The Collected Works of Charles Lamb and Mary Lamb. Charles Lamb

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Collected Works of Charles Lamb and Mary Lamb - Charles Lamb страница 60

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
The Collected Works of Charles Lamb and Mary Lamb - Charles  Lamb

Скачать книгу

private monument; for this

       Was the particular spot, in which they wished

       (And Heaven was pleased to accomplish their desire)

       That, undivided their Remains should lie.

       So, where the mouldered Tree had stood, was raised

       Yon Structure, framing, with the ascent of steps

       That to the decorated Pillar lead,

       A work of art, more sumptuous, as might seem,

       Than suits this Place; yet built in no proud scorn

       Of rustic homeliness; they only aimed

       To ensure for it respectful guardianship.

       Around the margin of the Plate, whereon

       The Shadow falls, to note the stealthy hours,

       Winds an inscriptive Legend——At these words

       Thither we turned; and gathered, as we read,

       The appropriate sense, in Latin numbers couched.

       "Time flies; it is his melancholy task

       To bring, and bear away, delusive hopes,

       And re-produce the troubles he destroys.

       But, while his blindness thus is occupied.

       Discerning Mortal! do thou serve the will

       Of Time's eternal Master, and that peace,

       Which the World wants, shall be for Thee confirmed."—pp. 270–3.

      The causes which have prevented the poetry of Mr. Wordsworth from attaining its full share of popularity are to be found in the boldness and originality of his genius. The times are past when a poet could securely follow the direction of his own mind into whatever tracts it might lead. A writer, who would be popular, must timidly coast the shore of prescribed sentiment and sympathy. He must have just as much more of the imaginative faculty than his readers, as will serve to keep their apprehensions from stagnating, but not so much as to alarm their jealousy. He must not think or feel too deeply.

      If he has had the fortune to be bred in the midst of the most magnificent objects of creation, he must not have given away his heart to them; or if he have, he must conceal his love, or not carry his expressions of it beyond that point of rapture, which the occasional tourist thinks it not overstepping decorum to betray, or the limit which that gentlemanly spy upon Nature, the picturesque traveller, has vouchsafed to countenance. He must do this, or be content to be thought an enthusiast.

      If from living among simple mountaineers, from a daily intercourse with them, not upon the footing of a patron, but in the character of an equal, he has detected, or imagines that he has detected, through the cloudy medium of their unlettered discourse, thoughts and apprehensions not vulgar; traits of patience and constancy, love unwearied, and heroic endurance, not unfit (as he may judge) to be made the subject of verse, he will be deemed a man of perverted genius by the philanthropist who, conceiving of the peasantry of his country only as objects of a pecuniary sympathy, starts at finding them elevated to a level of humanity with himself, having their own loves, enmities, cravings, aspirations, &c., as much beyond his faculty to believe, as his beneficence to supply.

      If from a familiar observation of the ways of children, and much more from a retrospect of his own mind when a child, he has gathered more reverential notions of that state than fall to the lot of ordinary observers, and, escaping from the dissonant wranglings of men, has tuned his lyre, though but for occasional harmonies, to the milder utterance of that soft age—his verses shall be censured as infantile by critics who confound poetry "having children for its subject" with poetry that is "childish," and who, having themselves perhaps never been children, never having possessed the tenderness and docility of that age, know not what the soul of a child is—how apprehensive! how imaginative! how religious!

      We have touched upon some of the causes which we conceive to have been unfriendly to the author's former poems. We think they do not apply in the same force to the one before us. There is in it more of uniform elevation, a wider scope of subject, less of manner, and it contains none of those starts and imperfect shapings which in some of this author's smaller pieces offended the weak, and gave scandal to the perverse. It must indeed be approached with seriousness. It has in it much of that quality which "draws the devout, deterring the profane." Those who hate the Paradise Lost will not love this poem. The steps of the great master are discernible in it; not in direct imitation or injurious parody, but in the following of the spirit, in free homage and generous subjection.

      ON THE MELANCHOLY OF TAILORS

       Table of Contents

      (1814. Text of 1818)

      Sedet, æternumque sedebit,

       Infelix Theseus.————Virgil.

      That there is a professional melancholy, if I may so express myself, incident to the occupation of a tailor, is a fact which I think very few will venture to dispute. I may safely appeal to my readers, whether they ever knew one of that faculty that was not of a temperament, to say the least, far removed from mercurial or jovial.

      Observe the suspicious gravity of their gait. The peacock is not more tender, from a consciousness of his peculiar infirmity, than a gentleman of this profession is of being known by the same infallible testimonies of his occupation. "Walk, that I may know thee."

      Do you ever see him go whistling along the foot-path like a carman, or brush through a crowd like a baker, or go smiling to himself like a lover? Is he forward to thrust into mobs, or to make one at the ballad-singer's audiences? Does he not rather slink by assemblies and meetings of the people, as one that wisely declines popular observation?

      How extremely rare is a noisy tailor! a mirthful and obstreperous tailor!

Скачать книгу