(1)
Had it not been that with two exceptions
all the poets of the Romantic Revival died early,
it might be more difficult to draw a line between
their school and that of their successors than it is.
As it happened, the only poet who survived and wrote
was Wordsworth, the oldest of them all. For long
before his death he did nothing that had one touch
of the fire and beauty of his earlier work. The
respect he began, after a lifetime of neglect, to
receive in the years immediately before his death,
was paid not to the conservative laureate of 1848,
but to the revolutionary in art and politics of fifty
years before. He had lived on long after his
work was done
“To hear the world applaud the hollow ghost
That blamed the living man.”
All the others, Keats, Shelley, Byron
were dead before 1830, and the problem which might
have confronted us had they lived, of adult work running
counter to the tendencies and ideals of youth, does
not exist for us. Keats or Shelley might have
lived as long as Carlyle, with whom they were almost
exactly contemporary; had they done so, the age of
the Romantic Revival and the Victorian age would have
been united in the lives of authors who were working
in both. We should conceive that is, the whole
period as one, just as we conceive of the Renaissance
in England, from Surrey to Shirley, as one. As
it is, we have accustomed ourselves to a strongly
marked line of division. A man must be on either
one side or the other; Wordsworth, though he wrote
on till 1850, is on the further side, Carlyle, though
he was born in the same year as Keats, on the hither
side. Still the accident of length of days must
not blind us to the fact that the Victorian period,
though in many respects its ideals and modes of thinking
differed from those of the period which preceded it,
is essentially an extension of the Romantic Revival
and not a fresh start. The coherent inspiration
of romanticism disintegrated into separate lines of
development, just as in the seventeenth century the
single inspiration of the Renaissance broke into different
schools. Along these separate lines represented
by such men as Browning, the Pre-Raphaelites, Arnold,
and Meredith, literature enriched and elaborated itself
into fresh forms. None the less, every author
in each of these lines of literary activity invites
his readers to understand his direct relations to
the romantic movement. Rossetti touches it through
his original, Keats; Arnold through Goethe and Byron;
Browning first through Shelley and then in item after
item of his varied subject-matter.
In one direction the Victorian age
achieved a salient and momentous advance. The
Romantic Revival had been interested in nature, in
the past, and in a lesser degree in art, but it had
not been interested in men and women. To Wordsworth
the dalesmen of the lakes were part of the scenery
they moved in; he saw men as trees walking, and when
he writes about them as in such great poems as Resolution
and Independence, the Brothers, or Michael,
it is as natural objects he treats them, invested
with the lonely remoteness that separates them from
the complexities and passions of life as it is lived.
They are there, you feel, to teach the same lesson
as the landscape teaches in which they are set.
The passing of the old Cumberland beggar through villages
and past farmsteads, brings to those who see him the
same kind of consolation as the impulses from a vernal
wood that Wordsworth celebrated in his purely nature
poetry. Compare with Wordsworth, Browning, and
note the fundamental change in the attitude of the
poet that his work reveals. Pippa Passes is
a poem on exactly the same scheme as the Old Cumberland
Beggar, but in treatment no two things could be
further apart. The intervention of Pippa is dramatic,
and though her song is in the same key as the wordless
message of Wordsworth’s beggar she is a world
apart from him, because she is something not out of
natural history, but out of life. The Victorian
age extended the imaginative sensibility which its
predecessor had brought to bear on nature and history,
to the complexities of human life. It searched
for individuality in character, studied it with a loving
minuteness, and built up out of its discoveries amongst
men and women a body of literature which in its very
mode of conception was more closely related to life,
and thus the object of greater interest and excitement
to its readers, than anything which had been written
in the previous ages. It is the direct result
of this extension of romanticism that the novel became
the characteristic means of literary expression of
the time, and that Browning, the poet who more than
all others represents the essential spirit of his
age, should have been as it were, a novelist in verse.
Only one other literary form, indeed, could have ministered
adequately to this awakened interest, but by some luck
not easy to understand, the drama, which might have
done with greater economy and directness the work
the novel had to do, remained outside the main stream
of literary activity. To the drama at last it
would seem that we are returning, and it may be that
in the future the direct representation of the clash
of human life which is still mainly in the hands of
our novelists, may come back to its own domain.
The Victorian age then added humanity
to nature and art as the subject-matter of literature.
But it went further than that. For the first
time since the Renaissance, came an era which was conscious
of itself as an epoch in the history of mankind, and
confident of its mission. The fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries revolutionized cosmography, and altered
the face of the physical world. The nineteenth
century, by the discoveries of its men of science,
and by the remarkable and rapid succession of inventions
which revolutionized the outward face of life, made
hardly less alteration in accepted ways of thinking.
The evolutionary theory, which had been in the air
since Goethe, and to which Darwin was able to give
an incontrovertible basis of scientific fact, profoundly
influenced man’s attitude to nature and to religion.
Physical as apart from natural science made scarcely
less advance, and instead of a world created in some
fixed moment of time, on which had been placed by
some outward agency all the forms and shapes of nature
that we know, came the conception of a planet congealing
out of a nebula, and of some lower, simpler and primeval
form of life multiplying and diversifying itself through
succeeding stages of development to form both the
animal and the vegetable world. This conception
not only enormously excited and stimulated thought,
but it gave thinkers a strange sense of confidence
and certainty not possessed by the age before.
Everything seemed plain to them; they were heirs of
all the ages. Their doubts were as certain as
their faith.
“There lives more faith in honest doubt
Believe me than in half the creeds.”
said Tennyson; “honest doubt,”
hugged with all the certainty of a revelation, is
the creed of most of his philosophical poetry, and
what is more to the point was the creed of the masses
that were beginning to think for themselves, to whose
awakening interest his work so strongly appealed.
There were no doubt, literary side-currents. Disraeli
survived to show that there were still young men who
thought Byronically. Rossetti and his school
held themselves proudly aloof from the rationalistic
and scientific tendencies of the time, and found in
the Middle ages, better understood than they had been
either by Coleridge or Scott, a refuge from a time
of factories and fact. The Oxford movement ministered
to the same tendencies in religion and philosophy;
but it is the scientific spirit, and all that the
scientific spirit implied, its certain doubt, its
care for minuteness, and truth of observation, its
growing interest in social processes, and the conditions
under which life is lived, that is the central fact
in Victorian literature.
Tennyson represents more fully than
any other poet this essential spirit of the age.
If it be true, as has been often asserted, that the
spirit of an age is to be found best in the work of
lesser men, his complete identity with the thought
of his time is in itself evidence of his inferiority
to his contemporary, Browning. Comparison between
the two men seem inevitable; they were made by readers
when In Memoriam and Men and Women came
hot from the press, and they have been made ever since.
There could, of course, scarcely be two men more dissimilar,
Tennyson elaborating and decorating the obvious; Browning
delving into the esoteric and the obscure, and bringing
up strange and unfamiliar finds; Tennyson in faultless
verse registering current newly accepted ways of thought;
Browning in advance thinking afresh for himself, occupied
ceaselessly in the arduous labour of creating an audience
fit to judge him. The age justified the accuracy
with which Tennyson mirrored it, by accepting him
and rejecting Browning. It is this very accuracy
that almost forces us at this time to minimise and
dispraise Tennyson’s work. We have passed
from Victorian certainties, and so he is apt when
he writes in the mood of Locksley Hall and the
rest, to appear to us a little shallow, a little empty,
and a little pretentious.
His earlier poetry, before he took
upon himself the burden of the age, is his best work,
and it bears strongly marked upon it the influence
of Keats. Such a poem for instance as Oenone
shows an extraordinarily fine sense of language and
melody, and the capacity caught from Keats of conveying
a rich and highly coloured pictorial effect. No
other poet, save Keats, has had a sense of colour
so highly developed as Tennyson’s. From
his boyhood he was an exceedingly close and sympathetic
observer of the outward forms of nature, and he makes
a splendid use of what his eyes had taught him in
these earlier poems. Later his interest in insects
and birds and flowers outran the legitimate opportunity
he possessed of using it in poetry. It was his
habit, his son tells us, to keep notebooks of things
he had observed in his garden or in his walks, and
to work them up afterwards into similes for the Princess
and the Idylls of the King. Read in the
books written by admirers, in which they have been
studied and collected (there are several of them) these
similes are pleasing enough; in the text where they
stand they are apt to have the air of impertinences,
beautiful and extravagant impertinences no doubt,
but alien to their setting. In one of the Idylls
of the King the fall of a drunken knight from his
horse is compared to the fall of a jutting edge of
cliff and with it a lance-like fir-tree, which Tennyson
had observed near his home, and one cannot resist
the feeling that the comparison is a thought too great
for the thing it was meant to illustrate. So,
too, in the Princess when he describes a handwriting,
“In such a hand as when a field of corn
Bows all its ears before the roaring East.”
he is using up a sight noted in his
walks and transmuted into poetry on a trivial and
frivolous occasion. You do not feel, in fact,
that the handwriting visualized spontaneously called
up the comparison; you are as good as certain that
the simile existed waiting for use before the handwriting
was thought of.
The accuracy of his observation of
nature, his love of birds and larvae is matched by
the carefulness with which he embodies, as soon as
ever they were made, the discoveries of natural and
physical science. Nowadays, possibly because
these things have become commonplace to us, we may
find him a little school-boy-like in his pride of knowledge.
He knows that
“This world was once a fluid haze of light,
Till toward the centre set the starry tides
And eddied wild suns that wheeling cast
The planets.”
just as he knows what the catkins
on the willows are like, or the names of the butterflies:
but he is capable, on occasion of “dragging it
in,” as in
“The nebulous star we call the sun,
If that hypothesis of theirs be sound.”
from the mere pride in his familiarity
with the last new thing. His dealings with science,
that is, no more than his dealings with nature, have
that inevitableness, that spontaneous appropriateness
that we feel we have a right to ask from great poetry.
Had Edgar Allan Poe wanted an example
for his theory of the impossibility of writing, in
modern times, a long poem, he might have found it
in Tennyson. His strength is in his shorter pieces;
even where as in In Memoriam he has conceived
and written something at once extended and beautiful,
the beauty lies rather in the separate parts; the
thing is more in the nature of a sonnet sequence than
a continuous poem. Of his other larger works,
the Princess, a scarcely happy blend between
burlesque in the manner of the Rape of the Lock,
and a serious apostleship of the liberation of women,
is solely redeemed by these lyrics. Tennyson’s
innate conservatism hardly squared with the liberalising
tendencies he caught from the more advanced thought
of his age, in writing it. Something of the same
kind is true of Maud, which is a novel told
in dramatically varied verse. The hero is morbid,
his social satire peevish, and a story which could
have been completely redeemed by the ending (the death
of the hero), which artistic fitness demands, is of
value for us now through its three amazing songs, in
which the lyric genius of Tennyson reached its finest
flower. It cannot be denied, either, that he
failed though magnificently in
the Idylls of the King. The odds were
heavily against him in the choice of a subject.
Arthur is at once too legendary and too shadowy for
an epic hero, and nothing but the treatment that Milton
gave to Satan (i.e. flat substitution of the legendary
person by a newly created character) could fit him
for the place. Even if Arthur had been more promising
than he is, Tennyson’s sympathies were fundamentally
alien from the moral and religious atmosphere of Arthurian
romance. His robust Protestantism left no room
for mysticism; he could neither appreciate nor render
the mystical fervour and exultation which is in the
old history of the Holy Grail. Nor could he comprehend
the morality of a society where courage, sympathy
for the oppressed, loyalty and courtesy were the only
essential virtues, and love took the way of freedom
and the heart rather than the way of law. In
his heart Tennyson’s attitude to the ideals of
chivalry and the old stories in which they are embodied
differed probably very little from that of Roger Ascham,
or of any other Protestant Englishman; when he endeavoured
to make an epic of them and to fasten to it an allegory
in which Arthur should typify the war of soul against
sense, what happened was only what might have been
expected. The heroic enterprise failed, and left
us with a series of mid-Victorian novels in verse
in which the knights figure as heroes of the generic
mid-Victorian type.
But if he failed in his larger poems,
he had a genius little short of perfect in his handling
of shorter forms. The Arthurian story which produced
only middling moralizing in the Idylls, gave
us as well the supremely written Homeric episode of
the Morte d’Arthur, and the sharp and
defined beauty of Sir Galahad and the Lady
of Shallott. Tennyson had a touch of the
pre-Raphaelite faculty of minute painting in words,
and the writing of these poems is as clear and naïve
as in the best things of Rossetti. He had also
what neither Rossetti nor any of his contemporaries
in verse, except Browning, had, a fine gift of understanding
humanity. The peasants of his English idylls are
conceived with as much breadth of sympathy and richness
of humour, as purely and as surely, as the peasants
of Chaucer or Burns. A note of passionate humanity
is indeed in all his work. It makes vivid and
intense his scholarly handling of Greek myth; always
the unchanging human aspect of it attracts him most,
in Oenone’s grief, in the indomitableness of
Ulysses, the weariness and disillusionment in Tithonus.
It has been the cause of the comfort he has brought
to sorrow; none of his generation takes such a human
attitude to death. Shelley could yearn for the
infinite, Browning treat it as the last and greatest
adventure, Arnold meet it clear eyed and resigned.
To Wordsworth it is the mere return of man the transient
to Nature the eternal.
“No motion has she now; no force,
She neither hears nor sees,
Roiled round in earth’s diurnal course
With rocks and stones and trees.”
To Tennyson it brings the fundamental
human home-sickness for familiar things.
“Ah, sad and strange as on dark summer dawns,
The earliest pipe of half-awakened birds
To dying ears when unto dying eyes
The casement slowly grows a glimmering square.”
It is an accent which wakes an echo in a thousand
hearts.
(2)
While Tennyson, in his own special
way and, so to speak, in collaboration with the spirit
of the age, was carrying on the work of Romanticism
on its normal lines, Browning was finding a new style
and a new subject matter. In his youth he had
begun as an imitator of Shelley, and Pauline
and Paracelsus remain to show what the influence
of the “sun-treader” was on his poetry.
But as early as his second publication, Bells and
Pomegranates, he had begun to speak for himself,
and with Men and Women, a series of poems of
amazing variety and brilliance, he placed himself
unassailably in the first rank. Like Tennyson’s,
his genius continued high and undimmed while life
was left him. Men and Women was followed by
an extraordinary narrative poem, The Ring and the
Book, and it by several volumes of scarcely less
brilliance, the last of which appeared on the very
day of his death.
Of the two classes into which, as we saw when we were
studying Burns, creative artists can be divided, Browning belongs to that one
which makes everything new for itself, and has in consequence to educate the
readers by whom its work can alone be judged. He was an innovator in nearly
everything he did; he thought for himself; he wrote for himself, and in his own
way. And because he refused to follow ordinary modes of writing, he was and is
still widely credited with being tortured and obscure.
The charge of obscurity is unfortunate because it tends
to shut off from him a large class of readers for
whom he has a sane and special and splendid message.
His most important innovation in form
was his device of the dramatic lyric. What interested
him in life was men and women, and in them, not their
actions, but the motives which governed their actions.
To lay bare fully the working of motive in a narrative
form with himself as narrator was obviously impossible;
the strict dramatic form, though he attained some
success in it, does not seem to have attracted him,
probably because in it the ultimate stress must be
on the thing done rather than the thing thought; there
remained, therefore, of the ancient forms of poetry,
the lyric. The lyric had of course been used before
to express emotions imagined and not real to the poet
himself; Browning was the first to project it to express
imagined emotions of men and women, whether typical
or individual, whom he himself had created. Alongside
this perversion of the lyric, he created a looser and
freer form, the dramatic monologue, in which most
of his most famous poems, Cleon, Sludge the Medium,
Bishop Blougram’s Apology, etc., are
cast. In the convention which Browning established
in it, all kinds of people are endowed with a miraculous
articulation, a new gift of tongues; they explain
themselves, their motives, the springs of those motives
(for in Browning’s view every thought and act
of a man’s life is part of an interdependent
whole), and their author’s peculiar and robust
philosophy of life. Out of the dramatic monologues
he devised the scheme of The Ring and the Book,
a narrative poem in which the episodes, and not the
plot, are the basis of the structure, and the story
of a trifling and sordid crime is set forth as it
appeared to the minds of the chief actors in succession.
To these new forms he added the originality of an
extraordinary realism in style. Few poets have
the power by a word, a phrase, a flash of observation
in detail to make you see the event as Browning makes
you see it.
Many books have been written on the
philosophy of Browning’s poetry. Stated
briefly its message is that of an optimism which depends
on a recognition of the strenuousness of life.
The base of his creed, as of Carlyle’s, is the
gospel of labour; he believes in the supreme moral
worth of effort. Life is a “training school”
for a future existence, and our place in it depends
on the courage and strenuousness with which we have
laboured here. Evil is in the world only as an
instrument in the process of development; by conquering
it we exercise our spiritual faculties the more.
Only torpor is the supreme sin, even as in The
Statue and the Bust where effort would have been
to a criminal end.
“The counter our lovers staked was lost
As surely as if it were lawful coin:
And the sin I impute to each frustrate ghost
Was, the unlit lamp and the ungirt loin,
Though the end in sight was a crime, I say.”
All the other main ideas of his poetry
fit with perfect consistency on to his scheme.
Love, the manifestation of a man’s or a woman’s
nature, is the highest and most intimate relationship
possible, for it is an opportunity the
highest opportunity for spiritual growth.
It can reach this end though an actual and earthly
union is impossible.
“She has lost me, I have gained her;
Her soul’s mine and thus grown perfect,
I shall pass my life’s remainder.
Life will just hold out the proving
Both our powers, alone and blended:
And then come the next life quickly!
This world’s use will have been ended.”
It follows that the reward of effort
is the promise of immortality, and that for each man,
just because his thoughts and motives taken together
count, and not one alone, there is infinite hope.
The contemporaries of Tennyson and
Browning in poetry divide themselves into three separate
schools. Nearest to them in temper is the school
of Matthew Arnold and Clough; they have the same quick
sensitiveness to the intellectual tendencies of the
age, but their foothold in a time of shifting and
dissolving creeds is a stoical resignation very different
from the buoyant optimism of Browning, or Tennyson’s
mixture of science and doubt and faith. Very
remote from them on the other hand is the backward-gazing
mediaevalism of Rossetti and his circle, who revived
(Rossetti from Italian sources, Morris from Norman)
a Middle age which neither Scott nor Coleridge had
more than partially and brokenly understood.
The last school, that to which Swinburne and Meredith
with all their differences unite in belonging, gave
up Christianity with scarcely so much as a regret,
“We have said to the dream that
caress’d and the dread that smote us, Good-night
and good-bye.”
and turned with a new hope and exultation
to the worship of our immemorial mother the earth.
In both of them, the note of enthusiasm for political
liberty which had been lost in Wordsworth after 1815,
and was too early extinguished with Shelley, was revived
by the Italian Revolution in splendour and fire.
(3)
As one gets nearer one’s own
time, a certain change comes insensibly over one’s
literary studies. Literature comes more and more
to mean imaginative literature or writing about imaginative
literature. The mass of writing comes to be taken
not as literature, but as argument or information;
we consider it purely from the point of view of its
subject matter. A comparison will make this at
once clear. When a man reads Bacon, he commonly
regards himself as engaged in the study of English
literature; when he reads Darwin he is occupied in
the study of natural science. A reader of Bacon’s
time would have looked on him as we look on Darwin
now.
The distinction is obviously illogical,
but a writer on English literature within brief limits
is forced to bow to it if he wishes his book to avoid
the dreariness of a summary, and he can plead in extenuation
the increased literary output of the later age, and
the incompleteness with which time so far has done
its work in sifting the memorable from the forgettable,
the ephemeral from what is going to last. The
main body of imaginative prose literature the
novel is treated of in the next chapter
and here no attempt will be made to deal with any
but the admittedly greatest names. Nothing can
be said, for instance, of that fluent journalist and
biased historian Macaulay, nor of the mellifluousness
of Newman, nor of the vigour of Kingsley or Maurice;
nor of the writings, admirable in their literary qualities
of purity and terseness, of Darwin or Huxley; nor
of the culture and apostleship of Matthew Arnold.
These authors, one and all, interpose no barrier,
so to speak, between their subject-matter and their
readers; you are not when you read them conscious
of a literary intention, but of some utilitarian one,
and as an essay on English literature is by no means
a handbook to serious reading they will be no more
mentioned here.
In the case of one nineteenth century
writer in prose, this method of exclusion cannot apply.
Both Carlyle and Ruskin were professional men of letters;
both in the voluminous compass of their works touched
on a large variety of subjects; both wrote highly
individual and peculiar styles; and both without being
either professional philosophers or professional preachers,
were as every good man of letters, whether he denies
it or not, is and must be, lay moralists and prophets.
Of the two Ruskin is plain and easily read, and he
derives his message; Carlyle, his original, is apt
to be tortured and obscure. Inside the body of
his work the student of nineteenth century literature
is probably in need of some guidance; outside so far
as prose is concerned he can fend for himself.
As we saw, Carlyle was the oldest
of the Victorians; he was over forty when the Queen
came to the throne. Already his years of preparation
in Scotland, town and country, were over, and he had
settled in that famous little house in Chelsea which
for nearly half a century to come was to be one of
the central hearths of literary London. More than
that, he had already fully formed his mode of thought
and his peculiar style. Sartor Resartus was
written and published serially before the Queen came
to the throne; the French Revolution came in
the year of her accession at the very time that Carlyle’s
lectures were making him a fashionable sensation;
most of his miscellaneous essays had already appeared
in the reviews. But with the strict Victorian
era, as if to justify the usually arbitrary division
of literary history by dynastic periods, there came
a new spirit into his work. For the first time
he applied his peculiar system of ideas to contemporary
politics. Chartism appeared in 1839; Past
and Present, which does the same thing as Chartism
in an artistic form, three years later. They
were followed by one other book Latter
Day Pamphlets addressed particularly
to contemporary conditions, and by two remarkable
and voluminous historical works. Then came the
death of his wife, and for the last fifteen years of
his life silence, broken only briefly and at rare
intervals.
The reader who comes to Carlyle with
preconceived notions based on what he has heard of
the subject-matter of his books is certain to be surprised
by what he finds. There are histories in the canon
of his works and pamphlets on contemporary problems,
but they are composed on a plan that no other historian
and no other social reformer would own. A reader
will find in them no argument, next to no reasoning,
and little practical judgment. Carlyle was not
a great “thinker” in the strictest sense
of that term. He was under the control, not of
his reason, but of his emotions; deep feeling, a volcanic
intensity of temperament flaming into the light and
heat of prophecy, invective, derision, or a simple
splendour of eloquence, is the characteristic of his
work. Against cold-blooded argument his passionate
nature rose in fierce rebellion; he had no patience
with the formalist or the doctrinaire. Nor had
he the faculty of analysis; his historical works are
a series of pictures or tableaux, splendidly and vividly
conceived, and with enormous colour and a fine illusion
of reality, but one-sided as regards the truth.
In his essays on hero-worship he contents himself
with a noisy reiteration of the general predicate
of heroism; there is very little except their names
and the titles to differentiate one sort of hero from
another. His picture of contemporary conditions
is not so much a reasoned indictment as a wild and
fantastic orgy of epithets: “dark simmering
pit of Tophet,” “bottomless universal
hypocrisies,” and all the rest. In it all
he left no practical scheme. His works are fundamentally
not about politics or history or literature, but about
himself. They are the exposition of a splendid
egotism, fiercely enthusiastic about one or two deeply
held convictions; their strength does not lie in their
matter of fact.
This is, perhaps, a condemnation of
him in the minds of those people who ask of a social
reformer an actuarially accurate scheme for the abolition
of poverty, or from a prophet a correct forecast of
the result of the next general election. Carlyle
has little help for these and no message save the
disconcerting one of their own futility. His message
is at once larger and simpler, for though his form
was prose, his soul was a poet’s soul, and what
he has to say is a poet’s word. In a way,
it is partly Wordsworth’s own. The chief
end of life, his message is, is the performance of
duty, chiefly the duty of work. “Do thy
little stroke of work; this is Nature’s voice,
and the sum of all the commandments, to each man.”
All true work is religion, all true work is worship;
to labour is to pray. And after work, obedience
the best discipline, so he says in Past and Present,
for governing, and “our universal duty and destiny;
wherein whoso will not bend must break.”
Carlyle asked of every man, action and obedience and
to bow to duty; he also required of him sincerity
and veracity, the duty of being a real and not a sham,
a strenuous warfare against cant. The historical
facts with which he had to deal he grouped under these
embracing categories, and in the French Revolution,
which is as much a treasure-house of his philosophy
as a history, there is hardly a page on which they
do not appear. “Quack-ridden,” he
says, “in that one word lies all misery whatsoever.”
These bare elemental precepts he clothes
in a garment of amazing and bizarre richness.
There is nothing else in English faintly resembling
the astonishing eccentricity and individuality of his
style. Gifted with an extraordinarily excitable
and vivid imagination; seeing things with sudden and
tremendous vividness, as in a searchlight or a lightning
flash, he contrived to convey to his readers his impressions
full charged with the original emotion that produced
them, and thus with the highest poetic effect.
There is nothing in all descriptive writing to match
the vividness of some of the scenes in the French
Revolution or in the narrative part of Cromwell’s
Letters and Speeches, or more than perhaps in
any of his books, because in it he was setting down
deep-seated impressions of his boyhood rather than
those got from brooding over documents, in Sartor
Resartus. Alongside this unmatched pictorial
vividness and a quite amazing richness and rhythm of
language, more surprising and original than anything
out of Shakespeare, there are of course, striking
defects a wearisome reiteration of emphasis,
a clumsiness of construction, a saddening fondness
for solecisms and hybrid inventions of his own.
The reader who is interested in these (and every one
who reads him is forced to become so) will find them
faithfully dealt with in John Sterling’s remarkable
letter (quoted in Carlyle’s Life of Sterling)
on Sartor Resartus. But gross as they
are, and frequently as they provide matter for serious
offence, these eccentricities of language link themselves
up in a strange indissoluble way with Carlyle’s
individuality and his power as an artist. They
are not to be imitated, but he would be much less
than he is without them, and they act by their very
strength and pungency as a preservative of his work.
That of all the political pamphlets which the new era
of reform occasioned, his, which were the least in
sympathy with it and are the furthest off the main
stream of our political thinking now, alone continue
to be read, must be laid down not only to the prophetic
fervour and fire of their inspiration but to the dark
and violent magic of their style.