"'Tis everything by fits, and nothing long."
"'Tis everything by fits, and nothing long."
"'Tis everything by fits, and nothing long."
SEWARD.
Don't exaggerate. An inapt quotation.
BULLER.
I was merely carrying on your eulogium of his wide-awake Face.
SEWARD.
The prevalent expression is still—the Benign.
BULLER.
A singular mixture of tenderness and truculence.
SEWARD.
Asleep it is absolutely saint-like.
BULLER.
It reminds me of the faces of Chantry's Sleeping Children in Litchfield Cathedral.
SEWARD.
Composure is the word. Composure is mute Harmony.
BULLER.
It may be so—but you will not deny that his nose is just a minim too long—and his mouth, at this moment, just a minim too open—and the crow-feet——
SEWARD.
Enhance the power of those large drooping eyelids, heavy with meditation—of that high broad forehead, with the lines not the wrinkles of age.
BULLER.
He is much balder than he was on Deeside.
SEWARD.
Or fifty years before. They say that, in youth, the sight of his head of hair once silenced Mirabeau.
BULLER.
Why, Mirabeau's was black, and my grandmother told me North's was yellow—or rather green, like a star.
NORTH.
Your Grandmother, Buller, was the finest woman of her time.
BULLER.
Sleepers hear. Sometimes a single word from without, reaching the spiritual region, changes by its touch the whole current of their dreams.
NORTH.
I once told you that, Buller. At present I happen to be awake. Butsurely a man may sit on a swing-chair with his eyes shut, and his mouth open, without incurring the charge of somnolency. Where have you been?
SEWARD.
You told us, sir, not to disturb you till Two——
NORTH.
But where have you been?
SEWARD.
We have written our despatches—read our London Papers—and had a pull inGutta Perchato and from Port Sonachan.
NORTH.
How does she pull?
BULLER.
Like a winner. I have written to the builder—Taylor of Newcastle—to match her against any craft of her keel in the kingdom.
NORTH.
Sit down. Where are the Boys.
SEWARD.
Off hours ago to Kilchurn. They have just signalised—"Two o'clock.1 Salmo Ferox, lb.12-20 Yellow-fins, lb.15-6 Pike, lb. 36."
NORTH.
And not bad sport, either. They know the dinner hour? Seven sharp.
SEWARD.
They do—and they are not the lads to disregard orders.
NORTH.
Four finer fellows are not in Christendom.
SEWARD.
May I presume to ask, sir, what volumes these are lying open on your knees?
NORTH.
The Iliad—andParadise Lost.
SEWARD.
I fear, sir, you may not be disposed to enlighten us, at this hour.
NORTH.
But I am disposed to be enlightened. Oxonians—and Double First-Class Men—nor truants since—you will find in me a docile pupil rather than a Teacher. I am no great Grecian.
BULLER.
But you are, sir; and a fine old Trojan too, methinks! What audacious word has escaped my lips!
NORTH.
Epic Poetry! Tell but a Tale, and see Childhood—the harmless, the trustful, the wondering, listen—"all ear;" and so has the wilder and mightier Childhood of Nations, listened, trustful, wondering, "all ear," to Tales lofty, profound—said, or, as Art grew up,sung.
SEWARD.
ΕΠΕ, Say or Tell.
BULLER.
ΑΕΙΔΕ, Sing.
NORTH.
Yes, my lads, these were the received formulas of beseeching with which the Minstrels of Hellas invoked succour of the divine Muse, when their burning tongue would fit well to the Harp transmitted Tales, fraught with old heroic remembrance, with solemn belief, with oracular wisdom. ΕΠΕ,Tell, ΕΠΟΣ,The Tale. And when, step after step, the Harp modelling the Verse, and the Verse charming power and beauty, and splendour and pathos—like a newly-created and newly-creating soul—into its ancestral Tradition—when insensibly the benign Usurper, the Muse, had made the magnificent dream rightly and wholly her own at last.— ΕΠΟΣ,The Sung Tale.Homer, to all following ages the chief Master of Eloquence whether in Verse or in Prose, has yet maintained the simplicity ofTelling.
"For he came beside the swift ships of the Achæans,Proposing to release his daughter, and bringing immense ransom;Having in his hand the fillet of the far-shooting Apollo,On the golden rod: and he implored of the Achæans,And the sons of Atreus, most of all, the two Orderers of the People."
"For he came beside the swift ships of the Achæans,Proposing to release his daughter, and bringing immense ransom;Having in his hand the fillet of the far-shooting Apollo,On the golden rod: and he implored of the Achæans,And the sons of Atreus, most of all, the two Orderers of the People."
"For he came beside the swift ships of the Achæans,Proposing to release his daughter, and bringing immense ransom;Having in his hand the fillet of the far-shooting Apollo,On the golden rod: and he implored of the Achæans,And the sons of Atreus, most of all, the two Orderers of the People."
These few words of a tongue stately, resplendent, sonorous, andnumerous, more than ours—and already the near Scamandrian Field feels, and fears, and trembles.Milton!The world has rolled round, and again round, from the day of that earlier to that of the later Mæonides. All the soul-wealth hoarded in words, which merciful Time held aloft, unsubmerged by the Gothic, by the Ottoman inundation; all the light shrined in the Second, the Intellectual Ark that, divinely built and guided, rode tilting over the tempestuous waste of waters; all the mind, bred and fostered by New Europe, down to within two hundred years of this year that runs: These have put differences between theIliadand theParadise Lost, in matter and in style, which to state and illustrate would hold me speaking till sunset.
BULLER.
And us listening.
NORTH.
The Fall of Hector and of his Troy! The Fall of Adam and of his World!
BULLER.
What concise expression!Multum in parvo, indeed, Seward.
NORTH.
Men and gods mingled in glittering conflict upon the ground that spreads between Ida's foot and the Hellespont! At the foot of the Omnipotent Throne, archangels and angels distracting their native Heaven with arms, and Heaven disburthening her lap of her self-lost sons for the peopling of Hell!
SEWARD.
Hush! Buller—hush!
NORTH.
In way of an Episode—yes, an Episode—see the Seventh Book—our Visible Universe willed into being!
SEWARD.
Hush! Buller—hush!
NORTH.
For a few risings and settings of yon since-bedimmed Sun—Love and celestial Bliss dwelling amidst the shades and flowers of Eden yet sinless—then, from aMORE FATAL APPLE, Discord clashing into and subverting the harmonies of Creation.
"Sin, and her shadow, Death; and Misery,Death's Harbinger."
"Sin, and her shadow, Death; and Misery,Death's Harbinger."
"Sin, and her shadow, Death; and Misery,Death's Harbinger."
The Iliad, indeed!
SEWARD.
I wish you could be persuaded, sir, to give us an Edition of Milton.
NORTH.
No. I must not take it out of the Doctor's hands. Then, as to Milton's style. If the Christian Theologian must be held bold who has dared to mix the Delivered Writings with his own Inventions—bold, too, was he, the heir of the mind that was nursed in the Aristotelian Schools, to unite, as he did, on the other hand, the gait of an understanding accomplished in logic, with the spontaneous and unstudied step of Poetry. The style of Milton, gentlemen, has been praised for simplicity; and it is true that the style of the Paradise Lost has often an austere simplicity; but one sort of it you miss—the proper Epic simplicity—that Homeric simplicity of theTelling.
SEWARD.
Perhaps, sir, in such a Poem such simplicity could not be.
NORTH.
Perhaps not. Homer adds thought to thought, and so builds up. Miltoninvolves thought with thought, and so constructs. Relation is with him argumentative also, and History both Philosophy and Oratory. This was unavoidable. He brought the mind of the latter age to the Form of Composition produced by the primitive time. Again, the style is fitted to the general intention of a Poem essentially didactic and argumentative. Again, the style is personal to himself. He has learnedly availed himself of all antecedent Art—minutely availed himself, yet he is no imitator. The style is like no other—it is intensely and completely original. It expresses himself. Lofty, capacious, acute, luminous, thoroughly disciplined, ratiocinative powers wonderfully blend their action with an imagination of the most delicate and profound sensibility to the beautiful, and of a sublimity that no theme can excel.
SEWARD.
Lord Bacon, sir, I believe, has defined Poetry, Feigned History—has he not?
NORTH.
He has—and no wonder that he thought much of "Feigned History"—for he had a view to Epos and Tragedy—the Iliad and Odyssey—the Attic Theatre—the Æneid—Dante—Ariosto—Tasso—the Romances of Chivalry—moreover, the whole Immense Greek Fable, whereof part and parcel remain, but more is perished. Which Fables, you know, existed, and were transmitted in Prose,—that is, by Oral Tradition, in the words of the relator,—long before they came into Homeric Verse—or any verse. He saw, Seward, the Memory of Mankind possessed by two kinds of History, both once alike credited. True History, which remains True History, and Fabulous History, now acknowledged as Poetry only. It is no wonder thatotherPoetry vanished from importance in his estimation.
BULLER.
I follow you, sir, with some difficulty.
NORTH.
You may with ease. Fabulous History holds place, side by side, with True History, as a rival in dignity, credence, and power, and in peopling the Earth with Persons and Events. For, of a verity, the Personages and Events created by Poesy hold place in our Mind—not in our Imagination only, but in our Understanding, along with Events and Personages historically remembered.
SEWARD.
An imposing Parallelism!
NORTH.
It is—but does it hold good? And if it does—with what limitations?
SEWARD.
With what limitations, sir?
NORTH.
I wish Lord Bacon were here, that I might ask him to explain. Take Homer and Thucydides—the Iliad and the History of the Peloponnesian War. We thus sever, at the widest, the Telling of Calliope from the Telling of Clio, holding each at the height of honour.
BULLER.
At the widest?
NORTH.
Yes; for how far from Thucydides is, at once, the Book of the Games! Look through the Iliad, and see how much and minute depicturing of a World with which the Historian had nothing to do! Shall the Historian, in Prose, of the Ten Years' War, stop to describe the Funeral Games of a Patroclus? Yes; if he stop to describe the Burying of every Hero who falls. But the Historian in Prose assumes that a People know their own Manners, and therefore he omits painting their manners to themselves. The Historian in Verse assumes the same thing, and,therefore, strange to say, he paints the manners! See, then, in the Iliad, how much memorising of a whole departed scheme of human existence, with which the Prose Historian had nothing to do, the Historian in regulated Metre has had the inspiration and the skill to inweave in the narrative of his ever-advancing Action.
BULLER.
Would his lordship were with us!
NORTH.
Give all this to—the Hexameter. Remember always, my dear Seward, the shield of Achilles—itself a world in miniature—a compendium of the world.
SEWARD.
Of the universe.
NORTH.
Even so; for Sun, and Moon, and Stars are there, Astronomy and all the learned sisterhood!
SEWARD.
Then to what species of narrative in prose—to one removed at what interval from the history of the Peloponnesian War, belongs that scene of Helen on the Walls of Troy? That scene at the Scæan gate? In the tent of Achilles, where Achilles sits, and Priam kneels?
NORTH.
Good. The general difference is obviously this—Publicity almost solely stamps the Thucydidean story—Privacy, more than in equal part, interfused with Publicity, the Homeric. You must allow Publicity and Privacy to signify, besides that which is done in public and in private, that which proceeds of the Public and of the Private will.
SEWARD.
In other words, if I apprehend you aright, the Theme given being some affair of Public moment, Prose tends to gather up the acts of the individual agents, under general aspects, into masses.
NORTH.
Just so. Verse, whenever it dare, resolves the mass of action into the individual acts, puts aside the collective doer—the Public, and puts forward individual persons. Glory, I say again, tothe Hexameter!
BULLER.
Glory to theHexameter! TheHexameter, like the Queen, has done it all.
NORTH.
Or let us return to the Paradise Lost? If the mustering of the Fallen Legions in the First Book—if the Infernal Council held in the Second—if the Angelic Rebellion and Warfare in the Fifth and Sixth—resemble Public History, civil and military, as we commonly speak—if the Seventh Book, relating the Creation by describing the kinds created, be the assumption into Heroic Poetry of Natural History—to what kind of History, I earnestly ask you both, does that scene belong, of Eve's relation of her dream, in the Fifth Book, and Adam's consolation of her uneasiness under its involuntary sin? To what, in the Fourth Book, her own innocent relation of her first impressions upon awaking into Life and Consciousness?
BULLER.
Ay!—to what kind of History? More easily asked than answered.
NORTH.
And Adam's relation to the Affable Archangel of his own suddenly-dawned morning from the night of non-existence, aptly and happily crowned upon the relation made to him by Raphael in the Seventh Book of his own forming under the Omnipotent Hand?
SEWARD.
Simply, I venture to say, sir, to the most interior autobiography—to that confidence of audible words, which flows when the face of a friend sharpens the heart of a man—and Raphael was Adam's Friend.
NORTH.
Seward, you are right. You speak well—as you always do—when you choose. Behold, then, I beseech you, the comprehending power of that little magical band—Our Accentual Iambic Pentameter.
SEWARD.
"Glory be with them, and eternal praise,The Poets who on earth have made us heirsOf Truth and pure Delight by heavenly lays!"
"Glory be with them, and eternal praise,The Poets who on earth have made us heirsOf Truth and pure Delight by heavenly lays!"
"Glory be with them, and eternal praise,The Poets who on earth have made us heirsOf Truth and pure Delight by heavenly lays!"
NORTH.
Glory to Verse, for its power is great. Man, from the garden in Eden, to the purifying by fire of the redeemed Earth—the creation of things Visible—Angels Upright and Fallen—and Higher than Angels—all the Regions of Space—Infinitude and Eternity—the Universality of Being—this is the copious matter of the Song. And herein there is place found, proper, distinct, and large, and prominent, for that whispered call to visit, in the freshness of morning, the dropping Myrrh—to study the opening beauty of the Flowers—to watch the Bee in her sweet labour—which tenderly dissipates from the lids of Eve her ominously-troubled sleep—free room for two tears, which, falling from a woman's eyes, are wiped with her hair—and for two more, which her pitying husband kisses away ere they fall. All these things Verse disposes, and composes, in One Presentment.
BULLER.
Glory to Verse, for its power is great—glory toour Accentual Iambic Pentameter.
NORTH.
Let us return to the Iliad. The Iliad is a history told by a mind that is arbiter, to a certain extent only, of its own facts. For Homer takes his decennial War and its Heroes, nay, the tenor of the story too, from long-descended Tradition. To his contemporary countrymen he appears as a Historian—not feigning, but commemorating and glorifying, transmitted facts.
SEWARD.
Ottfried Müller, asking how far Homer is tied up in his Traditions, ventures to suspect that the names of the Heroes whom Achilles kills, in such or such a fight, are all traditionary.
NORTH.
Where, then, is theFeignedHistory? Lord Bacon, Ottfried Müller, and Jacob Bryant, are here not in the main unagreed. "I nothing doubt," says Bacon, "but the Fables, which Homer having received, transmits, had originally a profound and excellent sense, although I greatly doubt if Homer any longer knew that sense."
BULLER.
What right, may I ask, had Lord Bacon to doubt, and Ottfried Müller to suspect——
NORTH.
Smoke your cigar. Ottfried Müller——
BULLER.
Whew!—poo!
NORTH.
Ottfried Müller imagines that there was in Greece a pre-Homeric Age, of which the principal intellectual employment was Myth-making. And Bryant, we know, shocked the opinion of his own day by referring the War of Troy to Mythology. Now, observe, Buller, how there is feigning and feigning—Poet after Poet—and the Poem that comes to us at last is the Poem of Homer; but in truth, of successive ages, ending in Homer——
SEWARD.
Who was then a real living flesh and blood Individual of the human species.
NORTH.
That he was——
SEWARD.
And wrote the Iliad.
NORTH.
That he did—but how I have hinted rather than told. In the Paradise Lost, the part of Milton is, then, infinitely bolder than Homer's in the Iliad. He is far more of a Creator.
SEWARD.
Can an innermost bond of Unity, sir, be shown for the Iliad?
NORTH.
Yes.The Iliad is a Tale of a Wrong Righted.Zeus, upon the secret top of Olympus, decrees thisRightingwith his omnipotent Nod. Upon the top of Ida he conducts it. But that is done, and the Fates resume their tenor. Hector falls, and Troy shall fall. That is again theRighting of a Wrong, done amongst men. This is the broadly-written admonition: "Discite Justitiam."
SEWARD.
You are always great, sir, on Homer.
NORTH.
Agamemnon, in insolence of self-will, offends Chryses and a God. He refused Chyseis—He robs Achilles. In Agamemnon the Insolence of Human Self-will is humbled, first under the hand of Apollo—then of Jupiter—say, altogether, of Heaven. He suffers and submits. And now Achilles, who has no less interest in the Courts of Heaven than Chryses—indeed higher—in overweening anger fashions out a redress for himself which the Father of Gods and Men grants. And what follows? Agamemnon again suffers and submits. For Achilles—Patroclus' bloody corse! Κειται Πατροκλος—that is the voice that rings! Now he accepts the proffered reconciliation of Agamemnon, before scornfully refused; and in the son of Thetis, too, the Insolence of Human Self-will is chastened under the hand of Heaven.
SEWARD.
He suffers, but submits not till Hector lies transfixed—till Twelve noble youths of the Trojans and their Allies have bled on Patroclus' Pyre. And does he submit then? No. For twelve days ever and anon he drags the insensible corse at his horses' heels round that sepulchral earth.
BULLER.
Mad, if ever a man was.
NORTH.
The Gods murmur—and will that the unseemly Revenge cease. Jove sends Thetis to him—and what meeter messenger for minister of mercy than a mother to her son! God-bidden by that voice, he submits—he remits his Revenge. The Human Will, infuriated, bows under the Heavenly.
SEWARD.
Touched by the prayers and the sight of that kneeling gray-haired Father, he has given him back his dead son—and from the ransom a costly pall of honour, to hide the dead son from the father's eyes—and of his own Will and Power Twelve Days' truce; and the days have expired, and the Funeral is performed—and the pyre is burned out—and the mound over the slayer of Patroclus is heaped—and the Iliad is done—and this Moral indelibly writes itself on the heart—the words of Apollo in that Council—
Τλητον γας Θυμον Μοισαι Θνητωσιε εδωχαν.
Τλητον γας Θυμον Μοισαι Θνητωσιε εδωχαν.
Τλητον γας Θυμον Μοισαι Θνητωσιε εδωχαν.
The Fates have appointed to mortals a Spirit that shall submit and endure.
NORTH.
Right and good. Τλητον is more than "shall suffer." It is, that shall accept suffering—that shallbear.
SEWARD.
Compare this one Verse and the Twenty-four Books, and you have the poetical simplicity and the poetical multiplicity side by side.
BULLER.
Right and good.
NORTH.
Yes, my friends, the Teaching of the Iliad is Piety to the Gods—
SEWARD.
Reverence for the Rights of Men—
NORTH.
A Will humbled, conformed to the Will of Heaven—
BULLER.
That the Earth is justly governed.
NORTH.
Dim foreshadowings, which Milton, I doubt not, discerned and cherished. The Iliad was the natural and spiritual father of the Paradise Lost—
SEWARD.
And the son is greater than the sire.
NORTH.
I see in the Iliad the love of Homer to Greece and to humankind. He was a legislator to Greece before Solon and Lycurgus—greater than either—after the manner fabled of Orpheus.
SEWARD.
Sprung from the bosom of heroic life, the Iliad asked heroic listeners.
NORTH.
See with what large-hearted love he draws the Men—Hector, and Priam, and Sarpedon—as well as the Woman Andromache—enemies! Can he so paint humanity and not humanise? He humanisesus—who have literature and refined Greece and Rome—who have Spenser, and Shakspeare, and Milton—who are Christendom.
SEWARD.
He loves the inferior creatures, and the face of nature.
NORTH.
The Iliad has been called a Song of War. I see in it—a Song of Peace. Think of all the fiery Iliad ending in—Reconciled Submission!
SEWARD.
"Murder Impossibility," and believe that there might have been an Iliad or a Paradise Lost in Prose.
NORTH.
It could never have been, by human power,ourParadise Lost. What would have become of the Seventh Book? This is now occupied with describing the Six Days of Creation. A few verses of the First Chapter of Genesis extended into so many hundred lines. The Book, as it stands, has full poetical reason. First, it has a sufficient motive. It founds the existence of Adam and Eve, which is otherwise not duly led to. The revolted Angels, you know, have fallen, and the Almighty will create a new race of worshippers to supply their place—Mankind.
SEWARD.
For this race that is to be created, a Home is previously to be built—or this World is to be created.
NORTH.
I initiated you into Milton nearly thirty years ago, my dear Seward; and I rejoice to find that you still have him by heart. Between the Fall of the Angels, and that inhabiting of Paradise by our first parents, which is largely related by Raphael, there would be in the history which the poem undertakes, an unfilled gap and blank without this book. The chain of events which is unrolled would be broken—interrupted—incomplete.
SEWARD.
And, sir, when Raphael has told the Rebellion and Fall of the Angels, Adam, with a natural movement of curiosity, asks of this "Divine Interpreter" how this frame of things began?
NORTH.
And Raphael answers by declaring at large the Purpose and the Manner. The Mission of Raphael is to strengthen, if it be practicable, the Human Pair in their obedience. To this end, how apt his discourse, showing how dear they are to the Universal Maker, how eminent in his Universe!
SEWARD.
The causes, then, of the Archangelic Narrative abound. And the personal interest with which the Two Auditors must hear such a revelation of wonders from such a Speaker, and that so intimately concerns themselves, falls nothing short of what Poetry justly requires in relations put into the mouth of the poetical Persons.
NORTH.
And can the interest—not now of Raphael's, but of Milton's "fit audience"—be sustained throughout? The answer is triumphant. The Book is, from beginning to end, a stream of the most beautiful descriptive Poetry that exists. Not however, mind you, Seward, of stationary description.
SEWARD.
Sir?
NORTH.
A proceeding work is described; and the Book is replete and alive with motion—with progress—with action—yes, of action—of an order unusual indeed to the Epos, but unexcelled in dignity—the Creative Action of Deity!
SEWARD.
What should hinder, then, but that this same Seventh Book should have been written in Prose?
NORTH.
Why this only—that without Verse it could not have been read! The Verse makes present. You listen with Adam and Eve, and you hear the Archangel. In Prose this illusion could not have been carried through such a subject-matter. Theconditio sine quâ nonof the Book was the ineffable charm of the Description. But what would a series of botanical and zoological descriptions, for instance, have been, in Prose? Thevivida visthat is in Verse is the quickening spirit of the whole.
BULLER.
But who doubts it?
NORTH.
Lord Bacon said that Poetry—that is, Feigned History—might be worded in Prose. And it may be; but how inadequately is known to Us Three.
BULLER.
And to all the world.
NORTH.
No—nor, to the million who do know it, so well as to Us, nor the reason why. But hear me a moment longer. Wordsworth, in his famous Preface to the Lyrical Ballads, asserts that the language of Prose and the language of Verse differ but in this—that in verse there is metre—and metre he calls an adjunct. With all reverence, I say that metre is not an adjunct—but vitality and essence; and that verse, in virtue thereof, so transfigures language, that it ceases to be the language of prose as spoken, out of verse, by any of the children of men.
SEWARD.
Remove the metre, and the language will not be the language of prose?
NORTH.
Not—if you remove the metre only—and leave otherwise the order of the words—the collocation unchanged—and unchanged any one of the two hundred figures of speech, one and all of which are differently presented in the language of Verse from what they are in Prose.
SEWARD.
It must be so.
NORTH.
The fountain of Law to Composition in Prose is the Understanding. The fountain of Law to Composition in Verse is the Will.
SEWARD.
?
NORTH.
A discourse in prose resembles a chain. The sentences are the successive links—all holdingtoone another—and holding one another.All is bound.
SEWARD.
Well?
NORTH.
A discourse in verse resembles a billowy sea. The verses are the waves that rise and fall—to our apprehension—each by impulse, life, will of its own.All is free.
SEWARD.
Ay. Now your meaning emerges.
NORTH.
E profundis clamavi.In eloquent prose, the feeling fits itself into the process of the thinking. In true verse, the thinking fits itself into the process of the feeling.
SEWARD.
I perpend.
NORTH.
In prose, the general distribution and composition of the matter belong to the reign of Necessity. The order of the parts, and the connexion of part with part, are obliged—logically justifiable—say, then, are demonstrable. See an Oration of Demosthenes. In verse, that distribution and composition belong to the reign of Liberty. That order and connexion are arbitrary—passionately justifiable—say, then, are delectable. See an Ode of Pindar.
SEWARD.
Publish—publish.
NORTH.
In prose the style is last—in verse first; in prose the sense controls the sound—in verse the sound the sense; in prose you speak—in verse you sing; in prose you live in the abstract—in verse in the concrete; in prose you present notions—in verse visions; in prose you expound—in verse you enchant; in prose it is much if now and then you are held in the sphere of the fascinated senses—in verse if of the calm understanding.
BULLER.
Will you have the goodness, sir, to say all that over again?
NORTH.
I have forgot it. The lines in the countenance of Prose are austere. The look is shy, reserved, governed—like the fixed steady lineaments of mountains. The hues that suffuse the face of her sister Verse vary faster than those with which the western or the eastern sky momently reports the progress of the sinking, of the fallen, but not yet lost, of the coming or of the risen sun.
BULLER.
I have jotted that down, sir.
NORTH.
And I hope you will come to understand it. Candidly speaking, 'tis more than I do.
SEWARD.
I do perfectly—and it is as true as beautiful, sir.
BULLER.
Equally so.
NORTH.
I venerate Wordsworth. Wordsworth's poetry stands distinct in the world. That which to other men is an occasional pleasure, or possibly delight, and to other poets an occasional transport,THE SEEING THIS VISIBLE UNIVERSE, is to him—a Life—one Individual Human Life—namely, his Own—travelling its whole Journey from the Cradle to the Grave. And that Life—for what else could he do with it?—he has versified—sung. And there is no other such Song. It is a Memorable Fact of our Civilisation—a Memorable Fact in the History of Human Kind—that one perpetual song. Perpetual but infinitely various—as a river of a thousand miles, traversing, from its birthplace in the mountains, diverse regions, wild and inhabited, to the ocean-receptacle.
BULLER.
Confoundedly prosaic at times.
NORTH.
He, more than any other true poet, approaches Verse to Prose—never, I believe, or hardly ever, quite blends them.
BULLER.
Often—often—often, my dear sir.
NORTH.
Seldom—seldom—seldom if ever, my dear sir. He tells his Life. His Poems are, of necessity, an Autobiography. The matter of them, then, is his personal reality; but Prose is, all over and properly, the language of Personal Realities. Even with him, however, so peculiarly conditioned, and, as well as I am able to understand his Proposition, against his own Theory of writing, Verse maintains, as by the laws of our insuppressible nature it always will maintain, its sacred Right and indefeasible Prerogative.
To conclude our conversation—
BULLER.
Or Monologue.
NORTH.
Epos is Human History in its magnitude in Verse. In Prose, National History offers itself in parallelism. The coincidence is broad and unquestioned; but on closer inspection, differences great and innumerable spring up and unfold themselves, until at last you might almost persuade yourself that the first striking resemblance deceived you, and that the two species lack analogy, so many other kinds does the Species in Verse embosom, and so escaping are the lines of agreement in the instant in which you attempt fixing them.
BULLER.
Would that Lord Bacon were here!
NORTH.
And thus we are led to a deeper truth. The Metrical Epos imitates History, without doubt, as Lord Bacon says—it borrows thence its mould, not rigorously, but with exceeding bold and free adaptations, as the Iliad unfolds the Ten Years' War in Seven Weeks. But for the Poet, more than another,ALL IS IN ALL.
SEWARD.
Sir?
NORTH.
What is the Paradise Lost, ultimately considered?
BULLER.
Oh!
NORTH.
It is, my friends, the arguing in verse of a question in Natural Theology. Whence are Wrong and Pain? Moral and Physical Evil, as we call them, in all their overwhelming extent of complexity sprung? How permitted in the Kingdom of an All-wise and Almighty Love? To this question, concerning the origin of Evil, Milton answers as a Christian Theologian, agreeably to his own understanding of his Religion,—so justifying the Universal Government of God, and, in particular, his Government of Man. The Poem is, therefore, Theological, Argumentative, Didactic, in Epic Form. Being in the constitution of his soul a Poet, mightiest of the mighty, the intention is hidden in the Form. The Verse has transformed the matter. Now, then, the Paradise Lost is not a history told for itself. But this One Truth, in two answering Propositions, that the Will of Man spontaneously consorting with God's Will is Man's Good, spontaneously dissenting, Man's Evil. This is created into an awful and solemn narrative of a Matter exactly adapted, and long since authoritatively told. But this Truth, springing up in the shape of narrative, will now take its own determination into Events of unsurpassed magnitude, now of the tenderest individuality and minuteness; and all is, hence, in keeping—as one power of life springs up on one spot, in oak-tree, moss, and violet, and the difference of stature, thus understood, gives a deep harmony, so deep and embracing, that none without injury to the whole could be taken away.
BULLER.
What's all this! Hang that Drone—confound that Chanter. Burst, thou most unseasonable of Bagpipes! Silence that dreadful Drum. Draw in your Horns—
SEWARD.
Musquetry! cannon! huzzas! The enemy are storming the Camp. The Delhis bear down on the Pavilion. The Life is in danger. Let us save the King.
NORTH.
See to it, gentlemen. I await the issue in my Swing-chair. Let the Barbarians but look on me and their weapons will drop.
BULLER.
All's right. A false alarm.
NORTH.
There was no alarm.
BULLER.
'Twas but aSalute.The Boyshave come back from Kilchurn. They are standing in front beside the spoil.
NORTH.
Widen the Portal. Artistically disposed! The Whole like one huge Star-fish. Salmo ferox, centre—Pike, radii—Yellow-fins, circumference—Weight I should say the tenth of a ton. Call the Manciple. Manciple, you are responsible for the preservation of that Star-fish.
BULLER.
Sir, you forget yourself. The People must be fed. We are Seven. Twelve are on the Troop Roll—Nine Strangers have sent in their cards—the Gillies are growing upon us—the Camp-followers have doubled the population since morn, and the circumambient Natives are waxing strong. Hunger is in the Camp—but for this supply, Famine;Iliacos intra murosPECCATURet extra; Dods reports that the Boiler is wroth, the Furnace at a red heat, Pots and Pans a-simmer—the Culinary Spirit impatient to be at work. In such circumstances, the tenth of a ton is no great matter; but it is better than nothing. The mind of the Manciple may lie at rest, for that Star-fish will never see to-morrow's Sun; and motionless as he looks, he is hastening to the Shades.
NORTH.
Sir, you forget yourself. There is other animal matter in the world besides Fish. No penury of it in camp. I have here the Manciple's report. "One dozen plucked Earochs—one ditto ditto Ducklings—d. d. d. March Chick—one Bubblyjock—one Side of Mutton—four Necks—six Sheep-heads, and their complement of Trotters—two Sheep, just slaughtered and yet in wholes—four Lambs ditto—the late Cladich Calf—one small Stot—two lb. 40 Rounds in pickle—four Miscellaneous Pies of the First Order—six Hams—four dozen of Rein-deer Tongues—one dozen of Bears' Paws—two Barrels of——"
BULLER.
Stop. Let that suffice for the meanwhile.
NORTH.
The short shadow-hand on the face of Dial-Cruachan, to my instructed sense, stands at six. You young Oxonians, I know, always adorn for dinner, even when roughing it on service; and so, V. and W., do you. These two elderly gentlemen here are seen to most advantage in white neckcloths, and theOld Oneis never so like himself as in a suit of black velvet. To your tent and toilets. In an hour we meet in the—Deeside.