登陆注册
5448600000015

第15章 LEIGH HUNT AND BARRY CORNWALL

IT has recently become the fashion to speak disparagingly of Leigh Hunt as a poet, to class him as a sort of pursuivant or shield-bearer to Coleridge, Shelley, and Keats. Truth to tell, Hunt was not a Keats nor a Shelley nor a Cole-ridge, but he was a most excellent Hunt. He was a delightful essayist--quite unsurpassed, indeed, in his blithe, optimistic way--and as a poet deserves to rank high among the lesser singers of his time. I should place him far above Barry Cornwall, who has not half the freshness, variety, and originality of his com-peer.

I instance Barry Cornwall because there has seemed a disposition since his death to praise him unduly. Barry Cornwall has always struck me as extremely artificial, especially in his dra-matic sketches. His verses in this line are mostly soft Elizabethan echoes. Of course a dramatist may find it to his profit to go out of his own age and atmosphere for inspiration; but in order successfully to do so he must be a dra-matist. Barry Cornwall fell short of filling the role; he got no further than the composing of brief disconnected scenes and scraps of solilo-quies, and a tragedy entitled Mirandola, for which the stage had no use. His chief claim to recognition lies in his lyrics. Here, as in the dramatic studies, his attitude is nearly always affected. He studiously strives to reproduce the form and spirit of the early poets. Being a Lon-doner, he naturally sings much of rural English life, but his England is the England of two or three centuries ago. He has a great deal to say about the "falcon," but the poor bird has the air of beating fatigued wings against the book-shelves of a well-furnished library! This well-furnished library was--if I may be pardoned a mixed image--the rock on which Barry Corn-wall split. He did not look into his own heart, and write: he looked into his books.

A poet need not confine himself to his indi-vidual experiences; the world is all before him where to choose; but there are subjects which he had better not handle unless he have some personal knowledge of them. The sea is one of these. The man who sang, The sea! the sea! the open sea!

The blue, the fresh, the ever free!

(a couplet which the Gifted Hopkins might have penned), should never have permitted himself to sing of the ocean. I am quoting from one of Barry Cornwall's most popular lyrics. When I

first read this singularly vapid poem years ago, in mid-Atlantic, I wondered if the author had ever laid eyes on any piece of water wider than the Thames at Greenwich, and in looking over Barry Cornwall's "Life and Letters" I am not so much surprised as amused to learn that he was never out of sight of land in the whole course of his existence. It is to be said of him more positively than the captain of the Pinafore said it of himself, that he was hardly ever sick at sea.

Imagine Byron or Shelley, who knew the ocean in all its protean moods, piping such thin feebleness as The blue, the fresh, the ever free!

To do that required a man whose acquaintance with the deep was limited to a view of it from an upper window at Margate or Scarborough.

Even frequent dinners of turbot and whitebait at the sign of The Ship and Turtle will not en-able one to write sea poetry.

Considering the actual facts, there is some-thing weird in the statement, I 'm on the sea! I 'm on the sea!

I am where I would ever be.

The words, to be sure, are placed in the mouth of an imagined sailor, but they are none the less diverting. The stanza containing the distich ends with a striking piece of realism:

If a storm should come and awake the deep, What matter? I shall ride and sleep.

This is the course of action usually pursued by sailors during a gale. The first or second mate goes around and tucks them up comfort-ably, each in his hammock, and serves them out an extra ration of grog after the storm is over.

Barry Cornwall must have had an exception-ally winning personality, for he drew to him the friendship of men as differently constituted as Thackeray, Carlyle, Browning, and Forster.

He was liked by the best of his time, from Charles Lamb down to Algernon Swinburne, who caught a glimpse of the aged poet in his vanishing. The personal magnetism of an au-thor does not extend far beyond the orbit of his contemporaries. It is of the lyrist and not of the man I am speaking here. One could wish he had written more prose like his admirable "Recollections of Elia."

Barry Cornwall seldom sounds a natural note, but when he does it is extremely sweet. That little ballad in the minor key beginning, Touch us gently, Time!

Let us glide adown thy stream, was written in one of his rare moments. Leigh Hunt, though not without questionable manner-isms, was rich in the inspiration that came but infrequently to his friend. Hunt's verse is full of natural felicities. He also was a bookman, but, unlike Barry Cornwall, he generally knew how to mint his gathered gold, and to stamp the coinage with his own head. In "Hero and Lean-der" there is one line which, at my valuing, is worth any twenty stanzas that Barry Cornwall has written:

So might they now have lived, and so have died;The story's heart, to me, still beats against its side.

Hunt's fortunate verse about the kiss Jane Carlyle gave him lingers on everybody's lip.

That and the rhyme of "Abou Ben Adhem and the Angel" are spice enough to embalm a man's memory. After all, it takes only a handful.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 穿越小狗腿

    穿越小狗腿

    意外穿越当红小说《丧乱离隐》,化身为被女主角先阉后杀活不过一百章的龙套配角。生存,还是毁灭?这对于虞世藩来说,根本不是个问题。他...毫不犹豫的穿越了节操的底线,交出了廉价的膝盖,抱住了女主角修长洁白的大腿,光荣的成为了一名仗势欺人的小狗腿。
  • 致青春之白鹭晴空

    致青春之白鹭晴空

    我叫白路,1999年4月16日凌晨四点出生,那一年没有什么好人死去,所以只有坏人出生,至于我,也不是什么好鸟!
  • 灰烬之燃

    灰烬之燃

    已经开书,科幻类,成长型。点作者名字可进入他从末日而来,毁灭了昨天。简介:从废土末世穿越到灾难前的燕京,拥有一面可以掠夺他人能力的镜子,像是恶魔一样占据了他人的身体,拿走了别人的生活。张生想要做个好人,在文明没有崩塌的时代。
  • 升仙传

    升仙传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 老海拉尔的“日本大夫”

    老海拉尔的“日本大夫”

    海拉尔的一切都时时刻刻在她的心上。该问候的她问了一遍又一遍,该帮助的她不遗余力,不停地往中国寄钱寄东西。一年年过去,她真的很老了,身体向前躬成一棵干枯的树,脸上的皱纹和头上的白发,使人们想起冬天来临之前的晚秋。魏大武女士给我找出了她精心保存的一封信,那是中村在生命的尽头对中国最后的表达:徐琳,我想你,徐冰琳,我想你,我想你们,我想你。整整的两页信纸,就是同样的一句话。当徐琳老人给我讲起这封信的时候,她忍不住掉泪了,她说,世上最苦不过人想人,我的老师辛苦了一辈子,临了临了,心里还装着那么多的思念,她是多么孤单啊……
  • 一世甜宠:郎郎生妾意

    一世甜宠:郎郎生妾意

    黑暗的屋子里陡然传来的光明,凤清纯抱着手里的蛋糕小心的往柜子里缩了缩,门外传来稀稀索索的换鞋……
  • 豪门平凡女

    豪门平凡女

    “乔总,麻烦让让,苏琛还在等我。”夏落终于开口,可她的语气却还是那么生硬,脸上也是不做任何掩饰的着急。乔总?苏琛?“呵。”乔安的嘴里吐出一声低笑,嘴角斜斜的勾了一下,只是脸上的每一处弧度那么浅。“你急什么?男人等女人不是天经地义么?咱们旧情人叙叙旧也是应该的,他应该体谅的不是?”他都已经这么放低,她凭什么?当初背弃他们的人是她,她现在还凭什么还用这副嘴脸对待他?一句话,……
  • 因材施教管孩子(如何教育好个性不同的孩子)

    因材施教管孩子(如何教育好个性不同的孩子)

    孩子就像那稚嫩的幼苗,需要父母精心地栽培。幼苗所需要的生长条件是不同的,就像柳树要生长在水旁,松树却可以生长在岩石中一样。由于成长环境以及自身的原因,每个孩子有着不同个性,能力也参差不齐。父母只有找到适合自己孩子个性发展的土壤,才能让孩子茁壮成长!作为父母必须对自己的孩子有一个清醒的认识,了解自己孩子的个性,然后根据孩子的个性采取科学合理的教育方法。千万别将孩子的优势当成个性缺陷而磨蚀掉,那样,孩子就将失去原有的灵性。要学会正确区分孩子个性中的优势劣势,因势利导地培养孩子,使孩子有勇气、有力量不断完善自我,强化自己的个性优势,改善个性中的劣势,走出属于自己的成功之路。
  • 神级特种兵王

    神级特种兵王

    一代战神天狼,单挑各国军事精英,为国杀敌无数!别人欺我,辱我,我必反击!娶个两百斤的媳妇?不从!她身娇美艳冷如冰,我有腾腾热血,为守护美女,化身都市狂狼!
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。