The Collected Works of Charles Lamb and Mary Lamb. Charles Lamb. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Charles Lamb
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Oh! no, full oft the innocent Sufferer sees

       Too clearly; feels too vividly; and longs

       To realize the Vision with intense

       And overconstant yearning—there—there lies

       The excess, by which the balance is destroyed.

       Too, too contracted are these walls of flesh,

       This vital warmth too cold, these visual orbs,

       Though inconceivably endowed, too dim

       For any passion of the soul that leads

       To extacy; and, all the crooked paths

       Of time and change disdaining, takes its course

       Along the line of limitless desires.—p. 148.

      With the same modifying and incorporating power, he tells us—

      Within the soul a Faculty abides,

       That with interpositions, which would hide

       And darken, so can deal, that they become

       Contingencies of pomp; and serve to exalt

       Her native brightness. As the ample Moon,

       In the deep stillness of a summer even

       Rising behind a thick and lofty Grove,

       Burns like an unconsuming fire of light,

       In the green tree; and, kindling on all sides

       Their leafy umbrage, turns the dusky veil

       Into a substance glorious as her own,

       Yea with her own incorporated, by power

       Capacious and serene. Like power abides

       In Man's celestial Spirit; Virtue thus

       Sets forth and magnifies herself; thus feeds

       A calm, a beautiful, and silent fire,

       From the incumbrances of mortal life,

       From error, disappointment—nay from guilt;

       And sometimes, so relenting Justice wills,

       From palpable oppressions of Despair.—p. 188.

      This is high poetry; though (as we have ventured to lay the basis of the author's sentiments in a sort of liberal Quakerism) from some parts of it, others may, with more plausibility, object to the appearance of a kind of Natural Methodism: we could have wished therefore that the tale of Margaret had been postponed, till the reader had been strengthened by some previous acquaintance with the author's theory, and not placed in the front of the poem, with a kind of ominous aspect, beautifully tender as it is. It is a tale of a cottage, and its female tenant, gradually decaying together, while she expected the return of one whom poverty and not unkindness had driven from her arms. We trust ourselves only with the conclusion—

      Nine tedious years;

       From their first separation, nine long years,

       She lingered in unquiet widowhood,

       A Wife and Widow. [Needs must it have been

       A sore heart-wasting!] I have heard, my Friend,

       That in yon arbour oftentimes she sate

       Alone, through half the vacant Sabbath-day;

       And if a dog passed by she still would quit

       The shade, and look abroad. On this old Bench

       For hours she sate; and evermore her eye

       Was busy in the distance, shaping things

       That made her heart beat quick. You see that path,

       [Now faint—the grass has crept o'er its grey line;]

       There, to and fro, she paced through many a day

       Of the warm summer, from a belt of hemp

       That girt her waist, spinning the long drawn thread

       With backward steps. Yet ever as there pass'd

      The fourth book, entitled "Despondency Corrected," we consider as the most valuable portion of the poem. For moral grandeur; for wide scope of thought and a long train of lofty imagery; for tender personal appeals; and a versification which we feel we ought to notice, but feel it also so involved in the poetry, that we can hardly mention it as a distinct excellence; it stands without competition among our didactic and descriptive verse. The general tendency of the argument (which we might almost affirm to be the leading moral of the poem) is to abate the pride of the calculating understanding, and to reinstate the imagination and the affections in those seats from which modern philosophy has laboured but too successfully to expel them.

      "Life's autumn past," says the grey-haired Wanderer,

      ——I stand on Winter's verge,

       And daily lose what I desire to keep:

       Yet rather would I instantly decline

       To the traditionary sympathies

       Of a most rustic ignorance, and take

       A fearful apprehension from the owl

       Or death-watch—and as readily rejoice,

       If two auspicious magpies crossed my way;

       This rather would I do than see and hear

       The repetitions wearisome of sense,

       Where soul is dead, and feeling hath no place;—p. 168.

      In the same spirit, those illusions of the imaginative faculty to which the peasantry in solitary districts are peculiarly subject, are represented as the kindly ministers of conscience:

      ——with whose service charged

       They come and go, appear and disappear;

       Diverting evil purposes, remorse

       Awakening, chastening an intemperate grief,

       Or pride of heart abating:

      Reverting to more distant ages of the world, the operation of that same faculty in producing the several fictions of Chaldean, Persian, and Grecian idolatry, is described with such seductive power, that the Solitary, in good earnest, seems alarmed at the tendency of his own argument.—Notwithstanding his fears, however, there is one thought so uncommonly fine, relative to the spirituality which lay hid beneath the gross material forms of Greek worship, in metal or stone, that we cannot resist the allurement of transcribing it—

      ——triumphant o'er this pompous show

       Of Art, this