登陆注册
25539400000003

第3章 SOME THOUGHTS OF A READER OF TENNYSON(3)

If we do not see Tennyson to be the lonely, the first, the ONE that he is, this is because of the throng of his following, though a number that are of that throng hardly know, or else would deny, their flocking. But he added to our literature not only in the way of cumulation, but by the advent of his single genius. He is one of the few fountain-head poets of the world. The new landscape which was his--the lovely unbeloved--is, it need hardly be said, the matter of his poetry and not its inspiration. It may have seemed to some readers that it is the novelty, in poetry, of this homely unscenic scenery--this Lincolnshire quality--that accounts for Tennyson's freshness of vision. But it is not so. Tennyson is fresh also in scenic scenery; he is fresh with the things that others have outworn; mountains, desert islands, castles, elves, what you will that is conventional. Where are there more divinely poetic lines than those, which will never be wearied with quotation, beginning, "A splendour falls"? What castle walls have stood in such a light of old romance, where in all poetry is there a sound wilder than that of those faint "horns of elfland"? Here is the remoteness, the beyond, the light delirium, not of disease but of more rapturous and delicate health, the closer secret of poetry.

This most English of modern poets has been taunted with his mere gardens. He loved, indeed, the "lazy lilies," of the exquisite garden of "The Gardener's Daughter," but he betook his ecstatic English spirit also far afield and overseas; to the winter places of his familiar nightingale:-When first the liquid note beloved of men Comes flying over many a windy wave;to the lotus-eaters' shore; to the outland landscapes of "The Palace of Art"--the "clear-walled city by the sea," the "pillared town,"the "full-fed river"; to the "pencilled valleys" of Monte Rosa; to the "vale in Ida"; to that tremendous upland in the "Vision of Sin":-At last I heard a voice upon the slope Cry to the summit, Is there any hope?

To which an answer pealed from that high land, But in a tongue no man could understand.

The Cleopatra of "The Dream of Fair Women" is but a ready-made Cleopatra, but when in the shades of her forest she remembers the sun of the world, she leaves the page of Tennyson's poorest manner and becomes one with Shakespeare's queen:-We drank the Libyan sun to sleep.

Nay, there is never a passage of manner but a great passage of style rebukes our dislike and recalls our heart again. The dramas, less than the lyrics, and even less than the "Idylls," are matter for the true Tennysonian. Their action is, at its liveliest rather vivacious than vital, and the sentiment, whether in "Becket" or in "Harold," is not only modern, it is fixed within Tennyson's own peculiar score or so of years. But that he might have answered, in drama, to a stronger stimulus, a sharper spur, than his time administered, may be guessed from a few passages of "Queen Mary,"and from the dramatic terror of the arrow in "Harold." The line has appeared in prophetic fragments in earlier scenes, and at the moment of doom it is the outcry of unquestionable tragedy:-Sanguelac--Sanguelac--the arrow--the arrow!--Away!

Tennyson is also an eminently all-intelligible poet. Those whom he puzzles or confounds must be a flock with an incalculable liability to go wide of any road--"down all manner of streets," as the desperate drover cries in the anecdote. But what are streets, however various, to the ways of error that a great flock will take in open country--minutely, individually wrong, ****** mistakes upon hardly perceptible occasions, or none--"minute fortuitous variations in any possible direction," as used to be said in exposition of the Darwinian theory? A vast outlying public, like that of Tennyson, may make you as many blunders as it has heads; but the accurate clear poet proved his meaning to all accurate perceptions. Where he hesitates, his is the sincere pause of process and uncertainty. It has been said that Tennyson, midway between the student of material science and the mystic, wrote and thought according to an age that wavered, with him, between the two minds, and that men have now taken one way or the other. Is this indeed true, and are men so divided and so sure? Or have they not rather already turned, in numbers, back to the parting, or meeting, of eternal roads? The religious question that arises upon experience of death has never been asked with more sincerity and attention than by him. If "In Memoriam" represents the mind of yesterday it represents no less the mind of to-morrow. It is true that pessimism and insurrection in their ignobler forms--nay, in the ignoblest form of a fashion--have, or had but yesterday, the control of the popular pen. Trivial pessimism or trivial optimism, it matters little which prevails.

For those who follow the one habit to-day would have followed the other in a past generation. Fleeting as they are, it cannot be within their competence to neglect or reject the philosophy of "In Memoriam." To the dainty stanzas of that poem, it is true, no great struggle of reasoning was to be committed, nor would any such dispute be judiciously entrusted to the rhymes of a song of sorrow.

Tennyson here proposes, rather than closes with, the ultimate question of our destiny. The conflict, for which he proves himself strong enough, is in that magnificent poem of a thinker, "Lucretius." But so far as "In Memoriam" attempts, weighs, falters, and confides, it is true to the experience of human anguish and intellect.

同类推荐
  • 礼法华经仪式

    礼法华经仪式

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 蛮书

    蛮书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Cruise of the Snark

    The Cruise of the Snark

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 诸葛亮集

    诸葛亮集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金有陀罗尼经

    金有陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 道契

    道契

    神秘婴儿出现在第一大家族门口,家主阳龙天一时心软收留下了下婴儿。等神秘婴儿长大时,阳龙天带他来测根骨,但测根骨时,根骨石发生异象,根骨石还发生强烈的爆炸。而少年的故事就从这开始…………
  • 唯你心萌然悸动

    唯你心萌然悸动

    EXO的到来,使她不知所措,最后他们的结局是什么样的呢!
  • 温吞先生我爱你

    温吞先生我爱你

    台湾作家[乐果]的免费全本小说《温吞先生我爱你》。
  • 舍头谏经

    舍头谏经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 女生宿舍的呓语

    女生宿舍的呓语

    那一切都好快,好磨糊,我看着她的眼睛仿若一曲痴人说梦,我努力的说一切都是假的,可它就是真的,我想要她变成真的时候,可它却永远都是假的
  • 清然若风长篇版

    清然若风长篇版

    初见她时,她那干净阳光的气质便深深吸引了他。是她,让他这个交过无数女友的花花公子第一次知道了什么是爱情。在她面前,他只是个情窦初开的大男孩,他捧出一颗诚挚的心,只想能交换她的心。她无法抗拒这颗炽热温暖的心,可是横在他们之间的种种阻碍,却让他们在一起的愿望如此难以实现。伤害、诽谤、欺骗,把原本美好的爱情弄得面目全非。而误会更是把爱情推入绝境。伊清然、林诗琪、许若飞、叶子风,他们四个人会演绎怎样的爱情故事呢?
  • 三公主的绝美爱恋

    三公主的绝美爱恋

    她,冷酷无情。他,冷傲如冰。她,妩媚妖娆。他,有点花心。她,活泼可爱。他,阳光帅气。当三公主遇上三王子,又会擦出怎样的火花?一次的误会,使他们的爱更加坚定不。此文好像是玛丽苏,本想停更,可是想想算了,反正快完结了。
  • 寻我记

    寻我记

    一个从雪族而出的少年,一个失去记忆与修为的修士。看小小少年如何寻记忆,立九州,战强敌,探寻那遥不可及的真我!
  • 凌厉至尊

    凌厉至尊

    武道世界,弱者被人欺辱,强者傲视群雄,林珠峰便是在被人欺辱之中,励志成为一名绝世强者。
  • 鬼才弃女:恶魔少女的复仇之路

    鬼才弃女:恶魔少女的复仇之路

    在她刚出生时,便与母亲一起被赶出了初心家。只因她是不详的存在。在她五岁时,母亲被初心家找来的人活活打死。她虽然没有死,容颜却被毁。在母亲的身躯重重倒下的时候,她便下定决心,要初心家的人血债血偿。她历经千辛万苦,终于当上了叱咤黑道的泣血佣兵团的五位团主之一。并开始了她的复仇计划。可就在她快要成功的时候,却遇见了他。她仿佛听见了内心的坚冰破碎的声音。