make a great part of that human scenery which is at least as
+important as the scenery of geological structure, or the scenery of
+architecture, or the scenery of vegetation, but which the lovers of
+mountains and the preservers of ancient buildings have consented to
+ignore. The leg is the best part of the figure, inasmuch as it has the
+finest lines and therewith those slender, diminishing forms which, coming
+at the base of the human structure, show it to be a thing of life by its
+unstable equilibrium. A lifeless structure is in stable equilibrium; the
+body, springing, poised, upon its fine ankles and narrow feet, never
+stands without implying and expressing life. It is the leg that first
+suggested the phantasy of flight. We imagine wings to the figure that is
+erect upon the vital and tense legs of man; and the herald Mercury,
+because of his station, looks new-lighted. All this is true of the best
+leg, and the best leg is the man's. That of the young child, in which
+the Italian schools of painting delighted, has neither movement nor
+supporting strength. In the case of the woman's figure it is the foot,
+with its extreme proportional smallness, that gives the precious
+instability, the spring and balance that are so organic. But man should
+no longer disguise the long lines, the strong forms, in those lengths of
+piping or tubing that are of all garments the most stupid. Inexpressive
+of what they clothe as no kind of concealing drapery could ever be, they
+are neither implicitly nor explicitly good raiment. It is hardly
+possible to err by violence in denouncing them. Why, when a bad writer
+is praised for 'clothing his thought,' it is to modern raiment that one's
+nimble fancy flies--fain of completing the beautiful metaphor!
+
+The human scenery: yes, costume could make a crowd something other than
+the mass of sooty colour--dark without depth--and the multiplication of
+undignified forms that fill the streets, and demonstrate, and strike, and
+listen to the democrat. For the undistinguished are very important by
+their numbers. These are they who make the look of the artificial world.
+They are man generalised; as units they inevitably lack something of
+interest; all the more have they cumulative effect. It would be well if
+we could persuade the average man to take on a certain human dignity in
+the clothing of his average body. Unfortunately he will be slow to be
+changed. And as to the poorer part of the mass, so wretched are their
+national customs--and the wretchedest of them all the wearing of other
+men's old raiment--that they must wait for reform until the reformed
+dress, which the reformers have not yet put on, shall have turned second-
+hand.
+
+
+
+
+THE UNIT OF THE WORLD
+
+
+The quarrel of Art with Nature goes on apace. The painters have long
+been talking of selecting, then of rejecting, or even, with Mr. Whistler,
+of supplanting. And then Mr. Oscar Wilde, in the witty and delicate
+series of inversions which he headed 'The Decay of Lying,' declared war
+with all the irresponsibility naturally attending an act so serious. He
+seems to affirm that Nature is less proportionate to man than is
+architecture; that the house is built and the sofa is made measurable by
+the unit measure of the body; but that the landscape is set to some other
+scale. 'I prefer houses to the open air. In a house we all feel of the
+proper proportions. Egotism itself, which is so necessary to a proper
+sense of human dignity, is absolutely the result of indoor life.'
+Nevertheless, before it is too late, let me assert that though nature is
+not always clearly and obviously made to man's measure, he is yet the
+unit by which she is measurable. The proportion may be far to seek at
+times, but the proportion is there. Man's farms about the lower Alps,
+his summer pastures aloft, have their relation to the whole construction
+of the range; and the range is great because it is great in regard to the
+village lodged in a steep valley in the foot hills. The relation of
+flower and fruit to his hands and mouth, to his capacity and senses (I am
+dealing with size, and nothing else), is a very commonplace of our
+conditions in the world. The arm of man is sufficient to dig just as
+deep as the harvest is to be sown. And if some of the cheerful little
+evidences of the more popular forms of teleology are apt to be baffled,
+or indefinitely postponed, by the retorts that suggest themselves to the
+modern child, there remains the subtle and indisputable witness borne by
+art itself: the body of man composes with the mass and the detail of the
+world. The picture is irrefutable, and the picture arranges the figure
+amongst its natural accessories in the landscape, and would not have them
+otherwise.
+
+But there is one conspicuous thing in the world to which man has not
+served as a unit of proportion, and that one thing is a popularly revered
+triumph of that very art of architecture in which Mr. Oscar Wilde has
+confidence for keeping things in scale. Human ingenuity in designing St.
+Peter's on the Vatican, has achieved this one exception to the universal
+harmony--a harmony enriched by discords, but always on one certain scale
+of notes--which the body makes with the details of the earth. It is not
+in the landscape, where Mr. Oscar Wilde has too rashly looked for
+contempt and contumely, but in the art he holds precious as the minister
+to man's egotism, that man's Ego is defied. St. Peter's is not
+necessarily too large (though on other grounds its size might be liable
+to correction); it is simply out of relation to the most vital thing on
+the earth--the thing which has supplied some secret rod to measure the
+waves withal, and the whales, the sea-wall cliffs, the ears of wheat, the
+cedar-branches, pines and diamonds and apples. Now, Emerson would
+certainly not have felt the soft shock and stimulus of delight to which
+he confesses himself to be liable at the first touch of certain phrases,
+had not the words in every case enclosed a promise of further truth and
+of a second pleasure. One of these swift and fruitful experiences
+visited him with the saying--grown popular through him--that an architect
+should have a knowledge of anatomy. There is assuredly a germ and a
+promise in the phrase. It delights us, first, because it seems to
+recognise the organic, as distinct from the merely constructive,
+character of finely civilised architecture; and next, it persuades us
+that Vitruvius had in truth discovered the key to size--the unit that is
+sometimes so obscurely, yet always so absolutely, the measure of what is
+great and small among things animate and inanimate. And in spite of
+themselves the architects of St. Peter's were constrained to take
+something from man; they refused his height for their scale, but they
+tried to use his shape for their ornament. And so in the blankest dearth
+of fancy that ever befel architect or builder they imagined human beings
+bigger than the human beings of experience; and by means of these, carved
+in stone and inlaid in mosaic, they set up a relation of their own. The
+basilica was related to the colossal figure (as a church more wisely
+measured would have been to living man), and so ceased to be large; and
+nothing more important was finally achieved than transposal of the whole
+work into another scale of proportions--a scale in which the body of man
+was not the unit. The pile of stones that make St. Peter's is a very
+little thing in comparison with Soracte; but man, and man's wife, and the
+unequal statures of his children, are in touch with the structure of the
+mountain rather than with that of the church which has been conceived
+without reference to the vital and fundamental rule of his inches.
+
+Is there no egotism, ministering to his dignity, that man, having the law
+of the organism of the world written in his members, can take with him,
+out of the room that has been built to accord with him, into the
+landscape that stands only a little further away? He has deliberately
+made the smoking chair and the table; there is nothing to surprise him in
+their ministrations. But what profounder homage is rendered by the
+multitudinous Nature going about the interests and the business of which
+he knows so little, and yet throughout confessing him! His eyes have
+seen her and his ears have heard, but it would never have entered into
+his heart to conceive her. His is not the fancy that could have achieved
+these woods, this little flush of summer from the innumerable flowering
+of grasses, the cyclic recreation of seasons. And yet he knows that he
+is imposed upon all he sees. His stature gives laws. His labour only is
+needful--not a greater strength. And the sun and the showers are made
+sufficient for him. His furniture must surely be adjudged to pay him but
+a coarse flattery in comparison with the subjection, yet the aloofness,
+of all this wild world. This is no flattery. The grass is lumpy, as Mr.
+Oscar Wilde remarks with truth: Nature is not man's lacquey, and has no
+preoccupation about his more commonplace comforts. These he gives
+himself indoors; and who prizes, with any self-respect, the things
+carefully provided by self-love? But when that _farouche_ Nature, who
+has never spoken to him, and to whom he has never had the opportunity of
+hinting his wishes or his tastes--when she reveals the suggestions of his
+form and the desire of his eyes, and amongst her numberless purposes lets
+him surprise in her the purpose to accord with him, and lets him suspect
+further harmonies which he has not yet learnt to understand--then man
+becomes conscious of having received a token from her lowliness, and a
+favour from her loveliness, compared with which the care wherewith his
+tailor himself has fitted him might leave his gratitude cool.
+
+
+
+
+BY THE RAILWAY SIDE
+
+
+My train drew near to the Via Reggio platform on a day between two of the
+harvests of a hot September; the sea was burning blue, and there were a
+sombreness and a gravity in the very excesses of the sun as his fires
+brooded deeply over the serried, hardy, shabby, seaside ilex-woods. I
+had come out of Tuscany and was on my way to the Genovesato: the steep
+country with its profiles, bay by bay, of successive mountains grey with
+olive-trees, between the flashes of the Mediterranean and the sky; the
+country through the which there sounds the twanging Genoese language, a
+thin Italian mingled with a little Arabic, more Portuguese, and much
+French. I was regretful at leaving the elastic Tuscan speech, canorous
+in its vowels set in emphatic _l's_ and _m's_ and the vigorous soft
+spring of the double consonants. But as the train arrived its noises
+were drowned by a voice declaiming in the tongue I was not to hear again
+for months--good Italian. The voice was so loud that one looked for the
+audience: Whose ears was it seeking to reach by the violence done to
+every syllable, and whose feelings would it touch by its insincerity? The
+tones were insincere, but there was passion behind them; and most often
+passion acts its own true character poorly, and consciously enough to
+make good judges think it a mere counterfeit. Hamlet, being a little
+mad, feigned madness. It is when I am angry that I pretend to be angry,
+so as to present the truth in an obvious and intelligible form. Thus
+even before the words were distinguishable it was manifest that they were
+spoken by a man in serious trouble who had false ideas as to what is
+convincing in elocution.
+
+When the voice became audibly articulate, it proved to be shouting
+blasphemies from the broad chest of a middle-aged man--an Italian of the
+type that grows stout and wears whiskers. The man was in _bourgeois_
+dress, and he stood with his hat off in front of the small station
+building, shaking his thick fist at the sky. No one was on the platform
+with him except the railway officials, who seemed in doubt as to their
+duties in the matter, and two women. Of one of these there was nothing
+to remark except her distress. She wept as she stood at the door of the
+waiting-room. Like the second woman, she wore the dress of the
+shopkeeping class throughout Europe, with the local black lace veil in
+place of a bonnet over her hair. It is of the second woman--O
+unfortunate creature!--that this record is made--a record without sequel,
+without consequence; but there is nothing to be done in her regard except
+so to remember her. And thus much I think I owe after having looked,
+from the midst of the negative happiness that is given to so many for a
+space of years, at some minutes of her despair. She was hanging on the
+man's arm in her entreaties that he would stop the drama he was enacting.
+She had wept so hard that her face was disfigured. Across her nose was
+the dark purple that comes with overpowering fear. Haydon saw it on the
+face of a woman whose child had just been run over in a London street. I
+remembered the note in his journal as the woman at Via Reggio, in her
+intolerable hour, turned her head my way, her sobs lifting it. She was
+afraid that the man would throw himself under the train. She was afraid
+that he would be damned for his blasphemies; and as to this her fear was
+mortal fear. It was horrible, too, that she was humpbacked and a dwarf.
+
+Not until the train drew away from the station did we lose the clamour.
+No one had tried to silence the man or to soothe the woman's horror. But
+has any one who saw it forgotten her face? To me for the rest of the day
+it was a sensible rather than a merely mental image. Constantly a red
+blur rose before my eyes for a background, and against it appeared the
+dwarf's head, lifted with sobs, under the provincial black lace veil. And
+at night what emphasis it gained on the boundaries of sleep! Close to my
+hotel there was a roofless theatre crammed with people, where they were
+giving Offenbach. The operas of Offenbach still exist in Italy, and the
+little town was placarded with announcements of _La Bella Elena_. The
+peculiar vulgar rhythm of the music jigged audibly through half the hot
+night, and the clapping of the town's-folk filled all its pauses. But
+the persistent noise did but accompany, for me, the persistent vision of
+those three figures at the Via Reggio station in the profound sunshine of
+the day.
+
+
+
+
+POCKET VOCABULARIES
+
+
+A serviceable substitute for style in literature has been found in such a
+collection of language ready for use as may be likened to a portable
+vocabulary. It is suited to the manners of a day that has produced salad-
+dressing in bottles, and many other devices for the saving of processes.
+Fill me such a wallet full of 'graphic' things, of 'quaint' things and
+'weird,' of 'crisp' or 'sturdy' Anglo-Saxon, of the material for 'word-
+painting' (is not that the way of it?), and it will serve the turn.
+Especially did the Teutonic fury fill full these common little hoards of
+language. It seemed, doubtless, to the professor of the New Literature
+that if anything could convince him of his own success it must be the
+energy of his Teutonisms and his avoidance of languid Latin derivatives,
+fit only for the pedants of the eighteenth century. Literature doubtless
+is made of words. What then is needful, he seems to ask, besides a knack
+of beautiful words? Unluckily for him, he has achieved, not style, but
+slang. Unluckily for him, words are not style, phrases are not style.
+'The man is style.' O good French language, cunning and good, that lets
+me read the sentence in obverse or converse as I will! And I read it as
+declaring that the whole man, the very whole of him, is his style. The
+literature of a man of letters worthy the name is rooted in all his
+qualities, with little fibres running invisibly into the smallest
+qualities he has. He who is not a man of letters, simply is not one; it
+is not too audacious a paradox to affirm that doing will not avail him
+who fails in being. 'Lay your deadly doing down,' sang once some old
+hymn known to Calvinists. Certain poets, a certain time ago, ransacked
+the language for words full of life and beauty, made a vocabulary of
+them, and out of wantonness wrote them to death. To change somewhat the
+simile, they scented out a word--an earlyish word, by preference--ran it
+to earth, unearthed it, dug it out, and killed it. And then their
+followers bagged it. The very word that lives, 'new every morning,'
+miraculously new, in the literature of a man of letters, they killed and
+put into their bag. And, in like manner, the emotion that should have
+caused the word is dead for those, and for those only, who abuse its
+expression. For the maker of a portable vocabulary is not content to
+turn his words up there: he turns up his feelings also, alphabetically or
+otherwise. Wonderful how much sensibility is at hand in such round words
+as the New Literature loves. Do you want a generous emotion? Pull forth
+the little language. Find out moonshine, find out moonshine!
+
+Take, as an instance, Mr. Swinburne's 'hell.' There is, I fear, no doubt
+whatever that Mr. Swinburne has put his 'hell' into a vocabulary, with
+the inevitable consequences to the word. And when the minor men of his
+school have occasion for a 'hell' (which may very well happen to any
+young man practising authorship), I must not be accused of phantasy if I
+say that they put their hands into Mr. Swinburne's vocabulary and pick
+it. These vocabularies are made out of vigorous and blunt language.
+'What hempen homespuns have we swaggering here?' Alas, they are
+homespuns from the factory, machine-made in uncostly quantities.
+Obviously, power needs to make use of no such storage. The property of
+power is to use phrases, whether strange or familiar, as though it
+created them. But even more than lack of power is lack of humour the
+cause of all the rankness and the staleness, of all the Anglo-Saxon of
+commerce, of all the weary 'quaintness'--that quaintness of which one is
+moved to exclaim with Cassio: 'Hither comes the bauble!' Lack of a sense
+of humour betrays a man into that perpetual too-much whereby he tries to
+make amends for a currency debased. No more than any other can a witty
+writer dispense with a sense of humour. In his moments of sentiment the
+lack is distressing; in his moments of wit it is at least perceptible. A
+sense of humour cannot be always present, it may be urged. Why, no; it
+is the lack of it that is--importunate. Other absences, such as the
+absence of passion, the absence of delicacy, are, if grievous negatives,
+still mere negatives. These qualities may or may not be there at call,
+ready for a summons; we are not obliged to know; we are not momentarily
+aware, unless they ought to be in action, whether their action is
+possible. But want of power and want of a sense of the ridiculous: these
+are lacks wherefrom there is no escaping, deficiencies that are
+all-influential, defects that assert themselves, vacancies that proclaim
+themselves, absences from the presence whereof there is no flying; what
+other paradoxes can I adventure? Without power--no style. Without a
+possible humour,--no style. The weakling has no confidence in himself to
+keep him from grasping at words that he fancies hold within them the true
+passions of the race, ready for the uses of his egoism. And with a sense
+of humour a man will not steal from a shelf the precious treasure of the
+language and put it in his pocket.
+
+
+
+
+PATHOS
+
+
+A fugitive writer wrote but lately on the fugitive page of a minor
+magazine: 'For our part, the drunken tinker [Christopher Sly] is the most
+real personage of the piece, and not without some hints of the pathos
+that is worked out more fully, though by different ways, in Bottom and
+Malvolio.' Has it indeed come to this? Have the Zeitgeist and the
+Weltschmerz and the other things compared to which 'le spleen' was gay,
+done so much for us? Is there to be no laughter left in literature free
+from the preoccupation of a sham real-life? So it would seem. Even what
+the great master has not shown us in his work, that your critic convinced
+of pathos is resolved to see in it. By the penetration of his intrusive
+sympathy he will come at it. It is of little use now to explain Snug the
+joiner to the audience: why, it is precisely Snug who stirs their
+emotions so painfully. Not the lion; they can see through that: but the
+Snug within, the human Snug. And Master Shallow has the Weltschmerz in
+that latent form which is the more appealing; and discouraging questions
+arise as to the end of old Double; and Argan in his nightcap is the
+tragic figure of Monomania; and human nature shudders at the petrifaction
+of the intellect of Mr. F.'s aunt. _Et patati, et patata_.
+
+It may be only too true that the actual world is 'with pathos delicately
+edged.' For Malvolio living we should have had living sympathies: so
+much aspiration, so ill-educated a love of refinement; so unarmed a
+credulity, noblest of weaknesses, betrayed for the laughter of a
+chambermaid. By an actual Bottom the Weaver our pity might be reached
+for the sake of his single self-reliance, his fancy and resource
+condemned to burlesque and ignominy by the niggard doom of circumstance.
+But is not life one thing and is not art another? Is it not the
+privilege of literature to make selection and to treat things singly,
+without the after-thoughts of life, without the troublous completeness of
+the many-sided world? Is not Shakespeare, for this reason, our refuge?
+Fortunately unreal is his world when he will have it so; and there we may
+laugh with open heart at a grotesque man: without misgiving, without
+remorse, without reluctance. If great creating Nature has not assumed
+for herself she has assuredly secured to the great creating poet the
+right of partiality, of limitation, of setting aside and leaving out, of
+taking one impression and one emotion as sufficient for the day. Art and
+Nature are separate, complementary; in relation, not in confusion, with
+one another. And all this officious cleverness in seeing round the
+corner, as it were, of a thing presented by literary art in the flat--(the
+borrowing of similes from other arts is of evil tendency; but let this
+pass, as it is apt)--is but another sign of the general lack of a sense
+of the separation between Nature and the sentient mirror in the mind. In
+some of his persons, indeed, Shakespeare is as Nature herself,
+all-inclusive; but in others--and chiefly in comedy--he is partial, he is
+impressionary, he refuses to know what is not to his purpose, he is an
+artist. And in that gay, wilful world it is that he gives us--or used to
+give us, for even the world is obsolete--the pleasure of _oubliance_.
+
+Now this fugitive writer has not been so swift but that I have caught him
+a clout as he went. Yet he will do it again; and those like-minded will
+assuredly also continue to show how much more completely human, how much
+more sensitive, how much more responsible, is the art of the critic than
+the world has ever dreamt till now. And, superior in so much, they will
+still count their superior weeping as the choicest of their gifts. And
+Lepidus, who loves to wonder, can have no better subject for his
+admiration than the pathos of the time. It is bred now of your mud by
+the operation of your sun. 'Tis a strange serpent; and the tears of it
+are wet.
+
+
+
+
+THE POINT OF HONOUR
+
+
+Not without significance is the Spanish nationality of Velasquez. In
+Spain was the Point put upon Honour; and Velasquez was the first
+Impressionist. As an Impressionist he claimed, implicity if not
+explicity, a whole series of delicate trusts in his trustworthiness; he
+made an appeal to the confidence of his peers; he relied on his own
+candour and asked that the candid should rely upon him; he kept the
+chastity of art when other masters were content with its honesty, and
+when others saved artistic conscience he safeguarded the point of honour.
+Contemporary masters more or less proved their position, and convinced
+the world by something of demonstration; the first Impressionist simply
+asked that his word should be accepted. To those who would not take his
+word he offers no bond. To those who will, he grants the distinction of
+a share in his responsibility. Somewhat unrefined, in comparison to his
+lofty and simple claim to be believed on a suggestion, is the commoner
+painter's production of his credentials, his appeal to the sanctions of
+ordinary experience, his self-defence against the suspicion of making
+irresponsible mysteries in art. 'You can see for yourself,' the lesser
+man seems to say to the world, 'thus things are, and I render them in
+such manner that your intelligence may be satisfied.' This is an appeal
+to average experience--at the best the cumulative experience; and with
+the average, or with the sum, art cannot deal without derogation. The
+Spaniard seems to say: 'Thus things are in my pictorial sight. Trust me,
+I apprehend them so.' We are not excluded from his counsels, but we are
+asked to attribute a certain authority to him, master of the craft as he
+is, master of that art of seeing pictorially which is the beginning and
+not far from the end--not far short of the whole--of the art of painting.
+So little indeed are we shut out from the mysteries of a great
+Impressionist's impression that Velasquez requires us to be in some
+degree his colleagues. Thus may each of us to whom he appeals take
+praise from the praised: He leaves my educated eyes to do a little of the
+work. He respects my responsibility no less--though he respects it less
+explicitly--than I do his. What he allows me would not be granted by a
+meaner master. If he does not hold himself bound to prove his own truth,
+he returns thanks for my trust. It is as though he used his countrymen's
+courteous hyperbole and called his house my own. In a sense of the most
+noble hostship he does me the honours of his picture.
+
+Because Impressionism is so free, therefore is it doubly bound. Because
+there is none to arraign it, it is a thousand times responsible. To
+undertake this art for the sake of its privileges without confessing its
+obligations--or at least without confessing them up to the point of
+honour--is to take a vulgar freedom: to see immunities precisely where
+there are duties, and an advantage where there is a bond. A very mob of
+men have taken Impressionism upon themselves in this our later day. It
+is against all probabilities that more than a few among these have within
+them the point of honour. In their galleries we are beset with a dim
+distrust. And to distrust is more humiliating than to be distrusted. How
+many of these landscape-painters, deliberately rash, are painting the
+truth of their own impressions? An ethical question as to loyalty is
+easily answered; truth and falsehood as to fact are, happily for the
+intelligence of the common conscience, not hard to divide. But when the
+_dubium_ concerns not fact but artistic truth, can the many be sure that
+their sensitiveness, their candour, their scruple, their delicate
+equipoise of perceptions, the vigilance of their apprehension, are
+enough? Now Impressionists of late have told us things as to their
+impressions--as to the effect of things upon the temperament of this man
+and upon the mood of that--which should not be asserted except on the
+artistic point of honour. The majority can tell ordinary truth, but they
+should not trust themselves for truth extraordinary. They can face the
+general judgment, but they should hesitate to produce work that appeals
+to the last judgment, which is the judgment within. There is too much
+reason to divine that a certain number of those who aspire to derive from
+the greatest of masters have no temperaments worth speaking of, no point
+of view worth seizing, no vigilance worth awaiting, no mood worth
+waylaying. And to be, _de parti pris_, an Impressionist without
+these! O Velasquez! Nor is literature quite free from a like reproach
+in her own things. An author, here and there, will make as though he had
+a word worth hearing--nay, worth over-hearing--a word that seeks to
+withdraw even while it is uttered; and yet what it seems to dissemble is
+all too probably a platitude. But obviously, literature is not--as is
+the craft and mystery of painting--so at the mercy of a half-imposture,
+so guarded by unprovable honour. For the art of painting is reserved
+that shadowy risk, that undefined salvation. May the gods guard us from
+the further popularising of Impressionism; for the point of honour is the
+simple secret of the few.
+
+
+
+
+COMPOSURE
+
+
+Tribulation, Immortality, the Multitude: what remedy of composure do
+these words bring for their own great disquiet! Without the remoteness
+of the Latinity the thought would come too close and shake too cruelly.
+In order to the sane endurance of the intimate trouble of the soul an
+aloofness of language is needful. Johnson feared death. Did his noble
+English control and postpone the terror? Did it keep the fear at some
+courteous, deferent distance from the centre of that human heart, in the
+very act of the leap and lapse of mortality? Doubtless there is in
+language such an educative power. Speech is a school. Every language is
+a persuasion, an induced habit, an instrument which receives the note
+indeed but gives the tone. Every language imposes a quality, teaches a
+temper, proposes a way, bestows a tradition: this is the tone--the
+voice--of the instrument. Every language, by counter-change, replies to
+the writer's touch or breath his own intention, articulate: this is his
+note. Much has always been said, many things to the purpose have been
+thought, of the power and the responsibility of the note. Of the
+legislation and influence of the tone I have been led to think by
+comparing the tranquillity of Johnson and the composure of Canning with
+the stimulated and close emotion, the interior trouble, of those writers
+who have entered as disciples in the school of the more Teutonic English.
+
+For if every language be a school, more significantly and more
+educatively is a part of a language a school to him who chooses that
+part. Few languages offer the choice. The fact that a choice is made
+implies the results and fruits of a decision. The French author is
+without these. They are of all the heritages of the English writer the
+most important. He receives a language of dual derivation. He may
+submit himself to either University, whither he will take his impulse and
+his character, where he will leave their influence, and whence he will
+accept their education. The Frenchman has certainly a style to develop
+within definite limits; but he does not subject himself to suggestions
+tending mainly hitherwards or thitherwards, to currents of various race
+within one literature. Such a choice of subjection is the singular
+opportunity of the Englishman. I do not mean to ignore the necessary
+mingling. Happily that mingling has been done once for all for us all.
+Nay, one of the most charming things that a master of English can achieve
+is the repayment of the united teaching by linking their results so
+exquisitely in his own practice, that words of the two schools are made
+to meet each other with a surprise and delight that shall prove them at
+once gayer strangers, and sweeter companions, than the world knew they
+were. Nevertheless there remains the liberty of choice as to which
+school of words shall have the place of honour in the great and sensitive
+moments of an author's style: which school shall be used for
+conspicuousness, and which for multitudinous service. And the choice
+being open, the perturbation of the pulses and impulses of so many hearts
+quickened in thought and feeling in this day suggests to me a deliberate
+return to the recollectedness of the more tranquil language. 'Doubtless
+there is a place of peace.'
+
+A place of peace, not of indifference. It is impossible not to charge
+some of the moralists of the last century with an indifference into which
+they educated their platitudes and into which their platitudes educated
+them. Addison thus gave and took, until he was almost incapable of
+coming within arm's-length of a real or spiritual emotion. There is no
+knowing to what distance the removal of the 'appropriate sentiment' from
+the central soul might have attained but for the change and renewal in
+language, which came when it was needed. Addison had assuredly removed
+eternity far from the apprehension of the soul when his Cato hailed the
+'pleasing hope,' the 'fond desire;' and the touch of war was distant from
+him who conceived his 'repulsed battalions' and his 'doubtful battle.'
+What came afterwards, when simplicity and nearness were restored once
+more, was doubtless journeyman's work at times. Men were too eager to go
+into the workshop of language. There were unreasonable raptures over the
+mere making of common words. 'A hand-shoe! a finger-hat! a foreword!
+Beautiful!' they cried; and for the love of German the youngest daughter
+of Chrysale herself might have consented to be kissed by a grammarian. It
+seemed to be forgotten that a language with all its construction visible
+is a language little fitted for the more advanced mental processes; that
+its images are material; and that, on the other hand, a certain
+spiritualising and subtilising effect of alien derivations is a privilege
+and an advantage incalculable--that to possess that half of the language
+within which Latin heredities lurk and Romanesque allusions are at play
+is to possess the state and security of a dead tongue, without the death.
+
+But now I spoke of words encountering as gay strangers, various in
+origin, divided in race, within a master's phrase. The most beautiful
+and the most sudden of such meetings are of course in Shakespeare.
+'Superfluous kings,' 'A lass unparalleled,' 'Multitudinous seas:' we
+needed not to wait for the eighteenth century or for the nineteenth to
+learn the splendour of such encounters, of such differences, of such
+nuptial unlikeness and union. But it is well that we should learn them
+afresh. And it is well, too, that we should not resist the rhythmic
+reaction bearing us now somewhat to the side of the Latin. Such a
+reaction is in some sort an ethical need for our day. We want to quell
+the exaggerated decision of monosyllables. We want the poise and the
+pause that imply vitality at times better than headstrong movement
+expresses it. And not the phrase only but the form of verse might render
+us timely service. The controlling couplet might stay with a touch a
+modern grief, as it ranged in order the sorrows of Canning for his son.
+But it should not be attempted without a distinct intention of submission
+on the part of the writer. The couplet transgressed against, trespassed
+upon, shaken off, is like a law outstripped, defied--to the dignity
+neither of the rebel nor of the rule. To Letters do we look now for the
+guidance and direction which the very closeness of the emotion taking us
+by the heart makes necessary. Shall not the Thing more and more, as we
+compose ourselves to literature, assume the honour, the hesitation, the
+leisure, the reconciliation of the Word?
+
+
+
+
+DR. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES
+
+
+It is good to go, now and again--let the American phrase be
+permitted--'back of' some of our contemporaries. We never desired them
+as coevals. We never wished to share an age with them; we share nothing
+else with them. And we deliver ourselves from them by passing, in
+literature, into the company of an author who wrote before their time,
+and yet is familiarly modern. To read Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, then,
+is to go behind the New Humorist--into a time before he was, or his
+Humour. Obviously we go in like manner behind many another, but the
+funny writer of the magazines is suggested because in reference to him
+our act has a special significance. We connect him with Dr. Holmes by a
+reluctant ancestry, by an impertinent descent. It may be objected that
+such a connection is but a trivial thing to attribute, as a conspicuous
+incident, to a man of letters. So it is. But the triviality has wide
+allusions. It is often a question which of several significant
+trivialities a critic shall choose in his communication with a reader who
+does not insist that all the grave things shall be told him. And, by the
+way, are we ever sufficiently grateful for that reader, whom the last few
+years have given to us, or to whom we have been given by the last few
+years? A trivial connexion has remote and negative issues. To go to Dr.
+Oliver Wendell Holmes's period is to get rid of many things; to go to
+himself is especially to get rid of the New Humour, yet to stand at its
+unprophetic source. And we love such authors as Dickens and this
+American for their own sake, refusing to be aware of their corrupt
+following. We would make haste to ignore their posterity, and to assure
+them that we absolve them from any fault of theirs in the bastardy.
+
+Humour is the most conspicuous thing in the world, which must explain why
+the little humour in _Elsie Venner_ and the _Breakfast Table_ series
+is not only the first thing the critic touches but the thing whereby he
+relates this author to his following and to the world. The young man
+John, Colonel Sprowle with his 'social entertainment,' the Landlady and
+her daughter, and the Poor Relation, almost make up the sum of the comic
+personages, and fifty per cent. of the things they say--no more--are good
+enough to remain after the bloom of their vulgarity has worn off. But
+that half is excellent, keen, jolly, temperate; and because of that
+temperance--the most stimulating and fecundating of qualities--the humour
+of it has set the literature of a hemisphere to the tune of mirth. Like
+Mr. Lowell's it was humour in dialect--not Irish dialect nor negro, but
+American; and it made New England aware of her comedy. Until then she
+had felt within herself that there was nothing to laugh at. 'Nature is
+in earnest when she makes a woman,' says Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes.
+Rather, she takes herself seriously when she makes the average spiritual
+woman: as seriously as that woman takes herself when she makes a novel.
+And in a like mood Nature made New England and endowed her with purpose,
+with mortuary frivolities, with long views, with energetic provincialism.
+
+If we remember best _The Wonderful One-Hoss Shay_, we do so in
+spite of the religious and pathetic motive of the greater part of Dr.
+Holmes's work, and of his fancy, which should be at least as conspicuous
+as his humour. It is fancy rather than imagination; but it is more
+perfect, more definite, more fit, than the larger art of imagery, which
+is apt to be vague, because it is intellectual and adult. No grown man
+makes quite so definite mental images as does a child; when the mind ages
+it thinks stronger thoughts in vaguer pictures. The young mind of Dr.
+Holmes has less intellectual imagination than intelligent fancy. For
+example: 'If you ever saw a crow with a king-bird after him, you will get
+an image of a dull speaker and a lively listener. The bird in sable
+plumage flaps heavily along his straightforward course, while the other
+sails round him, over him, under him, leaves him, comes back again,
+tweaks out a black feather, shoots away once more, never losing sight of
+him, and finally reaches the crow's perch at the same time the crow
+does;' but the comparison goes on after this at needless length, with
+explanations. Again: 'That blessed clairvoyance which sees into things
+without opening them: that glorious licence which, having shut the door
+and driven the reporter from the keyhole, calls upon Truth, majestic
+Virgin! to get off from her pedestal and drop her academic _poses_.' And
+this, of the Landlady: 'She told me her story once; it was as if a grain
+that had been ground and bolted had tried to individualise itself by a
+special narrative.' 'The riotous tumult of a laugh, which, I take it, is
+the mob-law of the features.' 'Think of the Old World--that part of it
+which is the seat of ancient civilisation! . . . A man cannot help
+marching in step with his kind in the rear of such a procession.' 'Young
+folk look on a face as a unit; children who go to school with any given
+little John Smith see in his name a distinctive appellation.' And that
+exquisitely sensitive passage on the nervous outward movement and the
+inward tranquillity of the woods. Such things are the best this good
+author gives us, whether they go gay with metaphor, or be bare thoughts
+shapely with their own truth.
+
+Part of the charm of Dr. Holmes's comment on life, and of the phrase
+wherein he secures it, arises from his singular vigilance. He has
+unpreoccupied and alert eyes. Strangely enough, by the way, this
+watchfulness is for once as much at fault as would be the slovenly
+observation of an ordinary man, in the description of a horse's gallop,
+'skimming along within a yard of the ground.' Who shall trust a man's
+nimble eyes after this, when habit and credulity have taught him? Not an
+inch nearer the ground goes the horse of fact at a gallop than at a walk.
+But Dr. Holmes's vigilance helps him to somewhat squalid purpose in his
+studies of New England inland life. Much careful literature besides has
+been spent, after the example of _Elsie Venner_ and the _Autocrat_,
+upon the cottage worldliness, the routine of abundant and common comforts
+achieved by a distressing household industry, the shrillness, the unrest,
+the best-parlour emulation, the ungraceful vanity, of Americans of the
+country-side and the country-town; upon their affections made vulgar by
+undemonstrativeness, and their consciences made vulgar by
+demonstrativeness--their kindness by reticence, and their religion by
+candour.
+
+As for the question of heredity and of individual responsibility which
+Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes proposes in _Elsie Venner_, it is strange
+that a man whom it had sincerely disquieted should present it--not in its
+own insolubility but--in caricature. As though the secrets of the
+inherited body and soul needed to be heightened by a bit of burlesque
+physiology! It is in spite of our protest against the invention of
+Elsie's horrible plight--a conception and invention which Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes should feel to be essentially frivolous--that the serpent-
+maiden moves us deeply by her last 'Good night,' and by the gentle phrase
+that tells us 'Elsie wept.' But now, if Dr. Holmes shall succeed in
+proposing the question of separate responsibility so as to convince every
+civilised mind of his doubts, there will be curiously little change
+wrought thereby in the discipline of the world. For Dr. Holmes
+incidentally lets us know that he cherishes and values the instinct of
+intolerance and destructiveness in presence of the cruel, the
+self-loving, and the false. Negation of separate moral responsibility,
+when that negation is tempered by a working instinct of intolerance and
+destructiveness, will deal with the felon, after all, very much in the
+manner achieved by the present prevalent judicialness, unscientific
+though it may be. And to say this is to confess that Dr. Oliver Wendell
+Holmes has worked, through a number of books, to futile purpose. His
+books are justified by something quite apart from his purpose.
+
+
+
+
+JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
+
+
+The United States have produced authors not a few; among some names not
+the most famous, perhaps, on the popular tongue, are two or three names
+of their poets; but they have hardly given to the world more than one man
+of letters--judicious, judicial, disinterested, patient, happy,
+temperate, delighted. The colonial days, with the 'painful' divines who
+brought the parish into the wilderness; the experimental period of
+ambition and attempts at a literature that should be young as the soil
+and much younger than the race; the civil-war years, with a literature
+that matched the self-conscious and inexpert heroism of the army;--none
+of these periods of the national life could fitly be represented by a man
+of letters. And though James Russell Lowell was the contemporary of the
+'transcendentalists,' and a man of middle age when the South seceded, and
+though indeed his fame as a Yankee humourist is to be discerned through
+the smoke and the dust, through the gravity and the burlesque, of the
+war, clear upon the other side, yet he was virtually the child of
+national leisure, of moderation and education, an American of the
+seventies and onwards. He represented the little-recognised fact that in
+ripeness, not in rawness, consists the excellence of Americans--an
+excellence they must be content to share with contemporary nations,
+however much it may cost them to abandon we know not what bounding
+ambitions which they have never succeeded in definitely describing in
+words. Mr. Lowell was a refutation of the fallacy that an American can
+never be American enough. He ranked with the students and the critics
+among all nations, and nothing marks his transatlantic conditions except,
+perhaps, that his scholarliness is a little anxious and would not seem
+so; he enriches his phrases busily, and yet would seem composed; he makes
+his allusions tread closely one upon another, and there is an assumed
+carelessness, and an ill-concealed vigilance, as to the effect their
+number and their erudition will produce upon the reader. The American
+sensitiveness takes with him that pleasantest of forms; his style
+confesses more than he thinks of the loveable weakness of national
+vanity, and asks of the stranger now and again, 'Well, what do you think
+of my country?'
+
+Declining, as I do, to separate style in expression from style in the
+thought that informs it--for they who make such a separation can hardly
+know that style should be in the very conception of a phrase, in its
+antenatal history, else the word is neither choice nor authentic--I
+recognise in Mr. Lowell, as a prose author, a sense of proportion and a
+delicacy of selection not surpassed in the critical work of this critical
+century. Those small volumes, _Among My Books_ and _My Study
+Windows_, are all pure literature. A fault in criticism is the rarest
+thing in them. I call none to mind except the strange judgment on Dr.
+Johnson: 'Our present concern with the Saxons is chiefly a literary one.
+. . Take Dr. Johnson as an instance. The Saxon, as it appears to me, has
+never shown any capacity for art,' and so forth. One wonders how Lowell
+read the passage on Iona, and the letter to Lord Chesterfield, and the
+Preface to the Dictionary without conviction of the great English
+writer's supreme art--art that declares itself and would not be hidden.
+But take the essay on Pope, that on Chaucer, and that on one Percival, a
+writer of American verse of whom English readers are not aware, and they
+prove Lowell to have been as clear in judging as he was exquisite in
+sentencing. His essay 'On a Certain Condescension in Foreigners' is
+famous, but an equal fame is due to 'My Garden Acquaintance' and 'A Good
+Word for Winter.' His talk about the weather is so full of wit that one
+wonders how prattlers at a loss for a topic dare attempt one so rich. The
+birds that nest in his syringas seem to be not his pensioners only, but
+his parishioners, so charmingly local, so intent upon his chronicle does
+he become when he is minded to play White of Selborne with a smile. And
+all the while it is the word that he is intent upon. You may trace his
+reading by some fine word that has not escaped him, but has been garnered
+for use when his fan has been quick to purge away the chaff of
+commonplace. He is thus fastidious and alert in many languages. You
+wonder at the delicacy of the sense whereby he perceives a choice rhyme
+in the Anglo-Norman of Marie de France or a clang of arms in the brief
+verse of Peire de Bergerac, or touches sensitively a word whereby Dante
+has transcended something sweet in Bernard de Ventadour, or Virgil
+somewhat noble in Homer. In his own use, and within his own English, he
+has the abstinence and the freshness of intention that keep every word
+new for the day's work. He gave to the language, and did not take from
+it; it gained by him, and lost not. There are writers of English now at
+work who almost convince us of their greatness until we convict them on
+that charge: they have succeeded at an unpardonable cost; they are
+glorified, but they have beggared the phrases they leave behind them.
+
+Nevertheless Lowell was no poet. To accept his verse as a poet's would
+be to confess a lack of instinct, and there is no more grievous lack in a
+lover of poetry. Reason, we grant, makes for the full acceptance of his
+poems, and perhaps so judicial a mind as his may be forgiven for having
+trusted to reason and to criticism. His trust was justified--if such
+justification avails--by the admiration of fairly educated people who
+apparently hold him to have been a poet first, a humourist in the second
+place, and an essayist incidentally. It is hard to believe that he
+failed in instinct about himself. More probably he was content to forego
+it when he found the ode, the lyric, and the narrative verse all so
+willing. They made no difficulty, and he made none; why then are we
+reluctant to acknowledge the manifest stateliness of this verse and the
+evident grace of that, and the fine thought finely worded? Such
+reluctance justifies itself. Nor would I attempt to back it by the cheap
+sanctions of prophecy. Nay, it is quite possible that Lowell's poems may
+live; I have no commands for futurity. Enough that he enriched the
+present with the example of a scholarly, linguistic, verbal love of
+literature, with a studiousness full of heart.
+
+
+
+
+DOMUS ANGUSTA
+
+
+The narrow house is a small human nature compelled to a large human
+destiny, charged with a fate too great, a history too various, for its
+slight capacities. Men have commonly complained of fate; but their
+complaints have been of the smallness, not of the greatness, of the human
+lot. A disproportion--all in favour of man--between man and his destiny
+is one of the things to be taken for granted in literature: so frequent
+and so easy is the utterance of the habitual lamentation as to the
+trouble of a 'vain capacity,' so well explained has it ever been.
+
+ 'Thou hast not half the power to do me harm
+ That I have to be hurt,'
+
+discontented man seems to cry to Heaven, taking the words of the brave
+Emilia. But inarticulate has been the voice within the narrow house.
+Obviously it never had its poet. Little elocution is there, little
+argument or definition, little explicitness. And yet for every vain
+capacity we may assuredly count a thousand vain destinies, for every
+liberal nature a thousand liberal fates. It is the trouble of the wide
+house we hear of, clamorous of its disappointments and desires. The
+narrow house has no echoes; yet its pathetic shortcoming might well move
+pity. On that strait stage is acted a generous tragedy; to that
+inadequate soul is intrusted an enormous sorrow; a tempest of movement
+makes its home within that slender nature; and heroic happiness seeks
+that timorous heart.
+
+We may, indeed, in part know the narrow house by its
+inarticulateness--not, certainly, its fewness of words, but its
+inadequacy and imprecision of speech. For, doubtless, right language
+enlarges the soul as no other power or influence may do. Who, for
+instance, but trusts more nobly for knowing the full word of his
+confidence? Who but loves more penetratingly for possessing the ultimate
+syllable of his tenderness? There is a 'pledging of the word,' in
+another sense than the ordinary sense of troth and promise. The poet
+pledges his word, his sentence, his verse, and finds therein a peculiar
+sanction. And I suppose that even physical pain takes on an edge when it
+not only enforces a pang but whispers a phrase. Consciousness and the
+word are almost as closely united as thought and the word. Almost--not
+quite; in spite of its inexpressive speech, the narrow house is aware and
+sensitive beyond, as it were, its poor power.
+
+But as to the whole disparity between the destiny and the nature, we know
+it to be general. Life is great that is trivially transmitted; love is
+great that is vulgarly experienced. Death, too, is a heroic virtue; and
+to the keeping of us all is death committed: death, submissive in the
+indocile, modest in the fatuous, several in the vulgar, secret in the
+familiar. It is destructive because it not only closes but contradicts
+life. Unlikely people die. The one certain thing, it is also the one
+improbable. A dreadful paradox is perhaps wrought upon a little nature
+that is incapable of death and yet is constrained to die. That is a true
+destruction, and the thought of it is obscure.
+
+Happy literature corrects all this disproportion by its immortal pause.
+It does not bid us follow man or woman to an illogical conclusion. Mrs.
+Micawber never does desert Mr. Micawber. Considering her mental powers,
+by the way, an illogical conclusion for her would be manifestly
+inappropriate. Shakespeare, indeed, having seen a life whole, sees it to
+an end: sees it out, and Falstaff dies. More than Promethean was the
+audacity that, having kindled, quenched that spark. But otherwise the
+grotesque man in literature is immortal, and with something more
+significant than the immortality awarded to him in the sayings of
+rhetoric; he is predurable because he is not completed. His humours are
+strangely matched with perpetuity. But, indeed, he is not worthy to die;
+for there is something graver than to be immortal, and that is to be
+mortal. I protest I do not laugh at man or woman in the world. I thank
+my fellow-mortals for their wit, and also for the kind of joke that the
+French so pleasantly call _une joyeusete_; these are to smile at. But
+the gay injustice of laughter is between me and the book.
+
+That narrow house--there is sometimes a message from its living windows.
+Its bewilderment, its reluctance, its defect, show by moments from eyes
+that are apt to express none but common things. There are allusions
+unawares, involuntary appeals, in those brief glances. Far from me and
+from my friends be the misfortune of meeting such looks in reply to pain
+of our inflicting. To be clever and sensitive and to hurt the foolish
+and the stolid--wouldst thou do such a deed for all the world? Not I, by
+this heavenly light.
+
+
+
+
+REJECTION
+
+
+Simplicity is not virginal in the modern world. She has a penitential or
+a vidual singleness. We can conceive an antique world in which life,
+art, and letters were simple because of the absence of many things; for
+us now they can be simple only because of our rejection of many things.
+We are constrained to such a vigilance as will not let even a master's
+work pass unfanned and unpurged. Even among his phrases one shall be
+taken and the other left. For he may unawares have allowed the
+habitualness that besets this multitudinous life to take the pen from his
+hand and to write for him a page or a word; and habitualness compels our
+refusals. Or he may have allowed the easy impulse of exaggeration to
+force a sentence which the mere truth, sensitively and powerfully
+pausing, would well have become. Exaggeration has played a part of its
+own in human history. By depreciating our language it has stimulated
+change, and has kept the circulating word in exercise. Our rejection
+must be alert and expert to overtake exaggeration and arrest it. It
+makes us shrewder than we wish to be. And, indeed, the whole endless
+action of refusal shortens the life we could desire to live. Much of our
+resolution is used up in the repeated mental gesture of adverse decision.
+Our tacit and implicit distaste is made explicit, who shall say with what
+loss to our treasury of quietness? We are defrauded of our interior
+ignorance, which should be a place of peace. We are forced to confess
+more articulately than befits our convention with ourselves. We are
+hurried out of our reluctances. We are made too much aware. Nay, more:
+we are tempted to the outward activity of destruction; reviewing becomes
+almost inevitable. As for the spiritual life--O weary, weary act of
+refusal! O waste but necessary hours, vigil and wakefulness of fear! 'We
+live by admiration' only a shortened life who live so much in the
+iteration of rejection and repulse. And in the very touch of joy there
+hides I know not what ultimate denial; if not on one side, on the other.
+If joy is given to us without reserve, not so do we give ourselves to
+joy. We withhold, we close. Having denied many things that have
+approached us, we deny ourselves to many things. Thus does _il gran
+rifiuto_ divide and rule our world.
+
+Simplicity is worth the sacrifice; but all is not sacrifice. Rejection
+has its pleasures, the more secret the more unmeasured. When we garnish
+a house we refuse more furniture, and furniture more various, than might
+haunt the dreams of decorators. There is no limit to our rejections. And
+the unconsciousness of the decorators is in itself a cause of pleasure to
+a mind generous, forbearing, and delicate. When we dress, no fancy may
+count the things we will none of. When we write, what hinders that we
+should refrain from Style past reckoning? When we marry--. Moreover, if
+simplicity is no longer set in a world having the great and beautiful
+quality of fewness, we can provide an equally fair setting in the quality
+of refinement. And refinement is not to be achieved but by rejection.
+One who suggests to me that refinement is apt to be a mere negative has
+offered up a singular blunder in honour of robustiousness. Refinement is
+not negative, because it must be compassed by many negations. It is a
+thing of price as well as of value; it demands immolations, it exacts
+experience. No slight or easy charge, then, is committed to such of us
+as, having apprehension of these things, fulfil the office of exclusion.
+Never before was a time when derogation was always so near, a daily
+danger, or when the reward of resisting it was so great. The simplicity
+of literature, more sensitive, more threatened, and more important than
+other simplicities, needs a guard of honour, who shall never relax the
+good will nor lose the good heart of their intolerance.
+
+
+
+
+THE LESSON OF LANDSCAPE
+
+
+The landscape, like our literature, is apt to grow and to get itself
+formed under too luxurious ideals. This is the evil work of that
+_little more_ which makes its insensible but persistent additions to
+styles, to the arts, to the ornaments of life--to nature, when unluckily
+man becomes too explicitly conscious of her beauty, and too deliberate in
+his arrangement of it. The landscape has need of moderation, of that
+fast-disappearing grace of unconsciousness, and, in short, of a return
+towards the ascetic temper. The English way of landowning, above all,
+has made for luxury. Naturally the country is fat. The trees are thick
+and round--a world of leaves; the hills are round; the forms are all
+blunt; and the grass is so deep as to have almost the effect of snow in
+smoothing off all points and curving away all abruptness. England is
+almost as blunt as a machine-made moulding or a piece of Early-Victorian
+cast-iron work. And on all this we have, of set purpose, improved by our
+invention of the country park. There all is curves and masses. A little
+more is added to the greenness and the softness of the forest glade, and
+for increase of ornament the fat land is devoted to idleness. Not a tree
+that is not impenetrable, inarticulate. Thick soil below and thick
+growth above cover up all the bones of the land, which in more delicate
+countries show brows and hollows resembling those of a fine face after
+mental experience. By a very intelligible paradox, it is only in a
+landscape made up for beauty that beauty is so ill achieved. Much beauty
+there must needs be where there are vegetation and the seasons. But even
+the seasons, in park scenery, are marred by the _little too much_:
+too complete a winter, too emphatic a spring, an ostentatious summer, an
+autumn too demonstrative.
+
+'Seek to have less rather than more.' It is a counsel of perfection in
+_The Imitation of Christ_. And here, undoubtedly, is the secret of
+all that is virile and classic in the art of man, and of all in nature
+that is most harmonious with that art. Moreover, this is the secret of
+Italy. How little do the tourists and the poets grasp this latter truth,
+by the way--and the artists! The legend of Italy is to be gorgeous, and
+they have her legend by rote. But Italy is slim and all articulate; her
+most characteristic trees are those that are distinct and distinguished,
+with lines that suggest the etching-point rather than a brush loaded with
+paint. Cypresses shaped like flames, tall pines with the abrupt flatness
+of their tops, thin canes in the brakes, sharp aloes by the road-side,
+and olives with the delicate acuteness of the leaf--these make keen lines
+of slender vegetation. And they own the seasons by a gentle confession.
+Rather than be overpowered by the clamorous proclamation of summer in the
+English woods, we would follow June to this subtler South: even to the
+Campagna, where the cycle of the seasons passes within such narrow
+limitations that insensitive eyes scarcely recognise it. In early spring
+there is a fresher touch of green on all the spaces of grass, the
+distance grows less mellow and more radiant; by the coming of May the
+green has been imperceptibly dimmed again; it blushes with the mingled
+colours of minute and numberless flowers--a dust of flowers, in lines
+longer than those of ocean billows. This is the desert blossoming like a
+rose: not the obvious rose of gardens, but the multitudinous and various
+flower that gathers once in the year in every hand's-breadth of the
+wilderness. When June comes the sun has burnt all to leagues of
+harmonious seed, coloured with a hint of the colour of harvest, which is
+gradually changed to the lighter harmonies of winter. All this fine
+chromatic scale passes within such modest boundaries that it is accused
+as a monotony. But those who find its modesty delightful may have a
+still more delicate pleasure in the blooming and blossoming of the sea.
+The passing from the winter blue to the summer blue, from the cold colour
+to the colour that has in it the fire of the sun, the kindling of the
+sapphire of the Mediterranean--the significance of these sea-seasons, so
+far from the pasture and the harvest, is imperceptible to ordinary
+senses, as appears from the fact that so few stay to see it all
+fulfilled. And if the tourist stayed, he would no doubt violate all that
+is lovely and moderate by the insistence of his descriptions. He would
+find adjectives for the blue sea, but probably he would refuse to search
+for words for the white. A white Mediterranean is not in the legend.
+Nevertheless it blooms, now and then, pale as an opal; the white sea is
+the flower of the breathless midsummer. And in its clear, silent waters,
+a few days, in the culmination of the heat, bring forth translucent
+living creatures, many-shaped jelly-fish, coloured like mother-of-pearl.
+
+But without going so far from the landscape of daily life, it is in
+agricultural Italy that the _little less_ makes so undesignedly, and as
+it were so inevitably, for beauty. The country that is formed for use
+and purpose only is immeasurably the loveliest. What a lesson in
+literature! How feelingly it persuades us that all except a very little
+of the ornament of letters and of life makes the dulness of the world.
+The tenderness of colour, the beauty of series and perspective, and the
+variety of surface, produced by the small culture of vegetables, are
+among the charms that come unsought, and that are not to be found by
+seeking--are never to be achieved if they are sought for their own sake.
+And another of the delights of the useful laborious land is its vitality.
+The soil may be thin and dry, but man's life is added to its own. He has
+embanked the hill to make little platforms for the growth of wheat in the
+light shadows of olive leaves. Thanks to the metayer land-tenure, man's
+heart, as well as his strength, is given to the ground, with his hope and
+his honour. Louis Blanc's 'point of honour of industry' is a conscious
+impulse--it is not too much to say--with most of the Tuscan contadini;
+but as each effort they make for their master they make also for the
+bread of their children, it is no wonder that the land they cultivate has
+a look of life. But in all colour, in all luxury, and in all that gives
+material for picturesque English, this lovely scenery for food and wine
+and raiment has that _little less_ to which we desire to recall a
+rhetorical world.
+
+
+
+
+MR. COVENTRY PATMORE'S ODES
+
+
+To most of the great poets no greater praise can be given than praise of
+their imagery. Imagery is the natural language of their poetry. Without
+a parable she hardly speaks. But undoubtedly there is now and then a
+poet who touches the thing, not its likeness, too vitally, too
+sensitively, for even such a pause as the verse makes for love of the
+beautiful image. Those rare moments are simple, and their simplicity
+makes one of the reader's keenest experiences. Other simplicities may be
+achieved by lesser art, but this is transcendent simplicity. There is
+nothing in the world more costly. It vouches for the beauty which it
+transcends; it answer for the riches it forbears; it implies the art
+which it fulfils. All abundance ministers to it, though it is so single.
+And here we get the sacrificial quality which is the well-kept secret of
+art at this perfection. All the faculties of the poet are used for
+preparing this naked greatness--are used and fruitfully spent and shed.
+The loveliness that stands and waits on the simplicity of certain of Mr.
+Coventry Patmore's Odes, the fervours and splendours that are there, only
+to be put to silence--to silence of a kind that would be impossible were
+they less glorious--are testimonies to the difference between sacrifice
+and waste.
+
+But does it seem less than reasonable to begin a review of a poet's work
+with praise of an infrequent mood? Infrequent such a mood must needs be,
+yet it is in a profound sense characteristic. To have attained it once
+or twice is to have proved such gift and grace as a true history of
+literature would show to be above price, even gauged by the rude measure
+of rarity. Transcendent simplicity could not possibly be habitual. Man
+lives within garments and veils, and art is chiefly concerned with making
+mysteries of these for the loveliness of his life; when they are rent
+asunder it is impossible not to be aware that an overwhelming human
+emotion has been in action. Thus _Departure_, _If I were Dead_,
+_A Farewell_, _Eurydice_, _The Toys_, _St. Valentine's
+Day_--though here there is in the exquisite imaginative play a
+mitigation of the bare vitality of feeling--group themselves apart as the
+innermost of the poet's achievements.
+
+Second to these come the Odes that have splendid thought in great images,
+and display--rather than, as do the poems first glanced at, betray--the
+beauties of poetic art. Emotion is here, too, and in shocks and throes,
+never frantic when almost intolerable. It is mortal pathos. If any
+other poet has filled a cup with a draught so unalloyed, we do not know
+it. Love and sorrow are pure in _The Unknown Eros_; and its author
+has not refused even the cup of terror. Against love often, against
+sorrow nearly always, against fear always, men of sensibility
+instantaneously guard the quick of their hearts. It is only the approach
+of the pang that they will endure; from the pang itself, dividing soul
+and spirit, a man who is conscious of a profound capacity for passion
+defends himself in the twinkling of an eye. But through nearly the whole
+of Coventry Patmore's poetry there is an endurance of the mortal touch.
+Nay, more, he has the endurance of the immortal touch. That is, his
+capacity for all the things that men elude for their greatness is more
+than the capacity of other men. He endures therefore what they could but
+will not endure and, besides this, degrees that they cannot apprehend.
+Thus, to have studied _The Unknown Eros_ is to have had a certain
+experience--at least the impassioned experience of a compassion; but it
+is also to have recognised a soul beyond our compassion.
+
+What some of the Odes have to sing of, their author does not insist upon
+our knowing. He leaves more liberty for a well-intentioned reader's
+error than makes for peace and recollection of mind in reading. That the
+general purpose of the poems is obscure is inevitable. It has the
+obscurity of profound clear waters. What the poet chiefly secures to us
+is the understanding that love and its bonds, its bestowal and reception,
+does but rehearse the action of the union of God with humanity--that
+there is no essential man save Christ, and no essential woman except the
+soul of mankind. When the singer of a Song of Songs seems to borrow the
+phrase of human love, it is rather that human love had first borrowed the
+truths of the love of God. The thought grows gay in the three _Psyche_
+odes, or attempts a gaiety--the reader at least being somewhat reluctant.
+How is it? Mr. Coventry Patmore's play more often than not wins you to
+but a slow participation. Perhaps because some thrust of his has left
+you still tremulous.
+
+But the inequality of equal lovers, sung in these Odes with a Divine
+allusion, is a most familiar truth. Love that is passionate has much of
+the impulse of gravitation--gravitation that is not falling, as there is
+no downfall in the precipitation of the sidereal skies. The love of the
+great for the small is the passionate love; the upward love hesitates and
+is fugitive. St. Francis Xavier asked that the day of his ecstasy might
+be shortened; Imogen, the wife of all poetry, 'prays forbearance;' the
+child is 'fretted with sallies of his mothers kisses.' It might be
+drawing an image too insistently to call this a centrifugal impulse.
+
+The art that utters an intellectual action so courageous, an emotion so
+authentic, as that of Mr. Coventry Patmore's poetry, cannot be otherwise
+than consummate. Often the word has a fulness of significance that gives
+the reader a shock of appreciation. This is always so in those simplest
+odes which we have taken as the heart of the author's work. Without such
+wonderful rightness, simplicity of course is impossible. Nor is that
+beautiful precision less in passages of description, such as the
+landscape lines in _Amelia_ and elsewhere. The words are used to the
+uttermost yet with composure. And a certain justness of utterance
+increases the provocation of what we take leave to call unjust thought in
+the few poems that proclaim an intemperate scorn--political, social,
+literary. The poems are but two or three; they are to be known by their
+subjects--we might as well do something to justify their scorn by using
+the most modern of adjectives--and call them topical. Here assuredly
+there is no composure. Never before did superiority bear itself with so
+little of its proper, signal, and peculiar grace--reluctance.
+
+If Mr. Patmore really intends that his Odes shall be read with minim, or
+crochet, or quaver rests, to fill up a measure of beaten time, we are
+free to hold that he rather arbitrarily applies to liberal verse the laws
+of verse set for use--cradle verse and march-marking verse (we are, of
+course, not considering verse set to music, and thus compelled into the
+musical time). Liberal verse, dramatic, narrative, meditative, can
+surely be bound by no time measures--if for no other reason, for this:
+that to prescribe pauses is also to forbid any pauses unprescribed.
+Granting, however, his principle of catalexis, we still doubt whether the
+irregular metre of _The Unknown Eros_ is happily used except for the
+large sweep of the flight of the Ode more properly so called. _Lycidas_,
+the _Mrs. Anne Killigrew_, the _Intimations_, and Emerson's
+_Threnody_, considered merely for their versification, fulfil their laws
+so perfectly that they certainly move without checks as without haste. So
+with the graver Odes--much in the majority--of Mr. Coventry Patmore's
+series. A more lovely dignity of extension and restriction, a more
+touching sweetness of simple and frequent rhyme, a truer impetus of pulse
+and impulse, English verse could hardly yield than are to be found in his
+versification. And what movement of words has ever expressed flight,
+distance, mystery, and wonderful approach, as they are expressed in a
+celestial line--the eighth in the ode _To the Unknown Eros_? When
+we are sensible of a metrical cheek it is in this way: To the English ear
+the heroic line is the unit of metre, and when two lines of various
+length undesignedly add together to form a heroic line, they have to be
+separated with something of a jerk. And this adding--as, for instance,
+of a line of four syllables preceding or following one of six--occurs now
+and then, and even in such a masterly measure of music as _A Farewell_.
+It is as when a sail suddenly flaps windless in the fetching about of a
+boat. In _The Angel in the House_, and other earlier poems, Mr.
+Coventry Patmore used the octosyllabic stanza perfectly, inasmuch as he
+never left it either heavily or thinly packed. Moreover those first
+poems had a composure which was the prelude to the peace of the Odes. And
+even in his slightest work he proves himself the master--that is, the
+owner--of words that, owned by him, are unprofaned, are as though they
+had never been profaned; the capturer of an art so quick and close that
+it is the voice less of a poet than of the very Muse.
+
+
+
+
+INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE
+
+
+I shall not ask the commentators whether Blake used these two words in
+union or in antithesis. They assuredly have an inseverable union in the
+art of literature. The songs of Innocence and Experience are for each
+poet the songs of his own separate heart and life; but to take the
+cumulative experiences of other men, and to use these in place of the
+virginal fruit of thought--whereas one would hardly consent to take them
+for ordering even the most habitual of daily affairs--is to forego
+Innocence and Experience at once and together. Obviously, Experience can
+be nothing except personal and separate; and Innocence of a singularly
+solitary quality is his who does not dip his hands into other men's
+histories, and does not give to his own word the common sanction of other
+men's summaries and conclusions. Therefore I bind Innocence and
+Experience in one, and take them as a sign of the necessary and noble
+isolation of man from man--of his uniqueness. But if I had a mind to
+forego that manner of personal separateness, and to use the things of
+others, I think I would rather appropriate their future than their past.
+Let me put on their hopes, and the colours of their confidence, if I must
+borrow. Not that I would burden my prophetic soul with unjustified
+ambitions; but even this would be more tolerable than to load my memory
+with an unjustifiable history.
+
+And yet how differently do the writers of a certain kind of love-poetry
+consider this matter. These are the love-poets who have no reluctance in
+adopting the past of a multitude of people to whom they have not even
+been introduced. Their verse is full of ready-made memories, various,
+numerous, and cruel. No single life--supposing it to be a liberal life
+concerned with something besides sex--could quite suffice for so much
+experience, so much disillusion, so much _deception_. To achieve that
+tone in its fulness it is necessary to take for one's own the
+_praeterita_ (say) of Alfred de Musset and of the men who helped him--not
+to live but--to have lived; it is necessary to have lived much more than
+any man lives, and to make a common hoard of erotic remembrances with all
+kinds of poets.
+
+As the Franciscans wear each other's old habits, and one Friar goes about
+darned because of another's rending, so the poet of a certain order grows
+cynical for the sake of many poets' old loves. Not otherwise will the
+resultant verse succeed in implying so much--or rather so many, in the
+feminine plural. The man of very sensitive individuality might hesitate
+at the adoption. The Franciscan is understood to have a fastidiousness
+and to overcome it. But these poets so triumph over their repugnance
+that it does not appear. And yet, if choice were, one might wish rather
+to make use of one's fellowmen's old shoes than put their old secrets to
+use, and dress one's art in a motley of past passions. Moreover, to
+utilise the mental experience of many is inevitably to use their verse
+and phrase. For the rest, all the traits of this love-poetry are
+familiar enough. One of them is the absence of the word of promise and
+pledge, the loss of the earliest and simplest of the impulses of love:
+which is the vow. 'Till death!' 'For ever!' are cries too simple and too
+natural to be commonplace, and in their denial there is the least
+tolerable of banalities--that of other men's disillusions.
+
+Perfect personal distinctness of Experience would be in literature a
+delicate Innocence. Not a passage of cheapness, of greed, of assumption,
+of sloth, or of any such sins in the work of him whose love-poetry were
+thus true, and whose _pudeur_ of personality thus simple and inviolate.
+This is the private man, in other words the gentleman, who will neither
+love nor remember in public.
+
+
+
+
+PENULTIMATE CARICATURE
+
+
+There has been no denunciation, and perhaps even no recognition, of a
+certain social immorality in the caricature of the mid-century and
+earlier. Literary and pictorial alike, it had for its notice the
+vulgarising of the married woman. No one now would read Douglas Jerrold
+for pleasure, but it is worth while to turn up that humourist's serial,
+_Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lectures_, which were presumably considered
+good comic reading in the _Punch_ of that time, and to make acquaintance
+with a certain ideal of the grotesque. Obviously to make a serious
+comment on anything which others consider or have considered humorous is
+to put one's-self at a disadvantage. He who sees the joke holds himself
+somewhat the superior of the man who would see it, such as it is, if he
+thought it worth his eyesight. The last-named has to bear the least
+tolerable of modern reproaches; but he need not always care. Now to turn
+over Douglas Jerrold's monologues is to find that people in the
+mid-century took their mirth principally from the life of the _arriere
+boutique_. On that shabby stage was enacted the comedy of literature.
+Therefore we must take something of the vulgarity of Jerrold as a
+circumstance of the social ranks wherein he delighted. But the essential
+vulgarity is that of the woman. There is in some old _Punch_ volume a
+drawing by Leech--whom one is weary of hearing named the gentle, the
+refined--where the work of the artist has vied with the spirit of the
+letter-press. Douglas Jerrold treats of the woman's jealousy, Leech of
+her stays. They lie on a chair by the bed, beyond description gross. And
+page by page the woman is derided, with an unfailing enjoyment of her
+foolish ugliness of person, of manners, and of language. In that time
+there was, moreover, one great humourist; he bore his part willingly in
+vulgarising the woman; and the part that fell to him was the vulgarising
+of the act of maternity. Woman spiteful, woman suing man at the law for
+evading her fatuous companionship, woman incoherent, woman abandoned
+without restraint to violence and temper, woman feigning sensibility--in
+none of these ignominies is woman so common, foul, and foolish for
+Dickens as she is in child-bearing.
+
+I named Leech but now. He was, in all things essential, Dickens's
+contemporary. And accordingly the married woman and her child are
+humiliated by his pencil; not grossly, but commonly. For him she is
+moderately and dully ridiculous. What delights him as humorous is that
+her husband--himself wearisome enough to die of--is weary of her, finds
+the time long, and tries to escape her. It amuses him that she should
+furtively spend money over her own dowdiness, to the annoyance of her
+husband, and that her husband should have no desire to adorn her, and
+that her mother should be intolerable. It pleases him that her baby,
+with enormous cheeks and a hideous rosette in its hat--a burlesque
+baby--should be a grotesque object of her love, for that too makes subtly
+for her abasement. Charles Keene, again--another contemporary, though he
+lived into a later and different time. He saw little else than common
+forms of human ignominy--indignities of civic physique, of stupid
+prosperity, of dress, of bearing. He transmits these things in greater
+proportion than he found them--whether for love of the humour of them, or
+by a kind of inverted disgust that is as eager as delight--one is not
+sure which is the impulse. The grossness of the vulgarities is rendered
+with a completeness that goes far to convince us of a certain
+sensitiveness of apprehension in the designer; and then again we get
+convinced that real apprehension--real apprehensiveness--would not have
+insisted upon such things, could not have lived with them through almost
+a whole career. There is one drawing in the _Punch_ of years ago, in
+which Charles Keene achieved the nastiest thing possible to even the
+invention of that day. A drunken citizen, in the usual broadcloth, has
+gone to bed, fully dressed, with his boots on and his umbrella open, and
+the joke lies in the surprise awaiting, when she awakes, the wife asleep
+at his side in a nightcap. Every one who knows Keene's work can imagine
+how the huge well-fed figure was drawn, and how the coat wrinkled across
+the back, and how the bourgeois whiskers were indicated. This obscene
+drawing is matched by many equally odious. Abject domesticity,
+ignominies of married life, of middle-age, of money-making; the old
+common jape against the mother-in-law; ill-dressed men with whisky--ill-
+dressed women with tempers; everything that is underbred and decivilised;
+abominable weddings: in one drawing a bridegroom with shambling sidelong
+legs asks his bride if she is nervous; she is a widow, and she answers,
+'No, never was.' In all these things there is very little humour. Where
+Keene achieved fun was in the figures of his schoolboys. The hint of
+tenderness which in really fine work could never be absent from a man's
+thought of a child or from his touch of one, however frolic or rowdy the
+subject in hand, is absolutely lacking in Keene's designs; nevertheless,
+we acknowledge that here is humour. It is also in some of his clerical
+figures when they are not caricatures, and certainly in 'Robert,' the
+City waiter of _Punch_. But so irresistible is the derision of the woman
+that all Charles Keene's persistent sense of vulgarity is intent
+centrally upon her. Never for any grace gone astray is she bantered,
+never for the social extravagances, for prattle, or for beloved dress;
+but always for her jealousy, and for the repulsive person of the man upon
+whom she spies and in whom she vindicates her ignoble rights. If this is
+the shopkeeper the possession of whom is her boast, what then is she?
+
+This great immorality, centring in the irreproachable days of the
+Exhibition of 1851, or thereabouts--the pleasure in this particular form
+of human disgrace--has passed, leaving one trace only: the habit by which
+some men reproach a silly woman through her sex, whereas a silly man is
+not reproached through his sex. But the vulgarity of which I have
+written here was distinctively English--the most English thing that
+England had in days when she bragged of many another--and it was not able
+to survive an increased commerce of manners and letters with France. It
+was the chief immorality destroyed by French fiction.
+
+
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+
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+
+
+The Rhythm of Life and Other Essays
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+The Rhythm of Life
+Decivilised
+A Remembrance
+The Sun
+The Flower
+Unstable Equilibrium
+The Unit of the World
+By the Railway Side
+Pocket Vocabularies
+Pathos
+The Point of Honour
+Composure
+Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes
+James Russell Lowell
+Domus Angusta
+Rejection
+The Lesson of Landscape
+Mr. Coventry Patmore's Odes
+Innocence and Experience
+Penultimate Caricature
+
+
+
+
+THE RHYTHM OF LIFE
+
+
+
+If life is not always poetical, it is at least metrical.
+Periodicity rules over the mental experience of man, according to
+the path of the orbit of his thoughts. Distances are not gauged,
+ellipses not measured, velocities not ascertained, times not known.
+Nevertheless, the recurrence is sure. What the mind suffered last
+week, or last year, it does not suffer now; but it will suffer again
+next week or next year. Happiness is not a matter of events; it
+depends upon the tides of the mind. Disease is metrical, closing in
+at shorter and shorter periods towards death, sweeping abroad at
+longer and longer intervals towards recovery. Sorrow for one cause
+was intolerable yesterday, and will be intolerable tomorrow; today
+it is easy to bear, but the cause has not passed. Even the burden
+of a spiritual distress unsolved is bound to leave the heart to a
+temporary peace; and remorse itself does not remain--it returns.
+Gaiety takes us by a dear surprise. If we had made a course of
+notes of its visits, we might have been on the watch, and would have
+had an expectation instead of a discovery. No one makes such
+observations; in all the diaries of students of the interior world,
+there have never come to light the records of the Kepler of such
+cycles. But Thomas e Kempis knew of the recurrences, if he did not
+measure them. In his cell alone with the elements--'What wouldst
+thou more than these? for out of these were all things made'--he
+learnt the stay to be found in the depth of the hour of bitterness,
+and the remembrance that restrains the soul at the coming of the
+moment of delight, giving it a more conscious welcome, but presaging
+for it an inexorable flight. And 'rarely, rarely comest thou,'
+sighed Shelley, not to Delight merely, but to the Spirit of Delight.
+Delight can be compelled beforehand, called, and constrained to our
+service--Ariel can be bound to a daily task; but such artificial
+violence throws life out of metre, and it is not the spirit that is
+thus compelled. THAT flits upon an orbit elliptically or
+parabolically or hyperbolically curved, keeping no man knows what
+trysts with Time.
+
+It seems fit that Shelley and the author of the IMITATION should
+both have been keen and simple enough to perceive these flights, and
+to guess at the order of this periodicity. Both souls were in close
+touch with the spirits of their several worlds, and no deliberate
+human rules, no infractions of the liberty and law of the universal
+movement, kept from them the knowledge of recurrences. Eppur si
+muove. They knew that presence does not exist without absence; they
+knew that what is just upon its flight of farewell is already on its
+long path of return. They knew that what is approaching to the very
+touch is hastening towards departure. 'O wind,' cried Shelley, in
+autumn,
+
+
+'O wind,
+If winter comes, can spring be far behind?'
+
+
+They knew that the flux is equal to the reflux; that to interrupt
+with unlawful recurrences, out of time, is to weaken the impulse of
+onset and retreat; the sweep and impetus of movement. To live in
+constant efforts after an equal life, whether the equality be sought
+in mental production, or in spiritual sweetness, or in the joy of
+the senses, is to live without either rest or full activity. The
+souls of certain of the saints, being singularly simple and single,
+have been in the most complete subjection to the law of periodicity.
+Ecstasy and desolation visited them by seasons. They endured,
+during spaces of vacant time, the interior loss of all for which
+they had sacrificed the world. They rejoiced in the uncovenanted
+beatitude of sweetness alighting in their hearts. Like them are the
+poets whom, three times or ten times in the course of a long life,
+the Muse has approached, touched, and forsaken. And yet hardly like
+them; not always so docile, nor so wholly prepared for the
+departure, the brevity, of the golden and irrevocable hour. Few
+poets have fully recognised the metrical absence of their Muse. For
+full recognition is expressed in one only way--silence.
+
+It has been found that several tribes in Africa and in America
+worship the moon, and not the sun; a great number worship both; but
+no tribes are known to adore the sun, and not the moon. For the
+periodicity of the sun is still in part a secret; but that of the
+moon is modestly apparent, perpetually influential. On her depend
+the tides; and she is Selene, mother of Herse, bringer of the dews
+that recurrently irrigate lands where rain is rare. More than any
+other companion of earth is she the Measurer. Early Indo-Germanic
+languages knew her by that name. Her metrical phases are the symbol
+of the order of recurrence. Constancy in approach and in departure
+is the reason of her inconstancies. Juliet will not receive a vow
+spoken in invocation of the moon; but Juliet did not live to know
+that love itself has tidal times--lapses and ebbs which are due to
+the metrical rule of the interior heart, but which the lover vainly
+and unkindly attributes to some outward alteration in the beloved.
+For man--except those elect already named--is hardly aware of
+periodicity. The individual man either never learns it fully, or
+learns it late. And he learns it so late, because it is a matter of
+cumulative experience upon which cumulative evidence is lacking. It
+is in the after-part of each life that the law is learnt so
+definitely as to do away with the hope or fear of continuance. That
+young sorrow comes so near to despair is a result of this young
+ignorance. So is the early hope of great achievement. Life seems
+so long, and its capacity so great, to one who knows nothing of all
+the intervals it needs must hold--intervals between aspirations,
+between actions, pauses as inevitable as the pauses of sleep. And
+life looks impossible to the young unfortunate, unaware of the
+inevitable and unfailing refreshment. It would be for their peace
+to learn that there is a tide in the affairs of men, in a sense more
+subtle--if it is not too audacious to add a meaning to Shakespeare--
+than the phrase was meant to contain. Their joy is flying away from
+them on its way home; their life will wax and wane; and if they
+would be wise, they must wake and rest in its phases, knowing that
+they are ruled by the law that commands all things--a sun's
+revolutions and the rhythmic pangs of maternity.
+
+
+
+DECIVILISED
+
+
+
+The difficulty of dealing--in the course of any critical duty--with
+decivilised man lies in this: when you accuse him of vulgarity--
+sparing him no doubt the word--he defends himself against the charge
+of barbarism. Especially from new soil--transatlantic, colonial--he
+faces you, bronzed, with a half conviction of savagery, partly
+persuaded of his own youthfulness of race. He writes, and recites,
+poems about ranches and canyons; they are designed to betray the
+recklessness of his nature and to reveal the good that lurks in the
+lawless ways of a young society. He is there to explain himself,
+voluble, with a glossary for his own artless slang. But his
+colonialism is only provincialism very articulate. The new air does
+but make old decadences seem more stale; the young soil does but set
+into fresh conditions the ready-made, the uncostly, the refuse
+feeling of a race decivilising. American fancy played long this
+pattering part of youth. The New-Englander hastened to assure you
+with so self-denying a face he did not wear war-paint and feathers,
+that it became doubly difficult to communicate to him that you had
+suspected him of nothing wilder than a second-hand dress coat. And
+when it was a question not of rebuke, but of praise, the American
+was ill-content with the word of the judicious who lauded him for
+some delicate successes in continuing something of the literature of
+England, something of the art of France; he was more eager for the
+applause that stimulated him to write romances and to paint
+panoramic landscape, after brief training in academies of native
+inspiration. Even now English voices, with violent commonplace, are
+constantly calling upon America to begin--to begin, for the world is
+expectant. Whereas there is no beginning for her, but instead a
+continuity which only a constant care can guide into sustained
+refinement and can save from decivilisation.
+
+But decivilised man is not peculiar to new soil. The English town,
+too, knows him in all his dailiness. In England, too, he has a
+literature, an art, a music, all his own--derived from many and
+various things of price. Trash, in the fulness of its in simplicity
+and cheapness, is impossible without a beautiful past. Its chief
+characteristic--which is futility, not failure--could not be
+achieved but by the long abuse, the rotatory reproduction, the
+quotidian disgrace, of the utterances of Art, especially the
+utterance by words. Gaiety, vigour, vitality, the organic quality,
+purity, simplicity, precision--all these are among the antecedents
+of trash. It is after them; it is also, alas, because of them. And
+nothing can be much sadder than such a proof of what may possibly be
+the failure of derivation.
+
+Evidently we cannot choose our posterity. Reversing the steps of
+time, we may, indeed, choose backwards. We may give our thoughts
+noble forefathers. Well begotten, well born our fancies must be;
+they shall be also well derived. We have a voice in decreeing our
+inheritance, and not our inheritance only, but our heredity. Our
+minds may trace upwards and follow their ways to the best well-heads
+of the arts. The very habit of our thoughts may be persuaded one
+way unawares by their antenatal history. Their companions must be
+lovely, but need be no lovelier than their ancestors; and being so
+fathered and so husbanded, our thoughts may be intrusted to keep the
+counsels of literature.
+
+Such is our confidence in a descent we know. But, of a sequel which
+of us is sure? Which of us is secured against the dangers of
+subsequent depreciation? And, moreover, which of us shall trace the
+contemporary tendencies, the one towards honour, the other towards
+dishonour? Or who shall discover why derivation becomes
+degeneration, and where and when and how the bastardy befalls? The
+decivilised have every grace as the antecedent of their vulgarities,
+every distinction as the precedent of their mediocrities. No
+ballad-concert song, feign it sigh, frolic, or laugh, but has the
+excuse that the feint was suggested, was made easy, by some living
+sweetness once. Nor are the decivilised to blame as having in their
+own persons possessed civilisation and marred it. They did not
+possess it; they were born into some tendency to derogation, into an
+inclination for things mentally inexpensive. And the tendency can
+hardly do other than continue. Nothing can look duller than the
+future of this second-hand and multiplying world. Men need not be
+common merely because they are many; but the infection of commonness
+once begun in the many, what dulness in their future! To the eye
+that has reluctantly discovered this truth--that the vulgarised are
+not UNcivilised, and that there is no growth for them--it does not
+look like a future at all. More ballad-concerts, more quaint
+English, more robustious barytone songs, more piecemeal pictures,
+more anxious decoration, more colonial poetry, more young nations
+with withered traditions. Yet it is before this prospect that the
+provincial overseas lifts up his voice in a boast or a promise
+common enough among the incapable young, but pardonable only in
+senility. He promises the world a literature, an art, that shall be
+new because his forest is untracked and his town just built. But
+what the newness is to be he cannot tell. Certain words were
+dreadful once in the mouth of desperate old age. Dreadful and
+pitiable as the threat of an impotent king, what shall we name them
+when they are the promise of an impotent people? 'I will do such
+things: what they are yet I know not.'
+
+
+
+A REMEMBRANCE
+
+
+
+When the memories of two or three persons now upon earth shall be
+rolled up and sealed with their records within them, there will be
+no remembrance left open, except this, of a man whose silence seems
+better worth interpreting than the speech of many another. Of
+himself he has left no vestiges. It was a common reproach against
+him that he never acknowledged the obligation to any kind of
+restlessness. The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, but as he
+did none there was nothing for it but that the kingdom of heaven
+should yield to his leisure. The delicate, the abstinent, the
+reticent graces were his in the heroic degree. Where shall I find a
+pen fastidious enough to define and limit and enforce so many
+significant negatives? Words seem to offend by too much assertion,
+and to check the suggestions of his reserve. That reserve was life-
+long. Loving literature, he never lifted a pen except to write a
+letter. He was not inarticulate, he was only silent. He had an
+exquisite style from which to refrain. The things he abstained from
+were all exquisite. They were brought from far to undergo his
+judgment, if haply he might have selected them. Things ignoble
+never approached near enough for his refusal; they had not with him
+so much as that negative connexion. If I had to equip an author I
+should ask no better than to arm him and invest him with precisely
+the riches that were renounced by the man whose intellect, by
+integrity, had become a presence-chamber.
+
+It was by holding session among so many implicit safeguards that he
+taught, rather than by precepts. Few were these in his speech, but
+his personality made laws for me. It was a subtle education, for it
+persuaded insensibly to a conception of my own. How, if he would
+not define, could I know what things were and what were not worthy
+of his gentle and implacable judgment? I must needs judge them for
+myself, yet he constrained me in the judging. Within that
+constraint and under that stimulus, which seemed to touch the
+ultimate springs of thoughts before they sprang, I began to discern
+all things in literature and in life--in the chastity of letters and
+in the honour of life--that I was bound to love. Not the things of
+one character only, but excellent things of every character. There
+was no tyranny in such a method. His idleness justified itself by
+the liberality it permitted to his taste. Never having made his
+love of letters further a secondary purpose, never having bound the
+literary genius--that delicate Ariel--to any kind of servitude,
+never having so much as permitted himself a prejudice whereby some
+of his delights should be stinted while others were indulged beyond
+the sanctions of modest reason, he barely tolerated his own
+preferences, which lay somewhat on the hither side of full
+effectiveness of style. These the range of his reading confessed by
+certain exclusions. Nevertheless it was not of deficiencies that he
+was patient: he did but respect the power of pause, and he disliked
+violence chiefly because violence is apt to confess its own limits.
+Perhaps, indeed, his own fine negatives made him only the more
+sensible of any lack of those literary qualities that are bound in
+their full complement to hold themselves at the disposal of the
+consummate author--to stand and wait, if they may do no more.
+
+Men said that he led a DILETTANTE life. They reproached him with
+the selflessness that made him somewhat languid. Others, they
+seemed to aver, were amateurs at this art or that; he was an amateur
+at living. So it was, in the sense that he never grasped at
+happiness, and that many of the things he had held slipped from his
+disinterested hands. So it was, too, in this unintended sense; he
+loved life. How should he not have loved a life that his living
+made honourable? How should he not have loved all arts, in which
+his choice was delicate, liberal, instructed, studious, docile,
+austere? An amateur man he might have been called, too, because he
+was not discomposed by his own experiences, or shaken by the
+discovery which life brings to us-that the negative quality of which
+Buddhism seems to accuse all good is partaken by our happiness. He
+had always prayed temperate prayers and harboured probable wishes.
+His sensibility was extreme, but his thought was generalised. When
+he had joy he tempered it not in the common way by meditation upon
+the general sorrow but by a recollection of the general pleasure.
+It was his finest distinction to desire no differences, no
+remembrance, but loss among the innumerable forgotten. And when he
+suffered, it was with so quick a nerve and yet so wide an
+apprehension that the race seemed to suffer in him. He pitied not
+himself so tenderly as mankind, of whose capacity for pain he was
+then feelingly persuaded. His darkening eyes said in the extreme
+hour: 'I have compassion on the multitude.'
+
+
+
+THE SUN
+
+
+
+Nowhere else does the greater light so rule the day, so measure, so
+divide, so reign, make so imperial laws, so visibly kindle, so
+immediately quicken, so suddenly efface, so banish, so restore, as
+in a plain like this of Suffolk with its enormous sky. The curious
+have an insufficient motive for going to the mountains if they do it
+to see the sunrise. The sun that leaps from a mountain peak is a
+sun past the dew of his birth; he has walked some way towards the
+common fires of noon. But on the flat country the uprising is early
+and fresh, the arc is wide, the career is long. The most distant
+clouds, converging in the beautiful and little-studied order of
+cloud-perspective (for most painters treat clouds as though they
+formed perpendicular and not horizontal scenery), are those that
+gather at the central point of sunrise. On the plain, and there
+only, can the construction--but that is too little vital a word; I
+should rather say the organism--the unity, the design, of a sky be
+understood. The light wind that has been moving all night is seen
+to have not worked at random. It has shepherded some small flocks
+of cloud afield and folded others. There's husbandry in Heaven.
+And the order has, or seems to have, the sun for its midst. Not a
+line, not a curve, but confesses its membership in a design declared
+from horizon to horizon.
+
+To see the system of a sky in fragments is to miss what I learn to
+look for in all achieved works of Nature and art: the organism that
+is unity and life. It is the unity and life of painting. The Early
+Victorian picture--(the school is still in full career, but
+essentially it belongs to that triumphal period)--is but a dull sum
+of things put together, in concourse, not in relation; but the true
+picture is ONE, however multitudinous it may be, for it is composed
+of relations gathered together in the unity of perception, of
+intention, and of light. It is organic. Moreover, how truly
+relation is the condition of life may be understood from the extinct
+state of the English stage, which resembles nothing so much as a
+Royal Academy picture. Even though the actors may be added together
+with something like vivacity (though that is rare), they have no
+vitality in common. They are not members one of another. If the
+Church and Stage Guild be still in existence, it would do much for
+the art by teaching that Scriptural maxim. I think, furthermore,
+that the life of our bodies has never been defined so suggestively
+as by one who named it a living relation of lifeless atoms. Could
+the value of relation be more curiously set forth? And one might
+penetrate some way towards a consideration of the vascular organism
+of a true literary style in which there is a vital relation of
+otherwise lifeless word with word. And wherein lies the progress of
+architecture from the stupidity of the pyramid and the dead weight
+of the Cyclopean wall to the spring and the flight of the ogival
+arch, but in a quasi-organic relation? But the way of such thoughts
+might be intricate, and the sun rules me to simplicity.
+
+He reigns as centrally in the blue sky as in the clouds. One
+October of late had days absolutely cloudless. I should not have
+certainly known it had there been a hill in sight. The gradations
+of the blue are incalculable, infinite, and they deepen from the
+central fire. As to the earthly scenery, there are but two 'views'
+on the plain; for the aspect of the light is the whole landscape.
+To look with the sun or against the sun--this is the alternative
+splendour. To look with the sun is to face a golden country,
+shadowless, serene, noble and strong in light, with a certain lack
+of relief that suggests--to those who dream of landscape--the
+country of a dream. The serried pines, and the lighted fields, and
+the golden ricks of the farms are dyed with the sun as one might
+paint with a colour. Bright as it is, the glow is rather the dye of
+sunlight than its luminosity. For by a kind of paradox the luminous
+landscape is that which is full of shadows--the landscape before you
+when you turn and face the sun. Not only every reed and rush of the
+salt marshes, every uncertain aspen-leaf of the few trees, but every
+particle of the October air shows a shadow and makes a mystery of
+the light. There is nothing but shadow and sun; colour is absorbed
+and the landscape is reduced to a shining simplicity. Thus is the
+dominant sun sufficient for his day. His passage kindles to
+unconsuming fires and quenches into living ashes. No incidents save
+of his causing, no delight save of his giving: from the sunrise,
+when the larks, not for pairing, but for play, sing the only
+virginal song of the year--a heart younger than Spring's in the
+season of decline--even to the sunset, when the herons scream
+together in the shallows. And the sun dominates by his absence,
+compelling the low country to sadness in the melancholy night.
+
+
+
+THE FLOWER
+
+
+
+There is a form of oppression that has not until now been confessed
+by those who suffer from it or who are participants, as mere
+witnesses, in its tyranny. It is the obsession of man by the
+flower. In the shape of the flower his own paltriness revisits him-
+-his triviality, his sloth, his cheapness, his wholesale
+habitualness, his slatternly ostentation. These return to him and
+wreak upon him their dull revenges. What the tyranny really had
+grown to can be gauged nowhere so well as in country lodgings, where
+the most ordinary things of design and decoration have sifted down
+and gathered together, so that foolish ornament gains a cumulative
+force and achieves a conspicuous commonness. Stem and petal and
+leaf--the fluent forms that a man has not by heart but certainly by
+rote--are woven, printed, cast, and stamped wherever restlessness
+and insimplicity have feared to leave plain spaces. The most ugly
+of all imaginable rooms, which is probably the parlour of a farm-
+house arrayed for those whom Americans call summer-boarders, is
+beset with flowers. It blooms, a dry, woollen, papery, cast-iron
+garden. The floor flourishes with blossoms adust, poorly
+conventionalised into a kind of order; the table-cover is ablaze
+with a more realistic florescence; the wall-paper is set with
+bunches; the rigid machine-lace curtain is all of roses and lilies
+in its very construction, over the muslin blinds an impotent sprig
+is scattered. In the worsted rosettes of the bell-ropes, in the
+plaster picture-frames, in the painted tea-tray and on the cups, in
+the pediment of the sideboard, in the ornament that crowns the
+barometer, in the finials of sofa and arm-chair, in the finger-
+plates of the 'grained' door, is to be seen the ineffectual portrait
+or to be traced the stale inspiration of the flower. And what is
+this bossiness around the grate but some blunt, black-leaded
+garland? The recital is wearisome, but the retribution of the
+flower is precisely weariness. It is the persecution of man, the
+haunting of his trivial visions, and the oppression of his
+inconsiderable brain.
+
+The man so possessed suffers the lot of the weakling--subjection to
+the smallest of the things he has abused. The designer of cheap
+patterns is no more inevitably ridden by the flower than is the vain
+and transitory author by the phrase. But I had rather learn my
+decoration of the Japanese, and place against the blank wall one pot
+plain from the wheel, holding one singular branch in blossom, in the
+attitude and accident of growth. And I could wish abstention to
+exist, and even to be evident, in my words. In literature as in all
+else man merits his subjection to trivialities by a kind of
+economical greed. A condition for using justly and gaily any
+decoration would seem to be a certain reluctance. Ornament--strange
+as the doctrine sounds in a world decivilised--was in the beginning
+intended to be something jocund; and jocundity was never to be
+achieved but by postponement, deference, and modesty. Nor can the
+prodigality of the meadows in May be quoted in dispute. For Nature
+has something even more severe than moderation: she has an
+innumerable singleness. Her butter-cup meadows are not prodigal;
+they show multitude, but not multiplicity, and multiplicity is
+exactly the disgrace of decoration. Who has ever multiplied or
+repeated his delights? or who has ever gained the granting of the
+most foolish of his wishes--the prayer for reiteration? It is a
+curious slight to generous Fate that man should, like a child, ask
+for one thing many times. Her answer every time is a resembling but
+new and single gift; until the day when she shall make the one
+tremendous difference among her gifts--and make it perhaps in
+secret--by naming one of them the ultimate. What, for novelty,
+what, for singleness, what, for separateness, can equal the last?
+Of many thousand kisses the poor last--but even the kisses of your
+mouth are all numbered.
+
+
+
+UNSTABLE EQUILIBRIUM
+
+
+
+It is principally for the sake of the leg that a change in the dress
+of man is so much to be desired. The leg, completing as it does the
+form of man, should make a great part of that human scenery which is
+at least as important as the scenery of geological structure, or the
+scenery of architecture, or the scenery of vegetation, but which the
+lovers of mountains and the preservers of ancient buildings have
+consented to ignore. The leg is the best part of the figure,
+inasmuch as it has the finest lines and therewith those slender,
+diminishing forms which, coming at the base of the human structure,
+show it to be a thing of life by its unstable equilibrium. A
+lifeless structure is in stable equilibrium; the body, springing,
+poised, upon its fine ankles and narrow feet, never stands without
+implying and expressing life. It is the leg that first suggested
+the phantasy of flight. We imagine wings to the figure that is
+erect upon the vital and tense legs of man; and the herald Mercury,
+because of his station, looks new-lighted. All this is true of the
+best leg, and the best leg is the man's. That of the young child,
+in which the Italian schools of painting delighted, has neither
+movement nor supporting strength. In the case of the woman's figure
+it is the foot, with its extreme proportional smallness, that gives
+the precious instability, the spring and balance that are so
+organic. But man should no longer disguise the long lines, the
+strong forms, in those lengths of piping or tubing that are of all
+garments the most stupid. Inexpressive of what they clothe as no
+kind of concealing drapery could ever be, they are neither
+implicitly nor explicitly good raiment. It is hardly possible to
+err by violence in denouncing them. Why, when a bad writer is
+praised for 'clothing his thought,' it is to modern raiment that
+one's nimble fancy flies--fain of completing the beautiful metaphor!
+
+The human scenery: yes, costume could make a crowd something other
+than the mass of sooty colour--dark without depth--and the
+multiplication of undignified forms that fill the streets, and
+demonstrate, and strike, and listen to the democrat. For the
+undistinguished are very important by their numbers. These are they
+who make the look of the artificial world. They are man
+generalised; as units they inevitably lack something of interest;
+all the more have they cumulative effect. It would be well if we
+could persuade the average man to take on a certain human dignity in
+the clothing of his average body. Unfortunately he will be slow to
+be changed. And as to the poorer part of the mass, so wretched are
+their national customs--and the wretchedest of them all the wearing
+of other men's old raiment--that they must wait for reform until the
+reformed dress, which the reformers have not yet put on, shall have
+turned second-hand.
+
+
+
+THE UNIT OF THE WORLD
+
+
+
+The quarrel of Art with Nature goes on apace. The painters have
+long been talking of selecting, then of rejecting, or even, with Mr.
+Whistler, of supplanting. And then Mr. Oscar Wilde, in the witty
+and delicate series of inversions which he headed 'The Decay of
+Lying,' declared war with all the irresponsibility naturally
+attending an act so serious. He seems to affirm that Nature is less
+proportionate to man than is architecture; that the house is built
+and the sofa is made measurable by the unit measure of the body; but
+that the landscape is set to some other scale. 'I prefer houses to
+the open air. In a house we all feel of the proper proportions.
+Egotism itself, which is so necessary to a proper sense of human
+dignity, is absolutely the result of indoor life.' Nevertheless,
+before it is too late, let me assert that though nature is not
+always clearly and obviously made to man's measure, he is yet the
+unit by which she is measurable. The proportion may be far to seek
+at times, but the proportion is there. Man's farms about the lower
+Alps, his summer pastures aloft, have their relation to the whole
+construction of the range; and the range is great because it is
+great in regard to the village lodged in a steep valley in the foot
+hills. The relation of flower and fruit to his hands and mouth, to
+his capacity and senses (I am dealing with size, and nothing else),
+is a very commonplace of our conditions in the world. The arm of
+man is sufficient to dig just as deep as the harvest is to be sown.
+And if some of the cheerful little evidences of the more popular
+forms of teleology are apt to be baffled, or indefinitely postponed,
+by the retorts that suggest themselves to the modern child, there
+remains the subtle and indisputable witness borne by art itself:
+the body of man composes with the mass and the detail of the world.
+The picture is irrefutable, and the picture arranges the figure
+amongst its natural accessories in the landscape, and would not have
+them otherwise.
+
+But there is one conspicuous thing in the world to which man has not
+served as a unit of proportion, and that one thing is a popularly
+revered triumph of that very art of architecture in which Mr. Oscar
+Wilde has confidence for keeping things in scale. Human ingenuity
+in designing St. Peter's on the Vatican, has achieved this one
+exception to the universal harmony--a harmony enriched by discords,
+but always on one certain scale of notes--which the body makes with
+the details of the earth. It is not in the landscape, where Mr.
+Oscar Wilde has too rashly looked for contempt and contumely, but in
+the art he holds precious as the minister to man's egotism, that
+man's Ego is defied. St. Peter's is not necessarily too large
+(though on other grounds its size might be liable to correction); it
+is simply out of relation to the most vital thing on the earth--the
+thing which has supplied some secret rod to measure the waves
+withal, and the whales, the sea-wall cliffs, the ears of wheat, the
+cedar-branches, pines and diamonds and apples. Now, Emerson would
+certainly not have felt the soft shock and stimulus of delight to
+which he confesses himself to be liable at the first touch of
+certain phrases, had not the words in every case enclosed a promise
+of further truth and of a second pleasure. One of these swift and
+fruitful experiences visited him with the saying--grown popular
+through him--that an architect should have a knowledge of anatomy.
+There is assuredly a germ and a promise in the phrase. It delights
+us, first, because it seems to recognise the organic, as distinct
+from the merely constructive, character of finely civilised
+architecture; and next, it persuades us that Vitruvius had in truth
+discovered the key to size--the unit that is sometimes so obscurely,
+yet always so absolutely, the measure of what is great and small
+among things animate and inanimate. And in spite of themselves the
+architects of St. Peter's were constrained to take something from
+man; they refused his height for their scale, but they tried to use
+his shape for their ornament. And so in the blankest dearth of
+fancy that ever befel architect or builder they imagined human
+beings bigger than the human beings of experience; and by means of
+these, carved in stone and inlaid in mosaic, they set up a relation
+of their own. The basilica was related to the colossal figure (as a
+church more wisely measured would have been to living man), and so
+ceased to be large; and nothing more important was finally achieved
+than transposal of the whole work into another scale of proportions-
+-a scale in which the body of man was not the unit. The pile of
+stones that make St. Peter's is a very little thing in comparison
+with Soracte; but man, and man's wife, and the unequal statures of
+his children, are in touch with the structure of the mountain rather
+than with that of the church which has been conceived without
+reference to the vital and fundamental rule of his inches.
+
+Is there no egotism, ministering to his dignity, that man, having
+the law of the organism of the world written in his members, can
+take with him, out of the room that has been built to accord with
+him, into the landscape that stands only a little further away? He
+has deliberately made the smoking chair and the table; there is
+nothing to surprise him in their ministrations. But what profounder
+homage is rendered by the multitudinous Nature going about the
+interests and the business of which he knows so little, and yet
+throughout confessing him! His eyes have seen her and his ears have
+heard, but it would never have entered into his heart to conceive
+her. His is not the fancy that could have achieved these woods,
+this little flush of summer from the innumerable flowering of
+grasses, the cyclic recreation of seasons. And yet he knows that he
+is imposed upon all he sees. His stature gives laws. His labour
+only is needful--not a greater strength. And the sun and the
+showers are made sufficient for him. His furniture must surely be
+adjudged to pay him but a coarse flattery in comparison with the
+subjection, yet the aloofness, of all this wild world. This is no
+flattery. The grass is lumpy, as Mr. Oscar Wilde remarks with
+truth: Nature is not man's lacquey, and has no preoccupation about
+his more commonplace comforts. These he gives himself indoors; and
+who prizes, with any self-respect, the things carefully provided by
+self-love? But when that farouche Nature, who has never spoken to
+him, and to whom he has never had the opportunity of hinting his
+wishes or his tastes--when she reveals the suggestions of his form
+and the desire of his eyes, and amongst her numberless purposes lets
+him surprise in her the purpose to accord with him, and lets him
+suspect further harmonies which he has not yet learnt to understand-
+-then man becomes conscious of having received a token from her
+lowliness, and a favour from her loveliness, compared with which the
+care wherewith his tailor himself has fitted him might leave his
+gratitude cool.
+
+
+
+BY THE RAILWAY SIDE
+
+
+
+My train drew near to the Via Reggio platform on a day between two
+of the harvests of a hot September; the sea was burning blue, and
+there were a sombreness and a gravity in the very excesses of the
+sun as his fires brooded deeply over the serried, hardy, shabby,
+seaside ilex-woods. I had come out of Tuscany and was on my way to
+the Genovesato: the steep country with its profiles, bay by bay, of
+successive mountains grey with olive-trees, between the flashes of
+the Mediterranean and the sky; the country through the which there
+sounds the twanging Genoese language, a thin Italian mingled with a
+little Arabic, more Portuguese, and much French. I was regretful at
+leaving the elastic Tuscan speech, canorous in its vowels set in
+emphatic L'S and M'S and the vigorous soft spring of the double
+consonants. But as the train arrived its noises were drowned by a
+voice declaiming in the tongue I was not to hear again for months--
+good Italian. The voice was so loud that one looked for the
+audience: Whose ears was it seeking to reach by the violence done
+to every syllable, and whose feelings would it touch by its
+insincerity? The tones were insincere, but there was passion behind
+them; and most often passion acts its own true character poorly, and
+consciously enough to make good judges think it a mere counterfeit.
+Hamlet, being a little mad, feigned madness. It is when I am angry
+that I pretend to be angry, so as to present the truth in an obvious
+and intelligible form. Thus even before the words were
+distinguishable it was manifest that they were spoken by a man in
+serious trouble who had false ideas as to what is convincing in
+elocution.
+
+When the voice became audibly articulate, it proved to be shouting
+blasphemies from the broad chest of a middle-aged man--an Italian of
+the type that grows stout and wears whiskers. The man was in
+BOURGEOIS dress, and he stood with his hat off in front of the small
+station building, shaking his thick fist at the sky. No one was on
+the platform with him except the railway officials, who seemed in
+doubt as to their duties in the matter, and two women. Of one of
+these there was nothing to remark except her distress. She wept as
+she stood at the door of the waiting-room. Like the second woman,
+she wore the dress of the shopkeeping class throughout Europe, with
+the local black lace veil in place of a bonnet over her hair. It is
+of the second woman--O unfortunate creature!--that this record is
+made--a record without sequel, without consequence; but there is
+nothing to be done in her regard except so to remember her. And
+thus much I think I owe after having looked, from the midst of the
+negative happiness that is given to so many for a space of years, at
+some minutes of her despair. She was hanging on the man's arm in
+her entreaties that he would stop the drama he was enacting. She
+had wept so hard that her face was disfigured. Across her nose was
+the dark purple that comes with overpowering fear. Haydon saw it on
+the face of a woman whose child had just been run over in a London
+street. I remembered the note in his journal as the woman at Via
+Reggio, in her intolerable hour, turned her head my way, her sobs
+lifting it. She was afraid that the man would throw himself under
+the train. She was afraid that he would be damned for his
+blasphemies; and as to this her fear was mortal fear. It was
+horrible, too, that she was humpbacked and a dwarf.
+
+Not until the train drew away from the station did we lose the
+clamour. No one had tried to silence the man or to soothe the
+woman's horror. But has any one who saw it forgotten her face? To
+me for the rest of the day it was a sensible rather than a merely
+mental image. Constantly a red blur rose before my eyes for a
+background, and against it appeared the dwarf's head, lifted with
+sobs, under the provincial black lace veil. And at night what
+emphasis it gained on the boundaries of sleep! Close to my hotel
+there was a roofless theatre crammed with people, where they were
+giving Offenbach. The operas of Offenbach still exist in Italy, and
+the little town was placarded with announcements of La Bella Elena.
+The peculiar vulgar rhythm of the music jigged audibly through half
+the hot night, and the clapping of the town's-folk filled all its
+pauses. But the persistent noise did but accompany, for me, the
+persistent vision of those three figures at the Via Reggio station
+in the profound sunshine of the day.
+
+
+
+POCKET VOCABULARIES
+
+
+
+A serviceable substitute for style in literature has been found in
+such a collection of language ready for use as may be likened to a
+portable vocabulary. It is suited to the manners of a day that has
+produced salad-dressing in bottles, and many other devices for the
+saving of processes. Fill me such a wallet full of 'graphic'
+things, of 'quaint' things and 'weird,' of 'crisp' or 'sturdy'
+Anglo-Saxon, of the material for 'word-painting' (is not that the
+way of it?), and it will serve the turn. Especially did the
+Teutonic fury fill full these common little hoards of language. It
+seemed, doubtless, to the professor of the New Literature that if
+anything could convince him of his own success it must be the energy
+of his Teutonisms and his avoidance of languid Latin derivatives,
+fit only for the pedants of the eighteenth century. Literature
+doubtless is made of words. What then is needful, he seems to ask,
+besides a knack of beautiful words? Unluckily for him, he has
+achieved, not style, but slang. Unluckily for him, words are not
+style, phrases are not style. 'The man is style.' O good French
+language, cunning and good, that lets me read the sentence in
+obverse or converse as I will! And I read it as declaring that the
+whole man, the very whole of him, is his style. The literature of a
+man of letters worthy the name is rooted in all his qualities, with
+little fibres running invisibly into the smallest qualities he has.
+He who is not a man of letters, simply is not one; it is not too
+audacious a paradox to affirm that doing will not avail him who
+fails in being. 'Lay your deadly doing down,' sang once some old
+hymn known to Calvinists. Certain poets, a certain time ago,
+ransacked the language for words full of life and beauty, made a
+vocabulary of them, and out of wantonness wrote them to death. To
+change somewhat the simile, they scented out a word--an earlyish
+word, by preference--ran it to earth, unearthed it, dug it out, and
+killed it. And then their followers bagged it. The very word that
+lives, 'new every morning,' miraculously new, in the literature of a
+man of letters, they killed and put into their bag. And, in like
+manner, the emotion that should have caused the word is dead for
+those, and for those only, who abuse its expression. For the maker
+of a portable vocabulary is not content to turn his words up there:
+he turns up his feelings also, alphabetically or otherwise.
+Wonderful how much sensibility is at hand in such round words as the
+New Literature loves. Do you want a generous emotion? Pull forth
+the little language. Find out moonshine, find out moonshine!
+
+Take, as an instance, Mr. Swinburne's 'hell.' There is, I fear, no
+doubt whatever that Mr. Swinburne has put his 'hell' into a
+vocabulary, with the inevitable consequences to the word. And when
+the minor men of his school have occasion for a 'hell' (which may
+very well happen to any young man practising authorship), I must not
+be accused of phantasy if I say that they put their hands into Mr.
+Swinburne's vocabulary and pick it. These vocabularies are made out
+of vigorous and blunt language. 'What hempen homespuns have we
+swaggering here?' Alas, they are homespuns from the factory,
+machine-made in uncostly quantities. Obviously, power needs to make
+use of no such storage. The property of power is to use phrases,
+whether strange or familiar, as though it created them. But even
+more than lack of power is lack of humour the cause of all the
+rankness and the staleness, of all the Anglo-Saxon of commerce, of
+all the weary 'quaintness'--that quaintness of which one is moved to
+exclaim with Cassio: 'Hither comes the bauble!' Lack of a sense of
+humour betrays a man into that perpetual too-much whereby he tries
+to make amends for a currency debased. No more than any other can a
+witty writer dispense with a sense of humour. In his moments of
+sentiment the lack is distressing; in his moments of wit it is at
+least perceptible. A sense of humour cannot be always present, it
+may be urged. Why, no; it is the lack of it that is--importunate.
+Other absences, such as the absence of passion, the absence of
+delicacy, are, if grievous negatives, still mere negatives. These
+qualities may or may not be there at call, ready for a summons; we
+are not obliged to know; we are not momentarily aware, unless they
+ought to be in action, whether their action is possible. But want
+of power and want of a sense of the ridiculous: these are lacks
+wherefrom there is no escaping, deficiencies that are all-
+influential, defects that assert themselves, vacancies that proclaim
+themselves, absences from the presence whereof there is no flying;
+what other paradoxes can I adventure? Without power--no style.
+Without a possible humour,--no style. The weakling has no
+confidence in himself to keep him from grasping at words that he
+fancies hold within them the true passions of the race, ready for
+the uses of his egoism. And with a sense of humour a man will not
+steal from a shelf the precious treasure of the language and put it
+in his pocket.
+
+
+
+PATHOS
+
+
+
+A fugitive writer wrote but lately on the fugitive page of a minor
+magazine: 'For our part, the drunken tinker [Christopher Sly] is
+the most real personage of the piece, and not without some hints of
+the pathos that is worked out more fully, though by different ways,
+in Bottom and Malvolio.' Has it indeed come to this? Have the
+Zeitgeist and the Weltschmerz and the other things compared to which
+'le spleen' was gay, done so much for us? Is there to be no
+laughter left in literature free from the preoccupation of a sham
+real-life? So it would seem. Even what the great master has not
+shown us in his work, that your critic convinced of pathos is
+resolved to see in it. By the penetration of his intrusive sympathy
+he will come at it. It is of little use now to explain Snug the
+joiner to the audience: why, it is precisely Snug who stirs their
+emotions so painfully. Not the lion; they can see through that:
+but the Snug within, the human Snug. And Master Shallow has the
+Weltschmerz in that latent form which is the more appealing; and
+discouraging questions arise as to the end of old Double; and Argan
+in his nightcap is the tragic figure of Monomania; and human nature
+shudders at the petrifaction of the intellect of Mr. F.'s aunt. Et
+patati, et patata.
+
+It may be only too true that the actual world is 'with pathos
+delicately edged.' For Malvolio living we should have had living
+sympathies: so much aspiration, so ill-educated a love of
+refinement; so unarmed a credulity, noblest of weaknesses, betrayed
+for the laughter of a chambermaid. By an actual Bottom the Weaver
+our pity might be reached for the sake of his single self-reliance,
+his fancy and resource condemned to burlesque and ignominy by the
+niggard doom of circumstance. But is not life one thing and is not
+art another? Is it not the privilege of literature to make
+selection and to treat things singly, without the after-thoughts of
+life, without the troublous completeness of the many-sided world?
+Is not Shakespeare, for this reason, our refuge? Fortunately unreal
+is his world when he will have it so; and there we may laugh with
+open heart at a grotesque man: without misgiving, without remorse,
+without reluctance. If great creating Nature has not assumed for
+herself she has assuredly secured to the great creating poet the
+right of partiality, of limitation, of setting aside and leaving
+out, of taking one impression and one emotion as sufficient for the
+day. Art and Nature are separate, complementary; in relation, not
+in confusion, with one another. And all this officious cleverness
+in seeing round the corner, as it were, of a thing presented by
+literary art in the flat--(the borrowing of similes from other arts
+is of evil tendency; but let this pass, as it is apt)--is but
+another sign of the general lack of a sense of the separation
+between Nature and the sentient mirror in the mind. In some of his
+persons, indeed, Shakespeare is as Nature herself, all-inclusive;
+but in others--and chiefly in comedy--he is partial, he is
+impressionary, he refuses to know what is not to his purpose, he is
+an artist. And in that gay, wilful world it is that he gives us--or
+used to give us, for even the world is obsolete--the pleasure of
+OUBLIANCE.
+
+Now this fugitive writer has not been so swift but that I have
+caught him a clout as he went. Yet he will do it again; and those
+like-minded will assuredly also continue to show how much more
+completely human, how much more sensitive, how much more
+responsible, is the art of the critic than the world has ever dreamt
+till now. And, superior in so much, they will still count their
+superior weeping as the choicest of their gifts. And Lepidus, who
+loves to wonder, can have no better subject for his admiration than
+the pathos of the time. It is bred now of your mud by the operation
+of your sun. 'Tis a strange serpent; and the tears of it are wet.
+
+
+
+THE POINT OF HONOUR
+
+
+
+Not without significance is the Spanish nationality of Velasquez.
+In Spain was the Point put upon Honour; and Velasquez was the first
+Impressionist. As an Impressionist he claimed, implicity if not
+explicity, a whole series of delicate trusts in his trustworthiness;
+he made an appeal to the confidence of his peers; he relied on his
+own candour and asked that the candid should rely upon him; he kept
+the chastity of art when other masters were content with its
+honesty, and when others saved artistic conscience he safeguarded
+the point of honour. Contemporary masters more or less proved their
+position, and convinced the world by something of demonstration; the
+first Impressionist simply asked that his word should be accepted.
+To those who would not take his word he offers no bond. To those
+who will, he grants the distinction of a share in his
+responsibility. Somewhat unrefined, in comparison to his lofty and
+simple claim to be believed on a suggestion, is the commoner
+painter's production of his credentials, his appeal to the sanctions
+of ordinary experience, his self-defence against the suspicion of
+making irresponsible mysteries in art. 'You can see for yourself,'
+the lesser man seems to say to the world, 'thus things are, and I
+render them in such manner that your intelligence may be satisfied.'
+This is an appeal to average experience--at the best the cumulative
+experience; and with the average, or with the sum, art cannot deal
+without derogation. The Spaniard seems to say: 'Thus things are in
+my pictorial sight. Trust me, I apprehend them so.' We are not
+excluded from his counsels, but we are asked to attribute a certain
+authority to him, master of the craft as he is, master of that art
+of seeing pictorially which is the beginning and not far from the
+end--not far short of the whole--of the art of painting. So little
+indeed are we shut out from the mysteries of a great Impressionist's
+impression that Velasquez requires us to be in some degree his
+colleagues. Thus may each of us to whom he appeals take praise from
+the praised: He leaves my educated eyes to do a little of the work.
+He respects my responsibility no less--though he respects it less
+explicitly--than I do his. What he allows me would not be granted
+by a meaner master. If he does not hold himself bound to prove his
+own truth, he returns thanks for my trust. It is as though he used
+his countrymen's courteous hyperbole and called his house my own.
+In a sense of the most noble hostship he does me the honours of his
+picture.
+
+Because Impressionism is so free, therefore is it doubly bound.
+Because there is none to arraign it, it is a thousand times
+responsible. To undertake this art for the sake of its privileges
+without confessing its obligations--or at least without confessing
+them up to the point of honour--is to take a vulgar freedom: to see
+immunities precisely where there are duties, and an advantage where
+there is a bond. A very mob of men have taken Impressionism upon
+themselves in this our later day. It is against all probabilities
+that more than a few among these have within them the point of
+honour. In their galleries we are beset with a dim distrust. And
+to distrust is more humiliating than to be distrusted. How many of
+these landscape-painters, deliberately rash, are painting the truth
+of their own impressions? An ethical question as to loyalty is
+easily answered; truth and falsehood as to fact are, happily for the
+intelligence of the common conscience, not hard to divide. But when
+the DUBIUM concerns not fact but artistic truth, can the many be
+sure that their sensitiveness, their candour, their scruple, their
+delicate equipoise of perceptions, the vigilance of their
+apprehension, are enough? Now Impressionists of late have told us
+things as to their impressions--as to the effect of things upon the
+temperament of this man and upon the mood of that--which should not
+be asserted except on the artistic point of honour. The majority
+can tell ordinary truth, but they should not trust themselves for
+truth extraordinary. They can face the general judgment, but they
+should hesitate to produce work that appeals to the last judgment,
+which is the judgment within. There is too much reason to divine
+that a certain number of those who aspire to derive from the
+greatest of masters have no temperaments worth speaking of, no point
+of view worth seizing, no vigilance worth awaiting, no mood worth
+waylaying. And to be, de parti pris, an Impressionist without
+these! O Velasquez! Nor is literature quite free from a like
+reproach in her own things. An author, here and there, will make as
+though he had a word worth hearing--nay, worth over-hearing--a word
+that seeks to withdraw even while it is uttered; and yet what it
+seems to dissemble is all too probably a platitude. But obviously,
+literature is not--as is the craft and mystery of painting--so at
+the mercy of a half-imposture, so guarded by unprovable honour. For
+the art of painting is reserved that shadowy risk, that undefined
+salvation. May the gods guard us from the further popularising of
+Impressionism; for the point of honour is the simple secret of the
+few.
+
+
+
+COMPOSURE
+
+
+
+Tribulation, Immortality, the Multitude: what remedy of composure
+do these words bring for their own great disquiet! Without the
+remoteness of the Latinity the thought would come too close and
+shake too cruelly. In order to the sane endurance of the intimate
+trouble of the soul an aloofness of language is needful. Johnson
+feared death. Did his noble English control and postpone the
+terror? Did it keep the fear at some courteous, deferent distance
+from the centre of that human heart, in the very act of the leap and
+lapse of mortality? Doubtless there is in language such an
+educative power. Speech is a school. Every language is a
+persuasion, an induced habit, an instrument which receives the note
+indeed but gives the tone. Every language imposes a quality,
+teaches a temper, proposes a way, bestows a tradition: this is the
+tone--the voice--of the instrument. Every language, by counter-
+change, replies to the writer's touch or breath his own intention,
+articulate: this is his note. Much has always been said, many
+things to the purpose have been thought, of the power and the
+responsibility of the note. Of the legislation and influence of the
+tone I have been led to think by comparing the tranquillity of
+Johnson and the composure of Canning with the stimulated and close
+emotion, the interior trouble, of those writers who have entered as
+disciples in the school of the more Teutonic English.
+
+For if every language be a school, more significantly and more
+educatively is a part of a language a school to him who chooses that
+part. Few languages offer the choice. The fact that a choice is
+made implies the results and fruits of a decision. The French
+author is without these. They are of all the heritages of the
+English writer the most important. He receives a language of dual
+derivation. He may submit himself to either University, whither he
+will take his impulse and his character, where he will leave their
+influence, and whence he will accept their education. The Frenchman
+has certainly a style to develop within definite limits; but he does
+not subject himself to suggestions tending mainly hitherwards or
+thitherwards, to currents of various race within one literature.
+Such a choice of subjection is the singular opportunity of the
+Englishman. I do not mean to ignore the necessary mingling.
+Happily that mingling has been done once for all for us all. Nay,
+one of the most charming things that a master of English can achieve
+is the repayment of the united teaching by linking their results so
+exquisitely in his own practice, that words of the two schools are
+made to meet each other with a surprise and delight that shall prove
+them at once gayer strangers, and sweeter companions, than the world
+knew they were. Nevertheless there remains the liberty of choice as
+to which school of words shall have the place of honour in the great
+and sensitive moments of an author's style: which school shall be
+used for conspicuousness, and which for multitudinous service. And
+the choice being open, the perturbation of the pulses and impulses
+of so many hearts quickened in thought and feeling in this day
+suggests to me a deliberate return to the recollectedness of the
+more tranquil language. 'Doubtless there is a place of peace.'
+
+A place of peace, not of indifference. It is impossible not to
+charge some of the moralists of the last century with an
+indifference into which they educated their platitudes and into
+which their platitudes educated them. Addison thus gave and took,
+until he was almost incapable of coming within arm's-length of a
+real or spiritual emotion. There is no knowing to what distance the
+removal of the 'appropriate sentiment' from the central soul might
+have attained but for the change and renewal in language, which came
+when it was needed. Addison had assuredly removed eternity far from
+the apprehension of the soul when his Cato hailed the 'pleasing
+hope,' the 'fond desire;' and the touch of war was distant from him
+who conceived his 'repulsed battalions' and his 'doubtful battle.'
+What came afterwards, when simplicity and nearness were restored
+once more, was doubtless journeyman's work at times. Men were too
+eager to go into the workshop of language. There were unreasonable
+raptures over the mere making of common words. 'A hand-shoe! a
+finger-hat! a foreword! Beautiful!' they cried; and for the love of
+German the youngest daughter of Chrysale herself might have
+consented to be kissed by a grammarian. It seemed to be forgotten
+that a language with all its construction visible is a language
+little fitted for the more advanced mental processes; that its
+images are material; and that, on the other hand, a certain
+spiritualising and subtilising effect of alien derivations is a
+privilege and an advantage incalculable--that to possess that half
+of the language within which Latin heredities lurk and Romanesque
+allusions are at play is to possess the state and security of a dead
+tongue, without the death.
+
+But now I spoke of words encountering as gay strangers, various in
+origin, divided in race, within a master's phrase. The most
+beautiful and the most sudden of such meetings are of course in
+Shakespeare. 'Superfluous kings,' 'A lass unparalleled,'
+'Multitudinous seas:' we needed not to wait for the eighteenth
+century or for the nineteenth to learn the splendour of such
+encounters, of such differences, of such nuptial unlikeness and
+union. But it is well that we should learn them afresh. And it is
+well, too, that we should not resist the rhythmic reaction bearing
+us now somewhat to the side of the Latin. Such a reaction is in
+some sort an ethical need for our day. We want to quell the
+exaggerated decision of monosyllables. We want the poise and the
+pause that imply vitality at times better than headstrong movement
+expresses it. And not the phrase only but the form of verse might
+render us timely service. The controlling couplet might stay with a
+touch a modern grief, as it ranged in order the sorrows of Canning
+for his son. But it should not be attempted without a distinct
+intention of submission on the part of the writer. The couplet
+transgressed against, trespassed upon, shaken off, is like a law
+outstripped, defied--to the dignity neither of the rebel nor of the
+rule. To Letters do we look now for the guidance and direction
+which the very closeness of the emotion taking us by the heart makes
+necessary. Shall not the Thing more and more, as we compose
+ourselves to literature, assume the honour, the hesitation, the
+leisure, the reconciliation of the Word?
+
+
+
+DR. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES
+
+
+
+It is good to go, now and again--let the American phrase be
+permitted--'back of' some of our contemporaries. We never desired
+them as coevals. We never wished to share an age with them; we
+share nothing else with them. And we deliver ourselves from them by
+passing, in literature, into the company of an author who wrote
+before their time, and yet is familiarly modern. To read Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes, then, is to go behind the New Humorist--into a time
+before he was, or his Humour. Obviously we go in like manner behind
+many another, but the funny writer of the magazines is suggested
+because in reference to him our act has a special significance. We
+connect him with Dr. Holmes by a reluctant ancestry, by an
+impertinent descent. It may be objected that such a connection is
+but a trivial thing to attribute, as a conspicuous incident, to a
+man of letters. So it is. But the triviality has wide allusions.
+It is often a question which of several significant trivialities a
+critic shall choose in his communication with a reader who does not
+insist that all the grave things shall be told him. And, by the
+way, are we ever sufficiently grateful for that reader, whom the
+last few years have given to us, or to whom we have been given by
+the last few years? A trivial connexion has remote and negative
+issues. To go to Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes's period is to get rid
+of many things; to go to himself is especially to get rid of the New
+Humour, yet to stand at its unprophetic source. And we love such
+authors as Dickens and this American for their own sake, refusing to
+be aware of their corrupt following. We would make haste to ignore
+their posterity, and to assure them that we absolve them from any
+fault of theirs in the bastardy.
+
+Humour is the most conspicuous thing in the world, which must
+explain why the little humour in Elsie Venner and the Breakfast
+Table series is not only the first thing the critic touches but the
+thing whereby he relates this author to his following and to the
+world. The young man John, Colonel Sprowle with his 'social
+entertainment,' the Landlady and her daughter, and the Poor
+Relation, almost make up the sum of the comic personages, and fifty
+per cent. of the things they say--no more--are good enough to remain
+after the bloom of their vulgarity has worn off. But that half is
+excellent, keen, jolly, temperate; and because of that temperance--
+the most stimulating and fecundating of qualities--the humour of it
+has set the literature of a hemisphere to the tune of mirth. Like
+Mr. Lowell's it was humour in dialect--not Irish dialect nor negro,
+but American; and it made New England aware of her comedy. Until
+then she had felt within herself that there was nothing to laugh at.
+'Nature is in earnest when she makes a woman,' says Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes. Rather, she takes herself seriously when she makes
+the average spiritual woman: as seriously as that woman takes
+herself when she makes a novel. And in a like mood Nature made New
+England and endowed her with purpose, with mortuary frivolities,
+with long views, with energetic provincialism.
+
+If we remember best The Wonderful One-Hoss Shay, we do so in spite
+of the religious and pathetic motive of the greater part of Dr.
+Holmes's work, and of his fancy, which should be at least as
+conspicuous as his humour. It is fancy rather than imagination; but
+it is more perfect, more definite, more fit, than the larger art of
+imagery, which is apt to be vague, because it is intellectual and
+adult. No grown man makes quite so definite mental images as does a
+child; when the mind ages it thinks stronger thoughts in vaguer
+pictures. The young mind of Dr. Holmes has less intellectual
+imagination than intelligent fancy. For example: 'If you ever saw
+a crow with a king-bird after him, you will get an image of a dull
+speaker and a lively listener. The bird in sable plumage flaps
+heavily along his straightforward course, while the other sails
+round him, over him, under him, leaves him, comes back again, tweaks
+out a black feather, shoots away once more, never losing sight of
+him, and finally reaches the crow's perch at the same time the crow
+does;' but the comparison goes on after this at needless length,
+with explanations. Again: 'That blessed clairvoyance which sees
+into things without opening them: that glorious licence which,
+having shut the door and driven the reporter from the keyhole, calls
+upon Truth, majestic Virgin! to get off from her pedestal and drop
+her academic POSES.' And this, of the Landlady: 'She told me her
+story once; it was as if a grain that had been ground and bolted had
+tried to individualise itself by a special narrative.' 'The riotous
+tumult of a laugh, which, I take it, is the mob-law of the
+features.' 'Think of the Old World--that part of it which is the
+seat of ancient civilisation! . . . A man cannot help marching in
+step with his kind in the rear of such a procession.' 'Young folk
+look on a face as a unit; children who go to school with any given
+little John Smith see in his name a distinctive appellation.' And
+that exquisitely sensitive passage on the nervous outward movement
+and the inward tranquillity of the woods. Such things are the best
+this good author gives us, whether they go gay with metaphor, or be
+bare thoughts shapely with their own truth.
+
+Part of the charm of Dr. Holmes's comment on life, and of the phrase
+wherein he secures it, arises from his singular vigilance. He has
+unpreoccupied and alert eyes. Strangely enough, by the way, this
+watchfulness is for once as much at fault as would be the slovenly
+observation of an ordinary man, in the description of a horse's
+gallop, 'skimming along within a yard of the ground.' Who shall
+trust a man's nimble eyes after this, when habit and credulity have
+taught him? Not an inch nearer the ground goes the horse of fact at
+a gallop than at a walk. But Dr. Holmes's vigilance helps him to
+somewhat squalid purpose in his studies of New England inland life.
+Much careful literature besides has been spent, after the example of
+Elsie Venner and the Autocrat, upon the cottage worldliness, the
+routine of abundant and common comforts achieved by a distressing
+household industry, the shrillness, the unrest, the best-parlour
+emulation, the ungraceful vanity, of Americans of the country-side
+and the country-town; upon their affections made vulgar by
+undemonstrativeness, and their consciences made vulgar by
+demonstrativeness--their kindness by reticence, and their religion
+by candour.
+
+As for the question of heredity and of individual responsibility
+which Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes proposes in Elsie Venner, it is
+strange that a man whom it had sincerely disquieted should present
+it--not in its own insolubility but--in caricature. As though the
+secrets of the inherited body and soul needed to be heightened by a
+bit of burlesque physiology! It is in spite of our protest against
+the invention of Elsie's horrible plight--a conception and invention
+which Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes should feel to be essentially
+frivolous--that the serpent-maiden moves us deeply by her last 'Good
+night,' and by the gentle phrase that tells us 'Elsie wept.' But
+now, if Dr. Holmes shall succeed in proposing the question of
+separate responsibility so as to convince every civilised mind of
+his doubts, there will be curiously little change wrought thereby in
+the discipline of the world. For Dr. Holmes incidentally lets us
+know that he cherishes and values the instinct of intolerance and
+destructiveness in presence of the cruel, the self-loving, and the
+false. Negation of separate moral responsibility, when that
+negation is tempered by a working instinct of intolerance and
+destructiveness, will deal with the felon, after all, very much in
+the manner achieved by the present prevalent judicialness,
+unscientific though it may be. And to say this is to confess that
+Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes has worked, through a number of books, to
+futile purpose. His books are justified by something quite apart
+from his purpose.
+
+
+
+JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
+
+
+
+The United States have produced authors not a few; among some names
+not the most famous, perhaps, on the popular tongue, are two or
+three names of their poets; but they have hardly given to the world
+more than one man of letters--judicious, judicial, disinterested,
+patient, happy, temperate, delighted. The colonial days, with the
+'painful' divines who brought the parish into the wilderness; the
+experimental period of ambition and attempts at a literature that
+should be young as the soil and much younger than the race; the
+civil-war years, with a literature that matched the self-conscious
+and inexpert heroism of the army;--none of these periods of the
+national life could fitly be represented by a man of letters. And
+though James Russell Lowell was the contemporary of the
+'transcendentalists,' and a man of middle age when the South
+seceded, and though indeed his fame as a Yankee humourist is to be
+discerned through the smoke and the dust, through the gravity and
+the burlesque, of the war, clear upon the other side, yet he was
+virtually the child of national leisure, of moderation and
+education, an American of the seventies and onwards. He represented
+the little-recognised fact that in ripeness, not in rawness,
+consists the excellence of Americans -an excellence they must be
+content to share with contemporary nations, however much it may cost
+them to abandon we know not what bounding ambitions which they have
+never succeeded in definitely describing in words. Mr. Lowell was a
+refutation of the fallacy that an American can never be American
+enough. He ranked with the students and the critics among all
+nations, and nothing marks his transatlantic conditions except,
+perhaps, that his scholarliness is a little anxious and would not
+seem so; he enriches his phrases busily, and yet would seem
+composed; he makes his allusions tread closely one upon another, and
+there is an assumed carelessness, and an ill-concealed vigilance, as
+to the effect their number and their erudition will produce upon the
+reader. The American sensitiveness takes with him that pleasantest
+of forms; his style confesses more than he thinks of the loveable
+weakness of national vanity, and asks of the stranger now and again,
+'Well, what do you think of my country?'
+
+Declining, as I do, to separate style in expression from style in
+the thought that informs it--for they who make such a separation can
+hardly know that style should be in the very conception of a phrase,
+in its antenatal history, else the word is neither choice nor
+authentic--I recognise in Mr. Lowell, as a prose author, a sense of
+proportion and a delicacy of selection not surpassed in the critical
+work of this critical century. Those small volumes, Among My Books
+and My Study Windows, are all pure literature. A fault in criticism
+is the rarest thing in them. I call none to mind except the strange
+judgment on Dr. Johnson: 'Our present concern with the Saxons is
+chiefly a literary one. . . Take Dr. Johnson as an instance. The
+Saxon, as it appears to me, has never shown any capacity for art,'
+and so forth. One wonders how Lowell read the passage on Iona, and
+the letter to Lord Chesterfield, and the Preface to the Dictionary
+without conviction of the great English writer's supreme art--art
+that declares itself and would not be hidden. But take the essay on
+Pope, that on Chaucer, and that on one Percival, a writer of
+American verse of whom English readers are not aware, and they prove
+Lowell to have been as clear in judging as he was exquisite in
+sentencing. His essay 'On a Certain Condescension in Foreigners' is
+famous, but an equal fame is due to 'My Garden Acquaintance' and 'A
+Good Word for Winter.' His talk about the weather is so full of wit
+that one wonders how prattlers at a loss for a topic dare attempt
+one so rich. The birds that nest in his syringas seem to be not his
+pensioners only, but his parishioners, so charmingly local, so
+intent upon his chronicle does he become when he is minded to play
+White of Selborne with a smile. And all the while it is the word
+that he is intent upon. You may trace his reading by some fine word
+that has not escaped him, but has been garnered for use when his fan
+has been quick to purge away the chaff of commonplace. He is thus
+fastidious and alert in many languages. You wonder at the delicacy
+of the sense whereby he perceives a choice rhyme in the Anglo-Norman
+of Marie de France or a clang of arms in the brief verse of Peire de
+Bergerac, or touches sensitively a word whereby Dante has
+transcended something sweet in Bernard de Ventadour, or Virgil
+somewhat noble in Homer. In his own use, and within his own
+English, he has the abstinence and the freshness of intention that
+keep every word new for the day's work. He gave to the language,
+and did not take from it; it gained by him, and lost not. There are
+writers of English now at work who almost convince us of their
+greatness until we convict them on that charge: they have succeeded
+at an unpardonable cost; they are glorified, but they have beggared
+the phrases they leave behind them.
+
+Nevertheless Lowell was no poet. To accept his verse as a poet's
+would be to confess a lack of instinct, and there is no more
+grievous lack in a lover of poetry. Reason, we grant, makes for the
+full acceptance of his poems, and perhaps so judicial a mind as his
+may be forgiven for having trusted to reason and to criticism. His
+trust was justified--if such justification avails--by the admiration
+of fairly educated people who apparently hold him to have been a
+poet first, a humourist in the second place, and an essayist
+incidentally. It is hard to believe that he failed in instinct
+about himself. More probably he was content to forego it when he
+found the ode, the lyric, and the narrative verse all so willing.
+They made no difficulty, and he made none; why then are we reluctant
+to acknowledge the manifest stateliness of this verse and the
+evident grace of that, and the fine thought finely worded? Such
+reluctance justifies itself. Nor would I attempt to back it by the
+cheap sanctions of prophecy. Nay, it is quite possible that
+Lowell's poems may live; I have no commands for futurity. Enough
+that he enriched the present with the example of a scholarly,
+linguistic, verbal love of literature, with a studiousness full of
+heart.
+
+
+
+DOMUS ANGUSTA
+
+
+
+The narrow house is a small human nature compelled to a large human
+destiny, charged with a fate too great, a history too various, for
+its slight capacities. Men have commonly complained of fate; but
+their complaints have been of the smallness, not of the greatness,
+of the human lot. A disproportion--all in favour of man--between
+man and his destiny is one of the things to be taken for granted in
+literature: so frequent and so easy is the utterance of the
+habitual lamentation as to the trouble of a 'vain capacity,' so well
+explained has it ever been.
+
+
+'Thou hast not half the power to do me harm
+That I have to be hurt,'
+
+
+discontented man seems to cry to Heaven, taking the words of the
+brave Emilia. But inarticulate has been the voice within the narrow
+house. Obviously it never had its poet. Little elocution is there,
+little argument or definition, little explicitness. And yet for
+every vain capacity we may assuredly count a thousand vain
+destinies, for every liberal nature a thousand liberal fates. It is
+the trouble of the wide house we hear of, clamorous of its
+disappointments and desires. The narrow house has no echoes; yet
+its pathetic shortcoming might well move pity. On that strait stage
+is acted a generous tragedy; to that inadequate soul is intrusted an
+enormous sorrow; a tempest of movement makes its home within that
+slender nature; and heroic happiness seeks that timorous heart.
+
+We may, indeed, in part know the narrow house by its
+inarticulateness--not, certainly, its fewness of words, but its
+inadequacy and imprecision of speech. For, doubtless, right
+language enlarges the soul as no other power or influence may do.
+Who, for instance, but trusts more nobly for knowing the full word
+of his confidence? Who but loves more penetratingly for possessing
+the ultimate syllable of his tenderness? There is a 'pledging of
+the word,' in another sense than the ordinary sense of troth and
+promise. The poet pledges his word, his sentence, his verse, and
+finds therein a peculiar sanction. And I suppose that even physical
+pain takes on an edge when it not only enforces a pang but whispers
+a phrase. Consciousness and the word are almost as closely united
+as thought and the word. Almost--not quite; in spite of its
+inexpressive speech, the narrow house is aware and sensitive beyond,
+as it were, its poor power.
+
+But as to the whole disparity between the destiny and the nature, we
+know it to be general. Life is great that is trivially transmitted;
+love is great that is vulgarly experienced. Death, too, is a heroic
+virtue; and to the keeping of us all is death committed: death,
+submissive in the indocile, modest in the fatuous, several in the
+vulgar, secret in the familiar. It is destructive because it not
+only closes but contradicts life. Unlikely people die. The one
+certain thing, it is also the one improbable. A dreadful paradox is
+perhaps wrought upon a little nature that is incapable of death and
+yet is constrained to die. That is a true destruction, and the
+thought of it is obscure.
+
+Happy literature corrects all this disproportion by its immortal
+pause. It does not bid us follow man or woman to an illogical
+conclusion. Mrs. Micawber never does desert Mr. Micawber.
+Considering her mental powers, by the way, an illogical conclusion
+for her would be manifestly inappropriate. Shakespeare, indeed,
+having seen a life whole, sees it to an end: sees it out, and
+Falstaff dies. More than Promethean was the audacity that, having
+kindled, quenched that spark. But otherwise the grotesque man in
+literature is immortal, and with something more significant than the
+immortality awarded to him in the sayings of rhetoric; he is
+predurable because he is not completed. His humours are strangely
+matched with perpetuity. But, indeed, he is not worthy to die; for
+there is something graver than to be immortal, and that is to be
+mortal. I protest I do not laugh at man or woman in the world. I
+thank my fellow-mortals for their wit, and also for the kind of joke
+that the French so pleasantly call une joyeusete; these are to smile
+at. But the gay injustice of laughter is between me and the book.
+
+That narrow house--there is sometimes a message from its living
+windows. Its bewilderment, its reluctance, its defect, show by
+moments from eyes that are apt to express none but common things.
+There are allusions unawares, involuntary appeals, in those brief
+glances. Far from me and from my friends be the misfortune of
+meeting such looks in reply to pain of our inflicting. To be clever
+and sensitive and to hurt the foolish and the stolid--wouldst thou
+do such a deed for all the world? Not I, by this heavenly light.
+
+
+
+REJECTION
+
+
+
+Simplicity is not virginal in the modern world. She has a
+penitential or a vidual singleness. We can conceive an antique
+world in which life, art, and letters were simple because of the
+absence of many things; for us now they can be simple only because
+of our rejection of many things. We are constrained to such a
+vigilance as will not let even a master's work pass unfanned and
+unpurged. Even among his phrases one shall be taken and the other
+left. For he may unawares have allowed the habitualness that besets
+this multitudinous life to take the pen from his hand and to write
+for him a page or a word; and habitualness compels our refusals. Or
+he may have allowed the easy impulse of exaggeration to force a
+sentence which the mere truth, sensitively and powerfully pausing,
+would well have become. Exaggeration has played a part of its own
+in human history. By depreciating our language it has stimulated
+change, and has kept the circulating word in exercise. Our
+rejection must be alert and expert to overtake exaggeration and
+arrest it. It makes us shrewder than we wish to be. And, indeed,
+the whole endless action of refusal shortens the life we could
+desire to live. Much of our resolution is used up in the repeated
+mental gesture of adverse decision. Our tacit and implicit distaste
+is made explicit, who shall say with what loss to our treasury of
+quietness? We are defrauded of our interior ignorance, which should
+be a place of peace. We are forced to confess more articulately
+than befits our convention with ourselves. We are hurried out of
+our reluctances. We are made too much aware. Nay, more: we are
+tempted to the outward activity of destruction; reviewing becomes
+almost inevitable. As for the spiritual life--O weary, weary act of
+refusal! O waste but necessary hours, vigil and wakefulness of
+fear! 'We live by admiration' only a shortened life who live so
+much in the iteration of rejection and repulse. And in the very
+touch of joy there hides I know not what ultimate denial; if not on
+one side, on the other. If joy is given to us without reserve, not
+so do we give ourselves to joy. We withhold, we close. Having
+denied many things that have approached us, we deny ourselves to
+many things. Thus does il gran rifiuto divide and rule our world.
+
+Simplicity is worth the sacrifice; but all is not sacrifice.
+Rejection has its pleasures, the more secret the more unmeasured.
+When we garnish a house we refuse more furniture, and furniture more
+various, than might haunt the dreams of decorators. There is no
+limit to our rejections. And the unconsciousness of the decorators
+is in itself a cause of pleasure to a mind generous, forbearing, and
+delicate. When we dress, no fancy may count the things we will none
+of. When we write, what hinders that we should refrain from Style
+past reckoning? When we marry--. Moreover, if simplicity is no
+longer set in a world having the great and beautiful quality of
+fewness, we can provide an equally fair setting in the quality of
+refinement. And refinement is not to be achieved but by rejection.
+One who suggests to me that refinement is apt to be a mere negative
+has offered up a singular blunder in honour of robustiousness.
+Refinement is not negative, because it must be compassed by many
+negations. It is a thing of price as well as of value; it demands
+immolations, it exacts experience. No slight or easy charge, then,
+is committed to such of us as, having apprehension of these things,
+fulfil the office of exclusion. Never before was a time when
+derogation was always so near, a daily danger, or when the reward of
+resisting it was so great. The simplicity of literature, more
+sensitive, more threatened, and more important than other
+simplicities, needs a guard of honour, who shall never relax the
+good will nor lose the good heart of their intolerance.
+
+
+
+THE LESSON OF LANDSCAPE
+
+
+
+The landscape, like our literature, is apt to grow and to get itself
+formed under too luxurious ideals. This is the evil work of that
+LITTLE MORE which makes its insensible but persistent additions to
+styles, to the arts, to the ornaments of life--to nature, when
+unluckily man becomes too explicitly conscious of her beauty, and
+too deliberate in his arrangement of it. The landscape has need of
+moderation, of that fast-disappearing grace of unconsciousness, and,
+in short, of a return towards the ascetic temper. The English way
+of landowning, above all, has made for luxury. Naturally the
+country is fat. The trees are thick and round--a world of leaves;
+the hills are round; the forms are all blunt; and the grass is so
+deep as to have almost the effect of snow in smoothing off all
+points and curving away all abruptness. England is almost as blunt
+as a machine-made moulding or a piece of Early-Victorian cast-iron
+work. And on all this we have, of set purpose, improved by our
+invention of the country park. There all is curves and masses. A
+little more is added to the greenness and the softness of the forest
+glade, and for increase of ornament the fat land is devoted to
+idleness. Not a tree that is not impenetrable, inarticulate. Thick
+soil below and thick growth above cover up all the bones of the
+land, which in more delicate countries show brows and hollows
+resembling those of a fine face after mental experience. By a very
+intelligible paradox, it is only in a landscape made up for beauty
+that beauty is so ill achieved. Much beauty there must needs be
+where there are vegetation and the seasons. But even the seasons,
+in park scenery, are marred by the LITTLE TOO MUCH, too complete a
+winter, too emphatic a spring, an ostentatious summer, an autumn too
+demonstrative.
+
+'Seek to have less rather than more.' It is a counsel of perfection
+in The Imitation of Christ. And here, undoubtedly, is the secret of
+all that is virile and classic in the art of man, and of all in
+nature that is most harmonious with that art. Moreover, this is the
+secret of Italy. How little do the tourists and the poets grasp
+this latter truth, by the way--and the artists! The legend of Italy
+is to be gorgeous, and they have her legend by rote. But Italy is
+slim and all articulate; her most characteristic trees are those
+that are distinct and distinguished, with lines that suggest the
+etching-point rather than a brush loaded with paint. Cypresses
+shaped like flames, tall pines with the abrupt flatness of their
+tops, thin canes in the brakes, sharp aloes by the road-side, and
+olives with the delicate acuteness of the leaf--these make keen
+lines of slender vegetation. And they own the seasons by a gentle
+confession. Rather than be overpowered by the clamorous
+proclamation of summer in the English woods, we would follow June to
+this subtler South: even to the Campagna, where the cycle of the
+seasons passes within such narrow limitations that insensitive eyes
+scarcely recognise it. In early spring there is a fresher touch of
+green on all the spaces of grass, the distance grows less mellow and
+more radiant; by the coming of May the green has been imperceptibly
+dimmed again; it blushes with the mingled colours of minute and
+numberless flowers--a dust of flowers, in lines longer than those of
+ocean billows. This is the desert blossoming like a rose: not the
+obvious rose of gardens, but the multitudinous and various flower
+that gathers once in the year in every hand's-breadth of the
+wilderness. When June comes the sun has burnt all to leagues of
+harmonious seed, coloured with a hint of the colour of harvest,
+which is gradually changed to the lighter harmonies of winter. All
+this fine chromatic scale passes within such modest boundaries that
+it is accused as a monotony. But those who find its modesty
+delightful may have a still more delicate pleasure in the blooming
+and blossoming of the sea. The passing from the winter blue to the
+summer blue, from the cold colour to the colour that has in it the
+fire of the sun, the kindling of the sapphire of the Mediterranean--
+the significance of these sea-seasons, so far from the pasture and
+the harvest, is imperceptible to ordinary senses, as appears from
+the fact that so few stay to see it all fulfilled. And if the
+tourist stayed, he would no doubt violate all that is lovely and
+moderate by the insistence of his descriptions. He would find
+adjectives for the blue sea, but probably he would refuse to search
+for words for the white. A white Mediterranean is not in the
+legend. Nevertheless it blooms, now and then, pale as an opal; the
+white sea is the flower of the breathless midsummer. And in its
+clear, silent waters, a few days, in the culmination of the heat,
+bring forth translucent living creatures, many-shaped jelly-fish,
+coloured like mother-of-pearl.
+
+But without going so far from the landscape of daily life, it is in
+agricultural Italy that the LITTLE LESS makes so undesignedly, and
+as it were so inevitably, for beauty. The country that is formed
+for use and purpose only is immeasurably the loveliest. What a
+lesson in literature! How feelingly it persuades us that all except
+a very little of the ornament of letters and of life makes the
+dulness of the world. The tenderness of colour, the beauty of
+series and perspective, and the variety of surface, produced by the
+small culture of vegetables, are among the charms that come
+unsought, and that are not to be found by seeking--are never to be
+achieved if they are sought for their own sake. And another of the
+delights of the useful laborious land is its vitality. The soil may
+be thin and dry, but man's life is added to its own. He has
+embanked the hill to make little platforms for the growth of wheat
+in the light shadows of olive leaves. Thanks to the metayer land-
+tenure, man's heart, as well as his strength, is given to the
+ground, with his hope and his honour. Louis Blanc's 'point of
+honour of industry' is a conscious impulse--it is not too much to
+say--with most of the Tuscan contadini; but as each effort they make
+for their master they make also for the bread of their children, it
+is no wonder that the land they cultivate has a look of life. But
+in all colour, in all luxury, and in all that gives material for
+picturesque English, this lovely scenery for food and wine and
+raiment has that LITTLE LESS to which we desire to recall a
+rhetorical world.
+
+
+
+MR. COVENTRY PATMORE'S ODES
+
+
+
+To most of the great poets no greater praise can be given than
+praise of their imagery. Imagery is the natural language of their
+poetry. Without a parable she hardly speaks. But undoubtedly there
+is now and then a poet who touches the thing, not its likeness, too
+vitally, too sensitively, for even such a pause as the verse makes
+for love of the beautiful image. Those rare moments are simple, and
+their simplicity makes one of the reader's keenest experiences.
+Other simplicities may be achieved by lesser art, but this is
+transcendent simplicity. There is nothing in the world more costly.
+It vouches for the beauty which it transcends; it answer for the
+riches it forbears; it implies the art which it fulfils. All
+abundance ministers to it, though it is so single. And here we get
+the sacrificial quality which is the well-kept secret of art at this
+perfection. All the faculties of the poet are used for preparing
+this naked greatness--are used and fruitfully spent and shed. The
+loveliness that stands and waits on the simplicity of certain of Mr.
+Coventry Patmore's Odes, the fervours and splendours that are there,
+only to be put to silence--to silence of a kind that would be
+impossible were they less glorious--are testimonies to the
+difference between sacrifice and waste.
+
+But does it seem less than reasonable to begin a review of a poet's
+work with praise of an infrequent mood? Infrequent such a mood must
+needs be, yet it is in a profound sense characteristic. To have
+attained it once or twice is to have proved such gift and grace as a
+true history of literature would show to be above price, even gauged
+by the rude measure of rarity. Transcendent simplicity could not
+possibly be habitual. Man lives within garments and veils, and art
+is chiefly concerned with making mysteries of these for the
+loveliness of his life; when they are rent asunder it is impossible
+not to be aware that an overwhelming human emotion has been in
+action. Thus DEPARTURE, IF I WERE DEAD, A FAREWELL, EURYDICE, THE
+TOYS, ST. VALENTINE'S DAY --though here there is in the exquisite
+imaginative play a mitigation of the bare vitality of feeling--group
+themselves apart as the innermost of the poet's achievements.
+
+Second to these come the Odes that have splendid thought in great
+images, and display--rather than, as do the poems first glanced at,
+betray--the beauties of poetic art. Emotion is here, too, and in
+shocks and throes, never frantic when almost intolerable. It is
+mortal pathos. If any other poet has filled a cup with a draught so
+unalloyed, we do not know it. Love and sorrow are pure in The
+Unknown Eros; and its author has not refused even the cup of terror.
+Against love often, against sorrow nearly always, against fear
+always, men of sensibility instantaneously guard the quick of their
+hearts. It is only the approach of the pang that they will endure;
+from the pang itself, dividing soul and spirit, a man who is
+conscious of a profound capacity for passion defends himself in the
+twinkling of an eye. But through nearly the whole of Coventry
+Patmore's poetry there is an endurance of the mortal touch. Nay,
+more, he has the endurance of the immortal touch. That is, his
+capacity for all the things that men elude for their greatness is
+more than the capacity of other men. He endures therefore what they
+could but will not endure and, besides this, degrees that they
+cannot apprehend. Thus, to have studied The Unknown Eros is to have
+had a certain experience--at least the impassioned experience of a
+compassion; but it is also to have recognised a soul beyond our
+compassion.
+
+What some of the Odes have to sing of, their author does not insist
+upon our knowing. He leaves more liberty for a well-intentioned
+reader's error than makes for peace and recollection of mind in
+reading. That the general purpose of the poems is obscure is
+inevitable. It has the obscurity of profound clear waters. What
+the poet chiefly secures to us is the understanding that love and
+its bonds, its bestowal and reception, does but rehearse the action
+of the union of God with humanity--that there is no essential man
+save Christ, and no essential woman except the soul of mankind.
+When the singer of a Song of Songs seems to borrow the phrase of
+human love, it is rather that human love had first borrowed the
+truths of the love of God. The thought grows gay in the three
+Psyche odes, or attempts a gaiety--the reader at least being
+somewhat reluctant. How is it? Mr. Coventry Patmore's play more
+often than not wins you to but a slow participation. Perhaps
+because some thrust of his has left you still tremulous.
+
+But the inequality of equal lovers, sung in these Odes with a Divine
+allusion, is a most familiar truth. Love that is passionate has
+much of the impulse of gravitation--gravitation that is not falling,
+as there is no downfall in the precipitation of the sidereal skies.
+The love of the great for the small is the passionate love; the
+upward love hesitates and is fugitive. St. Francis Xavier asked
+that the day of his ecstasy might be shortened; Imogen, the wife of
+all poetry, 'prays forbearance;' the child is 'fretted with sallies
+of his mothers kisses.' It might be drawing an image too
+insistently to call this a centrifugal impulse.
+
+The art that utters an intellectual action so courageous, an emotion
+so authentic, as that of Mr. Coventry Patmore's poetry, cannot be
+otherwise than consummate. Often the word has a fulness of
+significance that gives the reader a shock of appreciation. This is
+always so in those simplest odes which we have taken as the heart of
+the author's work. Without such wonderful rightness, simplicity of
+course is impossible. Nor is that beautiful precision less in
+passages of description, such as the landscape lines in Amelia and
+elsewhere. The words are used to the uttermost yet with composure.
+And a certain justness of utterance increases the provocation of
+what we take leave to call unjust thought in the few poems that
+proclaim an intemperate scorn--political, social, literary. The
+poems are but two or three; they are to be known by their subjects--
+we might as well do something to justify their scorn by using the
+most modern of adjectives--and call them topical. Here assuredly
+there is no composure. Never before did superiority bear itself
+with so little of its proper, signal, and peculiar grace--
+reluctance.
+
+If Mr. Patmore really intends that his Odes shall be read with
+minim, or crochet, or quaver rests, to fill up a measure of beaten
+time, we are free to hold that he rather arbitrarily applies to
+liberal verse the laws of verse set for use--cradle verse and march-
+marking verse (we are, of course, not considering verse set to
+music, and thus compelled into the musical time). Liberal verse,
+dramatic, narrative, meditative, can surely be bound by no time
+measures--if for no other reason, for this: that to prescribe
+pauses is also to forbid any pauses unprescribed. Granting,
+however, his principle of catalexis, we still doubt whether the
+irregular metre of The Unknown Eros is happily used except for the
+large sweep of the flight of the Ode more properly so called.
+Lycidas, the Mrs. Anne Killigrew, the Intimations, and Emerson's
+Threnody, considered merely for their versification, fulfil their
+laws so perfectly that they certainly move without checks as without
+haste. So with the graver Odes--much in the majority--of Mr.
+Coventry Patmore's series. A more lovely dignity of extension and
+restriction, a more touching sweetness of simple and frequent rhyme,
+a truer impetus of pulse and impulse, English verse could hardly
+yield than are to be found in his versification. And what movement
+of words has ever expressed flight, distance, mystery, and wonderful
+approach, as they are expressed in a celestial line--the eighth in
+the ode To the Unknown Eros? When we are sensible of a metrical
+cheek it is in this way: To the English ear the heroic line is the
+unit of metre, and when two lines of various length undesignedly add
+together to form a heroic line, they have to be separated with
+something of a jerk. And this adding--as, for instance, of a line
+of four syllables preceding or following one of six--occurs now and
+then, and even in such a masterly measure of music as A Farewell.
+It is as when a sail suddenly flaps windless in the fetching about
+of a boat. In The Angel in the House, and other earlier poems, Mr.
+Coventry Patmore used the octosyllabic stanza perfectly, inasmuch as
+he never left it either heavily or thinly packed. Moreover those
+first poems had a composure which was the prelude to the peace of
+the Odes. And even in his slightest work he proves himself the
+master--that is, the owner--of words that, owned by him, are
+unprofaned, are as though they had never been profaned; the capturer
+of an art so quick and close that it is the voice less of a poet
+than of the very Muse.
+
+
+
+INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE
+
+
+
+I shall not ask the commentators whether Blake used these two words
+in union or in antithesis. They assuredly have an inseverable union
+in the art of literature. The songs of Innocence and Experience are
+for each poet the songs of his own separate heart and life; but to
+take the cumulative experiences of other men, and to use these in
+place of the virginal fruit of thought--whereas one would hardly
+consent to take them for ordering even the most habitual of daily
+affairs--is to forego Innocence and Experience at once and together.
+Obviously, Experience can be nothing except personal and separate;
+and Innocence of a singularly solitary quality is his who does not
+dip his hands into other men's histories, and does not give to his
+own word the common sanction of other men's summaries and
+conclusions. Therefore I bind Innocence and Experience in one, and
+take them as a sign of the necessary and noble isolation of man from
+man--of his uniqueness. But if I had a mind to forego that manner
+of personal separateness, and to use the things of others, I think I
+would rather appropriate their future than their past. Let me put
+on their hopes, and the colours of their confidence, if I must
+borrow. Not that I would burden my prophetic soul with unjustified
+ambitions; but even this would be more tolerable than to load my
+memory with an unjustifiable history.
+
+And yet how differently do the writers of a certain kind of love-
+poetry consider this matter. These are the love-poets who have no
+reluctance in adopting the past of a multitude of people to whom
+they have not even been introduced. Their verse is full of ready-
+made memories, various, numerous, and cruel. No single life--
+supposing it to be a liberal life concerned with something besides
+sex--could quite suffice for so much experience, so much
+disillusion, so much deception. To achieve that tone in its fulness
+it is necessary to take for one's own the praeterita (say) of Alfred
+de Musset and of the men who helped him--not to live but--to have
+lived; it is necessary to have lived much more than any man lives,
+and to make a common hoard of erotic remembrances with all kinds of
+poets.
+
+As the Franciscans wear each other's old habits, and one Friar goes
+about darned because of another's rending, so the poet of a certain
+order grows cynical for the sake of many poets' old loves. Not
+otherwise will the resultant verse succeed in implying so much--or
+rather so many, in the feminine plural. The man of very sensitive
+individuality might hesitate at the adoption. The Franciscan is
+understood to have a fastidiousness and to overcome it. But these
+poets so triumph over their repugnance that it does not appear. And
+yet, if choice were, one might wish rather to make use of one's
+fellowmen's old shoes than put their old secrets to use, and dress
+one's art in a motley of past passions. Moreover, to utilise the
+mental experience of many is inevitably to use their verse and
+phrase. For the rest, all the traits of this love-poetry are
+familiar enough. One of them is the absence of the word of promise
+and pledge, the loss of the earliest and simplest of the impulses of
+love: which is the vow. 'Till death!' 'For ever!' are cries too
+simple and too natural to be commonplace, and in their denial there
+is the least tolerable of banalities--that of other men's
+disillusions.
+
+Perfect personal distinctness of Experience would be in literature a
+delicate Innocence. Not a passage of cheapness, of greed, of
+assumption, of sloth, or of any such sins in the work of him whose
+love-poetry were thus true, and whose pudeur of personality thus
+simple and inviolate. This is the private man, in other words the
+gentleman, who will neither love nor remember in public.
+
+
+
+PENULTIMATE CARICATURE
+
+
+
+There has been no denunciation, and perhaps even no recognition, of
+a certain social immorality in the caricature of the mid-century and
+earlier. Literary and pictorial alike, it had for its notice the
+vulgarising of the married woman. No one now would read Douglas
+Jerrold for pleasure, but it is worth while to turn up that
+humourist's serial, Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lectures, which were
+presumably considered good comic reading in the Punch of that time,
+and to make acquaintance with a certain ideal of the grotesque.
+Obviously to make a serious comment on anything which others
+consider or have considered humorous is to put one's-self at a
+disadvantage. He who sees the joke holds himself somewhat the
+superior of the man who would see it, such as it is, if he thought
+it worth his eyesight. The last-named has to bear the least
+tolerable of modern reproaches; but he need not always care. Now to
+turn over Douglas Jerrold's monologues is to find that people in the
+mid-century took their mirth principally from the life of the
+arriere boutique. On that shabby stage was enacted the comedy of
+literature. Therefore we must take something of the vulgarity of
+Jerrold as a circumstance of the social ranks wherein he delighted.
+But the essential vulgarity is that of the woman. There is in some
+old Punch volume a drawing by Leech--whom one is weary of hearing
+named the gentle, the refined--where the work of the artist has vied
+with the spirit of the letter-press. Douglas Jerrold treats of the
+woman's jealousy, Leech of her stays. They lie on a chair by the
+bed, beyond description gross. And page by page the woman is
+derided, with an unfailing enjoyment of her foolish ugliness of
+person, of manners, and of language. In that time there was,
+moreover, one great humourist; he bore his part willingly in
+vulgarising the woman; and the part that fell to him was the
+vulgarising of the act of maternity. Woman spiteful, woman suing
+man at the law for evading her fatuous companionship, woman
+incoherent, woman abandoned without restraint to violence and
+temper, woman feigning sensibility--in none of these ignominies is
+woman so common, foul, and foolish for Dickens as she is in child-
+bearing.
+
+I named Leech but now. He was, in all things essential, Dickens's
+contemporary. And accordingly the married woman and her child are
+humiliated by his pencil; not grossly, but commonly. For him she is
+moderately and dully ridiculous. What delights him as humorous is
+that her husband--himself wearisome enough to die of--is weary of
+her, finds the time long, and tries to escape her. It amuses him
+that she should furtively spend money over her own dowdiness, to the
+annoyance of her husband, and that her husband should have no desire
+to adorn her, and that her mother should be intolerable. It pleases
+him that her baby, with enormous cheeks and a hideous rosette in its
+hat--a burlesque baby--should be a grotesque object of her love, for
+that too makes subtly for her abasement. Charles Keene, again--
+another contemporary, though he lived into a later and different
+time. He saw little else than common forms of human ignominy--
+indignities of civic physique, of stupid prosperity, of dress, of
+bearing. He transmits these things in greater proportion than he
+found them--whether for love of the humour of them, or by a kind of
+inverted disgust that is as eager as delight--one is not sure which
+is the impulse. The grossness of the vulgarities is rendered with a
+completeness that goes far to convince us of a certain sensitiveness
+of apprehension in the designer; and then again we get convinced
+that real apprehension--real apprehensiveness--would not have
+insisted upon such things, could not have lived with them through
+almost a whole career. There is one drawing in the Punch of years
+ago, in which Charles Keene achieved the nastiest thing possible to
+even the invention of that day. A drunken citizen, in the usual
+broadcloth, has gone to bed, fully dressed, with his boots on and
+his umbrella open, and the joke lies in the surprise awaiting, when
+she awakes, the wife asleep at his side in a night-cap. Every one
+who knows Keene's work can imagine how the huge well-fed figure was
+drawn, and how the coat wrinkled across the back, and how the
+bourgeois whiskers were indicated. This obscene drawing is matched
+by many equally odious. Abject domesticity, ignominies of married
+life, of middle-age, of money-making; the old common jape against
+the mother-in-law; ill-dressed men with whisky--ill-dressed women
+with tempers; everything that is underbred and decivilised;
+abominable weddings: in one drawing a bridegroom with shambling
+sidelong legs asks his bride if she is nervous; she is a widow, and
+she answers, 'No, never was.' In all these things there is very
+little humour. Where Keene achieved fun was in the figures of his
+schoolboys. The hint of tenderness which in really fine work could
+never be absent from a man's thought of a child or from his touch of
+one, however frolic or rowdy the subject in hand, is absolutely
+lacking in Keene's designs; nevertheless, we acknowledge that here
+is humour. It is also in some of his clerical figures when they are
+not caricatures, and certainly in 'Robert,' the City waiter of
+Punch. But so irresistible is the derision of the woman that all
+Charles Keene's persistent sense of vulgarity is intent centrally
+upon her. Never for any grace gone astray is she bantered, never
+for the social extravagances, for prattle, or for beloved dress; but
+always for her jealousy, and for the repulsive person of the man
+upon whom she spies and in whom she vindicates her ignoble rights.
+If this is the shopkeeper the possession of whom is her boast, what
+then is she?
+
+This great immorality, centring in the irreproachable days of the
+Exhibition of 1851, or thereabouts--the pleasure in this particular
+form of human disgrace--has passed, leaving one trace only: the
+habit by which some men reproach a silly woman through her sex,
+whereas a silly man is not reproached through his sex. But the
+vulgarity of which I have written here was distinctively English--
+the most English thing that England had in days when she bragged of
+many another--and it was not able to survive an increased commerce
+of manners and letters with France. It was the chief immorality
+destroyed by French fiction.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Rhythm of Life by Alice Meynell
+
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