Pleasant discoveries await you if you wander the byways of Victorian poetry. Yes, you will come upon poems that seem to fit what may be called the "Victorian" stereotype. But you may be surprised at what else you encounter. The following poem is by A. Mary F. Robinson (1857-1944).
Neurasthenia
I watch the happier people of the house
Come in and out, and talk, and go their ways;
I sit and gaze at them; I cannot rouse
My heavy mind to share their busy days.
I watch them glide, like skaters on a stream,
Across the brilliant surface of the world.
But I am underneath: they do not dream
How deep below the eddying flood is whirl'd.
They cannot come to me, nor I to them;
But, if a mightier arm could reach and save,
Should I forget the tide I had to stem?
Should I, like these, ignore the abysmal wave?
Yes! in the radiant air how could I know
How black it is, how fast it is, below?
William Holman Hunt, "Our English Coasts" (1852)
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Friday, June 18, 2010
They No Longer Write History Like This
I enjoy the ambition and literary flair of the great British historians of the 19th and early-20th centuries. I am speaking of the authors of those comprehensive multi-volume works that no one undertakes these days. To name but a few: Symonds on the Italian Renaissance, Grote on Greece, Hallam on the Middle Ages, Macaulay on England, Trevelyan on England, Green on England, Froude on England, Carlyle on the French Revolution, Fortescue on the British army. Their knowledge of their subject matter was complete and their scope was all-encompassing. Today, we have specialists.
But what makes these historians wonderful is their writing itself. They thought of themselves as being engaged in a literary undertaking. Of course, they covered (oh, how they covered) the facts. However, they were not merely annalists. They had a story to tell and they told it with style and verve. Here, for instance, is Charles Oman (1860-1946) writing of the Spanish royal family in A History of the Peninsular War (seven volumes):
It is perhaps necessary to gain some detailed idea of the unpleasant family party at Madrid. King Charles IV was now a man of sixty years of age: he was so entirely simple and helpless that it is hardly an exaggeration to say that his weakness bordered on imbecility. His elder brother, Don Philip, was so clearly wanting in intellect that he had to be placed in confinement and excluded from the throne. It might occur to us that it would have been well for Spain if Charles had followed him to the asylum, if we had not to remember that the crown would then have fallen to Ferdinand of Naples, who if more intelligent was also more morally worthless than his brother.
. . .
[Charles] may be described as a good-natured and benevolent imbecile: he was not cruel or malicious or licentious, or given to extravagant fancies. . . . He was very ugly, not with the fierce clever ugliness of his father Charles III, but in an imbecile fashion, with a frightfully receding forehead, a big nose, and a retreating jaw generally set in a harmless grin. . . . He had just enough brains to be proud of his position as king, and to resent anything that he regarded as an attack on his dignity -- such as the mention of old constitutional rights and privileges, or any allusion to the Cortes.
A History of the Peninsular War, Volume I (1902), pages 13-14.
Some may think that this type of historical writing is too "subjective" or too "romantic." I respectfully disagree. To my mind, the writing of history in this fashion follows directly in the tradition of Herodotus, who is well-known for his colorful (and often digressive -- though wonderfully so) style.
Goya, "Charles IV" (1789)
But what makes these historians wonderful is their writing itself. They thought of themselves as being engaged in a literary undertaking. Of course, they covered (oh, how they covered) the facts. However, they were not merely annalists. They had a story to tell and they told it with style and verve. Here, for instance, is Charles Oman (1860-1946) writing of the Spanish royal family in A History of the Peninsular War (seven volumes):
It is perhaps necessary to gain some detailed idea of the unpleasant family party at Madrid. King Charles IV was now a man of sixty years of age: he was so entirely simple and helpless that it is hardly an exaggeration to say that his weakness bordered on imbecility. His elder brother, Don Philip, was so clearly wanting in intellect that he had to be placed in confinement and excluded from the throne. It might occur to us that it would have been well for Spain if Charles had followed him to the asylum, if we had not to remember that the crown would then have fallen to Ferdinand of Naples, who if more intelligent was also more morally worthless than his brother.
. . .
[Charles] may be described as a good-natured and benevolent imbecile: he was not cruel or malicious or licentious, or given to extravagant fancies. . . . He was very ugly, not with the fierce clever ugliness of his father Charles III, but in an imbecile fashion, with a frightfully receding forehead, a big nose, and a retreating jaw generally set in a harmless grin. . . . He had just enough brains to be proud of his position as king, and to resent anything that he regarded as an attack on his dignity -- such as the mention of old constitutional rights and privileges, or any allusion to the Cortes.
A History of the Peninsular War, Volume I (1902), pages 13-14.
Some may think that this type of historical writing is too "subjective" or too "romantic." I respectfully disagree. To my mind, the writing of history in this fashion follows directly in the tradition of Herodotus, who is well-known for his colorful (and often digressive -- though wonderfully so) style.
Goya, "Charles IV" (1789)
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
"I Listen To Money Singing": Philip Larkin And Arthur Schopenhauer
Philip Larkin's "Money" begins with a sardonic (surprise!) reflection by Larkin about how money could allegedly make him happy, if only he could bring himself to spend it on the things that allegedly make us happy. But the poem ends -- and this is why I love Larkin -- with a breathtaking final stanza:
I listen to money singing. It's like looking down
From long french windows at a provincial town,
The slums, the canal, the churches ornate and mad
In the evening sun. It is intensely sad.
High Windows (1974). (An aside that has nothing to do with money: when it comes to final stanzas (or final lines), I humbly suggest that Larkin cannot be surpassed. Consider, for example, "Mr Bleaney," "Continuing to Live," "High Windows," "Dockery and Son," "An Arundel Tomb," "Afternoons," "The Whitsun Weddings," "The Building" -- after reading the closing lines of those poems a few times, you may find that you have memorized them without intending to do so. "On that green evening when our death begins . . .")
But, back to the topic at hand. For some reason, I have the urge to pair Larkin's "Money" with a bit of wisdom from Arthur Schopenhauer:
"Money is human happiness in the abstract; he, then, who is no longer capable of enjoying human happiness in the concrete, devotes his heart entirely to money."
William Hogarth, "The Rake in Bedlam" (1735)
I listen to money singing. It's like looking down
From long french windows at a provincial town,
The slums, the canal, the churches ornate and mad
In the evening sun. It is intensely sad.
High Windows (1974). (An aside that has nothing to do with money: when it comes to final stanzas (or final lines), I humbly suggest that Larkin cannot be surpassed. Consider, for example, "Mr Bleaney," "Continuing to Live," "High Windows," "Dockery and Son," "An Arundel Tomb," "Afternoons," "The Whitsun Weddings," "The Building" -- after reading the closing lines of those poems a few times, you may find that you have memorized them without intending to do so. "On that green evening when our death begins . . .")
But, back to the topic at hand. For some reason, I have the urge to pair Larkin's "Money" with a bit of wisdom from Arthur Schopenhauer:
"Money is human happiness in the abstract; he, then, who is no longer capable of enjoying human happiness in the concrete, devotes his heart entirely to money."
William Hogarth, "The Rake in Bedlam" (1735)
Monday, June 14, 2010
"He Is The Concentration Of All That Is American"
I greatly admire Ulysses S. Grant. Why? A first-hand observer of Grant answers that question much more eloquently than I can. Theodore Lyman served as an aide to Major-General George Meade, commander of the Army of the Potomac. Grant was in the field with the Army from 1864 until the end of the war. Lyman saw Grant nearly every day during that period. In a June 12, 1864, letter to his wife, Lyman wrote of Grant: "He is the concentration of all that is American." (George Agassiz (editor), Meade's Headquarters, 1863-1865: Letters of Colonel Theodore Lyman from The Wilderness to Appomattox (1922), page 156.)
T. Harry Williams writes:
Grant's life is, in some ways, the most remarkable one in American history. There is no other quite like it.
. . .
People were always looking for visible signs of greatness in Grant. Most of them saw none and were disappointed. . . . Charles Francis Adams, Jr., grasped immediately the essence of Grant -- that here was an extraordinary man who looked ordinary. Grant could pass for a "dumpy and slouchy little subaltern," Adams thought, but nobody could watch him without concluding that he was a "remarkable man. . . . in a crisis he is one against whom all around, whether few in number or a great army as here, would instinctively lean. He is a man of the most exquisite judgment and tact."
T. Harry Williams, McClellan, Sherman and Grant (1962), pages 79-83.
As he was dying of cancer, Grant -- in a final act of fortitude and integrity -- wrote his memoirs in order to pay off his debts and to provide for the financial security of his family. He completed the memoirs less than a week before his death.
Grant begins: "My family is American, and has been for generations, in all its branches, direct and collateral."
Grant writing his memoirs
T. Harry Williams writes:
Grant's life is, in some ways, the most remarkable one in American history. There is no other quite like it.
. . .
People were always looking for visible signs of greatness in Grant. Most of them saw none and were disappointed. . . . Charles Francis Adams, Jr., grasped immediately the essence of Grant -- that here was an extraordinary man who looked ordinary. Grant could pass for a "dumpy and slouchy little subaltern," Adams thought, but nobody could watch him without concluding that he was a "remarkable man. . . . in a crisis he is one against whom all around, whether few in number or a great army as here, would instinctively lean. He is a man of the most exquisite judgment and tact."
T. Harry Williams, McClellan, Sherman and Grant (1962), pages 79-83.
As he was dying of cancer, Grant -- in a final act of fortitude and integrity -- wrote his memoirs in order to pay off his debts and to provide for the financial security of his family. He completed the memoirs less than a week before his death.
Grant begins: "My family is American, and has been for generations, in all its branches, direct and collateral."
Grant writing his memoirs
Saturday, June 12, 2010
"Life In A Day"
Life in a day.
-- Louis MacNeice, "Les Sylphides"
Days are where we live.
-- Philip Larkin, "Days"
We two. And nothing in the whole world was lacking.
It is later one realizes. I forget
the exact year or what we said. But the place
for a lifetime glows with noon.
-- Bernard Spencer, "On the Road"
The days that remain with us are rarely the planned-for days or the waited-upon days. The days that remain with us do so unaccountably, unwontedly. Those that remain -- in, say, an angle of light or a color -- are, I think, best left wordless.
'Why, yes, -- we've pass'd a pleasant day,
While life's true joys are on their way.'
-- Ah me! I now look back afar,
And see that one day like a star.
-- William Allingham (1824-1889)
The Spirit's Epochs
Not in the crises of events,
Of compass'd hopes, or fears fulfill'd,
Or acts of grave consequence,
Are life's delight and depth reveal'd.
The day of days was not the day;
That went before, or was postponed;
The night Death took our lamp away
Was not the night on which we groan'd.
I drew my bride, beneath the moon,
Across my threshold; happy hour!
But, ah, the walk that afternoon
We saw the water-flags in flower!
-- Coventry Patmore (1823-1896)
Water-flags
-- Louis MacNeice, "Les Sylphides"
Days are where we live.
-- Philip Larkin, "Days"
We two. And nothing in the whole world was lacking.
It is later one realizes. I forget
the exact year or what we said. But the place
for a lifetime glows with noon.
-- Bernard Spencer, "On the Road"
The days that remain with us are rarely the planned-for days or the waited-upon days. The days that remain with us do so unaccountably, unwontedly. Those that remain -- in, say, an angle of light or a color -- are, I think, best left wordless.
'Why, yes, -- we've pass'd a pleasant day,
While life's true joys are on their way.'
-- Ah me! I now look back afar,
And see that one day like a star.
-- William Allingham (1824-1889)
The Spirit's Epochs
Not in the crises of events,
Of compass'd hopes, or fears fulfill'd,
Or acts of grave consequence,
Are life's delight and depth reveal'd.
The day of days was not the day;
That went before, or was postponed;
The night Death took our lamp away
Was not the night on which we groan'd.
I drew my bride, beneath the moon,
Across my threshold; happy hour!
But, ah, the walk that afternoon
We saw the water-flags in flower!
-- Coventry Patmore (1823-1896)
Water-flags
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Samuel Johnson Runs A Foot-Race
In a previous post, we saw Samuel Johnson suddenly decide to roll sideways down a hill at the country house of Bennet Langton. ("Ludwig Wittgenstein Pretends To Be The Moon. Samuel Johnson Rolls Down A Hill": May 8, 2010.) That Johnson could be so playful and exuberant is something that we should remember, so that we do not accept uncritically the caricature of him as the harrumphing, orotund Great Cham.
"At a gentleman's seat in Devonshire, as he and some company were sitting in a saloon, before which was a spacious lawn, it was remarked as a very proper place for running a race. A young lady present boasted that she could outrun any person; on which Dr. Johnson rose up and said, 'Madam, you cannot outrun me'; and, going out on the lawn, they started. The lady at first had the advantage; but Dr. Johnson happening to have slippers on much too small for his feet, kick'd them off up into the air, and ran a great length without them, leaving the lady far behind him, and, having won the victory, he returned, leading her by the hand, with looks of high exultation and delight."
"Recollections of Dr. Johnson by Miss Reynolds," Johnsonian Miscellanies (edited by George Birkbeck Hill), Volume II (1897), page 278.
Joshua Reynolds, "Samuel Johnson" (c. 1769)
"At a gentleman's seat in Devonshire, as he and some company were sitting in a saloon, before which was a spacious lawn, it was remarked as a very proper place for running a race. A young lady present boasted that she could outrun any person; on which Dr. Johnson rose up and said, 'Madam, you cannot outrun me'; and, going out on the lawn, they started. The lady at first had the advantage; but Dr. Johnson happening to have slippers on much too small for his feet, kick'd them off up into the air, and ran a great length without them, leaving the lady far behind him, and, having won the victory, he returned, leading her by the hand, with looks of high exultation and delight."
"Recollections of Dr. Johnson by Miss Reynolds," Johnsonian Miscellanies (edited by George Birkbeck Hill), Volume II (1897), page 278.
Joshua Reynolds, "Samuel Johnson" (c. 1769)
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
"I'll Chance It, As Old Horne Did His Neck"
The contributors to Notes and Queries -- that repository of out-of-the-way knowledge -- were fond of recording (for the sake of preserving) "English proverbs and proverbial phrases." We earlier met with "like Morley's ducks, born without a notion." I am no doubt in a tiny minority in hoping that these chestnuts do not disappear. You never know when one of them might come in handy. Thus, I give you "old Horne":
"I'll chance it, as old Horne did his neck," or "as parson Horne did his neck." Fifty and sixty years ago this was a common saying in the midland counties, and may be now. I have heard of its being used in Scotland. Horne was a clergyman in Nottinghamshire. Horne committed a murder. He escaped to the Continent. After many years' residence abroad he determined to return. In answer to an attempt to dissuade him, and being told he would be hanged if he did, he said, "I'll chance it." He did return, was tried, condemned, and executed.
Notes and Queries, Fifth Series, Volume X, No. 236 (July 6, 1878), contributed by "Ellcee."
"I'll chance it, as old Horne did his neck," or "as parson Horne did his neck." Fifty and sixty years ago this was a common saying in the midland counties, and may be now. I have heard of its being used in Scotland. Horne was a clergyman in Nottinghamshire. Horne committed a murder. He escaped to the Continent. After many years' residence abroad he determined to return. In answer to an attempt to dissuade him, and being told he would be hanged if he did, he said, "I'll chance it." He did return, was tried, condemned, and executed.
Notes and Queries, Fifth Series, Volume X, No. 236 (July 6, 1878), contributed by "Ellcee."
Sunday, June 6, 2010
At Sea In An Open Boat: Louis MacNeice And W. R. Rodgers
The metaphor of life as a sea voyage is a time-honored one. In these two poems, Louis MacNeice and W. R. Rodgers see it as a perilous voyage in an open boat, amidst looming waves, in an icy sea, beneath a tilting sky . . .
Thalassa
Run out the boat, my broken comrades;
Let the old seaweed crack, the surge
Burgeon oblivious of the last
Embarkation of feckless men,
Let every adverse force converge --
Here we must needs embark again.
Run up the sail, my heartsick comrades;
Let each horizon tilt and lurch --
You know the worst: your wills are fickle,
Your values blurred, your hearts impure
And your past life a ruined church --
But let your poison be your cure.
Put out to sea, ignoble comrades,
Whose record shall be noble yet;
Butting through scarps of moving marble
The narwhal dares us to be free;
By a high star our course is set,
Our end is Life. Put out to sea.
"Thalassa" was found in Louis MacNeice's papers after his death in 1963. The date of its composition is unknown. (An aside: "Thalassa! Thalassa!" (or, "Thalatta! Thalatta!") -- the cry of the Greek mercenaries in Xenophon's Anabasis -- is explored by Tim Rood in his delightful The Sea! The Sea!: The Shout of the Ten Thousand in the Modern Imagination.)
The following poem is by W. R. Rodgers (1909-1969), who, like MacNeice, was born in Northern Ireland. He and MacNeice were acquaintances.
Life's Circumnavigators
Here, where the taut wave hangs
Its tented tons, we steer
Through rocking arch of eye
And creaking reach of ear,
Anchored to flying sky,
And chained to changing fear.
O when shall we, all spent,
Row in to some far strand,
And find, to our content,
The original land
From which our boat once went,
Though not the one we planned.
Us on that happy day
This fierce sea will release,
On our rough face of clay,
The final glaze of peace.
Our oars we all will lay
Down, and desire will cease.
Caspar David Friedrich, "The Sea of Ice" (1824)
Thalassa
Run out the boat, my broken comrades;
Let the old seaweed crack, the surge
Burgeon oblivious of the last
Embarkation of feckless men,
Let every adverse force converge --
Here we must needs embark again.
Run up the sail, my heartsick comrades;
Let each horizon tilt and lurch --
You know the worst: your wills are fickle,
Your values blurred, your hearts impure
And your past life a ruined church --
But let your poison be your cure.
Put out to sea, ignoble comrades,
Whose record shall be noble yet;
Butting through scarps of moving marble
The narwhal dares us to be free;
By a high star our course is set,
Our end is Life. Put out to sea.
"Thalassa" was found in Louis MacNeice's papers after his death in 1963. The date of its composition is unknown. (An aside: "Thalassa! Thalassa!" (or, "Thalatta! Thalatta!") -- the cry of the Greek mercenaries in Xenophon's Anabasis -- is explored by Tim Rood in his delightful The Sea! The Sea!: The Shout of the Ten Thousand in the Modern Imagination.)
The following poem is by W. R. Rodgers (1909-1969), who, like MacNeice, was born in Northern Ireland. He and MacNeice were acquaintances.
Life's Circumnavigators
Here, where the taut wave hangs
Its tented tons, we steer
Through rocking arch of eye
And creaking reach of ear,
Anchored to flying sky,
And chained to changing fear.
O when shall we, all spent,
Row in to some far strand,
And find, to our content,
The original land
From which our boat once went,
Though not the one we planned.
Us on that happy day
This fierce sea will release,
On our rough face of clay,
The final glaze of peace.
Our oars we all will lay
Down, and desire will cease.
Caspar David Friedrich, "The Sea of Ice" (1824)
Friday, June 4, 2010
"No Newspapers"; Or, "Melons Are Crowned By The Crowd"
Although the following two poems are about newspapers, I have no particular axe to grind when it comes to that particular form of news reporting. Rather, the topic at hand is "news" -- whether delivered via newspapers, television, radio, or the Internet.
Let me be clear: I do not claim to maintain an Olympian distance from "news." On the contrary, I bring this topic up because I am often troubled by my concern with "news," and by my habit of letting it work itself into my life. In addition, I have recently been thinking about Thomas Hardy's poem "In Time of 'The Breaking of Nations'" -- "only a man harrowing clods," etc. -- and the perspective that we ought to put on things.
First, Mary Coleridge (1861-1907):
No Newspapers
Where, to me, is the loss
Of the scenes they saw -- of the sounds they heard;
A butterfly flits across,
Or a bird;
The moss is growing on the wall,
I heard the leaf of the poppy fall.
Collected Poems (edited by Theresa Whistler) (1954).
Yes, sentimental and Victorian. Well, then, if it is vitriol that you want, let us proceed to Stephen Crane:
A newspaper is a collection of half-injustices
Which, bawled by boys from mile to mile,
Spreads its curious opinion
To a million merciful and sneering men,
While families cuddle the joys of the fireside
When spurred by tale of dire lone agony.
A newspaper is a court
Where every one is kindly and unfairly tried
By a squalor of honest men.
A newspaper is a market
Where wisdom sells its freedom
And melons are crowned by the crowd.
A newspaper is a game
Where his error scores the player victory
While another's skill wins death.
A newspaper is a symbol;
It is feckless life's chronicle,
A collection of loud tales
Concentrating eternal stupidities,
That in remote ages lived unhaltered,
Roaming through a fenceless world.
The Poems of Stephen Crane (edited by Joseph Katz) (1966).
Luis Melendez (1716-1780), "Still Life with Melon and Pears"
Let me be clear: I do not claim to maintain an Olympian distance from "news." On the contrary, I bring this topic up because I am often troubled by my concern with "news," and by my habit of letting it work itself into my life. In addition, I have recently been thinking about Thomas Hardy's poem "In Time of 'The Breaking of Nations'" -- "only a man harrowing clods," etc. -- and the perspective that we ought to put on things.
First, Mary Coleridge (1861-1907):
No Newspapers
Where, to me, is the loss
Of the scenes they saw -- of the sounds they heard;
A butterfly flits across,
Or a bird;
The moss is growing on the wall,
I heard the leaf of the poppy fall.
Collected Poems (edited by Theresa Whistler) (1954).
Yes, sentimental and Victorian. Well, then, if it is vitriol that you want, let us proceed to Stephen Crane:
A newspaper is a collection of half-injustices
Which, bawled by boys from mile to mile,
Spreads its curious opinion
To a million merciful and sneering men,
While families cuddle the joys of the fireside
When spurred by tale of dire lone agony.
A newspaper is a court
Where every one is kindly and unfairly tried
By a squalor of honest men.
A newspaper is a market
Where wisdom sells its freedom
And melons are crowned by the crowd.
A newspaper is a game
Where his error scores the player victory
While another's skill wins death.
A newspaper is a symbol;
It is feckless life's chronicle,
A collection of loud tales
Concentrating eternal stupidities,
That in remote ages lived unhaltered,
Roaming through a fenceless world.
The Poems of Stephen Crane (edited by Joseph Katz) (1966).
Luis Melendez (1716-1780), "Still Life with Melon and Pears"
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Thomas Hardy: June 2, 1840
Thomas Hardy was born on this date 170 years ago.
In Time of 'The Breaking of Nations'
I.
Only a man harrowing clods
In a slow silent walk
With an old horse that stumbles and nods
Half asleep as they stalk.
II.
Only thin smoke without flame
From the heaps of couch-grass;
Yet this will go onward the same
Though Dynasties pass.
III.
Yonder a maid and her wight
Come whispering by:
War's annals will cloud into night
Ere their story die.
John Constable, "Gillingham Bridge, Dorset" (1823)
The banded ones were all dressed in white gowns -- a gay survival from Old Style days, when cheerfulness and May-time were synonyms -- days before the habit of taking long views had reduced emotion to a monotonous average.
-- Tess of the d'Urbervilles
John Constable, "Weymouth Bay from the Downs above
Osmington Mills, Dorset" (c. 1816)
Waiting Both
A star looks down at me,
And says: 'Here I and you
Stand, each in our degree:
What do you mean to do, --
Mean to do?'
I say: 'For all I know,
Wait, and let Time go by,
Till my change come.' -- 'Just so,'
The star says: 'So mean I: --
So mean I.'
In Time of 'The Breaking of Nations'
I.
Only a man harrowing clods
In a slow silent walk
With an old horse that stumbles and nods
Half asleep as they stalk.
II.
Only thin smoke without flame
From the heaps of couch-grass;
Yet this will go onward the same
Though Dynasties pass.
III.
Yonder a maid and her wight
Come whispering by:
War's annals will cloud into night
Ere their story die.
John Constable, "Gillingham Bridge, Dorset" (1823)
The banded ones were all dressed in white gowns -- a gay survival from Old Style days, when cheerfulness and May-time were synonyms -- days before the habit of taking long views had reduced emotion to a monotonous average.
-- Tess of the d'Urbervilles
John Constable, "Weymouth Bay from the Downs above
Osmington Mills, Dorset" (c. 1816)
Waiting Both
A star looks down at me,
And says: 'Here I and you
Stand, each in our degree:
What do you mean to do, --
Mean to do?'
I say: 'For all I know,
Wait, and let Time go by,
Till my change come.' -- 'Just so,'
The star says: 'So mean I: --
So mean I.'
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