Writing about Botticelli, in that
essay which first interpreted Botticelli to the modern
world, Pater said, after naming the supreme artists,
Michelangelo or Leonardo:
But, besides these great men, there
is a certain number of artists who have a distinct
faculty of their own by which they convey to us a
peculiar quality of pleasure which we cannot get elsewhere;
and these, too, have their place in general culture,
and must be interpreted to it by those who have
felt their charm strongly, and are often the
objects of a special diligence and a consideration
wholly affectionate, just because there is not
about them the stress of a great name and authority.
It is among these rare artists, so
much more interesting, to many, than the very greatest,
that Pater belongs; and he can only be properly understood,
loved, or even measured by those to whom it is ’the
delicacies of fine literature’ that chiefly appeal.
There have been greater prose-writers in our language,
even in our time; but he was, as Mallarme called him,
‘lé prosateur ouvrage par
excellence de ce temps.’
For strangeness and subtlety of temperament, for rarity
and delicacy of form, for something incredibly attractive
to those who felt his attraction, he was as unique
in our age as Botticelli in the great age of Raphael.
And he, too, above all to those who knew him, can scarcely
fail to become, not only ‘the object of a special
diligence,’ but also of ‘a consideration
wholly affectionate,’ not lessened by the slowly
increasing ‘stress of authority’ which
is coming to be laid, almost by the world in general,
on his name.
In the work of Pater, thought moves
to music, and does all its hard work as if in play.
And Pater seems to listen for his thought, and to
overhear it, as the poet overhears his song in the
air. It is like music, and has something of the
character of poetry, yet, above all, it is precise,
individual, thought filtered through a temperament;
and it comes to us as it does because the style which
clothes and fits it is a style in which, to use some
of his own words, ’the writer succeeds in saying
what he wills.’
The style of Pater has been praised
and blamed for its particular qualities of colour,
harmony, weaving; but it has not always, or often,
been realised that what is most wonderful in the style
is precisely its adaptability to every shade of meaning
or intention, its extraordinary closeness in following
the turns of thought, the waves of sensation, in the
man himself. Everything in Pater was in harmony,
when you got accustomed to its particular forms of
expression: the heavy frame, so slow and deliberate
in movement, so settled in repose; the timid and yet
scrutinising eyes; the mannered, yet so personal, voice;
the precise, pausing speech, with its urbanity, its
almost painful conscientiousness of utterance; the
whole outer mask, in short, worn for protection and
out of courtesy, yet moulded upon the inner truth of
nature like a mask moulded upon the features which
it covers. And the books are the man, literally
the man in many accents, turns of phrase; and, far
more than that, the man himself, whom one felt through
his few, friendly, intimate, serious words: the
inner life of his soul coming close to us, in a slow
and gradual revelation.
He has said, in the first essay of his which we have:
The artist and he who has treated life
in the spirit of art desires only to be shown
to the world as he really is; as he comes nearer and
nearer to perfection, the veil of an outer life, not
simply expressive of the inward, becomes thinner
and thinner.
And Pater seemed to draw up into himself
every form of earthly beauty, or of the beauty made
by men, and many forms of knowledge and wisdom, and
a sense of human things which was neither that of the
lover nor of the priest, but partly of both; and his
work was the giving out of all this again, with a
certain labour to give it wholly. It is all, the
criticism, and the stories, and the writing about pictures
and places, a confession, the vraie vérité
(as he was fond of saying) about the world in which
he lived. That world he thought was open to all;
he was sure that it was the real blue and green earth,
and that he caught the tangible moments as they passed.
It was a world into which we can only look, not enter,
for none of us have his secret. But part of his
secret was in the gift and cultivation of a passionate
temperance, an unrelaxing attentiveness to whatever
was rarest and most delightful in passing things.
In Pater logic is of the nature of
ecstasy, and ecstasy never soars wholly beyond the
reach of logic. Pater is keen in pointing out
the liberal and spendthrift weakness of Coleridge
in his thirst for the absolute, his ‘hunger
for eternity,’ and for his part he is content
to set all his happiness, and all his mental energies,
on a relative basis, on a valuation of the things
of eternity under the form of time. He asks for
no ‘larger flowers’ than the best growth
of the earth; but he would choose them flower by flower,
and for himself. He finds life worth just living,
a thing satisfying in itself, if you are careful to
extract its essence, moment by moment, not in any
calculated ‘hedonism,’ even of the mind,
but in a quiet, discriminating acceptance of whatever
is beautiful, active, or illuminating in every moment.
As he grew older he added something more like a Stoic
sense of ‘duty’ to the old, properly and
severely Epicurean doctrine of ‘pleasure.’
Pleasure was never, for Pater, less than the essence
of all knowledge, all experience, and not merely all
that is rarest in sensation; it was religious from
the first, and had always to be served with a strict
ritual. ’Only be sure it is passion,’
he said of that spirit of divine motion to which he
appealed for the quickening of our sense of life,
our sense of ourselves; be sure, he said, ’that
it does yield you this fruit of a quickened, multiplied
consciousness.’ What he cared most for at
all times was that which could give ‘the highest
quality to our moments as they pass’; he differed
only, to a certain extent, in his estimation of what
that was. ‘The herb, the wine, the gem’
of the preface to the Renaissance tended more
and more to become, under less outward symbols of perfection,
’the discovery, the new faculty, the privileged
apprehension’ by which ’the imaginative
regeneration of the world’ should be brought
about, or even, at times, a brooding over ’what
the soul passes, and must pass, through, aux abois
with nothingness, or with those offended mysterious
powers that may really occupy it.’
When I first met Pater he was nearly
fifty. I did not meet him for about two years
after he had been writing to me, and his first letter
reached me when I was just over twenty-one. I
had been writing verse all my life, and what Browning
was to me in verse Pater, from about the age of seventeen,
had been to me in prose. Meredith made the third;
but his form of art was not, I knew never could be,
mine. Verse, I suppose, requires no teaching,
but it was from reading Pater’s Studies in
the History of the Renaissance, in its first edition
on ribbed paper (I have the feel of it still in my
fingers), that I realised that prose also could be
a fine art. That book opened a new world to me,
or, rather, gave me the key or secret of the world
in which I was living. It taught me that there
was a beauty besides the beauty of what one calls
inspiration, and comes and goes, and cannot be caught
or followed; that life (which had seemed to me of
so little moment) could be itself a work of art; from
that book I realised for the first time that there
was anything interesting or vital in the world besides
poetry and music. I caught from it an unlimited
curiosity, or, at least, the direction of curiosity
into definite channels.
The knowledge that there was such
a person as Pater in the world, an occasional letter
from him, an occasional meeting, and, gradually, the
definite encouragement of my work in which, for some
years, he was unfailingly generous and attentive,
meant more to me, at that time, than I can well indicate,
or even realise, now. It was through him that
my first volume of verse was published; and it was
through his influence and counsels that I trained
myself to be infinitely careful in all matters of
literature. Influence and counsel were always
in the direction of sanity, restraint, precision.
I remember a beautiful phrase which
he once made up, in his delaying way, with ‘wells’
and ‘no doubts’ in it, to describe, and
to describe supremely, a person whom I had seemed
to him to be disparaging. ’He does,’
he said meditatively, ’remind me of, well, of
a steam-engine stuck in the mud. But he is so
enthusiastic!’ Pater liked people to be enthusiastic,
but, with him, enthusiasm was an ardent quietude, guarded
by the wary humour that protects the sensitive.
He looked upon undue earnestness, even in outward
manner, in a world through which the artist is bound
to go on a wholly ‘secret errand,’ as bad
form, which shocked him as much in persons as bad
style did in books. He hated every form of extravagance,
noise, mental or physical, with a temperamental hatred:
he suffered from it, in his nerves and in his mind.
And he had no less dislike of whatever seemed to him
either morbid or sordid, two words which he often
used to express his distaste for things and people.
He never would have appreciated writers like Verlaine,
because of what seemed to him perhaps unnecessarily
‘sordid’ in their lives. It pained
him, as it pains some people, perhaps only because
they are more acutely sensitive than others, to walk
through mean streets, where people are poor, miserable,
and hopeless.
And since I have mentioned Verlaine,
I may say that what Pater most liked in poetry was
the very opposite of such work as that of Verlaine,
which he might have been supposed likely to like.
I do not think it was actually one of Verlaine’s
poems, but something done after his manner in English,
that some reviewer once quoted, saying: ’That,
to our mind, would be Mr. Pater’s ideal of poetry.’
Pater said to me, with a sad wonder, ‘I simply
don’t know what he meant.’ What he
liked in poetry was something even more definite than
can be got in prose; and he valued poets like Dante
and like Rossetti for their ’delight in concrete
definition,’ not even quite seeing the ultimate
magic of such things as Kubla Khan, which he
omitted in a brief selection from the poetry of Coleridge.
In the most interesting letter which I ever had from
him, the only letter which went to six pages, he says:
12
EARL’S TERRACE,
KENSINGTON,
W.,
Ja, 1888.
MY DEAR MR. SYMONS,-I feel
much flattered at your choosing me as an arbiter
in the matter of your literary work, and thank you
for the pleasure I have had in reading carefully
the two poems you have sent me. I don’t
use the word ‘arbiter’ loosely for ‘critic’;
but suppose a real controversy, on the question
whether you shall spend your best energies in
writing verse, between your poetic aspirations
on the one side, and prudence (calculating results)
on the other. Well! judging by these two
pieces, I should say that you have a poetic talent
remarkable, especially at the present day, for precise
and intellectual grasp on the matter it deals with.
Rossetti, I believe, said that the value of every
artistic product was in direct proportion to
the amount of purely intellectual force that
went to the initial conception of it: and it is
just this intellectual conception which seems
to me to be so conspicuously wanting in what,
in some ways, is the most characteristic verse of
our time, especially that of our secondary poets.
In your own pieces, particularly in your MS.
‘A Revenge,’ I find Rossetti’s requirement
fulfilled, and should anticipate great things from
one who has the talent of conceiving his motive
with so much firmness and tangibility-with
that close logic, if I may say so, which is an
element in any genuinely imaginative process.
It is clear to me that you aim at this, and it
is what gives your verses, to my mind, great
interest. Otherwise, I think the two pieces of
unequal excellence, greatly preferring ‘A
Revenge’ to ‘Bell in Camp.’
Reserving some doubt whether the watch, as the
lover’s gift, is not a little bourgeois,
I think this piece worthy of any poet. It has
that aim of concentration and organic unity which
I value greatly both in prose and verse.
‘Bell in Camp’ pleases me less, for the
same reason which makes me put Rossetti’s
‘Jenny,’ and some of Browning’s
pathetic-satiric pieces, below the rank which many
assign them. In no one of the poems I am
thinking of, is the inherent sordidness of everything
in the persons supposed, except the one poetic
trait then under treatment, quite forgotten.
Otherwise, I feel the pathos, the humour, of the
piece (in the full sense of the word humour)
and the skill with which you have worked out
your motive therein. I think the present age an
unfavourable one to poets, at least in England.
The young poet comes into a generation which
has produced a large amount of first-rate poetry,
and an enormous amount of good secondary poetry.
You know I give a high place to the literature
of prose as a fine art, and therefore hope you
won’t think me brutal in saying that the
admirable qualities of your verse are those also of
imaginative prose; as I think is the case also
with much of Browning’s finest verse.
I should say, make prose your principal metier,
as a man of letters, and publish your verse as
a more intimate gift for those who already value
you for your pedestrian work in literature. I
should think you ought to find no difficulty in finding
a publisher for poems such as those you have
sent to me.
I am more than ever anxious to
meet you. Letters are such poor
means of communication. Don’t come
to London without making an
appointment to come and see me here.-Very
sincerely yours,
WALTER
PATER.
‘Browning, one of my best-loved
writers,’ is a phrase I find in his first letter
to me, in December 1886, thanking me for a little book
on Browning which I had just published. There
is, I think, no mention of any other writer except
Shakespeare (besides the reference to Rossetti which
I have just quoted) in any of the fifty or sixty letters
which I have from him. Everything that is said
about books is a direct matter of business: work
which he was doing, of which he tells me, or which
I was doing, about which he advises and encourages
me.
In practical things Pater was wholly
vague, troubled by their persistence when they pressed
upon him. To wrap up a book to send by post was
an almost intolerable effort, and he had another reason
for hesitating. ‘I take your copy of Shakespeare’s
sonnets with me,’ he writes in June 1889, ’hoping
to be able to restore it to you there lest it should
get bruised by transit through the post.’
He wrote letters with distaste, never really well,
and almost always with excuses or regrets in them:
’Am so over-burdened (my time, I mean) just now
with pupils, lectures, and the making thereof’;
or, with hopes for a meeting: ‘Letters
are such poor means of communication: when are
we to meet?’ or, as a sort of hasty makeshift:
’I send this prompt answer, for I know by experience
that when I delay my delays are apt to be lengthy.’
A review took him sometimes a year to get through;
and remained in the end, like his letters, a little
cramped, never finished to the point of ease, like
his published writings. To lecture was a great
trial to him. Two of the three lectures which
I have heard in my life were given by Pater, one on
Merimee, at the London Institution, in November 1890,
and the other on Raphael, at Toynbee Hall, in 1892.
I never saw a man suffer a severer humiliation.
The act of reading his written lecture was an agony
which communicated itself to the main part of the
audience. Before going into the hall at Whitechapel
he had gone into a church to compose his mind a little,
between the discomfort of the underground railway and
the distress of the lecture-hall.
In a room, if he was not among very
intimate friends, Pater was rarely quite at his ease,
but he liked being among people, and he made the greater
satisfaction overcome the lesser reluctance. He
was particularly fond of cats, and I remember one
evening, when I had been dining with him in London,
the quaint, solemn, and perfectly natural way in which
he took up the great black Persian, kissed it, and
set it down carefully again on his way upstairs.
Once at Oxford he told me that M. Bourget had sent
him the first volume of his Essais de Psychologie
Contemporaine, and that the cat had got hold of
the book and torn up the part containing the essay
on Baudelaire, ’and as Baudelaire was such a
lover of cats I thought she might have spared him!’
We were talking once about fairs,
and I had been saying how fond I was of them.
He said: ’I am fond of them, too. I
always go to fairs. I am getting to find they
are very similar.’ Then he began to tell
me about the fairs in France, and I remember, as if
it were an unpublished fragment in one of his stories,
the minute, coloured impression of the booths, the
little white horses of the ‘roundabouts,’
and the little wild beast shows, in which what had
most struck him was the interest of the French peasant
in the wolf, a creature he might have seen in his own
woods. ’An English clown would not have
looked at a wolf if he could have seen a tiger.’
I once asked Pater if his family was
really connected with that of the painter, Jean-Baptiste
Pater. He said: ’I think so, I believe
so, I always say so.’ The relationship
has never been verified, but one would like to believe
it; to find something lineally Dutch in the English
writer. It was, no doubt, through this kind of
family interest that he came to work upon Goncourt’s
essay and the contemporary Life of Watteau
by the Count de Caylus, printed in the first series
of L’Art du XVIII^e Siecle, out of which
he has made certainly the most living of his Imaginary
Portraits, that Prince of Court Painters
which is supposed to be the journal of a sister of
Jean-Baptiste Pater, whom we see in one of Watteau’s
portraits in the Louvre. As far back as 1889
Pater was working towards a second volume of Imaginary
Portraits, of which Hippolytus Veiled was
to have been one. He had another subject in Moroni’s
Portrait of a Tailor in the National Gallery,
whom he was going to make a Burgomaster; and another
was to have been a study of life in the time of the
Albigensian persecution. There was also to be
a modern study: could this have been Emerald
Uthwart? No doubt Apollo in Picardy,
published in 1893, would have gone into the volume.
The Child in the House, which was printed as
an Imaginary Portrait, in Macmillans Magazine
in 1878, was really meant to be the first chapter
of a romance which was to show ‘the poetry of
modern life,’ something, he said, as Aurora
Leigh does. There is much personal detail
in it, the red hawthorn, for instance, and he used
to talk to me of the old house at Tunbridge, where
his great-aunt lived, and where he spent much of his
time when a child. He remembered the gipsies there,
and their caravans, when they came down for the hop-picking;
and the old lady in her large cap going out on the
lawn to do battle with the surveyors who had come
to mark out a railway across it; and his terror of
the train, and of ‘the red flag, which meant
blood.’ It was because he always
dreamed of going on with it that he did not reprint
this imaginary portrait in the book of Imaginary
Portraits; but he did not go on with it because,
having begun the long labour of Marius, it was
out of his mind for many years, and when, in 1889,
he still spoke of finishing it, he was conscious that
he could never continue it in the same style, and
that it would not be satisfactory to rewrite it in
his severer, later manner. It remains, perhaps
fortunately, a fragment, to which no continuation
could ever add a more essential completeness.
Style, in Pater, varied more than
is generally supposed, in the course of his development,
and, though never thought of as a thing apart from
what it expresses, was with him a constant preoccupation.
Let writers, he said, ‘make time to write English
more as a learned language.’ It has been
said that Ruskin, De Quincey, and Flaubert were among
the chief ‘origins’ of Pater’s style;
it is curiously significant that matter, in Pater,
was developed before style, and that in the bare and
angular outlines of the earliest fragment, Diaphanéité,
there is already the substance which is to be clothed
upon by beautiful and appropriate flesh in the Studies
in the Renaissance. Ruskin, I never heard
him mention, but I do not doubt that there, to the
young man beginning to concern himself with beauty
in art and literature, was at least a quickening influence.
Of De Quincey he spoke with an admiration which I had
difficulty in sharing, and I remember his showing me
with pride a set of his works bound in half-parchment,
with pale gold lettering on the white backs, and with
the cinnamon edges which he was so fond of. Of
Flaubert we rarely met without speaking. He thought
Julien l’Hospitalier as perfect as anything
he had done. L’Education Sentimentale
was one of the books which he advised me to read;
that, and Le Rouge et lé Noir of Stendhal;
and he spoke with particular admiration of two episodes
in the former, the sickness and the death of the child.
Of the Goncourts he spoke with admiration tempered
by dislike. Their books often repelled him, yet
their way of doing things seemed to him just the way
things should be done; and done before almost any
one else. He often read Madame Gervaisais,
and he spoke of Cherie (for all its ‘immodesty’)
as an admirable thing, and a model for all such studies.
Once, as we were walking in Oxford,
he pointed to a window and said, with a slow smile:
‘That is where I get my Zolas.’ He
was always a little on his guard in respect of books;
and, just as he read Flaubert and Goncourt because
they were intellectual neighbours, so he could read
Zola for mere pastime, knowing that there would be
nothing there to distract him. I remember telling
him about The Story of an African Farm, and
of the wonderful human quality in it. He said,
repeating his favourite formula: ’No doubt
you are quite right; but I do not suppose I shall
ever read it.’ And he explained to me that
he was always writing something, and that while he
was writing he did not allow himself to read anything
which might possibly affect him too strongly, by bringing
a new current of emotion to bear upon him. He
was quite content that his mind should ‘keep
as a solitary prisoner its own dream of a world’;
it was that prisoner’s dream of a world that
it was his whole business as a writer to remember,
to perpetuate.
1906.