I
Biography as a fine art can go no
further than Walton’s Life and Death of Dr.
Donne. From the ‘good and virtuous parents’
of the first line to the ‘small quantity of
Christian dust’ of the last, every word is the
touch of a cunning brush painting a picture. The
picture lives, and with so vivid and gracious a life
that it imposes itself upon us as the portrait of
a real man, faithfully copied from the man as he lived.
But that is precisely the art of the painter.
Walton’s picture is so beautiful because everything
in it is sacrificed to beauty; because it is a convention,
a picture in which life is treated almost as theme
for music. And so there remains an opportunity,
even after this masterpiece, for a life of Donne which
shall make no pretence to harmonise a sometimes discordant
existence, or indeed to produce, properly speaking,
a piece of art at all; but which shall be faithful
to the document, a piece of history. Such a book
has now been written by Mr. Gosse, in his Life
and Letters of John Donne, Dean of St. Paul’s.
It is perhaps the most solid and serious contribution
which Mr. Gosse has made to English literature, and
we may well believe that it will remain the final
authority on so interesting and so difficult a subject.
For the first time, in the light of this clear analysis,
and of these carefully arranged letters, we are able,
if not indeed to see Donne as he really was, at all
events to form our own opinion about every action of
his life. This is one of the merits of Mr. Gosse’s
book; he has collected his documents, and he has given
them to us as they are, guiding us adroitly along
the course of the life which they illustrate, but not
allowing himself to dogmatise on what must still remain
conjectural. And he has given us a series of
reproductions of portraits, of the highest importance
in the study of one who is not merely a difficult poet,
but a very ambiguous human being. They begin
with the eager, attractive, somewhat homely youth
of eighteen, grasping the hilt of his sword so tightly
that his knuckles start out from the thin covering
of flesh; passing into the mature Donne as we know
him, the lean, humorous, large-browed, courtly thinker,
with his large intent eyes, a cloak folded elegantly
about his uncovered throat, or the ruff tightening
about his carefully trimmed beard; and ending with
the ghastly emblem set as a frontispiece to Death’s
Duel, the dying man wrapped already in his shroud,
which gathers into folds above his head, as if tied
together like the mouth of a sack, while the sunken
cheeks and hollow closed eyelids are mocked by the
shapely moustache, brushed upwards from the lips.
In the beautiful and fanciful monument in St. Paul’s
done after the drawing from which this frontispiece
was engraved, there is less ghastliness and a more
harmonious beauty in the brave attitude of a man who
dresses for death as he would dress for Court, wearing
the last livery with an almost foppish sense of propriety.
Between them these portraits tell much, and Mr. Gosse,
in his narrative, tells us everything else that there
is to tell, much of it for the first time; and the
distinguished and saintly person of Walton’s
narrative, so simple, so easily explicable, becomes
more complex at every moment, as fresh light makes
the darkness more and more visible. At the end
we seem to have become singularly intimate with a
fascinating and puzzling creature, whom each of us
may try to understand after his fashion, as we try
to understand the real secrets of the character of
our friends.
Donne’s mind, then, if I may
make my own attempt to understand him, was the mind
of the dialectician, of the intellectual adventurer;
he is a poet almost by accident, or at least for reasons
with which art in the abstract has but little to do.
He writes verse, first of all, because he has observed
keenly, and because it pleases the pride of his intellect
to satirise the pretensions of humanity. Then
it is the flesh which speaks in his verse, the curiosity
of woman, which he has explored in the same spirit
of adventure; then passion, making a slave of him for
love’s sake, and turning at last to the slave’s
hatred; finally, religion, taken up with the same
intellectual interest, the same subtle indifference,
and, in its turn, passing also into passionate reality.
A few poems are inspired in him by what he has seen
in remote countries; some are marriage songs and funeral
elegies, written for friendship or for money.
But he writes nothing ‘out of his own head,’
as we say; nothing lightly, or, it would seem, easily;
nothing for the song’s sake. He speaks,
in a letter, of ‘descending to print anything
in verse’; and it is certain that he was never
completely absorbed by his own poetry, or at all careful
to measure his achievements against those of others.
He took his own poems very seriously, he worked upon
them with the whole force of his intellect; but to
himself, even before he became a divine, he was something
more than a poet. Poetry was but one means of
expressing the many-sided activity of his mind and
temperament. Prose was another, preaching another;
travel and contact with great events and persons scarcely
less important to him, in the building up of himself.
And he was interested in everything.
At one moment he is setting himself to study Oriental
languages, a singularly difficult task in those days.
Both in poetry and divinity he has more Spanish than
English books in his library. Scientific and
technical terms are constantly found in his verse,
where we should least expect them, where indeed they
are least welcome. In Ignatius-his
Conclave he speaks with learned enthusiasm of
Copernicus and Tycho Brahe, and of his own immediate
contemporaries, then but just become famous, Galileo
(’who of late hath summoned the other worlds,
the stars, to come nearer to him, and to give an account
of themselves’) and Kepler (’who hath received
it into his care, that no new thing should be done
in heaven without his knowledge’). He rebukes
himself for his abandonment to ’the worst voluptuousness,
which is an hydroptic, immoderate desire of human
learning and languages.’ At twenty-three
he was a soldier against Spain under Raleigh, and went
on the ‘Islands Voyage’; later on, at
different periods, he travelled over many parts of
the Continent, with rich patrons or on diplomatic offices.
Born a Catholic, he became a Protestant, deliberately
enough; wrote books on controversial subjects, against
his old party, before he had taken orders in the Church
of England; besides a strange, morbid speculation
on the innocence of suicide. He used his lawyer’s
training for dubious enough purposes, advising the
Earl of Somerset in the dark business of his divorce
and re-marriage. And, in a mournful pause in the
midst of many harrowing concerns, he writes to a friend:
’When I must shipwreck, I would fain do it in
a sea where mine own impotency might have some excuse;
not in a sullen, weedy lake, where I could not have
so much as exercise for my swimming. Therefore
I would fain do something, but that I cannot tell
what is no wonder.’ ’Though I be in
such a planetary and erratic fortune that I can do
nothing constantly,’ he confesses later in the
same letter.
No doubt some of this feverish activity,
this uncertainty of aim, was a matter of actual physical
health. It is uncertain at what time the wasting
disease, of which he died, first settled upon him;
but he seems to have been always somewhat sickly of
body, and with just that at times depressing, at times
exciting, malady which tells most upon the whole organisation.
That preoccupation with death, which in early life
led him to write his Biathanatos, with its
elaborate apology for suicide, and at the end of his
life to prepare so spectacularly for the act of dying,
was but one symptom of a morbid state of body and brain
and nerves, to which so many of his poems and so many
of his letters bear witness. ‘Sometimes,’
he writes, in a characteristic letter, ’when
I find myself transported with jollity and love of
company, I hang lead to my heels, and reduce to my
thoughts my fortunes, my years, the duties of a man,
of a friend, of a husband, of a father, and all the
incumbencies of a family; when sadness dejects me,
either I countermine it with another sadness, or I
kindle squibs about me again, and fly into sportfulness
and company.’
At the age of thirty-five he writes
from his bed describing every detail of what he frantically
calls ’a sickness which I cannot name or describe,’
and ends his letter: ’I profess to you truly,
that my loathness to give over now, seems to myself
an ill sign that I shall write no more.’
It was at this time that he wrote the Biathanatos,
with its explicit declaration in the preface:
’Whensoever any affliction assails me, methinks
I have the keys of my prison in mine own hand, and
no remedy presents itself so soon to my heart as mine
own sword.’ Fifteen years later, when one
of his most serious illnesses was upon him, and his
life in real danger, he notes down all his symptoms
as he lies awake night after night, with an extraordinary
and, in itself, morbid acuteness. ’I observe
the physician with the same diligence as he the disease;
I see he fears, and I fear with him; I overtake him,
I over-run him in his fear, because he makes his pace
slow; I fear the more because he disguises his fear,
and I see it with the more sharpness because he would
not have me see it.’ As he lies in bed,
he realises ’I am mine own ghost, and rather
affright my beholders than instruct them. They
conceive the worst of me now, and yet fear worse; they
give me for dead now, and yet wonder how I do when
they wake at midnight, and ask how I do to-morrow.
Miserable and inhuman posture, where I must practise
my lying in the grave by lying still.’ This
preying upon itself of the brain is but one significant
indication of a temperament, neurotic enough indeed,
but in which the neurosis is still that of the curious
observer, the intellectual casuist, rather than of
the artist. A wonderful piece of self-analysis,
worthy of St. Augustine, which occurs in one of his
funeral sermons, gives poignant expression to what
must doubtless have been a common condition of so
sensitive a brain. ’I throw myself down
in my chamber, and I call in and invite God and His
angels together; and when they are there, I neglect
God and his angels for the noise of a fly, for the
rattling of a coach, for the whining of a door; I
talk on in the same posture of prayer, eyes lifted
up, knees bowed down, as though I prayed to God; and
if God should ask me when I last thought of God in
that prayer, I cannot tell. Sometimes I find that
I forgot what I was about; But when I began to forget
it, I cannot tell. A memory of yesterday’s
pleasures, a fear of to-morrow’s dangers, a straw
under my knee, a noise in mine ear, a chimera in my
brain, troubles me in my prayer.’ It is
this brain, turned inward upon itself, and darting
out on every side in purely random excursions, that
was responsible, I cannot doubt, for all the contradictions
of a career in which the inner logic is not at first
apparent.
Donne’s career divides itself
sharply into three parts: his youth, when we
see him a soldier, a traveller, a lover, a poet, unrestrained
in all the passionate adventures of youth; then a
middle period, in which he is a lawyer and a theologian,
seeking knowledge and worldly advancement, without
any too restraining scruple as to the means which come
to his hand; and then a last stage of saintly living
and dying. What then is the link between these
successive periods, the principle of development,
the real Donne in short? ’He was none of
these, or all of these, or more,’ says Mr. Gosse.
But, surely, he was indeed all of these, and his individuality
precisely the growth from one stage to another, the
subtle intelligence being always there, working vividly,
but in each period working in a different direction.
’I would fain do something, but that I cannot
tell what is no wonder.’ Everything in Donne
seems to me to explain itself in that fundamental
uncertainty of aim, and his uncertainty of aim partly
by a morbid physical condition. He searches,
nothing satisfies him, tries everything, in vain; finding
satisfaction at last in the Church, as in a haven
of rest. Always it is the curious, insatiable
brain searching. And he is always wretchedly aware
that he ‘can do nothing constantly.’
His three periods, then, are three
stages in the search after a way to walk in, something
worthy of himself to do. Thus, of his one printed
collection of verse he writes: ’Of my Anniversaries,
the fault which I acknowledge in myself is to have
descended to print anything in verse, which, though
it have excuse, even in our times, by example of men,
which one would think should as little have done it
as I, yet I confess I wonder how I declined to it,
and do not pardon myself.’ Of his legal
studies he writes in the same letter: ’For
my purpose of proceeding in the profession of the
law, so far as to a title, you may be pleased to correct
that imagination where you find it. I ever thought
the study of it my best entertainment and pastime,
but I have no ambition nor design upon the style.’
Until he accepts religion, with all its limitations
and encouragements, he has not even sure landmarks
on his way. So speculative a brain, able to prove,
and proving for its own uneasy satisfaction, that
even suicide is ’not so naturally sin, that it
may never be otherwise,’ could allow itself
to be guided by no fixed rules; and to a brain so
abstract, conduct must always have seemed of less
importance than it does to most other people, and especially
conduct which is argument, like the demonstrations
on behalf of what seems, on the face of it, a somewhat
iniquitous divorce and re-marriage, or like those
unmeasured eulogies, both of this ‘blest pair
of swans,’ and of the dead child of a rich father.
He admits, in one of his letters, that in his elegies,
‘I did best when I had least truth for my subjects’;
and of the Anniversaries in honour of little
Mistress Drury, ’But for the other part of the
imputation of having said so much, my defence is, that
my purpose was to say as well as I could; for since
I never saw the gentlewoman, I cannot be understood
to have bound myself to have spoken the just truth.’
He is always the casuist, always mentally impartial
in the face of a moral problem, reserving judgment
on matters which, after all, seem to him remote from
an unimpassioned contemplation of things; until that
moment of crisis comes, long after he has become a
clergyman, when the death of his wife changed the
world for him, and he became, in the words of Walton,
’crucified to the world, and all those vanities,
those imaginary pleasures, that are daily acted on
that restless stage; and they were as perfectly crucified
to him.’ From that time to the end of his
life he had found what he had all the while been seeking:
rest for the restlessness of his mind, in a meditation
upon the divine nature; occupation, in being ‘ambassador
of God,’ through the pulpit; himself, as it
seemed to him, at his fullest and noblest. It
was himself, really, that he had been seeking all
the time, conscious at least of that in all the deviations
of the way; himself, the ultimate of his curiosities.
II
And yet, what remains to us out of
this life of many purposes, which had found an end
satisfying to itself in the Deanery of St. Paul’s,
is simply a bundle of manuscript verses, which the
writer could bring himself neither to print nor to
destroy. His first satire speaks contemptuously
of ‘giddy fantastic poets,’ and, when he
allowed himself to write poetry, he was resolved to
do something different from what anybody had ever
done before, not so much from the artist’s instinctive
desire of originality, as from a kind of haughty, yet
really bourgeois, desire to be indebted to nobody.
With what care he wrote is confessed in a passage
of one of his letters, where, speaking of a sermon,
he says: ’For, as Cardinal Cusanus wrote
a book, Cribratio Alchorani, I have cribrated,
and re-cribrated, and post-cribrated the sermon, and
must necessarily say, the King, who hath let fall
his eye upon some of my poems, never saw, of mine,
a hand, or an eye, or an affection, set down with
so much study and diligence, and labour of syllables,
as in this sermon I expressed those two points.’
But he thought there were other things more important
than being a poet, and this very labour of his was
partly a sign of it. ‘He began,’ says
Mr. Gosse with truth, ’as if poetry had never
been written before.’ To the people of his
time, to those who came immediately after him, he
was the restorer of English poetry.
The Muses’ garden,
with pedantic weeds
O’erspread, was
purged by thee,
says Carew, in those memorial verses
in which the famous lines occur:
Here lies a king that
ruled as he thought fit
The universal monarchy
of wit.
Shakespeare was living, remember,
and it was Elizabethan poetry that Donne set himself
to correct. He began with metre, and invented
a system of prosody which has many merits, and would
have had more in less arbitrary hands. ‘Donne,
for not keeping of accent, deserved hanging,’
said Ben Jonson, who was nevertheless his friend and
admirer. And yet, if one will but read him always
for the sense, for the natural emphasis of what he
has to say, there are few lines which will not come
out in at all events the way that he meant them to
be delivered. The way he meant them to be delivered
is not always as beautiful as it is expressive.
Donne would be original at all costs, preferring himself
to his art. He treated poetry as AEsop’s
master treated his slave, and broke what he could
not bend.
But Donne’s novelty of metre
is only a part of his too deliberate novelty as a
poet. As Mr. Gosse has pointed out, with a self-evident
truth which has apparently waited for him to say it,
Donne’s real position in regard to the poetry
of his time was that of a realistic writer, who makes
a clean sweep of tradition, and puts everything down
in the most modern words and with the help of the most
trivial actual images.
To what a cumbersome
unwieldiness,
And burdensome corpulence
my love hath grown,
he will begin a poem on Love’s
Diet. Of love, as the master of hearts, he
declares seriously:
He swallows us and never
chaws;
By him, as by chain’d
shot, whole ranks do die;
He is the tyrant pike,
our hearts the fry.
And, in his unwise insistence that
every metaphor shall be absolutely new, he drags medical
and alchemical and legal properties into verse really
full of personal passion, producing at times poetry
which is a kind of disease of the intellect, a sick
offshoot of science. Like most poets of powerful
individuality, Donne lost precisely where he gained.
That cumulative and crowding and sweeping intellect
which builds up his greatest poems into miniature
Escurials of poetry, mountainous and four-square to
all the winds of the world, ‘purges’ too
often the flowers as well as the weeds out of ‘the
Muses’ garden.’ To write poetry as
if it had never been written before is to attempt what
the greatest poets never attempted. There are
only two poets in English literature who thus stand
out of the tradition, who are without ancestors, Donne
and Browning. Each seems to have certain qualities
almost greater than the qualities of the greatest;
and yet in each some precipitation of arrogant egoism
remains in the crucible, in which the draught has all
but run immortally clear.
Donne’s quality of passion is
unique in English poetry. It is a rapture in
which the mind is supreme, a reasonable rapture, and
yet carried to a pitch of actual violence. The
words themselves rarely count for much, as they do
in Crashaw, for instance, where words turn giddy at
the height of their ascension. The words mean
things, and it is the things that matter. They
can be brutal: ’For God’s sake, hold
your tongue, and let me love!’ as if a long,
pre-supposed self-repression gave way suddenly, in
an outburst. ‘Love, any devil else but you,’
he begins, in his abrupt leap to the heart of the
matter. Or else his exaltation will be grave,
tranquil, measureless in assurance.
All kings, and all their
favourites,
All glory of honours,
beauties, wits,
The sun itself, which
makes time, as they pass,
Is elder by a year now
than it was
When thou and I first
one another saw.
All other things to
their destruction draw,
Only our love hath no
decay;
This no to-morrow hath,
no yesterday;
Running, it never runs
from us away,
But truly keeps his
first, last, everlasting day.
This lover loves with his whole nature,
and so collectedly because reason, in him, is not
in conflict with passion, but passion’s ally.
His senses speak with unparalleled directness, as
in those elegies which must remain the model in English
of masculine sensual sobriety. He distinguishes
the true end of such loving in a forcible, characteristically
prosaic image:
Whoever loves, if he
do not propose
The right true end of
love, he’s one that goes
To sea for nothing but
to make him sick.
And he exemplifies every motion and
the whole pilgrim’s progress of physical love,
with a deliberate, triumphant, unluxurious explicitness
which ‘leaves no doubt,’ as we say ‘of
his intentions,’ and can be no more than referred
to passingly in modern pages. In a series of hate
poems, of which I will quote the finest, he gives expression
to a whole region of profound human sentiment which
has never been expressed, out of Catullus, with such
intolerable truth.
When by thy scorn, O
murderess, I am dead,
And that thou think’st
thee free
From all solicitation
from me,
Then shall my ghost
come to thy bed,
And thee, feign’d
vestal, in worse arms shall see:
Then thy sick taper
will begin to wink,
And he, whose thou art
then, being tired before,
Will, if thou stir,
or pinch to wake him, think
Thou call’st for
more,
And, in false sleep,
will from thee shrink;
And then, poor aspen
wretch, neglected thou
Bathed in a cold quicksilver
sweat wilt lie
A verier ghost than
I.
What I will say, I will
not tell thee now,
Lest that preserve thee;
and since my love is spent,
I’d rather thou
should’st painfully repent,
Than by my threatenings
rest still innocent.
Yet it is the same lover, and very
evidently the same, who winnows all this earthly passion
to a fine, fruitful dust, fit to make bread for angels.
Ecstatic reason, passion justifying its intoxication
by revealing the mysteries that it has come thus to
apprehend, speak in the quintessence of Donne’s
verse with an exalted simplicity which seems to make
a new language for love. It is the simplicity
of a perfectly abstract geometrical problem, solved
by one to whom the rapture of solution is the blossoming
of pure reason. Read the poem called The Ecstasy,
which seems to anticipate a metaphysical Blake; it
is all close reasoning, step by step, and yet is what
its title claims for it.
It may be, though I doubt it, that
other poets who have written personal verse in English,
have known as much of women’s hearts and the
senses of men, and the interchanges of passionate
intercourse between man and woman; but, partly by
reason of this very method of saying things, no one
has ever rendered so exactly, and with such elaborate
subtlety, every mood of the actual passion. It
has been done in prose; may one not think of Stendhal,
for a certain way he has of turning the whole forces
of the mind upon those emotions and sensations which
are mostly left to the heat of an unreflective excitement?
Donne, as he suffers all the colds and fevers of love,
is as much the sufferer and the physician of his disease
as we have seen him to be in cases of actual physical
sickness. Always detached from himself, even when
he is most helplessly the slave of circumstances,
he has that frightful faculty of seeing through his
own illusions; of having no illusions to the mind,
only to the senses. Other poets, with more wisdom
towards poetry, give us the beautiful or pathetic
results of no matter what creeping or soaring passions.
Donne, making a new thing certainly, if not always
a thing of beauty, tells us exactly what a man really
feels as he makes love to a woman, as he sits beside
her husband at table, as he dreams of her in absence,
as he scorns himself for loving her, as he hates or
despises her for loving him, as he realises all that
is stupid in her devotion, and all that is animal
in his. ’Nature’s lay idiot, I taught
thee to love,’ he tells her, in a burst of angry
contempt, priding himself on his superior craft in
the art. And his devotions to her are exquisite,
appealing to what is most responsive in woman, beyond
those of tenderer poets. A woman cares most
for the lover who understands her best, and is least
taken in by what it is the method of her tradition
to feign. So wearily conscious that she is not
the abstract angel of her pretence and of her adorers,
she will go far in sheer thankfulness to the man who
can see so straight into her heart as to have
found
something like a heart,
But colours it and corners
had;
It was not good, it
was not bad,
It was entire to none,
and few had part.
Donne shows women themselves, in delight,
anger, or despair; they know that he finds nothing
in the world more interesting, and they much more
than forgive him for all the ill he says of them.
If women most conscious of their sex were ever to
read Donne, they would say, He was a great lover;
he understood.
And, in the poems of divine love,
there is the same quality of mental emotion as in
the poems of human love. Donne adores God reasonably,
knowing why he adores Him. He renders thanks point
by point, celebrates the heavenly perfections with
metaphysical precision, and is no vaguer with God
than with woman. Donne knew what he believed and
why he believed, and is carried into no heat or mist
as he tells over the recording rosary of his devotions.
His Holy Sonnets are a kind of argument with
God; they tell over, and discuss, and resolve, such
perplexities of faith and reason as would really occur
to a speculative brain like his. Thought crowds
in upon thought, in these tightly packed lines, which
but rarely admit a splendour of this kind:
At the round earth’s
imagined corners blow
Your trumpets, angels,
and arise, arise
From death, you numberless
infinities
Of souls, and to your
scattered bodies go.
More typical is this too knotted beginning
of another sonnet:
Batter my heart, three-person’d
God; for you
As yet but knock; breathe,
shine, and seek to mend;
That I may rise, and
stand, o’erthrow me, and bend
Your force, to break,
blow, burn, and make me new.
Having something very minute and very
exact to say, he hates to leave anything out; dreading
diffuseness, as he dreads the tame sweetness of an
easy melody, he will use only the smallest possible
number of words to render his thought; and so, as
here, he is too often ingenious rather than felicitous,
forgetting that to the poet poetry comes first, and
all the rest afterwards.
For the writing of great poetry something
more is needed than to be a poet and to have great
occasions. Donne was a poet, and he had the passions
and the passionate adventures, in body and mind, which
make the material for poetry; he was sincere to himself
in expressing what he really felt under the burden
of strong emotion and sharp sensation. Almost
every poem that he wrote is written on a genuine inspiration,
a genuine personal inspiration, but most of his poems
seem to have been written before that personal inspiration
has had time to fuse itself with the poetic inspiration.
It is always useful to remember Wordsworth’s
phrase of ‘emotion recollected in tranquillity,’
for nothing so well defines that moment of crystallisation
in which direct emotion or sensation deviates exquisitely
into art. Donne is intent on the passion itself,
the thought, the reality; so intent that he is not
at the same time, in that half-unconscious way which
is the way of the really great poet, equally intent
on the form, that both may come to ripeness together.
Again it is the heresy of the realist. Just as
he drags into his verse words that have had no time
to take colour from men’s association of them
with beauty, so he puts his ’naked thinking
heart’ into verse as if he were setting forth
an argument. He gives us the real thing, as he
would have been proud to assure us. But poetry
will have nothing to do with real things, until it
has translated them into a diviner world. That
world may be as closely the pattern of ours as the
worlds which Dante saw in hell and purgatory; the language
of the poet may be as close to the language of daily
speech as the supreme poetic language of Dante.
But the personal or human reality and the imaginative
or divine reality must be perfectly interfused, or
the art will be at fault. Donne is too proud
to abandon himself to his own inspiration, to his
inspiration as a poet; he would be something more
than a voice for deeper yet speechless powers; he would
make poetry speak straight. Well, poetry will
not speak straight, in the way Donne wished it to,
and under the goading that his restless intellect gave
it.
He forgot beauty, preferring to it
every form of truth, and beauty has revenged itself
upon him, glittering miraculously out of many lines
in which he wrote humbly, and leaving the darkness
of a retreating shadow upon great spaces in which
a confident intellect was conscious of shining.
For, though mind be
the heaven, where love may sit,
Beauty a convenient
type may be to figure it,
he writes, in the Valediction to
his Book, thus giving formal expression to his
heresy. ’The greatest wit, though not the
best poet of our nation,’ Dryden called him;
the greatest intellect, that is, which had expressed
itself in poetry. Dryden himself was not always
careful to distinguish between what material was fit
and what unfit for verse; so that we can now enjoy
his masterly prose with more equable pleasure than
his verse. But he saw clearly enough the distinction
in Donne between intellect and the poetical spirit;
that fatal division of two forces, which, had they
pulled together instead of apart, might have achieved
a result wholly splendid. Without a great intellect
no man was ever a great poet; but to possess a great
intellect is not even a first step in the direction
of becoming a poet at all.
Compare Donne, for instance, with
Herrick. Herrick has little enough of the intellect,
the passion, the weight and the magnificence of Donne;
but, setting out with so much less to carry, he certainly
gets first to the goal, and partly by running always
in the right direction. The most limited poet
in the language, he is the surest. He knows the
airs that weave themselves into songs, as he knows
the flowers that twine best into garlands. Words
come to him in an order which no one will ever alter,
and no one will ever forget. Whether they come
easily or not is no matter; he knows when they have
come right, and they always come right before he lets
them go. But Donne is only occasionally sure of
his words as airs; he sets them doggedly to the work
of saying something, whether or no they step to the
beat of the music. Conscious writer though he
was, I suppose he was more or less unconscious of his
extraordinary felicities, more conscious probably of
how they came than of what they were doing. And
they come chiefly through a sudden heightening of
mood, which brings with it a clearer and a more exalted
mode of speech, in its merely accurate expression of
itself. Even then I cannot imagine him quite
reconciled to beauty, at least actually doing homage
to it, but rather as one who receives a gift by the
way.
1899.