The Church, which was once the mother
of poets no less than of saints, during the last two
centuries has relinquished to aliens the chief glories
of poetry, if the chief glories of holiness she has
preserved for her own. The palm and the laurel,
Dominic and Dante, sanctity and song, grew together
in her soil: she has retained the palm, but forgone
the laurel. Poetry in its widest sense,
and when not professedly irreligious, has been too
much and too long among many Catholics either misprised
or distrusted; too much and too generally the feeling
has been that it is at best superfluous, at worst
pernicious, most often dangerous. Once poetry
was, as she should be, the lesser sister and helpmate
of the Church; the minister to the mind, as the Church
to the soul. But poetry sinned, poetry fell;
and, in place of lovingly reclaiming her, Catholicism
cast her from the door to follow the feet of her pagan
seducer. The separation has been ill for poetry;
it has not been well for religion.
Fathers of the Church (we would say),
pastors of the Church, pious laïcs of the Church:
you are taking from its walls the panoply of Aquinas-take
also from its walls the psaltery of Alighieri.
Unroll the precedents of the Church’s past;
recall to your minds that Francis of Assisi was among
the precursors of Dante; that sworn to Poverty he forswore
not Beauty, but discerned through the lamp Beauty
the Light God; that he was even more a poet in his
miracles than in his melody; that poetry clung round
the cowls of his Order. Follow his footsteps;
you who have blessings for men, have you no blessing
for the birds? Recall to your memory that, in
their minor kind, the love poems of Dante shed no less
honour on Catholicism than did the great religious
poem which is itself pivoted on love; that in singing
of heaven he sang of Beatrice-this supporting
angel was still carven on his harp even when he stirred
its strings in Paradise. What you theoretically
know, vividly realise: that with many the religion
of beauty must always be a passion and a power, that
it is only evil when divorced from the worship of
the Primal Beauty. Poetry is the preacher to
men of the earthly as you of the Heavenly Fairness;
of that earthly fairness which God has fashioned to
His own image and likeness. You proclaim the
day which the Lord has made, and Poetry exults and
rejoices in it. You praise the Creator for His
works, and she shows you that they are very good.
Beware how you misprise this potent ally, for hers
is the art of Giotto and Dante: beware how you
misprise this insidious foe, for hers is the art of
modern France and of Byron. Her value, if you
know it not, God knows, and know the enemies of God.
If you have no room for her beneath the wings of
the Holy One, there is place for her beneath the webs
of the Evil One: whom you discard, he embraces;
whom you cast down from an honourable seat, he will
advance to a haughty throne; the brows you dislaurel
of a just respect, he will bind with baleful splendours;
the stone which you builders reject, he will make
his head of the corner. May she not prophesy
in the temple? then there is ready for her the tripod
of Delphi. Eye her not askance if she seldom
sing directly of religion: the bird gives glory
to God though it sings only of its innocent loves.
Suspicion creates its own cause; distrust begets
reason for distrust. This beautiful, wild, feline
Poetry, wild because left to range the wilds, restore
to the hearth of your charity, shelter under the rafter
of your Faith; discipline her to the sweet restraints
of your household, feed her with the meat from your
table, soften her with the amity of your children;
tame her, fondle her, cherish her-you will
no longer then need to flee her. Suffer her to
wanton, suffer her to play, so she play round the foot
of the Cross!
There is a change of late years:
the Wanderer is being called to her Father’s
house, but we would have the call yet louder, we would
have the proffered welcome more unstinted. There
are still stray remnants of the old intolerant distrust.
It is still possible for even a French historian
of the Church to enumerate among the articles cast
upon Savonarola’s famous pile, poesies érotiques,
tant des anciens que des modernes, livres impies où
corrupteurs, Ovide, Tibulle, Properce, pour ne nommer
que les plus connus, Dante, Petrarque, Boccace, tous
ces auteurs Italiens qui deja souillaient les âmes
et ruinaient les moeurs, en creant où perfectionnant
la langue. Blameworthy carelessness at the
least, which can class the Vita Nuova with
the Ars Amandi and the Decameron!
And among many English Catholics the spirit of poetry
is still often received with a restricted Puritanical
greeting, rather than with the traditionally Catholic
joyous openness.
We ask, therefore, for a larger interest,
not in purely Catholic poetry, but in poetry generally,
poetry in its widest sense. With few exceptions,
whatsoever in our best poets is great and good to the
non-Catholic, is great and good also to the Catholic;
and though Faber threw his edition of Shelley into
the fire and never regretted the act; though, moreover,
Shelley is so little read among us that we can still
tolerate in our Churches the religious parody which
Faber should have thrown after his three-volumed Shelley;
-in spite of this, we are not disposed
to number among such exceptions that straying spirit
of light.
We have among us at the present day
no lineal descendant, in the poetical order, of Shelley;
and any such offspring of the aboundingly spontaneous
Shelley is hardly possible, still less likely, on account
of the defect by which (we think) contemporary poetry
in general, as compared with the poetry of the early
nineteenth century, is mildewed. That defect
is the predominance of art over inspiration, of body
over soul. We do not say the defect of
inspiration. The warrior is there, but he is
hampered by his armour. Writers of high aim
in all branches of literature, even when they are
not-as Mr. Swinburne, for instance, is-lavish
in expression, are generally over-deliberate in expression.
Mr. Henry James, delineating a fictitious writer
clearly intended to be the ideal of an artist, makes
him regret that he has sometimes allowed himself to
take the second-best word instead of searching for
the best. Theoretically, of course, one ought
always to try for the best word. But practically,
the habit of excessive care in word-selection frequently
results in loss of spontaneity; and, still worse,
the habit of always taking the best word too easily
becomes the habit of always taking the most ornate
word, the word most removed from ordinary speech.
In consequence of this, poetic diction has become
latterly a kaleidoscope, and one’s chief curiosity
is as to the precise combinations into which the pieces
will be shifted. There is, in fact, a certain
band of words, the Praetorian cohorts of poetry, whose
prescriptive aid is invoked by every aspirant to the
poetical purple, and without whose prescriptive aid
none dares aspire to the poetical purple; against
these it is time some banner should be raised.
Perhaps it is almost impossible for a contemporary
writer quite to evade the services of the free-lances
whom one encounters under so many standards.
But it is at any rate curious to note that the literary
revolution against the despotic diction of Pope seems
issuing, like political revolutions, in a despotism
of its own making.
This, then, we cannot but think, distinguishes
the literary period of Shelley from our own.
It distinguishes even the unquestionable treasures
and masterpieces of to-day from similar treasures and
masterpieces of the precedent day; even the Lotus-Eaters
from Kubla-Khan; even Rossetti’s ballads
from Christabel. It is present in the
restraint of Matthew Arnold no less than in the exuberance
of Swinburne, and affects our writers who aim at simplicity
no less than those who seek richness. Indeed,
nothing is so artificial as our simplicity. It
is the simplicity of the French stage ingenue.
We are self-conscious to the finger-tips; and this
inherent quality, entailing on our poetry the inevitable
loss of spontaneity, ensures that whatever poets,
of whatever excellence, may be born to us from the
Shelleian stock, its founder’s spirit can take
among us no reincarnation. An age that is ceasing
to produce child-like children cannot produce a Shelley.
For both as poet and man he was essentially a child.
Yet, just as in the effete French
society before the Revolution the Queen played at
Arcadia, the King played at being a mechanic, everyone
played at simplicity and universal philanthropy, leaving
for most durable outcome of their philanthropy the
guillotine, as the most durable outcome of ours may
be execution by electricity;-so in our own
society the talk of benevolence and the cult of childhood
are the very fashion of the hour. We, of this
self-conscious, incredulous generation, sentimentalise
our children, analyse our children, think we are endowed
with a special capacity to sympathise and identify
ourselves with children; we play at being children.
And the result is that we are not more child-like,
but our children are less child-like. It is
so tiring to stoop to the child, so much easier to
lift the child up to you. Know you what it is
to be a child? It is to be something very different
from the man of to-day. It is to have a spirit
yet streaming from the waters of baptism; it is to
believe in love, to believe in loveliness, to believe
in belief; it is to be so little that the elves can
reach to whisper in your ear; it is to turn pumpkins
into coaches, and mice into horses, lowness into loftiness,
and nothing into everything, for each child has its
fairy godmother in its own soul; it is to live in
a nutshell and to count yourself the king of infinite
space; it is
To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in
a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your
hand,
And eternity in
an hour;
it is to know not as yet that you
are under sentence of life, nor petition that it be
commuted into death. When we become conscious
in dreaming that we dream, the dream is on the point
of breaking; when we become conscious in living that
we live, the ill dream is but just beginning.
Now if Shelley was but too conscious of the dream,
in other respects Dryden’s false and famous
line might have been applied to him with very much
less than it’s usual untruth. To the last,
in a degree uncommon even among poets, he retained
the idiosyncrasy of childhood, expanded and matured
without differentiation. To the last he was
the enchanted child.
This was, as is well known, patent
in his life. It is as really, though perhaps
less obviously, manifest in his poetry, the sincere
effluence of his life. And it may not, therefore,
be amiss to consider whether it was conditioned by
anything beyond his congenital nature. For our
part, we believe it to have been equally largely the
outcome of his early and long isolation. Men
given to retirement and abstract study are notoriously
liable to contract a certain degree of childlikeness:
and if this be the case when we segregate a man, how
much more when we segregate a child! It is when
they are taken into the solution of school-life that
children, by the reciprocal interchange of influence
with their fellows, undergo the series of reactions
which converts them from children into boys and from
boys into men. The intermediate stage must be
traversed to reach the final one.
Now Shelley never could have been
a man, for he never was a boy. And the reason
lay in the persecution which overclouded his school-days.
Of that persecution’s effect upon him, he has
left us, in The Revolt of Islam, a picture
which to many or most people very probably seems a
poetical exaggeration; partly because Shelley appears
to have escaped physical brutality, partly because
adults are inclined to smile tenderly at childish
sorrows which are not caused by physical suffering.
That he escaped for the most part bodily violence
is nothing to the purpose. It is the petty malignant
annoyance recurring hour by hour, day by day, month
by month, until its accumulation becomes an agony;
it is this which is the most terrible weapon that
boys have against their fellow boy, who is powerless
to shun it because, unlike the man, he has virtually
no privacy. His is the torture which the ancients
used, when they anointed their victim with honey and
exposed him naked to the restless fever of the flies.
He is a little St. Sebastian, sinking under the incessant
flight of shafts which skilfully avoid the vital parts.
We do not, therefore, suspect Shelley
of exaggeration: he was, no doubt, in terrible
misery. Those who think otherwise must forget
their own past. Most people, we suppose, must
forget what they were like when they were children:
otherwise they would know that the griefs of their
childhood were passionate abandonment, dechirants
(to use a characteristically favourite phrase of modern
French literature) as the griefs of their maturity.
Children’s griefs are little, certainly; but
so is the child, so is its endurance, so is its field
of vision, while its nervous impressionability is
keener than ours. Grief is a matter of relativity;
the sorrow should be estimated by its proportion to
the sorrower; a gash is as painful to one as an amputation
to another. Pour a puddle into a thimble, or
an Atlantic into Etna; both thimble and mountain overflow.
Adult fools, would not the angels smile at our griefs,
were not angels too wise to smile at them?
So beset, the child fled into the
tower of his own soul, and raised the drawbridge.
He threw out a reserve, encysted in which he grew
to maturity unaffected by the intercourses that
modify the maturity of others into the thing we call
a man. The encysted child developed until it
reached years of virility, until those later Oxford
days in which Hogg encountered it; then, bursting
at once from its cyst and the university, it swam
into a world not illegitimately perplexed by such a
whim of the gods. It was, of course, only the
completeness and duration of this seclusion-lasting
from the gate of boyhood to the threshold of youth-which
was peculiar to Shelley. Most poets, probably,
like most saints, are prepared for their mission by
an initial segregation, as the seed is buried to germinate:
before they can utter the oracle of poetry, they must
first be divided from the body of men. It is
the severed head that makes the seraph.
Shelley’s life frequently exhibits
in him the magnified child. It is seen in his
fondness for apparently futile amusements, such as
the sailing of paper boats. This was, in the
truest sense of the word, child-like; not, as it
is frequently called and considered, childish.
That is to say, it was not a mindless triviality,
but the genuine child’s power of investing little
things with imaginative interest; the same power,
though differently devoted, which produced much of
his poetry. Very possibly in the paper boat
he saw the magic bark of Laon and Cythna, or
That
thinnest boat
In which the mother of the months
is borne
By ebbing night into her western
cave.
In fact, if you mark how favourite
an idea, under varying forms, is this in his verse,
you will perceive that all the charmed boats which
glide down the stream of his poetry are but glorified
resurrections of the little paper argosies which trembled
down the Isis.
And the child appeared no less often
in Shelley the philosopher than in Shelley the idler.
It is seen in his repellent no less than in his amiable
weaknesses; in the unteachable folly of a love that
made its goal its starting-point, and firmly expected
spiritual rest from each new divinity, though it had
found none from the divinities antecedent. For
we are clear that this was no mere straying of sensual
appetite, but a straying, strange and deplorable,
of the spirit; that (contrary to what Mr. Coventry
Patmore has said) he left a woman not because he was
tired of her arms, but because he was tired of her
soul. When he found Mary Shelley wanting, he
seems to have fallen into the mistake of Wordsworth,
who complained in a charming piece of unreasonableness
that his wife’s love, which had been a fountain,
was now only a well:
Such change, and at the very door
Of my fond heart, hath made me poor.
Wordsworth probably learned, what
Shelley was incapable of learning, that love can never
permanently be a fountain. A living poet, in
an article which you almost fear to breathe upon
lest you should flutter some of the frail pastel-like
bloom, has said the thing: “Love itself
has tidal moments, lapses and flows due to the metrical
rule of the interior heart.” Elementary
reason should proclaim this true. Love is an
affection, its display an emotion: love is the
air, its display is the wind. An affection may
be constant; an emotion can no more be constant than
the wind can constantly blow. All, therefore,
that a man can reasonably ask of his wife is that
her love should be indeed a well. A well; but
a Bethesda-well, into which from time to time the angel
of tenderness descends to trouble the waters for the
healing of the beloved. Such a love Shelley’s
second wife appears unquestionably to have given him.
Nay, she was content that he should veer while she
remained true; she companioned him intellectually,
shared his views, entered into his aspirations, and
yet-yet, even at the date of Epipsychidion
the foolish child, her husband, assigned her the part
of moon to Emilia Viviani’s sun, and lamented
that he was barred from final, certain, irreversible
happiness by a cold and callous society. Yet
few poets were so mated before, and no poet was so
mated afterwards, until Browning stooped and picked
up a fair-coined soul that lay rusting in a pool of
tears.
In truth, his very unhappiness and
discontent with life, in so far as it was not the
inevitable penalty of the ethical anarch, can only
be ascribed to this same child-like irrationality-though
in such a form it is irrationality hardly peculiar
to Shelley. Pity, if you will, his spiritual
ruins and the neglected early training which was largely
their cause; but the pity due to his outward circumstances
has been strangely exaggerated. The obloquy
from which he suffered he deliberately and wantonly
courted. For the rest, his lot was one that many
a young poet might envy. He had faithful friends,
a faithful wife, an income small but assured.
Poverty never dictated to his pen; the designs on
his bright imagination were never etched by the sharp
fumes of necessity.
If, as has chanced to others-as
chanced, for example, to Mangan-outcast
from home, health and hope, with a charred past and
a bleared future, an anchorite without detachment
and self-cloistered without self-sufficingness, deposed
from a world which he had not abdicated, pierced with
thorns which formed no crown, a poet hopeless of the
bays and a martyr hopeless of the palm, a land cursed
against the dews of love, an exile banned and proscribed
even from the innocent arms of childhood-he
were burning helpless at the stake of his unquenchable
heart, then he might have been inconsolable, then might
he have cast the gorge at life, then have cowered
in the darkening chamber of his being, tapestried
with mouldering hopes, and hearkened to the winds that
swept across the illimitable wastes of death.
But no such hapless lot was Shelley’s as that
of his own contemporaries-Keats, half chewed
in the jaws of London and spit dying on to Italy;
de Quincey, who, if he escaped, escaped rent and maimed
from those cruel jaws; Coleridge, whom they dully
mumbled for the major portion of his life. Shelley
had competence, poetry, love; yet he wailed that he
could lie down like a tired child and weep away his
life of care. Is it ever so with you, sad brother;
is it ever so with me? and is there no drinking of
pearls except they be dissolved in biting tears?
“Which of us has his desire, or having it is
satisfied?”
It is true that he shared the fate
of nearly all the great poets contemporary with him,
in being unappreciated. Like them, he suffered
from critics who were for ever shearing the wild tresses
of poetry between rusty rules, who could never see
a literary bough project beyond the trim level of
its day but they must lop it with a crooked criticism,
who kept indomitably planting in the defile of fame
the “established canons” that had been
spiked by poet after poet. But we decline to
believe that a singer of Shelley’s calibre could
be seriously grieved by want of vogue. Not that
we suppose him to have found consolation in that senseless
superstition, “the applause of posterity.”
Posterity! posterity which goes to Rome, weeps large-sized
tears, carves beautiful inscriptions over the tomb
of Keats; and the worm must wriggle her curtsey to
it all, since the dead boy, wherever he be, has quite
other gear to tend. Never a bone less dry for
all the tears!
A poet must to some extent be a chameleon
and feed on air. But it need not be the musty
breath of the multitude. He can find his needful
support in the judgement of those whose judgement he
knows valuable, and such support Shelley had:
La
gloire
Ne compte pas toujours
les voix;
Elle les pèse quelquefois.
Yet if this might be needful to him
as support, neither this, nor the applause of the
present, nor the applause of posterity, could have
been needful to him as motive: the one all-sufficing
motive for a great poet’s singing is that expressed
by Keats:
I was taught in Paradise
To ease my breast of melodies.
Precisely so. The overcharged
breast can find no ease but in suckling the baby-song.
No enmity of outward circumstances, therefore, but
his own nature, was responsible for Shelley’s
doom.
A being with so much about it of child-like
unreasonableness, and yet withal so much of the beautiful
attraction luminous in a child’s sweet unreasonableness,
would seem fore-fated by its very essence to the transience
of the bubble and the rainbow, of all things filmy
and fair. Did some shadow of this destiny bear
part in his sadness? Certain it is that, by
a curious chance, he himself in Julian and Maddalo
jestingly foretold the manner of his end. “O
ho! You talk as in years past,” said Maddalo
(Byron) to Julian (Shelley); “If you can’t
swim, Beware of Providence.” Did no unearthly
dixisti sound in his ears as he wrote it?
But a brief while, and Shelley, who could not swim,
was weltering on the waters of Lerici. We know
not how this may affect others, but over us it is
a coincidence which has long tyrannised with an absorbing
inveteracy of impression (strengthened rather than
diminished by the contrast between the levity of the
utterance and its fatal fulfilment)-thus
to behold, heralding itself in warning mockery through
the very lips of its predestined victim, the Doom upon
whose breath his locks were lifting along the coasts
of Campania. The death which he had prophesied
came upon him, and Spezzia enrolled another name among
the mournful Marcelli of our tongue; Venetian glasses
which foamed and burst before the poisoned wine of
life had risen to their brims.
Coming to Shelley’s poetry,
we peep over the wild mask of revolutionary metaphysics,
and we see the winsome face of the child. Perhaps
none of his poems is more purely and typically Shelleian
than The Cloud, and it is interesting to note
how essentially it springs from the faculty of make-believe.
The same thing is conspicuous, though less purely
conspicuous, throughout his singing; it is the child’s
faculty of make-believe raised to the nth power.
He is still at play, save only that his play is such
as manhood stops to watch, and his playthings are those
which the gods give their children. The universe
is his box of toys. He dabbles his fingers in
the day-fall. He is gold-dusty with tumbling
amidst the stars. He makes bright mischief with
the moon. The meteors nuzzle their noses in
his hand. He teases into growling the kennelled
thunder, and laughs at the shaking of its fiery chain.
He dances in and out of the gates of heaven:
its floor is littered with his broken fancies.
He runs wild over the fields of ether. He chases
the rolling world. He gets between the feet
of the horses of the sun. He stands in the lap
of patient Nature and twines her loosened tresses after
a hundred wilful fashions, to see how she will look
nicest in his song.
This it was which, in spite of his
essentially modern character as a singer, qualified
Shelley to be the poet of Prometheus Unbound,
for it made him, in the truest sense of the word,
a mythological poet. This child-like quality
assimilated him to the child-like peoples among whom
mythologies have their rise. Those Nature myths
which, according to many, are the basis of all mythology,
are likewise the very basis of Shelley’s poetry.
The lark that is the gossip of heaven, the winds that
pluck the grey from the beards of the billows, the
clouds that are snorted from the sea’s broad
nostril, all the elemental spirits of Nature, take
from his verse perpetual incarnation and reincarnation,
pass in a thousand glorious transmigrations through
the radiant forms of his imagery.
Thus, but not in the Wordsworthian
sense, he is a veritable poet of Nature. For
with Nature the Wordsworthians will admit no tampering:
they exact the direct interpretative reproduction
of her; that the poet should follow her as a mistress,
not use her as a handmaid. To such following
of Nature, Shelley felt no call. He saw in her
not a picture set for his copying, but a palette set
for his brush; not a habitation prepared for his inhabiting,
but a Coliseum whence he might quarry stones for his
own palaces. Even in his descriptive passages
the dream-character of his scenery is notorious; it
is not the clear, recognisable scenery of Wordsworth,
but a landscape that hovers athwart the heat and haze
arising from his crackling fantasies. The materials
for such visionary Edens have evidently been accumulated
from direct experience, but they are recomposed by
him into such scenes as never had mortal eye beheld.
“Don’t you wish you had?” as Turner
said. The one justification for classing Shelley
with the Lake poet is that he loved Nature with a love
even more passionate, though perhaps less profound.
Wordsworth’s Nightingale and Stockdove
sums up the contrast between the two, as though it
had been written for such a purpose. Shelley
is the “creature of ebullient heart,”
who
Sings as if the god of wine
Had helped him to a valentine.
Wordsworth’s is the
the “serious faith and inward glee.”
But if Shelley, instead of culling
Nature, crossed with its pollen the blossoms of his
own soul, that Babylonian garden is his marvellous
and best apology. For astounding figurative
opulence he yields only to Shakespeare, and even to
Shakespeare not in absolute fecundity but in images.
The sources of his figurative wealth are specialised,
sources of Shakespeare’s are universal.
It would have been as conscious an effort for him
to speak without figure as it is for most men to speak
with figure. Suspended in the dripping well
of his imagination the commonest object becomes encrusted
with imagery. Herein again he deviates from the
true Nature poet, the normal Wordsworth type of Nature
poet: imagery was to him not a mere means of
expression, not even a mere means of adornment; it
was a delight for its own sake.
And herein we find the trail by which
we would classify him. He belongs to a school
of which not impossibly he may hardly have read a line-the
Metaphysical School. To a large extent he is
what the Metaphysical School should have been.
That school was a certain kind of poetry trying for
a range. Shelley is the range found. Crashaw
and Shelley sprang from the same seed; but in the
one case the seed was choked with thorns, in the other
case it fell on good ground. The Metaphysical
School was in its direct results an abortive movement,
though indirectly much came of it-for Dryden
came of it. Dryden, to a greater extent than
is (we imagine) generally perceived, was Cowley systematised;
and Cowley, who sank into the arms of Dryden, rose
from the lap of Donne.
But the movement was so abortive that
few will thank us for connecting with it the name
of Shelley. This is because to most people the
Metaphysical School means Donne, whereas it ought to
mean Crashaw. We judge the direction of a development
by its highest form, though that form may have been
produced but once, and produced imperfectly.
Now the highest product of the Metaphysical School
was Crashaw, and Crashaw was a Shelley manque;
he never reached the Promised Land, but he had fervid
visions of it. The Metaphysical School, like
Shelley, loved imagery for its own sake: and
how beautiful a thing the frank toying with imagery
may be, let The Skylark and The Cloud
witness. It is only evil when the poet, on the
straight way to a fixed object, lags continually from
the path to play. This is commendable neither
in poet nor errand-boy. The Metaphysical School
failed, not because it toyed with imagery, but because
it toyed with it frostily. To sport with the
tangles of Neaera’s hair may be trivial idleness
or caressing tenderness, exactly as your relation
to Neaera is that of heartless gallantry or of love.
So you may toy with imagery in mere intellectual
ingenuity, and then you might as well go write acrostics:
or you may toy with it in raptures, and then you may
write a Sensitive Plant. In fact, the
Metaphysical poets when they went astray cannot be
said to have done anything so dainty as is implied
by toying with imagery. They cut it into
shapes with a pair of scissors. From all such
danger Shelley was saved by his passionate spontaneity.
No trappings are too splendid for the swift steeds
of sunrise. His sword-hilt may be rough with
jewels, but it is the hilt of an Excalibur.
His thoughts scorch through all the folds of expression.
His cloth of gold bursts at the flexures, and
shows the naked poetry.
It is this gift of not merely embodying
but apprehending everything in figure which co-operates
towards creating his rarest characteristics, so almost
preternaturally developed in no other poet, namely,
his well-known power to condense the most hydrogenic
abstraction. Science can now educe threads of
such exquisite tenuity that only the feet of the tiniest
infant-spiders can ascend them; but up the filmiest
insubstantiality Shelley runs with agile ease.
To him, in truth, nothing is abstract. The
dustiest abstractions
Start, and tremble under his feet,
And blossom in purple and red.
The coldest moon of an idea rises
haloed through his vaporous imagination. The
dimmest-sparked chip of a conception blazes and scintillates
in the subtile oxygen of his mind. The most wrinkled
AEson of an abstruseness leaps rosy out of his bubbling
genius. In a more intensified signification
than it is probable that Shakespeare dreamed of, Shelley
gives to airy nothing a local habitation and a name.
Here afresh he touches the Metaphysical School, whose
very title was drawn from this habitual pursuit of
abstractions, and who failed in that pursuit from
the one cause omnipresent with them, because in all
their poetic smithy they had left never a place for
a forge. They laid their fancies chill on the
anvil. Crashaw, indeed, partially anticipated
Shelley’s success, and yet further did a later
poet, so much further that we find it difficult to
understand why a generation that worships Shelley
should be reviving Gray, yet almost forget the name
of Collins. The generality of readers, when
they know him at all, usually know him by his Ode
on the Passions. In this, despite its beauty,
there is still a soupçon of formalism, a lingering
trace of powder from the eighteenth century periwig,
dimming the bright locks of poetry. Only the
literary student reads that little masterpiece, the
Ode to Evening, which sometimes heralds the
Shelleian strain, while other passages are the sole
things in the language comparable to the miniatures
of Il Penseroso. Crashaw, Collins, Shelley-three
ricochets of the one pebble, three jets from three
bounds of the one Pegasus! Collins’s Pity,
“with eyes of dewy light,” is near of
kin to Shelley’s Sleep, “the filmy-eyed”;
and the “shadowy tribes of mind” are the
lineal progenitors of “Thought’s crowned
powers.” This, however, is personification,
wherein both Collins and Shelley build on Spenser:
the dizzying achievement to which the modern poet
carried personification accounts for but a moiety,
if a large moiety, of his vivifying power over abstractions.
Take the passage (already alluded to) in that glorious
chorus telling how the Hours come
From the temples
high
Of man’s
ear and eye
Roofed over Sculpture and Poesy,
From those skiey
towers
Where Thought’s
crowned powers
Sit watching your dance, ye happy
Hours!
Our feet now,
every palm,
Are sandalled
with calm,
And the dew of our wings is a rain
of balm;
And beyond our
eyes
The human love
lies
Which makes all it gazes on Paradise.
Any partial explanation will break
in our hands before it reaches the root of such a
power. The root, we take it, is this. He
had an instinctive perception (immense in range and
fertility, astonishing for its delicate intuition)
of the underlying analogies the secret subterranean
passages, between matter and soul; the chromatic scales,
whereat we dimly guess, by which the Almighty modulates
through all the keys of creation. Because, the
more we consider it, the more likely does it appear
that Nature is but an imperfect actress, whose constant
changes of dress never change her manner and method,
who is the same in all her parts.
To Shelley’s ethereal vision
the most rarified mental or spiritual music traced
its beautiful corresponding forms on the sand of outward
things. He stood thus at the very junction-lines
of the visible and invisible, and could shift the
points as he willed. His thoughts became a mounted
infantry, passing with baffling swiftness from horse
to foot or foot to horse. He could express as
he listed the material and the immaterial in terms
of each other. Never has a poet in the past rivalled
him as regards this gift, and hardly will any poet
rival him as regards it in the future: men are
like first to see the promised doom lay its hand on
the tree of heaven and shake down the golden leaves.
The finest specimens of this faculty
are probably to be sought in that Shelleian treasury,
Prometheus Unbound. It is unquestionably
the greatest and most prodigal exhibition of Shelley’s
powers, this amazing lyric world, where immortal clarities
sigh past in the perfumes of the blossoms, populate
the breathings of the breeze, throng and twinkle in
the leaves that twirl upon the bough; where the very
grass is all a-rustle with lovely spirit-things, and
a weeping mist of music fills the air. The final
scenes especially are such a Bacchic reel and rout
and revelry of beauty as leaves one staggered and
giddy; poetry is spilt like wine, music runs to drunken
waste. The choruses sweep down the wind, tirelessly,
flight after flight, till the breathless soul almost
cries for respite from the unrolling splendours.
Yet these scenes, so wonderful from a purely poetical
standpoint that no one could wish them away, are (to
our humble thinking) nevertheless the artistic error
of the poem. Abstractedly, the development of
Shelley’s idea required that he should show
the earthly paradise which was to follow the fall of
Zeus. But dramatically with that fall the action
ceases, and the drama should have ceased with it.
A final chorus, or choral series, of rejoicings (such
as does ultimately end the drama where Prometheus appears
on the scene) would have been legitimate enough.
Instead, however, the bewildered reader finds the
drama unfolding itself through scene after scene which
leaves the action precisely where it found it, because
there is no longer an action to advance. It
is as if the choral finale of an opera were
prolonged through two acts.
We have, nevertheless, called Prometheus
Shelley’s greatest poem because it is the most
comprehensive storehouse of his power. Were we
asked to name the most perfect among his longer
efforts, we should name the poem in which he lamented
Keats: under the shed petals of his lovely fancy
giving the slain bird a silken burial. Seldom
is the death of a poet mourned in true poetry.
Not often is the singer coffined in laurel-wood.
Among the very few exceptions to such a rule, the
greatest is Adonais. In the English language
only Lycidas competes with it; and when we
prefer Adonais to Lycidas, we are following
the precedent set in the case of Cicero: Adonais
is the longer. As regards command over abstraction,
it is no less characteristically Shelleian than Prometheus.
It is throughout a series of abstractions vitalised
with daring exquisiteness, from Morning who sought:
Her eastern watch-tower, and her
hair unbound,
Wet with the tears which should
adorn the ground,
and who
Dimmed the aerial eyes that kindle
day,
to the Dreams that were the flock
of the dead shepherd, the Dreams
Whom near the living streams
Of his young spirit he fed; and
whom he taught
The love that was its music;
of whom one sees, as she hangs mourning over him,
Upon the silken fringe of his faint
eyes,
Like dew upon a sleeping flower,
there lies
A tear some dream has loosened from
his brain!
Lost angel of a ruined Paradise!
She knew not ’twas her own;
as with no stain
She faded like a cloud which hath
outwept its rain.
In the solar spectrum, beyond the
extreme red and extreme violet rays, are whole series
of colours, demonstrable, but imperceptible to gross
human vision. Such writing as this we have quoted
renders visible the invisibilities of imaginative
colour.
One thing prevents Adonais
from being ideally perfect: its lack of Christian
hope. Yet we remember well the writer of a popular
memoir on Keats proposing as “the best consolation
for the mind pained by this sad record” Shelley’s
inexpressibly sad exposition of Pantheistic immortality:
He is a portion of the loveliness
Which once he made more lovely,
etc.
What desolation can it be that discerns
comfort in this hope, whose wan countenance is as
the countenance of a despair? What deepest depth
of agony is it that finds consolation in this immortality:
an immortality which thrusts you into death, the maw
of Nature, that your dissolved elements may circulate
through her veins?
Yet such, the poet tells me, is my
sole balm for the hurts of life. I am as the
vocal breath floating from an organ. I too shall
fade on the winds, a cadence soon forgotten.
So I dissolve and die, and am lost in the ears of
men: the particles of my being twine in newer
melodies, and from my one death arise a hundred lives.
Why, through the thin partition of this consolation
Pantheism can hear the groans of its neighbour, Pessimism.
Better almost the black resignation which the fatalist
draws from his own hopelessness, from the fierce kisses
of misery that hiss against his tears.
With some gleams, it is true, of more
than mock solace, Adonais is lighted; but they
are obtained by implicitly assuming the personal immortality
which the poem explicitly denies; as when, for instance,
to greet the dead youth,
The inheritors of unfulfilled renown
Rose from their thrones, built beyond
mortal thought
Far in the unapparent.
And again the final stanza of the poem:
The breath whose might I have invoked
in song
Descends on me; my spirit’s
bark is driven
Far from the shore, far from the
trembling throng
Whose sails were never to the tempest
riven;
The massy earth, the sphered skies
are given:
I am borne darkly, fearfully afar;
Whilst, burning through the inmost
veil of heaven,
The soul of Adonais like a star
Beacons from the abode where the
eternal are.
The Soul of Adonais?-Adonais, who is but
A
portion of the loveliness
Which once he made more lovely.
After all, to finish where we began,
perhaps the poems on which the lover of Shelley leans
most lovingly, which he has oftenest in his mind, which
best represent Shelley to him and which he instinctively
reverts to when Shelley’s name is mentioned
are some of the shorter poems and detached lyrics.
Here Shelley forgets for a while all that ever makes
his verse turbid; forgets that he is anything but
a poet, forgets sometimes that he is anything but
a child; lies back in his skiff, and looks at the clouds.
He plays truant from earth, slips through the wicket
of fancy into heaven’s meadow, and goes gathering
stars. Here we have that absolute virgin-gold
of song which is the scarcest among human products,
and for which we can go to but three poets-Coleridge,
Shelley, Chopin, and perhaps we should add Keats.
Christabel and Kubla-Khan; The Skylark,
The Cloud, and The Sensitive Plant (in
its first two parts). The Eve of Saint Agnes
and The Nightingale; certain of the Nocturnes;-these
things make very quintessentialised loveliness.
It is attar of poetry.
Remark, as a thing worth remarking,
that, although Shelley’s diction is at other
times singularly rich, it ceases in these poems to
be rich, or to obtrude itself at all; it is imperceptible;
his Muse has become a veritable Echo, whose body has
dissolved from about her voice. Indeed, when
his diction is richest, nevertheless the poetry so
dominates the expression that we feel the latter only
as an atmosphere until we are satiated with the former;
then we discover with surprise to how imperial a vesture
we had been blinded by gazing on the face of his song.
A lesson, this, deserving to be conned by a generation
so opposite in tendency as our own: a lesson
that in poetry, as in the Kingdom of God, we should
not take thought too greatly wherewith we shall be
clothed, but seek first the spirit, and all these
things will be added unto us.
On the marvellous music of Shelley’s
verse we need not dwell, except to note that he avoids
that metronomic beat of rhythm which Edgar Poe introduced
into modern lyric measures, as Pope introduced it into
the rhyming heroics of his day. Our varied metres
are becoming as painfully over-polished as Pope’s
one metre. Shelley could at need sacrifice smoothness
to fitness. He could write an anapaest that would
send Mr. Swinburne into strong shudders (e.g., “stream
did glide”) when he instinctively felt that
by so forgoing the more obvious music of melody he
would better secure the higher music of harmony.
If we have to add that in other ways he was far from
escaping the defects of his merits, and would sometimes
have to acknowledge that his Nilotic flood too often
overflowed its banks, what is this but saying that
he died young?
It may be thought that in our casual
comments on Shelley’s life we have been blind
to its evil side. That, however, is not the case.
We see clearly that he committed grave sins, and
one cruel crime; but we remember also that he was
an Atheist from his boyhood; we reflect how gross
must have been the moral neglect in the training of
a child who could be an Atheist from his boyhood:
and we decline to judge so unhappy a being by the
rules which we should apply to a Catholic. It
seems to us that Shelley was struggling-blindly,
weakly, stumblingly, but still struggling-towards
higher things. His Pantheism is an indication
of it. Pantheism is a half-way house, and marks
ascent or descent according to the direction from
which it is approached. Now Shelley came to
it from absolute Atheism; therefore in his case it
meant rise. Again, his poetry alone would lead
us to the same conclusion, for we do not believe that
a truly corrupted spirit can write consistently ethereal
poetry. We should believe in nothing, if we believed
that, for it would be the consecration of a lie.
Poetry is a thermometer: by taking its average
height you can estimate the normal temperature of its
writer’s mind. The devil can do many things.
But the devil cannot write poetry. He may mar
a poet, but he cannot make a poet. Among all
the temptations wherewith he tempted St. Anthony,
though we have often seen it stated that he howled,
we have never seen it stated that he sang.
Shelley’s anarchic principles
were as a rule held by him with some misdirected view
to truth. He disbelieved in kings. And
is it not a mere fact-regret it if you
will-that in all European countries, except
two, monarchs are a mere survival, the obsolete buttons
on the coat-tails of rule, which serve no purpose
but to be continually coming off? It is a miserable
thing to note how every little Balkan State, having
obtained liberty (save the mark!) by Act of Congress,
straightway proceeds to secure the service of a professional
king. These gentlemen are plentiful in Europe.
They are the “noble Chairmen” who lend
their names for a consideration to any enterprising
company which may be speculating in Liberty.
When we see these things, we revert to the old lines
in which Persius tells how you cannot turn Dama into
a freeman by twirling him round your finger and calling
him Marcus Dama.
Again, Shelley desired a religion
of humanity, and that meant, to him, a religion for
humanity, a religion which, unlike the spectral Christianity
about him, should permeate and regulate the whole organisation
of men. And the feeling is one with which a Catholic
must sympathise, in an age when-if we may
say so without irreverence-the Almighty
has been made a constitutional Deity, with certain
state-grants of worship, but no influence over political
affairs. In these matters his aims were generous,
if his methods were perniciously mistaken. In
his theory of Free Love alone, borrowed like the rest
from the Revolution, his aim was as mischievous as
his method. At the same time he was at least
logical. His theory was repulsive, but comprehensible.
Whereas from our present via media-facilitation
of divorce-can only result the era when
the young lady in reduced circumstances will no longer
turn governess but will be open to engagement as wife
at a reasonable stipend.
We spoke of the purity of Shelley’s
poetry. We know of but three passages to which
exception can be taken. One is happily hidden
under a heap of Shelleian rubbish. Another is
offensive, because it presents his theory of Free
Love in its most odious form. The third is very
much a matter, we think, for the individual conscience.
Compare with this the genuinely corrupt Byron, through
the cracks and fissures of whose heaving versification
steam up perpetually the sulphurous vapours from his
central iniquity. We cannot credit that any Christian
ever had his faith shaken through reading Shelley,
unless his faith were shaken before he read Shelley.
Is any safely havened bark likely to slip its cable,
and make for a flag planted on the very reef where
the planter himself was wrecked?
Why indeed (one is tempted to ask
in concluding) should it be that the poets who have
written for us the poetry richest in skiey grain, most
free from admixture with the duller things of earth-the
Shelleys, the Coleridges, the Keats-are
the very poets whose lives are among the saddest records
in literature? Is it that (by some subtile mystery
of analogy) sorrow, passion, and fantasy are indissolubly
connected, like water, fire, and cloud; that as from
sun and dew are born the vapours, so from fire and
tears ascend the “visions of aerial joy”;
that the harvest waves richest over the battlefields
of the soul; that the heart, like the earth, smells
sweetest after rain; that the spell on which depend
such necromantic castles is some spirit of pain charm-poisoned
at their base? Such a poet, it may be, mists
with sighs the window of his life until the tears
run down it; then some air of searching poetry, like
an air of searching frost, turns it to a crystal wonder.
The god of golden song is the god, too, of the golden
sun; so peradventure song-light is like sunlight,
and darkens the countenance of the soul. Perhaps
the rays are to the stars what thorns are to the flowers;
and so the poet, after wandering over heaven, returns
with bleeding feet. Less tragic in its merely
temporal aspect than the life of Keats or Coleridge,
the life of Shelley in its moral aspect is, perhaps,
more tragical than that of either; his dying seems
a myth, a figure of his living; the material shipwreck
a figure of the immaterial.
Enchanted child, born into a world
unchildlike; spoiled darling of Nature, playmate of
her elemental daughters; “pard-like spirit, beautiful
and swift,” laired amidst the burning fastnesses
of his own fervid mind; bold foot along the verges
of precipitous dream; light leaper from crag to crag
of inaccessible fancies; towering Genius, whose soul
rose like a ladder between heaven and earth with the
angels of song ascending and descending it;-he
is shrunken into the little vessel of death, and sealed
with the unshatterable seal of doom, and cast down
deep below the rolling tides of Time. Mighty
meat for little guests, when the heart of Shelley
was laid in the cemetery of Caius Cestius! Beauty,
music, sweetness, tears-the mouth of the
worm has fed of them all. Into that sacred bridal-gloom
of death where he holds his nuptials with eternity
let not our rash speculations follow him. Let
us hope rather that as, amidst material nature, where
our dull eyes see only ruin, the finer eye of science
has discovered life in putridity and vigour in decay,-seeing
dissolution even and disintegration, which in the mouth
of man symbolise disorder, to be in the works of God
undeviating order, and the manner of our corruption
to be no less wonderful than the manner of our health,-so,
amidst the supernatural universe, some tender undreamed
surprise of life in doom awaited that wild nature,
which, worn by warfare with itself, its Maker, and
all the world, now
Sleeps, and never palates more the
dug,
The beggar’s nurse, and Caesar’s.