CHAPTER
XVII
The Poets of the Dawn – 2
A
POETRY whose task is to render
truth of the Spirit by passing behind the appearances of the sense and the
intellect to their spiritual reality, is in fact attempting a work for which no
characteristic power of language has been discovered, —except the symbolic, but
the old once established symbols will no longer entirely serve, and the method
itself is not now sufficient for the need, —no traditional form of presentation
native to the substance, no recognized method of treatment or approach, or none
at once sufficiently wide and subtle, personal and universal for the modern
mind. In the past indeed there have been hieratic and religious ways of
approaching the truths of spirit which have produced some remarkable forms in
art and literature. Sufi poetry, Vaishnava poetry are of this order, in more
ancient times the symbolic and mystic way of the Vedic singers, while the
unique revelatory utterance of the Upanishads stands by itself as a form of
inspired thought which penetrates either direct of through strong unveiling
images to the highest truths of self and soul and the largest seeing of the
Eternal. One or two modern poets have attempted to use in a new way the almost unworked wealth of poetical suggestion in Catholic Christianity. But the drift
of the modern mind in this direction is too large in its aim and varied in its
approach to be satisfied by any definite or any fixed symbolic or hieratic
method, it cannot rest within the special experience and figures of a given
religion. There has been too universal a departure from all specialized forms
and too general a breaking down of the old cut channels; in place of their
intensive narrowness we have straining through all that has been experienced by
an age of wide intellectual curiosity to the ultimate sense of that experience.
The truth behind man and Nature and things, behind intellectual and emotional
and vital perception is sought to be seized by a pressure upon these things
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themselves,
and the highly intellectualized language and way of seeing developed by this
age is either used as it is with more meaning or strained or moulded anew or
given some turn or transformation which will bring in the intensity of the
deeper truth and vision. An intellectualism which takes this turn can choose
one of three methods. It may prolong the language and forms it already
possesses and trust to the weight of the thing it has to say and the power of
its vision to inform this vehicle with another spirit. It may strain, heighten,
transfigure the language and forms into a more intensive force of image, mould
and expression. Or it may strive for some new and direct tone, some sheer cry
of intuitive speech and soul born from the spirit itself and coming near to its
native harmonies. The moulds too may either be the established moulds turned or
modified to a greater and subtler use or else strange 8nprecedented frames,
magical products of a spiritual inspiration. On any of these lines the poetry
of the future may arrive at its objective and cross the borders of a greater
kingdom of experience and expression.
But these earlier poets came in an age of
imperfect, unenriched and uncompleted intellectuality. The language which they
inherited was admirable for clear and balanced prose speech, but in poetry had
been used only for adequate or vigorous statement, rhe3torical reasoning,
superficial sentimentalizing or ornate thought, narrative, description in the
manner of a concentrated, elevated and eloquent prose. The forms and rhythmical
movements were unsuitable for any imaginative, flexible or subtly feeling
poetry. Their dealing with these forms was clear and decisive; they were thrown
aside and new forms were sought for or old one taken from the earlier masters
of from song and ballad moulds and modified or developed to serve a more fluid
and intellectualised mind and imagination. But the language was a more
difficult problem and could not be entirely solved by such short cuts as
Wordsworth’s recipe of a resort to the straightforward force of the simplest
speech dependent on the weight of the substance and thought for its one
sufficient source of power., We find the tongue of this period floating between
various possibilities. On its lower levels it is weighted down by some remnant
of the character of the eighteenth century
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and
proceeds by a stream of eloquence, no longer artificial, but facile, fluid,
helped by a greater force of thought and imagination. This turn sometimes rises
to a higher level of inspired and imaginative poetic eloquence. But beyond this
pitch we have a fuller and richer style packed with thought and imaginative
substance, the substitute of this new intellectualised poetic mind for the more
spontaneous Elizabethan richness and curiosity; but imaginative thought is the
secret of its power, no longer the exuberance of the life-soul in its vision.
On the other side we have quite different note, a sheer poetical directness,
which sometimes sinks below itself to poverty and insufficiency or at least to
thinness, as in much of the work of Wordsworth and Byron, but, when better
supported and rhythmed, rises to quite new authenticities of great or perfect
utterance, and out of this there comes in some absolute moments a native voice
of the spirit6, in Wordsworth’ revelations of the spiritual presence in Nature
and its scenes and peoples, in Byron’s rare forceful sincerities, in the
luminous simplicities of Blake, in the faery melodies of Coleridge, most of all
perhaps in the lyrical cry and ethereal light of Shelley. But these are
comparatively rare moments, the mass of their work is less certain and unequal
in expression and significance. Finally we get in Keats a turning away to a
rich, artistic and sensuous poetical speech which prepares us for the lower
fullnesses of the intellectual and aesthetic epoch that had to intervene. The
greatest intuitive and revealing poetry has yet to come.
Byron and Wordsworth are the two
poets who are the most hampered by this difficulty of finding and keeping to
the native speech of their greater self, most often depressed in their
elevation, because they are both drawn by a strong side of their nature, the
one to a forceful, the other to a weighty intellectualised expression; neither
of them are born singers or artists of word and sound, neither of them poets in
the whole grain of their mind and temperament, not, that is to say, always
dominated by the aesthetic, imaginative or inspired strain in their being, but
doubled here by a man of action and passion, there by a moralist and preacher,
in each too a would-be “critic of life”, who gets into the way of the poet and
makes upon him illegitimate demands; therefore they are readily prone to fall
away to what is, however interesting
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it
may otherwise be, a lower, a not genuinely poetic range of substance and
speech. But both in the deepest centre or on the highest peak of their
inspiration are moved by powers for which their heavily or forcibly
intellectualized language of poetry was no adequate means. It is only when they
escape from it that they do their rare highest work. Byron, no artist,
intellectually shallow and hurried, a poet by compulsion of personality rather
than in the native colour of his mind, inferior in all these respects to the
finer strain of his great contemporaries, but in compensation a more powerful
elemental force than any of them and more in touch with all that had begun to
stir in the mind of the time, -always an advantage, if he knows how to make use
of it, for a poet’s largeness and ease of execution, -succeeds more amply on
the inferior levels of his genius, but fails in giving any adequate voice to
his highest possibility. Wordsworth, meditative, inward, concentrated in his
thought, is more often able by force of brooding to bring out that voice of his
greater self, but flags constantly,
brings in a heavier music surrounding his few great clear tones, drowns his
genius at last in a desolate sea of platitude. Neither arrives at that
amplitude of achievement which might have been theirs in a more fortunate time,
if ready forms had been given to them, or if they had lived in the stimulating
atmosphere of a contemporary culture harmonious with their personality.
Byron’s prodigious reputation,
greater and more prolonged on the continent than in his own country, led
perhaps to too severely critical an undervaluing when his defects became
nakedly patent in the fading away of the helpful glamour of contemporary
sympathies. That is the penalty of an exaggerated fame lifted too high on the
wings or the winds of the moment. But his fame was no accident or caprice of
fortune; it was his due from the Time-Spirit. His hasty vehement personality
caught up and crowded into its work in a strong though intellectually crude
expression an extraordinary number of the powers and motives of the modern age.
The passion for liberty found in him its voice of Tyrrhenian bronze. The revolt
and self-assertion of the individual against the falsities and stifling
conventions of society, denial, unbelief, the scorn of the sceptic for
established things,
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the
romance of the past, the restlessness of the present, the groping towards the
future, the sensuous, glittering, artificial romance of the pseudo-East, the romance
of the solitary, the immoral or amoral superman, all that flawed romanticism,
passionate sentimentalism, insatiable satiety of sensualism, cynicism, realism
which are the chaotic fermentation of an old world dying and a new world in
process of becoming, -a century and half’s still unfinished process, -caught
hold of his mood and unrolled itself before the dazzled, astonished and
delighted eyes of his contemporaries in the rapid succession of forcibly
ill-hewn works impatiently cut out or fierily molten from his single
personality in a few crowded years from its first rhetorical and struggling
outburst in Childe Harold to the accomplished ease of its finale in Don
Juan. Less than this apparent
plenitude would have been enough to create the rumour that rose around the
outbreak of this singular and rapid energy. No doubt, his intellectual
understanding of these things was thin and poverty-stricken in the extreme, his
poetic vision of the powers that moved him had plenty of force, but wanted
depth and form and greatness. But he brought to his work what no other poet
could give and what the mentality of the time, moved itself by things which it
had not sufficient intellectual preparation to grasp, was fitted to appreciate,
the native elemental force, the personality, the strength of nervous and vital
feeling of them which they just then needed and which took the place of
understanding and vision. To this pervading power, to this lava flood of
passion and personality, were added certain pre-eminent gifts, a language at
first of considerable rhetorical weight and drive, afterwards of great nervous
strength, directness, precision, force of movement, a power of narrative and of
vivid presentation, and always, whatever else might lack, an unfailing energy.
It was enough for the highest assured immortality
These things which Byron more or less
adequately expressed, were the ferment of the mind of humanity in its first
crude attempt to shake off the conventions of the past and struggle towards a
direct feeling of itself and its surrounding world in their
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immediate
reality. But behind it there is something else which seems sometimes about to
emerge vaguely, an element which may be called spiritual, a feeling of the
greatness of man the individual spirit commensurate with Nature, man able to
stand in the world in his own strength and puissance, man affirming his
liberty, the claim to freedom of a force as great within as the forces which
surround and seem to overwhelm him. It is a Titanism, the spirit in man seen
through the soul of desire, in revolt, not in self-possession, man the fallen
archangel, not man returning to godhead: but it reposes on it is the obscure
side of a spiritual reality. He could not break through the obstructions of his
lower personality and express this thing that he felt in its native tones of
largeness and power. If he could have done so, his work would have been of a
lasting greatness. But he never found the right form. Never achieved the
liberation into right thought and speech of the Daemon within him. The language
and movement he started from were an intellectual and sentimental rhetoric, the
speech of the eighteenth century broken down, melted and beaten into new shape
for stronger uses; he went on to a more chastened and rapid style of great
force, but void of delicacy, subtlety and variety; he ended in a flexible and
easy tongue which gave power to even the most cynical trivialities and could
rise to heights of poetry and passion: but none of these things, however
adapted to his other gifts, was the style wanted for this greater utterance.
Art, structure, accomplished mould were needs of which he had no idea; neither
the weight of a deep and considered, nor the sureness of an inspired
interpretation were at his command. But sometimes language and movement rise
suddenly into a bare and powerful sincerity which, if he could have maintained
it, would have given him the needed instrument: but the patience and artistic
conscientiousness or the feeling for poetic truth which would alone have done
this, were far from him. Considerable work of a secondary kind he did, but he
had something greater to say which he never said, but only gave rare hints of
it and an obscured sense of the presence of its meaning.
Wordsworth, with a much higher
poetic mind than Byron’s did not so entirely miss his greatest way, though he
wandered
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much
in adjacent paths and finally lost himself in the dry desert sands of their
uninspired intellectual mentality. At the beginning he struck in the midst of
some alloy full into his purest vein of gold. His earliest vision of his task
was the right vision, and whatever may be the general truth of his philosophy
of childhood in the great Ode, it seems to have been true of him. For as
intellectuality grew on him, the vision failed; the first clear intimations
dimmed and finally passed, leaving behind an unillumined waste of mere thought
and moralizing. But always, even from the beginning, it got into the way of his
inspiration. Wordsworth was not a wide thinker, though he could bring a
considerable weight of thought to the aid of the two or three great things he
felt and saw lucidly and deeply, and he was unfitted to be a critic of life of
which he could only see one side with power and originality, -for the rest he
belongs to his age rather than to the future and is limited in his view of
religion, of society, of man by many walls of convention. But what the poet
sees and feels, not what he opines, is the real substance of his poetry.
Wordsworth saw Nature and he saw man near to Nature, and when he speaks of
these things, he finds either his noblest or his purest and most penetrating
tones. His view of them is native to his temperament and personality and at the
opposite pole to Byron’s. Not what which is wild, dynamic or tumultuously great
in Nature, but her calm, her serenity, the soul of peace, the tranquil
Infinite, the still, near, intimate voice that speaks from flower and bird and
lived in as no poet before or after him
has done, with a spiritual closeness and identity which is of the nature of
revelation, the first spiritual revelation of this high near kind to which
English poetry had given voice. Some soul of man, too, he sees, not in revolt,
-he has written unforgettable lines about liberty, but a calm and ordered
liberty, -in harmony with this tranquil soul in Nature, finding on it a life in
tune with the order of an eternal law. On this perception the moralist in
Wordsworth founds a rule of simple faith, truth, piety, self-control,
affection, grave gladness in which the sentimental naturalism of the eighteenth
century disappears into an ethical naturalism, a very different idealization
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of
humanity in the simplicity of its direct contact with Nature unspoiled by the
artifice and corruption of a too developed society. All that Wordsworth has to
say worth saying is confined to these motives and from them he draws his whole
genuine thought inspiration.
But it is in the Nature-strain of
which he is the discoverer that he is unique, for it is then that the seer in
him either speaks the revelatory thought of his spirit or gives us strains
greater than thought’s the imperishable substance of spiritual consciousness
finding itself in sight and speech. At other times, especially when he fuses this
Nature-strain with his thought and
ethical motive, he writes sometimes poetry of the very greatest; at others
again it is of a varying worth and merit; but too often also he passes out from
his uninspired intelligence work with no stamp of endurance, much less of the
true immortality. In the end poet in him died while the man and the writer
lived on; the moralist and concentred thinker had killed the singer, the
intellect had walled up the issues of the imagination and spiritual vision. But
even from the beginning there is an inequality and uncertainty which betray an
incomplete fusion of the sides of his personality, and the heavy weight of
intellectuality shadows over and threatens the spiritual light which it
eventually extinguished. Except in a small number of pieces which rank among
the greatest things in poetry, he can never long keep to the pure high poetic
expression. He intellectualizes his poetic statement overmuch and in fact
states too much and sings too little, has a dangerous turn for a too obvious
sermonizing, pushes too far his reliance on the worth of his substance and is
not jealously careful to give it a form of beauty. In his works of long breath
there are terrible stretches of flattest prose in verse with lines of power,
sometimes of fathomless depth like that wonderful
Voyaging through strange seas of
Thought, alone,
interspersed
or occurring like a lonely and splendid accident, rari nantes in gurgite
vasto.¹ It has been said with justice that he talks too much in verse and
sings too little; there is a deficient
¹”Rare
swimming in the vast gurge”.
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sense
of the more subtle spirit of rhythm, a deficiency which he overcomes when moved
or lifted up, but which, at other times hampers greatly his effectiveness. His
theory of poetic diction, though it has a certain truth in it, was, as he
practiced it, narrow and turned to unsoundness; it betrayed him into the power
of the prosaic and intellectual element in his mind. These defects grew on him
as the reflective moralist and monk and the conventional citizen, —there was
always in him this curious amalgam, —prevailed over the seer and poet.
But still one of the set-poets he
is, a seer of the calm spirit in Nature, the poet of man’s large identity with
her and serene liberating communion: it is on this side that he is admirable
and unique. He has other strains too of great power. His chosen form of
diction, often too bare and trivial in the beginning, too heavy afterwards,
helps him at his best to a language and movement of unsurpassed poetic weight
and gravity charged with imaginative insight, in which his thought and his
ethical sense and spiritual sight meet in a fine harmony, as in his one great
Ode, in some of his sonnets, in Ruth,
even in Laodamia, in lines and
passages which uplift and redeem much of his less satisfying work, while when
the inner light shines wholly out, it admits him to the secret of the very
self-revealing voice of Nature herself speaking through the human personality
in some closest intimacy with her or else uttering the greatness of an
impersonal sight and truth. He has transparencies in which the spirit gets free
of the life-wave, the intelligence, the coloured veils of the imagination, and
poetic speech and rhythm become hints of the eternal movements and the eternal
stabilities, voices of the depths, rare moments of speech direct from our
hidden immortality.
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