D.L.R.
For the sake of my home readers I must now say a word or two on the effect produced upon the mind of a stranger on his approach to Calcutta from the Sandheads.
As we run up the Bay of Bengal and approach the dangerous Sandheads, the beautiful deep blue of the ocean suddenly disappears. It turns into a pale green. The sea, even in calm weather, rolls over soundings in long swells. The hue of the water is varied by different depths, and in passing over the edge of soundings, it is curious to observe how distinctly the form of the sands may be traced by the different shades of green in the water above and beyond them. In the lower part of the bay, the crisp foam of the dark sea at night is instinct with phosphoric lustre. The ship seems to make her way through galaxies of little ocean stars. We lose sight of this poetical phenomenon as we approach the mouth of the Hooghly. But the passengers, towards the termination of their voyage, become less observant of the changeful aspect of the sea. Though amused occasionally by flights of sea-gulls, immense shoals of porpoises, apparently tumbling or rolling head over tail against the wind, and the small sprat-like fishes that sometimes play and glitter on the surface, the stranger grows impatient to catch a glimpse of an Indian jungle; and even the swampy tiger-haunted Saugor Island is greeted with that degree of interest which novelty usually inspires.
At first the land is but little above the level of the water. It rises gradually as we pass up further from the sea. As we come still nearer to Calcutta, the soil on shore seems to improve in richness and the trees to increase in size. The little clusters of nest-like villages snugly sheltered in foliage--the groups of dark figures in white garments--the cattle wandering over the open plain--the emerald-colored fields of rice--the rich groves of mangoe trees--the vast and magnificent banyans, with straight roots dropping from their highest branches, (hundreds of these branch-dropped roots being fixed into the earth and forming "a pillared shade"),--the tall, slim palms of different characters and with crowns of different forms, feathery or fan-like,--the many-stemmed and long, sharp-leaved bamboos, whose thin pliant branches swing gracefully under the weight of the lightest bird,--the beautifully rounded and bright green peepuls, with their burnished leaves glittering in the sunshine, and trembling at the zephyr's softest touch with a pleasant rustling sound, suggestive of images of coolness and repose,--form a striking and singularly interesting scene (or rather succession of scenes) after the monotony of a long voyage during which nothing has been visible but sea and sky.
But it is not until he arrives at a bend of the river calledGarden Reach, where the City of Palaces first opens on the view, that the stranger has a full sense of the value of our possessions in the East. The princely mansions on our right;--(residences of English gentry), with their rich gardens and smooth slopes verdant to the water's edge,-- the large and rich Botanic Garden and the Gothic edifice of Bishop's College on our left--and in front, as we advance a little further, the countless masts of vessels of all sizes and characters, and from almost every clime,--Fort William, with its grassy ramparts and white barracks,--the Government House, a magnificent edifice in spite of many imperfections,--the substantial looking Town Hall--the Supreme Court House--the broad and ever verdant plain (ormadaun) in front--and the noble lines of buildings along the Esplanade and Chowringhee Road,--the new Cathedral almost at the extremity of the plain, and half-hidden amidst the trees,--the suburban groves and buildings of Kidderpore beyond, their outlines softened by the haze of distance, like scenes contemplated through colored glass--the high-sterned budgerows and small trim bauleahs along the edge of the river,--the neatly-painted palanquins and other vehicles of all sorts and sizes,--the variously- hued and variously-clad people of all conditions; the fair European, the black and nearly naked Cooly, the clean-robed and lighter-skinned native Baboo, the Oriental nobleman with his jewelled turban and kincob vest, and costly necklace and twisted cummerbund, on a horse fantastically caparisoned, and followed in barbaric state by a train of attendants with long, golden-handled punkahs, peacock feather chowries, and golden chattahs and silver sticks,--present altogether a scene that is calculated to at once delight and bewilder the traveller, to whom all the strange objects before him have something of the enchantment and confusion of an Arabian Night's dream. When he recovers from his surprise, the first emotion in the breast of an Englishman is a feeling of national pride. He exults in the recognition of so many glorious indications of the power of a small and remote nation that has founded a splendid empire in so strange and vast a land.
When the first impression begins to fade, and he takes a closer view of the great metropolis of India--and observes what miserable straw huts are intermingled with magnificent palaces--how much Oriental filth and squalor and idleness and superstition and poverty and ignorance are associated with savage splendour, and are brought into immediate and most incongruous contact with Saxon energy and enterprize and taste and skill and love of order, and the amazing intelligence of the West in this nineteenth century--and when familiarity breeds something like contempt for many things that originally excited a vague and pleasing wonder--the English traveller in the East is apt to dwell too exclusively on the worst side of the picture, and to become insensible to the real interest, and blind to the actual beauty of much of the scene around him. Extravagant astonishment and admiration, under the influence of novelty, a strong re-action, and a subsequent feeling of unreasonable disappointment, seem, in some degree, natural to all men; but in no other part of the world, and under no other circumstances, is this peculiarity of our condition more conspicuously displayed than in the case of Englishmen in India. John Bull, who is always a grumbler even on his own shores, is sure to become a still more inveterate grumbler in other countries, and perhaps the climate of Bengal, producing lassitude and low spirits, and a yearning for their native land, of which they are so justly proud, contribute to make our countrymen in the East even more than usually unsusceptible of pleasurable emotions until at last they turn away in positive disgust from the scenes and objects which remind them that they are in a state of exile.
"There is nothing," says Hamlet, "either good or bad, but thinking makes it so." At every change of the mind's colored optics the scene before it changes also. I have sometimes contemplated the vast metropolis of England--or ratherof the world--multitudinous and mighty LONDON--with the pride and hope and exultation, not of a patriot only, but of a cosmopolite--a man. Its grand national structures that seem built for eternity--its noble institutions, charitable, and learned, and scientific, and artistical--the genius and science and bravery and moral excellence within its countless walls--have overwhelmed me with a sense of its glory and majesty and power. But in a less admiring mood, I have quite reversed the picture. Perhaps the following sonnet may seem to indicate that the writer while composing it, must have worn his colored spectacles.
LONDON, IN THE MORNING.
The morning wakes, and through the misty airIn sickly radiance struggles--like the dreamOf sorrow-shrouded hope. O'er Thames' dull stream,Whose sluggish waves a wealthy burden bearFrom every port and clime, the pallid glareOf early sun-light spreads. The long streets seemUnpeopled still, but soon each path shall teemWith hurried feet, and visages of care.And eager throngs shall meet where dusky martsResound like ocean-caverns, with the dinOf toil and strife and agony and sin.Trade's busy Babel! Ah! how many heartsBy lust of gold to thy dim temples broughtIn happier hours have scorned the prize they sought?
D.L.R.
I now give a pair of sonnets upon the City of Palaces as viewed through somewhat clearer glasses.
VIEW OF CALCUTTA.
Here Passion's restless eye and spirit rudeMay greet no kindred images of powerTo fear or wonder ministrant. No tower,Time-struck and tenantless, here seems to brood,In the dread majesty of solitude,O'er human pride departed--no rocks lowerO'er ravenous billows--no vast hollow woodRings with the lion's thunder--no dark bowerThe crouching tiger haunts--no gloomy caveGlitters with savage eyes! But all the sceneIs calm and cheerful. At the mild commandOf Britain's sons, the skilful and the brave,Fair palace-structures decorate the land,And proud ships float on Hooghly's breast serene!
D.L.R.
SONNET, ON RETURNING TO CALCUTTA AFTER A VOYAGE TO THE STRAITS OF MALACCA.
Umbrageous woods, green dells, and mountains high,And bright cascades, and wide cerulean seas,Slumbering, or snow-wreathed by the freshening breeze,And isles like motionless clouds upon the skyIn silent summer noons, late charmed mine eye,Until my soul was stirred like wind-touched trees,And passionate love and speechless ecstasiesUp-raised the thoughts in spiritual depths that lie.Fair scenes, ye haunt me still! Yet I beholdThis sultry city on the level shoreNot all unmoved; for here our fathers boldWon proud historic names in days of yore,And here are generous hearts that ne'er grow cold,And many a friendly hand and open door.
D.L.R.
There are several extremely elegant customs connected with some of the Indian Festivals, at which flowers are used in great profusion. The surface of the "sacred river" is often thickly strewn with them. In Mrs. Carshore's pleasing volume ofSongs of the East[053]there is a long poem (too long to quote entire) in which theBeara Festivalis described. I must give the introductory passage.
"THE BEARA FESTIVAL.
"Upon the Ganges' overflowing banks,Where palm trees lined the shore in graceful ranks,I stood one night amidst a merry throngOf British youths and maidens, to beholdA witching Indian scene of light and song,Crowds of veiled native loveliness untold,Each streaming path poured duskily along.The air was filled with the sweet breath of flowers,And music that awoke the silent hours,It was the BEARA FESTIVAL and feastWhen proud and lowly, loftiest and least,Matron and Moslem maiden pay their vows,With impetratory and votive gift,And to the Moslem Jonas bent their brows.Each brought her floating lamp of flowers, and swiftA thousand lights along the current drift,Till the vast bosom of the swollen stream,Glittering and gliding onward like a dream,Seems a wide mirror of the starry sphereOr more as if the stars had dropt from air,And in an earthly heaven were shining here,And far above were, but reflected thereStill group on group, advancing to the brink,As group on group retired link by link;For one pale lamp that floated out of viewFive brighter ones they quickly placed anew;At length the slackening multitudes grew less,And the lamps floated scattered and apart.As stars grow few when morning's footsteps pressWhen a slight girl, shy as the timid halt,Not far from where we stood, her offering brought.Singing a low sweet strain, with lips untaught.Her song proclaimed, that 'twas not many hoursSince she had left her childhood's innocent home;And now with Beara lamp, and wreathed flowers,To propitiate heaven, for wedded bliss had come"
To these lines Mrs. Carshore (who has been in this country, I believe, from her birth, and who ought to know something of Indian customs) appends the following notes.
"It was the Beara festival." Much has been said about the Beara or floating lamp, but I have never yet seen a correct description. Moore mentions that Lalla Rookh saw a solitary Hindoo girl bring her lamp to the river. D.L.R. says the same, whereas the Beara festival is a Moslem feast that takes place once a year in the monsoons, when thousands of females offer their vows to the patron of rivers.
"Moslem Jonas" Khauj Khoddir is the Jonas of the Mussulman; he, like the prophet of Nineveh, was for three days inside a fish, and for that reason is called the patron of rivers."
I suppose Mrs. Carshore alludes, in the first of these notes, to the following passage in the prose part of Lalla Rookh:--
"As they passed along a sequestered river after sunset, they saw a young Hindoo girl upon the bank whose employment seemed to them so strange that they stopped their palanquins to observe her. She had lighted a small lamp, filled with oil of cocoa, and placing it in an earthern dish, adorned with a wreath of flowers, had committed it with a trembling hand to the stream: and was now anxiously watching its progress down the current, heedless of the gay cavalcade which had drawn up beside her. Lalla Rookh was all curiosity;--when one of her attendants, who had lived upon the banks of the Ganges, (where this ceremony is so frequent that often, in the dusk of evening, the river is seen glittering all over with lights, like the Oton-Jala or Sea of Stars,) informed the Princess that it was the usual way, in which the friends of those who had gone on dangerous voyages offered up vows for their safe return. If the lamp sunk immediately, the omen was disastrous; but if it went shining down the stream, and continued to burn till entirely out of sight, the return of the beloved object was considered as certain.
Lalla Rookh, as they moved on, more than once looked back, to observe how the young Hindoo's lamp proceeded: and while she saw with pleasure that it was unextinguished, she could not help fearing that all the hopes of this life were no better than that feeble light upon the river."
Moore prepared himself for the writing of Lalla Rookh by "long and laborious reading." He himself narrates that Sir James Mackintosh was asked by Colonel Wilks, the Historian of British India, whether it was true that the poet had never been in the East. Sir James replied, "Never." "Well, that shows me," said Colonel Wilks, "that reading over D'Herbelot is as good as riding on the back of a camel." Sir John Malcolm, Sir William Ouseley and other high authorities have testified to the accuracy of Moore's descriptions of Eastern scenes and customs.
The following lines were composed on the banks of the Hooghly at Cossipore, (many long years ago) just after beholding the river one evening almost covered with floating lamps.[054]
A HINDU FESTIVAL.
Seated on a bank of green,Gazing on an Indian scene,I have dreams the mind to cheer,And a feast for eye and ear.At my feet a river flows,And its broad face richly glowsWith the glory of the sun,Whose proud race is nearly runNe'er before did sea or streamKindle thus beneath his beam,Ne'er did miser's eye beholdSuch a glittering mass of gold'Gainst the gorgeous radiance floatDarkly, many a sloop and boat,While in each the figures seemLike the shadows of a dreamSwiftly, passively, they glideAs sliders on a frozen tide.Sinks the sun--the sudden nightFalls, yet still the scene is brightNow the fire-fly's living sparkGlances through the foliage dark,And along the dusky streamMyriad lamps with ruddy gleamOn the small waves float and quiver,As if upon the favored river,And to mark the sacred hour,Stars had fallen in a shower.For many a mile is either shoreIllumined with a countless storeOf lustres ranged in glittering rows,Each a golden column throwsTo light the dim depths of the tide,And the moon in all her prideThough beauteously her regions glow,Views a scene as fair below
D.L.R.
Mrs. Carshore alludes, I suppose to the above lines, or the following sonnet, or both perhaps, when she speaks of my erroneous Orientalism--
SCENE ON THE GANGES.
The shades of evening veil the lofty spiresOf proud Benares' fanes! A thickening hazeHangs o'er the stream. The weary boatmen raiseAlong the dusky shore their crimson firesThat tinge the circling groups. Now hope inspiresYon Hindu maid, whose heart true passion sways,To launch on Gungas flood the glimmering raysOf Love's frail lamp,--but, lo the light expires!Alas! what sudden sorrow fills her breast!No charm of life remains. Her tears deploreA lover lost and never, never moreShall hope's sweet vision yield her spirit rest!The cold wave quenched the flame--an omen dreadThat telleth of the faithless--or the dead!
D.L.R.
Horace Hayman Wilson, a high authority on all Oriental customs, clearly alludes in the following lines to the launching of floating lamps byHindufemales.
Grave in the tide the Brahmin stands,And folds his cord or twists his hands,And tells his beads, and all unheardMutters a solemn mystic wordWith reverence the Sudra dips,And fervently the current sips,That to his humbler hope conveysA future life of happier days.But chief do India's simple daughtersAssemble in these hallowed waters,With vase of classic model ladenLike Grecian girl or Tuscan maiden,Collecting thus their urns to fillFrom gushing fount or trickling rill,And still with pious fervour theyTo Gunga veneration payAnd with pretenceless rite prefer,The wishes of their hearts to herThe maid or matron, as she throwsChampaeor lotus,Belor rose,Or sends the quivering light afloatIn shallow cup or paper boat,Prays for a parent's peace and wealthPrays for a child's success and health,For a fond husband breathes a prayer,For progeny their loves to share,For what of good on earth is givenTo lowly life, or hoped in heaven,
H.H.W.
On seeing Miss Carshore's criticism I referred the subject to an intelligent Hindu friend from whom I received the following answer:--
My dear Sir,TheBeara, strictly speaking, is a Mahomedan festival. Some ofthe lower orders of the Hindus of the NW Provinces, who haveborrowed many of their customs from the Mahomedans, celebratetheBeara. But it is not observed by the Hindus of Bengal, whohave a festival of their own, similar to theBeara. It takesplace on the evening of theSaraswati Poojah, when a smallpiece of the bark of the Plantain Tree is fitted out with allthe necessary accompaniments of a boat, and is launched in aprivate tank with a lamp. The custom is confined to the womenwho follow it in their own house or in the same neighbourhood.It is called theSooa Dooa Breta.Yours truly,
Mrs. Carshore it would seem is partly right and partly wrong. She is right in calling theBearaaMoslemFestival. It is so; but we have the testimony of Horace Hayman Wilson to the fact thatHindu maids and matrons also launch their lamps upon the river. My Hindu friend acknowledges that his countrymen in the North West Provinces have borrowed many of their customs from the Mahomedans, and though he is not aware of it, it may yet be the case, that some of the Hindus ofBengal, as elsewhere, have done the same, and that they set lamps afloat upon the stream to discover by their continued burning or sudden extinction the fate of some absent friend or lover. I find very few Natives who are able to give me any exact and positive information concerning their own national customs. In their explanations of such matters they differ in the most extraordinary manner amongst themselves. Two most respectable and intelligent Native gentlemen who were proposing to lay out their grounds under my directions, told me that I must not cut down a single cocoa-nut tree, as it would be dreadful sacrilege-- equal to cutting the throats of seven brahmins! Another equally respectable and intelligent Native friend, when I mentioned the fact, threw himself back in his chair to give vent to a hearty laugh. When he had recovered himself a little from this risible convulsion he observed that his father and his grandfather had cut down cocoa-nut trees in considerable numbers without the slightest remorse or fear. And yet again, I afterwards heard that one of the richest Hindu families in Calcutta, rather than suffer so sacred an object to be injured, piously submit to a very serious inconvenience occasioned by a cocoa-nut tree standing in the centre of the carriage road that leads to the portico of their large town palace. I am told that there are other sacred trees which must not be removed by the hands of Hindus of inferior caste, though in this case there is a way of getting over the difficulty, for it is allowable or even meritorious to make presents of these trees to Brahmins, who cut them down for their own fire-wood. But the cocoa-nut tree is said to be too sacred even for the axe of a Brahmin.
I have been running away again from my subject;--I was discoursing upon May-day in England. The season there is still a lovely and a merry one, though the most picturesque and romantic of its ancient observances, now live but in the memory of the "oldest inhabitants," or on the page of history.[055]
See where, amidst the sun and showers,The Lady of the vernal hours,Sweet May, comes forth again with all her flowers.
Barry Cornwall.
TheMay-poleon these days is rarely seen to rise up in English towns with its proper floral decorations[056]. In remote rural districts a solitary May-pole is still, however, occasionally discovered. "A May- pole," says Washington Irving, "gave a glow to my feelings and spread a charm over the country for the rest of the day: and as I traversed a part of the fair plains of Cheshire, and the beautiful borders of Wales and looked from among swelling hills down a long green valley, through which the Deva wound its wizard stream, my imagination turned all into a perfect Arcadia. One can readily imagine what a gay scene old London must have been when the doors were decked with hawthorn; and Robin Hood, Friar Tuck, Maid Marian, Morris dancers, and all the other fantastic dancers and revellers were performing their antics about the May-pole in every part of the city. I value every custom which tends to infuse poetical feeling into the common people, and to sweeten and soften the rudeness of rustic manners without destroying their simplicity."
Another American writer--a poet--has expressed his due appreciation of the pleasures of the season. He thus addresses the merrie month of MAY.[057]
MAY.
Would that thou couldst laugh for aye,Merry, ever merry May!Made of sun gleams, shade and showersBursting buds, and breathing flowers,Dripping locked, and rosy vested,Violet slippered, rainbow crested;Girdled with the eglantine,Festooned with the dewy vineMerry, ever Merry May,Would that thou could laugh for aye!
W.D. Gallagher.
I must give a dainty bit of description from the poet of the poets--our own romantic Spenser.
Then comes fair May, the fayrest mayde on ground,Decked with all dainties of the season's pryde,And throwing flowres out of her lap around.Upon two brethren's shoulders she did ride,The twins of Leda, which, on eyther side,Supported her like to their Sovereign queeneLord! how all creatures laught when her they spide,And leapt and danced as they had ravisht beene!And Cupid's self about her fluttred all in greene.
Here are a few lines from Herrick.
Fled are the frosts, and now the fields appeareRe-clothed in freshe and verdant diaper;Thawed are the snowes, and now the lusty springGives to each mead a neat enameling,The palmes[058]put forth their gemmes, and every treeNow swaggers in her leavy gallantry.
The Queen of May--Lady Flora--was the British representative of the Heathen Goddess Flora. May still returns and ever will return at her proper season, with all her bright leaves and fragrant blossoms, but men cease to make the same use of them as of yore. England is waxing utilitarian and prosaic.
The poets, let others neglect her as they will, must ever do fitting observance, in songs as lovely and fresh as the flowers of the hawthorn,
To the lady of the vernal hours.
Poor Keats, who was passionately fond of flowers, and everything beautiful or romantic or picturesque, complains, with a true poet's earnestness, that inhisday in England there were
No crowds of nymphs, soft-voiced and young and gayIn woven baskets, bringing ears of corn,Roses and pinks and violets, to adornThe shrine of Flora in her early May.
The Floral Games--Jeux Floraux--of Toulouse--first celebrated at the commencement of the fourteenth century, are still kept up annually with great pomp and spirit. Clemence Isaure, a French lady, bequeathed to the Academy of Toulouse a large sum of money for the annual celebration of these games. A sort of College Council is formed, which not only confers degrees on those poets who do most honor to the Goddess Flora, but sometimes grants them more substantial favors. In 1324 the poets were encouraged to compete for a golden violet and a silver eglantine and pansy. A century later the prizes offered were an amaranthus of gold of the value of 400 livres, for the best ode, a violet of silver, valued at 250 livres, for an essay in prose, a silver pansy, worth 200 livres, for an eclogue, elegy or idyl, and a silver lily of the value of sixty livres, for the best sonnet or hymn in honor of the Virgin Mary,--for religion is mixed up with merriment, and heathen with Christian rites. He who gained a prize three times was honored with the title of Doctoren gaye science, the name given to the poetry of the Provençal troubadours. A mass, a sermon, and alms-giving, commence the ceremonies. The French poet, Ronsard who had gained a prize in the floral games, so delighted Mary Queen of Scots with his verses on the Rose that she presented him with a silver rose worth £500, with this inscription--"A Ronsard, l'Apollon de la source des Muses."
At Ghent floral festivals are held twice a year when amateur and professional florists assemble together and contribute each his share of flowers to the grand general exhibition which is under the direct patronage of the public authorities. Honorary medals are awarded to the possessors of the finest flowers.
The chief floral festival of the Chinese is on their new year's day, when their rivers are covered with boats laden with flowers, and gay flags streaming from every mast. Their homes and temples are richly hung with festoons of flowers. Boughs of the peach and plum trees in blossom, enkíanthus quinque-flòra, camelias, cockscombs, magnolias, jonquils are then exposed for sale in all the streets of Canton. Even the Chinese ladies, who are visible at no other season, are seen on this occasion in flower-boats on the river or in the public gardens on the shore.
The Italians, it is said, still have artificers calledFestaroli, whose business it is to prepare festoons and garlands. The ancient Romans were very tasteful in their nosegays and chaplets. Pliny tells us that the Sicyonians were especially celebrated for the graceful art exhibited in the arrangement of the varied colors of their garlands, and he gives us the story of Glycera who, to please her lover Pausias, the painter of Sicyon, used to send him the most exquisite chaplets of her own braiding, which he regularly copied on his canvas. He became very eminent as a flower-painter. The last work of his pencil, and his master-piece, was a picture of his mistress in the act of arranging a chaplet. The picture was called theGarland Twiner. It is related that Antony for some time mistrusting Cleopatra made her taste in the first instance every thing presented to him at her banquets. One day "the Serpent of old Nile" after dipping her own coronet of flowers into her goblet drank up the wine and then directed him to follow her example. He was off his guard. He dipped his chaplet in his cup. The leaves had been touched with poison. He was just raising the cup to his lips when she seized his arm, and said "Cease your jealous doubts, for know, that if I had desired your death or wished to live without you, I could easily have destroyed you." The Queen then ordered a prisoner to be brought into their presence, who being made to drink from the cup, instantly expired.[059]
Some of the nosegays made up by "flower-girls" in London and its neighbourhood are sold at such extravagant prices that none but the very wealthy are in the habit of purchasing them, though sometimes a poor lover is tempted to present his mistress on a ball-night with a bouquet that he can purchase only at the cost of a good many more leaves of bread or substantial meals than he can well spare. He has to make every day a banian-day for perhaps half a month that his mistress may wear a nosegay for a few hours. However, a lover is often like a cameleon and can almost live on air--for a time--"promise-crammed." 'You cannot feed capons so.'
At Covent Garden Market, (in London) and the first-rate Flower-shops, a single wreath or nosegay is often made up for the head or hand at a price that would support a poor labourer and his family for a month. The colors of the wreaths are artfully arranged, so as to suit different complexions, and so also as to exhibit the most rare and costly flowers to the greatest possible advantage.
All true poets
--The sagesWho have left streaks of light athwart their pages--
have contemplated flowers--with a passionate love, an ardent admiration; none more so than the sweet-souled Shakespeare. They are regarded by the imaginative as the fairies of the vegetable world--the physical personifications of etherial beauty. InThe Winter's Taleour great dramatic bard has some delightful floral allusions that cannot be too often quoted.
Here's flowers for you,Hot lavender, mint, savory, majoram,The marigold, that goes to bed with the sun,And with him rises weeping these are flowersOf middle summer, and I think they are givenTo men of middle age.
O, Proserpina,For the flowers now that, frighted, thou lett'st fallFrom Dis's waggon! Daffodils,That come before the swallow dares, and takeThe winds of March with beauty, violets dim,But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes,Or Cytherea's breath, pale primroses,That die unmarried ere they can beholdGreat Phoebus in his strength,--a maladyMost incident to maids, bold oxlips andThe crown imperial, lilies of all kinds,The flower de luce being one
Shakespeare here, as elsewhere, speaks of "paleprimroses." The poets almost always allude to the primrose as apaleand interesting invalid. Milton tells us of
The yellow cowslip and thepaleprimrose[060]
The poet in the manuscript of hisLycidashad at first made the primrose "die unwedded," which was a pretty close copy of Shakespeare. Milton afterwards struck out the word "unwedded," and substituted the word "forsaken." The reason why the primrose was said to "die unmarried," is, according to Warton, because it grows in the shade uncherished or unseen by the sun, who was supposed to be in love with certain sorts of flowers. Ben Jonson, however, describes the primrose asa wedded lady--"the Spring's ownSpouse"--though she is certainly more commonly regarded as the daughter of Spring not the wife. J Fletcher gives her the true parentage:--
Primrose, first born child of Ver
There are some kinds of primroses, that are notpale. There is a species in Scotland, which is of a deep purple. And even in England (in some of the northern counties) there is a primrose, the bird's-eye primrose, (Primula farinosa,) of which the blossom is lilac colored and the leaves musk-scented.
In Sweden they call the PrimroseThe key of May.
The primrose is always a great favorite with imaginative and sensitive observers, but there are too many people who look upon the beautiful with a utilitarian eye, or like Wordsworth's Peter Bell regard it with perfect indifference.
A primrose by the river's brimA yellow primrose was to him.And it was nothing more.
I have already given one anecdote of a utilitarian; but I may as well give two more anecdotes of a similar character. Mrs. Wordsworth was in a grove, listening to the cooing of the stock-doves, and associating their music with the remembrance of her husband's verses to a stock-dove, when a farmer's wife passing by exclaimed, "Oh, I do like stock-doves!" The woman won the heart of the poet's wife at once; but she did not long retain it. "Some people," continued the speaker, "like 'em in a pie; for my part I think there's nothing like 'em stewed in inions." This was a rustic utilitarian. Here is an instance of a very different sort of utilitarianism--the utilitarianism of men who lead a gay town life. Sir W.H. listened, patiently for some time to a poetical-minded friend who was rapturously expatiating upon the delicious perfume of a bed of violets; "Oh yes," said Sir W. at last, "its all very well, but for my part I very much prefer the smell of a flambeau at the theatre." But intellects far more capacious than that of Sir W.H. have exhibited the same indifference to the beautiful in nature. Locke and Jeremy Bentham and even Sir Isaac Newton despised all poetry. And yet God never meant man to be insensible to the beautiful or the poetical. "Poetry, like truth," says Ebenezer Elliot, "is a common flower: God has sown it over the earth, like the daisies sprinkled with tears or glowing in the sun, even as he places the crocus and the March frosts together and beautifully mingles life and death." If the finer and more spiritual faculties of men were as well cultivated or exercised as are their colder and coarser faculties there would be fewer utilitarians. But the highest part of our nature is too much neglected in all our systems of education. Of the beauty and fragrance of flowers all earthly creatures except man are apparently meant to be unconscious. The cattle tread down or masticate the fairest flowers without a single "compunctious visiting of nature." This excites no surprize. It is no more than natural. But it is truly painful and humiliating to see any human being as insensible as the beasts of the field to that poetry of the world which God seems to have addressed exclusively to the heart and soul of man.
In South Wales the custom of strewing all kinds of flowers over the graves of departed friends, is preserved to the present day. Shakespeare, it appears, knew something of the customs of that part of his native country and puts the followingfloweryspeech into the mouth of the young Prince, Arviragus, who was educated there.
With fairest flowers,While summer lasts, and I live here, Fidele,I'll sweeten thy sad grave. Thou shalt not lackThe flower that's like thy face, pale Primrose, norThe azured Harebell, like thy veins; no, norThe leaf of Eglantine; whom not to slander,Out-sweetened not thy breath.
Cymbeline.
Here are two more flower-passages from Shakespeare.
Here's a few flowers; but about midnight more;The herbs that have on them cold dew o' the nightAre strewings fitt'st for graves.--Upon their faces:--You were as flowers; now withered; even soThese herblets shall, which we upon you strow.
Cymbeline.
Sweets to the sweet. Farewell!I hoped thou shoulds't have been my Hamlet's wife;I thought thy bride-bed to have decked, sweet maid,And not t' have strewed thy grave.
Hamlet.
Flowers are peculiarly suitable ornaments for the grave, for as Evelyn truly says, "they are just emblems of the life of man, which has been compared in Holy Scripture to those fading creatures, whose roots being buried in dishonor rise again in glory."[061]
This thought is natural and just. It is indeed a most impressive sight, a most instructive pleasure, to behold some "bright consummate flower" rise up like a radiant exhalation or a beautiful vision--like good from evil--with such stainless purity and such dainty loveliness, from the hot-bed of corruption.
Milton turns his acquaintance with flowers to divine account in his Lycidas.
Return; Sicilian Muse,And call the vales, and bid them hither castTheir bells and flowerets of a thousand hues.Ye vallies low, where the mild whispers useOf shades and wanton winds, and gushing brooks,On whose fresh lap the swart-star sparely looks;Throw hither all your quaint enamelled eyes,That on the green turf suck the honied showers.And purple all the ground with vernal flowers.Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies.The tufted crow-toe, and pale jessamine,The white pink, and the pansy freaked with jet,The glowing violet,The musk-rose and the well-attired woodbine,With cowslips wan that hang the pensive head,[062]And every flower that sad embroidery wears;Bid Amaranthus all his beauty shed,And daffodillies fill their cups with tears,To strew the laureate hearse where Lycid lies,For, so to interpose a little ease,Let our frail thoughts dally with faint surmise
Here is a nosegay of spring-flowers from the hand of Thomson:--
Fair handed Spring unbosoms every grace,Throws out the snow drop and the crocus first,the daisy, primrose, violet darkly blue,And polyanthus of unnumbered dyes,The yellow wall flower, stained with iron brown,And lavish stock that scents the garden round,From the soft wing of vernal breezes shed,Anemonies, auriculas, enrichedWith shining meal o'er all their velvet leavesAnd full ranunculus of glowing redThen comes the tulip race, where Beauty playsHer idle freaks from family diffusedTo family, as flies the father dust,The varied colors run, and while they breakOn the charmed eye, the exulting Florist marksWith secret pride, the wonders of his handNor gradual bloom is wanting, from the bird,First born of spring, to Summer's musky tribesNor hyacinth, of purest virgin white,Low bent, and, blushing inward, nor jonquils,Of potent fragrance, nor Narcissus fair,As o'er the fabled fountain hanging still,Nor broad carnations, nor gay spotted pinks;Nor, showered from every bush, the damask rose.Infinite varieties, delicacies, smells,With hues on hues expression cannot paint,The breath of Nature and her endless bloom.
Here are two bouquets of flowers from the garden of Cowper
Laburnum, richIn streaming gold, syringa, ivory pure,The scentless and the scented rose, this red,And of an humbler growth, the other[063]tall,And throwing up into the darkest gloomOf neighboring cypress, or more sable yew,Her silver globes, light as the foamy surfThat the wind severs from the broken wave,The lilac, various in array, now white,Now sanguine, and her beauteous head now setWith purple spikes pyramidal, as ifStudious of ornament yet unresolvedWhich hue she most approved, she chose them all,Copious of flowers the woodbine, pale and wan,But well compensating her sickly looksWith never cloying odours, early and late,Hypericum all bloom, so thick a swarmOf flowers, like flies clothing her slender rods,That scarce a loaf appears, mezereon too,Though leafless, well attired, and thick besetWith blushing wreaths, investing every spray,Althaea with the purple eye, the broomYellow and bright, as bullion unalloy'd,Her blossoms, and luxuriant above allThe jasmine, throwing wide her elegant sweets,The deep dark green of whose unvarnish'd leafMakes more conspicuous, and illumines more,The bright profusion of her scatter'd stars
Th' amomum there[064]with intermingling flowersAnd cherries hangs her twigs. Geranium boastsHer crimson honors, and the spangled beauFicoides, glitters bright the winter longAll plants, of every leaf, that can endureThe winter's frown, if screened from his shrewd bite,Live their and prosper. Those Ausonia claims,Levantine regions those, the Azores sendTheir jessamine, her jessamine remoteCaffraia, foreigners from many lands,They form one social shade as if convenedBy magic summons of the Orphean lyre
Here is a bunch of flowers laid before the public eye by Mr. Proctor--
There the rose unveilsHer breast of beauty, and each delicate budO' the season comes in turn to bloom and perish,But first of all the violet, with an eyeBlue as the midnight heavens, the frail snowdrop,Born of the breath of winter, and on his browFixed like a full and solitary starThe languid hyacinth, and wild primroseAnd daisy trodden down like modestyThe fox glove, in whose drooping bells the beeMakes her sweet music, the Narcissus (namedFrom him who died for love) the tangled woodbine,Lilacs, and flowering vines, and scented thorns,And some from whom the voluptuous winds of JuneCatch their perfumings