This was a woman young
and passionate,
Loving the Earth, and
loving most to be
Where she might be alone
with liberty;
Loving the beasts, who
are compassionate;
The homeless moors,
her home; the bright elate
Winds of the cold dawn;
rock and stone and tree;
Night, bringing dreams
out of eternity;
And memory of Death’s
unforgetting date.
She too was unforgetting:
has she yet
Forgotten that long
agony when her breath
Too fierce for living
fanned the flame of death?
Earth for her heather,
does she now forget
What pity knew not in
her love from scorn,
And that it was an unjust
thing to be born?
The Stoic in woman has been seen once
only, and that in the only woman in whom there has
been seen the paradox of passion without sensuousness.
Emily Bronte lived with an unparalleled energy a life
of outward quiet, in a loneliness which she shared
only with the moors and with the animals whom she
loved. She required no passion-experience to endow
her with more than a memory of passion. Passion
was alive in her as flame is alive in the earth.
And the vehemence of that inner fire fed on itself,
and wore out her body before its time, because it had
no respite and no outlet. We see her condemned
to self-imprisonment, and dying of too much life.
Her poems are few and brief, and nothing
more personal has ever been written. A few are
as masterly in execution as in conception, and almost
all have a direct truth of utterance, which rarely
lacks at least the bare beauty of muscle and sinew,
of a kind of naked strength and alertness. They
are without heat or daylight, the sun is rarely in
them, and then ‘blood-red’; light comes
as starshine, or comes as
hostile
light
That does not warm but
burn.
At times the landscape in this bare,
grey, craggy verse, always a landscape of Yorkshire
moors, with its touches of stern and tender memory,
‘The mute bird sitting on the stone,’ ’A
little and a lone green lane,’ has a quality
more thrilling than that of Wordsworth. There
is none of his observation, and none of his sense
of a benignant ’presence far more deeply interfused’;
but there is the voice of the heart’s roots,
crying out to its home in the earth.
At first this unornamented verse may
seem forbidding, may seem even to be ordinary, as
an actual moorland may, to those for whom it has no
special attraction. But in the verse, as on the
moors, there is space, wind, and the smell of the
earth; and there is room to be alone, that liberty
which this woman cried for when she cried:
Leave the heart that
now I bear,
And give me liberty.
To be alone was for her to be alone
with ‘a chainless soul,’ which asked of
whatever powers might be only ‘courage to endure,’
constancy not to forget, and the right to leave the
door wide open to those visions that came to her out
of mere fixed contemplation: ‘the God of
Visions,’ as she called her imagination, ‘my
slave, my comrade, and my king.’ And we
know that her courage was flawless, heroic, beyond
praise; that she forgot nothing, not even that love
for her unspeakable brother, for whom she has expressed
in two of her poems a more than masculine magnanimity
of pity and contempt; and that at all times she could
turn inward to that world within, where her imagination
waited for her,
Where thou, and I, and
Liberty
Have undisputed sovereignty.
Yet even imagination, though ‘benignant,’
is to her a form of ’phantom bliss’ to
which she will not trust herself wholly. ’So
hopeless is the world without’: but is
the world within ever quite frankly accepted as a
substitute, as a truer reality? She is always
on her guard against imagination as against the outer
world, whose ‘lies’ she is resolved shall
not ‘beguile’ her. She has accepted
reason as the final arbiter, and desires only to see
clearly, to see things as they are. She really
believed that
Earth reserves no blessing
For the unblest of heaven;
and she had an almost Calvinistic
sense of her own condemnation to unhappiness.
That being so, she was suspicious of those opportunities
of joy which did come to her, or at least resolute
not to believe too implicitly in the good messages
of the stars, which might be mere dreams, or of the
earth, which was only certainly kind in preparing for
her that often-thought-of grave. ‘No coward
soul is mine’ is one of her true sayings; but
it was with difficulty that she trusted even that
message of life which she seemed to discover in death.
She has to assure herself of it, again and again:
‘Who once lives, never dies!’ And that
sense of personal identity which aches throughout all
her poems is a sense, not of the delight, but of the
pain and ineradicable sting of personal identity.
Her poems are all outcries, as her
great novel, Wuthering Heights, is one long
outcry. A soul on the rack seems to make itself
heard at moments, when suffering has grown too acute
for silence. Every poem is as if torn from her.
Even when she does not write seemingly in her own
person, the subjects are such disguises as ‘The
Prisoner,’ ’Honour’s Martyr,’
‘The Outcast Mother,’ echoes of all the
miseries and useless rebellions of the earth.
She spells over the fading characters in dying faces,
unflinchingly, with an austere curiosity; and looks
closely into the eyes of shame, not dreading what
she may find there. She is always arguing with
herself, and the answers are inflexible, the answers
of a clear intellect which rebels but accepts defeat.
Her doubt is itself an affirmation, her defiance would
be an entreaty but for the ’quenchless will’
of her pride. She faces every terror, and to her
pained apprehension birth and death and life are alike
terrible. Only Webster’s dirge might have
been said over her coffin.
What my soul bore my
soul alone
Within itself may tell,
she says truthfully; but some of that
long endurance of her life, in which exile, the body’s
weakness, and a sense of some ‘divinest anguish’
which clung about the world and all things living,
had their share, she was able to put into ascetic
and passionate verse. It is sad-coloured and
desolate, but when gleams of sunlight or of starlight
pierce the clouds that hang generally above it, a
rare and stormy beauty comes into the bare outlines,
quickening them with living splendour.
1906.