Book Read Free

Delphi Complete Works of Walter Pater

Page 78

by Walter Pater


  It is natural that Shakespeare should be the favourite illustration of such criticism, whether in England or Germany. The first suggestion in Shakespeare is that of capricious detail, of a waywardness that plays with the parts careless of the impression of the whole; what supervenes is the constraining unity of effect, the ineffaceable impression, of Hamlet or Macbeth. His hand moving freely is curved round as if by some law of gravitation from within: an energetic unity or identity makes itself visible amid an abounding variety. This unity or identity Coleridge exaggerates into something like the identity of a natural organism, and the associative act which effected it into something closely akin to the primitive power of nature itself. “In the Shakespearian drama,” he says, “there is a vitality which grows and evolves itself from within.”

  Again —

  He, too, worked in the spirit of nature, by evolving the germ from within, by the imaginative power, according to the idea. For as the power of seeing is to light, so is an idea in mind to a law in nature. They are correlatives which suppose each other.

  Again —

  The organic form is innate: it shapes, as it develops, itself from within, and the fulness of its development is one and the same with the perfection of its outward form. Such as the life is, such is the form. Nature, the prime, genial artist, inexhaustible in diverse powers, is equally inexhaustible in forms: each exterior is the physiognomy of the being within, and even such is the appropriate excellence of Shakespeare, himself a nature humanised, a genial understanding, directing self-consciously a power and an implicit wisdom deeper even than our consciousness.+

  In this late age we are become so familiarised with the greater works of art as to be little sensitive of the act of creation in them: they do not impress us as a new presence in the world. Only sometimes, in productions which realise immediately a profound influence and enforce a change in taste, we are actual witnesses of the moulding of an unforeseen type by some new principle of association; and to that phenomenon Coleridge wisely recalls our attention. What makes his view a one-sided one is, that in it the artist has become almost a mechanical agent: instead of the most luminous and self-possessed phase of consciousness, the associative act in art or poetry is made to look like some blindly organic process of assimilation. The work of art is likened to a living organism. That expresses truly the sense of a self-delighting, independent life which the finished work of art gives us: it hardly figures the process by which such work was produced. Here there is no blind ferment of lifeless elements towards the realisation of a type. By exquisite analysis the artist attains clearness of idea; then, through many stages of refining, clearness of expression. He moves slowly over his work, calculating the tenderest tone, and restraining the subtlest curve, never letting hand or fancy move at large, gradually enforcing flaccid spaces to the higher degree of expressiveness. The philosophic critic, at least, will value, even in works of imagination, seemingly the most intuitive, the power of the understanding in them, their logical process of construction, the spectacle of a supreme intellectual dexterity which they afford.

  Coleridge’s prose writings on philosophy, politics, religion, and criticism, were, in truth, but one element in a whole lifetime of endeavours to present the then recent metaphysics of Germany to English readers, as a legitimate expansion of the older, classical and native masters of what has been variously called the a priori, or absolute, or spiritual, or Platonic, view of things. His criticism, his challenge for recognition in the concrete, visible, finite work of art, of the dim, unseen, comparatively infinite, soul or power of the artist, may well be remembered as part of the long pleading of German culture for the things “behind the veil.” To introduce that spiritual philosophy, as represented by the more transcendental parts of Kant, and by Schelling, into all subjects, as a system of reason in them, one and ever identical with itself, however various the matter through which it was diffused, became with him the motive of an unflagging enthusiasm, which seems to have been the one thread of continuity in a life otherwise singularly wanting in unity of purpose, and in which he was certainly far from uniformly at his best. Fragmentary and obscure, but often eloquent, and always at once earnest and ingenious, those writings, supplementing his remarkable gift of conversation, were directly and indirectly influential, even on some the furthest removed from Coleridge’s own masters; on John Stuart Mill, for instance, and some of the earlier writers of the “high-church” school. Like his verse, they display him also in two other characters — as a student of words, and as a psychologist, that is, as a more minute observer or student than other men of the phenomena of mind. To note the recondite associations of words, old or new; to expound the logic, the reasonable soul, of their various uses; to recover the interest of older writers who had had a phraseology of their own — this was a vein of inquiry allied to his undoubted gift of tracking out and analysing curious modes of thought. A quaint fragment of verse on Human Life might serve to illustrate his study of the earlier English philosophical poetry. The latter gift, that power of the “subtle-souled psychologist,” as Shelley calls him, seems to have been connected with some tendency to disease in the physical temperament, something of a morbid want of balance in those parts where the physical and intellectual elements mix most closely together, with a kind of languid visionariness, deep-seated in the very constitution of the “narcotist,” who had quite a gift for “plucking the poisons of self-harm,” and which the actual habit of taking opium, accidentally acquired, did but reinforce. This morbid languor of nature, connected both with his fitfulness of purpose and his rich delicate dreaminess, qualifies Coleridge’s poetic composition even more than his prose; his verse, with the exception of his avowedly political poems, being, unlike that of the “Lake School,” to which in some respects he belongs, singularly unaffected by any moral, or professional, or personal effort or ambition,— “written,” as he says, “after the more violent emotions of sorrow, to give him pleasure, when perhaps nothing else could;” but coming thus, indeed, very close to his own most intimately personal characteristics, and having a certain languidly soothing grace or cadence, for its most fixed quality, from first to last. After some Platonic soliloquy on a flower opening on a fine day in February, he goes on —

  Dim similitudes

  Weaving in mortal strains, I’ve stolen one hour

  From anxious self, life’s cruel taskmaster!

  And the warm wooings of this sunny day

  Tremble along my frame and harmonise

  The attempered organ, that even saddest thoughts

  Mix with some sweet sensations, like harsh tunes

  Played deftly on a sweet-toned instrument.

  The expression of two opposed, yet allied, elements of sensibility in these lines, is very true to Coleridge: — the grievous agitation, the grievous listlessness, almost never entirely relieved, together with a certain physical voluptuousness. He has spoken several times of the scent of the bean-field in the air: — the tropical touches in a chilly climate; his is a nature that will make the most of these, which finds a sort of caress in such things. Kubla Khan, the fragment of a poem actually composed in some certainly not quite healthy sleep, is perhaps chiefly of interest as showing, by the mode of its composition, how physical, how much of a diseased or valetudinarian temperament, in its moments of relief, Coleridge’s happiest gift really was; and side by side with Kubla Khan should be read, as Coleridge placed it, the Pains of Sleep, to illustrate that retarding physical burden in his temperament, that “unimpassioned grief,” the source of which lay so near the source of those pleasures. Connected also with this, and again in contrast with Wordsworth, is the limited quantity of his poetical performance, as he himself regrets so eloquently in the lines addressed to Wordsworth after his recitation of The Prelude. It is like some exotic plant, just managing to blossom a little in the somewhat un-english air of Coleridge’s own south-western birthplace, but never quite well there.

  In 1798 he joined Wordsworth in the compos
ition of a volume of poems — the Lyrical Ballads. What Wordsworth then wrote already vibrates with that blithe impulse which carried him to final happiness and self-possession. In Coleridge we feel already that faintness and obscure dejection which clung like some contagious damp to all his work. Wordsworth was to be distinguished by a joyful and penetrative conviction of the existence of certain latent affinities between nature and the human mind, which reciprocally gild the mind and nature with a kind of “heavenly alchemy.”

  My voice proclaims

  How exquisitely the individual mind

  (And the progressive powers, perhaps, no less

  Of the whole species) to the external world

  Is fitted; and how exquisitely, too,

  The external world is fitted to the mind;

  And the creation, by no lower name

  Can it be called, which they with blended might

  Accomplish.

  In Wordsworth this took the form of an unbroken dreaming over the aspects and transitions of nature — a reflective, though altogether unformulated, analysis of them.

  There are in Coleridge’s poems expressions of this conviction as deep as Wordsworth’s. But Coleridge could never have abandoned himself to the dream, the vision, as Wordsworth did, because the first condition of such abandonment must be an unvexed quietness of heart. No one can read the Lines composed above Tintern without feeling how potent the physical element was among the conditions of Wordsworth’s genius— “felt in the blood and felt along the heart.”

  My whole life I have lived in quiet thought!

  The stimulus which most artists require of nature he can renounce. He leaves the ready-made glory of the Swiss mountains that he may reflect glory on a mouldering leaf. He loves best to watch the floating thistledown, because of its hint at an unseen life in the air. Coleridge’s temperament, aei en sphodra orexei,+ with its faintness, its grieved dejection, could never have been like that.

  My genial spirits fail;

  And what can these avail

  To lift the smothering weight from off my breast?

  It were a vain endeavour,

  Though I should gaze for ever

  On that green light that lingers in the west

  I may not hope from outward forms to win

  The passion and the life whose fountains are within.

  Wordsworth’s flawless temperament, his fine mountain atmosphere of mind, that calm, sabbatic, mystic, wellbeing which De Quincey, a little cynically, connected with worldly (that is to say, pecuniary) good fortune, kept his conviction of a latent intelligence in nature within the limits of sentiment or instinct, and confined it to those delicate and subdued shades of expression which alone perfect art allows. In Coleridge’s sadder, more purely intellectual, cast of genius, what with Wordsworth was sentiment or instinct became a philosophical idea, or philosophical formula, developed, as much as possible, after the abstract and metaphysical fashion of the transcendental schools of Germany.

  The period of Coleridge’s residence at Nether Stowey, 1797-1798, was for him the annus mirabilis. Nearly all the chief works by which his poetic fame will live were then composed or planned. What shapes itself for criticism as the main phenomenon of Coleridge’s poetic life, is not, as with most true poets, the gradual development of a poetic gift, determined, enriched, retarded, by the actual circumstances of the poet’s life, but the sudden blossoming, through one short season, of such a gift already perfect in its kind, which thereafter deteriorates as suddenly, with something like premature old age. Connecting this phenomenon with the leading motive of his prose writings, we might note it as the deterioration of a productive or creative power into one merely metaphysical or discursive. In his unambitious conception of his function as a poet, and in the very limited quantity of his poetical performance, as I have said, he was a contrast to his friend Wordsworth. That friendship with Wordsworth, the chief “developing” circumstance of his poetic life, comprehended a very close intellectual sympathy; and in such association chiefly, lies whatever truth there may be in the popular classification of Coleridge as a member of what is called the “Lake School.” Coleridge’s philosophical speculations do really turn on the ideas which underlay Wordsworth’s poetical practice. His prose works are one long explanation of all that is involved in that famous distinction between the Fancy and the Imagination. Of what is understood by both writers as the imaginative quality in the use of poetic figures, we may take some words of Shakespeare as an example. —

  My cousin Suffolk,

  My soul shall thine keep company to heaven

  Tarry, sweet soul, for mine, then fly abreast.

  The complete infusion here of the figure into the thought, so vividly realised, that, though birds are not actually mentioned, yet the sense of their flight, conveyed to us by the single word “abreast,” comes to be more than half of the thought itself: — this, as the expression of exalted feeling, is an instance of what Coleridge meant by Imagination. And this sort of identification of the poet’s thought, of himself, with the image or figure which serves him, is the secret, sometimes, of a singularly entire realisation of that image, such as makes these lines of Coleridge, for instance, “imaginative” —

  Amid the howl of more than wintry storms,

  The halcyon hears the voice of vernal hours

  Already on the wing.

  There are many such figures both in Coleridge’s verse and prose. He has, too, his passages of that sort of impassioned contemplation on the permanent and elementary conditions of nature and humanity, which Wordsworth held to be the essence of a poet; as it would be his proper function to awaken such contemplation in other men — those “moments,” as Coleridge says, addressing him —

  Moments awful,

  Now in thy inner life, and now abroad,

  When power streamed from thee, and thy soul received

  The light reflected, as a light bestowed.

  The entire poem from which these lines are taken, “composed on the night after Wordsworth’s recitation of a poem on the growth of an individual mind,” is, in its high-pitched strain of meditation, and in the combined justice and elevation of its philosophical expression —

  high and passionate thoughts

  To their own music chanted;

  wholly sympathetic with The Prelude which it celebrates, and of which the subject is, in effect, the generation of the spirit of the “Lake poetry.” The Lines to Joseph Cottle have the same philosophically imaginative character; the Ode to Dejection being Coleridge’s most sustained effort of this kind.

  It is in a highly sensitive apprehension of the aspects of external nature that Coleridge identifies himself most closely with one of the main tendencies of the “Lake School”; a tendency instinctive, and no mere matter of theory, in him as in Wordsworth. That record of the

  green light

  Which lingers in the west,

  and again, of

  the western sky,

  And its peculiar tint of yellow green,

  which Byron found ludicrously untrue, but which surely needs no defence, is a characteristic example of a singular watchfulness for the minute fact and expression of natural scenery pervading all he wrote — a closeness to the exact physiognomy of nature, having something to do with that idealistic philosophy which sees in the external world no mere concurrence of mechanical agencies, but an animated body, informed and made expressive, like the body of man, by an indwelling intelligence. It was a tendency, doubtless, in the air, for Shelley too is affected by it, and Turner, with the school of landscape which followed him. “I had found,” Coleridge tells us,

  That outward forms, the loftiest, still receive

  Their finer influence from the world within;

  Fair ciphers of vague import, where the eye

  Traces no spot, in which the heart may read

  History and prophecy:...

  and this induces in him no indifference to actual colour and form and process, but such minute re
alism as this —

  The thin grey cloud is spread on high,

  It covers but not hides the sky.

  The moon is behind and at the full;

  And yet she looks both small and dull;

  or this, which has a touch of “romantic” weirdness —

  Nought was green upon the oak

  But moss and rarest misletoe

  or this —

  There is not wind enough to twirl

  The one red leaf, the last of its clan,

  That dances as often as dance it can,

  Hanging so light, and hanging so high,

  On the topmost twig that looks up at the sky

  or this, with a weirdness, again, like that of some wild French etcher —

 

‹ Prev