第 15 节
作者:理性的思索      更新:2021-02-21 10:15      字数:9322
  picture of the child Maud …
  〃Maud the delight of the village; the ringing joy of the Hall。〃
  The poem abounds in lines which live in the memory; as in the vernal
  description …
  〃A million emeralds break from the ruby…budded lime〃;
  and the voice heard in the garden singing
  〃A passionate ballad gallant and gay;〃
  as Lovelace's Althea; and the lines on the far…off waving of a white
  hand; 〃betwixt the cloud and the moon。〃  The lyric of
  〃Birds in the high Hall…garden
  When twilight was falling;
  Maud; Maud; Maud; Maud;
  They were crying and calling;〃
  was a favourite of the poet。
  〃What birds were these?〃 he is said to have asked a lady suddenly;
  when reading to a silent company。
  〃Nightingales;〃 suggested a listener; who did not probably remember
  any other fowl that is vocal in the dusk。
  〃No; they were rooks;〃 answered the poet。
  〃Come into the Garden; Maud;〃 is as fine a love…song as Tennyson ever
  wrote; with a triumphant ring; and a soaring exultant note。  Then the
  poem drops from its height; like a lark shot high in heaven; tragedy
  comes; and remorse; and the beautiful interlude of the
  〃lovely shell;
  Small and pure as a pearl。〃
  Then follows the exquisite
  〃O that 'twere possible;〃
  and the dull consciousness of the poem of madness; with its dumb
  gnawing confusion of pain and wandering memory; the hero being
  finally left; in the author's words; 〃sane but shattered。〃
  Tennyson's letters of the time show that the critics succeeded in
  wounding him:  it was not a difficult thing to do。  Maud was
  threatened with a broadside from 〃that pompholygous; broad…blown
  Apollodorus; the gifted X。〃  People who have read Aytoun's diverting
  Firmilian; where Apollodorus plays his part; and who remember 〃gifted
  Gilfillan〃 in Waverley; know who the gifted X。 was。  But X。 was no
  great authority south of Tay。
  Despite the almost unanimous condemnation by public critics; the
  success of Maud enabled Tennyson to buy Farringford; so he must have
  been better appreciated and understood by the world than by the
  reviewers。
  In February 1850 Tennyson returned to his old Arthurian themes; 〃the
  only big thing not done;〃 for Milton had merely glanced at Arthur;
  Dryden did not
  〃Raise the Table Round again;〃
  and Blackmore has never been reckoned adequate。  Vivien was first
  composed as Merlin and Nimue; and then Geraint and Enid was adapted
  from the Mabinogion; the Welsh collection of Marchen and legends;
  things of widely different ages; now rather Celtic; or Brythonic; now
  amplifications made under the influence of mediaeval French romance。
  Enid was finished in Wales in August; and Tennyson learned Welsh
  enough to be able to read the Mabinogion; which is much more of Welsh
  than many Arthurian critics possess。  The two first Idylls were
  privately printed in the summer of 1857; being very rare and much
  desired of collectors in this embryonic shape。  In July Guinevere was
  begun; in the middle; with Arthur's valedictory address to his erring
  consort。  In autumn Tennyson visited the late Duke of Argyll at
  Inveraray:  he was much attached to the Dukeunlike Professor
  Huxley。  Their love of nature; the Duke being as keen…eyed as the
  poet was short…sighted; was one tie of union。  The Indian Mutiny; or
  at least the death of Havelock; was the occasion of lines which the
  author was too wise to include in any of his volumes:  the poem on
  Lucknow was of later composition。
  Guinevere was completed in March 1858; and Tennyson met Mr Swinburne;
  then very young。  〃What I particularly admired in him was that he did
  not press upon me any verses of his own。〃  Tennyson would have found
  more to admire if he had pressed for a sight of the verses。  Neither
  he nor Mr Matthew Arnold was very encouraging to young poets:  they
  had no sons in Apollo; like Ben Jonson。  But both were kept in a
  perpetual state of apprehension by the army of versifiers who send
  volumes by post; to whom that can only be said what Tennyson did say
  to one of them; 〃As an amusement to yourself and your friends; the
  writing it〃 (verse) 〃is all very well。〃  It is the friends who do not
  find it amusing; while the stranger becomes the foe。  The psychology
  of these pests of the Muses is bewildering。  They do not seem to read
  poetry; only to write it and launch it at unoffending strangers。  If
  they bought each other's books; all of them could afford to publish。
  The Master of Balliol; the most adviceful man; if one may use the
  term; of his age; appears to have advised Tennyson to publish the
  Idylls at once。  There had been years of silence since Maud; and the
  Master suspected that 〃mosquitoes〃 (reviewers) were the cause。
  〃There is a note needed to show the good side of human nature and to
  condone its frailties which Thackeray will never strike。〃  To others
  it seems that Thackeray was eternally striking this note:  at that
  time in General Lambert; his wife; and daughters; not to speak of
  other characters in The Virginians。  Who does not condone the
  frailties of Captain Costigan; and F。 B。; and the Chevalier Strong?
  In any case; Tennyson took his own time; he was (1858) only beginning
  Elaine。  There is no doubt that Tennyson was easily pricked by
  unsympathetic criticism; even from the most insignificant source;
  and; as he confessed; he received little pleasure from praise。  All
  authors; without exception; are sensitive。  A sturdier author wrote
  that he would sometimes have been glad to meet his assailant 〃where
  the muir…cock was bailie。〃  We know how testily Wordsworth replied in
  defence to the gentlest comments by Lamb。
  The Master of Balliol kept insisting; 〃As to the critics; their power
  is not really great。 。 。 。  One drop of natural feeling in poetry or
  the true statement of a single new fact is already felt to be of more
  value than all the critics put together。〃  Yet even critics may be in
  the right; and of all great poets; Tennyson listened most obediently
  to their censures; as we have seen in the case of his early poems。
  His prolonged silences after the attacks of 1833 and 1855 were
  occupied in work and reflection:  Achilles was not merely sulking in
  his tent; as some of his friends seem to have supposed。  An epic in a
  series of epic idylls cannot be dashed off like a romantic novel in
  rhyme; and Tennyson's method was always one of waiting for maturity
  of conception and execution。
  Mrs Tennyson; doubtless by her lord's desire; asked the Master (then
  tutor of Balliol) to suggest themes。  Old age was suggested; and is
  treated in The Grandmother。  Other topics were not handled。  〃I hold
  most strongly;〃 said the Master; 〃that it is the duty of every one
  who has the good fortune to know a man of genius to do any trifling
  service they can to lighten his work。〃  To do every service in his
  power to every man was the Master's life…long practice。  He was not
  much at home; his letters show; with Burns; to whom he seems to have
  attributed John Anderson; my jo; John; while he tells an anecdote of
  Burns composing Tam o' Shanter with emotional tears; which; if true
  at all; is true of the making of To Mary in Heaven。  If Burns wept
  over Tam o' Shanter; the tears must have been tears of laughter。
  The first four Idylls of the King were prepared for publication in
  the spring of 1859; while Tennyson was at work also on Pelleas and
  Ettarre; and the Tristram cycle。  In autumn he went on a tour to
  Lisbon with Mr F。 T。 Palgrave and Mr Craufurd Grove。  Returning; he
  fell eagerly to reading an early copy of Darwin's Origin of Species;
  the crown of his own early speculations on the theory of evolution。
  〃Your theory does not make against Christianity?〃 he asked Darwin
  later (1868); who replied; 〃No; certainly not。〃  But Darwin has
  stated the waverings of his own mind in contact with a topic too high
  for a priori reasoning; and only to be approached; if at all; on the
  strength of the scientific method applied to facts which science; so
  far; neglects; or denies; or 〃explains away;〃 rather than explains。
  The Idylls; unlike Maud; were well received by the press; better by
  the public; and best of all by friends like Thackeray; the Duke of
  Argyll; the Master of Balliol; and Clough; while Ruskin showed some
  reserve。  The letter from Thackeray I cannot deny myself the pleasure
  of citing from the Biography:  it was written 〃in an ardour of claret
  and gratitude;〃 but posted some six weeks later:…
  FOLKESTONE; September。
  36 ONSLOW SQUARE; October。
  My Dear Old Alfred;I owe you a letter of happiness and thanks。
  Sir; about three weeks ago; when I was ill in bed; I read the Idylls
  of the King; and I thought; 〃Oh; I must write to him now; for this
  pleasure; this delight; this splendour of happiness which I have been
  enjoying。〃  But I should have blotted the sheets; 'tis ill writing on
  one's back。  The letter full of gratitude never went as far as the
  post…office; and how comes it now?
  D'abord; a bottle of claret。  (The landlord of the hotel asked me
  down to the cellar and treated me。)  Then afterwards sitting here; an
  old magazine; Fraser's Magazine; 1850; and I come on a poem out of
  The Princess which says; 〃I hear the horns of Elfland blowing;
  blo