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shelley-第3部分

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mouldering hopes; and hearkened to the winds that swept across the

illimitable wastes of death。  But no such hapless lot was Shelley's

as that of his own contemporariesKeats; half chewed in the jaws of

London and spit dying on to Italy; de Quincey; who; if he escaped;

escaped rent and maimed from those cruel jaws; Coleridge; whom they

dully mumbled for the major portion of his life。  Shelley had

competence; poetry; love; yet he wailed that he could lie down like

a tired child and weep away his life of care。  Is it ever so with

you; sad brother; is it ever so with me? and is there no drinking of

pearls except they be dissolved in biting tears?  〃Which of us has

his desire; or having it is satisfied?〃



It is true that he shared the fate of nearly all the great poets

contemporary with him; in being unappreciated。  Like them; he

suffered from critics who were for ever shearing the wild tresses of

poetry between rusty rules; who could never see a literary bough

project beyond the trim level of its day but they must lop it with a

crooked criticism; who kept indomitably planting in the defile of

fame the 〃established canons〃 that had been spiked by poet after

poet。  But we decline to believe that a singer of Shelley's calibre

could be seriously grieved by want of vogue。  Not that we suppose

him to have found consolation in that senseless superstition; 〃the

applause of posterity。〃  Posterity! posterity which goes to Rome;

weeps large…sized tears; carves beautiful inscriptions over the tomb

of Keats; and the worm must wriggle her curtsey to it all; since the

dead boy; wherever he be; has quite other gear to tend。  Never a

bone less dry for all the tears!



A poet must to some extent be a chameleon and feed on air。  But it

need not be the musty breath of the multitude。  He can find his

needful support in the judgement of those whose judgement he knows

valuable; and such support Shelley had:





La gloire

Ne compte pas toujours les voix;

Elle les pese quelquefois。





Yet if this might be needful to him as support; neither this; nor

the applause of the present; nor the applause of posterity; could

have been needful to him as motive:  the one all…sufficing motive

for a great poet's singing is that expressed by Keats:





I was taught in Paradise

To ease my breast of melodies。





Precisely so。  The overcharged breast can find no ease but in

suckling the baby…song。  No enmity of outward circumstances;

therefore; but his own nature; was responsible for Shelley's doom。



A being with so much about it of childlike unreasonableness; and yet

withal so much of the beautiful attraction luminous in a child's

sweet unreasonableness; would seem fore…fated by its very essence to

the transience of the bubble and the rainbow; of all things filmy

and fair。  Did some shadow of this destiny bear part in his sadness?

Certain it is that; by a curious chance; he himself in Julian and

Maddalo jestingly foretold the manner of his end。  〃O ho!  You talk

as in years past;〃 said Maddalo (Byron) to Julian (Shelley); 〃If you

can't swim; Beware of Providence。〃  Did no unearthly dixisti sound

in his ears as he wrote it?  But a brief while; and Shelley; who

could not swim; was weltering on the waters of Lerici。  We know not

how this may affect others; but over us it is a coincidence which

has long tyrannised with an absorbing inveteracy of impression

(strengthened rather than diminished by the contrast between the

levity of the utterance and its fatal fulfilment)thus to behold;

heralding itself in warning mockery through the very lips of its

predestined victim; the Doom upon whose breath his locks were

lifting along the coasts of Campania。  The death which he had

prophesied came upon him; and Spezzia enrolled another name among

the mournful Marcelli of our tongue; Venetian glasses which foamed

and burst before the poisoned wine of life had risen to their brims。





Coming to Shelley's poetry; we peep over the wild mask of

revolutionary metaphysics; and we see the winsome face of the child。

Perhaps none of his poems is more purely and typically Shelleian

than The Cloud; and it is interesting to note how essentially it

springs from the faculty of make…believe。  The same thing is

conspicuous; though less purely conspicuous; throughout his singing;

it is the child's faculty of make…believe raised to the nth power。

He is still at play; save only that his play is such as manhood

stops to watch; and his playthings are those which the gods give

their children。  The universe is his box of toys。  He dabbles his

fingers in the day…fall。  He is gold…dusty with tumbling amidst the

stars。  He makes bright mischief with the moon。  The meteors nuzzle

their noses in his hand。  He teases into growling the kennelled

thunder; and laughs at the shaking of its fiery chain。  He dances in

and out of the gates of heaven:  its floor is littered with his

broken fancies。  He runs wild over the fields of ether。  He chases

the rolling world。  He gets between the feet of the horses of the

sun。  He stands in the lap of patient Nature and twines her loosened

tresses after a hundred wilful fashions; to see how she will look

nicest in his song。



This it was which; in spite of his essentially modern character as a

singer; qualified Shelley to be the poet of Prometheus Unbound; for

it made him; in the truest sense of the word; a mythological poet。

This childlike quality assimilated him to the childlike peoples

among whom mythologies have their rise。  Those Nature myths which;

according to many; are the basis of all mythology; are likewise the

very basis of Shelley's poetry。  The lark that is the gossip of

heaven; the winds that pluck the grey from the beards of the

billows; the clouds that are snorted from the sea's broad nostril;

all the elemental spirits of Nature; take from his verse perpetual

incarnation and reincarnation; pass in a thousand glorious

transmigrations through the radiant forms of his imagery。



Thus; but not in the Wordsworthian sense; he is a veritable poet of

Nature。  For with Nature the Wordsworthians will admit no tampering:

they exact the direct interpretative reproduction of her; that the

poet should follow her as a mistress; not use her as a handmaid。  To

such following of Nature; Shelley felt no call。  He saw in her not a

picture set for his copying; but a palette set for his brush; not a

habitation prepared for his inhabiting; but a Coliseum whence he

might quarry stones for his own palaces。  Even in his descriptive

passages the dream…character of his scenery is notorious; it is not

the clear; recognisable scenery of Wordsworth; but a landscape that

hovers athwart the heat and haze arising from his crackling

fantasies。  The materials for such visionary Edens have evidently

been accumulated from direct experience; but they are recomposed by

him into such scenes as never had mortal eye beheld。  〃Don't you

wish you had?〃 as Turner said。  The one justification for classing

Shelley with the Lake poet is that he loved Nature with a love even

more passionate; though perhaps less profound。  Wordsworth's

Nightingale and Stockdove sums up the contrast between the two; as

though it had been written for such a purpose。  Shelley is the

〃creature of ebullient heart;〃 who





Sings as if the god of wine

Had helped him to a valentine。





Wordsworth's is the





… Love with quiet blending;

Slow to begin and never ending;





the 〃serious faith and inward glee。〃



But if Shelley; instead of culling Nature; crossed with its pollen

the blossoms of his own soul; that Babylonian garden is his

marvellous and best apology。  For astounding figurative opulence he

yields only to Shakespeare; and even to Shakespeare not in absolute

fecundity but in images。  The sources of his figurative wealth are

specialised; sources of Shakespeare's are universal。  It would have

been as conscious an effort for him to speak without figure as it is

for most men to speak with figure。  Suspended in the dripping well

of his imagination the commonest object becomes encrusted with

imagery。  Herein again he deviates from the true Nature poet; the

normal Wordsworth type of Nature poet:  imagery was to him not a

mere means of expression; not even a mere means of adornment; it was

a delight for its own sake。



And herein we find the trail by which we would classify him。  He

belongs to a school of which not impossibly he may hardly have read

a linethe Metaphysical School。  To a large extent he IS what the

Metaphysical School should have been。  That school was a certain

kind of poetry trying for a range。  Shelley is the range found。

Crashaw and Shelley sprang from the same seed; but in the one case

the seed was choked with thorns; in the other case it fell on good

ground。  The Metaphysical School was in its direct results an

abortive movement; though indirectly much came of itfor Dryden

came of it。  Dryden; to a greater extent than is (we imagine)

generally perceived; was Cowley systematised; and Cowley; who sank

into the arms of Dryden; rose from the lap of Donne。



But the movement was so abortive that few will thank us for

connecting with it the name of Shelley。  This is because to most

people the Metaphysical School means Donne; whereas it ought to mean

Crashaw。  We judge the direction of a development by its highest

form; though that form may have been produced but once; and produced

imperfectly。  Now the highest product of the Metaphysical School was

Crashaw; and Crashaw was a Shelley manque; he never reached the

Promised Land; but he had fervid visions of it。  The Metaphysical

School; like Shelley; loved imagery for its own sake:  and how

beautiful a thing the frank toying with imagery may be; let The

Skylark and The Cloud witness。  It is only evil when the poet; on

the straight way to a fixed object; lags continually from
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