Sure of the Father, Self, and Love, alone."*3*
--
*1* `Individuality', l. 62.
*2* `Individuality', l. 76.
*3* `Individuality', ll. 89-91.
--
Again, the
province of
poetry is
pointed out, as in `Clover':
"The artist's market is the heart of man;
The artist's price, some little good of man;"*1*
and in `The Bee':
"Wilt ask, `What profit e'er a poet brings?'
He beareth
starry stuff about his wings
To
pollen thee and sting thee fertile."*2*
In `Corn',*3* too, the "tall corn-captain" "types the poet-soul sublime."
--
*1* `Clover', ll. 126-127.
*2* `The Bee', ll. 40-42.
*3* `Corn', l. 52 ff.
--
But it is in his prose works that Lanier has treated the matter
most at length, and to these I turn. In the first place,
he insists that to be an artist one must know a great deal,
a statement that would appear
superfluous but for its
frequent overlooking
by would-be artists. Hence he is right in
warning young writers:
"You need not dream of
winning the attention of sober people with your
poetryunless that
poetry and your soul behind it are informed and saturated
with at least the largest final conceptions of current science."*
That Lanier
strove to follow this
precept, we have
abundant evidence
in his life and in his works; and I think that, if we remember
his environments, we must wonder at the vastness, the accuracy,
and the
variety of his knowledge. As additionally illustrative of the last,
I may add that Lanier invented some improvements for the flute,
and made a discovery in the physics of music that the Professor of Physics
in the University of Virginia thought considerable.**
--
* `Gates', p. 29.
** See `West', p. 23.
--
In the second place, Lanier thinks that a poet's knowledge of his art
should be
scientific. It was this that led him to write
`The Science of English Verse', the motto of which is,
"But the best conceptions cannot be, save where science and
genius are."
In `The English Novel' he declares that "not a single verse
was ever written by
instinct alone since the world began,"*
and fortifies his statement by Ben Jonson's
tribute to Shakespeare, --
"For a good poet's made as well as born,
And such wert thou."
But Lanier clearly saw that no
formal laws and no amount
of
scientific knowledge could alone make a poet, as appears from the motto
above quoted, from the closing chapter of `The Science of English Verse',
which tells us that the educated love of beauty is the artist's only law,
and from this other motto, from Sir Philip Sidney: "A Poet,
no industrie can make, if his owne Genius bee not carried unto it."
--
* `The English Novel', p. 33.
--
In the third place, Lanier holds that a moral
intention on the part
of an artist does not
interfere with the naturalness or intrinsic beauty
of his work; that in art the controlling
consideration is rather moral
than
artistic beauty; but that moral beauty and
artistic beauty,
so far from being
distinct or opposed, are convergent and mutually helpful.
This thesis he upholds in the following
eloquent and cogent passage:
"Permit me to recall to you in the first place that the requirement
has been from time
immemorial that
wherever there is contest
as between
artistic and moral beauty, unless the moral side prevail,
all is lost. Let any
sculptor hew us out the most ravishing combination
of tender curves and spheric
softness that ever stood for woman;
yet if the lip have a certain fulness that hints of the flesh,