"A well-bred
man,"
says Sir
James Puckle,
in his "Gray Cap for a Green Head," "will never give himself the
liberty
to speak ill of women." We emphasize the "man." Setting aside, for the
present, certain rare commentators and compilers of the species ———
creatures neither precisely men, women, nor Mary Wollstonecraft's —
setting
these aside as unclassifiable, we may observe that the race of critics
are masculine — men. With the exception, perhaps, of Mrs. Anne Royal,
we can call to mind no female who has occupied, even temporarily, the
Zoilus
throne. And this, the Salic law, is an evil; for the inherent chivalry
of the critical
man renders it not only an unpleasant task to
him
"to speak ill of a woman," (and a woman and her book are identical,)
but
an almost impossible task not to laud her
ad nauseam. In
general,
therefore, it is the unhappy lot of the authoress to be subjected, time
after time, to the downright degradation of mere puffery. On her own
side
of the Atlantic, Miss Barrett has indeed, in one instance at least,
escaped
the infliction of this lamentable contumely and wrong; but if she had
been
really solicitous of its infliction in America, she could not have
adopted
a more effectual plan than that of saying a few words about "the great
American people," in an American edition of her work, published under
the
superintendence of an American author.
† Of the
innumerable "native"
notices
of "The Drama of Exile," which have come under our
[page 402:]
observation, we can call to mind
not one in which there is any
thing
more remarkable than the critic's dogged determination to find nothing
barren, from Beersheba to Dan. Another in the "Democratic Review" has
proceeded
so far, it is true, as to venture a
very delicate insinuation
to
the effect that the poetess "will not fail to speak her mind
though
it bring upon her a bad rhyme;" beyond this, nobody has proceeded:
and as for the elaborate paper in the new Whig Monthly, all that any
body
can say or think, and all that Miss Barrett can
feel respecting
it is, that it is an eulogy as well written as it is an insult well
intended.
Now of all the friends of the fair author, we doubt whether one exists,
with more profound — with more enthusiastic reverence and admiration of
her genius, than the writer of these words. And it is for this very
reason,
beyond all others, that he intends to speak of her
the truth.
Our
chief regret is, nevertheless, that the limits of this "Journal" will
preclude
the possibility of our speaking this truth so fully, and so much in
detail,
as we could wish. By far the most valuable criticism that we, or that
any
one could give, of the volumes now lying before us, would be the
quotation
of three fourths of their contents. But we have this advantage — that
the work has been long published, and almost universally read — and
thus,
in some measure, we may proceed, concisely, as if the text of our
context,
were an understood thing.
In her preface to this, the "American
edition" of
her late poems, Miss Barrett, speaking of the Drama of Exile, says: —
"I decided on publishing it, after considerable hesitation and doubt.
Its
subject rather fastened on me than was chosen; and the form,
approaching
the model of the Greek tragedy, shaped itself under my hand rather by
force
of pleasure than of design. But when the compositional excitement had
subsided,
I felt afraid of my position. My own object was the new and strange
experiment
of the fallen Humanity, as it went forth from Paradise into the
Wilderness,
with a peculiar reference to Eve's allotted grief, which, considering
that
self-sacrifice belonged to her womanhood, and the consciousness of
being
the organ of the Fall to her offence, appeared to me imperfectly
apprehended
hitherto, and more expressible by a woman than by a man." In this
abstract
announcement of the theme, it is difficult to understand the ground of
the poet's hesitation
[page 403:] to publish; for
the
theme in itself seems admirably adapted to the purposes of the closet
dram.
The poet, nevertheless very properly, conscious of failure — a failure
which occurs not in the general, but in the particular conception, and
which must be placed to the account of "the model of the Greek
tragedies."
The Greek tragedies
had and even
hare high merits;
but we
act wisely in now substituting for the external and typified human
sympathy
of the antique Chorus, a direct, internal, living and moving sympathy
itself;
and although AEschylus might have done service as "a model," to either
Euripides or Sophocles, yet were Sophocles and Euripides in London
to-day,
they would, perhaps, while granting a certain formless and shadowy
grandeur,
indulge a quiet smile at the shallowness and uncouthness of that Art,
which,
in the old amphitheatres, had beguiled them into applause of the Œdipus
at Colonos.
It would have been better for Miss
Barrett if, throwing
herself independently upon her own very extraordinary resources, and
forgetting
that a Greek had ever lived, she had involved her Eve in a series of
adventures
merely natural, or if not this, of adventures preternatural within the
limits of at least a conceivable relation — a relation of matter to
spirit
and spirit to matter, that should have left room for something like
palpable
action and comprehensible emotion — that should not have utterly
precluded
the development of that womanly character which is admitted as the
principal
object of the poem. As the case actually stands, it is only in a few
snatches
of verbal intercommunication with Adam and Lucifer, that we behold her
as a woman at all. For the rest, she is a mystical something or
nothing,
enwrapped in a fog of rhapsody about Transfiguration, and the Seed, and
the Bruising of the Heel, and other talk of a nature that no man ever
pretended
to understand in plain prose, and which, when solar-microscoped into
poetry
"upon the model of the Greek drama," is about as convincing as the
Egyptian
Lectures of Mr. Silk Buckingham — about as much to any purpose under
the
sun as the
hi presto! conjurations of Signor Blitz. What are
we
to make, for example, of dramatic colloquy such as this? — the words
are
those of a Chorus of Invisible Angels addressing Adam:
[page
404:]
Live, work on, O Earthy!
By the Actual's tension
Speed the arrow worthy
Of a pure ascension.
From the low earth round you
Reach the heights above you;
From the stripes that wound you
Seek the loves that love you!
God's divines" burneth plain
Through the crystal diaphane
Of our loves that love you.
Now we do not mean to assert that, by excessive
"tension"
of the intellect, a reader accustomed to the cant of the
transcendentalists
(or of those who degrade an ennobling philosophy by styling themselves
such) may not succeed in fitting from the passage quoted, and indeed
from
each of the thousand similar ones throughout the book, something that
shall
bear the aspect of an absolute idea — but we do mean to say first,
that,
in nine cases out of ten, the thought when dug out will be found very
poorly
to repay the labor of the digging; — for it is the nature of thought in
general, as it is the nature of some ores in particular, to be richest
when most superficial. And we do mean to say, secondly, that, in
nineteen
cases out of twenty, the reader will suffer the most valuable ore to
remain
unmined to all eternity, before he will be put to the trouble of
digging
for it one inch. And we do mean to assert, thirdly, that no reader is
to
be condemned for not putting himself to the trouble of digging even the
one inch; for no writer has the right to impose any such necessity upon
him. What is worth thinking is distinctly thought: what is distinctly
thought,
can and should be distinctly expressed, or should not be expressed at
all.
Nevertheless, there is no more appropriate opportunity than the present
for admitting and maintaining, at once, what has never before been
either
maintained or admitted — that there is a justifiable exception to the
rule
for which we contend. It is where the design is to convey the fantastic
— not
the obscure. To give the idea of the latter we need, as in general, the
most precise and definitive terms, and those who employ other terms but
confound obscurity of expression with the expression of obscurity. The
fantastic in itself, however, — phantasm — may be materially furthered
in
its development by the
quaint in phraseology: —
[page
405:] a proposition which any moralist may examine at his
leisure
for himself.
The "Drama of Exile" opens with a
very palpable
bull: — "Scene, the outer side of the gate of
Eden, shut fast with clouds" — [a
scene out of sight!] — "from the depth of which revolves the sword of
fire,
self-moved. A watch of innumerable angels rank above rank, slopes up
from
around it to the zenith: and the glare cast from their brightness and
from
the sword, extends many miles into the wilderness. Adam and Eve are
seen
in the distance, flying along the glare. The angel Gabriel and Lucifer
are beside the gate." — These are the "stage directions" which greet us
on the threshold of the book. We complain first of the bull: secondly,
of the blue-fire melo-dramatic aspect of the revolving sword; thirdly,
of the duplicate nature of the sword, which, if steel, and sufficiently
enflamed to do service in burning, would, perhaps, have been m no
temper
to cut; and on the other hand, if sufficiently cool to have an edge,
would
have accomplished little in the way of scorching a personage so well
accustomed
to fire and brimstone and all that, as we have very good reason to
believe
Lucifer was. We cannot help objecting, too, to the "innumerable
angels,"
as a force altogether disproportioned to the one enemy to be kept out:
— either
the self-moving sword itself, we think, or the angel Gabriel alone, or
five or six of the "innumerable" angels, would have sufficed to keep
the
devil (or is it Adam?) outside of the gate — which, after all, he might
not have been able to discover, on account of the clouds.
Far be it from us, however, to dwell
irreverently
on matters which have venerability in the faith or in the fancy of Miss
Barrett. We allude to these
niäiseries at all — found
here
in the very first paragraph of her poem, — simply by way of putting in
the clearest light the mass of inconsistency and antagonism in which
her
subject has inextricably involved her. She has made
allusion to
Milton, and no doubt felt secure in her theme (as a theme merely) when
she considered his "Paradise Lost." But even in Milton's own day, when
men had the habit of believing all things, the more nonsensical the
more
readily, and of worshipping, in blind acquiescence, the most
preposterous
of impossibilities — even
then. there
were not
wanting individuals
who would have read the
[page 406:] great epic
with
more : — , could it have been explained to their satisfaction, how ind
why it was, not only that a snake quoted Aristotle's ethics, and
behaved
otherwise pretty much as he pleased, but that bloody battles were
continually
being fought between bloodless "innumerable angels," that found no
inconvenience
m losing a wing one minute and a head the next, and if pounded up into
puff-paste late in the afternoon, were as good "innumerable angels" as
new the next morning, in time to be at
reveille roll-call: And
now — at
the present epoch — there are few people who do not occasionally
think.
This
is emphatically the thinking age; — indeed it may very well be
questioned
whether mankind ever substantially thought before. The fact is, if the
"Paradise Lost" were written to-day (assuming that it had never been
written
when it was), not even its eminent, although over-estimated merits,
would
counterbalance, either in the public view, or in the opinion of any
critic
at once intelligent and honest, the multitudinous incongruities which
are
part and parcel of its plot.
But in the plot of the drama of Miss
Barrett it is
something even worse than incongruity which affronts: — a continuous
mystical
strain of ill-fitting and exaggerated allegory — if, indeed, allegory
is
not much too respectable a term for it. We are called upon, for
example,
to sympathise in the whimsical woes of two Spirits, who, upspringing
from
the bowels of the earth, set immediately to bewailing their miseries in
jargon such as this:
I am the spirit of the harmless earth;
God spake me softly out among the stars,
As softly as a blessing of much worth —
And then his smile did follow unawares,
That all things, fashioned, so, for use and duty,
Might shine anointed with his chrism of beauty —
Yet I wail!
I drave on with the worlds exultingly,
Obliquely down the Godlight's gradual fall —
Individual aspect and complexity
Of gyratory orb and interval,
Lost in the fluent motion of delight
Toward the high ends of Being, beyond Sight —
Yet I wail!
Innumerable other spirits discourse successively
after
the same fashion, each ending every stanza of his lamentation with the
"yet I wail!" When at length they have fairly made an end, Eve
[page
407:] touches Adam upon the elbow, and hazards, also, the
profound
and pathetic observation — "Lo, Adam, they wail!" — which is nothing
more
than the simple truth — for they
do — and God deliver us from
any
such wailing again!
It is not our purpose, however, to
demonstrate what
every reader of these volumes will have readily seen self-demonstrated
— the
utter indefensibility of "The Drama of Exile," considered uniquely, as
a work of art. We have none of us to be told that a medley of
metaphysical
recitatives sung out of tune, at Adam and Eve, by all manner of
inconceivable
abstractions, is not exactly the best material for a poem. Still it may
very well happen that among this material there shall be individual
passages
of great beauty. But should any one doubt the possibility, let him be
satisfied
by a single extract such as follows:
On a mountain peak
Half sheathed in primal woods and glittering
In spasms of awful sunshine, at that hour
A lion couched, — part raised upon his paws,
With his calm massive face turned full on shine,
And his mane listening. When the ended curse
Left silence in the world, right suddenly
He sprang up rampant, and stood straight and stiff,
As if the new reality of death
Were dashed against his eyes, — and roared so
fierce,
(Such thick carnivorous passion in his throat
Tearing a passage through the wrath and fear) —
And roared so wild, and smote from all the hills
Such fast keen echoes crumbling down the vales
To distant silence, — that the forest beasts,
One after one, did mutter a response
In savage and in sorrowful complaint
Which trailed along the gorges.
There is an Homeric force here — a vivid
picturesqueness
in all men will appreciate and admire. It is, however, the longest
quotable
passage in the drama, not disfigured with blemishes of importance; —
although
there are many — very many passages of a far loftier order of
excellence,
so disfigured, and which, therefore, it would not suit our immediate e
to extract. The truth is, — and it may be as well mentioned at this
point
as elsewhere — that we are not to look in Miss Barrett's works for any
examples
of what has been occasionally termed "sustained effort;" for neither
are
there, in any of her poems, any long commendable
[page 408:]
paragraphs, nor are there any individual compositions which will bear
the
slightest examination as consistent Art-products. Her wild and
magnificent
genius seems to have contented itself with points — to have exhausted
itself
in flashes; — but it is the profusion — the unparalleled number and
close
propinquity of these points and flashes which render her book
one
flame, and justify us in calling her, unhesitatingly, the
greatest — the most
glorious of her sex.
The "Drama of Exile" calls for little
more, in the
way of comment, than what we have generally said. Its finest particular
feature is, perhaps, the rapture of Eve — rapture bursting through
despair — upon
discovering that she still possesses, in the unwavering love of Adam,
an
undreamed-of and priceless treasure. The poem ends, as it commences,
with
a bull. The last sentence gives us to understand that "there is a sound
through the silence, as of the falling tears of an angel." How there
can
be sound during silence, and how an audience are to distinguish, by
such
sound, angel tears from any other species of tears, it may be as well,
perhaps, not too particularly to inquire.
Next, in length, to the Drama, is
"The Vision of
Poets." We object to the didacticism of its design, which the poetess
thus
states: `'I have attempted to express here my view of the mission of
the
veritable poet — of the self-abnegation implied in it, of the uses of
sorrow
suffered in it, of the great work accomplished in it through suffering,
and of the duty and glory of what Balzac has beautifully and truly
called
'la patience angelique du genie.''' This "view" may
be correct,
but neither its correctness nor its falsity has anything to do with a
poem.
If a thesis is to be demonstrated, we need
prose for its
demonstration.
In this instance, so far as the allegorical instruction and
argumentation
are lost sight of, in the upper current — so far as the main admitted
intention
of the work is kept out of view — so far only is the work a poem, and
so
far only is the poem worth notice, or worthy of its author. Apart from
its poetical character, the composition is thoughtful, vivid,
epigrammatic,
and abundant in just observation — although the critical opinions
introduced
are not always our own. A reviewer in "Blackwood's Magazine," quoting
many
of these critical portraits, takes occasion to find fault with the
grammar
of this tristich:
[page 409:]
Here Æschylus — the women swooned
To see so awful when he frowned
As the Gods did — he standeth crowned.
"What on earth," says the critic, "are we to make of
the words 'the women swooned to see so awful' ? .... The syntax will
punish
future commentators as much as some of his own corrupt choruses." In
general,
we are happy to agree with this reviewer, whose decisions respecting
the
book are, upon the whole, so nearly coincident with ours, that we
hesitated,
through fear of repetition, to undertake a
critique at all,
until
we considered that we might say a very great deal in simply supplying
his
omissions; but he frequently errs through mere hurry, and never did he
err more singularly than at the point now in question. He evidently
supposes
that "awful" has been misused as an adverb and made referrible to "
women."
But not so; and although the construction of the passage is
unjustifiably
involute, its grammar is intact. Disentangling the construction, we
make
this evident at once: "Here AEschylus (he) standeth crowned, (whom) the
women swooned to see so awful, when he frowned as the Gods did." The
"he"
is excessive, and the "whom" is understood. Respecting the lines,
Euripides, with close and mild
Scholastic lips, that could be wild,
And laugh or sob out like a child
Right in the classes,
the critic observes: — " 'Right in the classes' throws our intellect
completely
upon its beam-ends." But, if so, the fault possibly lies in the
crankness
of the intellect; for the words themselves mean merely that Sophocles
laughed
or cried like a school-boy — like a child right (or just) in his
classes — one
who had not yet left school. The phrase is affected, we grant, but
quite
intelligible. A still more remarkable misapprehension occurs in regard
to the triplet,
And Goethe, with that reaching eye
His soul reached out from, far and high,
And fell from inner entity.
The reviewer's remarks upon this are too
preposterous
not to be quoted in full; — we doubt if any commentator of equal
dignity
ever so egregiously committed himself before. "Goethe," he says, "is a
perfect enigma, what does the word 'fell' mean?
[page 410:]
[[Greek text:]] xxx [[:Greek text]] we suppose — that is, 'not to be
trifled
with.' But surely it sounds very strange, although it may be true
enough,
to say that his 'fellness' is occasioned by 'inner entity.' But perhaps
the line has some deeper meaning which we are unable to fathom."
Perhaps
it has: and this is the criticism — the British criticism — the
Blackwood
criticism — to which we have so long implicitly bowed down! As before,
Miss
Barrett's verses are needlessly involved, but their meaning requires no
OEdipus. Their construction is thus intended: — "And Goethe, with that
reaching
eye from which his soul reached out, far and high, and (in so reaching)
fell from inner entity." The plain prose is this: — Goethe, (the poet
would
say), in involving himself too far and too profoundly in external
speculations — speculations
concerning the world without him — neglected, or made miscalculations
concerning
his inner entity, or being, — concerning the world within This idea is
involved
in the metaphor of a person leaning from a window so far that finally
he
falls from it — the person being the soul, the window the eye.
Of the twenty-eight "Sonnets," which
immediately
succeed the "Drama of Exile," and which receive the especial
commendation
of Blackwood, we have no very enthusiastic opinion. The
best sonnet
is objectionable from its extreme artificiality; and, to be effective,
this species of composition, requires a minute management — a
well-controlled
dexterity of touch — compatible neither with Miss Barrett's deficient
constructiveness,
nor with the fervid rush and whirl of her genius. Of the particular
instances
here given, we prefer "the Prisoner," of which the conclusion is
particularly
beautiful In general, the themes are obtrusively metaphysical, or
didactic.
"The Romaunt of the Page," an
imitation of the old
English ballad, is neither very original in subject, nor very skilfully
put together. We speak comparatively, of course: — It is not very good
— for
Miss Barrett: — and what we have said of this poem will apply equally
to
a very similar production, "The Rhyme of the Dutchess May." The "Poet
and
the Bird" — "A Child Asleep" — "Crowned and Wedded" — "Crowned and
Buried" — "To
Flush my Dog" — "The Four fold Aspect" — "A Flower in a Letter" — "A
Lay of
the early Rose" — "That Day" — "L. E. L's Last
[page 411:]
Questio" — "Catarina to Camoens" — "Wine of Cyprus" — "The Dead Pan" —
"Sleeping
and Watching" — "A Portrait" — "The Mournful Mother" — and "A
Valediction" — although
all burning with divine fire, manifested only in scintillations, have
nothing
in them idiosyncratic. "The House of Clouds" and "The Last Bower" are
superlatively
lovely, and show the vast powers of the poet in the field best adapted
to their legitimate display: — the
themes, here, could not be
improved.
The former poem is purely imaginative; the latter is unobjectionably be
cause unobtrusively suggestive of a moral, and is, perhaps, upon the
whole,
the most admirable composition in the two volumes: — or, if it is not,
then
"The Lay of the Brown Rosarie"
is. In this last the
ballad-character
is elevated — the realized — and thus made to afford scope for an
ideality
at once the richest and most vigorous in the world. The peculiar
foibles
of the author are here too, dropped bodily, as a mantle, in the
tumultuous
movement and excitement of the narrative.
Miss Barrett has need only of
real self-interest
in her subjects, to do justice to her subjects and to herself. On the
other
hand, "A Rhapsody of Life's Progress," although gleaming with cold
corruscations,
is the least meritorious, because the most philosophical, effusion of
the
whole: — this, we say, in flat contradiction of the
"spoudiotaton
kai
philosophikotaton genos" of Aristotle. "The Cry of the Human" is
singularly
effective, not more from the vigour and ghastly passion of its thought,
than from the artistically-conceived
arabesquerie of its
rhythm.
"The Cry of the Children," similar, although superior in tone and
handling,
is full of a nervous unflinching energy — a horror sublime in its
simplicity — of
which a far greater than Dante might have been proud. "Bertha in the
Lane,"
a rich ballad, very singularly excepted from the wholesale commendation
of the "Democratic Review," as "perhaps not one of the best," and
designated
by Blackwood, on the contrary, as "decidedly the finest poem of the
collection,"
is
not the
very best, we think, only because mere
pathos,
however exquisite, cannot be ranked with the loftiest exhibitions of
the
ideal. Of "Lady Geraldine's Courtship," the magazine last quoted
observes
that "some pith is put forth in its passionate parts." We will not
pause
to examine the delicacy or lucidity of the metaphor
[page
412:]
embraced in the
"putting forth of some pith;" but unless by
"some
pith" itself, is intended the utmost conceivable intensity and vigour,
then the critic is merely damning with faint praise. With the exception
of Tennyson's "Locksley Hall," we have never perused a poem combining
so
much of the fiercest passion with so much of the most ethereal fancy,
as
the "Lady Geraldine's Courtship," of Miss Barrett. We are forced to
admit,
however, that the latter work is a very palpable imitation of the
former,
which it surpasses in plot or rather in thesis, as much as it falls
below
it in artistical management, and a certain calm energy — lustrous and
indomitable — such
as we might imagine in a broad river of molten gold.
It is in the "Lady Geraldine" that
the critic of
Blackwood is again put at fault in the comprehension of a couple of
passages.
He confesses his inability "to make out the construction of the words,
'all that spirits pure and ardent are cast out of love and reverence,
because
chancing not to hold.' " There are comparatively few American
school-boys
who could not parse it. The prosaic construction would run thus: — "all
that (wealth understood) because chancing not to
hold
which, (or
on account of not holding which) all pure and ardent spirits are cast
out
of love and reverence." The "which" is involved in the relative pronoun
"that" — the second word of the sentence.
All that we know is, that
Miss
Barrett is right: — here is a parallel phrase, meaning — "all that
(which)
we know," etc. The fact is, that the accusation of imperfect grammar
would
have been more safely, if more generally, urged: in descending to
particular
exceptions, the reviewer has been doing little more than exposing
himself
at all points.
Turning aside, however, from grammar,
he declares
his incapacity to fathom the meaning of
She has halls and she has castles, and the
resonant steam-eagles
Follow far on the directing of her
floating dove-like
hand —
With a thunderous vapour trailing underneath the starry vigils,
So to mark upon the blasted heaven the measure of
her land.
Now it must be understood that he is profoundly
serious
in his declaration — he really
does not apprehend the thought
designed — and
he is even more than profoundly serious, too in intending these his own
comments upon his own stolidity for wit: — "We
[page 413:]
thought that steam-coaches generally followed the directing of no hand
except the stoker's, but
it, certainly, is always much
liker
[[sic]] a raven than a dove." After this, who shall question the
infallibility
of Christopher North? We presume there are very few of
our readers
who will not easily appreciate the richly imaginative conception of the
poetess: — The Lady Geraldine is supposed to be standing in her own
door,
(positively
not on the top of an engine), and thence pointing,
"with
her floating dove-like hand," to the lines of vapour, from the
"resonant
steam-eagles," that designate upon the "blasted heaven," the remote
boundaries
of her domain. — But, perhaps, we are guilty of a very gross absurdity
ourselves,
in commenting
at all upon the whimsicalities of a reviewer who
can
deliberately
select for special animadversion the second of
the
four verses we here copy:
Eyes, he said, now throbbing through me! are ye
eyes that did
undo me?
Shining eyes like antique jewels set in Parian
statue-stone !
Underneath that calm white forehead are ye ever burning torrid
O'er the desolate sand desert of my heart and life undone?"
The ghost of the Great Frederic might, to be sure,
quote
at us, in his own Latin, his favorite adage, "De gustibus non est
disputandus;" — but, when we take into consideration the moral
designed, the weirdness
of effect intended, and the historical adaptation of the fact alluded
to,
in the line italicized, (a fact of which it is by no means impossible
that
the critic is ignorant), we cannot refrain from expressing our
conviction — and
we here
express it in the teeth of the whole horde of the
Ambrosianians — that
from the entire range of poetical literature there shall not, in a
century,
be produced a more sonorous — a more vigorous verse — a juster — a
nobler — a
more ideal — a more magnificent image — than this very image, in this
very
verse, which the most noted magazine of Europe has so especially and so
contemptuously condemned.
"The Lady Geraldine" is, we think,
the only poem
of its author which is not deficient, considered as an artistical
whole.
Her constructive ability, as we have already suggested, is either not
very
remarkable, or has never been properly brought into play: — in truth,
her
genius is too impetuous for the minuter technicalities of that
elaborate
Art
so needful in the building up of pyramids for immortality. This
deficiency,
then — if there be any
[page 414:] such — is her
chief
weakness. Her other foibles, although some of them are, in fact,
glaring,
glare, nevertheless, to no very material ill purpose. There are none
which
she will not readily dismiss in her future works. She retains them now,
perhaps, because unaware of their existence.
Her affectations are unquestionably
many, and generally
inexcusable. We may, perhaps, tolerate such words as "ble," "chrysm,"
"nympholeptic,"
"oenomel," and "chrysopras" — they have at least the merit either of
distinct
meaning, or of terse and sonorous expression; — but what can be well
said
in defence of the unnecessary nonsense of "'ware" for "aware," — of
"bide,"
for "abide" — of " 'gins," for "begins" — of " 'las," for "alas" — of
"oftly,"
"ofter," and "oftest," for "often," "more often," and "most often" — or
of "erelong" in the sense of "long ago"? That there is
authority for
the mere words proves nothing; those who employed them in their day
would
not employ them if writing
nom. Although we grant, too, that
the
poetess is very usually Homeric in her compounds, there is no
intelligibility
of construction, and therefore no force of meaning in "dew-pallid,"
"pale-passioned,"
and "silver-solemn." Neither have we any partiality for "crave" or
"supreme,"
or "lament"; and while upon this topic, we may as well observe that
there
are few readers who do anything but laugh or stare, at such phrases as
"L. E. L.'s Last Questio" — "The Cry of the Human" — "Leaning from my
Human" — "Heaven
assist the human" — "the full sense of your mortal" — "a grave for your
divine" — "falling
off from our created" — "he sends this gage for thy pity's counting" —
they
could not press their futures on the present of her courtesy — or
"could
another fairer lack to thee, lack to thee?" There are few, at the same
time, who do not feel disposed to weep outright, when they hear of such
things as "Hope withdrawing her peradventure" — "spirits dealing in
pathos
of antithesis" — "angels in antagonism to God and his reflex
beatitudes" — "songs
of glories ruffling down doorways" — God's possibles" — and "rules of
Mandom."
We have already said, however, that
mere
quaintness within reasonable limit, is not only
not to
be
regarded as affectation,
but has its proper artistic uses in aiding a fantastic effect. We
quote,
[page 415:] from the lines "To my dog
Flush," amplification:
Leap! thy broad tail waves a light!
Leap! thy slender feet are bright,
Canopied in fringes!
Leap! those tasselled ears of shine
Flicker strangely, fair and fine,
Down their
golden inches!
And again — from the song of a tree-spirit, in the
"Drama
of Exile:"
The Divine impulsion cleaves
In dim movements to the leaves
Dropt and lifted, drops and lifted,
In the sun-light greenly sifted, —
In the sun-light and the moon-light
Greenly sifted through the trees.
Ever wave the Eden trees,
In the night-light and the noon-light,
With a ruffling of green branches,
Shaded off to resonances,
Never stirred by rain or breeze.
The thoughts, here, belong to the highest order of
poetry,
it they could not have been wrought into effective expression, without
the instrumentality of those repetitions — those unusual phrases — in a
word,
those
quaintnesses, which it has been too long the fashion to
censure,
indiscriminately, under the one general head of "affectation." No true
poet will fail to be enraptured with the two extracts above quoted —
but
we believe there are few who would not find a difficulty m reconciling
the psychal impossibility of refraining from admiration, with the
too-hastily
attained mental conviction that, critically, there is nothing to
admire.
Occasionally, we meet in Miss
Barrett's poems a certain
far-fetchedness of imagery, which is
reprehensible m the extreme.
What, for example, are we to think of
Now he hears the angel voices
Folding silence in the room? —
undoubtedly, that it is nonsense, and no more; or of
How the silence round you shivers
While our voices through it go? —
again, unquestionably, that it is nonsense, and nothing beyond.
Sometimes we are startled by knotty
paradoxes; and
it is nat acquitting their perpetrator of all blame on their account to
admit that, in some instances, they are susceptible of solution It is
[page
416:] really difficult to discover anything for approbation,
in enigmas such as
That bright impassive, passive angel-hood,
or —
The silence of my heart is full of sound.
At long intervals, we are annoyed by specimens of
repulsive
imagery, as where the children cry:
How long, O cruel nation,
Will you stand, to move the world, on a child's heart —
Stifle down with a mailed heel its palpitation? etc.
Now and then, too, we are confounded by a pure
platitude
as when Eve exclaims:
Leave us not
In agony beyond what we can bear,
And in abasement below thunder mark!
or, when the Saviour is made to say:
So, at last,
He shall look round on you with lids too straight
To hold the grateful tears.
"Strait" was, no doubt, intended, but does not
materially
elevate, although it slightly elucidates, the thought. A very
remarkable
passage is that, also, wherein Eve bids the infant voices
Hear the steep generations, how they fall
Adown the visionary stairs of Time,
Like supernatural thunders — far yet near,
Sowing their fiery echoes through the hills!
Here, saying nothing of the affectation in "adown;"
not alluding to the insoluble paradox of "far yet near;" not mentioning
the inconsistent metaphor involved in the "sowing of
fiery echoes;"
adverting but slightly to the misusage of "like," in place of "as," and
to the impropriety of making any thing like
thunder, which has
never
been known to fall at all; merely hinting, too, at the misapplication
of
"steep," to the nations,'' instead of to the "stairs" — a perversion in
no degree to be justified by the fact that so preposterous a figure
synecdoche
exists in the school books; — letting these things is, for the present,
we shall still find it difficult to understand how Miss Barrett should
have been led to think the principal idea itself — the abstract idea —
the
idea of
tumbling down stairs in any shape, or under any
circumstances, — either
a poetical or a decorous conception.
[page 417:]
And
yet we have seen this very passage quoted as "sublime," by a critic who
seems to take it for granted, as a general rule, that Nat-Leeism is the
loftiest order of literary merit. That the lines very
narrowly missed
sublimity, we grant; that they came within a step of it, we admit; —
but,
unhappily, the step is that
one step which, time out of mind,
has
intervened between the sublime and the ridiculous. So true is this,
that
any person — that even with a very partial modification of the imagery
— a
modification that shall not interfere with its richly spiritual
tone
— may elevate the quotation into unexceptionability. For example:
and
we offer it with profound deference —
Hear the far generations —
how they crash,
From crag to crag, down the precipitous Time,
In multitudinous thunders that upstartle,
Aghast, the echoes from their cavernous lairs
In the visionary hills!
We have no doubt that our version has its faults —
but
it has, at least, the merit of consistency. Not only is a mountain mote
poetical than a pair of stairs; but echoes are more appropriately
typified
as wild beasts than as seeds; and echoes and wild beasts agree better
with
a mountain than does a pair of stairs with the
sowing of seeds
— even
admitting that these seeds be seeds of fire, and be sown broadcast
"among
the hills,'' by a steep generation while in the act of tumbling down
the
stairs — that is to say, of coming down the stairs in too violent a
hurry
to be capable of sowing the seeds as accurately as all seeds should be
sown; nor is the matter rendered any better for Miss Barrett, even if
the
construction of her sentence is to be understood as implying that the
fiery
seeds were sown, not immediately by the steep generations that tumbled
down the stairs, but immediately, through the intervention of the
"supernatural
thunders" that were
occasioned by the "steep generations" that
tumbled
down the stairs.
The poetess is not unfrequently
guilty of repeating
herself. The "thunder cloud veined by lightning" appears, for instance,
on pages 34 of the first, and 228 of the second volume The "silver
clash
of wings" is heard at pages 53 of the first, and 269 of the second; and
angel tears are discovered to be falling as well at page 17, as at the
conclusion of "The Drama of Exile." Steam, too, in the shape of Death's
White Horse, comes upon
[page 418:] the ground,
both
at page 244 of the first and 179 of the second volume — and there are
multitudinous
other repetitions both of phrase and idea — but it is the excessive
reiteration
of pet
words which is, perhaps, the most obtrusive of the
minor
errors of the poet. "Chrystalline," "Apocalypse," "foregone,"
"evangel,"
" 'ware," "throb," "level," "loss," and the musical term "minor," are
forever
upon her lips. The chief favorites, however, are "down" and "leaning,"
which are echoed and re-echoed not only
ad infinitum, but in
every
whimsical variation of import. As Miss Barrett certainly cannot be
aware
of the extent of this mannerism, we will venture to call her attention
to a few — comparatively a very few examples.
Pealing down the depths of Godhead —
And smiling down the stars —
Smiling down, as Venus down the waves —
Smiling down the steep world very purely —
Down the purple of this chamber —
Moving down the hidden depths of loving —
Cold the sun shines down the door —
Which brought angels down our talk —
Let your souls behind you lean gently moved —
But angels leaning from the golden seats —
And melancholy leaning out of heaven —
And I know the heavens are leaning down —
Then over the casement she leaneth —
Forbear that dream, too near to heaven it leaned
Thou, O sapient angel, leanest o'er —
Shapes of brightness overleap thee —
They are leaning their young heads —
Out of heaven shall o'er you lean —
While my spirit leans and reaches —
Leaning from my human —
When it leans out on the air —
etc. etc. etc.
In the matter of grammar, upon which the Edinburgh
critic
insists so pertinaciously, the author of "The Drama of Exile" seems to
us even peculiarly without fault. The nature of her studies has, no
doubt,
imbued her with a very delicate instinct of constructive accuracy. The
occasional use of phrases so questionable as "from whence" and the
far-fetchedness
and involution of which we have already spoken, are the only noticeable
blemishes of an exceedingly chaste, vigorous and comprehensive style.
In her inattention to rhythm, Mrs.
Barrett is guilty
of an error
[page 419:] that might have been fatal
to her fame — that
would have been fatal to any reputation
less solidly
founded than her own. We do not allude, so particularly, to her
multiplicity
of inadmissible rhymes. We would wish, to be sure, that she had not
thought
proper to couple Eden and succeeding — glories and floorwise — burning
and
morning — thither and aether — enclose me and across me — misdoers and
flowers — centre
and winter — guerdon and pardon — conquer and anchor — desert and
unmeasured — atoms
and fathoms — opal and people — glory and doorway — trumpet and
accompted — taming
and overcame him — coming and woman — is and trees — off and sun-proof
— eagles
and vigils — nature and satire — poems and interflowings — certes and
virtues — pardon
and burden — thereat and great — children and bewildering — mortal and
turtle — moonshine
and sunshine. It would have been better, we say, if such apologies for
rhymes as these had been rejected. But deficiencies of
rhythm are
more serious. In some cases it is nearly impossible to determine what
metre
is intended. "The Cry of the Children" cannot be scanned: we
never
saw
so poor a specimen of verse. In imitating the rhythm of "Locksley
Hall,"
the poetess has preserved with accuracy (so far as mere syllables are
concerned)
the forcible line of seven trochees with a final caesura. The ''double
rhymes" have only the force of a single long syllable ca sure; but the
natural rhythmical division, occurring at the close of the fourth
trochee,
should never be forced to occur, as Miss Barrett constantly forces it,
in the middle of a word, or of an indivisible phrase. If it do so
occur,
we must sacrifice, in perusal, either the sense or the rhythm. If she
will
consider, too, that this line of seven trochees and a ca sure, is
nothing
more than two lines written in one — a line of four trochees succeeded
by
one of three trochees and a caesura — she will at once see how unwise
she
has been in composing her poem in quatrains of the long line with
alternate
rhymes, instead immediate ones, as in the case of "Locksley Hall." The
result is, that the ear, expecting the rhymes before they occur, does
not
appreciate them when they do. These points, however, will be best
exemplified
by transcribing one of the quatrains in
its natural arrangement.
That actually employed is addressed only to the eye.
[page
420:]
Oh, she fluttered like a tame bird
In among its forest brothers
Far too strong for it, then, drooping,
Bowed her face upon her hands —
And I spake out wildly, fiercely,
Brutal truths of her and others!
I, she planted in the desert,
Swathed her 'wind-like, with my sands.
Here it will be seen that there is a paucity of
rhyme,
and that it is expected at closes where it does not occur. In fact, we
consider the eight lines as two independent quatrains, (which they
are),
then we find them
entirely rhymeless. Now so unhappy are these
metrical
defects — of so much importance do we take them to be, that we do not
hesitate
in declaring the general inferiority of the poem to its prototype to be
altogether chargeable to
them. With equal rhythm "Lady
Geraldine"
had been far — very far the superior poem. Inefficient rhythm is
inefficient
poetical expression; and expression, in poetry, — what is ti? — what
is it not? No one living can better answer these queries than Miss
Barrett.
We conclude our comments upon her
versification,
by quoting (we will not say whence — from what one of her poems) — a
few
verses without the linear division as it appears ai the book. There are
many readers who would never suspect the passage to be intended for
metre
at all. — "Ay! — and sometimes, on the hill-side, while we sat down on
the
gowans, with the forest green behind us, and its shadow cast before,
and
the river running under, and, across it from the rowens a partridge
whirring
near us till we felt the air it bore — there, obedient to her praying,
did I read aloud the poems made by Tuscan flutes, or instruments more
various
of our own — read the pastoral parts of Spenser — or the subtle
interflowings
found in Petrarch's sonnets; — here's the book! — the leaf is folded
down!"
With this extract we make an end of
our fault-finding — end now, shall we speak, equally in detail, of the
beauties
of this
book? Alas! here, indeed, do we feel the impotence of the pen. We have
already said that the supreme excellence of the poetess whose works we
review, is made up of the multitudinous sums of a world of lofty
merits.
It is the multiplicity — it is the
aggregation — which excites
our
most profound enthusiasm, and enforces
[page 421:]
our most earnest respect. But unless we had space to extract three
fourths
of the volumes, how could we convey this aggregation by specimens? We
might
quote, to be sure, an example of keen insight into our psychal nature,
such as this:
I fell flooded with a Dark,
In the silence of a swoon —
When I rose, still cold and stark,
There was night, — I saw the moon:
And the stars, each in its place,
And the May-blooms on the grass,
Seemed to wonder what I was.
And I walked as if apart
From myself when I could stand —
And I pitied my own heart,
As if I held it in my hand
Somewhat coldly, — with a sense
Of fulfilled benevolence.
Or we might copy an instance of the purest and most imagination, such
as
this:
So, young muser, I sat listening
To my Fancy's wildest word —
On a sudden, through the glistening
Leaves around, a little stirred,
Came a sound, a sense of music, which was rather felt than heard.
Softly, finely, it inwound me —
From the world it shut me in —
Like a fountain falling round me
Which with silver waters thin,
Holds a little marble Naiad sitting smilingly within.
Or, again, we might extract a specimen of wild Dantesque vigor, such as
this — in combination with a pathos never excelled:
Ay! be silent — let them hear each other
breathing
For a moment, mouth to mouth —
Let them touch each others' hands in a fresh wreathing
Of their tender human youth!
Let them feel that this cold metallic motion
Is not all the life God fashions or reveals —
Let them prove their inward souls against the notion
That they live in you, or under you, O wheels!
Or, still again, we might give a passage embodying the most elevated
sentiment,
most tersely and musically thus expressed:
And since, Prince Albert, men have called thy
spirit high and
rare,
And true to truth, and brave for truth, as some at Augsburg were —
We charge thee by thy lofty thoughts and by thy poet mind.
Which not by glory or degree takes measure of mankind,
Esteem that wedded hand less dear for sceptre than for ring
And hold her uncrowned womanhood to be the royal thing! [page
422:]
These passages, we say, and a hundred similar ones,
exemplifying particular excellences, might be displayed, and we should
still fail, as lamentably as the
skolastikos with his brick,
in
conveying an idea of the vast
totality. By no individual stars
can
we present the constellatory radiance of the book. —
To the book,
then, with implicit confidence we appeal.
That Miss Barrett has done more, in
poetry, than
any woman, living or dead, will scarcely be questioned: — that she has
surpassed
all her poetical contemporaries of either sex (with a single exception)
is our deliberate opinion — not idly entertained, we think, nor founded
on any visionary basis. It may not be uninteresting, therefore, in
closing
this examination of her claims, to determine in what manner she holds
poetical
relation with these contemporaries, or with her immediate predecessors,
and especially with the great exception Which we have alluded, — if at
all.
If ever mortal "wreaked his thoughts
upon expression"
it was Shelley. If ever poet sang (as a bird sings) — impulsively —
earnestly — with
utter abandonment — to himself solely — and for the mere joy of his own
song — that
poet was the author of the Sensitive Plant. Of Art — beyond that which
is
the inalienable instinct of Genius — he either had little or disdained
all.
He
really disdained that Rule which is the emation from Law,
because
his own soul was law in itself. His rhapsodies are but the rough notes
— the
stenographic memoranda of poems — memoranda which, because they were
all-sufficient
for his own intelligence, he cared not to be at the trouble of
transcribing
in full for mankind. In his whole life he wrought not thoroughly out a
single conception. For this reason it is that he is the most fatiguing
of poets. Yet he wearies in having done too little, rather than too
much;
what is in him the diffuseness of one idea, is the conglomerate
concision
of many; — and this concision it is which renders obscure. With such a
man,
to imitate was out of the question; it would have answered no purpose —
for
he spoke to his own alone , which would have comprehended no alien
tongue; — he
was, therefore, profoundly original. His quaintness arose from
intuitive
perception of that truth to which Lord Verulam alone has given distinct
voice: — "There is no exquisite beauty which
[page 423:]
has not some strangeness in its proportion." But whether obscure,
original,
or quaint, he was at all times sincere. He had no
affectations.
From the ruins of Shelley there
sprang into existence,
affronting the Heavens, a tottering and fantastic pagoda, in which the
salient angles, tipped with mad jangling bells, were the idiosyncratic
faults
of the great original — faults which cannot
be called such
in view of his purposes, but which are monstrous when we regard his
works
as addressed to mankind. A "school" arose — if that absurd term must
still
be employed — a school — a system of rules — upon the basis of the
Shelley
who had none. Young men innumerable, dazzled with the glare and
bewildered
with the
bizarrerie of the divine lightning that flickered
through
the clouds of the Prometheus, had no trouble whatever in heaping up
imitative
vapors, but, for the lightning, were content, perforce, with its
spectrum,
in which the
bizarrerie appeared without the
fire. Nor were
great and mature minds unimpressed by the contemplation of a greater
and
more mature; and thus gradually were interwoven into this school of all
Lawlessness — of obscurity, quaintness, exaggeration — the misplaced
didacticism
of Wordsworth, and the even more preposterously anomalous
metaphysicianism
of Coleridge. Matters were now fast verging to their worst, and at
length,
in Tennyson, poetic inconsistency attained its extreme. But it was
precisely
this extreme (for the greatest error and the greatest truth are
scarcely
two points in a circle) — it was this extreme which, following the law
of
all extremes, wrought in him — in Tennyson — a natural and inevitable
revulsion,
leading him first to contemn and secondly to investigate his early
manner,
and, finally, to win now from its magnificent elements the truest and
purest
of all poetical styles. But not even yet is the process complete; and
for
this reason in part, but chiefly on account of the mere fortuitousness
of that mental and moral combination which shall unite in one person
(if
ever it shall) the Shelleyan
abandon, the
Tennysonian poetic
sense, the most profound instinct of Art, and the sternest Will
properly
to blend and vigorously to control all; — chiefly, we say, because such
combination of antagonisms must be purely fortuitous, has the world
never
[page 424:] in the noblest of the poems
of which it
is
possible that it may be put in possession.
And yet Miss Barrett has narrowly
missed the fulfilment
of these conditions. Her poetic inspiration is the highest — we can
conceive
nothing more august. Her sense of Art is pure itself, but has been
contaminated
by pedantic study of false models — a study which has the more easily
led
her astray, because she placed an undue value upon it as rare — as
alien
to her character of woman. The accident of having been long secluded by
ill health from the world has effected, moreover, in her behalf, what
an
innate recklessness did for Shelley — has imparted to her, if not
precisely
that
abandon to which I have referred, at least a something
that
stands well in its stead — a comparative independence of men and
opinions
with which she did not come personally in contact — a happy audacity of
thought and expression never before known in one of her sex. It is,
however,
this same accident of ill health, perhaps, which has invalidated her
original
Will — diverted her from proper individuality of purpose — and seduced
her
in the sin of imitation. Thus, what she might have done we cannot
altogether
determine. What she has actually accomplished is before us. With
Tennyson's
works beside her, and a keen appreciation of them in her soul —
appreciation
too keen to be discriminative; — with an imagination even more vigorous
than his, although somewhat less ethereally delicate; with inferior art
and more feeble volition; she has written poems such as he
could
not
write, but such as he, under
her conditions of ill
health and
seclusion,
would have written during the epoch of his pupildom
in
that school which arose out of Shelley, and from which, over a
disgustful
gulf of utter incongruity and absurdity, lit only by miasmatic flashes,
into the broad open meadows of Natural Art and Divine Genius, he —
Tennyson — is
at once the bridge and the transition.