登陆注册
19903400000029

第29章 MR. MORRIS'S POEMS(2)

Only I know that it is unforgettable. Again (Galahad speaks):-"I saw One sitting on the altar as a throne, Whose face no man could say he did not know, And, though the bell still rang, he sat alone, With raiment half blood-red, half white as snow."Such things made their own special ineffaceable impact.

Leaving the Arthurian cycle, Mr. Morris entered on his especially sympathetic period--the gloom and sad sunset glory of the late fourteenth century, the age of Froissart and wicked, wasteful wars.

To Froissart it all seemed one magnificent pageant of knightly and kingly fortunes; he only murmurs a "great pity" for the death of a knight or the massacre of a town. It is rather the pity of it that Mr. Morris sees: the hearts broken in a corner, as in "Sir Peter Harpedon's End," or beside "The Haystack in the Floods." Here is a picture like life of what befell a hundred times. Lady Alice de la Barde hears of the death of her knight:-"ALICE

"Can you talk faster, sir?

Get over all this quicker? fix your eyes On mine, I pray you, and whate'er you see Still go on talking fast, unless I fall, Or bid you stop.

"SQUIRE

"I pray your pardon then, And looking in your eyes, fair lady, say I am unhappy that your knight is dead.

Take heart, and listen! let me tell you all.

We were five thousand goodly men-at-arms, And scant five hundred had he in that hold;His rotten sandstone walls were wet with rain, And fell in lumps wherever a stone hit;Yet for three days about the barriers there The deadly glaives were gather'd, laid across, And push'd and pull'd; the fourth our engines came;But still amid the crash of falling walls, And roar of bombards, rattle of hard bolts, The steady bow-strings flash'd, and still stream'd out St. George's banner, and the seven swords, And still they cried, 'St. George Guienne,' until Their walls were flat as Jericho's of old, And our rush came, and cut them from the keep."The astonishing vividness, again, of the tragedy told in "Geffray Teste Noire" is like that of a vision in a magic mirror or a crystal ball, rather than like a picture suggested by printed words. "Shameful Death" has the same enchanted kind of presentment. We look through a "magic casement opening on the foam" of the old waves of war. Poems of a pure fantasy, unequalled out of Coleridge and Poe, are "The Wind" and "The Blue Closet."Each only lives in fantasy. Motives, and facts, and "story" are unimportant and out of view. The pictures arise distinct, unsummoned, spontaneous, like the faces and places which are flashed on our eyes between sleeping and waking. Fantastic, too, but with more of a recognisable human setting, is "Golden Wings,"which to a slight degree reminds one of Theophile Gautier's Chateau de Souvenir.

"The apples now grow green and sour Upon the mouldering castle wall, Before they ripen there they fall:

There are no banners on the tower, The draggled swans most eagerly eat The green weeds trailing in the moat;Inside the rotting leaky boat You see a slain man's stiffen'd feet."These, with "The Sailing of the Sword," are my own old favourites.

There was nothing like them before, nor will be again, for Mr.

Morris, after several years of silence, abandoned his early manner.

No doubt it was not a manner to persevere in, but happily, in a mood and a moment never to be re-born or return, Mr. Morris did fill a fresh page in English poetry with these imperishable fantasies. They were absolutely neglected by "the reading public,"but they found a few staunch friends. Indeed, I think of "Guenevere" as FitzGerald did of Tennyson's poems before 1842. But this, of course, is a purely personal, probably a purely capricious, estimate. Criticism may aver that the influence of Mr.

Rossetti was strong on Mr. Morris before 1858. Perhaps so, but we read Mr. Morris first (as the world read the "Lay" before "Christabel"), and my own preference is for Mr. Morris.

It was after eight or nine years of silence that Mr. Morris produced, in 1866 or 1867, "The Life and Death of Jason." Young men who had read "Guenevere" hastened to purchase it, and, of course, found themselves in contact with something very unlike their old favourite. Mr. Morris had told a classical tale in decasyllabic couplets of the Chaucerian sort, and he regarded the heroic age from a mediaeval point of view; at all events, not from an historical and archaeological point of view. It was natural in Mr. Morris to "envisage" the Greek heroic age in this way, but it would not be natural in most other writers. The poem is not much shorter than the "Odyssey," and long narrative poems had been out of fashion since "The Lord of the Isles" (1814).

All this was a little disconcerting. We read "Jason," and read it with pleasure, but without much of the more essential pleasure which comes from magic and distinction of style. The peculiar qualities of Keats, and Tennyson, and Virgil are not among the gifts of Mr. Morris. As people say of Scott in his long poems, so it may be said of Mr. Morris--that he does not furnish many quotations, does not glitter in "jewels five words long."In "Jason" he entered on his long career as a narrator; a poet retelling the immortal primeval stories of the human race. In one guise or another the legend of Jason is the most widely distributed of romances; the North American Indians have it, and the Samoans and the Samoyeds, as well as all Indo-European peoples. This tale, told briefly by Pindar, and at greater length by Apollonius Rhodius, and in the "Orphica," Mr. Morris took up and handled in a single and objective way. His art was always pictorial, but, in "Jason" and later, he described more, and was less apt, as it were, to flash a picture on the reader, in some incommunicable way.

同类推荐
  • 饵黄精

    饵黄精

    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。
  • 锦州府志

    锦州府志

    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。
  • 食疗方

    食疗方

    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。
  • The Sleeping-Car

    The Sleeping-Car

    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。
  • The Life of Sir John Oldcastle

    The Life of Sir John Oldcastle

    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。
热门推荐
  • 狂女重生:纨绔七皇妃

    狂女重生:纨绔七皇妃

    前世的她,惊艳才绝,武功无双,却错在将一颗真心错付,最终换来尸骨无存,血肉分离的下场。涅槃重生,浴火归来,她发誓要将那些辱她,负她,伤她的送入地狱。辱她的人,百倍偿还。负她的人,千刀万剐。伤她的人,全家灭门。这一世,她要逆天而行,血债血偿……
  • 异世之娱乐巨星

    异世之娱乐巨星

    沫宇凡,一个在地球生活了28年的一名普通音乐教师,转世重生到一个娱乐业比地球还发达的星球,悲剧的是,居然转世重生到一个被家族抛弃,被学校唾弃的一个名叫陈志伦废物身上.值得高兴的是在这里他发现这里没有周杰伦,没有周星驰,没有周润发.没有梁朝伟,没有地球那些经典的电影,电视剧,歌曲.......于是一个闷骚,猥琐,卑鄙,无耻的屌丝咸鱼翻身了.这是一本关于一个小人物扮猪吃老虎的轻松娱乐故事,不喜误入。QQ群:153843152加群可给点写作意见
  • 名侦探柯南之冥皇守护

    名侦探柯南之冥皇守护

    杀手界的至尊--冥皇。在和一次任务中被自己人暗算死亡。当他再次醒来,发现他到了另一个世界----柯南的世界。sherry,我要守护你,即使屠杀千万,真正化身冥皇
  • 青衣遥

    青衣遥

    庙堂之高,高不过人心之野,江湖水深,深不过剑客执念。这是一个江湖与庙堂交错的世界,这是一个武道的天堂,人心与道德之间总是在不断的碰撞,交织出一个又一个动人心魄的故事。【情】谁与谁,能生生世世,两相欢?【痴】她非她,灯影凝忘,怎不伤?【恨】剑去去,千里穿心,能不痛?【仇】魑魅魍魉,岁月流伤,剑悲鸣!
  • 重生异界享受人生

    重生异界享受人生

    他没有傲世的武功、惊人的魔法,更不可能成仙成神,但是他确有不同种族的伙伴、亲密相依的魔宠、超凡脱俗的伴侣、幽默逗趣的家人、整人搞怪的技能,看咱们的猪角把台湾的夜市、日本的极限体能王、哈尔滨的雪橇竞赛、爱尔兰踢踏舞……等不同的游乐设施、观光景点及大型的比赛通通都搬到异界去。
  • 佛说菩萨修行经

    佛说菩萨修行经

    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。
  • 极品明王

    极品明王

    高三刘志偶回大明看他如何步步生莲宦官当道、锦衣夜行、华山论剑、流芳百年、提缰铁骑、碧天成名、破敌倭寇、痛击戎狄、扮猪吃虎、芳妻如云、明镜清玄、收复河山、万人朝拜、武林至尊、
  • 魂归华夏

    魂归华夏

    盘古、女娲、伏羲、神农……你可曾记得华夏的万古始祖?耶和华、宙斯、大梵天……当华夏面临危机之时,你可愿抛头颅、洒热血,与始祖一起护我华夏!五位天选之人,茫茫天道,能否为华夏留下一线生机?在大战之后,我们高唱“万古华夏,神魂不灭!”盘古、女娲、伏羲、神农……你可曾记得华夏的万古始祖?耶和华、宙斯、大梵天……当华夏面临危机之时,你可愿抛头颅、洒热血,与始祖一起护我华夏!五位天选之人,茫茫天道,能否为华夏留下一线生机?在大战之后,我们高唱“万古华夏,神魂不灭!”
  • 黑白伞下血寂然

    黑白伞下血寂然

    黑白的时间,在米索不达米亚街道上,在索落魅紫的街角上,在月牙泉下,你的倒影,是黑白。那个梦境万籁俱寂,连我们彼此的呼吸都听不见。我站在黑暗的角落,灰色是我的嫁衣。我看着你。你一无所知,迷茫的眼瞳。我睁开眼睛,你已经没有了呼吸。——这是恶魔的誓言。——这是我们两个人的秘密。——嘘。。。安静。。。已陌,已殇,无言,那是一场华丽的谢幕。或许你我已不再时。你已经没有了心跳。在冰凉的地上,你冰凉的身体,冰凉的脸。下雪了,我的心被雪覆盖了一层又一层,在心中的伞下。你看着我,你的黑白双眸中,是我。在夏夜的宁静中,轻吻你的脸,你的呼吸我已听不见。在黑白的世界里,好冷好累,真希望你还在。
  • 荒神战记

    荒神战记

    定天年间,大玄朝周边国家战乱不断,百姓哀鸿遍野,东洲神母怜悯众生,传大同巫术与民间,减轻百姓的痛苦,后各地大同巫师聚集一处,迁往东洲星云岛,传度神法。岩云,西川凉城人,自幼与母亲相依为命,被皇都富商王成收养。在抢夺神谕后结识千秋,又遇神秘巫女赠其一卷咒书,自此便踏上了寻巫的路途。