Essays from 'The Guardian'
Flute. By
s, but cannot do. And yet we could name certain modern churches in London, for instance, to which posterity may well look back puzzled.-Could these exquisitely pondered buildings have been indeed works of the nineteenth century? Were they not the subtlest creations of the age in which Gothic art was spontaneous? In truth, we have had instances of workmen, who, through long, l
d original, there is great scholarship, a large comparative acquaintance with the poetic methods of earlier workmen, and a very subtle intelligence of their charm. Of that fine scholarship in this matter there is
l lingering around "white Algiers." In Mr. Gosse's "Return of [109] the Sw
awoke in the s
birds in thei
and alighted, and
e broad white
slave woman,
in her broad-li
self, with
swallows will
of palinode, "1870-1871," years of the Fr
sang that pa
o see the m
h myriad thu
ruth caught
ts like p
f pale emac
rowth of yea
ore us like
pleasure m
ets fell
robes are dash
dream of gor
the torturi
a Sultan's mi
ys harsh
1
lips are blanc
ounds and tor
n canvas sho
h faces clef
and life
r still-life and landscape, is unmistakably vivid and sound. T
untains clustere
mmer blossome
the creeping sa
ry-flowers
gh the valley
island where
ter dragged wit
tain sno
ht-time in the
mmer fills the
not, till the b
se, smite
lue snow-shado
aks against t
s the knots of
d their t
1
nward to the Lap
ng sweet day w
h our hearts wi
ard steps
what he describes: not so Mr. Gosse, whose acquaintance with northern lands and northern literature is special. We have indeed picked out those stanzas from a quiet personal record of certain amorous hours of early youth i
n it; and what marks in [112] him the final achievement of poetic scholarship is the perfect balance his work presents of so many and varied effects, as regards both matter and form. The memories of a large range of poetic reading are blent into one methodical music so perfectly that at times the notes
r, with no str
e white-throat o
nfinished ape
y. "The New Endymion" is a good instance of such sustained [113] power. Poetic scholar!-If we must reserve the sacred name of "poet" to a very small number, that humbler but perhaps still rarer title is due indisputably to Mr. Gosse. His work is like exquisite modern Latin verse, into the academic shape of which,
d justifies it. Yet there is a clear note of originality (so it seems to us) in the peculiar charm of his strictly personal compositions; and, generally, in such touches as he gives us of the soul, the life, of the [114] nineteenth century. Far greater, we think, than the charm of poems strictly classic in interest, such as the "Praise of Dionysus," exquisite as that is, is the charm of those pieces in which, so
aranth, no pom
art forget the
and snowdrops
er poets, he sings much of youth, he is often most successful in the forecast, the exp
by and lays h
mine eyes, tha
1
ess weight of g
red, and wait f
nd these limbs of
ears, and silv
me not, nor a
l that meekly
ivers into
reeds that not
f the poppies w
fe, and calm
n a lamp at
remnant of me
erests in life, creed-less as he may otherwise seem to be, is, we think, a token, though certainly an unconscious token, of the spontaneous originalit
to be also returning to the thoughts, the fears, t
1
it stran
the ha
things that
ous life as
t me jo
th bird
haughtier ai
rtner in t
o have in what is called "natural optimism," the beauty and benignity of nature, if let alone, in her mechanical round of changes with man and beast and flower. Her method, however, certainly invo
e, the tall yo
d the sunset,
as an uninv
wondering what d
earts and mine w
do their hands su
1
are not, for
ers, and trees an
ese, one atom
Walker's "Ploughman," of Mason's "Evening Hymn," in which Mr. Gosse is at his best.
er for a well
to live my l
unison with
ike the sing
n the horizon's
here all thin
the noiseless
hind and take
rise as one w
ss, but all the
and young del
men be sad thro
flying; in th
ines from her bri
re all gone,
h was indeed the genial youth of the world, but, sweetly attuned by his skill of touch, it is the sum of what Mr. Gosse has to tell us of the experience of life. Or is it
ion and
oo tender and
n any melod
Octob