have gone off: Mr. M. hardly knows whether he shall ever
venture again,
&c. &c., and in short begs to decline even inspecting, &c. &c.
I called on Saunders and Otley at once, and,
marvel of
marvels,
do really think there is some chance of our coming to
decent terms --
I shall know at the
beginning of next week, but am not over-sanguine.
You will `sarve me out'? two words to that; being the man you are,
you must need very little telling from me, of the real feeling I have
of your
criticism's worth, and if I have had no more of it,
surely I am hardly to blame, who have in more than one instance
bored you
sufficiently: but not a
particle of your article
has been rejected or neglected by your observant
humble servant,
and very proud shall I be if my new work bear in it
the marks of the influence under which it was undertaken --
and if I prove not a fit compeer of the potter in Horace
who
anticipated an amphora and produced a porridge-pot.
I purposely keep back the subject until you see my
conceptionof its capabilities --
otherwise you would be planning a vase
fit to give the go-by to Evander's best crockery, which my cantharus
would cut but a sorry figure beside -- hardly up to the ansa.
But such as it is, it is very
earnest and
suggestive --
and likely I hope to do good; and though I am rather scared
at the thought of a FRESH EYE going over its 4,000 lines --
discovering blemishes of all sorts which my one wit cannot avail to detect,
fools treated as sages, obscure passages, slipshod verses,
and much that worse is, -- yet on the whole I am not much afraid of the issue,
and I would give something to be allowed to read it some morning to you --
for every rap o' the knuckles I should get a clap o' the back, I know.
I have another affair on hand, rather of a more popular nature, I conceive,
but not so
decisive and explicit on a point or two -- so I decide
on
trying the question with this: -- I really shall NEED your notice,
on this
account; I shall affix my name and stick my arms akimbo;
there are a few precious bold bits here and there, and the drift and scope
are
awfullyradical -- I am `off' for ever with the other side,
but must by all means be `on' with yours -- a position once gained,
worthier works shall follow --
therefore a certain
writer*
who meditated a notice (it matters not laudatory or
otherwise) on `Pauline'
in the `Examiner', must be benignant or supercilious as he shall choose,
but in no case an idle
spectator of my first appearance on any stage
(having
previously only dabbled in private theatricals)
and bawl `Hats off!' `Down in front!' &c., as soon as I get to the proscenium;
and he may depend that tho' my `Now is the winter of our discontent'
be rather
awkward, yet there shall be
occasional outbreaks of good stuff --
that I shall warm as I get on, and finally wish `Richmond at the bottom
of the seas,' &c. in the best style imaginable.
--
* Mr. John Stuart Mill.
--
Excuse all this swagger, I know you will, and
==
(The
signature has been cut off;
evidently for an autograph.)
Mr. Effingham Wilson was induced to publish the poem, but more, we understand,
on the ground of
radical sympathies in Mr. Fox and the author
than on that of its intrinsic worth.
The title-page of `Paracelsus' introduces us to one of the warmest friendships
of Mr. Browning's life. Count de Ripert-Monclar was a young French Royalist,
one of those who had accompanied the Duchesse de Berri
on her Chouan
edition" target="_blank" title="n.远征;探险;迅速">
expedition, and was then, for a few years,
spending his summers in England; ostensibly for his pleasure,
really -- as he confessed to the Browning family -- in the
characterof private agent of
communication between the royal exiles
and their friends in France. He was four years older than the poet,
and of
intellectual tastes which created an immediate bond of union
between them. In the course of one of their conversations,
he suggested the life of Paracelsus as a possible subject for a poem;
but on second thoughts
pronounced it unsuitable, because it gave no room
for the
introduction of love: about which, he added,
every young man of their age thought he had something quite new to say.
Mr. Browning
decided, after the necessary study, that he would write a poem
on Paracelsus, but treating him in his own way. It was dedicated,
in
fulfilment of a promise, to the friend to whom its inspiration
had been due.
The Count's visits to England entirely ceased, and the two friends
did not meet for twenty years. Then, one day, in a street in Rome,
Mr. Browning heard a voice behind him crying, `Robert!'
He turned, and there was `Amedee'. Both were, by that time, married;
the Count -- then, I believe, Marquis -- to an English lady, Miss Jerningham.
Mrs. Browning, to whom of course he was introduced, liked him very much.*
--
* A minor result of the
intimacy was that Mr. Browning
became member, in 1835, of the Institut Historique,
and in 1836 of the Societe Francaise de Statistique Universelle,
to both of which
learned bodies his friend belonged.
--
Mr. Browning did treat Paracelsus in his own way; and in so doing
produced a
character -- at all events a history -- which,
according to recent judgments, approached far nearer to the reality
than any
conception which had until then been formed of it.
He had carefully collected all the known facts of the great discoverer's life,
and interpreted them with a
sympathy which was no less
an intuition of their truth than a
reflection of his own
genius upon them.
We are enabled in some
measure to judge of this by a paper entitled
`Paracelsus, the Reformer of Medicine', written by Dr. Edward Berdoe
for the Browning Society, and read at its October meeting in 1888;
and in the difficulty which exists for most of us of verifying
the
historical data of Mr. Browning's poem, it becomes a
valuable guide to,
as well as an interesting
comment upon it.
Dr. Berdoe reminds us that we cannot understand the real Paracelsus
without
reference to the occult sciences so largely
cultivated in his day,
as also to the
mentalatmosphere which produced them;
and he quotes in
illustration a passage from the writings
of that Bishop of Spanheim who was the
instructor of Paracelsus,
and who appears as such in the poem. The passage is a definition
of
divine magic, which is
apparently another term for alchemy;
and lays down the great
doctrine of all mediaeval occultism,
as of all modern theosophy -- of a soul-power
equally operative
in the material and the immaterial, in nature and in the
consciousness of man.
The same clue will guide us, as no other can, through what is
apparentlyconflicting in the aims and methods, anomalous in the moral experience,
of the Paracelsus of the poem. His
feverish pursuit,
among the things of Nature, of an
ultimate of knowledge,
not contained, even in fragments, in her isolated truths;
the sense of
failure which haunts his most
valuable attainments;
his tampering with the lower or diabolic magic, when the
divine has failed;
the ascetic exaltation in which he begins his
career; the sudden awakening
to the
spiritual sterility which has been
consequent on it;
all these find their place, if not always their counterpart, in the real life.
The language of Mr. Browning's Paracelsus, his attitude towards
himself and the world, are not, however, quite consonant
with the alleged facts. They are more
appropriate to an
ardent explorer
of the world of
abstract thought than to a mystical
scientist pursuing
the secret of
existence. He preserves, in all his
mental vicissitudes,
a loftiness of tone and a unity of
intention, difficult to connect,
even in fancy, with the real man, in whom the inherited superstitions
and the prognostics of true science must often have clashed with each other.
Dr. Berdoe's picture of the `Reformer' drawn more directly from history,
conveys this double
impression. Mr. Browning has rendered him more simple
by, as it were, recasting him in the
atmosphere of a more modern time,
and of his own
intellectual life. This poem still,
therefore, belongs
to the same group as `Pauline', though, as an effort of
dramaticcreation,
superior to it.
We find the Poet with still less of
dramatic disguise
in the deathbed
revelation which forms so beautiful a close to the story.
It supplies a fitter
comment to the errors of the
dramatic Paracelsus,
than to those of the
historical, whether or not its utterance
was within the
compass of
historicalprobability, as Dr. Berdoe believes.
In any case it was the direct product of Mr. Browning's mind,
and expressed what was to be his
permanent conviction.
It might then have been an echo of German pantheistic philosophies.
From the point of view of science -- of modern science at least --
it was
prophetic; although the
prophecy of one for whom