第 5 节
作者:理性的思索      更新:2021-02-21 10:15      字数:9322
  whom Sir Barnes Newcome delivered his famous lecture。  The seventh
  stanza perhaps hardly deserved to be altered; as it is; so as to
  bring in 〃minnows〃 where 〃fish〃 had been the reading; and where
  〃trout〃 would best recall an English chalk stream。  To the angler the
  rising trout; which left the poet cold; is at least as welcome as the
  〃reflex of a beauteous form。〃  〃Every woman seems an angel at the
  water…side;〃 said 〃that good old angler; now with God;〃 Thomas Todd
  Stoddart; and so 〃the long and listless boy〃 found it to be。  It is
  no wonder that the mother was 〃SLOWLY brought to yield consent to my
  desire。〃  The domestic affections; in fact; do not adapt themselves
  so well to poetry as the passion; unique in Tennyson; of Fatima。  The
  critics who hunt for parallels or plagiarisms will note …
  〃O Love; O fire! once he drew
  With one long kiss my whole soul thro'
  My lips;〃
  and will observe Mr Browning's
  〃Once he kissed
  My soul out in a fiery mist。〃
  As to OEnone; the scenery of that earliest of the classical idylls is
  borrowed from the Pyrenees and the tour with Hallam。  〃It is possible
  that the poem may have been suggested by Beattie's Judgment of
  Paris;〃 says Mr Collins; it is also possible that the tale which
  〃Quintus Calaber
  Somewhat lazily handled of old〃
  may have reached Tennyson's mind from an older writer than Beattie。
  He is at least as likely to have been familiar with Greek myth as
  with the lamented 〃Minstrel。〃  The form of 1833; greatly altered in
  1842; contained such unlucky phrases as 〃cedar shadowy;〃 and
  〃snowycoloured;〃 〃marblecold;〃 〃violet…eyed〃easy spoils of
  criticism。  The alterations which converted a beautiful but faulty
  into a beautiful and flawless poem perhaps obscure the significance
  of OEnone's 〃I will not die alone;〃 which in the earlier volume
  directly refers to the foreseen end of all as narrated in Tennyson's
  late piece; The Death of OEnone。  The whole poem brings to mind the
  glowing hues of Titian and the famous Homeric lines on the divine
  wedlock of Zeus and Hera。
  The allegory or moral of The Palace of Art does not need explanation。
  Not many of the poems owe more to revision。  The early stanza about
  Isaiah; with fierce Ezekiel; and 〃Eastern Confutzee;〃 did undeniably
  remind the reader; as Lockhart said; of The Groves of Blarney。
  〃With statues gracing that noble place in;
  All haythen goddesses most rare;
  Petrarch; Plato; and Nebuchadnezzar;
  All standing naked in the open air。〃
  In the early version the Soul; being too much 〃up to date;〃
  〃Lit white streams of dazzling gas;〃
  like Sir Walter Scott at Abbotsford。
  〃Thus her intense; untold delight;
  In deep or vivid colour; smell; and sound;
  Was flattered day and night。〃
  Lockhart was not fond of Sir Walter's experiments in gas; the 〃smell〃
  gave him no 〃deep; untold delight;〃 and his 〃infamous review〃 was
  biassed by these circumstances。
  The volume of 1833 was in nothing more remarkable than in its proof
  of the many…sidedness of the author。  He offered mediaeval romance;
  and classical perfection touched with the romantic spirit; and
  domestic idyll; of which The May Queen is probably the most popular
  example。  The 〃mysterious being;〃 conversant with 〃the spiritual
  world;〃 might have been expected to disdain topics well within the
  range of Eliza Cook。  He did not despise but elevated them; and
  thereby did more to introduce himself to the wide English public than
  he could have done by a century of Fatimas or Lotos…Eaters。  On the
  other hand; a taste more fastidious; or more perverse; will scarcely
  be satisfied with pathos which in process of time has come to seem
  〃obvious。〃  The pathos of early death in the prime of beauty is less
  obvious in Homer; where Achilles is to be the victim; or in the
  laments of the Anthology; where we only know that the dead bride or
  maiden was fair; but the poor May Queen is of her nature rather
  commonplace。
  〃That good man; the clergyman; has told me words of peace;〃
  strikes a note rather resembling the Tennysonian parody of Wordsworth
  …
  〃A Mr Wilkinson; a clergyman。〃
  The Lotos…Eaters; of course; is at the opposite pole of the poet's
  genius。  A few plain verses of the Odyssey; almost bald in their
  reticence; are the point de repere of the most magical vision
  expressed in the most musical verse。  Here is the languid charm of
  Spenser; enriched with many classical memories; and pictures of
  natural beauty gorgeously yet delicately painted。  After the excision
  of some verses; rather fantastical; in 1842; the poem became a
  flawless masterpiece;one of the eternal possessions of song。
  On the other hand; the opening of The Dream of Fair Women was marred
  in 1833 by the grotesque introductory verses about 〃a man that sails
  in a balloon。〃  Young as Tennyson was; these freakish passages are a
  psychological marvel in the work of one who did not lack the saving
  sense of humour。  The poet; wafted on the wing and 〃pinion that the
  Theban eagle bear;〃 cannot conceivably be likened to an aeronaut
  waving flags out of a balloonexcept in a spirit of self…mockery
  which was not Tennyson's。  His remarkable self…discipline in excising
  the fantastic and superfluous; and reducing his work to its classical
  perfection of thought and form; is nowhere more remarkable than in
  this magnificent vision。  It is probably by mere accidental
  coincidence of thought that; in the verses To J。 S。 (James Spedding);
  Tennyson reproduces the noble speech on the warrior's death which Sir
  Walter Scott places in the lips of the great Dundee:  〃It is the
  memory which the soldier leaves behind him; like the long train of
  light that follows the sunken sun; THAT is all that is worth caring
  for;〃 the light which lingers eternally on the hills of Atholl。
  Tennyson's lines are a close parallel:…
  〃His memory long will live alone
  In all our hearts; as mournful light
  That broods above the fallen sun;
  And dwells in heaven half the night。〃
  Though Tennyson disliked the exhibition of 〃the chips of the
  workshop;〃 we have commented on them; on the early readings of the
  early volumes。  They may be regarded more properly as the sketches of
  a master than as 〃chips;〃 and do more than merely engage the idle
  curiosity of the fanatics of first editions。  They prove that the
  poet was studious of perfection; and wisely studious; for his
  alterations; unlike those of some authors; were almost invariably for
  the better; the saner; the more mature in taste。  The early readings
  are also worth notice; because they partially explain; by their
  occasionally fantastic and humourless character; the lack of early
  and general recognition of the poet's genius。  The native prejudice
  of mankind is not in favour of a new poet。  Of new poets there are
  always so many; most of them bad; that nature has protected mankind
  by an armour of suspiciousness。  The world; and Lockhart; easily
  found good reasons for distrusting this new claimant of the ivy and
  the bays:  moreover; since about 1814 there had been a reaction
  against new poetry。  The market was glutted。  Scott had set everybody
  on reading; and too many on writing; novels。  The great reaction of
  the century against all forms of literature except prose fiction had
  begun。  Near the very date of Tennyson's first volume Bulwer Lytton;
  as we saw; had frankly explained that he wrote novels because nobody
  would look at anything else。  Tennyson had to overcome this
  universal; or all but universal; indifference to new poetry; and;
  after being silent for ten years; overcome it he dida remarkable
  victory of art and of patient courage。  Times were even worse for
  poets than to…day。  Three hundred copies of the new volume were sold!
  But Tennyson's friends were not puffers in league with pushing
  publishers。
  Meanwhile the poet in 1833 went on quietly and undefeated with his
  work。  He composed The Gardener's Daughter; and was at work on the
  Morte d'Arthur; suppressed till the ninth year; on the Horatian plan。
  Many poems were produced (and even written out; which a number of his
  pieces never were); and were left in manuscript till they appeared in
  the Biography。  Most of these are so little worthy of the author that
  the marvel is how he came to write themin what uninspired hours。
  Unlike Wordsworth; he could weed the tares from his wheat。  His
  studies were in Greek; German; Italian; history (a little); and
  chemistry; botany; and electricity〃cross…grained Muses;〃 these
  last。
  It was on September 15; 1833; that Arthur Hallam died。  Unheralded by
  sign or symptom of disease as it was; the news fell like a
  thunderbolt from a serene sky。  Tennyson's and Hallam's love had been
  〃passing the love of women。〃  A blow like this drives a man on the
  rocks of the ultimate; the insoluble problems of destiny。  〃Is this
  the end?〃  Nourished as on the milk of lions; on the elevating and
  strengthening doctrines of popular science; trained from childhood to
  forego hope and attend evening lectures; the young critics of our
  generation find Tennyson a weakling because he had hopes and fears
  concerning the ultimate renewal of what was more than half his life
  his friendship。
  〃That