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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Shelley</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Shelley, by Francis Thompson</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Shelley, by Francis Thompson
+
+
+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: Shelley
+ An Essay
+
+
+Author: Francis Thompson
+
+Release Date: March 27, 2005 [eBook #1336]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHELLEY***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1914 Burns &amp; Oates edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h2>SHELLEY: AN ESSAY</h2>
+<p>The Church, which was once the mother of poets no less than of saints,
+during the last two centuries has relinquished to aliens the chief glories
+of poetry, if the chief glories of holiness she has preserved for her
+own.&nbsp; The palm and the laurel, Dominic and Dante, sanctity and
+song, grew together in her soil: she has retained the palm, but forgone
+the laurel.&nbsp; Poetry in its widest sense, <a name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1">{1}</a>
+and when not professedly irreligious, has been too much and too long
+among many Catholics either misprised or distrusted; too much and too
+generally the feeling has been that it is at best superfluous, at worst
+pernicious, most often dangerous.&nbsp; Once poetry was, as she should
+be, the lesser sister and helpmate of the Church; the minister to the
+mind, as the Church to the soul.&nbsp; But poetry sinned, poetry fell;
+and, in place of lovingly reclaiming her, Catholicism cast her from
+the door to follow the feet of her pagan seducer.&nbsp; The separation
+has been ill for poetry; it has not been well for religion.</p>
+<p>Fathers of the Church (we would say), pastors of the Church, pious
+laics of the Church: you are taking from its walls the panoply of Aquinas&mdash;take
+also from its walls the psaltery of Alighieri.&nbsp; Unroll the precedents
+of the Church&rsquo;s past; recall to your minds that Francis of Assisi
+was among the precursors of Dante; that sworn to Poverty he forswore
+not Beauty, but discerned through the lamp Beauty the Light God; that
+he was even more a poet in his miracles than in his melody; that poetry
+clung round the cowls of his Order.&nbsp; Follow his footsteps; you
+who have blessings for men, have you no blessing for the birds?&nbsp;
+Recall to your memory that, in their minor kind, the love poems of Dante
+shed no less honour on Catholicism than did the great religious poem
+which is itself pivoted on love; that in singing of heaven he sang of
+Beatrice&mdash;this supporting angel was still carven on his harp even
+when he stirred its strings in Paradise.&nbsp; What you theoretically
+know, vividly realise: that with many the religion of beauty must always
+be a passion and a power, that it is only evil when divorced from the
+worship of the Primal Beauty.&nbsp; Poetry is the preacher to men of
+the earthly as you of the Heavenly Fairness; of that earthly fairness
+which God has fashioned to His own image and likeness.&nbsp; You proclaim
+the day which the Lord has made, and Poetry exults and rejoices in it.&nbsp;
+You praise the Creator for His works, and she shows you that they are
+very good.&nbsp; Beware how you misprise this potent ally, for hers
+is the art of Giotto and Dante: beware how you misprise this insidious
+foe, for hers is the art of modern France and of Byron.&nbsp; Her value,
+if you know it not, God knows, and know the enemies of God.&nbsp; If
+you have no room for her beneath the wings of the Holy One, there is
+place for her beneath the webs of the Evil One: whom you discard, he
+embraces; whom you cast down from an honourable seat, he will advance
+to a haughty throne; the brows you dislaurel of a just respect, he will
+bind with baleful splendours; the stone which you builders reject, he
+will make his head of the corner.&nbsp; May she not prophesy in the
+temple? then there is ready for her the tripod of Delphi.&nbsp; Eye
+her not askance if she seldom sing directly of religion: the bird gives
+glory to God though it sings only of its innocent loves.&nbsp; Suspicion
+creates its own cause; distrust begets reason for distrust.&nbsp; This
+beautiful, wild, feline Poetry, wild because left to range the wilds,
+restore to the hearth of your charity, shelter under the rafter of your
+Faith; discipline her to the sweet restraints of your household, feed
+her with the meat from your table, soften her with the amity of your
+children; tame her, fondle her, cherish her&mdash;you will no longer
+then need to flee her.&nbsp; Suffer her to wanton, suffer her to play,
+so she play round the foot of the Cross!</p>
+<p>There is a change of late years: the Wanderer is being called to
+her Father&rsquo;s house, but we would have the call yet louder, we
+would have the proffered welcome more unstinted.&nbsp; There are still
+stray remnants of the old intolerant distrust.&nbsp; It is still possible
+for even a French historian of the Church to enumerate among the articles
+cast upon Savonarola&rsquo;s famous pile, <i>po&eacute;sies &eacute;rotiques,
+tant des anciens que des modernes, livres impies ou corrupteurs, Ovide,
+Tibulle, Properce, pour ne nommer que les plus connus, Dante, P&eacute;trarque,
+Boccace, tous ces auteurs Italiens qui d&eacute;j&agrave; souillaient
+les &acirc;mes et ruinaient les moeurs, en cr&eacute;ant ou perfectionnant
+la langue</i>. <a name="citation2"></a><a href="#footnote2">{2}</a>&nbsp;
+Blameworthy carelessness at the least, which can class the <i>Vita Nuova</i>
+with the <i>Ars Amandi</i> and the <i>Decameron</i>!&nbsp; And among
+many English Catholics the spirit of poetry is still often received
+with a restricted Puritanical greeting, rather than with the traditionally
+Catholic joyous openness.</p>
+<p>We ask, therefore, for a larger interest, not in purely Catholic
+poetry, but in poetry generally, poetry in its widest sense.&nbsp; With
+few exceptions, whatsoever in our best poets is great and good to the
+non-Catholic, is great and good also to the Catholic; and though Faber
+threw his edition of Shelley into the fire and never regretted the act;
+though, moreover, Shelley is so little read among us that we can still
+tolerate in our Churches the religious parody which Faber should have
+thrown after his three-volumed Shelley; <a name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3">{3}</a>&mdash;in
+spite of this, we are not disposed to number among such exceptions that
+straying spirit of light.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>We have among us at the present day no lineal descendant, in the
+poetical order, of Shelley; and any such offspring of the aboundingly
+spontaneous Shelley is hardly possible, still less likely, on account
+of the defect by which (we think) contemporary poetry in general, as
+compared with the poetry of the early nineteenth century, is mildewed.&nbsp;
+That defect is the predominance of art over inspiration, of body over
+soul.&nbsp; We do not say the <i>defect</i> of inspiration.&nbsp; The
+warrior is there, but he is hampered by his armour.&nbsp; Writers of
+high aim in all branches of literature, even when they are not&mdash;as
+Mr. Swinburne, for instance, is&mdash;lavish in expression, are generally
+over-deliberate in expression.&nbsp; Mr. Henry James, delineating a
+fictitious writer clearly intended to be the ideal of an artist, makes
+him regret that he has sometimes allowed himself to take the second-best
+word instead of searching for the best.&nbsp; Theoretically, of course,
+one ought always to try for the best word.&nbsp; But practically, the
+habit of excessive care in word-selection frequently results in loss
+of spontaneity; and, still worse, the habit of always taking the best
+word too easily becomes the habit of always taking the most ornate word,
+the word most removed from ordinary speech.&nbsp; In consequence of
+this, poetic diction has become latterly a kaleidoscope, and one&rsquo;s
+chief curiosity is as to the precise combinations into which the pieces
+will be shifted.&nbsp; There is, in fact, a certain band of words, the
+Pr&aelig;torian cohorts of poetry, whose prescriptive aid is invoked
+by every aspirant to the poetical purple, and without whose prescriptive
+aid none dares aspire to the poetical purple; against these it is time
+some banner should be raised.&nbsp; Perhaps it is almost impossible
+for a contemporary writer quite to evade the services of the free-lances
+whom one encounters under so many standards. <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4">{4}</a>&nbsp;
+But it is at any rate curious to note that the literary revolution against
+the despotic diction of Pope seems issuing, like political revolutions,
+in a despotism of its own making.</p>
+<p>This, then, we cannot but think, distinguishes the literary period
+of Shelley from our own.&nbsp; It distinguishes even the unquestionable
+treasures and masterpieces of to-day from similar treasures and masterpieces
+of the precedent day; even <i>the Lotus-Eaters</i> from <i>Kubla-Khan</i>;
+even Rossetti&rsquo;s ballads from <i>Christabel</i>.&nbsp; It is present
+in the restraint of Matthew Arnold no less than in the exuberance of
+Swinburne, and affects our writers who aim at simplicity no less than
+those who seek richness.&nbsp; Indeed, nothing is so artificial as our
+simplicity.&nbsp; It is the simplicity of the French stage <i>ing&eacute;nue</i>.&nbsp;
+We are self-conscious to the finger-tips; and this inherent quality,
+entailing on our poetry the inevitable loss of spontaneity, ensures
+that whatever poets, of whatever excellence, may be born to us from
+the Shelleian stock, its founder&rsquo;s spirit can take among us no
+reincarnation.&nbsp; An age that is ceasing to produce child-like children
+cannot produce a Shelley.&nbsp; For both as poet and man he was essentially
+a child.</p>
+<p>Yet, just as in the effete French society before the Revolution the
+Queen played at Arcadia, the King played at being a mechanic, everyone
+played at simplicity and universal philanthropy, leaving for most durable
+outcome of their philanthropy the guillotine, as the most durable outcome
+of ours may be execution by electricity;&mdash;so in our own society
+the talk of benevolence and the cult of childhood are the very fashion
+of the hour.&nbsp; We, of this self-conscious, incredulous generation,
+sentimentalise our children, analyse our children, think we are endowed
+with a special capacity to sympathise and identify ourselves with children;
+we play at being children.&nbsp; And the result is that we are not more
+child-like, but our children are less child-like.&nbsp; It is so tiring
+to stoop to the child, so much easier to lift the child up to you.&nbsp;
+Know you what it is to be a child?&nbsp; It is to be something very
+different from the man of to-day.&nbsp; It is to have a spirit yet streaming
+from the waters of baptism; it is to believe in love, to believe in
+loveliness, to believe in belief; it is to be so little that the elves
+can reach to whisper in your ear; it is to turn pumpkins into coaches,
+and mice into horses, lowness into loftiness, and nothing into everything,
+for each child has its fairy godmother in its own soul; it is to live
+in a nutshell and to count yourself the king of infinite space; it is</p>
+<blockquote><p>To see a world in a grain of sand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And a heaven in a wild flower,<br />
+Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And eternity in an hour;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>it is to know not as yet that you are under sentence of life, nor
+petition that it be commuted into death.&nbsp; When we become conscious
+in dreaming that we dream, the dream is on the point of breaking; when
+we become conscious in living that we live, the ill dream is but just
+beginning.&nbsp; Now if Shelley was but too conscious of the dream,
+in other respects Dryden&rsquo;s false and famous line might have been
+applied to him with very much less than it&rsquo;s usual untruth. <a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5">{5}</a>&nbsp;
+To the last, in a degree uncommon even among poets, he retained the
+idiosyncrasy of childhood, expanded and matured without differentiation.&nbsp;
+To the last he was the enchanted child.</p>
+<p>This was, as is well known, patent in his life.&nbsp; It is as really,
+though perhaps less obviously, manifest in his poetry, the sincere effluence
+of his life.&nbsp; And it may not, therefore, be amiss to consider whether
+it was conditioned by anything beyond his congenital nature.&nbsp; For
+our part, we believe it to have been equally largely the outcome of
+his early and long isolation.&nbsp; Men given to retirement and abstract
+study are notoriously liable to contract a certain degree of childlikeness:
+and if this be the case when we segregate a man, how much more when
+we segregate a child!&nbsp; It is when they are taken into the solution
+of school-life that children, by the reciprocal interchange of influence
+with their fellows, undergo the series of reactions which converts them
+from children into boys and from boys into men.&nbsp; The intermediate
+stage must be traversed to reach the final one.</p>
+<p>Now Shelley never could have been a man, for he never was a boy.&nbsp;
+And the reason lay in the persecution which overclouded his school-days.&nbsp;
+Of that persecution&rsquo;s effect upon him, he has left us, in <i>The
+Revolt of Islam</i>, a picture which to many or most people very probably
+seems a poetical exaggeration; partly because Shelley appears to have
+escaped physical brutality, partly because adults are inclined to smile
+tenderly at childish sorrows which are not caused by physical suffering.&nbsp;
+That he escaped for the most part bodily violence is nothing to the
+purpose.&nbsp; It is the petty malignant annoyance recurring hour by
+hour, day by day, month by month, until its accumulation becomes an
+agony; it is this which is the most terrible weapon that boys have against
+their fellow boy, who is powerless to shun it because, unlike the man,
+he has virtually no privacy.&nbsp; His is the torture which the ancients
+used, when they anointed their victim with honey and exposed him naked
+to the restless fever of the flies.&nbsp; He is a little St. Sebastian,
+sinking under the incessant flight of shafts which skilfully avoid the
+vital parts.</p>
+<p>We do not, therefore, suspect Shelley of exaggeration: he was, no
+doubt, in terrible misery.&nbsp; Those who think otherwise must forget
+their own past.&nbsp; Most people, we suppose, <i>must</i> forget what
+they were like when they were children: otherwise they would know that
+the griefs of their childhood were passionate abandonment, <i>d&eacute;chirants</i>
+(to use a characteristically favourite phrase of modern French literature)
+as the griefs of their maturity.&nbsp; Children&rsquo;s griefs are little,
+certainly; but so is the child, so is its endurance, so is its field
+of vision, while its nervous impressionability is keener than ours.&nbsp;
+Grief is a matter of relativity; the sorrow should be estimated by its
+proportion to the sorrower; a gash is as painful to one as an amputation
+to another.&nbsp; Pour a puddle into a thimble, or an Atlantic into
+Etna; both thimble and mountain overflow.&nbsp; Adult fools, would not
+the angels smile at our griefs, were not angels too wise to smile at
+them?</p>
+<p>So beset, the child fled into the tower of his own soul, and raised
+the drawbridge.&nbsp; He threw out a reserve, encysted in which he grew
+to maturity unaffected by the intercourses that modify the maturity
+of others into the thing we call a man.&nbsp; The encysted child developed
+until it reached years of virility, until those later Oxford days in
+which Hogg encountered it; then, bursting at once from its cyst and
+the university, it swam into a world not illegitimately perplexed by
+such a whim of the gods.&nbsp; It was, of course, only the completeness
+and duration of this seclusion&mdash;lasting from the gate of boyhood
+to the threshold of youth&mdash;which was peculiar to Shelley.&nbsp;
+Most poets, probably, like most saints, are prepared for their mission
+by an initial segregation, as the seed is buried to germinate: before
+they can utter the oracle of poetry, they must first be divided from
+the body of men.&nbsp; It is the severed head that makes the seraph.</p>
+<p>Shelley&rsquo;s life frequently exhibits in him the magnified child.&nbsp;
+It is seen in his fondness for apparently futile amusements, such as
+the sailing of paper boats.&nbsp; This was, in the truest sense of the
+word, child-like; not, as it is frequently called and considered, childish.&nbsp;
+That is to say, it was not a mindless triviality, but the genuine child&rsquo;s
+power of investing little things with imaginative interest; the same
+power, though differently devoted, which produced much of his poetry.&nbsp;
+Very possibly in the paper boat he saw the magic bark of Laon and Cythna,
+or</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That
+thinnest boat<br />
+In which the mother of the months is borne<br />
+By ebbing night into her western cave.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In fact, if you mark how favourite an idea, under varying forms,
+is this in his verse, you will perceive that all the charmed boats which
+glide down the stream of his poetry are but glorified resurrections
+of the little paper argosies which trembled down the Isis.</p>
+<p>And the child appeared no less often in Shelley the philosopher than
+in Shelley the idler.&nbsp; It is seen in his repellent no less than
+in his amiable weaknesses; in the unteachable folly of a love that made
+its goal its starting-point, and firmly expected spiritual rest from
+each new divinity, though it had found none from the divinities antecedent.&nbsp;
+For we are clear that this was no mere straying of sensual appetite,
+but a straying, strange and deplorable, of the spirit; that (contrary
+to what Mr. Coventry Patmore has said) he left a woman not because he
+was tired of her arms, but because he was tired of her soul.&nbsp; When
+he found Mary Shelley wanting, he seems to have fallen into the mistake
+of Wordsworth, who complained in a charming piece of unreasonableness
+that his wife&rsquo;s love, which had been a fountain, was now only
+a well:</p>
+<blockquote><p>Such change, and at the very door<br />
+Of my fond heart, hath made me poor.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Wordsworth probably learned, what Shelley was incapable of learning,
+that love can never permanently be a fountain.&nbsp; A living poet,
+in an article <a name="citation6"></a><a href="#footnote6">{6}</a> which
+you almost fear to breathe upon lest you should flutter some of the
+frail pastel-like bloom, has said the thing: &ldquo;Love itself has
+tidal moments, lapses and flows due to the metrical rule of the interior
+heart.&rdquo;&nbsp; Elementary reason should proclaim this true.&nbsp;
+Love is an affection, its display an emotion: love is the air, its display
+is the wind.&nbsp; An affection may be constant; an emotion can no more
+be constant than the wind can constantly blow.&nbsp; All, therefore,
+that a man can reasonably ask of his wife is that her love should be
+indeed a well.&nbsp; A well; but a Bethesda-well, into which from time
+to time the angel of tenderness descends to trouble the waters for the
+healing of the beloved.&nbsp; Such a love Shelley&rsquo;s second wife
+appears unquestionably to have given him.&nbsp; Nay, she was content
+that he should veer while she remained true; she companioned him intellectually,
+shared his views, entered into his aspirations, and yet&mdash;yet, even
+at the date of <i>Epipsychidion</i> the foolish child, her husband,
+assigned her the part of moon to Emilia Viviani&rsquo;s sun, and lamented
+that he was barred from final, certain, irreversible happiness by a
+cold and callous society.&nbsp; Yet few poets were so mated before,
+and no poet was so mated afterwards, until Browning stooped and picked
+up a fair-coined soul that lay rusting in a pool of tears.</p>
+<p>In truth, his very unhappiness and discontent with life, in so far
+as it was not the inevitable penalty of the ethical anarch, can only
+be ascribed to this same child-like irrationality&mdash;though in such
+a form it is irrationality hardly peculiar to Shelley.&nbsp; Pity, if
+you will, his spiritual ruins and the neglected early training which
+was largely their cause; but the pity due to his outward circumstances
+has been strangely exaggerated.&nbsp; The obloquy from which he suffered
+he deliberately and wantonly courted.&nbsp; For the rest, his lot was
+one that many a young poet might envy.&nbsp; He had faithful friends,
+a faithful wife, an income small but assured.&nbsp; Poverty never dictated
+to his pen; the designs on his bright imagination were never etched
+by the sharp fumes of necessity.</p>
+<p>If, as has chanced to others&mdash;as chanced, for example, to Mangan&mdash;outcast
+from home, health and hope, with a charred past and a bleared future,
+an anchorite without detachment and self-cloistered without self-sufficingness,
+deposed from a world which he had not abdicated, pierced with thorns
+which formed no crown, a poet hopeless of the bays and a martyr hopeless
+of the palm, a land cursed against the dews of love, an exile banned
+and proscribed even from the innocent arms of childhood&mdash;he were
+burning helpless at the stake of his unquenchable heart, then he might
+have been inconsolable, then might he have cast the gorge at life, then
+have cowered in the darkening chamber of his being, tapestried with
+mouldering hopes, and hearkened to the winds that swept across the illimitable
+wastes of death.&nbsp; But no such hapless lot was Shelley&rsquo;s as
+that of his own contemporaries&mdash;Keats, half chewed in the jaws
+of London and spit dying on to Italy; de Quincey, who, if he escaped,
+escaped rent and maimed from those cruel jaws; Coleridge, whom they
+dully mumbled for the major portion of his life.&nbsp; Shelley had competence,
+poetry, love; yet he wailed that he could lie down like a tired child
+and weep away his life of care.&nbsp; Is it ever so with you, sad brother;
+is it ever so with me? and is there no drinking of pearls except they
+be dissolved in biting tears?&nbsp; &ldquo;Which of us has his desire,
+or having it is satisfied?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is true that he shared the fate of nearly all the great poets
+contemporary with him, in being unappreciated.&nbsp; Like them, he suffered
+from critics who were for ever shearing the wild tresses of poetry between
+rusty rules, who could never see a literary bough project beyond the
+trim level of its day but they must lop it with a crooked criticism,
+who kept indomitably planting in the defile of fame the &ldquo;established
+canons&rdquo; that had been spiked by poet after poet.&nbsp; But we
+decline to believe that a singer of Shelley&rsquo;s calibre could be
+seriously grieved by want of vogue.&nbsp; Not that we suppose him to
+have found consolation in that senseless superstition, &ldquo;the applause
+of posterity.&rdquo;&nbsp; Posterity! posterity which goes to Rome,
+weeps large-sized tears, carves beautiful inscriptions over the tomb
+of Keats; and the worm must wriggle her curtsey to it all, since the
+dead boy, wherever he be, has quite other gear to tend.&nbsp; Never
+a bone less dry for all the tears!</p>
+<p>A poet must to some extent be a chameleon and feed on air.&nbsp;
+But it need not be the musty breath of the multitude.&nbsp; He can find
+his needful support in the judgement of those whose judgement he knows
+valuable, and such support Shelley had:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;La gloire<br />
+Ne compte pas toujours les voix;<br />
+Elle les p&egrave;se quelquefois.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Yet if this might be needful to him as support, neither this, nor
+the applause of the present, nor the applause of posterity, could have
+been needful to him as motive: the one all-sufficing motive for a great
+poet&rsquo;s singing is that expressed by Keats:</p>
+<blockquote><p>I was taught in Paradise<br />
+To ease my breast of melodies.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Precisely so.&nbsp; The overcharged breast can find no ease but in
+suckling the baby-song.&nbsp; No enmity of outward circumstances, therefore,
+but his own nature, was responsible for Shelley&rsquo;s doom.</p>
+<p>A being with so much about it of child-like unreasonableness, and
+yet withal so much of the beautiful attraction luminous in a child&rsquo;s
+sweet unreasonableness, would seem fore-fated by its very essence to
+the transience of the bubble and the rainbow, of all things filmy and
+fair.&nbsp; Did some shadow of this destiny bear part in his sadness?&nbsp;
+Certain it is that, by a curious chance, he himself in <i>Julian and
+Maddalo</i> jestingly foretold the manner of his end.&nbsp; &ldquo;O
+ho!&nbsp; You talk as in years past,&rdquo; said Maddalo (Byron) to
+Julian (Shelley); &ldquo;If you can&rsquo;t swim, Beware of Providence.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Did no unearthly <i>dixisti</i> sound in his ears as he wrote it?&nbsp;
+But a brief while, and Shelley, who could not swim, was weltering on
+the waters of Lerici.&nbsp; We know not how this may affect others,
+but over us it is a coincidence which has long tyrannised with an absorbing
+inveteracy of impression (strengthened rather than diminished by the
+contrast between the levity of the utterance and its fatal fulfilment)&mdash;thus
+to behold, heralding itself in warning mockery through the very lips
+of its predestined victim, the Doom upon whose breath his locks were
+lifting along the coasts of Campania.&nbsp; The death which he had prophesied
+came upon him, and Spezzia enrolled another name among the mournful
+Marcelli of our tongue; Venetian glasses which foamed and burst before
+the poisoned wine of life had risen to their brims.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>Coming to Shelley&rsquo;s poetry, we peep over the wild mask of revolutionary
+metaphysics, and we see the winsome face of the child.&nbsp; Perhaps
+none of his poems is more purely and typically Shelleian than <i>The
+Cloud</i>, and it is interesting to note how essentially it springs
+from the faculty of make-believe.&nbsp; The same thing is conspicuous,
+though less purely conspicuous, throughout his singing; it is the child&rsquo;s
+faculty of make-believe raised to the nth power.&nbsp; He is still at
+play, save only that his play is such as manhood stops to watch, and
+his playthings are those which the gods give their children.&nbsp; The
+universe is his box of toys.&nbsp; He dabbles his fingers in the day-fall.&nbsp;
+He is gold-dusty with tumbling amidst the stars.&nbsp; He makes bright
+mischief with the moon.&nbsp; The meteors nuzzle their noses in his
+hand.&nbsp; He teases into growling the kennelled thunder, and laughs
+at the shaking of its fiery chain.&nbsp; He dances in and out of the
+gates of heaven: its floor is littered with his broken fancies.&nbsp;
+He runs wild over the fields of ether.&nbsp; He chases the rolling world.&nbsp;
+He gets between the feet of the horses of the sun.&nbsp; He stands in
+the lap of patient Nature and twines her loosened tresses after a hundred
+wilful fashions, to see how she will look nicest in his song.</p>
+<p>This it was which, in spite of his essentially modern character as
+a singer, qualified Shelley to be the poet of <i>Prometheus Unbound</i>,
+for it made him, in the truest sense of the word, a mythological poet.&nbsp;
+This child-like quality assimilated him to the child-like peoples among
+whom mythologies have their rise.&nbsp; Those Nature myths which, according
+to many, are the basis of all mythology, are likewise the very basis
+of Shelley&rsquo;s poetry.&nbsp; The lark that is the gossip of heaven,
+the winds that pluck the grey from the beards of the billows, the clouds
+that are snorted from the sea&rsquo;s broad nostril, all the elemental
+spirits of Nature, take from his verse perpetual incarnation and reincarnation,
+pass in a thousand glorious transmigrations through the radiant forms
+of his imagery.</p>
+<p>Thus, but not in the Wordsworthian sense, he is a veritable poet
+of Nature.&nbsp; For with Nature the Wordsworthians will admit no tampering:
+they exact the direct interpretative reproduction of her; that the poet
+should follow her as a mistress, not use her as a handmaid.&nbsp; To
+such following of Nature, Shelley felt no call.&nbsp; He saw in her
+not a picture set for his copying, but a palette set for his brush;
+not a habitation prepared for his inhabiting, but a Coliseum whence
+he might quarry stones for his own palaces.&nbsp; Even in his descriptive
+passages the dream-character of his scenery is notorious; it is not
+the clear, recognisable scenery of Wordsworth, but a landscape that
+hovers athwart the heat and haze arising from his crackling fantasies.&nbsp;
+The materials for such visionary Edens have evidently been accumulated
+from direct experience, but they are recomposed by him into such scenes
+as never had mortal eye beheld.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you wish you
+had?&rdquo; as Turner said.&nbsp; The one justification for classing
+Shelley with the Lake poet is that he loved Nature with a love even
+more passionate, though perhaps less profound.&nbsp; Wordsworth&rsquo;s
+<i>Nightingale and Stockdove</i> sums up the contrast between the two,
+as though it had been written for such a purpose.&nbsp; Shelley is the
+&ldquo;creature of ebullient heart,&rdquo; who</p>
+<blockquote><p>Sings as if the god of wine<br />
+Had helped him to a valentine.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Wordsworth&rsquo;s is the</p>
+<blockquote><p>&mdash;Love with quiet blending,<br />
+Slow to begin and never ending,</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>the &ldquo;serious faith and inward glee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But if Shelley, instead of culling Nature, crossed with its pollen
+the blossoms of his own soul, that Babylonian garden is his marvellous
+and best apology.&nbsp; For astounding figurative opulence he yields
+only to Shakespeare, and even to Shakespeare not in absolute fecundity
+but in images.&nbsp; The sources of his figurative wealth are specialised,
+sources of Shakespeare&rsquo;s are universal.&nbsp; It would have been
+as conscious an effort for him to speak without figure as it is for
+most men to speak with figure.&nbsp; Suspended in the dripping well
+of his imagination the commonest object becomes encrusted with imagery.&nbsp;
+Herein again he deviates from the true Nature poet, the normal Wordsworth
+type of Nature poet: imagery was to him not a mere means of expression,
+not even a mere means of adornment; it was a delight for its own sake.</p>
+<p>And herein we find the trail by which we would classify him.&nbsp;
+He belongs to a school of which not impossibly he may hardly have read
+a line&mdash;the Metaphysical School.&nbsp; To a large extent he <i>is</i>
+what the Metaphysical School should have been.&nbsp; That school was
+a certain kind of poetry trying for a range.&nbsp; Shelley is the range
+found.&nbsp; Crashaw and Shelley sprang from the same seed; but in the
+one case the seed was choked with thorns, in the other case it fell
+on good ground.&nbsp; The Metaphysical School was in its direct results
+an abortive movement, though indirectly much came of it&mdash;for Dryden
+came of it.&nbsp; Dryden, to a greater extent than is (we imagine) generally
+perceived, was Cowley systematised; and Cowley, who sank into the arms
+of Dryden, rose from the lap of Donne.</p>
+<p>But the movement was so abortive that few will thank us for connecting
+with it the name of Shelley.&nbsp; This is because to most people the
+Metaphysical School means Donne, whereas it ought to mean Crashaw.&nbsp;
+We judge the direction of a development by its highest form, though
+that form may have been produced but once, and produced imperfectly.&nbsp;
+Now the highest product of the Metaphysical School was Crashaw, and
+Crashaw was a Shelley <i>manqu&eacute;</i>; he never reached the Promised
+Land, but he had fervid visions of it.&nbsp; The Metaphysical School,
+like Shelley, loved imagery for its own sake: and how beautiful a thing
+the frank toying with imagery may be, let <i>The Skylark</i> and <i>The
+Cloud</i> witness.&nbsp; It is only evil when the poet, on the straight
+way to a fixed object, lags continually from the path to play.&nbsp;
+This is commendable neither in poet nor errand-boy.&nbsp; The Metaphysical
+School failed, not because it toyed with imagery, but because it toyed
+with it frostily.&nbsp; To sport with the tangles of Ne&aelig;ra&rsquo;s
+hair may be trivial idleness or caressing tenderness, exactly as your
+relation to Ne&aelig;ra is that of heartless gallantry or of love.&nbsp;
+So you may toy with imagery in mere intellectual ingenuity, and then
+you might as well go write acrostics: or you may toy with it in raptures,
+and then you may write a <i>Sensitive Plant</i>.&nbsp; In fact, the
+Metaphysical poets when they went astray cannot be said to have done
+anything so dainty as is implied by <i>toying</i> with imagery.&nbsp;
+They cut it into shapes with a pair of scissors.&nbsp; From all such
+danger Shelley was saved by his passionate spontaneity.&nbsp; No trappings
+are too splendid for the swift steeds of sunrise.&nbsp; His sword-hilt
+may be rough with jewels, but it is the hilt of an Excalibur.&nbsp;
+His thoughts scorch through all the folds of expression.&nbsp; His cloth
+of gold bursts at the flexures, and shows the naked poetry.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>It is this gift of not merely embodying but apprehending everything
+in figure which co-operates towards creating his rarest characteristics,
+so almost preternaturally developed in no other poet, namely, his well-known
+power to condense the most hydrogenic abstraction.&nbsp; Science can
+now educe threads of such exquisite tenuity that only the feet of the
+tiniest infant-spiders can ascend them; but up the filmiest insubstantiality
+Shelley runs with agile ease.&nbsp; To him, in truth, nothing is abstract.&nbsp;
+The dustiest abstractions</p>
+<blockquote><p>Start, and tremble under his feet,<br />
+And blossom in purple and red.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The coldest moon of an idea rises haloed through his vaporous imagination.&nbsp;
+The dimmest-sparked chip of a conception blazes and scintillates in
+the subtile oxygen of his mind.&nbsp; The most wrinkled &AElig;son of
+an abstruseness leaps rosy out of his bubbling genius.&nbsp; In a more
+intensified signification than it is probable that Shakespeare dreamed
+of, Shelley gives to airy nothing a local habitation and a name.&nbsp;
+Here afresh he touches the Metaphysical School, whose very title was
+drawn from this habitual pursuit of abstractions, and who failed in
+that pursuit from the one cause omnipresent with them, because in all
+their poetic smithy they had left never a place for a forge.&nbsp; They
+laid their fancies chill on the anvil.&nbsp; Crashaw, indeed, partially
+anticipated Shelley&rsquo;s success, and yet further did a later poet,
+so much further that we find it difficult to understand why a generation
+that worships Shelley should be reviving Gray, yet almost forget the
+name of Collins.&nbsp; The generality of readers, when they know him
+at all, usually know him by his <i>Ode on the Passions</i>.&nbsp; In
+this, despite its beauty, there is still a <i>soup&ccedil;on</i> of
+formalism, a lingering trace of powder from the eighteenth century periwig,
+dimming the bright locks of poetry.&nbsp; Only the literary student
+reads that little masterpiece, the <i>Ode to Evening</i>, which sometimes
+heralds the Shelleian strain, while other passages are the sole things
+in the language comparable to the miniatures of <i>Il Penseroso</i>.&nbsp;
+Crashaw, Collins, Shelley&mdash;three ricochets of the one pebble, three
+jets from three bounds of the one Pegasus!&nbsp; Collins&rsquo;s Pity,
+&ldquo;with eyes of dewy light,&rdquo; is near of kin to Shelley&rsquo;s
+Sleep, &ldquo;the filmy-eyed&rdquo;; and the &ldquo;shadowy tribes of
+mind&rdquo; are the lineal progenitors of &ldquo;Thought&rsquo;s crowned
+powers.&rdquo;&nbsp; This, however, is personification, wherein both
+Collins and Shelley build on Spenser: the dizzying achievement to which
+the modern poet carried personification accounts for but a moiety, if
+a large moiety, of his vivifying power over abstractions.&nbsp; Take
+the passage (already alluded to) in that glorious chorus telling how
+the Hours come</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From the temples high<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of man&rsquo;s ear and eye<br />
+Roofed over Sculpture and Poesy,</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From those skiey towers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Thought&rsquo;s crowned powers<br />
+Sit watching your dance, ye happy Hours!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our feet now, every palm,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Are sandalled with calm,<br />
+And the dew of our wings is a rain of balm;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And beyond our eyes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The human love lies<br />
+Which makes all it gazes on Paradise.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Any partial explanation will break in our hands before it reaches
+the root of such a power.&nbsp; The root, we take it, is this.&nbsp;
+He had an instinctive perception (immense in range and fertility, astonishing
+for its delicate intuition) of the underlying analogies the secret subterranean
+passages, between matter and soul; the chromatic scales, whereat we
+dimly guess, by which the Almighty modulates through all the keys of
+creation.&nbsp; Because, the more we consider it, the more likely does
+it appear that Nature is but an imperfect actress, whose constant changes
+of dress never change her manner and method, who is the same in all
+her parts.</p>
+<p>To Shelley&rsquo;s ethereal vision the most rarified mental or spiritual
+music traced its beautiful corresponding forms on the sand of outward
+things.&nbsp; He stood thus at the very junction-lines of the visible
+and invisible, and could shift the points as he willed.&nbsp; His thoughts
+became a mounted infantry, passing with baffling swiftness from horse
+to foot or foot to horse.&nbsp; He could express as he listed the material
+and the immaterial in terms of each other.&nbsp; Never has a poet in
+the past rivalled him as regards this gift, and hardly will any poet
+rival him as regards it in the future: men are like first to see the
+promised doom lay its hand on the tree of heaven and shake down the
+golden leaves. <a name="citation7"></a><a href="#footnote7">{7}</a></p>
+<p>The finest specimens of this faculty are probably to be sought in
+that Shelleian treasury, <i>Prometheus Unbound</i>.&nbsp; It is unquestionably
+the greatest and most prodigal exhibition of Shelley&rsquo;s powers,
+this amazing lyric world, where immortal clarities sigh past in the
+perfumes of the blossoms, populate the breathings of the breeze, throng
+and twinkle in the leaves that twirl upon the bough; where the very
+grass is all a-rustle with lovely spirit-things, and a weeping mist
+of music fills the air.&nbsp; The final scenes especially are such a
+Bacchic reel and rout and revelry of beauty as leaves one staggered
+and giddy; poetry is spilt like wine, music runs to drunken waste.&nbsp;
+The choruses sweep down the wind, tirelessly, flight after flight, till
+the breathless soul almost cries for respite from the unrolling splendours.&nbsp;
+Yet these scenes, so wonderful from a purely poetical standpoint that
+no one could wish them away, are (to our humble thinking) nevertheless
+the artistic error of the poem.&nbsp; Abstractedly, the development
+of Shelley&rsquo;s idea required that he should show the earthly paradise
+which was to follow the fall of Zeus.&nbsp; But dramatically with that
+fall the action ceases, and the drama should have ceased with it.&nbsp;
+A final chorus, or choral series, of rejoicings (such as does ultimately
+end the drama where Prometheus appears on the scene) would have been
+legitimate enough.&nbsp; Instead, however, the bewildered reader finds
+the drama unfolding itself through scene after scene which leaves the
+action precisely where it found it, because there is no longer an action
+to advance.&nbsp; It is as if the choral <i>finale</i> of an opera were
+prolonged through two acts.</p>
+<p>We have, nevertheless, called <i>Prometheus</i> Shelley&rsquo;s greatest
+poem because it is the most comprehensive storehouse of his power.&nbsp;
+Were we asked to name the most <i>perfect</i> among his longer efforts,
+we should name the poem in which he lamented Keats: under the shed petals
+of his lovely fancy giving the slain bird a silken burial.&nbsp; Seldom
+is the death of a poet mourned in true poetry.&nbsp; Not often is the
+singer coffined in laurel-wood.&nbsp; Among the very few exceptions
+to such a rule, the greatest is <i>Adonais</i>.&nbsp; In the English
+language only <i>Lycidas</i> competes with it; and when we prefer <i>Adonais</i>
+to <i>Lycidas</i>, we are following the precedent set in the case of
+Cicero: <i>Adonais</i> is the longer.&nbsp; As regards command over
+abstraction, it is no less characteristically Shelleian than <i>Prometheus</i>.&nbsp;
+It is throughout a series of abstractions vitalised with daring exquisiteness,
+from Morning who sought:</p>
+<blockquote><p>Her eastern watch-tower, and her hair unbound,<br />
+Wet with the tears which should adorn the ground,</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and who</p>
+<blockquote><p>Dimmed the aerial eyes that kindle day,</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>to the Dreams that were the flock of the dead shepherd, the Dreams</p>
+<blockquote><p>Whom near the living streams<br />
+Of his young spirit he fed; and whom he taught<br />
+The love that was its music;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>of whom one sees, as she hangs mourning over him,</p>
+<blockquote><p>Upon the silken fringe of his faint eyes,<br />
+Like dew upon a sleeping flower, there lies<br />
+A tear some dream has loosened from his brain!<br />
+Lost angel of a ruined Paradise!<br />
+She knew not &rsquo;twas her own; as with no stain<br />
+She faded like a cloud which hath outwept its rain.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the solar spectrum, beyond the extreme red and extreme violet
+rays, are whole series of colours, demonstrable, but imperceptible to
+gross human vision.&nbsp; Such writing as this we have quoted renders
+visible the invisibilities of imaginative colour.</p>
+<p>One thing prevents <i>Adonais</i> from being ideally perfect: its
+lack of Christian hope.&nbsp; Yet we remember well the writer of a popular
+memoir on Keats proposing as &ldquo;the best consolation for the mind
+pained by this sad record&rdquo; Shelley&rsquo;s inexpressibly sad exposition
+of Pantheistic immortality:</p>
+<blockquote><p>He is a portion of the loveliness<br />
+Which once he made more lovely, <i>etc</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>What desolation can it be that discerns comfort in this hope, whose
+wan countenance is as the countenance of a despair?&nbsp; What deepest
+depth of agony is it that finds consolation in this immortality: an
+immortality which thrusts you into death, the maw of Nature, that your
+dissolved elements may circulate through her veins?</p>
+<p>Yet such, the poet tells me, is my sole balm for the hurts of life.&nbsp;
+I am as the vocal breath floating from an organ.&nbsp; I too shall fade
+on the winds, a cadence soon forgotten.&nbsp; So I dissolve and die,
+and am lost in the ears of men: the particles of my being twine in newer
+melodies, and from my one death arise a hundred lives.&nbsp; Why, through
+the thin partition of this consolation Pantheism can hear the groans
+of its neighbour, Pessimism.&nbsp; Better almost the black resignation
+which the fatalist draws from his own hopelessness, from the fierce
+kisses of misery that hiss against his tears.</p>
+<p>With some gleams, it is true, of more than mock solace, <i>Adonais</i>
+is lighted; but they are obtained by implicitly assuming the personal
+immortality which the poem explicitly denies; as when, for instance,
+to greet the dead youth,</p>
+<blockquote><p>The inheritors of unfulfilled renown<br />
+Rose from their thrones, built beyond mortal thought<br />
+Far in the unapparent.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And again the final stanza of the poem:</p>
+<blockquote><p>The breath whose might I have invoked in song<br />
+Descends on me; my spirit&rsquo;s bark is driven<br />
+Far from the shore, far from the trembling throng<br />
+Whose sails were never to the tempest riven;<br />
+The massy earth, the spher&egrave;d skies are given:<br />
+I am borne darkly, fearfully afar;<br />
+Whilst, burning through the inmost veil of heaven,<br />
+The soul of Adonais like a star<br />
+Beacons from the abode where the eternal are.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Soul of Adonais?&mdash;Adonais, who is but</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A portion of the
+loveliness<br />
+Which once he made more lovely.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>After all, to finish where we began, perhaps the poems on which the
+lover of Shelley leans most lovingly, which he has oftenest in his mind,
+which best represent Shelley to him and which he instinctively reverts
+to when Shelley&rsquo;s name is mentioned are some of the shorter poems
+and detached lyrics.&nbsp; Here Shelley forgets for a while all that
+ever makes his verse turbid; forgets that he is anything but a poet,
+forgets sometimes that he is anything but a child; lies back in his
+skiff, and looks at the clouds.&nbsp; He plays truant from earth, slips
+through the wicket of fancy into heaven&rsquo;s meadow, and goes gathering
+stars.&nbsp; Here we have that absolute virgin-gold of song which is
+the scarcest among human products, and for which we can go to but three
+poets&mdash;Coleridge, Shelley, Chopin, <a name="citation8"></a><a href="#footnote8">{8}</a>
+and perhaps we should add Keats.&nbsp; <i>Christabel</i> and <i>Kubla-Khan</i>;
+<i>The Skylark</i>, <i>The Cloud</i>, and <i>The Sensitive Plant</i>
+(in its first two parts).&nbsp; <i>The Eve of Saint Agnes</i> and <i>The
+Nightingale</i>; certain of the Nocturnes;&mdash;these things make very
+quintessentialised loveliness.&nbsp; It is attar of poetry.</p>
+<p>Remark, as a thing worth remarking, that, although Shelley&rsquo;s
+diction is at other times singularly rich, it ceases in these poems
+to be rich, or to obtrude itself at all; it is imperceptible; his Muse
+has become a veritable Echo, whose body has dissolved from about her
+voice.&nbsp; Indeed, when his diction is richest, nevertheless the poetry
+so dominates the expression that we feel the latter only as an atmosphere
+until we are satiated with the former; then we discover with surprise
+to how imperial a vesture we had been blinded by gazing on the face
+of his song.&nbsp; A lesson, this, deserving to be conned by a generation
+so opposite in tendency as our own: a lesson that in poetry, as in the
+Kingdom of God, we should not take thought too greatly wherewith we
+shall be clothed, but seek first <a name="citation9"></a><a href="#footnote9">{9}</a>
+the spirit, and all these things will be added unto us.</p>
+<p>On the marvellous music of Shelley&rsquo;s verse we need not dwell,
+except to note that he avoids that metronomic beat of rhythm which Edgar
+Poe introduced into modern lyric measures, as Pope introduced it into
+the rhyming heroics of his day.&nbsp; Our varied metres are becoming
+as painfully over-polished as Pope&rsquo;s one metre.&nbsp; Shelley
+could at need sacrifice smoothness to fitness.&nbsp; He could write
+an anap&aelig;st that would send Mr. Swinburne into strong shudders
+(e.g., &ldquo;stream did glide&rdquo;) when he instinctively felt that
+by so forgoing the more obvious music of melody he would better secure
+the higher music of harmony.&nbsp; If we have to add that in other ways
+he was far from escaping the defects of his merits, and would sometimes
+have to acknowledge that his Nilotic flood too often overflowed its
+banks, what is this but saying that he died young?</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>It may be thought that in our casual comments on Shelley&rsquo;s
+life we have been blind to its evil side.&nbsp; That, however, is not
+the case.&nbsp; We see clearly that he committed grave sins, and one
+cruel crime; but we remember also that he was an Atheist from his boyhood;
+we reflect how gross must have been the moral neglect in the training
+of a child who <i>could</i> be an Atheist from his boyhood: and we decline
+to judge so unhappy a being by the rules which we should apply to a
+Catholic.&nbsp; It seems to us that Shelley was struggling&mdash;blindly,
+weakly, stumblingly, but still struggling&mdash;towards higher things.&nbsp;
+His Pantheism is an indication of it.&nbsp; Pantheism is a half-way
+house, and marks ascent or descent according to the direction from which
+it is approached.&nbsp; Now Shelley came to it from absolute Atheism;
+therefore in his case it meant rise.&nbsp; Again, his poetry alone would
+lead us to the same conclusion, for we do not believe that a truly corrupted
+spirit can write consistently ethereal poetry.&nbsp; We should believe
+in nothing, if we believed that, for it would be the consecration of
+a lie.&nbsp; Poetry is a thermometer: by taking its average height you
+can estimate the normal temperature of its writer&rsquo;s mind.&nbsp;
+The devil can do many things.&nbsp; But the devil cannot write poetry.&nbsp;
+He may mar a poet, but he cannot make a poet.&nbsp; Among all the temptations
+wherewith he tempted St. Anthony, though we have often seen it stated
+that he howled, we have never seen it stated that he sang.</p>
+<p>Shelley&rsquo;s anarchic principles were as a rule held by him with
+some misdirected view to truth.&nbsp; He disbelieved in kings.&nbsp;
+And is it not a mere fact&mdash;regret it if you will&mdash;that in
+all European countries, except two, monarchs are a mere survival, the
+obsolete buttons on the coat-tails of rule, which serve no purpose but
+to be continually coming off?&nbsp; It is a miserable thing to note
+how every little Balkan State, having obtained liberty (save the mark!)
+by Act of Congress, straightway proceeds to secure the service of a
+professional king.&nbsp; These gentlemen are plentiful in Europe.&nbsp;
+They are the &ldquo;noble Chairmen&rdquo; who lend their names for a
+consideration to any enterprising company which may be speculating in
+Liberty.&nbsp; When we see these things, we revert to the old lines
+in which Persius tells how you cannot turn Dama into a freeman by twirling
+him round your finger and calling him Marcus Dama.</p>
+<p>Again, Shelley desired a religion of humanity, and that meant, to
+him, a religion for humanity, a religion which, unlike the spectral
+Christianity about him, should permeate and regulate the whole organisation
+of men.&nbsp; And the feeling is one with which a Catholic must sympathise,
+in an age when&mdash;if we may say so without irreverence&mdash;the
+Almighty has been made a constitutional Deity, with certain state-grants
+of worship, but no influence over political affairs.&nbsp; In these
+matters his aims were generous, if his methods were perniciously mistaken.&nbsp;
+In his theory of Free Love alone, borrowed like the rest from the Revolution,
+his aim was as mischievous as his method.&nbsp; At the same time he
+was at least logical.&nbsp; His theory was repulsive, but comprehensible.&nbsp;
+Whereas from our present <i>via media</i>&mdash;facilitation of divorce&mdash;can
+only result the era when the young lady in reduced circumstances will
+no longer turn governess but will be open to engagement as wife at a
+reasonable stipend.</p>
+<p>We spoke of the purity of Shelley&rsquo;s poetry.&nbsp; We know of
+but three passages to which exception can be taken.&nbsp; One is happily
+hidden under a heap of Shelleian rubbish.&nbsp; Another is offensive,
+because it presents his theory of Free Love in its most odious form.&nbsp;
+The third is very much a matter, we think, for the individual conscience.&nbsp;
+Compare with this the genuinely corrupt Byron, through the cracks and
+fissures of whose heaving versification steam up perpetually the sulphurous
+vapours from his central iniquity.&nbsp; We cannot credit that any Christian
+ever had his faith shaken through reading Shelley, unless his faith
+were shaken before he read Shelley.&nbsp; Is any safely havened bark
+likely to slip its cable, and make for a flag planted on the very reef
+where the planter himself was wrecked?</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>Why indeed (one is tempted to ask in concluding) should it be that
+the poets who have written for us the poetry richest in skiey grain,
+most free from admixture with the duller things of earth&mdash;the Shelleys,
+the Coleridges, the Keats&mdash;are the very poets whose lives are among
+the saddest records in literature?&nbsp; Is it that (by some subtile
+mystery of analogy) sorrow, passion, and fantasy are indissolubly connected,
+like water, fire, and cloud; that as from sun and dew are born the vapours,
+so from fire and tears ascend the &ldquo;visions of a&euml;rial joy&rdquo;;
+that the harvest waves richest over the battlefields of the soul; that
+the heart, like the earth, smells sweetest after rain; that the spell
+on which depend such necromantic castles is some spirit of pain charm-poisoned
+at their base? <a name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10">{10}</a>&nbsp;
+Such a poet, it may be, mists with sighs the window of his life until
+the tears run down it; then some air of searching poetry, like an air
+of searching frost, turns it to a crystal wonder.&nbsp; The god of golden
+song is the god, too, of the golden sun; so peradventure song-light
+is like sunlight, and darkens the countenance of the soul.&nbsp; Perhaps
+the rays are to the stars what thorns are to the flowers; and so the
+poet, after wandering over heaven, returns with bleeding feet.&nbsp;
+Less tragic in its merely temporal aspect than the life of Keats or
+Coleridge, the life of Shelley in its moral aspect is, perhaps, more
+tragical than that of either; his dying seems a myth, a figure of his
+living; the material shipwreck a figure of the immaterial.</p>
+<p>Enchanted child, born into a world unchildlike; spoiled darling of
+Nature, playmate of her elemental daughters; &ldquo;pard-like spirit,
+beautiful and swift,&rdquo; laired amidst the burning fastnesses of
+his own fervid mind; bold foot along the verges of precipitous dream;
+light leaper from crag to crag of inaccessible fancies; towering Genius,
+whose soul rose like a ladder between heaven and earth with the angels
+of song ascending and descending it;&mdash;he is shrunken into the little
+vessel of death, and sealed with the unshatterable seal of doom, and
+cast down deep below the rolling tides of Time.&nbsp; Mighty meat for
+little guests, when the heart of Shelley was laid in the cemetery of
+Caius Cestius!&nbsp; Beauty, music, sweetness, tears&mdash;the mouth
+of the worm has fed of them all.&nbsp; Into that sacred bridal-gloom
+of death where he holds his nuptials with eternity let not our rash
+speculations follow him.&nbsp; Let us hope rather that as, amidst material
+nature, where our dull eyes see only ruin, the finer eye of science
+has discovered life in putridity and vigour in decay,&mdash;seeing dissolution
+even and disintegration, which in the mouth of man symbolise disorder,
+to be in the works of God undeviating order, and the manner of our corruption
+to be no less wonderful than the manner of our health,&mdash;so, amidst
+the supernatural universe, some tender undreamed surprise of life in
+doom awaited that wild nature, which, worn by warfare with itself, its
+Maker, and all the world, now</p>
+<blockquote><p>Sleeps, and never palates more the dug,<br />
+The beggar&rsquo;s nurse, and C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1">{1}</a>&nbsp; That is
+to say, taken as the general animating spirit of the Fine Arts.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2">{2}</a>&nbsp; The Abb&eacute;
+Bareille was not, of course, responsible for Savonarola&rsquo;s taste,
+only for thus endorsing it.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3">{3}</a>&nbsp; We mean,
+of course, the hymn, &ldquo;I rise from dreams of time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4">{4}</a>&nbsp; We are
+a little surprised at the fact, because so many Victorian poets are,
+or have been, prose-writers as well.&nbsp; Now, according to our theory,
+the practice of prose should maintain fresh and comprehensive a poet&rsquo;s
+diction, should save him from falling into the hands of an exclusive
+coterie of poetic words.&nbsp; It should react upon his metrical vocabulary
+to its beneficial expansion, by taking him outside his aristocratic
+circle of language, and keeping him in touch with the great commonalty,
+the proletariat of speech.&nbsp; For it is with words as with men: constant
+intermarriage within the limits of a patrician clan begets effete refinement;
+and to reinvigorate the stock, its veins must be replenished from hardy
+plebeian blood.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5">{5}</a>&nbsp; Wordsworth&rsquo;s
+adaptation of it, however, is true.&nbsp; Men are not &ldquo;children
+of a larger growth,&rdquo; but the child <i>is</i> father of the man,
+since the parent is only partially reproduced in his offspring.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6">{6}</a>&nbsp; <i>The
+Rhythm of Life</i>, by Alice Meynell.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7">{7}</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig-tree casteth
+her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind&rdquo; (Rev.
+vi, 13).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8">{8}</a>&nbsp; Such analogies
+between master in sister-arts are often interesting.&nbsp; In some respects,
+is not Brahms the Browning of music?</p>
+<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9">{9}</a>&nbsp; Seek <i>first</i>,
+not seek <i>only</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10">{10}</a>&nbsp; We
+hope that we need not refer the reader, for the methods of magic architecture,
+to Ariosto and that Atlas among enchanters, Beckford.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHELLEY***</p>
+<pre>
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+</html>
diff --git a/1336.txt b/1336.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/1336.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Shelley, by Francis Thompson
+
+
+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: Shelley
+ An Essay
+
+
+Author: Francis Thompson
+
+Release Date: March 27, 2005 [eBook #1336]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHELLEY***
+
+
+Credit
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1914 Burns & Oates edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+SHELLEY: AN ESSAY
+
+
+The Church, which was once the mother of poets no less than of saints,
+during the last two centuries has relinquished to aliens the chief
+glories of poetry, if the chief glories of holiness she has preserved for
+her own. The palm and the laurel, Dominic and Dante, sanctity and song,
+grew together in her soil: she has retained the palm, but forgone the
+laurel. Poetry in its widest sense, {1} and when not professedly
+irreligious, has been too much and too long among many Catholics either
+misprised or distrusted; too much and too generally the feeling has been
+that it is at best superfluous, at worst pernicious, most often
+dangerous. Once poetry was, as she should be, the lesser sister and
+helpmate of the Church; the minister to the mind, as the Church to the
+soul. But poetry sinned, poetry fell; and, in place of lovingly
+reclaiming her, Catholicism cast her from the door to follow the feet of
+her pagan seducer. The separation has been ill for poetry; it has not
+been well for religion.
+
+Fathers of the Church (we would say), pastors of the Church, pious laics
+of the Church: you are taking from its walls the panoply of Aquinas--take
+also from its walls the psaltery of Alighieri. Unroll the precedents of
+the Church's past; recall to your minds that Francis of Assisi was among
+the precursors of Dante; that sworn to Poverty he forswore not Beauty,
+but discerned through the lamp Beauty the Light God; that he was even
+more a poet in his miracles than in his melody; that poetry clung round
+the cowls of his Order. Follow his footsteps; you who have blessings for
+men, have you no blessing for the birds? Recall to your memory that, in
+their minor kind, the love poems of Dante shed no less honour on
+Catholicism than did the great religious poem which is itself pivoted on
+love; that in singing of heaven he sang of Beatrice--this supporting
+angel was still carven on his harp even when he stirred its strings in
+Paradise. What you theoretically know, vividly realise: that with many
+the religion of beauty must always be a passion and a power, that it is
+only evil when divorced from the worship of the Primal Beauty. Poetry is
+the preacher to men of the earthly as you of the Heavenly Fairness; of
+that earthly fairness which God has fashioned to His own image and
+likeness. You proclaim the day which the Lord has made, and Poetry
+exults and rejoices in it. You praise the Creator for His works, and she
+shows you that they are very good. Beware how you misprise this potent
+ally, for hers is the art of Giotto and Dante: beware how you misprise
+this insidious foe, for hers is the art of modern France and of Byron.
+Her value, if you know it not, God knows, and know the enemies of God. If
+you have no room for her beneath the wings of the Holy One, there is
+place for her beneath the webs of the Evil One: whom you discard, he
+embraces; whom you cast down from an honourable seat, he will advance to
+a haughty throne; the brows you dislaurel of a just respect, he will bind
+with baleful splendours; the stone which you builders reject, he will
+make his head of the corner. May she not prophesy in the temple? then
+there is ready for her the tripod of Delphi. Eye her not askance if she
+seldom sing directly of religion: the bird gives glory to God though it
+sings only of its innocent loves. Suspicion creates its own cause;
+distrust begets reason for distrust. This beautiful, wild, feline
+Poetry, wild because left to range the wilds, restore to the hearth of
+your charity, shelter under the rafter of your Faith; discipline her to
+the sweet restraints of your household, feed her with the meat from your
+table, soften her with the amity of your children; tame her, fondle her,
+cherish her--you will no longer then need to flee her. Suffer her to
+wanton, suffer her to play, so she play round the foot of the Cross!
+
+There is a change of late years: the Wanderer is being called to her
+Father's house, but we would have the call yet louder, we would have the
+proffered welcome more unstinted. There are still stray remnants of the
+old intolerant distrust. It is still possible for even a French
+historian of the Church to enumerate among the articles cast upon
+Savonarola's famous pile, _poesies erotiques, tant des anciens que des
+modernes, livres impies ou corrupteurs, Ovide, Tibulle, Properce, pour ne
+nommer que les plus connus, Dante, Petrarque, Boccace, tous ces auteurs
+Italiens qui deja souillaient les ames et ruinaient les moeurs, en creant
+ou perfectionnant la langue_. {2} Blameworthy carelessness at the least,
+which can class the _Vita Nuova_ with the _Ars Amandi_ and the
+_Decameron_! And among many English Catholics the spirit of poetry is
+still often received with a restricted Puritanical greeting, rather than
+with the traditionally Catholic joyous openness.
+
+We ask, therefore, for a larger interest, not in purely Catholic poetry,
+but in poetry generally, poetry in its widest sense. With few
+exceptions, whatsoever in our best poets is great and good to the non-
+Catholic, is great and good also to the Catholic; and though Faber threw
+his edition of Shelley into the fire and never regretted the act; though,
+moreover, Shelley is so little read among us that we can still tolerate
+in our Churches the religious parody which Faber should have thrown after
+his three-volumed Shelley; {3}--in spite of this, we are not disposed to
+number among such exceptions that straying spirit of light.
+
+* * * * *
+
+We have among us at the present day no lineal descendant, in the poetical
+order, of Shelley; and any such offspring of the aboundingly spontaneous
+Shelley is hardly possible, still less likely, on account of the defect
+by which (we think) contemporary poetry in general, as compared with the
+poetry of the early nineteenth century, is mildewed. That defect is the
+predominance of art over inspiration, of body over soul. We do not say
+the _defect_ of inspiration. The warrior is there, but he is hampered by
+his armour. Writers of high aim in all branches of literature, even when
+they are not--as Mr. Swinburne, for instance, is--lavish in expression,
+are generally over-deliberate in expression. Mr. Henry James,
+delineating a fictitious writer clearly intended to be the ideal of an
+artist, makes him regret that he has sometimes allowed himself to take
+the second-best word instead of searching for the best. Theoretically,
+of course, one ought always to try for the best word. But practically,
+the habit of excessive care in word-selection frequently results in loss
+of spontaneity; and, still worse, the habit of always taking the best
+word too easily becomes the habit of always taking the most ornate word,
+the word most removed from ordinary speech. In consequence of this,
+poetic diction has become latterly a kaleidoscope, and one's chief
+curiosity is as to the precise combinations into which the pieces will be
+shifted. There is, in fact, a certain band of words, the Praetorian
+cohorts of poetry, whose prescriptive aid is invoked by every aspirant to
+the poetical purple, and without whose prescriptive aid none dares aspire
+to the poetical purple; against these it is time some banner should be
+raised. Perhaps it is almost impossible for a contemporary writer quite
+to evade the services of the free-lances whom one encounters under so
+many standards. {4} But it is at any rate curious to note that the
+literary revolution against the despotic diction of Pope seems issuing,
+like political revolutions, in a despotism of its own making.
+
+This, then, we cannot but think, distinguishes the literary period of
+Shelley from our own. It distinguishes even the unquestionable treasures
+and masterpieces of to-day from similar treasures and masterpieces of the
+precedent day; even _the Lotus-Eaters_ from _Kubla-Khan_; even Rossetti's
+ballads from _Christabel_. It is present in the restraint of Matthew
+Arnold no less than in the exuberance of Swinburne, and affects our
+writers who aim at simplicity no less than those who seek richness.
+Indeed, nothing is so artificial as our simplicity. It is the simplicity
+of the French stage _ingenue_. We are self-conscious to the finger-tips;
+and this inherent quality, entailing on our poetry the inevitable loss of
+spontaneity, ensures that whatever poets, of whatever excellence, may be
+born to us from the Shelleian stock, its founder's spirit can take among
+us no reincarnation. An age that is ceasing to produce child-like
+children cannot produce a Shelley. For both as poet and man he was
+essentially a child.
+
+Yet, just as in the effete French society before the Revolution the Queen
+played at Arcadia, the King played at being a mechanic, everyone played
+at simplicity and universal philanthropy, leaving for most durable
+outcome of their philanthropy the guillotine, as the most durable outcome
+of ours may be execution by electricity;--so in our own society the talk
+of benevolence and the cult of childhood are the very fashion of the
+hour. We, of this self-conscious, incredulous generation, sentimentalise
+our children, analyse our children, think we are endowed with a special
+capacity to sympathise and identify ourselves with children; we play at
+being children. And the result is that we are not more child-like, but
+our children are less child-like. It is so tiring to stoop to the child,
+so much easier to lift the child up to you. Know you what it is to be a
+child? It is to be something very different from the man of to-day. It
+is to have a spirit yet streaming from the waters of baptism; it is to
+believe in love, to believe in loveliness, to believe in belief; it is to
+be so little that the elves can reach to whisper in your ear; it is to
+turn pumpkins into coaches, and mice into horses, lowness into loftiness,
+and nothing into everything, for each child has its fairy godmother in
+its own soul; it is to live in a nutshell and to count yourself the king
+of infinite space; it is
+
+ To see a world in a grain of sand,
+ And a heaven in a wild flower,
+ Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
+ And eternity in an hour;
+
+it is to know not as yet that you are under sentence of life, nor
+petition that it be commuted into death. When we become conscious in
+dreaming that we dream, the dream is on the point of breaking; when we
+become conscious in living that we live, the ill dream is but just
+beginning. Now if Shelley was but too conscious of the dream, in other
+respects Dryden's false and famous line might have been applied to him
+with very much less than it's usual untruth. {5} To the last, in a
+degree uncommon even among poets, he retained the idiosyncrasy of
+childhood, expanded and matured without differentiation. To the last he
+was the enchanted child.
+
+This was, as is well known, patent in his life. It is as really, though
+perhaps less obviously, manifest in his poetry, the sincere effluence of
+his life. And it may not, therefore, be amiss to consider whether it was
+conditioned by anything beyond his congenital nature. For our part, we
+believe it to have been equally largely the outcome of his early and long
+isolation. Men given to retirement and abstract study are notoriously
+liable to contract a certain degree of childlikeness: and if this be the
+case when we segregate a man, how much more when we segregate a child! It
+is when they are taken into the solution of school-life that children, by
+the reciprocal interchange of influence with their fellows, undergo the
+series of reactions which converts them from children into boys and from
+boys into men. The intermediate stage must be traversed to reach the
+final one.
+
+Now Shelley never could have been a man, for he never was a boy. And the
+reason lay in the persecution which overclouded his school-days. Of that
+persecution's effect upon him, he has left us, in _The Revolt of Islam_,
+a picture which to many or most people very probably seems a poetical
+exaggeration; partly because Shelley appears to have escaped physical
+brutality, partly because adults are inclined to smile tenderly at
+childish sorrows which are not caused by physical suffering. That he
+escaped for the most part bodily violence is nothing to the purpose. It
+is the petty malignant annoyance recurring hour by hour, day by day,
+month by month, until its accumulation becomes an agony; it is this which
+is the most terrible weapon that boys have against their fellow boy, who
+is powerless to shun it because, unlike the man, he has virtually no
+privacy. His is the torture which the ancients used, when they anointed
+their victim with honey and exposed him naked to the restless fever of
+the flies. He is a little St. Sebastian, sinking under the incessant
+flight of shafts which skilfully avoid the vital parts.
+
+We do not, therefore, suspect Shelley of exaggeration: he was, no doubt,
+in terrible misery. Those who think otherwise must forget their own
+past. Most people, we suppose, _must_ forget what they were like when
+they were children: otherwise they would know that the griefs of their
+childhood were passionate abandonment, _dechirants_ (to use a
+characteristically favourite phrase of modern French literature) as the
+griefs of their maturity. Children's griefs are little, certainly; but
+so is the child, so is its endurance, so is its field of vision, while
+its nervous impressionability is keener than ours. Grief is a matter of
+relativity; the sorrow should be estimated by its proportion to the
+sorrower; a gash is as painful to one as an amputation to another. Pour
+a puddle into a thimble, or an Atlantic into Etna; both thimble and
+mountain overflow. Adult fools, would not the angels smile at our
+griefs, were not angels too wise to smile at them?
+
+So beset, the child fled into the tower of his own soul, and raised the
+drawbridge. He threw out a reserve, encysted in which he grew to
+maturity unaffected by the intercourses that modify the maturity of
+others into the thing we call a man. The encysted child developed until
+it reached years of virility, until those later Oxford days in which Hogg
+encountered it; then, bursting at once from its cyst and the university,
+it swam into a world not illegitimately perplexed by such a whim of the
+gods. It was, of course, only the completeness and duration of this
+seclusion--lasting from the gate of boyhood to the threshold of
+youth--which was peculiar to Shelley. Most poets, probably, like most
+saints, are prepared for their mission by an initial segregation, as the
+seed is buried to germinate: before they can utter the oracle of poetry,
+they must first be divided from the body of men. It is the severed head
+that makes the seraph.
+
+Shelley's life frequently exhibits in him the magnified child. It is
+seen in his fondness for apparently futile amusements, such as the
+sailing of paper boats. This was, in the truest sense of the word, child-
+like; not, as it is frequently called and considered, childish. That is
+to say, it was not a mindless triviality, but the genuine child's power
+of investing little things with imaginative interest; the same power,
+though differently devoted, which produced much of his poetry. Very
+possibly in the paper boat he saw the magic bark of Laon and Cythna, or
+
+ That thinnest boat
+ In which the mother of the months is borne
+ By ebbing night into her western cave.
+
+In fact, if you mark how favourite an idea, under varying forms, is this
+in his verse, you will perceive that all the charmed boats which glide
+down the stream of his poetry are but glorified resurrections of the
+little paper argosies which trembled down the Isis.
+
+And the child appeared no less often in Shelley the philosopher than in
+Shelley the idler. It is seen in his repellent no less than in his
+amiable weaknesses; in the unteachable folly of a love that made its goal
+its starting-point, and firmly expected spiritual rest from each new
+divinity, though it had found none from the divinities antecedent. For
+we are clear that this was no mere straying of sensual appetite, but a
+straying, strange and deplorable, of the spirit; that (contrary to what
+Mr. Coventry Patmore has said) he left a woman not because he was tired
+of her arms, but because he was tired of her soul. When he found Mary
+Shelley wanting, he seems to have fallen into the mistake of Wordsworth,
+who complained in a charming piece of unreasonableness that his wife's
+love, which had been a fountain, was now only a well:
+
+ Such change, and at the very door
+ Of my fond heart, hath made me poor.
+
+Wordsworth probably learned, what Shelley was incapable of learning, that
+love can never permanently be a fountain. A living poet, in an article
+{6} which you almost fear to breathe upon lest you should flutter some of
+the frail pastel-like bloom, has said the thing: "Love itself has tidal
+moments, lapses and flows due to the metrical rule of the interior
+heart." Elementary reason should proclaim this true. Love is an
+affection, its display an emotion: love is the air, its display is the
+wind. An affection may be constant; an emotion can no more be constant
+than the wind can constantly blow. All, therefore, that a man can
+reasonably ask of his wife is that her love should be indeed a well. A
+well; but a Bethesda-well, into which from time to time the angel of
+tenderness descends to trouble the waters for the healing of the beloved.
+Such a love Shelley's second wife appears unquestionably to have given
+him. Nay, she was content that he should veer while she remained true;
+she companioned him intellectually, shared his views, entered into his
+aspirations, and yet--yet, even at the date of _Epipsychidion_ the
+foolish child, her husband, assigned her the part of moon to Emilia
+Viviani's sun, and lamented that he was barred from final, certain,
+irreversible happiness by a cold and callous society. Yet few poets were
+so mated before, and no poet was so mated afterwards, until Browning
+stooped and picked up a fair-coined soul that lay rusting in a pool of
+tears.
+
+In truth, his very unhappiness and discontent with life, in so far as it
+was not the inevitable penalty of the ethical anarch, can only be
+ascribed to this same child-like irrationality--though in such a form it
+is irrationality hardly peculiar to Shelley. Pity, if you will, his
+spiritual ruins and the neglected early training which was largely their
+cause; but the pity due to his outward circumstances has been strangely
+exaggerated. The obloquy from which he suffered he deliberately and
+wantonly courted. For the rest, his lot was one that many a young poet
+might envy. He had faithful friends, a faithful wife, an income small
+but assured. Poverty never dictated to his pen; the designs on his
+bright imagination were never etched by the sharp fumes of necessity.
+
+If, as has chanced to others--as chanced, for example, to Mangan--outcast
+from home, health and hope, with a charred past and a bleared future, an
+anchorite without detachment and self-cloistered without
+self-sufficingness, deposed from a world which he had not abdicated,
+pierced with thorns which formed no crown, a poet hopeless of the bays
+and a martyr hopeless of the palm, a land cursed against the dews of
+love, an exile banned and proscribed even from the innocent arms of
+childhood--he were burning helpless at the stake of his unquenchable
+heart, then he might have been inconsolable, then might he have cast the
+gorge at life, then have cowered in the darkening chamber of his being,
+tapestried with mouldering hopes, and hearkened to the winds that swept
+across the illimitable wastes of death. But no such hapless lot was
+Shelley's as that of his own contemporaries--Keats, half chewed in the
+jaws of London and spit dying on to Italy; de Quincey, who, if he
+escaped, escaped rent and maimed from those cruel jaws; Coleridge, whom
+they dully mumbled for the major portion of his life. Shelley had
+competence, poetry, love; yet he wailed that he could lie down like a
+tired child and weep away his life of care. Is it ever so with you, sad
+brother; is it ever so with me? and is there no drinking of pearls except
+they be dissolved in biting tears? "Which of us has his desire, or
+having it is satisfied?"
+
+It is true that he shared the fate of nearly all the great poets
+contemporary with him, in being unappreciated. Like them, he suffered
+from critics who were for ever shearing the wild tresses of poetry
+between rusty rules, who could never see a literary bough project beyond
+the trim level of its day but they must lop it with a crooked criticism,
+who kept indomitably planting in the defile of fame the "established
+canons" that had been spiked by poet after poet. But we decline to
+believe that a singer of Shelley's calibre could be seriously grieved by
+want of vogue. Not that we suppose him to have found consolation in that
+senseless superstition, "the applause of posterity." Posterity!
+posterity which goes to Rome, weeps large-sized tears, carves beautiful
+inscriptions over the tomb of Keats; and the worm must wriggle her
+curtsey to it all, since the dead boy, wherever he be, has quite other
+gear to tend. Never a bone less dry for all the tears!
+
+A poet must to some extent be a chameleon and feed on air. But it need
+not be the musty breath of the multitude. He can find his needful
+support in the judgement of those whose judgement he knows valuable, and
+such support Shelley had:
+
+ La gloire
+ Ne compte pas toujours les voix;
+ Elle les pese quelquefois.
+
+Yet if this might be needful to him as support, neither this, nor the
+applause of the present, nor the applause of posterity, could have been
+needful to him as motive: the one all-sufficing motive for a great poet's
+singing is that expressed by Keats:
+
+ I was taught in Paradise
+ To ease my breast of melodies.
+
+Precisely so. The overcharged breast can find no ease but in suckling
+the baby-song. No enmity of outward circumstances, therefore, but his
+own nature, was responsible for Shelley's doom.
+
+A being with so much about it of child-like unreasonableness, and yet
+withal so much of the beautiful attraction luminous in a child's sweet
+unreasonableness, would seem fore-fated by its very essence to the
+transience of the bubble and the rainbow, of all things filmy and fair.
+Did some shadow of this destiny bear part in his sadness? Certain it is
+that, by a curious chance, he himself in _Julian and Maddalo_ jestingly
+foretold the manner of his end. "O ho! You talk as in years past," said
+Maddalo (Byron) to Julian (Shelley); "If you can't swim, Beware of
+Providence." Did no unearthly _dixisti_ sound in his ears as he wrote
+it? But a brief while, and Shelley, who could not swim, was weltering on
+the waters of Lerici. We know not how this may affect others, but over
+us it is a coincidence which has long tyrannised with an absorbing
+inveteracy of impression (strengthened rather than diminished by the
+contrast between the levity of the utterance and its fatal
+fulfilment)--thus to behold, heralding itself in warning mockery through
+the very lips of its predestined victim, the Doom upon whose breath his
+locks were lifting along the coasts of Campania. The death which he had
+prophesied came upon him, and Spezzia enrolled another name among the
+mournful Marcelli of our tongue; Venetian glasses which foamed and burst
+before the poisoned wine of life had risen to their brims.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Coming to Shelley's poetry, we peep over the wild mask of revolutionary
+metaphysics, and we see the winsome face of the child. Perhaps none of
+his poems is more purely and typically Shelleian than _The Cloud_, and it
+is interesting to note how essentially it springs from the faculty of
+make-believe. The same thing is conspicuous, though less purely
+conspicuous, throughout his singing; it is the child's faculty of make-
+believe raised to the nth power. He is still at play, save only that his
+play is such as manhood stops to watch, and his playthings are those
+which the gods give their children. The universe is his box of toys. He
+dabbles his fingers in the day-fall. He is gold-dusty with tumbling
+amidst the stars. He makes bright mischief with the moon. The meteors
+nuzzle their noses in his hand. He teases into growling the kennelled
+thunder, and laughs at the shaking of its fiery chain. He dances in and
+out of the gates of heaven: its floor is littered with his broken
+fancies. He runs wild over the fields of ether. He chases the rolling
+world. He gets between the feet of the horses of the sun. He stands in
+the lap of patient Nature and twines her loosened tresses after a hundred
+wilful fashions, to see how she will look nicest in his song.
+
+This it was which, in spite of his essentially modern character as a
+singer, qualified Shelley to be the poet of _Prometheus Unbound_, for it
+made him, in the truest sense of the word, a mythological poet. This
+child-like quality assimilated him to the child-like peoples among whom
+mythologies have their rise. Those Nature myths which, according to
+many, are the basis of all mythology, are likewise the very basis of
+Shelley's poetry. The lark that is the gossip of heaven, the winds that
+pluck the grey from the beards of the billows, the clouds that are
+snorted from the sea's broad nostril, all the elemental spirits of
+Nature, take from his verse perpetual incarnation and reincarnation, pass
+in a thousand glorious transmigrations through the radiant forms of his
+imagery.
+
+Thus, but not in the Wordsworthian sense, he is a veritable poet of
+Nature. For with Nature the Wordsworthians will admit no tampering: they
+exact the direct interpretative reproduction of her; that the poet should
+follow her as a mistress, not use her as a handmaid. To such following
+of Nature, Shelley felt no call. He saw in her not a picture set for his
+copying, but a palette set for his brush; not a habitation prepared for
+his inhabiting, but a Coliseum whence he might quarry stones for his own
+palaces. Even in his descriptive passages the dream-character of his
+scenery is notorious; it is not the clear, recognisable scenery of
+Wordsworth, but a landscape that hovers athwart the heat and haze arising
+from his crackling fantasies. The materials for such visionary Edens
+have evidently been accumulated from direct experience, but they are
+recomposed by him into such scenes as never had mortal eye beheld. "Don't
+you wish you had?" as Turner said. The one justification for classing
+Shelley with the Lake poet is that he loved Nature with a love even more
+passionate, though perhaps less profound. Wordsworth's _Nightingale and
+Stockdove_ sums up the contrast between the two, as though it had been
+written for such a purpose. Shelley is the "creature of ebullient
+heart," who
+
+ Sings as if the god of wine
+ Had helped him to a valentine.
+
+Wordsworth's is the
+
+ --Love with quiet blending,
+ Slow to begin and never ending,
+
+the "serious faith and inward glee."
+
+But if Shelley, instead of culling Nature, crossed with its pollen the
+blossoms of his own soul, that Babylonian garden is his marvellous and
+best apology. For astounding figurative opulence he yields only to
+Shakespeare, and even to Shakespeare not in absolute fecundity but in
+images. The sources of his figurative wealth are specialised, sources of
+Shakespeare's are universal. It would have been as conscious an effort
+for him to speak without figure as it is for most men to speak with
+figure. Suspended in the dripping well of his imagination the commonest
+object becomes encrusted with imagery. Herein again he deviates from the
+true Nature poet, the normal Wordsworth type of Nature poet: imagery was
+to him not a mere means of expression, not even a mere means of
+adornment; it was a delight for its own sake.
+
+And herein we find the trail by which we would classify him. He belongs
+to a school of which not impossibly he may hardly have read a line--the
+Metaphysical School. To a large extent he _is_ what the Metaphysical
+School should have been. That school was a certain kind of poetry trying
+for a range. Shelley is the range found. Crashaw and Shelley sprang
+from the same seed; but in the one case the seed was choked with thorns,
+in the other case it fell on good ground. The Metaphysical School was in
+its direct results an abortive movement, though indirectly much came of
+it--for Dryden came of it. Dryden, to a greater extent than is (we
+imagine) generally perceived, was Cowley systematised; and Cowley, who
+sank into the arms of Dryden, rose from the lap of Donne.
+
+But the movement was so abortive that few will thank us for connecting
+with it the name of Shelley. This is because to most people the
+Metaphysical School means Donne, whereas it ought to mean Crashaw. We
+judge the direction of a development by its highest form, though that
+form may have been produced but once, and produced imperfectly. Now the
+highest product of the Metaphysical School was Crashaw, and Crashaw was a
+Shelley _manque_; he never reached the Promised Land, but he had fervid
+visions of it. The Metaphysical School, like Shelley, loved imagery for
+its own sake: and how beautiful a thing the frank toying with imagery may
+be, let _The Skylark_ and _The Cloud_ witness. It is only evil when the
+poet, on the straight way to a fixed object, lags continually from the
+path to play. This is commendable neither in poet nor errand-boy. The
+Metaphysical School failed, not because it toyed with imagery, but
+because it toyed with it frostily. To sport with the tangles of Neaera's
+hair may be trivial idleness or caressing tenderness, exactly as your
+relation to Neaera is that of heartless gallantry or of love. So you may
+toy with imagery in mere intellectual ingenuity, and then you might as
+well go write acrostics: or you may toy with it in raptures, and then you
+may write a _Sensitive Plant_. In fact, the Metaphysical poets when they
+went astray cannot be said to have done anything so dainty as is implied
+by _toying_ with imagery. They cut it into shapes with a pair of
+scissors. From all such danger Shelley was saved by his passionate
+spontaneity. No trappings are too splendid for the swift steeds of
+sunrise. His sword-hilt may be rough with jewels, but it is the hilt of
+an Excalibur. His thoughts scorch through all the folds of expression.
+His cloth of gold bursts at the flexures, and shows the naked poetry.
+
+* * * * *
+
+It is this gift of not merely embodying but apprehending everything in
+figure which co-operates towards creating his rarest characteristics, so
+almost preternaturally developed in no other poet, namely, his well-known
+power to condense the most hydrogenic abstraction. Science can now educe
+threads of such exquisite tenuity that only the feet of the tiniest
+infant-spiders can ascend them; but up the filmiest insubstantiality
+Shelley runs with agile ease. To him, in truth, nothing is abstract. The
+dustiest abstractions
+
+ Start, and tremble under his feet,
+ And blossom in purple and red.
+
+The coldest moon of an idea rises haloed through his vaporous
+imagination. The dimmest-sparked chip of a conception blazes and
+scintillates in the subtile oxygen of his mind. The most wrinkled AEson
+of an abstruseness leaps rosy out of his bubbling genius. In a more
+intensified signification than it is probable that Shakespeare dreamed
+of, Shelley gives to airy nothing a local habitation and a name. Here
+afresh he touches the Metaphysical School, whose very title was drawn
+from this habitual pursuit of abstractions, and who failed in that
+pursuit from the one cause omnipresent with them, because in all their
+poetic smithy they had left never a place for a forge. They laid their
+fancies chill on the anvil. Crashaw, indeed, partially anticipated
+Shelley's success, and yet further did a later poet, so much further that
+we find it difficult to understand why a generation that worships Shelley
+should be reviving Gray, yet almost forget the name of Collins. The
+generality of readers, when they know him at all, usually know him by his
+_Ode on the Passions_. In this, despite its beauty, there is still a
+_soupcon_ of formalism, a lingering trace of powder from the eighteenth
+century periwig, dimming the bright locks of poetry. Only the literary
+student reads that little masterpiece, the _Ode to Evening_, which
+sometimes heralds the Shelleian strain, while other passages are the sole
+things in the language comparable to the miniatures of _Il Penseroso_.
+Crashaw, Collins, Shelley--three ricochets of the one pebble, three jets
+from three bounds of the one Pegasus! Collins's Pity, "with eyes of dewy
+light," is near of kin to Shelley's Sleep, "the filmy-eyed"; and the
+"shadowy tribes of mind" are the lineal progenitors of "Thought's crowned
+powers." This, however, is personification, wherein both Collins and
+Shelley build on Spenser: the dizzying achievement to which the modern
+poet carried personification accounts for but a moiety, if a large
+moiety, of his vivifying power over abstractions. Take the passage
+(already alluded to) in that glorious chorus telling how the Hours come
+
+ From the temples high
+ Of man's ear and eye
+ Roofed over Sculpture and Poesy,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ From those skiey towers
+ Where Thought's crowned powers
+ Sit watching your dance, ye happy Hours!
+ Our feet now, every palm,
+ Are sandalled with calm,
+ And the dew of our wings is a rain of balm;
+ And beyond our eyes
+ The human love lies
+ Which makes all it gazes on Paradise.
+
+Any partial explanation will break in our hands before it reaches the
+root of such a power. The root, we take it, is this. He had an
+instinctive perception (immense in range and fertility, astonishing for
+its delicate intuition) of the underlying analogies the secret
+subterranean passages, between matter and soul; the chromatic scales,
+whereat we dimly guess, by which the Almighty modulates through all the
+keys of creation. Because, the more we consider it, the more likely does
+it appear that Nature is but an imperfect actress, whose constant changes
+of dress never change her manner and method, who is the same in all her
+parts.
+
+To Shelley's ethereal vision the most rarified mental or spiritual music
+traced its beautiful corresponding forms on the sand of outward things.
+He stood thus at the very junction-lines of the visible and invisible,
+and could shift the points as he willed. His thoughts became a mounted
+infantry, passing with baffling swiftness from horse to foot or foot to
+horse. He could express as he listed the material and the immaterial in
+terms of each other. Never has a poet in the past rivalled him as
+regards this gift, and hardly will any poet rival him as regards it in
+the future: men are like first to see the promised doom lay its hand on
+the tree of heaven and shake down the golden leaves. {7}
+
+The finest specimens of this faculty are probably to be sought in that
+Shelleian treasury, _Prometheus Unbound_. It is unquestionably the
+greatest and most prodigal exhibition of Shelley's powers, this amazing
+lyric world, where immortal clarities sigh past in the perfumes of the
+blossoms, populate the breathings of the breeze, throng and twinkle in
+the leaves that twirl upon the bough; where the very grass is all
+a-rustle with lovely spirit-things, and a weeping mist of music fills the
+air. The final scenes especially are such a Bacchic reel and rout and
+revelry of beauty as leaves one staggered and giddy; poetry is spilt like
+wine, music runs to drunken waste. The choruses sweep down the wind,
+tirelessly, flight after flight, till the breathless soul almost cries
+for respite from the unrolling splendours. Yet these scenes, so
+wonderful from a purely poetical standpoint that no one could wish them
+away, are (to our humble thinking) nevertheless the artistic error of the
+poem. Abstractedly, the development of Shelley's idea required that he
+should show the earthly paradise which was to follow the fall of Zeus.
+But dramatically with that fall the action ceases, and the drama should
+have ceased with it. A final chorus, or choral series, of rejoicings
+(such as does ultimately end the drama where Prometheus appears on the
+scene) would have been legitimate enough. Instead, however, the
+bewildered reader finds the drama unfolding itself through scene after
+scene which leaves the action precisely where it found it, because there
+is no longer an action to advance. It is as if the choral _finale_ of an
+opera were prolonged through two acts.
+
+We have, nevertheless, called _Prometheus_ Shelley's greatest poem
+because it is the most comprehensive storehouse of his power. Were we
+asked to name the most _perfect_ among his longer efforts, we should name
+the poem in which he lamented Keats: under the shed petals of his lovely
+fancy giving the slain bird a silken burial. Seldom is the death of a
+poet mourned in true poetry. Not often is the singer coffined in laurel-
+wood. Among the very few exceptions to such a rule, the greatest is
+_Adonais_. In the English language only _Lycidas_ competes with it; and
+when we prefer _Adonais_ to _Lycidas_, we are following the precedent set
+in the case of Cicero: _Adonais_ is the longer. As regards command over
+abstraction, it is no less characteristically Shelleian than
+_Prometheus_. It is throughout a series of abstractions vitalised with
+daring exquisiteness, from Morning who sought:
+
+ Her eastern watch-tower, and her hair unbound,
+ Wet with the tears which should adorn the ground,
+
+and who
+
+ Dimmed the aerial eyes that kindle day,
+
+to the Dreams that were the flock of the dead shepherd, the Dreams
+
+ Whom near the living streams
+ Of his young spirit he fed; and whom he taught
+ The love that was its music;
+
+of whom one sees, as she hangs mourning over him,
+
+ Upon the silken fringe of his faint eyes,
+ Like dew upon a sleeping flower, there lies
+ A tear some dream has loosened from his brain!
+ Lost angel of a ruined Paradise!
+ She knew not 'twas her own; as with no stain
+ She faded like a cloud which hath outwept its rain.
+
+In the solar spectrum, beyond the extreme red and extreme violet rays,
+are whole series of colours, demonstrable, but imperceptible to gross
+human vision. Such writing as this we have quoted renders visible the
+invisibilities of imaginative colour.
+
+One thing prevents _Adonais_ from being ideally perfect: its lack of
+Christian hope. Yet we remember well the writer of a popular memoir on
+Keats proposing as "the best consolation for the mind pained by this sad
+record" Shelley's inexpressibly sad exposition of Pantheistic
+immortality:
+
+ He is a portion of the loveliness
+ Which once he made more lovely, _etc_.
+
+What desolation can it be that discerns comfort in this hope, whose wan
+countenance is as the countenance of a despair? What deepest depth of
+agony is it that finds consolation in this immortality: an immortality
+which thrusts you into death, the maw of Nature, that your dissolved
+elements may circulate through her veins?
+
+Yet such, the poet tells me, is my sole balm for the hurts of life. I am
+as the vocal breath floating from an organ. I too shall fade on the
+winds, a cadence soon forgotten. So I dissolve and die, and am lost in
+the ears of men: the particles of my being twine in newer melodies, and
+from my one death arise a hundred lives. Why, through the thin partition
+of this consolation Pantheism can hear the groans of its neighbour,
+Pessimism. Better almost the black resignation which the fatalist draws
+from his own hopelessness, from the fierce kisses of misery that hiss
+against his tears.
+
+With some gleams, it is true, of more than mock solace, _Adonais_ is
+lighted; but they are obtained by implicitly assuming the personal
+immortality which the poem explicitly denies; as when, for instance, to
+greet the dead youth,
+
+ The inheritors of unfulfilled renown
+ Rose from their thrones, built beyond mortal thought
+ Far in the unapparent.
+
+And again the final stanza of the poem:
+
+ The breath whose might I have invoked in song
+ Descends on me; my spirit's bark is driven
+ Far from the shore, far from the trembling throng
+ Whose sails were never to the tempest riven;
+ The massy earth, the sphered skies are given:
+ I am borne darkly, fearfully afar;
+ Whilst, burning through the inmost veil of heaven,
+ The soul of Adonais like a star
+ Beacons from the abode where the eternal are.
+
+The Soul of Adonais?--Adonais, who is but
+
+ A portion of the loveliness
+ Which once he made more lovely.
+
+After all, to finish where we began, perhaps the poems on which the lover
+of Shelley leans most lovingly, which he has oftenest in his mind, which
+best represent Shelley to him and which he instinctively reverts to when
+Shelley's name is mentioned are some of the shorter poems and detached
+lyrics. Here Shelley forgets for a while all that ever makes his verse
+turbid; forgets that he is anything but a poet, forgets sometimes that he
+is anything but a child; lies back in his skiff, and looks at the clouds.
+He plays truant from earth, slips through the wicket of fancy into
+heaven's meadow, and goes gathering stars. Here we have that absolute
+virgin-gold of song which is the scarcest among human products, and for
+which we can go to but three poets--Coleridge, Shelley, Chopin, {8} and
+perhaps we should add Keats. _Christabel_ and _Kubla-Khan_; _The
+Skylark_, _The Cloud_, and _The Sensitive Plant_ (in its first two
+parts). _The Eve of Saint Agnes_ and _The Nightingale_; certain of the
+Nocturnes;--these things make very quintessentialised loveliness. It is
+attar of poetry.
+
+Remark, as a thing worth remarking, that, although Shelley's diction is
+at other times singularly rich, it ceases in these poems to be rich, or
+to obtrude itself at all; it is imperceptible; his Muse has become a
+veritable Echo, whose body has dissolved from about her voice. Indeed,
+when his diction is richest, nevertheless the poetry so dominates the
+expression that we feel the latter only as an atmosphere until we are
+satiated with the former; then we discover with surprise to how imperial
+a vesture we had been blinded by gazing on the face of his song. A
+lesson, this, deserving to be conned by a generation so opposite in
+tendency as our own: a lesson that in poetry, as in the Kingdom of God,
+we should not take thought too greatly wherewith we shall be clothed, but
+seek first {9} the spirit, and all these things will be added unto us.
+
+On the marvellous music of Shelley's verse we need not dwell, except to
+note that he avoids that metronomic beat of rhythm which Edgar Poe
+introduced into modern lyric measures, as Pope introduced it into the
+rhyming heroics of his day. Our varied metres are becoming as painfully
+over-polished as Pope's one metre. Shelley could at need sacrifice
+smoothness to fitness. He could write an anapaest that would send Mr.
+Swinburne into strong shudders (e.g., "stream did glide") when he
+instinctively felt that by so forgoing the more obvious music of melody
+he would better secure the higher music of harmony. If we have to add
+that in other ways he was far from escaping the defects of his merits,
+and would sometimes have to acknowledge that his Nilotic flood too often
+overflowed its banks, what is this but saying that he died young?
+
+* * * * *
+
+It may be thought that in our casual comments on Shelley's life we have
+been blind to its evil side. That, however, is not the case. We see
+clearly that he committed grave sins, and one cruel crime; but we
+remember also that he was an Atheist from his boyhood; we reflect how
+gross must have been the moral neglect in the training of a child who
+_could_ be an Atheist from his boyhood: and we decline to judge so
+unhappy a being by the rules which we should apply to a Catholic. It
+seems to us that Shelley was struggling--blindly, weakly, stumblingly,
+but still struggling--towards higher things. His Pantheism is an
+indication of it. Pantheism is a half-way house, and marks ascent or
+descent according to the direction from which it is approached. Now
+Shelley came to it from absolute Atheism; therefore in his case it meant
+rise. Again, his poetry alone would lead us to the same conclusion, for
+we do not believe that a truly corrupted spirit can write consistently
+ethereal poetry. We should believe in nothing, if we believed that, for
+it would be the consecration of a lie. Poetry is a thermometer: by
+taking its average height you can estimate the normal temperature of its
+writer's mind. The devil can do many things. But the devil cannot write
+poetry. He may mar a poet, but he cannot make a poet. Among all the
+temptations wherewith he tempted St. Anthony, though we have often seen
+it stated that he howled, we have never seen it stated that he sang.
+
+Shelley's anarchic principles were as a rule held by him with some
+misdirected view to truth. He disbelieved in kings. And is it not a
+mere fact--regret it if you will--that in all European countries, except
+two, monarchs are a mere survival, the obsolete buttons on the coat-tails
+of rule, which serve no purpose but to be continually coming off? It is
+a miserable thing to note how every little Balkan State, having obtained
+liberty (save the mark!) by Act of Congress, straightway proceeds to
+secure the service of a professional king. These gentlemen are plentiful
+in Europe. They are the "noble Chairmen" who lend their names for a
+consideration to any enterprising company which may be speculating in
+Liberty. When we see these things, we revert to the old lines in which
+Persius tells how you cannot turn Dama into a freeman by twirling him
+round your finger and calling him Marcus Dama.
+
+Again, Shelley desired a religion of humanity, and that meant, to him, a
+religion for humanity, a religion which, unlike the spectral Christianity
+about him, should permeate and regulate the whole organisation of men.
+And the feeling is one with which a Catholic must sympathise, in an age
+when--if we may say so without irreverence--the Almighty has been made a
+constitutional Deity, with certain state-grants of worship, but no
+influence over political affairs. In these matters his aims were
+generous, if his methods were perniciously mistaken. In his theory of
+Free Love alone, borrowed like the rest from the Revolution, his aim was
+as mischievous as his method. At the same time he was at least logical.
+His theory was repulsive, but comprehensible. Whereas from our present
+_via media_--facilitation of divorce--can only result the era when the
+young lady in reduced circumstances will no longer turn governess but
+will be open to engagement as wife at a reasonable stipend.
+
+We spoke of the purity of Shelley's poetry. We know of but three
+passages to which exception can be taken. One is happily hidden under a
+heap of Shelleian rubbish. Another is offensive, because it presents his
+theory of Free Love in its most odious form. The third is very much a
+matter, we think, for the individual conscience. Compare with this the
+genuinely corrupt Byron, through the cracks and fissures of whose heaving
+versification steam up perpetually the sulphurous vapours from his
+central iniquity. We cannot credit that any Christian ever had his faith
+shaken through reading Shelley, unless his faith were shaken before he
+read Shelley. Is any safely havened bark likely to slip its cable, and
+make for a flag planted on the very reef where the planter himself was
+wrecked?
+
+* * * * *
+
+Why indeed (one is tempted to ask in concluding) should it be that the
+poets who have written for us the poetry richest in skiey grain, most
+free from admixture with the duller things of earth--the Shelleys, the
+Coleridges, the Keats--are the very poets whose lives are among the
+saddest records in literature? Is it that (by some subtile mystery of
+analogy) sorrow, passion, and fantasy are indissolubly connected, like
+water, fire, and cloud; that as from sun and dew are born the vapours, so
+from fire and tears ascend the "visions of aerial joy"; that the harvest
+waves richest over the battlefields of the soul; that the heart, like the
+earth, smells sweetest after rain; that the spell on which depend such
+necromantic castles is some spirit of pain charm-poisoned at their base?
+{10} Such a poet, it may be, mists with sighs the window of his life
+until the tears run down it; then some air of searching poetry, like an
+air of searching frost, turns it to a crystal wonder. The god of golden
+song is the god, too, of the golden sun; so peradventure song-light is
+like sunlight, and darkens the countenance of the soul. Perhaps the rays
+are to the stars what thorns are to the flowers; and so the poet, after
+wandering over heaven, returns with bleeding feet. Less tragic in its
+merely temporal aspect than the life of Keats or Coleridge, the life of
+Shelley in its moral aspect is, perhaps, more tragical than that of
+either; his dying seems a myth, a figure of his living; the material
+shipwreck a figure of the immaterial.
+
+Enchanted child, born into a world unchildlike; spoiled darling of
+Nature, playmate of her elemental daughters; "pard-like spirit, beautiful
+and swift," laired amidst the burning fastnesses of his own fervid mind;
+bold foot along the verges of precipitous dream; light leaper from crag
+to crag of inaccessible fancies; towering Genius, whose soul rose like a
+ladder between heaven and earth with the angels of song ascending and
+descending it;--he is shrunken into the little vessel of death, and
+sealed with the unshatterable seal of doom, and cast down deep below the
+rolling tides of Time. Mighty meat for little guests, when the heart of
+Shelley was laid in the cemetery of Caius Cestius! Beauty, music,
+sweetness, tears--the mouth of the worm has fed of them all. Into that
+sacred bridal-gloom of death where he holds his nuptials with eternity
+let not our rash speculations follow him. Let us hope rather that as,
+amidst material nature, where our dull eyes see only ruin, the finer eye
+of science has discovered life in putridity and vigour in decay,--seeing
+dissolution even and disintegration, which in the mouth of man symbolise
+disorder, to be in the works of God undeviating order, and the manner of
+our corruption to be no less wonderful than the manner of our health,--so,
+amidst the supernatural universe, some tender undreamed surprise of life
+in doom awaited that wild nature, which, worn by warfare with itself, its
+Maker, and all the world, now
+
+ Sleeps, and never palates more the dug,
+ The beggar's nurse, and Caesar's.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+{1} That is to say, taken as the general animating spirit of the Fine
+Arts.
+
+{2} The Abbe Bareille was not, of course, responsible for Savonarola's
+taste, only for thus endorsing it.
+
+{3} We mean, of course, the hymn, "I rise from dreams of time."
+
+{4} We are a little surprised at the fact, because so many Victorian
+poets are, or have been, prose-writers as well. Now, according to our
+theory, the practice of prose should maintain fresh and comprehensive a
+poet's diction, should save him from falling into the hands of an
+exclusive coterie of poetic words. It should react upon his metrical
+vocabulary to its beneficial expansion, by taking him outside his
+aristocratic circle of language, and keeping him in touch with the great
+commonalty, the proletariat of speech. For it is with words as with men:
+constant intermarriage within the limits of a patrician clan begets
+effete refinement; and to reinvigorate the stock, its veins must be
+replenished from hardy plebeian blood.
+
+{5} Wordsworth's adaptation of it, however, is true. Men are not
+"children of a larger growth," but the child _is_ father of the man,
+since the parent is only partially reproduced in his offspring.
+
+{6} _The Rhythm of Life_, by Alice Meynell.
+
+{7} "And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig-tree
+casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind" (Rev. vi,
+13).
+
+{8} Such analogies between master in sister-arts are often interesting.
+In some respects, is not Brahms the Browning of music?
+
+{9} Seek _first_, not seek _only_.
+
+{10} We hope that we need not refer the reader, for the methods of magic
+architecture, to Ariosto and that Atlas among enchanters, Beckford.
+
+
+
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+
+
+SHELLEY: AN ESSAY
+
+
+
+
+The Church, which was once the mother of poets no less than of
+saints, during the last two centuries has relinquished to aliens the
+chief glories of poetry, if the chief glories of holiness she has
+preserved for her own. The palm and the laurel, Dominic and Dante,
+sanctity and song, grew together in her soil: she has retained the
+palm, but forgone the laurel. Poetry in its widest sense, {1} and
+when not professedly irreligious, has been too much and too long
+among many Catholics either misprised or distrusted; too much and
+too generally the feeling has been that it is at best superfluous,
+at worst pernicious, most often dangerous. Once poetry was, as she
+should be, the lesser sister and helpmate of the Church; the
+minister to the mind, as the Church to the soul. But poetry sinned,
+poetry fell; and, in place of lovingly reclaiming her, Catholicism
+cast her from the door to follow the feet of her pagan seducer. The
+separation has been ill for poetry; it has not been well for
+religion.
+
+Fathers of the Church (we would say), pastors of the Church, pious
+laics of the Church: you are taking from its walls the panoply of
+Aquinas--take also from its walls the psaltery of Alighieri. Unroll
+the precedents of the Church's past; recall to your minds that
+Francis of Assisi was among the precursors of Dante; that sworn to
+Poverty he forswore not Beauty, but discerned through the lamp
+Beauty the Light God; that he was even more a poet in his miracles
+than in his melody; that poetry clung round the cowls of his Order.
+Follow his footsteps; you who have blessings for men, have you no
+blessing for the birds? Recall to your memory that, in their minor
+kind, the love poems of Dante shed no less honour on Catholicism
+than did the great religious poem which is itself pivoted on love;
+that in singing of heaven he sang of Beatrice--this supporting angel
+was still carven on his harp even when he stirred its strings in
+Paradise. What you theoretically know, vividly realise: that with
+many the religion of beauty must always be a passion and a power,
+that it is only evil when divorced from the worship of the Primal
+Beauty. Poetry is the preacher to men of the earthly as you of the
+Heavenly Fairness; of that earthly fairness which God has fashioned
+to His own image and likeness. You proclaim the day which the Lord
+has made, and Poetry exults and rejoices in it. You praise the
+Creator for His works, and she shows you that they are very good.
+Beware how you misprise this potent ally, for hers is the art of
+Giotto and Dante: beware how you misprise this insidious foe, for
+hers is the art of modern France and of Byron. Her value, if you
+know it not, God knows, and know the enemies of God. If you have no
+room for her beneath the wings of the Holy One, there is place for
+her beneath the webs of the Evil One: whom you discard, he
+embraces; whom you cast down from an honourable seat, he will
+advance to a haughty throne; the brows you dislaurel of a just
+respect, he will bind with baleful splendours; the stone which you
+builders reject, he will make his head of the corner. May she not
+prophesy in the temple? then there is ready for her the tripod of
+Delphi. Eye her not askance if she seldom sing directly of
+religion: the bird gives glory to God though it sings only of its
+innocent loves. Suspicion creates its own cause; distrust begets
+reason for distrust. This beautiful, wild, feline Poetry, wild
+because left to range the wilds, restore to the hearth of your
+charity, shelter under the rafter of your Faith; discipline her to
+the sweet restraints of your household, feed her with the meat from
+your table, soften her with the amity of your children; tame her,
+fondle her, cherish her--you will no longer then need to flee her.
+Suffer her to wanton, suffer her to play, so she play round the foot
+of the Cross!
+
+There is a change of late years: the Wanderer is being called to
+her Father's house, but we would have the call yet louder, we would
+have the proffered welcome more unstinted. There are still stray
+remnants of the old intolerant distrust. It is still possible for
+even a French historian of the Church to enumerate among the
+articles cast upon Savonarola's famous pile, poesies erotiques, tant
+des anciens que des modernes, livres impies ou corrupteurs, Ovide,
+Tibulle, Properce, pour ne nommer que les plus connus, Dante,
+Petrarque, Boccace, tous ces auteurs Italiens qui deje souillaient
+les ames et ruinaient les moeurs, en creant ou perfectionnant la
+langue. {2} Blameworthy carelessness at the least, which can class
+the Vita Nuova with the Ars Amandi and the Decameron! And among
+many English Catholics the spirit of poetry is still often received
+with a restricted Puritanical greeting, rather than with the
+traditionally Catholic joyous openness.
+
+We ask, therefore, for a larger interest, not in purely Catholic
+poetry, but in poetry generally, poetry in its widest sense. With
+few exceptions, whatsoever in our best poets is great and good to
+the non-Catholic, is great and good also to the Catholic; and though
+Faber threw his edition of Shelley into the fire and never regretted
+the act; though, moreover, Shelley is so little read among us that
+we can still tolerate in our Churches the religious parody which
+Faber should have thrown after his three-volumed Shelley; {3}--in
+spite of this, we are not disposed to number among such exceptions
+that straying spirit of light.
+
+We have among us at the present day no lineal descendant, in the
+poetical order, of Shelley; and any such offspring of the
+aboundingly spontaneous Shelley is hardly possible, still less
+likely, on account of the defect by which (we think) contemporary
+poetry in general, as compared with the poetry of the early
+nineteenth century, is mildewed. That defect is the predominance of
+art over inspiration, of body over soul. We do not say the DEFECT
+of inspiration. The warrior is there, but he is hampered by his
+armour. Writers of high aim in all branches of literature, even
+when they are not--as Mr. Swinburne, for instance, is--lavish in
+expression, are generally over-deliberate in expression. Mr. Henry
+James, delineating a fictitious writer clearly intended to be the
+ideal of an artist, makes him regret that he has sometimes allowed
+himself to take the second-best word instead of searching for the
+best. Theoretically, of course, one ought always to try for the
+best word. But practically, the habit of excessive care in word-
+selection frequently results in loss of spontaneity; and, still
+worse, the habit of always taking the best word too easily becomes
+the habit of always taking the most ornate word, the word most
+removed from ordinary speech. In consequence of this, poetic
+diction has become latterly a kaleidoscope, and one's chief
+curiosity is as to the precise combinations into which the pieces
+will be shifted. There is, in fact, a certain band of words, the
+Praetorian cohorts of poetry, whose prescriptive aid is invoked by
+every aspirant to the poetical purple, and without whose
+prescriptive aid none dares aspire to the poetical purple; against
+these it is time some banner should be raised. Perhaps it is almost
+impossible for a contemporary writer quite to evade the services of
+the free-lances whom one encounters under so many standards. {4}
+But it is at any rate curious to note that the literary revolution
+against the despotic diction of Pope seems issuing, like political
+revolutions, in a despotism of its own making.
+
+This, then, we cannot but think, distinguishes the literary period
+of Shelley from our own. It distinguishes even the unquestionable
+treasures and masterpieces of to-day from similar treasures and
+masterpieces of the precedent day; even the Lotus-Eaters from Kubla-
+Khan; even Rossetti's ballads from Christabel. It is present in the
+restraint of Matthew Arnold no less than in the exuberance of
+Swinburne, and affects our writers who aim at simplicity no less
+than those who seek richness. Indeed, nothing is so artificial as
+our simplicity. It is the simplicity of the French stage ingenue.
+We are self-conscious to the finger-tips; and this inherent quality,
+entailing on our poetry the inevitable loss of spontaneity, ensures
+that whatever poets, of whatever excellence, may be born to us from
+the Shelleian stock, its founder's spirit can take among us no
+reincarnation. An age that is ceasing to produce child-like
+children cannot produce a Shelley. For both as poet and man he was
+essentially a child.
+
+Yet, just as in the effete French society before the Revolution the
+Queen played at Arcadia, the King played at being a mechanic,
+everyone played at simplicity and universal philanthropy, leaving
+for most durable outcome of their philanthropy the guillotine, as
+the most durable outcome of ours may be execution by electricity;--
+so in our own society the talk of benevolence and the cult of
+childhood are the very fashion of the hour. We, of this self-
+conscious, incredulous generation, sentimentalise our children,
+analyse our children, think we are endowed with a special capacity
+to sympathise and identify ourselves with children; we play at being
+children. And the result is that we are not more child-like, but
+our children are less child-like. It is so tiring to stoop to the
+child, so much easier to lift the child up to you. Know you what it
+is to be a child? It is to be something very different from the man
+of to-day. It is to have a spirit yet streaming from the waters of
+baptism; it is to believe in love, to believe in loveliness, to
+believe in belief; it is to be so little that the elves can reach to
+whisper in your ear; it is to turn pumpkins into coaches, and mice
+into horses, lowness into loftiness, and nothing into everything,
+for each child has its fairy godmother in its own soul; it is to
+live in a nutshell and to count yourself the king of infinite space;
+it is
+
+
+To see a world in a grain of sand,
+And a heaven in a wild flower,
+Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
+And eternity in an hour;
+
+
+it is to know not as yet that you are under sentence of life, nor
+petition that it be commuted into death. When we become conscious
+in dreaming that we dream, the dream is on the point of breaking;
+when we become conscious in living that we live, the ill dream is
+but just beginning. Now if Shelley was but too conscious of the
+dream, in other respects Dryden's false and famous line might have
+been applied to him with very much less than it's usual untruth. {5}
+To the last, in a degree uncommon even among poets, he retained the
+idiosyncrasy of childhood, expanded and matured without
+differentiation. To the last he was the enchanted child.
+
+This was, as is well known, patent in his life. It is as really,
+though perhaps less obviously, manifest in his poetry, the sincere
+effluence of his life. And it may not, therefore, be amiss to
+consider whether it was conditioned by anything beyond his
+congenital nature. For our part, we believe it to have been equally
+largely the outcome of his early and long isolation. Men given to
+retirement and abstract study are notoriously liable to contract a
+certain degree of childlikeness: and if this be the case when we
+segregate a man, how much more when we segregate a child! It is
+when they are taken into the solution of school-life that children,
+by the reciprocal interchange of influence with their fellows,
+undergo the series of reactions which converts them from children
+into boys and from boys into men. The intermediate stage must be
+traversed to reach the final one.
+
+Now Shelley never could have been a man, for he never was a boy.
+And the reason lay in the persecution which overclouded his school-
+days. Of that persecution's effect upon him, he has left us, in The
+Revolt of Islam, a picture which to many or most people very
+probably seems a poetical exaggeration; partly because Shelley
+appears to have escaped physical brutality, partly because adults
+are inclined to smile tenderly at childish sorrows which are not
+caused by physical suffering. That he escaped for the most part
+bodily violence is nothing to the purpose. It is the petty
+malignant annoyance recurring hour by hour, day by day, month by
+month, until its accumulation becomes an agony; it is this which is
+the most terrible weapon that boys have against their fellow boy,
+who is powerless to shun it because, unlike the man, he has
+virtually no privacy. His is the torture which the ancients used,
+when they anointed their victim with honey and exposed him naked to
+the restless fever of the flies. He is a little St. Sebastian,
+sinking under the incessant flight of shafts which skilfully avoid
+the vital parts.
+
+We do not, therefore, suspect Shelley of exaggeration: he was, no
+doubt, in terrible misery. Those who think otherwise must forget
+their own past. Most people, we suppose, MUST forget what they were
+like when they were children: otherwise they would know that the
+griefs of their childhood were passionate abandonment, DECHIRANTS
+(to use a characteristically favourite phrase of modern French
+literature) as the griefs of their maturity. Children's griefs are
+little, certainly; but so is the child, so is its endurance, so is
+its field of vision, while its nervous impressionability is keener
+than ours. Grief is a matter of relativity; the sorrow should be
+estimated by its proportion to the sorrower; a gash is as painful to
+one as an amputation to another. Pour a puddle into a thimble, or
+an Atlantic into Etna; both thimble and mountain overflow. Adult
+fools, would not the angels smile at our griefs, were not angels too
+wise to smile at them?
+
+So beset, the child fled into the tower of his own soul, and raised
+the drawbridge. He threw out a reserve, encysted in which he grew
+to maturity unaffected by the intercourses that modify the maturity
+of others into the thing we call a man. The encysted child
+developed until it reached years of virility, until those later
+Oxford days in which Hogg encountered it; then, bursting at once
+from its cyst and the university, it swam into a world not
+illegitimately perplexed by such a whim of the gods. It was, of
+course, only the completeness and duration of this seclusion--
+lasting from the gate of boyhood to the threshold of youth--which
+was peculiar to Shelley. Most poets, probably, like most saints,
+are prepared for their mission by an initial segregation, as the
+seed is buried to germinate: before they can utter the oracle of
+poetry, they must first be divided from the body of men. It is the
+severed head that makes the seraph.
+
+Shelley's life frequently exhibits in him the magnified child. It
+is seen in his fondness for apparently futile amusements, such as
+the sailing of paper boats. This was, in the truest sense of the
+word, child-like; not, as it is frequently called and considered,
+childish. That is to say, it was not a mindless triviality, but the
+genuine child's power of investing little things with imaginative
+interest; the same power, though differently devoted, which produced
+much of his poetry. Very possibly in the paper boat he saw the
+magic bark of Laon and Cythna, or
+
+
+That thinnest boat
+In which the mother of the months is borne
+By ebbing night into her western cave.
+
+
+In fact, if you mark how favourite an idea, under varying forms, is
+this in his verse, you will perceive that all the charmed boats
+which glide down the stream of his poetry are but glorified
+resurrections of the little paper argosies which trembled down the
+Isis.
+
+And the child appeared no less often in Shelley the philosopher than
+in Shelley the idler. It is seen in his repellent no less than in
+his amiable weaknesses; in the unteachable folly of a love that made
+its goal its starting-point, and firmly expected spiritual rest from
+each new divinity, though it had found none from the divinities
+antecedent. For we are clear that this was no mere straying of
+sensual appetite, but a straying, strange and deplorable, of the
+spirit; that (contrary to what Mr. Coventry Patmore has said) he
+left a woman not because he was tired of her arms, but because he
+was tired of her soul. When he found Mary Shelley wanting, he seems
+to have fallen into the mistake of Wordsworth, who complained in a
+charming piece of unreasonableness that his wife's love, which had
+been a fountain, was now only a well:
+
+
+Such change, and at the very door
+Of my fond heart, hath made me poor.
+
+
+Wordsworth probably learned, what Shelley was incapable of learning,
+that love can never permanently be a fountain. A living poet, in an
+article {6} which you almost fear to breathe upon lest you should
+flutter some of the frail pastel-like bloom, has said the thing:
+"Love itself has tidal moments, lapses and flows due to the metrical
+rule of the interior heart." Elementary reason should proclaim this
+true. Love is an affection, its display an emotion: love is the
+air, its display is the wind. An affection may be constant; an
+emotion can no more be constant than the wind can constantly blow.
+All, therefore, that a man can reasonably ask of his wife is that
+her love should be indeed a well. A well; but a Bethesda-well, into
+which from time to time the angel of tenderness descends to trouble
+the waters for the healing of the beloved. Such a love Shelley's
+second wife appears unquestionably to have given him. Nay, she was
+content that he should veer while she remained true; she companioned
+him intellectually, shared his views, entered into his aspirations,
+and yet--yet, even at the date of Epipsychidion the foolish child,
+her husband, assigned her the part of moon to Emilia Viviani's sun,
+and lamented that he was barred from final, certain, irreversible
+happiness by a cold and callous society. Yet few poets were so
+mated before, and no poet was so mated afterwards, until Browning
+stooped and picked up a fair-coined soul that lay rusting in a pool
+of tears.
+
+In truth, his very unhappiness and discontent with life, in so far
+as it was not the inevitable penalty of the ethical anarch, can only
+be ascribed to this same childlike irrationality--though in such a
+form it is irrationality hardly peculiar to Shelley. Pity, if you
+will, his spiritual ruins and the neglected early training which was
+largely their cause; but the pity due to his outward circumstances
+has been strangely exaggerated. The obloquy from which he suffered
+he deliberately and wantonly courted. For the rest, his lot was one
+that many a young poet might envy. He had faithful friends, a
+faithful wife, an income small but assured. Poverty never dictated
+to his pen; the designs on his bright imagination were never etched
+by the sharp fumes of necessity.
+
+If, as has chanced to others--as chanced, for example, to Mangan--
+outcast from home, health and hope, with a charred past and a
+bleared future, an anchorite without detachment and self-cloistered
+without self-sufficingness, deposed from a world which he had not
+abdicated, pierced with thorns which formed no crown, a poet
+hopeless of the bays and a martyr hopeless of the palm, a land
+cursed against the dews of love, an exile banned and proscribed even
+from the innocent arms of childhood--he were burning helpless at the
+stake of his unquenchable heart, then he might have been
+inconsolable, then might he have cast the gorge at life, then have
+cowered in the darkening chamber of his being, tapestried with
+mouldering hopes, and hearkened to the winds that swept across the
+illimitable wastes of death. But no such hapless lot was Shelley's
+as that of his own contemporaries--Keats, half chewed in the jaws of
+London and spit dying on to Italy; de Quincey, who, if he escaped,
+escaped rent and maimed from those cruel jaws; Coleridge, whom they
+dully mumbled for the major portion of his life. Shelley had
+competence, poetry, love; yet he wailed that he could lie down like
+a tired child and weep away his life of care. Is it ever so with
+you, sad brother; is it ever so with me? and is there no drinking of
+pearls except they be dissolved in biting tears? "Which of us has
+his desire, or having it is satisfied?"
+
+It is true that he shared the fate of nearly all the great poets
+contemporary with him, in being unappreciated. Like them, he
+suffered from critics who were for ever shearing the wild tresses of
+poetry between rusty rules, who could never see a literary bough
+project beyond the trim level of its day but they must lop it with a
+crooked criticism, who kept indomitably planting in the defile of
+fame the "established canons" that had been spiked by poet after
+poet. But we decline to believe that a singer of Shelley's calibre
+could be seriously grieved by want of vogue. Not that we suppose
+him to have found consolation in that senseless superstition, "the
+applause of posterity." Posterity! posterity which goes to Rome,
+weeps large-sized tears, carves beautiful inscriptions over the tomb
+of Keats; and the worm must wriggle her curtsey to it all, since the
+dead boy, wherever he be, has quite other gear to tend. Never a
+bone less dry for all the tears!
+
+A poet must to some extent be a chameleon and feed on air. But it
+need not be the musty breath of the multitude. He can find his
+needful support in the judgement of those whose judgement he knows
+valuable, and such support Shelley had:
+
+
+La gloire
+Ne compte pas toujours les voix;
+Elle les pese quelquefois.
+
+
+Yet if this might be needful to him as support, neither this, nor
+the applause of the present, nor the applause of posterity, could
+have been needful to him as motive: the one all-sufficing motive
+for a great poet's singing is that expressed by Keats:
+
+
+I was taught in Paradise
+To ease my breast of melodies.
+
+
+Precisely so. The overcharged breast can find no ease but in
+suckling the baby-song. No enmity of outward circumstances,
+therefore, but his own nature, was responsible for Shelley's doom.
+
+A being with so much about it of childlike unreasonableness, and yet
+withal so much of the beautiful attraction luminous in a child's
+sweet unreasonableness, would seem fore-fated by its very essence to
+the transience of the bubble and the rainbow, of all things filmy
+and fair. Did some shadow of this destiny bear part in his sadness?
+Certain it is that, by a curious chance, he himself in Julian and
+Maddalo jestingly foretold the manner of his end. "O ho! You talk
+as in years past," said Maddalo (Byron) to Julian (Shelley); "If you
+can't swim, Beware of Providence." Did no unearthly dixisti sound
+in his ears as he wrote it? But a brief while, and Shelley, who
+could not swim, was weltering on the waters of Lerici. We know not
+how this may affect others, but over us it is a coincidence which
+has long tyrannised with an absorbing inveteracy of impression
+(strengthened rather than diminished by the contrast between the
+levity of the utterance and its fatal fulfilment)--thus to behold,
+heralding itself in warning mockery through the very lips of its
+predestined victim, the Doom upon whose breath his locks were
+lifting along the coasts of Campania. The death which he had
+prophesied came upon him, and Spezzia enrolled another name among
+the mournful Marcelli of our tongue; Venetian glasses which foamed
+and burst before the poisoned wine of life had risen to their brims.
+
+
+Coming to Shelley's poetry, we peep over the wild mask of
+revolutionary metaphysics, and we see the winsome face of the child.
+Perhaps none of his poems is more purely and typically Shelleian
+than The Cloud, and it is interesting to note how essentially it
+springs from the faculty of make-believe. The same thing is
+conspicuous, though less purely conspicuous, throughout his singing;
+it is the child's faculty of make-believe raised to the nth power.
+He is still at play, save only that his play is such as manhood
+stops to watch, and his playthings are those which the gods give
+their children. The universe is his box of toys. He dabbles his
+fingers in the day-fall. He is gold-dusty with tumbling amidst the
+stars. He makes bright mischief with the moon. The meteors nuzzle
+their noses in his hand. He teases into growling the kennelled
+thunder, and laughs at the shaking of its fiery chain. He dances in
+and out of the gates of heaven: its floor is littered with his
+broken fancies. He runs wild over the fields of ether. He chases
+the rolling world. He gets between the feet of the horses of the
+sun. He stands in the lap of patient Nature and twines her loosened
+tresses after a hundred wilful fashions, to see how she will look
+nicest in his song.
+
+This it was which, in spite of his essentially modern character as a
+singer, qualified Shelley to be the poet of Prometheus Unbound, for
+it made him, in the truest sense of the word, a mythological poet.
+This childlike quality assimilated him to the childlike peoples
+among whom mythologies have their rise. Those Nature myths which,
+according to many, are the basis of all mythology, are likewise the
+very basis of Shelley's poetry. The lark that is the gossip of
+heaven, the winds that pluck the grey from the beards of the
+billows, the clouds that are snorted from the sea's broad nostril,
+all the elemental spirits of Nature, take from his verse perpetual
+incarnation and reincarnation, pass in a thousand glorious
+transmigrations through the radiant forms of his imagery.
+
+Thus, but not in the Wordsworthian sense, he is a veritable poet of
+Nature. For with Nature the Wordsworthians will admit no tampering:
+they exact the direct interpretative reproduction of her; that the
+poet should follow her as a mistress, not use her as a handmaid. To
+such following of Nature, Shelley felt no call. He saw in her not a
+picture set for his copying, but a palette set for his brush; not a
+habitation prepared for his inhabiting, but a Coliseum whence he
+might quarry stones for his own palaces. Even in his descriptive
+passages the dream-character of his scenery is notorious; it is not
+the clear, recognisable scenery of Wordsworth, but a landscape that
+hovers athwart the heat and haze arising from his crackling
+fantasies. The materials for such visionary Edens have evidently
+been accumulated from direct experience, but they are recomposed by
+him into such scenes as never had mortal eye beheld. "Don't you
+wish you had?" as Turner said. The one justification for classing
+Shelley with the Lake poet is that he loved Nature with a love even
+more passionate, though perhaps less profound. Wordsworth's
+Nightingale and Stockdove sums up the contrast between the two, as
+though it had been written for such a purpose. Shelley is the
+"creature of ebullient heart," who
+
+
+Sings as if the god of wine
+Had helped him to a valentine.
+
+
+Wordsworth's is the
+
+
+- Love with quiet blending,
+Slow to begin and never ending,
+
+
+the "serious faith and inward glee."
+
+But if Shelley, instead of culling Nature, crossed with its pollen
+the blossoms of his own soul, that Babylonian garden is his
+marvellous and best apology. For astounding figurative opulence he
+yields only to Shakespeare, and even to Shakespeare not in absolute
+fecundity but in images. The sources of his figurative wealth are
+specialised, sources of Shakespeare's are universal. It would have
+been as conscious an effort for him to speak without figure as it is
+for most men to speak with figure. Suspended in the dripping well
+of his imagination the commonest object becomes encrusted with
+imagery. Herein again he deviates from the true Nature poet, the
+normal Wordsworth type of Nature poet: imagery was to him not a
+mere means of expression, not even a mere means of adornment; it was
+a delight for its own sake.
+
+And herein we find the trail by which we would classify him. He
+belongs to a school of which not impossibly he may hardly have read
+a line--the Metaphysical School. To a large extent he IS what the
+Metaphysical School should have been. That school was a certain
+kind of poetry trying for a range. Shelley is the range found.
+Crashaw and Shelley sprang from the same seed; but in the one case
+the seed was choked with thorns, in the other case it fell on good
+ground. The Metaphysical School was in its direct results an
+abortive movement, though indirectly much came of it--for Dryden
+came of it. Dryden, to a greater extent than is (we imagine)
+generally perceived, was Cowley systematised; and Cowley, who sank
+into the arms of Dryden, rose from the lap of Donne.
+
+But the movement was so abortive that few will thank us for
+connecting with it the name of Shelley. This is because to most
+people the Metaphysical School means Donne, whereas it ought to mean
+Crashaw. We judge the direction of a development by its highest
+form, though that form may have been produced but once, and produced
+imperfectly. Now the highest product of the Metaphysical School was
+Crashaw, and Crashaw was a Shelley manque; he never reached the
+Promised Land, but he had fervid visions of it. The Metaphysical
+School, like Shelley, loved imagery for its own sake: and how
+beautiful a thing the frank toying with imagery may be, let The
+Skylark and The Cloud witness. It is only evil when the poet, on
+the straight way to a fixed object, lags continually from the path
+to play. This is commendable neither in poet nor errand-boy. The
+Metaphysical School failed, not because it toyed with imagery, but
+because it toyed with it frostily. To sport with the tangles of
+Neaera's hair may be trivial idleness or caressing tenderness,
+exactly as your relation to Neaera is that of heartless gallantry or
+of love. So you may toy with imagery in mere intellectual
+ingenuity, and then you might as well go write acrostics: or you
+may toy with it in raptures, and then you may write a Sensitive
+Plant. In fact, the Metaphysical poets when they went astray cannot
+be said to have done anything so dainty as is implied by TOYING with
+imagery. They cut it into shapes with a pair of scissors. From all
+such danger Shelley was saved by his passionate spontaneity. No
+trappings are too splendid for the swift steeds of sunrise. His
+sword-hilt may be rough with jewels, but it is the hilt of an
+Excalibur. His thoughts scorch through all the folds of expression.
+His cloth of gold bursts at the flexures, and shows the naked
+poetry.
+
+
+It is this gift of not merely embodying but apprehending everything
+in figure which co-operates towards creating his rarest
+characteristics, so almost preternaturally developed in no other
+poet, namely, his well-known power to condense the most hydrogenic
+abstraction. Science can now educe threads of such exquisite
+tenuity that only the feet of the tiniest infant-spiders can ascend
+them; but up the filmiest insubstantiality Shelley runs with agile
+ease. To him, in truth, nothing is abstract. The dustiest
+abstractions
+
+
+Start, and tremble under his feet,
+And blossom in purple and red.
+
+
+The coldest moon of an idea rises haloed through his vaporous
+imagination. The dimmest-sparked chip of a conception blazes and
+scintillates in the subtile oxygen of his mind. The most wrinkled
+AEson of an abstruseness leaps rosy out of his bubbling genius. In
+a more intensified signification than it is probable that
+Shakespeare dreamed of, Shelley gives to airy nothing a local
+habitation and a name. Here afresh he touches the Metaphysical
+School, whose very title was drawn from this habitual pursuit of
+abstractions, and who failed in that pursuit from the one cause
+omnipresent with them, because in all their poetic smithy they had
+left never a place for a forge. They laid their fancies chill on
+the anvil. Crashaw, indeed, partially anticipated Shelley's
+success, and yet further did a later poet, so much further that we
+find it difficult to understand why a generation that worships
+Shelley should be reviving Gray, yet almost forget the name of
+Collins. The generality of readers, when they know him at all,
+usually know him by his Ode on the Passions. In this, despite its
+beauty, there is still a soupcon of formalism, a lingering trace of
+powder from the eighteenth century periwig, dimming the bright locks
+of poetry. Only the literary student reads that little masterpiece,
+the Ode to Evening, which sometimes heralds the Shelleian strain,
+while other passages are the sole things in the language comparable
+to the miniatures of Il Penseroso. Crashaw, Collins, Shelley--three
+ricochets of the one pebble, three jets from three bounds of the one
+Pegasus! Collins's Pity, "with eyes of dewy light," is near of kin
+to Shelley's Sleep, "the filmy-eyed"; and the "shadowy tribes of
+mind" are the lineal progenitors of "Thought's crowned powers."
+This, however, is personification, wherein both Collins and Shelley
+build on Spenser: the dizzying achievement to which the modern poet
+carried personification accounts for but a moiety, if a large
+moiety, of his vivifying power over abstractions. Take the passage
+(already alluded to) in that glorious chorus telling how the Hours
+come
+
+
+From the temples high
+Of man's ear and eye
+Roofed over Sculpture and Poesy,
+
+* * * * *
+
+From those skiey towers
+Where Thought's crowned powers
+Sit watching your dance, ye happy Hours!
+Our feet now, every palm,
+Are sandalled with calm,
+And the dew of our wings is a rain of balm;
+And beyond our eyes
+The human love lies
+Which makes all it gazes on Paradise.
+
+
+Any partial explanation will break in our hands before it reaches
+the root of such a power. The root, we take it, is this. He had an
+instinctive perception (immense in range and fertility, astonishing
+for its delicate intuition) of the underlying analogies the secret
+subterranean passages, between matter and soul; the chromatic
+scales, whereat we dimly guess, by which the Almighty modulates
+through all the keys of creation. Because, the more we consider it,
+the more likely does it appear that Nature is but an imperfect
+actress, whose constant changes of dress never change her manner and
+method, who is the same in all her parts.
+
+To Shelley's ethereal vision the most rarified mental or spiritual
+music traced its beautiful corresponding forms on the sand of
+outward things. He stood thus at the very junction-lines of the
+visible and invisible, and could shift the points as he willed. His
+thoughts became a mounted infantry, passing with baffling swiftness
+from horse to foot or foot to horse. He could express as he listed
+the material and the immaterial in terms of each other. Never has a
+poet in the past rivalled him as regards this gift, and hardly will
+any poet rival him as regards it in the future: men are like first
+to see the promised doom lay its hand on the tree of heaven and
+shake down the golden leaves. {7}
+
+The finest specimens of this faculty are probably to be sought in
+that Shelleian treasury, Prometheus Unbound. It is unquestionably
+the greatest and most prodigal exhibition of Shelley's powers, this
+amazing lyric world, where immortal clarities sigh past in the
+perfumes of the blossoms, populate the breathings of the breeze,
+throng and twinkle in the leaves that twirl upon the bough; where
+the very grass is all a-rustle with lovely spirit-things, and a
+weeping mist of music fills the air. The final scenes especially
+are such a Bacchic reel and rout and revelry of beauty as leaves one
+staggered and giddy; poetry is spilt like wine, music runs to
+drunken waste. The choruses sweep down the wind, tirelessly, flight
+after flight, till the breathless soul almost cries for respite from
+the unrolling splendours. Yet these scenes, so wonderful from a
+purely poetical standpoint that no one could wish them away, are (to
+our humble thinking) nevertheless the artistic error of the poem.
+Abstractedly, the development of Shelley's idea required that he
+should show the earthly paradise which was to follow the fall of
+Zeus. But dramatically with that fall the action ceases, and the
+drama should have ceased with it. A final chorus, or choral series,
+of rejoicings (such as does ultimately end the drama where
+Prometheus appears on the scene) would have been legitimate enough.
+Instead, however, the bewildered reader finds the drama unfolding
+itself through scene after scene which leaves the action precisely
+where it found it, because there is no longer an action to advance.
+It is as if the choral finale of an opera were prolonged through two
+acts.
+
+We have, nevertheless, called Prometheus Shelley's greatest poem
+because it is the most comprehensive storehouse of his power. Were
+we asked to name the most PERFECT among his longer efforts, we
+should name the poem in which he lamented Keats: under the shed
+petals of his lovely fancy giving the slain bird a silken burial.
+Seldom is the death of a poet mourned in true poetry. Not often is
+the singer coffined in laurel-wood. Among the very few exceptions
+to such a rule, the greatest is Adonais. In the English language
+only Lycidas competes with it; and when we prefer Adonais to
+Lycidas, we are following the precedent set in the case of Cicero:
+Adonais is the longer. As regards command over abstraction, it is
+no less characteristically Shelleian than Prometheus. It is
+throughout a series of abstractions vitalised with daring
+exquisiteness, from Morning who sought:
+
+
+Her eastern watch-tower, and her hair unbound,
+Wet with the tears which should adorn the ground,
+
+
+and who
+
+
+Dimmed the aerial eyes that kindle day,
+
+
+to the Dreams that were the flock of the dead shepherd, the Dreams
+
+
+Whom near the living streams
+Of his young spirit he fed; and whom he taught
+The love that was its music;
+
+
+of whom one sees, as she hangs mourning over him,
+
+
+Upon the silken fringe of his faint eyes,
+Like dew upon a sleeping flower, there lies
+A tear some dream has loosened from his brain!
+Lost angel of a ruined Paradise!
+She knew not 'twas her own; as with no stain
+She faded like a cloud which hath outwept its rain.
+
+
+In the solar spectrum, beyond the extreme red and extreme violet
+rays, are whole series of colours, demonstrable, but imperceptible
+to gross human vision. Such writing as this we have quoted renders
+visible the invisibilities of imaginative colour.
+
+One thing prevents Adonais from being ideally perfect: its lack of
+Christian hope. Yet we remember well the writer of a popular memoir
+on Keats proposing as "the best consolation for the mind pained by
+this sad record" Shelley's inexpressibly sad exposition of
+Pantheistic immortality:
+
+
+He is a portion of the loveliness
+Which once he made more lovely, etc.
+
+
+What desolation can it be that discerns comfort in this hope, whose
+wan countenance is as the countenance of a despair? What deepest
+depth of agony is it that finds consolation in this immortality: an
+immortality which thrusts you into death, the maw of Nature, that
+your dissolved elements may circulate through her veins?
+
+Yet such, the poet tells me, is my sole balm for the hurts of life.
+I am as the vocal breath floating from an organ. I too shall fade
+on the winds, a cadence soon forgotten. So I dissolve and die, and
+am lost in the ears of men: the particles of my being twine in
+newer melodies, and from my one death arise a hundred lives. Why,
+through the thin partition of this consolation Pantheism can hear
+the groans of its neighbour, Pessimism. Better almost the black
+resignation which the fatalist draws from his own hopelessness, from
+the fierce kisses of misery that hiss against his tears.
+
+With some gleams, it is true, of more than mock solace, Adonais is
+lighted; but they are obtained by implicitly assuming the personal
+immortality which the poem explicitly denies; as when, for instance,
+to greet the dead youth,
+
+
+The inheritors of unfulfilled renown [thought
+Rose from their thrones, built beyond mortal
+Far in the unapparent.
+
+
+And again the final stanza of the poem:
+
+
+The breath whose might I have invoked in song
+Descends on me; my spirit's bark is driven
+Far from the shore, far from the trembling throng
+Whose sails were never to the tempest riven;
+The massy earth, the sphered skies are given:
+I am borne darkly, fearfully afar;
+Whilst, burning through the inmost veil of heaven,
+The soul of Adonais like a star
+Beacons from the abode where the eternal are.
+
+
+The Soul of Adonais?--Adonais, who is but
+
+
+A portion of the loveliness
+Which once he made more lovely.
+
+
+After all, to finish where we began, perhaps the poems on which the
+lover of Shelley leans most lovingly, which he has oftenest in his
+mind, which best represent Shelley to him and which he instinctively
+reverts to when Shelley's name is mentioned are some of the shorter
+poems and detached lyrics. Here Shelley forgets for a while all
+that ever makes his verse turbid; forgets that he is anything but a
+poet, forgets sometimes that he is anything but a child; lies back
+in his skiff, and looks at the clouds. He plays truant from earth,
+slips through the wicket of fancy into heaven's meadow, and goes
+gathering stars. Here we have that absolute virgin-gold of song
+which is the scarcest among human products, and for which we can go
+to but three poets--Coleridge, Shelley, Chopin, {8} and perhaps we
+should add Keats. Christabel and Kubla-Khan; The Skylark, The
+Cloud, and The Sensitive Plant (in its first two parts). The Eve of
+Saint Agnes and The Nightingale; certain of the Nocturnes;--these
+things make very quintessentialised loveliness. It is attar of
+poetry.
+
+Remark, as a thing worth remarking, that, although Shelley's diction
+is at other times singularly rich, it ceases in these poems to be
+rich, or to obtrude itself at all; it is imperceptible; his Muse has
+become a veritable Echo, whose body has dissolved from about her
+voice. Indeed, when his diction is richest, nevertheless the poetry
+so dominates the expression that we feel the latter only as an
+atmosphere until we are satiated with the former; then we discover
+with surprise to how imperial a vesture we had been blinded by
+gazing on the face of his song. A lesson, this, deserving to be
+conned by a generation so opposite in tendency as our own: a lesson
+that in poetry, as in the Kingdom of God, we should not take thought
+too greatly wherewith we shall be clothed, but seek first {9} the
+spirit, and all these things will be added unto us.
+
+On the marvellous music of Shelley's verse we need not dwell, except
+to note that he avoids that metronomic beat of rhythm which Edgar
+Poe introduced into modern lyric measures, as Pope introduced it
+into the rhyming heroics of his day. Our varied metres are becoming
+as painfully over-polished as Pope's one metre. Shelley could at
+need sacrifice smoothness to fitness. He could write an anapaest
+that would send Mr. Swinburne into strong shudders (e.g., "stream
+did glide") when he instinctively felt that by so forgoing the more
+obvious music of melody he would better secure the higher music of
+harmony. If we have to add that in other ways he was far from
+escaping the defects of his merits, and would sometimes have to
+acknowledge that his Nilotic flood too often overflowed its banks,
+what is this but saying that he died young?
+
+
+It may be thought that in our casual comments on Shelley's life we
+have been blind to its evil side. That, however, is not the case.
+We see clearly that he committed grave sins, and one cruel crime;
+but we remember also that he was an Atheist from his boyhood; we
+reflect how gross must have been the moral neglect in the training
+of a child who COULD be an Atheist from his boyhood: and we decline
+to judge so unhappy a being by the rules which we should apply to a
+Catholic. It seems to us that Shelley was struggling--blindly,
+weakly, stumblingly, but still struggling--towards higher things.
+His Pantheism is an indication of it. Pantheism is a half-way
+house, and marks ascent or descent according to the direction from
+which it is approached. Now Shelley came to it from absolute
+Atheism; therefore in his case it meant rise. Again, his poetry
+alone would lead us to the same conclusion, for we do not believe
+that a truly corrupted spirit can write consistently ethereal
+poetry. We should believe in nothing, if we believed that, for it
+would be the consecration of a lie. Poetry is a thermometer: by
+taking its average height you can estimate the normal temperature of
+its writer's mind. The devil can do many things. But the devil
+cannot write poetry. He may mar a poet, but he cannot make a poet.
+Among all the temptations wherewith he tempted St. Anthony, though
+we have often seen it stated that he howled, we have never seen it
+stated that he sang.
+
+Shelley's anarchic principles were as a rule held by him with some
+misdirected view to truth. He disbelieved in kings. And is it not
+a mere fact--regret it if you will--that in all European countries,
+except two, monarchs are a mere survival, the obsolete buttons on
+the coat-tails of rule, which serve no purpose but to be continually
+coming off? It is a miserable thing to note how every little Balkan
+State, having obtained liberty (save the mark!) by Act of Congress,
+straightway proceeds to secure the service of a professional king.
+These gentlemen are plentiful in Europe. They are the "noble
+Chairmen" who lend their names for a consideration to any
+enterprising company which may be speculating in Liberty. When we
+see these things, we revert to the old lines in which Persius tells
+how you cannot turn Dama into a freeman by twirling him round your
+finger and calling him Marcus Dama.
+
+Again, Shelley desired a religion of humanity, and that meant, to
+him, a religion for humanity, a religion which, unlike the spectral
+Christianity about him, should permeate and regulate the whole
+organisation of men. And the feeling is one with which a Catholic
+must sympathise, in an age when--if we may say so without
+irreverence--the Almighty has been made a constitutional Deity, with
+certain state-grants of worship, but no influence over political
+affairs. In these matters his aims were generous, if his methods
+were perniciously mistaken. In his theory of Free Love alone,
+borrowed like the rest from the Revolution, his aim was as
+mischievous as his method. At the same time he was at least
+logical. His theory was repulsive, but comprehensible. Whereas
+from our present via media--facilitation of divorce--can only result
+the era when the young lady in reduced circumstances will no longer
+turn governess but will be open to engagement as wife at a
+reasonable stipend.
+
+We spoke of the purity of Shelley's poetry. We know of but three
+passages to which exception can be taken. One is happily hidden
+under a heap of Shelleian rubbish. Another is offensive, because it
+presents his theory of Free Love in its most odious form. The third
+is very much a matter, we think, for the individual conscience.
+Compare with this the genuinely corrupt Byron, through the cracks
+and fissures of whose heaving versification steam up perpetually the
+sulphurous vapours from his central iniquity. We cannot credit that
+any Christian ever had his faith shaken through reading Shelley,
+unless his faith were shaken before he read Shelley. Is any safely
+havened bark likely to slip its cable, and make for a flag planted
+on the very reef where the planter himself was wrecked?
+
+
+Why indeed (one is tempted to ask in concluding) should it be that
+the poets who have written for us the poetry richest in skiey grain,
+most free from admixture with the duller things of earth--the
+Shelleys, the Coleridges, the Keats--are the very poets whose lives
+are among the saddest records in literature? Is it that (by some
+subtile mystery of analogy) sorrow, passion, and fantasy are
+indissolubly connected, like water, fire, and cloud; that as from
+sun and dew are born the vapours, so from fire and tears ascend the
+"visions of aerial joy"; that the harvest waves richest over the
+battlefields of the soul; that the heart, like the earth, smells
+sweetest after rain; that the spell on which depend such necromantic
+castles is some spirit of pain charm-poisoned at their base? {10}
+Such a poet, it may be, mists with sighs the window of his life
+until the tears run down it; then some air of searching poetry, like
+an air of searching frost, turns it to a crystal wonder. The god of
+golden song is the god, too, of the golden sun; so peradventure
+song-light is like sunlight, and darkens the countenance of the
+soul. Perhaps the rays are to the stars what thorns are to the
+flowers; and so the poet, after wandering over heaven, returns with
+bleeding feet. Less tragic in its merely temporal aspect than the
+life of Keats or Coleridge, the life of Shelley in its moral aspect
+is, perhaps, more tragical than that of either; his dying seems a
+myth, a figure of his living; the material shipwreck a figure of the
+immaterial.
+
+Enchanted child, born into a world unchildlike; spoiled darling of
+Nature, playmate of her elemental daughters; "pard-like spirit,
+beautiful and swift," laired amidst the burning fastnesses of his
+own fervid mind; bold foot along the verges of precipitous dream;
+light leaper from crag to crag of inaccessible fancies; towering
+Genius, whose soul rose like a ladder between heaven and earth with
+the angels of song ascending and descending it;--he is shrunken into
+the little vessel of death, and sealed with the unshatterable seal
+of doom, and cast down deep below the rolling tides of Time. Mighty
+meat for little guests, when the heart of Shelley was laid in the
+cemetery of Caius Cestius! Beauty, music, sweetness, tears--the
+mouth of the worm has fed of them all. Into that sacred bridal-
+gloom of death where he holds his nuptials with eternity let not our
+rash speculations follow him. Let us hope rather that as, amidst
+material nature, where our dull eyes see only ruin, the finer eye of
+science has discovered life in putridity and vigour in decay,--
+seeing dissolution even and disintegration, which in the mouth of
+man symbolise disorder, to be in the works of God undeviating order,
+and the manner of our corruption to be no less wonderful than the
+manner of our health,--so, amidst the supernatural universe, some
+tender undreamed surprise of life in doom awaited that wild nature,
+which, worn by warfare with itself, its Maker, and all the world,
+now
+
+
+Sleeps, and never palates more the dug,
+The beggar's nurse, and Caesar's.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{1} That is to say, taken as the general animating spirit of the
+Fine Arts.
+
+{2} The Abbe Bareille was not, of course, responsible for
+Savonarola's taste, only for thus endorsing it.
+
+{3} We mean, of course, the hymn, "I rise from dreams of time."
+
+{4} We are a little surprised at the fact, because so many
+Victorian poets are, or have been, prose-writers as well. Now,
+according to our theory, the practice of prose should maintain fresh
+and comprehensive a poet's diction, should save him from falling
+into the hands of an exclusive coterie of poetic words. It should
+react upon his metrical vocabulary to its beneficial expansion, by
+taking him outside his aristocratic circle of language, and keeping
+him in touch with the great commonalty, the proletariat of speech.
+For it is with words as with men: constant intermarriage within the
+limits of a patrician clan begets effete refinement; and to
+reinvigorate the stock, its veins must be replenished from hardy
+plebeian blood.
+
+{5} Wordsworth's adaptation of it, however, is true. Men are not
+"children of a larger growth," but the child IS father of the man,
+since the parent is only partially reproduced in his offspring.
+
+{6} The Rhythm of Life, by Alice Meynell.
+
+{7} "And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig-
+tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind"
+(Rev. vi, 13).
+
+{8} Such analogies between master in sister-arts are often
+interesting. In some respects, is not Brahms the Browning of music?
+
+{9} Seek FIRST, not seek ONLY.
+
+{10} We hope that we need not refer the reader, for the methods of
+magic architecture, to Ariosto and that Atlas among enchanters,
+Beckford.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Shelley, by Francis Thompson**
+
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