登陆注册
26546800000053

第53章 LAST YEARS.(1)

The end of 1884 saw the publication of Tiresias and other Poems, dedicated to "My good friend, Robert Browning," and opening with the beautiful verses to one who never was Mr Browning's friend, Edward FitzGerald. The volume is rich in the best examples of Tennyson's later work. Tiresias, the monologue of the aged seer, blinded by excess of light when he beheld Athene unveiled, and under the curse of Cassandra, is worthy of the author who, in youth, wrote OEnone and Ulysses. Possibly the verses reflect Tennyson's own sense of public indifference to the voice of the poet and the seer. But they are of much earlier date than the year of publication:-"For when the crowd would roar For blood, for war, whose issue was their doom, To cast wise words among the multitude Was flinging fruit to lions; nor, in hours Of civil outbreak, when I knew the twain Would each waste each, and bring on both the yoke Of stronger states, was mine the voice to curb The madness of our cities and their kings.

Who ever turn'd upon his heel to hear My warning that the tyranny of one Was prelude to the tyranny of all?

My counsel that the tyranny of all Led backward to the tyranny of one?

This power hath work'd no good to aught that lives."The conclusion was a favourite with the author, and his blank verse never reached a higher strain:-"But for me, I would that I were gather'd to my rest, And mingled with the famous kings of old, On whom about their ocean-islets flash The faces of the Gods--the wise man's word, Here trampled by the populace underfoot, There crown'd with worship--and these eyes will find The men I knew, and watch the chariot whirl About the goal again, and hunters race The shadowy lion, and the warrior-kings, In height and prowess more than human, strive Again for glory, while the golden lyre Is ever sounding in heroic ears Heroic hymns, and every way the vales Wind, clouded with the grateful incense-fume Of those who mix all odour to the Gods On one far height in one far-shining fire."Then follows the pathetic piece on FitzGerald's death, and the prayer, not unfulfilled -"That, when I from hence Shall fade with him into the unknown, My close of earth's experience May prove as peaceful as his own."The Ancient Sage, with its lyric interludes, is one of Tennyson's meditations on the mystery of the world and of existence. Like the poet himself, the Sage finds a gleam of light and hope in his own subjective experiences of some unspeakable condition, already recorded in In Memoriam. The topic was one on which he seems to have spoken to his friends with *******:-"And more, my son! for more than once when ISat all alone, revolving in myself The word that is the symbol of myself, The mortal limit of the Self was loosed, And past into the Nameless, as a cloud Melts into Heaven. I touch'd my limbs, the limbs Were strange not mine--and yet no shade of doubt, But utter clearness, and thro' loss of Self The gain of such large life as match'd with ours Were Sun to spark--unshadowable in words, Themselves but shadows of a shadow-world."The poet's habit of "Revolving in myself The word that is the symbol of myself" -that is, of dwelling on the sound of his own name, was familiar to the Arabs. M. Lefebure has drawn my attention to a passage in the works of a mediaeval Arab philosopher, Ibn Khaldoun: "To arrive at the highest degree of inspiration of which he is capable, the diviner should have recourse to the use of certain phrases marked by a peculiar cadence and parallelism. Thus he emancipates his mind from the influence of the senses, and is enabled to attain an imperfect contact with the spiritual world." Ibn Khaldoun regards the "contact" as extremely "imperfect." He describes similar efforts made by concentrating the gaze on a mirror, a bowl of water, or the like. Tennyson was doubtless unaware that he had stumbled accidentally on a method of "ancient sages." Psychologists will explain his experience by the word "dissociation." It is not everybody, however, who can thus dissociate himself. The temperament of genius has often been subject to such influence, as M. Lefebure has shown in the modern instances of George Sand and Alfred de Musset: we might add Shelley, Goethe, and even Scott.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 从潮州量移袁州,张

    从潮州量移袁州,张

    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。
  • 随言世变

    随言世变

    “我说,傲慢之人必亡!”“我说,妒忌、暴怒之人必亡!”“我说,懒惰、贪婪、贪食,色欲之人必亡!”“我说!这世界,要有光!!!”
  • 我的美幻人生

    我的美幻人生

    在忙忙碌碌的世界里,这社会的纷纷扰扰。在这个强食弱肉,只看颜值得世界里。是不是也曾抱怨这生活的不公平那么如果你梦里的那个完美自己出现在人世里,让你重生自我,这一次你会怎么活......
  • 青三堂

    青三堂

    (本简介可能涉及部分剧透,请紧张的往下看。)安知十二岁时,平凡的医师生活彻底被颠覆,暮垂镇被毁,只余一片岩浆,生命即将终结的安知,与神器签订了契约,人生再一次被逆转。在一次机缘巧合下,安知遇到了青龙,并与青龙做下了约定,为了变强,四年之内他不得向任何人暴露身份。乖巧听话的徒弟雪儿,黑化病娇的未婚妻宇文兰,痴情于他的公主芒果,在命运的颠沛下与安知分离,续写着一个又一个故事。青三堂,青龙学院,青班。
  • 无上咒师

    无上咒师

    “为什么别人念咒不灵,你念咒就灵呢?”“因为我是咒师啊——”周大军笑道:“三百年来第一咒师!”
  • 神级投资大亨

    神级投资大亨

    马华腾:如果不是肖毅,讯腾摸索出盈利点至少要多花两年时间;陈天乔:没有肖毅,就没有传奇;马昀:肖毅成就了淘宝的今天;张潮阳:肖毅对产品的把握堪称天才,他能抓住这时代的每一个细节。雷均:其实饥饿营销的概念不是我提出的,是肖毅,你们要怪就怪他吧……记者:肖先生,您的投资从未失败过,是不是有什么诀窍?肖毅:没诀窍,我要是说我睡觉做了个梦就梦到了你们相信吗?记者:…………!!!这个一个有关梦想的故事。
  • 恋城

    恋城

    两年前的暑假,大学生肖潇去湖南同学许东家里玩,一次偶然的机会见到了许东的表妹——柯小然,对其一见钟情。离开湖南以后,肖潇北上继续求学,柯小然则南下到昆明某公司上班。肖潇因对其思念成河,终于决定在大学最后一个暑假里去昆明找柯小然,并对其表明自己的心意。随着肖潇抵达昆明的还有许东以及许东喜欢的姑娘张馨怡。肖潇的前女友叶紫涵在昆明上大学,那年暑假留在了昆明兼职,自从高中毕业,肖潇就一直有跟叶紫涵分手的打算,却一直没敢提出来。此行来到昆明,肖潇终于结束了自己跟叶紫涵的这段感情,然后开启了自己跟柯小然的另一段故事……情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 紫渊剑

    紫渊剑

    天下之事皆为一利字,利相侵者,即便是正道,也是会自相残杀,直到一方胜利,依旧为正,另一方则一朝成魔。没有对错,只有成败。
  • 陌崖

    陌崖

    一个世界,几个人,一段年华,片刻记忆,但我却一直站在那里,等待一个未知的结局!从开朗爱笑到沉默不语到底经历了什么?那个选择真的错了吗?十七岁的他们该何去何从?这一切难道都是命运的刻意安排吗?可当他们走到最后却发现一切都逃不开"mo“
  • 前微冷,今微暖

    前微冷,今微暖

    只有在暗淡无光的时候才会想起灯光红火的时候;只有在冰天雪地的时候才会想起暖人心弦的阳光;只有在失去的时候,才会想起那久违的心痛。前世的负心人,今生的追爱人。昔日的爱恋,是否能重拾?【作者原创,三对人的情仇】