登陆注册
15732400000006

第6章 BOYHOOD--CAMBRIDGE--EARLY POEMS.(5)

Other and younger critics, who have attained to a cock-certain mood of negation, are apt to blame him because, in fact, he did not finally agree with their opinions. If a man is necessarily a weakling or a hypocrite because, after trying all things, he is not an atheist or a materialist, then the reproach of insincerity or of feebleness of mind must rest upon Tennyson. But it is manifest that, almost in boyhood, he had already faced the ideas which, to one of his character, almost meant despair: he had not kept his eyes closed. To his extremely self-satisfied accusers we might answer, in lines from this earliest volume (The Mystic):-"Ye scorn him with an undiscerning scorn;Ye cannot read the marvel in his eye, The still serene abstraction."He would behold "One shadow in the midst of a great light, One reflex from eternity on time, One mighty countenance of perfect calm, Awful with most invariable eyes."His mystic of these boyish years -

"Often lying broad awake, and yet Remaining from the body, and apart In intellect and power and will, hath heard Time flowing in the middle of the night, And all things creeping to a day of doom."In this poem, never republished by the author, is an attempt to express an experience which in later years he more than once endeavoured to set forth in articulate speech, an experience which was destined to colour his finial speculations on ultimate problems of God and of the soul. We shall later have to discuss the opinion of an eminent critic, Mr Frederic Harrison, that Tennyson's ideas, theological, evolutionary, and generally speculative, "followed, rather than created, the current ideas of his time." "The train of thought" (in In Memoriam), writes Mr Harrison, "is essentially that with which ordinary English readers had been made familiar by F. D.

Maurice, Professor Jowett, Dr Martineau, Ecce Homo, Hypatia." Of these influences only Maurice, and Maurice only orally, could have reached the author of The Mystic and the Supposed Confessions. Ecce Homo, Hypatia, Mr Jowett, were all in the bosom of the future when In Memoriam was written. Now, The Mystic and the Supposed Confessions are prior to In Memoriam, earlier than 1830. Yet they already contain the chief speculative tendencies of In Memoriam; the growing doubts caused by evolutionary ideas (then familiar to Tennyson, though not to "ordinary English readers"), the longing for a return to childlike faith, and the mystical experiences which helped Tennyson to recover a faith that abode with him. In these things he was original. Even as an undergraduate he was not following "a train of thought made familiar" by authors who had not yet written a line, and by books which had not yet been published.

So much, then, of the poet that was to be and of the philosopher existed in the little volume of the undergraduate. In The Mystic we notice a phrase, two words long, which was later to be made familiar, "Daughters of time, divinely tall," reproduced in the picture of Helen:-"A daughter of the Gods, divinely tall, And most divinely fair."The reflective pieces are certainly of more interest now (though they seem to have satisfied the poet less) than the gallery of airy fairy Lilians, Adelines, Rosalinds, and Eleanores:-"Daughters of dreams and of stories,"

like "Faustine, Fragoletta, Dolores, Felise, and Yolande, and Juliette."Cambridge, which he was soon to leave, did not satisfy the poet.

Oxford did not satisfy Gibbon, or later, Shelley; and young men of genius are not, in fact, usually content with universities which, perhaps, are doing their best, but are neither governed nor populated by minds of the highest and most original class.

"You that do profess to teach And teach us nothing, feeding not the heart."The universities, in fact, teach a good deal of that which can be learned, but the best things cannot be taught. The universities give men leisure, books, and companionship, to learn for themselves. All tutors cannot be, and at that time few dreamed of being, men like Jowett and T. H. Green, Gamaliels at whose feet undergraduates sat with enthusiasm, "did EAGERLY frequent," like Omar Khayyam. In later years Tennyson found closer relations between dons and undergraduates, and recorded his affection for his university. She had supplied him with such companionship as is rare, and permitted him to "catch the blossom of the flying terms," even if tutors and lecturers were creatures of routine, terriblement enfonces dans la matiere, like the sire of Madelon and Cathos, that honourable citizen.

Tennyson just missed, by going down, a visit of Wordsworth to Cambridge. The old enthusiast of revolution was justifying passive obedience: thirty years had turned the almost Jacobin into an almost Jacobite. Such is the triumph of time. In the summer of 1830Tennyson, with Hallam, visited the Pyrenees. The purpose was political--to aid some Spanish rebels. The fruit is seen in OEnone and Mariana in the South.

In March 1831 Tennyson lost his father. "He slept in the dead man's bed, earnestly desiring to see his ghost, but no ghost came." "You see," he said, "ghosts do not generally come to imaginative people;"a remark very true, though ghosts are attributed to "imagination."Whatever causes these phantasms, it is not the kind of phantasia which is consciously exercised by the poet. Coleridge had seen far too many ghosts to believe in them; and Coleridge and Donne apart, with the hallucinations of Goethe and Shelley, who met themselves, what poet ever did "see a ghost"? One who saw Tennyson as he wandered alone at this period called him "a mysterious being, seemingly lifted high above other mortals, and having a power of intercourse with the spirit world not granted to others." But it was the world of the poet, not of the "medium."The Tennysons stayed on at the parsonage for six years. But, anticipating their removal, Arthur Hallam in 1831 dealt in prophecy about the identification in the district of places in his friend's poems--"critic after critic will trace the wanderings of the brook,"as,--in fact, critic after critic has done. Tennyson disliked--these "localisers." The poet's walks were shared by Arthur Hallam, then affianced to his sister Emily.

同类推荐
  • ON THE SACRED DISEASE

    ON THE SACRED DISEASE

    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。
  • 佛说未曾有正法经

    佛说未曾有正法经

    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。
  • 剪胜野闻

    剪胜野闻

    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。
  • 续一切经音义

    续一切经音义

    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。
  • 晋后略

    晋后略

    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。
热门推荐
  • 迷失的星际

    迷失的星际

    星际浩如星海。星际间的势力,被帝国、联盟以及神族把持,而在未知的领域则是强大的虫群。
  • 凶舞

    凶舞

    这里没有古老的内力,亦没有眼花缭乱的魔法,有的,是能吞吐天地,创造日月的创之力,创武,创将,创王,创皇,创仙,创神,创机,且看罗魁穿越时空,来到表面宁静,其实逆乱的21世纪,如何,创,世,纪
  • 似锦宠妃

    似锦宠妃

    云浅贝认为自己平生做的最重要的一个决定,莫过于安份听话。皇上让干啥咱就干啥呗!不挑事,不争宠,只要不涉及底线,日子还是可以美美满满的过下去滴。宫外有爹爹哥哥做依仗,皇上不看僧面看佛面,也不能亏待了自己不是?只是.....皇上!你不觉得你的宠爱有些过了吗!?“宝贝儿...有吗?”这是个淡定女主争宠的故事,文文慢热,很宠,不虐。~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~新人呀,捧个场呗!包子文笔不好,挑刺的姐妹温柔点,怕疼啊....
  • 宠物小精灵之斗士之路

    宠物小精灵之斗士之路

    一梦醒来,到了精灵世界,但一梦真的醒来,却只是在自己的家里!
  • 宅男梦想的二次元

    宅男梦想的二次元

    某东方腹黑金发妹子:“林星!你就给我好好的拯救世界啊!别给咱继续添乱子了啊!”某傲娇放电妹:“林星!你这个色狼!混蛋!h狂!”某个双胞胎兄依存妹妹:“星,不要离开我,我要,一直在你身边!”某个金发呆毛吃货:“唔。。master!再来一碗!”某无节操红白巫女:“大混蛋!给我去死一万次啊!”某病娇斧头女:“小星,你,是我的!就算是死神也无法从我这里夺走!”妹子有凶残有温顺也有蹭得累,可是面对众多冒着黑气的妹子,林星又该怎么办哩?ps1:之前的计划因为作者菌的不成熟已经推翻,下个世界将会是型月世界,希望多多评论,指出作者菌写的不好的地方,幻梦在这里拜谢大家!PS2:本书大概会一直更下去。。。嗯大概
  • 恶魔校草的独宠爱恋

    恶魔校草的独宠爱恋

    刚刚失恋了,得罪恶魔,肖木一见面就说“要不是你当本少爷的到道,我都懒得看你一眼”,我无视,第二次见面“要不是本爸比逼我,我才不让一个女孩坐我的车”,我在忍,第三次见面“你个猪,睡在本少爷床上,我不嫌弃,你嫌弃什么。”我忍无可忍“你一个冰山脸,哪来的那么多毛病”。从此二人,见面如仇人,别人都说“一日不见,如隔三秋”,他们俩却是“一日不见,希望永远都不见”感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持
  • 雪映人生

    雪映人生

    前生:本该她平穷一生,可为爷爷,不惜与亲生父亲做交易。跟庶姐斗口水跟后妈斗智商因为一时心软,最后惨死车祸。。。。后生;本该死亡的她却复活。一切将从零开始。她拥有父皇一生的宠爱。前世,她为爷爷,亲手推开自己的父亲。今生,她要用尽一切,护父皇荣世繁华,万里江山。打江山统天下站世界巅峰欧石楠:“我求求你,认真看我一眼,好不好?”“我为你放弃了一切,只想和你在一起”“一个虚假也好”“我愿用尽一生,只为换你倾城一笑”“你真傻”
  • 沉沦者之书

    沉沦者之书

    望川与莲迦自幼被翡翠王抚养长大,却在出外游历时惹祸上身,导致翡翠宫一夜被灭。掌控诸王命运的组织‘轮回’暗中操纵着各个国家的局势发展,传说中的不死药‘琼膏’也被他们所得,这个由六名绝顶高手组成的组织又将掀起何等腥风血雨。望川与莲迦分别被天道盟与欲宗所救,青梅竹马的两人走向不同的命运轨迹,他们将继承恩人的梦想还是另辟蹊径?十里枫林、讲武堂、玉皇宗,望川一步步从翡翠王的过往中走来,却遇到了毕生挚爱,虚夜宫宫主、东郡第一美人卿昙夜,而相遇时的望川却只是个一无所有的少年...
  • 超极品杀手

    超极品杀手

    天才杀手回归都市。为朋友,他血溅五步!为女人,他横霸天下!
  • 君临天下不识妻:绝版皇后【完结】

    君临天下不识妻:绝版皇后【完结】

    她是正宫娘娘,三年来过着与世隔绝的生活。没有人见过她的真面目,包括她的夫君——景泰国最高执权者轩辕毅,可一场邂逅,却打破了原本平静地生活......他爱上了她,她也爱上了他。然而,命运总是多变的。为了他,她甘愿放弃一切。为了她,他独守后宫灵位。事隔多年,是老天的怜悯亦或命运的捉弄。。。看着这个几乎与自己长得一模一样的可爱小人,他动摇了。“皇上叔叔,看着你,我就好像在照镜子呢?”是她吗?她还活着吗?那。。。。