in the
forthcoming work, and his son had the
satisfaction of telling him
of its already realized success, while he could still receive
a warm, if
momentary, pleasure from the intelligence.
The circumstances of its appearance place it beyond ordinary
criticism;
they place it beyond even an
impartialanalysis of its contents.
It includes one or two poems to which we would
gladly assign
a much earlier date; I have been told on good authority that we may do this
in regard to one of them. It is difficult to refer the `Epilogue'
to a coherent mood of any period of its author's life.
It is certain, however, that by far the greater part of the little volume
was written in 1888-89, and I believe all that is most serious in it
was the product of the later year. It possesses for many readers
the
inspiration of
farewell words; for all of us it has their pathos.
He was buried in Westminster Abbey, in Poets' Corner,
on the 31st of December, 1889. In this tardy act of national
recognitionEngland claimed her own. A
densely packed, reverent and
sympathetic crowd of
his countrymen and countrywomen assisted at the consignment of the dead poet
to his
historic resting place. Three verses of Mrs. Browning's poem,
`The Sleep', set to music by Dr. Bridge, were sung for the first time
on this occasion.
Conclusion
A few words must still be said upon that
purport and tendency
of Robert Browning's work, which has been defined by a few persons,
and felt by very many as his `message'.
The
definition has been disputed on the ground of Art.
We are told by Mr. Sharp, though in somewhat different words,
that the poet, qua poet, cannot deliver a `message'
such as directly addresses itself to the
intellectual or moral sense;
since his special
appeal to us lies not through the substance,
but through the form, or presentment, of what he has had to say;
since,
therefore (by implication), in claiming for it
an
intellectual -- as
distinct from an aesthetic --
character,
we
ignore its
function as
poetry.
It is difficult to argue
justly, where the question at issue
turns practically on the meaning of a word. Mr. Sharp would, I think,
be the first to admit this; and it appears to me that, in the present case,
he so formulates his theory as to satisfy his
artistic conscience,
and yet leave room for the
recognition of that
intellectual quality
so
peculiar to Mr. Browning's verse. But what one member
of the aesthetic school may express with a certain reserve
is proclaimed unreservedly by many more; and Mr. Sharp must
forgive me,
if for the moment I regard him as one of these; and if I oppose his arguments
in the words of another poet and
critic of
poetry, whose claim
to the double title is I believe undisputed -- Mr. Roden Noel.
I quote from an unpublished
fragment of a published article
on Mr. Sharp's `Life of Browning'.
==
`Browning's message is an integral part of himself as writer;
(whether as poet, since we agree that he is a poet, were surely
a too curious and vain discussion;) but some of his finest things
assuredly are the
outcome of certain very
definite personal convictions.
"The question," Mr. Sharp says, "is not one of weighty message,
but of
artistic presentation." There seems to be no true
contrast here.
"The
primary concern of the artist must be with his
vehicle of expression"
-- no -- not the
primary concern. Since the
critic adds -- (for a poet)
"this
vehicle is language emotioned to the white heat of rhythmic music
by impassioned thought or sensation." Exactly -- "thought" it may be.
Now part of this same "thought" in Browning is the message. And
thereforeit is part of his "
primary concern". "It is with presentment,"
says Mr. Sharp, "that the artist has funda
mentally to concern himself."
Granted: but it must surely be presentment of SOMETHING. . . .
I do not understand how to separate the substance from the form
in true
poetry. . . . If the message be not well delivered,
it does not
constituteliterature. But if it be well delivered,
the
primary concern of the poet lay with the message after all!'
==
More cogent
objection has been taken to the
character of the `message'
as judged from a philosophic point of view. It is the expression
or
exposition of a vivid a priori religious faith
confirmed by
positive experience; and it reflects as such
a double order of thought, in which
totally opposite
mental activities
are often forced into co-operation with each other. Mr. Sharp says,
this time quoting from Mr. Mortimer (`Scottish Art Review', December 1889):
==
`His position in regard to the thought of the age is paradoxical,
if not
inconsistent. He is in advance of it in every respect but one,
the most important of all, the matter of funda
mental principles;
in these he is behind it. His processes of thought are often scientific
in their
precision of
analysis; the sudden conclusion
which he imposes upon them is transcendental and inept.'
==
This statement is
relatively true. Mr. Browning's
positive reasonings
often do end with transcendental conclusions. They also start
from transcendental premises. However closely his mind might follow
the
visible order of experience, he never lost what was for him
the
consciousness" target="_blank" title="n.意识;觉悟;知觉">
consciousness of a Supreme Eternal Will as having existed before it;
he never lost the
vision of an
intelligent First Cause, as underlying
all minor
systems of causation. But such weaknesses as were involved
in his
logical position are
inherent to all the higher forms
of natural
theology when once it has been erected into a dogma.
As maintained by Mr. Browning, this
belief held a saving clause,
which removed it from all dogmatic, hence all admissible
grounds of
controversy: the more
definite or
concrete conceptions
of which it consists possessed no finality for even his own mind;
they represented for him an
absolute truth in contingent relations to it.
No one felt more
strongly than he the contradictions involved
in any
conceivablesystem of Divine
creation and government.
No one knew better that every act and
motive which we attribute
to a Supreme Being is a virtual negation of His existence.
He believed
nevertheless that such a Being exists;
and he accepted His
reflection in the mirror of the human
consciousness" target="_blank" title="n.意识;觉悟;知觉">
consciousness,
as a
necessarily false image, but one which bears
witness to the truth.
His works
rarely indicate this condition of feeling; it was not often
apparent in his conversation. The faith which he had contingently accepted
became
absolute for him from all practical points of view;
it became subject to all the conditions of his humanity.
On the ground of
abstract logic he was always ready to disavow it;
the transcendental
imagination and the acknowledged limits of human reason
claimed the last word in its
behalf. This
philosophy of religion
is
distinctly suggested in the fifth parable of `Ferishtah's Fancies'.
But even in defending what remains, from the most widely accepted
point of view, the validity of Mr. Browning's `message',
we
concede the fact that it is most powerful when conveyed
in its least explicit form; for then alone does it bear,
with the full weight of his
poeticutterance, on the minds
to which it is addressed. His
challenge to Faith and Hope imposes itself
far less through any
intellectual plea which he can advance in its support,
than through the
conscious" target="_blank" title="a.无意识的;不觉察的">
unconscioustestimony of all
creative genius
to the
marvel of
conscious life; through the
passionate affirmation
of his
poetic and human nature, not only of the
goodness and the beauty
of that life, but of its
reality and its persistence.
We are told by Mr. Sharp that a new star appeared in Orion
on the night on which Robert Browning died. The alleged fact is disproved
by the statement of the Astronomer Royal, to whom it has been submitted;
but it would have been a beautiful
symbol of translation,
such as
affectionate fancy might
gladlycherish if it were true.
It is indeed true that on that twelfth of December,
a vivid centre of light and
warmth was extinguished upon our earth.
The clouded
brightness of many lives bears
witness to the poet spirit
which has
departed, the glowing human presence which has passed away.
We mourn the poet whom we have lost far less than we regret the man:
for he had done his appointed work; and that work remains to us.
But the two beings were in truth
inseparable. The man is always
present in the poet; the poet was
dominant in the man.
This fact can never be
absent from our
lovingremembrance of him.
No just
estimate of his life and
character will fail to give it weight.
Index
[The Index is included only as a rough guide to what is in this book.
The numbers in brackets indicate the number of index entries:
as each
reference, short or long, is counted as one,