登陆注册
26127200000006

第6章

And yet "a thousand cherubim" is a line of a poem full of the dullest kind of reasoning--curious matter for music--and of the intricate knotting of what is a very ****** thread of thought.It was therefore no easy matter to choose something of Campion's for a collection of the finest work.For an historical book of representative poetry the question would be easy enough, for there Campion should appear by his glorious lyric, Cherry Ripe, by one or two poems of profounder imagination (however imperfect), and by a madrigal written for the music (however the stanzas may flag in their quibbling).But the work of choosing among his lyrics for the sake of beauty shows too clearly the inequality, the brevity of the inspiration, and the poet's absolute disregard of the moment of its flight and departure.A few splendid lines may be reason enough for extracting a short poem, but must not be made to bear too great a burden.

WHEN THOU MUST HOME

Of the quality of this imaginative lyric there is no doubt.It is fine throughout, as we confess even after the greatness of the opening:-"When thou must home to shades of underground, And there arrived, a new admired guest--"It is as solemn and fantastic at the close as at this dark and splendid opening, and throughout, past description, Elizabethan.This single poem must bind Campion to that period without question; and as he lived thirty- six years in the actual reign of Elizabeth, and printed his Book of Airs withRosseter two years before her death, it is by no violence that we give him the name that covers our earlier poets of the great age.When thou must Home is of the day of Marlowe.It has the qualities of great poetry, and especially the quality of keeping its simplicity; and it has a quality of great simplicity not at all child-like, but *****, large, gay, credulous, tragic, sombre, and amorous.

THE FUNERAL

Donne, too, is a poet of fine onsets.It was with some hesitation that I admitted a poem having the middle stanza of this Funeral; but the earlier lines of the last are fine.

CHARIS' TRIUMPH

The freshest of Ben Jonson's lyrics have been chosen.Obviously it is freshness that he generally lacks, for all his vigour, his emphatic initiative, and his overbearing and impulsive voice in verse.There is a stale breath in that hearty shout.Doubtless it is to the credit of his honesty that he did not adopt the country- phrases in vogue; but when he takes landscape as a task the effect is ill enough.I have already had the temerity to find fault for a blunder of meaning, with the passage of a most famous lyric, where it says the contrary of what it would say -"But might I of Jove's nectar sup I would not change for thine;"and for doing so have encountered the anger rather than the argument of those who cannot admire a pretty lyric but they must hold reason itself to be in error rather than allow that a line of it has chanced to get turned in the rhyming.

IN EARTH

"I ever saw anything," says Charles Lamb, "like this funeral dirge, except the ditty which reminds Ferdinand of his drowned father in the Tempest.As that is of the water, watery; so this is of the earth, earthy.Both have that intentness of feeling which seems to resolve itself into the element which it contemplates."SONG (Phoebus, arise!)

All Drummond's poems seem to be minor poems, even at their finest, except only this.He must have known, for the creation of that poem, some more impassioned and less restless hour.It is, from the outset to the close,the sigh of a profound expectation.There is no division into stanzas, because its metre is the breath of life.One might wish that the English ode (roughly called "Pindaric") had never been written but with passion, for so written it is the most immediate of all metres; the shock of the heart and the breath of elation or grief are the law of the lines.It has passed out of the gates of the garden of stanzas, and walks (not astray) in the further ******* where all is interior law.Cowley, long afterwards, wrote this Pindaric ode, and wrote it coldly.But Drummond's (he calls it a song) can never again be forgotten.With admirable judgment it was set up at the very gate of that Golden Treasury we all know so well; and, therefore, generation after generation of readers, who have never opened Drummond's poems, know this fine ode as well as they know any single poem in the whole of English literature.There was a generation that had not been taught by the Golden Treasury, and Cardinal Newman was of it.Writing to Coventry Patmore of his great odes, he called them beautiful but fragmentary; was inclined to wish that they might some day be made complete.There is nothing in all poetry more complete.Seldom is a poem in stanzas so complete but that another stanza might have made a final close; but a master's ode has the unity of life, and when it ends it ends for ever.

A poem of Drummond's has this auroral image of a blush: Anthea has blushed to hear her eyes likened to stars (habit might have caused her, one would think, to bear the flattery with a front as cool as the very daybreak), and the lover tells her that the sudden increase of her beauty is futile, for he cannot admire more: "For naught thy cheeks that morn do raise." What sweet, nay, what solemn roses!

Again:

"Me here she first perceived, and here a morn Of bright carnations overspread her face."The seventeenth century has possession of that "morn" caught once upon its uplands; nor can any custom of aftertime touch its freshness to wither it.

TO MY INCONSTANT MISTRESS

The solemn vengeance of this poem has a strange tone--not unique,for it had sounded somewhere in mediaeval poetry in Italy--but in a dreadful sense divine.At the first reading, this sentence against inconstancy, spoken by one more than inconstant, moves something like indignation; nevertheless, it is menacingly and obscurely justified, on a ground as it were beyond the common region of tolerance and pardon.

THE PULLEY

同类推荐
  • 林泉高致集

    林泉高致集

    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。
  • 菩提心离相论

    菩提心离相论

    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。
  • 疡医大全

    疡医大全

    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。
  • 温氏母训

    温氏母训

    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。
  • 见闻录

    见闻录

    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
  • 你是吾的躯壳

    你是吾的躯壳

    男主踏破虚空从异界回归,身边诡异事件便层出不穷。邪异的黑雾能量体,尘封多年往事,一件件事抽丝剥茧,究竟,是谁在幕后操控这一切?
  • 中国故事

    中国故事

    对于《中国故事》的创作者们来说,要把梦想以纪录片的方式搬上银屏着实是一项大工程,要么如入荒原,不知主角何时上场;要么如入闹市,目不暇接中不知到底谁是“她”。不过,我们深信:无论历史长河,还是时代洪流,在本质上都是由一个个小小的个体构成的,无数个体的故事构成了历史,无数个体的梦想构成了时代旋律。每一个中国人的梦都值得尊重。“人”字的大写,正是我们这个时代值得骄傲的进步。
  • 易眸

    易眸

    这个天下,风起云涌,身怀奇眸,上古遗婴云涌天地,一人,一眸,足以定之邪千寒:这个天下,我负责杀敌养家,你负责貌美如花。易妍:我娇蛮?邪千寒宠的,我任性?邪千寒惯的,我歹毒?你找邪千寒去。古言宠文,放心入坑,绝对不虐,就是更新有点慢,慢慢看寒妍cp虐渣渣
  • 杀手女pk千年冰山

    杀手女pk千年冰山

    一个呢,是有点傲娇又有点小冷酷的大少爷,另一个呢,则是脾气暴躁有点贪吃却又无比聪明的女杀手,还有这位有点花心却又正义感十足的帅哥,以及一位外貌协会会员加上超级大花痴的某女。两队人凑到一起的故事可如同火星撞地球,一对呢是打死都要嘴硬不承认感情,一拖再拖;另一对则是上演女追男的把戏,到头来不得不屈服……〔小编:此文又名《至尊女杀手:冷傲少爷独宠爱》本人在此说明啊,此文可能很乱,初次写作,多多包涵〕
  • 80后的青春岁月

    80后的青春岁月

    一群80后的青春校园生活,一个感人却又遭遇种种不幸的爱情故事,一段经历万般艰难的都市求生岁月
  • 酷尊的小淘气

    酷尊的小淘气

    [花雨授权]她有三个如花似玉的姊姊,但她却有个不为人知的隐疾……月圆之夜,她的脸就会出现一个讨人厌的印记,今夜又是一个月圆夜,而她很倒霉的遇上一个可恶的男人,真是冤家路窄!她新的合作对象竟然就是那个讨厌鬼!?
  • 我就喜欢,不那么好的你

    我就喜欢,不那么好的你

    萧临:青春是一场萎靡而华丽的盛宴;破灭的轮舞曲已经敲响,华美的晚餐准备就绪,那闻到香味的食客,已经在路上。夏凉炎:我这辈子最糟糕的事,是在人生最璀璨的花样年华里遇见了蓝格那个混蛋;可是我却如此感谢这个混蛋,没有他,我如何能够参与一场,别样的另类年华?林乔:嗤,矫情。可我就喜欢,不那么美好的你们。
  • 婚牵爱绕

    婚牵爱绕

    顾家二少花心爱玩,出了名的二世祖。盛家大小姐沉着冷静,工作上的女强人。本来应该嫁给顾家大少的盛家大小姐阴差阳错嫁给了顾家二少。所有人都为其感到悲哀,觉得好好的大白菜被猪啃了。然而只有盛宁绯自己清楚,嫁给顾天戎于她来说真是万幸中的万幸。
  • 邪君的天才宠妃

    邪君的天才宠妃

    【全书免费】再一睁眼穿越废物身上,看姐如何玩转世界。左手上古宝物,右手上古神兽,外加护徒师傅。看姐怎么玩转古代。。某天莫男来临怒道:“晴儿,你缺男人。”“我不认喜欢男人。”某女说道。“哦,是么。我也不喜欢男人”“滚!”某男听闻,喜笑颜开。抱着某女滚床单
  • 侯爷要出嫁

    侯爷要出嫁

    这是一个从村女到侯爷的华丽转变的故事,当她以男子的身份站在帝都的最顶端,她以自己的生命为代价,嚣张的,高调的,让所有欺侮过她的人都不得好下场。当天然呆御姐小侯爷对上天然萌忠犬小王爷,是老草啃嫩牛,还是嫩牛啃老草,激情四射,一切皆有可能。