Rossetti’s phrase about poetry,
that it must be ‘amusing’; his ‘commandment’
about verse translation, ’that a good poem shall
not be turned into a bad one’; his roughest
and most random criticisms about poets, are as direct
and inevitable as his finest verse. Only Coleridge
among English poets has anything like the same definite
grasp upon whatever is essential in poetry. And
it is this intellectual sanity partly, this complete
knowledge of the medium in which he worked, that has
given Rossetti a position of his own, a kind of leadership
in art.
And, technically, Rossetti has done
much for English poetry. Such a line as
And when the night-vigil
was done,
is a perfectly good metrical line
if read without any displacement of the normal accent
in speaking, and the rhyme of ‘of’ to ‘enough’
is as satisfying to the ear as the more commonly accepted
rhyme of ‘love’ and ‘move.’
Rossetti did nothing but good by his troubling of many
rhythms which had become stagnant, and it is in his
extraordinary subtlety of rhythm, most accomplished
where it seems most hesitating, that he has produced
his finest emotional effects, effects before his time
found but rarely, and for the most part accidentally,
in English poetry.
Like Baudelaire and like Mallarme
in France, Rossetti was not only a wholly original
poet, but a new personal force in literature.
That he stimulated the sense of beauty is true in
a way it is not true of Tennyson, for instance, as
it is true of Baudelaire in a way it is not true of
Victor Hugo. In Rossetti’s work, perhaps
because it is not the greatest, there is an actually
hypnotic quality which exerts itself on those who
come within his circle at all; a quality like that
of an unconscious medium, or like that of a woman
against whose attraction one is without defence.
It is the sound of a voice, rather than anything said;
and, when Rossetti speaks, no other voice, for the
moment, seems worth listening to. Even after
one has listened, not very much seems to have been
said; but the world is not quite the same. He
has stimulated a new sense, by which a new mood of
beauty can be apprehended.
Dreams are precise; it is only when
we awake, when we go outside, that they become vague.
In a certain sense Rossetti, with all his keen practical
intelligence, was never wholly awake, had never gone
outside that house of dreams in which the only real
things were the things of the imagination. In
the poetry of most poets there is a double kind of
existence, of which each half is generally quite distinct;
a real world, and a world of the imagination.
But the poetry of Rossetti knows but one world, and
it inhabits a corner there, like a perfectly contented
prisoner, or like a prisoner to whom the sense of imprisonment
is a joy. The love of beauty, the love of love,
because love is the supreme energy of beauty, suffices
for an existence in which every moment is a crisis;
for to him, as Pater has said, ‘life is a crisis
at every moment’: life, that is to say,
the inner life, the life of imagination, in which the
senses are messengers from the outer world, from which
they can but bring disquieting tidings.
The whole of this poetry is tragic,
though without pathos or even self-pity. Every
human attempt to maintain happiness is foredoomed to
be a failure, and this is an attempt to maintain ecstasy
in a region where everything which is not ecstasy
is pain. In reading every other poet who has
written of love one is conscious of compensations:
the happiness of loving or of being loved, the honour
of defeat, the help and comfort of nature or of action.
But here all energy is concentrated on the one ecstasy,
and this exists for its own sake, and the desire of
it is like thirst, which returns after every partial
satisfaction. The desire of beauty, the love
of love, can but be a form of martyrdom when, as with
Rossetti, there is also the desire of possession.
Circumstances have very little to
do with the making of a poet’s temperament or
vision, and it would be enough to point to Christina
Rossetti, who was hardly more in the country than her
brother, but to whom a blade of grass was enough to
summon the whole country about her, and whose poetry
is full of the sense of growing things. Rossetti
instinctively saw faces, and only faces, and he would
have seen them if he had lived in the loneliest countryside,
and he would never have learned to distinguish between
oats and barley if he had had fields of them about
his door from childhood. It was in the beauty
of women, and chiefly in the mysterious beauty of
faces, that Rossetti found the supreme embodiment
of beauty; and it was in the love of women, and not
in any more abstract love, of God, of nature, or of
ideas, that he found the supreme revelation of love.
With this narrowness, with this intensity,
he has rendered in his painting as in his poetry one
ideal, one obsession. He calls what is really
the House of Love The House of Life, and this
is because the house of love was literally to him
the house of life. There is no mystic to whom
love has not seemed to be the essence or ultimate expression
of the soul. Rossetti’s whole work is a
parable of this belief, and it is a parable written
with his life-blood. Of beauty he has said, ’I
drew it in as simply as my breath,’ but, as
the desire of beauty possessed him, as he laboured
to create it over again, with rebellious words or
colours, always too vague for him when they were most
precise, never the precise embodiment of a dream,
the pursuit turned to a labour and the labour to a
pain. Part of what hypnotises us in this work
is, no doubt, that sense of personal tragedy which
comes to us out of its elaborate beauty: the
eternal tragedy of those who have loved the absolute
in beauty too well, and with too mortal a thirst.
1904.