登陆注册
25539400000001

第1章 SOME THOUGHTS OF A READER OF TENNYSON(1)

Fifty years after Tennyson's birth he was saluted a great poet by that unanimous acclamation which includes mere clamour. Fifty further years, and his centenary was marked by a new detraction. It is sometimes difficult to distinguish the obscure but not unmajestic law of change from the sorry custom of reaction. Change hastes not and rests not, reaction beats to and fro, flickering about the moving mind of the world. Reaction--the paltry precipitancy of the multitude--rather than the novelty of change, has brought about a ferment and corruption of opinion on Tennyson's poetry. It may be said that opinion is the same now as it was in the middle of the nineteenth century--the same, but turned. All that was not worth having of admiration then has soured into detraction now. It is of no more significance, acrid, than it was, sweet. What the herding of opinion gave yesterday it is able to take away to-day, that and no more.

But besides the common favour-disfavour of the day, there is the tendency of educated opinion, once disposed to accept the whole of Tennyson's poetry as though he could not be "parted from himself,"and now disposed to reject the whole, on the same plea. But if ever there was a poet who needed to be thus "parted"--the word is his own--it is he who wrote both narrowly for his time and liberally for all time, and who--this is the more important character of his poetry--had both a style and a manner: a masterly style, a magical style, a too dainty manner, nearly a trick; a noble landscape and in it figures something ready-made. He is a subject for our alternatives of feeling, nay, our conflicts, as is hardly another poet. We may deeply admire and wonder, and, in another line or hemistich, grow indifferent or slightly averse. He sheds the luminous suns of dreams upon men & women who would do well with footlights; waters their way with rushing streams of Paradise and cataracts from visionary hills; laps them in divine darkness; leads them into those touching landscapes, "the lovely that are not beloved;" long grey fields, cool sombre summers, and meadows thronged with unnoticeable flowers; speeds his carpet knight--or is that hardly a just name for one whose sword "smites" so well?--upon a carpet of authentic wild flowers; pushes his rovers, in costume, from off blossoming shores, on the keels of old romance. The style and the manner, I have said, run side by side. If we may take one poet's too violent phrase, and consider poets to be "damned to poetry," why, then, Tennyson is condemned by a couple of sentences, "to run concurrently." We have the style and the manner locked together at times in a single stanza, locked and yet not mingled.

There should be no danger for the more judicious reader lest impatience at the peculiar Tennyson trick should involve the great Tennyson style in a sweep of protest. Yet the danger has in fact proved real within the present and recent years, and seems about to threaten still more among the less judicious. But it will not long prevail. The vigorous little nation of lovers of poetry, alive one by one within the vague multitude of the nation of England, cannot remain finally insensible to what is at once majestic and magical in Tennyson. For those are not qualities they neglect in their other masters. How, valuing singleness of heart in the sixteenth century, splendour in the seventeenth, composure in the eighteenth; how, with a spiritual ear for the note--commonly called Celtic, albeit it is the most English thing in the world--the wild wood note of the remoter song; how, with the educated sense of style, the liberal sense of ease; how, in a word, fostering Letters and loving Nature, shall that choice nation within England long disregard these virtues in the nineteenth-century master? How disregard him, for more than the few years of reaction, for the insignificant reasons of his bygone taste, his insipid courtliness, his prettiness, or what not?

It is no dishonour to Tennyson, for it is a dishonour to our education, to disparage a poet who wrote but the two--had he written no more of their kind--lines of "The Passing of Arthur," of which, before I quote them, I will permit myself the personal remembrance of a great contemporary author's opinion. Mr. Meredith, speaking to me of the high-water mark of English style in poetry and prose, cited those lines as topmost in poetry:-On one side lay the ocean, and on one Lay a great water, and the moon was full.

Here is no taint of manner, no pretty posture or habit, but the simplicity of poetry and the simplicity of Nature, something on the yonder side of imagery. It is to be noted that this noble passage is from Tennyson's generally weakest kind of work--blank verse; and should thus be a sign that the laxity of so many parts of the "Idylls" and other blank verse poems was a quite unnecessary fault.

Lax this form of poetry undoubtedly is with Tennyson. His blank verse is often too easy; it cannot be said to fly, for the paradoxical reason that it has no weight; it slips by, without halting or tripping indeed, but also without the friction of the movement of vitality. This quality, which is so near to a fault, this quality of ease, has come to be disregarded in our day. That Horace Walpole overpraised this virtue is not good reason that we should hold it for a vice. Yet we do more than undervalue it; and several of our authors, in prose and poetry, seem to find much merit in the manifest difficulty; they will not have a key to turn, though closely and tightly, in oiled wards; let the reluctant iron catch and grind, or they would even prefer to pick you the lock.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 火爆王妃不好惹

    火爆王妃不好惹

    现代警花穿越异世,绑了朝廷都忌惮的头号江湖大人物,还对其进行百般羞辱,她发誓,如果不是庸医误诊她魂归西天了,她是绝对不敢惹上这么一个大魔头的!可明明说要将她碎尸万段的某大魔头,却对她穷追不舍……楼兮瑾无语问苍天:有受虐狂谤我、欺我、辱我、笑我、轻我、贱我、非礼我,调戏我,我当如何处置乎?老天答:推倒攻之……楼兮瑾:滚你芭蕉的推倒,他又不是受!!在后面偷听着的某大魔头挑眉:是不是兽,要身体力行才会知晓的。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 重生之废材的逆袭攻略

    重生之废材的逆袭攻略

    当一个普通的宅女重生到小时候,一切让她后悔的事情还没有发生,命运有了重新选择的机会,这一次,她会好好珍惜吗?曾经以为无缘的梦想可以实现吗?胆小,没毅力,自卑,贪财的她,面对上天的眷顾,能保持的住自己不多的优点吗吗?
  • 盗墓之秘藏山海经

    盗墓之秘藏山海经

    神是神化的人,神话是神秘化的历史。陆机,一个拥有辨天眼的考古人员,意外卷入一场充满悬疑的探险之旅,寻找史前文明的足迹。在这过程中,他发现《山海经》不仅仅是一部上古奇书,更是解开史前墓葬的线索,在这当中,隐藏着人类起源的秘密,以及不老长生的基因密码。广寒月宫里的嫦娥与西施有什么联系,蓬莱龙舟上徐福为秦始皇留下了什么秘密,浮屠塔里谁能求得千年舍利,白蛇传究竟是浪漫的传说还是一段不为人知的野史,伏羲女娲究竟又是何人……看陆机如何一步一步探索出《山海经》里的秘藏!
  • 凡特维斯2016

    凡特维斯2016

    人的生命只有一次,如若生命变成了一种消耗品可以反复使用又会如何?若光明和黑暗终将对立,他们不得不提起武器相互猎杀。人类王国米德加尔特又将何去何从。开始亦是结束,且让我慢慢的讲述这凡特维斯的传奇。
  • 不怕不悔

    不怕不悔

    老实说自己有很多的小想法,而现实常常无法实现,我常奢望能有一个就像是完美的生活。我想把曾经的那些后悔遗憾都抹去,想让自己能看的就开心。算是写给自己和所有有遗憾,但会想要完美的人。本书不求任何的成绩,只是单纯的想让自己开心而已。额,另外补一句,如果有人可以喜欢,那么我真的会非常的开心。
  • 梦寐坛城

    梦寐坛城

    姜北宸为了揭开摆渡者之谜,四处寻找有隐性基因的人群。当她被找到,姜北宸知道这个女孩是最有可能帮助他解开谜团的人,但是她却如游鱼一般悄然溜走。当她再次出现在他的面前时,事情已经超出了他的想象。。。。。。
  • 一拥二抱三上轿:王爷追妻三步曲

    一拥二抱三上轿:王爷追妻三步曲

    倒霉的飞兔兔芯芯,在机缘巧合下,遇到了百年难得一见的跨世纪大灾难而从天而降,正巧遇见了风雨国的怪异王爷轩辕翼,此时的他正承受着被太子下的毒的痛苦,兔芯芯一见,便用自己的异能把他身上的伤都治好了。但是,王爷变成了一颗蛋,还是狐狸蛋!此后,一拥二抱三上轿,成了某狐狸的扑妻法宝。不好意思,简介无力。
  • 官家庶女

    官家庶女

    穿越成一名庶女,舒沫的愿望很卑微。不求富贵荣华,只求平淡过一生。在深宅大院里,她过得小心翼翼。桃林赏花,救下睿王府的小公子,又与康王世子公子熠扯上关系,从此名振京师。新婚当日被当街劫持,花烛之夜没有温情脉脉,只有无尽的欺凌与折辱!九死一生历劫归来,等着她的却是一纸休书和逐出家门。情节虚构,切勿模仿。
  • 妖孽王爷高冷妃

    妖孽王爷高冷妃

    一朝重生,废物之躯?心魔附体?敌人是神,那又如何!且看我夜凌汐虐尽渣男,灭尽白莲花,成为顶尖强者。
  • 诱拐腹黑王爷

    诱拐腹黑王爷

    莫名穿越异世,先被人放火杀全家,后青楼谋生,她真是够悲催的!她本无意寻仇人,却不想成婚的相公竟是灭她满门的仇人之子!她怒,一脚踹了男人,不爱她,就滚!