登陆注册
37753500000009

第9章 LONGFELLOW(1)

To Walter Mainwaring,Esq.,Lothian College,Oxford.

My dear Mainwaring,--You are very good to ask me to come up and listen to a discussion,by the College Browning Society,of the minor characters in "Sordello;"but I think it would suit me better,if you didn't mind,to come up when the May races are on.I am not deeply concerned about the minor characters in "Sordello,"and have long reconciled myself to the conviction that I must pass through this pilgrimage without hearing Sordello's story told in an intelligible manner.Your letter,however,set me a-voyaging about my bookshelves,taking up a volume of poetry here and there.

What an interesting tract might be written by any one who could remember,and honestly describe,the impressions that the same books have made on him at different ages!There is Longfellow,for example.I have not read much in him for twenty years.I take him up to-day,and what a flood of memories his music brings with it!

To me it is like a sad autumn wind blowing over the woods,blowing over the empty fields,bringing the scents of October,the song of a belated bird,and here and there a red leaf from the tree.There is that autumnal sense of things fair and far behind,in his poetry,or,if it is not there,his poetry stirs it in our forsaken lodges of the past.Yes,it comes to one out of one's boyhood;it breathes of a world very vaguely realized--a world of imitative sentiments and forebodings of hours to come.Perhaps Longfellow first woke me to that later sense of what poetry means,which comes with early manhood.

Before,one had been content,I am still content,with Scott in his battle pieces;with the ballads of the Border.Longfellow had a touch of reflection you do not find,of course,in battle poems,in a boy's favourites,such as "Of Nelson and the North,"or "Ye Mariners of England."His moral reflections may seem obvious now,and trite;they were neither when one was fifteen.To read the "Voices of the Night,"in particular--those early pieces--is to be back at school again,on a Sunday,reading all alone on a summer's day,high in some tree,with a wide prospect of gardens and fields.

There is that mysterious note in the tone and measure which one first found in Longfellow,which has since reached our ears more richly and fully in Keats,in Coleridge,in Tennyson.Take,for example,"The welcome,the thrice prayed for,the most fair,The best-beloved Night!"Is not that version of Euripides exquisite--does it not seem exquisite still,though this is not the quality you expect chiefly from Longfellow,though you rather look to him for honest human matter than for an indefinable beauty of manner?

I believe it is the manner,after all,of the "Psalm of Life"that has made it so strangely popular.People tell us,excellent people,that it is "as good as a sermon,"that they value it for this reason,that its lesson has strengthened the hearts of men in our difficult life.They say so,and they think so:but the poem is not nearly as good as a sermon;it is not even coherent.But it really has an original cadence of its own,with its double rhymes;and the pleasure of this cadence has combined,with a belief that they are being edified,to make readers out of number consider the "Psalms of Life"a masterpiece.You--my learned prosodist and student of Browning and Shelley--will agree with me that it is not a masterpiece.But I doubt if you have enough of the experience brought by years to tolerate the opposite opinion,as your elders can.

How many other poems of Longfellow's there are that remind us of youth,and of those kind,vanished faces which were around us when we read "The Reaper and the Flowers"!I read again,and,as the poet says,"Then the forms of the departed Enter at the open door,The beloved,the true-hearted Come to visit me once more."Compare that ****** strain,you lover of Theophile Gautier,with Theo's own "Chateau de Souvenir"in "Emaux et Camees,"and confess the truth,which poet brings the break into the reader's voice?It is not the dainty,accomplished Frenchman,the jeweller in words;it is the ******r speaker of our English tongue who stirs you as a ballad moves you.I find one comes back to Longfellow,and to one's old self of the old years.I don't know a poem "of the affections,"as Sir Barnes Newcome would have called it,that I like better than Thackeray's "Cane-bottomed Chair."Well,"The Fire of Driftwood"and this other of Longfellow's with its absolute lack of pretence,its artful avoidance of art,is not less tender and true.

"And she sits and gazes at me With those deep and tender eyes,Like the stars,so still and saintlike,Looking downward from the skies."It is from the skies that they look down,those eyes which once read the "Voices of the Night"from the same book with us,how long ago!

同类推荐
  • 御制广寒殿记

    御制广寒殿记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 魏郑公谏录

    魏郑公谏录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重修台湾县志

    重修台湾县志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • TOPICS

    TOPICS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 虬髯客传

    虬髯客传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 凌帝传

    凌帝传

    身为下人,他小小年纪受尽苦难,绝处逢生,他立志斩尽邪恶,少年说:有朝一日乘风起,斩尽天下蛇蝎人!
  • 风之寻

    风之寻

    一代至尊被自己的弟子设计,打入了另一个世界,变成了一个普通人,他想回到他的世界。
  • 灵异怪谈集

    灵异怪谈集

    繁忙的都市下,隐藏着太多不为人知的灵异事件,有的流传甚广,有的却不为人知,跟随我,一起走进灵异的世界吧。
  • 葬海

    葬海

    墨痕在断章处终止,一切一切的起始似乎便是这终止的时刻……当我们发现了这隐藏在黑暗中的真相时,才意识到自己早已陷入了巨大的骗局当中……
  • 人民宝藏

    人民宝藏

    虽非乱世,只要有心,也可成为英雄!欢迎加入:九流错误群:307719436——九流任何作品中的错误,小至标点符号,大到主线逻辑,希望伸出你宝贵的手,给予批评指正,九流将感激不尽。九流问题群:244168755——任何九流作品中未明的问题及相关资料共享,意见提供等。以上两群纯作交流之用,广告及非实体编辑勿扰,谢谢。
  • 宠妃逃嫁:摄政王爷快捕捉

    宠妃逃嫁:摄政王爷快捕捉

    她是某市名牌大学的大四学生,一觉醒来来到历史上没有记载的朝代,算了,既来之则安之,混个公主当当还是不错滴,什么?嫁人,我拒绝,自己还是祖国的花朵呢,怎么可以嫁人呢,三十六计,逃!管他什么摄政王,关她什么事,可是,为什么他从邻国追到这里来了?某公主欲哭无泪”王爷,我们真的不合适,放过我吧“某王爷危险的看着她”你不嫁给本王!那你要嫁给谁?“某公主”当然是要嫁给我喜欢的人,反正你不是我的菜“某王爷满头黑线”是吗?那我就追到你感兴趣为止,女人,记住,你是我的“
  • 恃爱争婚

    恃爱争婚

    她是众人眼中令人羡慕的灰姑娘,出身平凡却得贵公子青睐,一朝麻雀变凤凰。然而新婚不满月,丈夫即不幸车祸身亡,她成了S城最有名的寡妇。他是家族中声名狼藉、肆意妄为的害群之马,身陷种种浮浪传闻,被家族放弃。一朝归来,誓要搅得全家天翻地覆,鸡犬不宁。他想要摧毁的,却是她最珍视的;他和她相爱,却互不信任。在这场金钱、权势、爱与信任的战争中,谁会是最后的赢家!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 民国才女的爱情往事

    民国才女的爱情往事

    她是芳菲人间的四月天;她是从尘埃里开出的一朵花;她是孤独一生、为爱出走的娜拉……林徽因、张爱玲、萧红、陆小曼、庐隐、凌叔华,六位万人瞩目的民国女子,六段精致曲折的动人故事。她们打破传统,紧跟时代的步伐;她们才情万千,留下永恒的光辉;她们亦敢爱敢恨,追寻自己的心灵归宿。她们用手中的笔书写传奇,亦用自己的人生诠释爱情的悲与喜。她们是民国最美丽的风景,亦是世间最特别的存在!
  • 报告爹地,妈咪不是坏人

    报告爹地,妈咪不是坏人

    五年前,简安纵火行凶,还让陆司霆戴了绿帽。他一纸离婚协议,步步紧逼,将她打入万劫不复。五年后,她带着高智商女儿出现,破坏了他的婚礼。陆司霆没有想到,自己无意救下的萌眼野丫头,身上流淌着他的熊猫血……
  • 纵横大千

    纵横大千

    这个世界是武者和念力师的世界,洛水本质是一个小小的弃婴,却因为一个木牌而改变,因此向着巅峰进发,魂珠,念力师,武者看主角如何站在...