Although Scott was hard upon his thirty-fifth
year when the Lay appeared, and although he
had already a considerable literary reputation in
Edinburgh, and some in London, the amount of his original
publications was then but small. Indeed, on the
austere principles of those who deny ‘originality’
to such things as reviews, or as the essays in the
Minstrelsy, it must be limited to a mere handful,
though of very pleasant delights, the half-dozen of
ballads made up by ‘Glenfinlas,’ ‘The
Eve of St. John,’ the rather inferior ‘Fire
King,’ the beautiful ‘Cadzow Castle’
(not yet mentioned, but containing some of its author’s
most charming topic lines), the fragment of
’The Grey Brother,’ and a few minor pieces.
With the Lay he took an entirely
different position. The mere bulk of the poem
was considerable; and, putting for the instant entirely
out of question its peculiarities of subject, metre,
and general treatment, it was a daring innovation
in point of class. The eighteenth century had,
even under its own laws and conditions, distinctly
eschewed long narrative poems, the unreadable epics
of Glover, for instance, belonging to that class of
exception which really does prove the rule. Pope’s
Rape had been burlesque, and his Dunciad,
satire; hardly the ghost of a narrative had appeared
in Thomson and Young; Shenstone, Collins, Gray, had
nothing de longue haleine; the entire poetical
works of Goldsmith probably do not exceed in length
a canto of the Lay; Cowper had never attempted narrative;
Crabbe was resting on the early laurels of his brief
Village, etc., and had not begun his tales.
Thalaba, indeed, had been published, and no
doubt was not without effect on Scott himself; but
it was not popular, and the author was still under
the sway of the craze against rhyme. To all intents
and purposes the poet was addressing the public, in
a work combining the attractions of fiction with the
attractions of verse at considerable length, for the
first time since Dryden had done so in his Fables,
a hundred and five years before. And though the
mastery of the method might be less, the stories were
original, they were continuous, and they displayed
an entirely new gust and seasoning both of subject
and of style.
There can be no doubt at all, for
those who put metre in its proper place, that a very
large, perhaps the much larger, part of the appeal
of the Lay was metrical. The public was
sick of the couplet had indeed been sickened
twice over, if the abortive revolt of Gray and Collins
be counted. It did not take, and was quite right
in not taking, to the rhymeless, shortened Pindaric
of Sayers and Southey, as to anything but an eccentric
‘sport’ of poetry. What Scott had
to offer was practically new, or at least novel.
It is universally known and Scott, who was
only too careless of his own claims, and the very
last of men to steal or conceal those of others, made
no secret of it that the suggestion of
the Lay in metre came from a private recitation
or reading of Coleridge’s Christabel,
written in the year of Scott’s marriage, but
not published till twenty years later, and more than
ten after the appearance of the Lay. Coleridge
seems to have regarded Scott’s priority with
an irritability less suitable to his philosophic than
to his poetical character. But he had, in the
first place, only himself, if anybody, to blame; in
the second, Scott more than made the loan his own
property by the variations executed on its motive;
and in the third, Coleridge’s original right
was far less than he seems to have honestly thought,
and than most people have guilelessly assumed since.
For the iambic dimeter, freely altered
by the licences of equivalence, anacrusis, and catalexis,
though not recently practised in English when Christabel
and the Lay set the example, is an inevitable
result of the clash between accented, alliterative,
asyllabic rhythm and quantitative, exactly syllabic
metre, which accompanied the transformation of Anglo-Saxon
into English. We have distinct approaches to
it in the thirteenth century Genesis; it attains
considerable development in Spenser’s The
Oak and the Brere; anybody can see that the latter
part of Milton’s Comus was written under
the breath of its spirit. But it had not hitherto
been applied on any great scale, and the delusions
under which the eighteenth century laboured as to the
syllabic restrictions of English poetry had made it
almost impossible that it should be. At the same
time, that century, by its lighter practice on the
one hand in the octosyllable, on the other in the four-footed
anapaestic, was making the way easier for those who
dared a little: and Coleridge first, then Scott,
did the rest.
We have seen that in some of his early
ballad work Scott had a little overdone the licence
of equivalence, but this had probably been one of
the formal points on which, as we know, the advice
of Lewis, no poet but a remarkably good metrist, had
been of use to him. And he acquitted himself
now in a manner which, if it never quite attains the
weird charm of Christabel itself at its best,
is more varied, better sustained, and, above all,
better suited to the story-telling which was, of course,
Scott’s supremest gift. It is very curious
to compare Coleridge’s remarks on Scott’s
verse with those of Wordsworth, in reference to the
White Doe of Rylstone. Neither in Christabel,
nor in the White Doe, is there a real story
really told. Coleridge, but for his fatal weaknesses,
undoubtedly could have told such a story; it is pretty
certain that Wordsworth could not. But Scott could
tell a story as few other men who have ever drawn
breath on the earth could tell it. He had been
distinguished in the conversational branch of the art
from his youth up, and though it was to be long before
he could write a story in prose, he showed now, at
the first attempt, how he could write one in verse.
Construction, of course, was not his
forte; it never was. The plot of the Lay,
if not exactly non-existent, is of the simplest and
loosest description; the whole being in effect a series
of episodes strung together by the loves of Margaret
and Cranstoun and the misdeeds of the Goblin Page.
Even the Book supplies no real or necessary nexus.
But the romance proper has never required elaborate
construction, and has very rarely, if ever, received
it. A succession of engaging or exciting episodes,
each plausibly joined to each, contents its easy wants;
and such a succession is liberally provided here.
So, too, it does not require strict character-drawing a
gift with which Scott was indeed amply provided, but
which he did not exhibit, and had no call to exhibit,
here. If the personages will play their parts,
that is enough. And they all play them very well
here, though the hero and heroine do certainly exhibit
something of that curious nullity which has been objected
to the heroes nearly always, the heroines too frequently,
of the later prose novels.
But even those critics who, as too
many critics are wont to do, forgot and forget that
‘the prettiest girl in the world’ not only
cannot give, but ought not to be asked to give, more
than she has, must have been, and must be, very unreasonable
if they find fault with the subject and stuff of the
Lay. Jeffrey’s remark about ’the
present age not enduring’ the Border and mosstrooping
details was contradicted by the fact, and was, as
a matter of taste, one of those strange blunders which
diversified his often admirably acute critical utterances.
When he feared their effects on ‘English
readers,’ he showed himself, as was not common
with him, actually ignorant of one of the simplest
general principles of the poetic appeal, that is to
say, the element of strangeness. But we
must not criticise criticism here, and must only add
that another great appeal, that of variety, is amply
given, as well as that of unfamiliarity. The
graceful and touching, if a little conventional, overture
of the Minstrel introduces with the truest art the
vigorous sketch of Branksome Tower. The spirits
of flood and fell are allowed to impress and not allowed
to bore us; for the quickest of changes is made to
Deloraine’s ride a kind of thing in
which Scott never failed, even in his latest and saddest
days. The splendid Melrose opening of the Second
Canto supports itself through the discovery of the
Book, and finds due contrast in the description (or
no-description) of the lovers’ meeting; the
fight and the Goblin Page’s misbehaviour and
punishment (to all, at least, but those, surely few
now, who are troubled by the Jeffreyan sense of ’dignity’),
the decoying and capture of young Buccleuch, and the
warning of the clans are certainly no ungenerous provision
for the Third; nor the clan anecdotes (especially
the capital episode of the Beattisons), the parley,
the quarrel of Howard and Dacre, and the challenge,
for the Fourth. There is perhaps less in the
Fifth, for Scott seems to have been afraid of another
fight in detail; but the description of the night
before, and the famous couplet
’I’d give the
lands of Deloraine
Dark Musgrave were alive again’
would save it if there were nothing
else, as there is much. And if the actual conclusion
has no great interest (Scott was never good at conclusions,
as we shall find Lady Louisa Stuart telling him frankly
later), the Sixth Canto is full, and more than full,
of brilliant things the feast, the Goblin’s
tricks, his carrying-off, the pilgrimage, and, above
all, the songs, especially ‘Rosabelle’
and the version of the ‘Dies Irae.’
The mention of these last may fairly
introduce a few words on the formal and metrical characteristics
of the poem, remarks which perhaps some readers resent,
but which must nevertheless be made, inasmuch as they
are to my mind by far the most important part of poetical
criticism. Scott evidently arranged his scheme
of metre with extreme care here, though it is possible
that after this severe exercise he let it take care
of itself to some extent later. His introduction
is in the strict octosyllable, with only such licences
of slur or elision
‘The pi | tying Duch
| ess praised its chime,’
’He had played
| it to King Charles the Good’
as the greatest precisians might have
allowed themselves. But the First Canto breaks
at once into the full licence, not merely of equivalence, that
is to say, of substituting an anapaest or a trochee
for an iamb, but of shifting the base and
rhythm of any particular verse, or of set batches
of verses, between the three ground-feet, and, further,
of occasionally introducing sixes, as in the ballad
metre, and even fours
’Bards long | shall
tell
How Lord Wal | ter fell,’
instead of the usual eights.
In similar fashion he varies the rhymes,
passing as the subject or the accompaniment of the
word-music may require, from the couplet to the quatrain,
and from the quatrain to the irregularly rhymed ‘Pindaric’;
always, however, taking care that, except in the set
lyric, the quatrain shall not fall too much into definite
stanza, but be interlaced in sense or sound sufficiently
to carry on the narrative. The result, to some
tastes, is a medium quite unsurpassed for the particular
purpose. The only objection to it at all capable
of being maintained, that I can think of, is that
the total effect is rather lyrical than epic.
And so much of this must be perhaps allowed as comes
to granting that Scott’s verse-romance is rather
a long and cunningly sustained and varied ballad than
an epic proper.
The Lay, though not received
with quite that eager appetite for poetry which Scott
was ‘born to introduce,’ and of which he
lived long enough to see the glutting, had a large
and immediate sale. The author, not yet aware
what a gold mine his copyrights were, parted with this
after the first edition, and received in all rather
less than L770, a sum trifling in comparison with
his after gains; but probably the largest that had
as yet been received by any English poet for a single
volume not published by subscription. It is curious
that, at the estimated rate of three for one in comparing
the value of money at the end of the seventeenth and
the beginning of the nineteenth century, the sum almost
exactly equals that paid by Tonson for Dryden’s
Fables, the last book, before the Lay
itself, which had united popularity, merit, and bulk
in English verse. But Dryden was the acknowledged
head of English literature at the time, and Scott
was a mere beginner. He was probably even better
pleased with the quality of the praise than with the
quantity of the pudding. For though professional
criticism, then in no very vigorous state, said some
silly things, it was generally favourable; and a saying
of Pitt (most indifferent, as a rule, of all Prime
Ministers to English literature) is memorable not
merely as summing up the general impression, but as
defining what that impression was in a fashion quite
invaluable to the student of literary history.
The Pilot that Weathered the Storm, it seems, said
of the description of the Minstrel’s hesitation
before playing, ’This is a sort of thing I might
have expected in painting, but could never have fancied
capable of being given by poetry.’ To the
present generation and the last, the reverse expression
would probably seem more natural. We say, of Mr.
Watts or of Sir Edward Burne-Jones, that they have
put, in ‘Love and Death’ or in ‘Love
among the Ruins,’ what we might have expected
from poetry, but could hardly have thought possible
in painting. But a hundred years of studious
convention and generality, of deliberate avoidance
of the poignant, and the vivid, and the detailed,
and the coloured in poetry had made Pitt’s confession
as natural as another hundred years of contrary practice
from Coleridge to Rossetti have made ours.
The publication of the Lay
immediately preceded, and perhaps its success had
no small share in deciding, the most momentous and
unfortunate step of Scott’s life, his entry into
partnership with James Ballantyne. The discussion
of the whole of this business will best be postponed
till the date of its catastrophe is reached, but a
few words may be said on the probable reasons for
it. Much, no doubt, was the result of that combination
of incalculable things which foolish persons of one
kind call mere chance, of which foolish persons of
another kind deny the existence, and which wise men
term, from different but not irreconcilable points
of view, Providence, or Luck, or Fate. But a
little can be cleared up. Scott had evidently
made up his mind that he should not succeed at the
Bar, and had also persuaded himself that the very
success of the Lay had made failure certain.
The ill success of his brother Thomas, with the writer’s
business inherited from their father, perhaps inconvenienced
and no doubt frightened him. In fact, though
his harsher judges are wrong in attributing to him
any undue haste to be rich, he certainly does seem
to have been under a dread of being poor; a dread
no doubt not wholly intelligible and partly morbid
in a young man still under thirty-five, with brilliant
literary and some legal prospects, who had, independently
of fees, literary or legal, a secured income of about
a thousand a year. He probably thought, and was
right in thinking, that the book trade was going to
‘look up’ to a degree previously unknown;
he seems throughout to have been under one of those
inexplicable attractions towards the Ballantynes which
now and then exist, as Hobbes says, ’in the
greater towards the meaner, but not contrary’;
and perhaps there was another cause which has not been
usually allowed for enough. Good Christian and
good-natured man as he was, Scott was exceedingly
proud; and though joining himself with persons of
dubious social position in mercantile operations seems
an odd way of pride, it had its temptations.
I do not doubt but that from the first Scott intended,
more or less vaguely and dimly, to extend the printing
business into a publishing one, and so to free himself
from any necessity of going cap-in-hand to publishers.
However, for good or for ill, I
think it was mainly for ill, for this reason
or for that, the partnership was formed, at first indirectly
by way of loan, then directly by further advance on
security of a share in the business, and finally so
that Scott became, though he did not appear, the leading
partner. And the very first letter that we have
of his about business shows the fatal flaw which he,
the soul of honour, seems never to have detected till
too late, if even then. The scheme for an edition
of Dryden was already afloat, and the first editor
proposed was a certain Mr. Foster, who ‘howled
about the expense of printing.’ ’I
still,’ says Scott to Ballantyne, ’stick
to my answer that I know nothing of the matter,
but that, settle it how he and you will, it must
be printed by you or be no concern of mine. This
gives you an advantage in driving the bargain.’
Perhaps; but how about the advantage to Mr. Foster
of being advised by Ballantyne’s partner to employ
Ballantyne, while he was innocent of the knowledge
of the identity of partner and adviser, and was even
told that Scott ’knew nothing of the matter’?
Even before the quarrel which soon
occurred with Constable established the Ballantynes nominally
the other brother John as publishers, Scott
had begun, and was constantly pressing upon the different
publishing houses with which he was connected, a variety
of literary schemes of the most ambitious and costly
character. All these books were to be printed
by Ballantyne, and many of them edited by himself;
while, when the direct publishing business was added,
there was no longer any check on this dangerous proceeding.
It is most curious how Scott, the shrewdest and sanest
of men in the vast majority of affairs, seems to have
lost his head wherever books or lands were concerned.
Himself both an antiquary and an antiquarian,
as well as a lover of literature, he seems to have
taken it for granted that the same combination of tastes
existed in the public to an extent which would pay
all expenses, however lavishly incurred. To us,
nowadays, who know how cold a face publishers turn
on what we call really interesting schemes, and how
often these schemes, even when fostered, miscarry
or barely pay expenses, who are aware that
even the editors of literary societies, where expenses
are assured beforehand, have to work for love or for
merely nominal fees, simply because the public will
not buy the books, it is not so wonderful
that some of Scott’s schemes never got into being
at all, and that others were dead losses, as that
any ‘got home.’ His Dryden,
an altogether admirable book, on which he lavished
labour, and great part of which appealed to a still
dominant prestige, may just have carried the editor’s
certainly not excessive fee of forty guineas a volume,
or about L750 for the whole. But when one reads
of twice that sum paid for the Swift, of L1300
for the thirteen quartos of the Somers Papers,
and so forth, the feeling is not that the sums paid
were at all too much for the work done, but that the
publishers must have been very lucky men if they ever
saw their money again. The two first of these
schemes certainly, the third perhaps, deserved success;
and still more so did a great scheme for the publication
of the entire British Poets, to be edited by
Scott and Campbell, which indeed fell through in itself,
but resulted indirectly in Campbell’s excellent
Specimens and Chalmers’s invaluable if
not very comely Poets. Even another project,
a Corpus Historicorum, would have been magnificent,
though it could hardly have been bookselling war.
But the Somers Tracts themselves, the Memoirs
and papers of Sadler, Slingsby, Carleton, Cary, etc.,
were of the class of book which requires subvention
of some kind to prevent it from being a dead loss;
and when the preventive check of the unwillingness
of publishers was removed by the fatal establishment
of ’John Ballantyne & Co.,’ things
became worse still. There are few better instances
of the eternal irony of fate than that the author
of the admirable description of the bookseller’s
horror at Mr. Pembroke’s Sermons should have
permitted, should have positively caused, the publishing
at what was in effect his own risk, or rather his
own certainty of loss, not merely of Weber’s
ambitious Beaumont and Fletcher, but of collections
of Tixall Poetry, Histories of the Culdees,
Wilson’s History of James the First,
and the rest.
As the beginning of 1805 saw the first
birth of his real books, so the end of it saw that
of the last of his children according to the flesh.
His firstborn, as has been said, did not live.
But Walter (born November 1799), Sophia (born October
1801), Anne (born February 1803), and Charles (born
December 1805) survived infancy; and it is quite probable
that these regular increases to his family, by suggesting
that he might have a large one, stimulated Scott’s
desire to enlarge his income. As a matter of
fact, however, the quartette of two boys and two girls
was not exceeded. The domestic life at Castle
Street and Ashestiel, from the publication of the
Lay to that of Marmion in 1808, indeed
to that of The Lady of the Lake in May 1810, ran
smoothly enough; and there can be little doubt that
these five years were the happiest, and in reality
the most prosperous, of Scott’s life. He
had at once attained great fame, and was increasing
it by each successive poem; his immense intellectual
activity found vent besides in almost innumerable projects,
some of which were in a way successful, and some of
which, if they did himself no very great good pecuniarily,
did good to more or less deserving friends and proteges.
His health had, as yet, shown no signs whatever of
breaking down; he was physically in perfect condition
for, and at Ashestiel he had every opportunity of
indulging in, the field sports in which his soul delighted
at least as much as in reading and writing; he had
pleasant intervals of wandering; and, to crown it all,
he was, during this period, established in reversionary
prospect, if not yet in actual possession, of an income
which should have put even his anxieties at rest,
and which certainly might have made him dissociate
himself from the dangerous and doubtful commercial
enterprises in which he had engaged. This reversion
was that of a Clerkship of Session, one of an honourable,
well-paid, and by no means laborious group of offices
which seems to have been accepted as a comely and comfortable
set of shelves for advocates of ability, position,
and influence, who, for this reason or that, were
not making absolutely first-rate mark at the Bar.
The post to which Scott was appointed was in the possession
of a certain Mr. Hope, and as no retiring pension
was attached to these places, it was customary to
hold them on the rather uncomfortable terms of doing
the work till the former holder died, without getting
any money. But before many years a pension scheme
was put in operation; Mr. Hope took his share of it,
and Scott entered upon thirteen hundred a year in
addition to his Sheriffship and to his private property,
without taking any account at all of literary gains.
The appointment had not actually been completed, though
the patent had been signed, when the Fox and Grenville
Government came in, and it so happened that the document
had been so made out as to have enabled Scott, if
he chose, to draw the whole salary and leave his predecessor
in the cold. But this was soon set right.
In the visit to London which he paid
(apparently for the purpose of getting the error corrected),
he made the acquaintance of the unlucky Princess of
Wales, who was at this time rather a favourite with
the Tories. And when he came back to Scotland,
the trial of Lord Melville gave him an opportunity
of distinguishing himself by a natural and very pardonable
partisanship, which made his Whig friends rather sore.
Politics in Edinburgh ran very high during this short
break in the long Tory domination, and from it dates
a story, to some minds, perhaps, one of the most interesting
of all those about Scott, and connected indelibly
with the scene of its occurrence. It tells how,
as he was coming down the Mound with Jeffrey and another
Whig, after a discussion in the Faculty of Advocates
on some proposals of innovation, Jeffrey tried to
laugh the difference off, and how Scott, usually stoical
enough, save in point of humour, broke out with actual
tears in his eyes, ’No, no! it is no laughing
matter. Little by little, whatever your wishes
may be, you will destroy and undermine until nothing
of what makes Scotland Scotland shall remain!’
He would probably have found no great reason at the
other end of the century to account himself a false
prophet; and he might have thought his prophecies in
fair way of fulfilment not in Scotland only.
During 1806 and 1807 the main occupations
of Scott’s leisure (if he can ever be said to
have had such a thing) were the Dryden and Marmion.
The latter of these appeared in February and the former
in April 1808, a perhaps unique example of an original
work, and one of criticism and compilation, both of
unusual bulk and excellence, appearing, with so short
an interval, from the same pen.
As for Marmion, it is surely
by far the greatest, taking all constituents of poetical
greatness together, of Scott’s poems. It
was not helped at the time, and probably never has
been helped, by the author’s plan of prefixing
to each canto introductions of very considerable length,
each addressed to one or other of his chief literary
friends, and having little or nothing at all to do
with the subject of the tale. Contemporaries
complained that the main poem was thereby intolerably
interrupted; posterity, I believe, has taken the line
of ignoring the introductions altogether. This
is a very great pity, for not only do they contain
some of Scott’s best and oftenest quoted lines,
but each is a really charming piece of occasional verse,
and something more, in itself. The beautiful description
of Tweedside in late autumn, the dirge on Nelson,
Pitt, and Fox (which last, of course, infuriated Jeffrey),
and, above all, the splendid passage on the Morte
d’Arthur (which Scott had at this time thought
of editing, but gave up to Southey) adorn the epistle
to Rose; the picture of Ettrick Forest in that to
Marriott is one of the best sustained things the poet
ever did; the personal interest of the Erskine piece
is of the highest, though it has fewer ‘purple’
passages, and it is well-matched with that to Skene;
while the fifth to Ellis and the sixth and last to
Heber nobly complete the batch. Only, though
the things in this case are both rich and rare,
‘We wonder what the
devil they do there’;
and Lockhart unearthed, what Scott
seems to have forgotten, the fact that they were originally
intended to appear by themselves. It is a pity
they did not; for, excellent as they are, they are
quite out of place as interludes to a story, the serried
range of which not only does not require but positively
rejects them.
For here, while Scott had lost little,
if anything, of the formal graces of the Lay,
he had improved immensely in grip and force. Clare
may be a bread-and-butter heroine, and Wilton a milk-and-water
lover, but the designs of Marmion against both give
a real story-interest, which is quite absent from
the Lay. The figure of Constance is really
tragic, not melodramatic merely, and makes one regret
that Scott, in his prose novels, did not repeat and
vary her. All the accessories, both in incident
and figure, are good, and it is almost superfluous
to praise the last canto. It extorted admiration
from the partisan rancour and the literary prudishness
of Jeffrey; it made the disturbed dowagers of the
Critical Review, who thought, with Rymer, that
’a hero ought to be virtuous,’ mingle
applause with their fie-fies; it has been the
delight of every reader, not a milksop, or a faddist,
or a poetical man-of-one-idea, ever since. The
last canto of Marmion and the last few ‘Aventiuren’
of the Nibelungen Lied are perhaps the only
things in all poetry where a set continuous battle
(not a series of duels as in Homer) is related with
unerring success; and the steady crescendo of
the whole, considering its length and intensity, is
really miraculous. Nay, even without this astonishing
finale, the poem that contained the opening sketch
of Norham, the voyage from Whitby to Holy Island, the
final speech of Constance, and the famous passage of
her knell, the Host’s Tale, the pictures of
Crichton and the Blackford Hill view, the ‘air
and fire’ of the ‘Lochinvar’ song,
the phantom summons from the Cross of Edinburgh, and
the parting of Douglas and Marmion, could spare half
of these and still remain one of the best of its kind,
while every passage so spared would be enough to distinguish
any poem in which it occurred.
The considerable change in the metre
of Marmion as compared with the Lay
is worth noticing. Here, as there, the ‘introductions’
are, for the most part, if not throughout, in continuous
octosyllabic couplets. But, in the text, the
couplet plays also a much larger part than it does
in the Lay, and where it is dropped the substitute
is not usually the light and extremely varied medley
of the earlier poem, so much as a sort of irregular
(and sometimes almost regular) stanza arrangement,
sets of (usually three) octosyllables being interspersed
with sixes, rhyming independently. The batches
of monorhymed octosyllables sometimes extend to even
four in number, with remarkably good effect, as, for
instance, in the infernal proclamation from the Cross.
Altogether the metrical scheme is of a graver cast
than that of the Lay, and suits the more serious
and tragical colour of the story.
It has been mentioned above in passing
that Jeffrey reviewed Marmion on the whole
unfavourably. The story of this review is well
known: how the editor-reviewer (with the best
intentions doubtless) sent the proof with a kind of
apology to Scott on the morning of a dinner-party in
Castle Street; how Scott showed at least outward indifference,
and Mrs. Scott a not unamiable petulance; and how,
though the affair caused no open breach of private
friendship, it doubtless gave help to the increasing
Whiggery of the Review and its pusillanimous
policy in regard to the Spanish War in severing Scott’s
connection with it, and determining him to promote,
heart and soul, the opposition venture of the Quarterly.
Of this latter it was naturally enough proposed by
Canning that Scott should be editor; but, as naturally,
he does not seem to have even considered the proposal.
He would have hated living in London; no salary that
could have been offered him could have done more than
equal, if so much, the stipends of his Sheriffship
and the coming Clerkship, which he would have had
to give up; and the work would have interfered much
more seriously than his actual vocations with his
literary avocations. Besides, it is quite certain
that he would not have made a good editor. In
the first place, he was fitted neither by education
nor by temperament for the troublesome and ‘meticulous’
business of knocking contributions into shape.
And, in the second, he would most assuredly have fallen
into the most fatal of all editorial errors that
of inserting articles, not because they were actually
good or likely to be popular, but because the subjects
were interesting, or the writers agreeable, to himself.
But he backed the venture manfully with advice, by
recruiting for it, and afterwards by contributing to
it.
It so happened, too, that about the
same time he had dissensions with the publisher as
well as with the editor of the Edinburgh.
Constable, though he had not entered into the intimate
relations with Scott and the Ballantynes that were
afterwards so fatal, had made the spirited bid of
a thousand pounds for Marmion, and the much
more spirited and (it is to be feared) much less profitable
one of fifteen hundred for the Swift.
He had, however, recently taken into partnership a
certain Mr. Hunter of Blackness. This Hunter
must have had some merits he had at any
rate sufficient wit to throw the blame of the fact
that sojourn in Scotland did not always agree with
Englishmen on their disgusting habit of ‘eating
too much and not drinking enough.’
But he was a laird of some family, and he seems to
have thought that he might bring into business the
slightly hectoring ways which were then tolerated in
Scotland from persons of quality to persons of none
or less. He was a very bitter Whig, and, therefore,
ill disposed towards Scott. And, lastly, he had,
or thought he had, a grievance against his distinguished
‘hand’ in respect of the Swift,
to wit, that the editor of that well-paid compilation
did not devote himself to it by any means exclusively
enough. Now Scott, though the most good-natured
of men and only too easy to lead, was absolutely impossible
to drive; and his blood was as ready as the ‘bluid
of M’Foy’ itself to be set on fire at the
notion of a cock-laird from Fife not merely treating
a Scott with discourtesy, but imputing doubtful conduct
to him. He offered to throw up the Swift,
and though this was not accepted, broke for a time
all other connection with Constable an
unfortunate breach, as it helped to bring about the
establishment of the Ballantyne publishing business,
and so unquestionably began Scott’s own ruin.
It is remarkable that a similar impatience of interference
afterwards broke Scott’s just-begun connection
with Blackwood, which, could it have lasted, would
probably have saved him. For that sagacious person
would certainly never have plunged, or, if he could
have helped it, let anyone else plunge, into Charybdis.
Between the publication of Marmion
and that of The Lady of the Lake Scott was
very busy in bookmaking and bookselling projects.
It was characteristic of the mixture of bad luck and
bad management which hung on the Ballantynes from
the first that even their Edinburgh Annual Register,
published as it was in the most stirring times, and
written by Scott, by Southey, and others of the very
best hands, was a failure. He made some visits
to London, and (for the scenery of the new poem) to
the Trossachs and Loch Lomond; and had other matters
of concern, the chief of which were the death of his
famous bull-terrier Camp, and two troublesome affairs
connected with his brothers. One of these, the
youngest, Daniel, after misconduct of various kinds,
had, as mentioned above, shown the white feather during
a negro insurrection in Jamaica, and so disgusted
his brother that when he came home to die, Scott would
neither see him, nor, when he died, go to his funeral.
The other concerned his brother Thomas, who, after
his failure as a writer, had gone from prudential
motives to the Isle of Man, where he for a time was
an officer in the local Fencibles. But before
leaving Edinburgh, and while he was still a practising
lawyer, his brother had appointed him to a small post
in his own gift as Clerk. Not only was there nothing
discreditable in this according to the idea of any
time, for Thomas Scott’s education
and profession qualified him fully for the office, but
there were circumstances which, at that time, showed
rather heroic and uncommon virtue. For the actual
vacancy had occurred in a higher and more valuable
post, also in Scott’s gift, and he, instead of
appointing his brother to this, promoted a deserving
subordinate veteran, and gave the lower and less valuable
place to Thomas. The latter’s circumstances,
however, obliged him to perform his duties by deputy,
and a Commission then sitting ultimately abolished
the office altogether, with a retiring allowance of
about half the salary. Certain Whig peers took
this up as a job, and Lord Lauderdale, supported by
Lord Holland, made in the House of Lords very offensive
charges against Scott personally for having appointed
his brother to a place which he knew would be abolished,
and against Thomas for claiming compensation in respect
of duties which he had never performed. The Bill
was, however, carried; but Scott was indignant at
the loss threatened to his brother and the imputation
made on himself, and ‘cut’ Lord Holland
at a semi-public dinner not long afterwards.
For this he was and has since been severely blamed,
and his behaviour was perhaps a little ‘perfervid.’
But everybody knows, or should know, that there are
few things more trying to humanity than to be accused
of improper conduct when a man is hugging himself
on having behaved with unusual and saint-like propriety.
The Lady of the Lake appeared
in May 1810, being published by Ballantyne and Miller,
and at once attained enormous popularity. Twenty
thousand copies were sold within the year, two thousand
of which were costly quartos; and while there can
be no doubt that this was the highest point of Scott’s
poetical vogue, there is, I believe, not much doubt
that the poem has always continued to be a greater
favourite with the general than any other of his.
It actually, more than any other, created the furore
for Scottish scenery and touring, which has never
ceased since; it supplied in the descriptions of that
scenery, in the fight between Roderick and Fitz-James,
and in other things, his most popular passages; and
it has remained probably the type of his poetry to
the main body of readers.
Yet there are some who like it less
than any other of the major divisions of that poetry,
and this is by no means necessarily due either to
a desire to be eccentric or to the subtler but almost
equally illegitimate operation of the want of novelty of
the fact that its best effects are but repetitions
of those of Marmion and the Lay.
For, fine as it is, it seems to me to display the
drawbacks of Scott’s scheme and method more
than any of the longer poems. Douglas, Ellen,
Malcolm, are null; Roderick and the king have a touch
of theatricality which I look for in vain elsewhere
in Scott; there is nothing fantastic in the piece
like the Goblin Page, and nothing tragical like Constance.
There is something teasing in what has been profanely
called the ‘guide-book’ character the
cicerone-like fidelity which contrasts so strongly
with the skilfully subordinated description in the
two earlier and even in the later poems. Moreover,
though Ellis ought not to have called the octosyllable
‘the Hudibrastic measure’ (which is only
a very special variety of it), he was certainly right
in objecting to its great predominance in unmixed
form here.
The critics, however, sang the praises
of the poem lustily. Even Jeffrey perhaps
because it was purely Scottish (he had thought Marmion
not Scottish enough), perhaps because its greater
conventionality appealed to him, perhaps because he
wished to make atonement was extremely
complimentary. And certainly no one need be at
a loss for things to commend positively, whatever may
be his comparative estimate. The fine Spenserian
openings (which Byron copied almost slavishly in the
form of the stanza he took for Harold), the
famous beginning of the stag, the description of the
pass (till Fitz-James begins to soliloquise), some
of the songs (especially the masterly ’Coronach’),
the passage of the Fiery Cross, the apparition of the
clan (not perhaps so great as some have thought it,
but still great), the struggle, the guard-room (which
shocked Jeffrey dreadfully) these are only
some of the best things. But I own that I turn
from the best of them to the last stand of the spearmen
at Flodden, and the unburying of the Book in the Lay.
It may, perhaps, not be undesirable
to anticipate somewhat, in order to complete the sketch
of the verse romances in this chapter; for not very
long after the publication of the Lady of the Lake,
Scott resumed the writing of Waverley, which
effected an entire change in the direction of his
literature; and it was not a twelvemonth later that
he planned the establishment at Abbotsford, which
was thenceforward the headquarters of his life.
The first poem to follow was one which
lay out of the series in subject, scheme, and dress,
and which perhaps should rather be counted with his
minor and miscellaneous pieces The Vision
of Don Roderick. It was written with rapidity,
even for him, and with a special purpose; the profits
being promised beforehand to the Committee of the Portuguese
Relief Fund, formed to assist the sufferers from Massena’s
devastations. It consists of rather less than
a hundred Spenserian stanzas, the story of Roderick
merely ushering in a magical revelation, to that too-amorous
monarch, of the fortunes of the Peninsular War and
its heroes up to the date of writing. The Edinburgh
Review, which hated the war, was very angry because
Scott did not celebrate Sir John Moore (whether as
a good Whig or a bad general it did not explain);
but even Jeffrey was not entirely unfavourable, and
the piece was otherwise well received. The description
of the subterranean hall beneath the Cathedral of Toledo
is as good as we should expect, and the verses on
Saragossa and on the forces of the three kingdoms
are very fine. But the whole was something of
a torso, and it is improbable that Scott could
ever have used the Spenserian stanza to good effect
for continuous narrative. Even in its individual
shape, that great form requires the artistic patience
as well as the natural gift of men like its inventor,
or like Thomson, Shelley, and Tennyson, in other times
and of other schools, to get the full effect out of
it; while to connect it satisfactorily with its kind
and adjust it to narrative is harder still.
The true succession, however, after
this parenthesis, was taken up by Rokeby, which
was dated on the very last day of 1812. Its reception
was not exceedingly enthusiastic; for Byron, borrowing
most of his technique and general scheme from Scott,
and joining with these greater apparent passion and
a more novel and unfamiliar local colour, had appeared
on the scene as a ‘second lion.’ The
public, a ’great-sized monster of ingratitudes,’
had got accustomed to Scott, if not weary of him.
The title was not very happy; and perhaps some
harm was really done by one of the best of Moore’s
many good jokes in the Twopenny Postbag, where
he represented Scott as coming from Edinburgh to London
‘To do all the gentlemen’s
seats by the way’
in romances of half a dozen cantos.
The poem, however, is a very delightful
one, and to some tastes at least very far above the
Lady of the Lake. Scott, indeed, clung
to the uninterrupted octosyllable more than ever;
but that verse, if a poet knows how to manage it,
is by no means so unsuited for story-telling as Ellis
thought; and Scott had here more story to tell than
in any of his preceding pieces, except Marmion.
The only character, indeed, in which one takes much
interest is Bertram Risingham; but he is a really
excellent person, the cream of Scott’s ruffians,
whether in prose or verse; appearing well, conducting
himself better, and ending best of all. Nor is
Oswald, the contrasted villain, by any means to be
despised; while the passages on which the
romance, in contradistinction to the classical epic,
stands or falls are equal to all but the
very best in Marmion or the Lay.
Bertram’s account of the first and happier events
at Marston Moor, as well as of his feelings as to his
comradeship with Mortham; the singularly beautiful
opening of the second canto
‘Far in the chambers
of the west’;
with the description of Upper Teesdale;
Bertram’s clamber on the cliff, with its reminiscences
of the ’Kittle Nine Steps,’ these
lead on to many other things as good, ending with
that altogether admirable bit of workmanship, Bertram’s
revenge on Oswald and his own death. Matilda is
one of the best of Scott’s verse-heroines, except
Constance that is to say, the best of his
good girls and she has the interest of being
avowedly modelled on ‘Green Mantle.’
Nor in any of the poems do the lyrics give more satisfactory
setting-off to the main text. Indeed, it may
be questioned whether any contains such a garland as to
mention only the best is formed by
‘O, Brignall banks are
wild and fair’;
the exquisite
‘A weary lot is thine,
fair maid,’
adapted from older matter with a skill
worthy of Burns himself; the capital bravura of Allen-a-Dale;
and that noble Cavalier lyric
‘When the dawn on the
mountain was misty and grey.’
The Bridal of Triermain was
published in 1813, not long after Rokeby, and,
like that poem, drew its scenery from the North of
England; but in circumstances, scale, and other ways
it forms a pair with Harold the Dauntless,
and they had best be noticed together.
The Lord of the Isles, the
last of the great quintet, appeared in December 1814.
Scott had obtained part of the scenery for it in an
earlier visit to the Hebrides, and the rest in his
yachting voyage (see below) with the Commissioners
of Northern Lights, which also gave the decor
for The Pirate. The poem was not more popular
than Rokeby in England, and it was even less
so in Scotland, chiefly for the reason, only to be
mentioned with all but silent amazement, that it was
’not bitter enough against England.’
Its faults are, of course, obvious enough. Central
story there is simply none; the inconvenience that
arises to the hero from his being addressed by two
young ladies cannot awake any very sympathetic tear,
nor does either Edith of Lorn or Isabel Bruce awaken
any violent desire to offer to relieve him of one of
them. The versification, however, is less uniform
than that of Rokeby or The Lady of the Lake,
and there are excellent passages the best
being, no doubt, the Abbot’s extorted blessing
on the Bruce; the great picture of Loch Coruisk, which,
let people say what they will, is marvellously faithful;
part of the voyage (though one certainly could spare
some of the ’merrilys’); the landing in
Carrick; the rescue of the supposed page; and, finally,
Bannockburn, which even Jeffrey admired, though its
want of ‘animosity’ shocked him.
The two last of the great poems there
was indeed a third, The Field of Waterloo,
written hastily for a subscription, and not worthy
either of Scott or of the subject have
not by any means the least interest, either intrinsic
or that of curiosity. Indeed, as a matter of liking,
not quite disjoined from criticism, I should put them
very high indeed. Both were issued anonymously,
and with indications intended to mislead readers into
the idea that they were by Erskine; the intention being,
it would seem, partly to ascertain how far the author’s
mere name counted in his popularity, partly also to
‘fly kites’ as to the veering of the public
taste in reference to the verse romance in general.
By the time of the publication of Harold the Dauntless
in 1817, Scott could hardly have had any intention
of deserting the new way his own exclusive
right in which he was already walking firmly.
But the Bridal of Triermain appeared very shortly
after Rokeby, and was, no doubt, seriously
intended as a test.
In both pieces the author fell back
upon his earlier scheme of metre, the Christabel
blend of iambic with anapaestic passages, instead of
the nearly pure iambs of his middle poems. The
Bridal, partly to encourage the Erskine notion,
it would seem, is hampered by an intermixed outline-story,
told in the introductions, of the wooing and winning
of a certain Lucy by a certain Arthur, both of whom
may be very heartily wished away. But the actual
poem is more thoroughly a Romance of Adventure than
even the Lay, has much more central interest
than that poem, and is adorned by passages of hardly
less beauty than the best of the earlier piece.
It is astonishing how anyone of the slightest penetration
could have entertained the slightest doubt about the
authorship of
’Come hither, come hither,
Henry my page,
Whom I saved from the sack
of Hermitage’;
still more of that of the well-known
opening of the Third Canto, one of the triumphs of
that ‘science of names’ in which Scott
was such a proficient
’Bewcastle now must
keep the Hold,
Speir-Adam’s
steeds must bide in stall,
Of Hartley-burn the bowmen
bold
Must only shoot
from battled wall;
And Liddesdale may buckle
spur,
And Teviot now
may belt the brand,
Tarras and Ewes keep nightly
stir,
And Eskdale foray
Cumberland!’
But these are only the most unmistakable,
not the best. The opening specification of the
Bride; the admirable ‘Lyulph’s Tale,’
with the first appearance of the castle, and the stanza
(suggested no doubt by a famous picture) of the damsels
dragging Arthur’s war-gear; the courtship, and
Guendolen’s wiles to retain Arthur, and the parting;
the picture of the King’s court; the tournament;
all these are good enough. But I am not sure
that the description of Sir Roland’s tantalised
vigil in the Vale of St. John, with the moonlit valley
(itself a worthy pendant even to the Melrose), and
the sudden and successful revelation of the magic
hold when the knight flings his battle-axe, does not
even surpass the Tale. Nor do I think that the
actual adventures of this Childe Roland in the dark
towers are inferior. The trials and temptations
are of stock material, but all the best matter is stock,
and this is handled with a rush and dash which more
than saves it. I hope the tiger was only a magic
tiger, and went home comfortably with the damsels
of Zaharak. It seems unfair that he should be
actually killed. But this is the only thing that
disquiets me; and it is impossible to praise too much
De Vaux’s ingenious compromise between tasteless
asceticism and dangerous indulgence in the matter of
’Asia’s willing maids.’
Harold the Dauntless is much
slighter, as indeed might be expected, considering
that it was finished in a hurry, long after the author
had given up poetry as a main occupation. But
the half burlesque Spenserians of the overture are
very good; the contrasted songs, ’Dweller of
the Cairn’ and ‘A Danish Maid for Me,’
are happy. Harold’s interview with the
Chapter is a famous bit of bravura; and all concerning
the Castle of the Seven Shields, from the ballad introducing
it, through the description of its actual appearance
(in which, by the way, Scott shows almost a better
grasp of the serious Spenserian stanza than anywhere
else) to the final battle of Odin and Harold, is of
the very best Romantic quality. Perhaps, indeed,
it is because (as the Critical Review, the
Abdiel of ‘classical’ orthodoxy among the
reviews of the time, scornfully said), ’both
poems are romantic enough to satisfy all the parlour-boarders
of all the ladies’ schools in England,’
that they are so pleasant. It is something, in
one’s grey and critical age, to feel genuine
sympathy with the parlour-boarder.
The chapter has already stretched
to nearly the utmost proportions compatible with the
scale of this little book, and we must not indulge
in very many critical remarks on the general character
of the compositions discussed in it. But I have
never carried out the plan (which I think indispensable)
of reading over again whatever work, however well
known, one has to write about, with more satisfaction.
The main defects lie on the surface. Despite
great felicities of a certain kind, these poems have
no claim to formal perfection, and occasionally sin
by very great carelessness, if not by something worse.
The poet frankly shows himself as one whose appeal
is not that of ’jewels five words long,’
set and arranged in phrases of that magical and unending
beauty which the very greatest poets of the world command.
His effect, even in description, is rather of mass
than of detail. He does not attempt analysis
in character, and only skirts passion. Although
prodigal enough of incident, he is very careless of
connected plot. But his great and abiding glory
is that he revived the art, lost for centuries in
England, of telling an interesting story in verse,
of riveting the attention through thousands of lines
of poetry neither didactic nor argumentative.
And of his separate passages, his patches of description
and incident, when the worst has been said of them,
it will remain true that, in their own way and for
their own purpose, they cannot be surpassed.
The already noticed comparison of any of Scott’s
best verse-tales with Christabel, which they
formally imitated to some extent, and with the White
Doe of Rylstone, which followed them, will no
doubt show that Coleridge and Wordsworth had access
to mansions in the house of poetry where Scott is
never seen. But in some respects even their best
passages are not superior to his; and as tales, as
romances, his are altogether superior to theirs.