Critical Studies
feeling and simplicity of expression. The verses, of which this small volume is full, resemble the stornelli and rispetti of Italian songs rather than any kind of verse which has p
new liberties and ideal creeds; in this tiny azure booklet he is also a poet, or, as he would rather himself say, a singer. The verse springs from the
t is the go
t king goes
t the purp
from foo
nd and loo
art is cle
the visio
for the d
ute beneath the moon. He who has killed his heart in the pressure of the world will find nothing in them. They who are steeped in the chill indifference of mundane interests will no more heed them than such heed the skylark's or the linnet's song, which they resemble. They were not written in the study, or fashioned with the pruning-knife; they were born by the edg
here is an added charm in these tender blossoms in the fact that they spring from the same intelligence as that w
of Rydal, or as Coleridge strove with the rebellious forces of a halting sonnet when lying down face foremost amongst 'the common grass.' They are spontaneous utterances, as natural as the ripple of the water over the cresses in a brook's bed beneath willow and alder. It may be easy to dismiss them with indifference, to underrate them with hypercritic sneer, and assuredly those who take pleasure in the strained archaic obscurities of much modern verse will find no more charm in them than the languid ?sthete, musing over the pages of Ver
Swinburne; a charm much calmer and more peaceful, but not less strong. Many of these little poems speak of the sea only; are full of that happy sense of return and recognition which so many amongst us feel when, after absence from the sea, we tread again its wet salt sands, and feel its white spray dance against ou
other' he calls th
hers, from whom
tired, I c
crooning the
! sing it a
ent as the ho
eep with the
s away, wash all
ains that to
side I plac
nses are ste
adings have ceas
pirit float
et ag
ong sea, fast l
urneying
blue the star
ut love
ossession
my lif
of dust I g
stray pa
O storm, are
ridest ove
hy breath fro
s clean
ou comest on
with fores
is woe for th
rrow will
l go and you
the pale
hill that hu
er days
come your l
, you pal
u mean for t
you mean
hey look on
er true
changing gle
at face o
ese verses impressionist. They have the quickly-captured forms, the frail fugitive colour,
se eigh
rest-for the
with the ha
shadow creep
hes in si
t stops in its f
or a while t
d wakes from its
n and glory
he sudden flashing as of a million spears with which the sea, when smitten by the sword of the Sun, ris
thi
t of land-
ng face on th
as well migh
ach other our
t times, and at
a path that
is with you fr
you are I dar
thi
of youth the y
ith pride w
d," he cried, "to
of the bur
rs passed and
to the ol
my word and n
t world roll
thi
look, and we
icture and te
ok, and the bl
oubles that on
ah! well, and l
enchanter w
ve-stories to
ur dreams the
thi
weet, and pati
far from
myself that th
en rich wi
e an image fro
ewilderi
ew proud and I t
aceful ho
re light, and I
e false fr
drawn where the
wonder stra
itter to heart
e the folly
I can from the
nce more at
peasant to express so many of the deepest chords of human feeling. These English verses might, like those Italian canzone, be created by one to whom all the stores of knowledge and of culture were sealed books. They are cast in the simplest of all possible forms of expressi
s, not from poverty of resources, but from correctness of instinct. These songs are na?f as a child's prayer at its mother's knee at eventide; were they orna
t in noisy railway train, or metropolitan library, or fashion-filled country house; but in the solitude of some quiet rural plac
tween the hymns of George Herbert and those earliest love-songs whic