Select Search
-----
All Bartleby.com
-----
All Reference
-----
Columbia Encyclopedia
World History Encyclopedia
Cultural Literacy
World Factbook
Columbia Gazetteer
American Heritage Coll.
Dictionary
Roget's Thesauri
Roget's II: Thesaurus
Roget's Int'l Thesaurus
Quotations
Bartlett's Quotations
Columbia Quotations
Simpson's Quotations
Respectfully Quoted
English Usage
Modern Usage
American English
Fowler's King's English
Strunk's Style
Mencken's Language
Cambridge History
The King James Bible
Oxford Shakespeare
Gray's Anatomy
Farmer's Cookbook
Post's Etiquette
Brewer's Phrase & Fable
Bulfinch's Mythology
Frazer's Golden Bough
-----
All Verse
-----
Anthologies
Dickinson, E.
Eliot, T.S.
Frost, R.
Hopkins, G.M.
Keats, J.
Lawrence, D.H.
Masters, E.L.
Sandburg, C.
Sassoon, S.
Whitman, W.
Wordsworth, W.
Yeats, W.B.
-----
All Nonfiction
-----
Harvard Classics
American Essays
Einstein's Relativity
Grant, U.S.
Roosevelt, T.
Wells's History
Presidential Inaugurals
-----
All Fiction
-----
Shelf of Fiction
Ghost Stories
Short Stories
Shaw, G.B.
Stein, G.
Stevenson, R.L.
Wells, H.G.
Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Victorian Age, Part One
>
The Rossettis, William Morris, Swinburne, and Others
>
Poems and Ballads
Atalanta in Calydon
Tristram of Lyonesse
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XIII. The Victorian Age, Part One.
V.
The Rossettis, William Morris, Swinburne, and Others
.
§ 9.
Poems and Ballads
.
The atheism of
Atalanta
might pass unchallenged, so long as it was partly veiled by its antique setting; but
Poems and Ballads
not unnaturally shocked austere critics by its negation of conventional reticence. Not all the beauty of its verse can palliate Swinburnes waywardness in his choice of themes, and his attempt to acclimatize his
fleurs du mal
to English soil in defiance of prudery and philistinism created a prejudice against him in a society which had responded heartily to Tennysons noble celebration of duty and virtue and welcomed the bracing quality of Brownings optimism. The subjects of
Laus Veneris, Anactoria, Faustine
and
The Leper
were sensual obsessions, marring and wasting life: their end, satiety and hopeless weariness of spirit, was the burden of
Dolores, Ilicet
and
The Triumph of Time.
No one could have felt more amusement than Swinburne himself at the plea occasionally made by his defenders that
Dolores
is a moral sermon, because it is full of the pain and bitterness of sensual indulgence. The spirit of
Poems and Ballads
is frankly pagan: the goddess,
hominum divumque voluptas,
to whose cult it is dedicated, is, also, our Lady of Pain: the inevitable escape from the barren pleasures of her worship and the revulsions of feeling which they entail is the end of all, the poppied sleep. There are, naturally, two opinions upon the desirability of asserting such views publicly without suggesting a tonic remedy; but there can be no question as to the beauty of form in which the assertion was clothed. Swinburnes work, as a whole, suffers from the paucity of its contents; his rapid genius was too easily satisfied with returning to the same themes over and over again and reaffirming them with increased emphasis but little variety. But, in metrical skill and in the volume of his highly decorated language, he had no rival among English poets. The first of these qualities he preserved to the end; the second was somewhat affected, as time went on, by the monotony, already noticed, of his favourite subjects, which became unequal to the strain put upon them by their constant changes of elaborate dress. In
Poems and Ballads,
however, as in
Atalanta,
his verse had lost none of its freshness, and his metre and rhythm adapted themselves freely to change of subject. The profuse strains of unpremeditated art of the earlier romantic poets were not his; but the constraint of form was a positive pleasure to him, under which he moved with unequalled freedom. The slow movement of
Laus Veneris,
and the sorrow-laden spondees of
Ilicet,
the impetuous haste with which the lover in
The Triumph of Time
flings away regretfully but unhesitatingly his past happiness with both hands, the forced lightness of
Faustine,
the swift anapaests of
Dolores,
full of reckless glorying in forbidden pleasure, the solemn affirmations and cowed responses of
A Litany,
the bird-notes of
Itylus,
mingling with magic skill the sweetness and sorrow of the nightingales song, the careless innocence of
A Match,
are striking instances of his power of adapting sound to meaning. Characteristic features of all these poems are the use of alliteration and of words which, by community of sound and form, echo and are complementary to one another. The accusation of sound without sense has been brought by unsympathetic critics against poetry in which the charm of sound is remarkable. If Swinburnes wealth of language sometimes obscured his meaning with allusiveness and periphrases, his rhythm is an unfailing guide to the spirit of his words.
22
Poems and Ballads
contained tributes of admiration to Landor and Victor Hugo, while
A Christmas Carol
and
The Masque of Queen Bersabe,
to say nothing of the constant use of imagery and phrase in
Laus Veneris
and other poems, were evidence of close kinship with the medieval romance beloved of Rossetti and his circle. There were signs, also, in this volume of the special enthusiasm which filled Swinburnes next books of verse. The spirit of liberty was aborad upon the winds. In 1867, the poet whose hymns of lust and satiety had dazzled the lovers of poetry with their youthful vigour sang the praise of Mazzini and Garibaldi in
A Song of Italy.
Songs before
Sunrise
in 1871 was a collection of poems written during the final struggle for Italian freedom. To analyse its characteristics would be to repeat what has been said already of
Poems and Ballads.
It includes much of Swinburnes best work, the majestic
Hertha,
the lament for captive Italy in
Super Flumina Babylonis
and the apostrophe to France in
Quia Multum Amavit,
whose strains sway and fluctuate at will between fierce scorn for the oppressor and tenderness for his victims, hope and comfort for Italy in her slavery, compassion for prostituted France. Where Victor Hugos war music had led the way, Swinburnes clarion was bound to follow. It was difficult to enter a field so fully occupied by the author of
Les Chatiments.
and it must be owned that, when the clarion sounded a charge against Napoleon III, it made up for want of originality by an excess of shrillness. Nevertheless, the sonnets written at intervals during this period and collected under the title
Dirae
sound and individual note of abuse and add their quota to the imagery even of such poems as
LÉgout de Rome.
23
After the achievement of Italian hope in 1870 and the fall of Napoleon III, which he hailed with savage delight in 1871, Swinburne had leisure to return to more purely artistic work. In the length and rhetoric of
Bothwell,
sequel to
Chastelard
and precursor of
Mary Stuart,
he followed the example of Hugos
Cromwell.
This play, published in 1874, is a dramatic poem in which he pursued with close attention to historical fact his conception of Marys character, defending her against the sympathisers who, in their anxiety to clear her of knavery, only succeeded in convicting her of senseless folly. Unfitted by its extreme length for the stage,
Bothwell
is yet a work of great dramatic power; its sustained speeches, chief among them the great speech of Knox, are written in music which is susceptible to every change of tone, and tragic terror could go no further than in the scene at Kirk of Field where, before Darnleys murder, Mary is heard singing snatches of
Lord Love went maying,
the lyric sung by Rizzio to the queen and her ladies on the night of his death. As
Bothwell
followed
Chastelard,
so
Erechtheus,
in 1876, followed
Atalanta
with equal eloquence and with a somewhat closer relation to the inner spirit of Greek tragic form than its predecessor. The lyric choruses of
Erechtheus,
while they give less immediate delight than the enchanting music of those in
Atalanta,
have a more constant loftiness and majesty, and no passage of Swinburnes lyric work is more spontaneous and splendid than the apostrophe to Athens, the
fruitful immortal anointed adored
Dear city of men without master or lord,
which is an episode of the opening chorus. Athens is the true heroine of the drama;love of country and hatred of slavery are its inspiring passions.
24
A second series of
Poems and Ballads
showed no falling off in melody, with a more chastened tone than that of the first volume. There is equal ease in Swinburnes handling of the music of enchantment in
A Forsaken Garden
and of the dignified choral harmonies of
Ave atque Vale,
his beautiful tribute to the memory of Baudelaire. In his translations of some of Villons
ballades,
he acknowledged, with his usual generosity, his inferiority to Rossetti in this field: if, in choice of material, he was too often guided by the example of others in whose wake it was dangerous to follow, it was, at any rate, with an admiration totally distinct from a desire to rival them.
Studies in Song
and
Songs of the Springtides,
in 1880, were full of love of the sea, the prevailing passion of his later verse.
By the North Sea,
a lyric symphony in seven movements echoing the rushing of the east wind and the chiming of sun-lit breakers beating upon a crumbling coast, was his highest tribute to the resistless power and eternity of ocean, the sense of which plays an animate part in the later
Tristram of Lyonesse
and
Marino Faliero.
A rather excessive ingenuity obscures the
Song for the Centenary of Walter
Savage Landor
and the
Birthday Ode
to Victor Hugo: allusions to the works of these authors are woven into the substance of both poems with a skill that suggests an acrostic, and the short explanatory key which Swinburne found it necessary to add to them is an indication of his own uneasiness on this head. His own humour was quick to detect possible weaknesses in the fiery enthusiasm of his verse, and in the same year he parodied himself mercilessly and perfectly in the last piece of the anonymous
Heptalogia.
25
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Atalanta in Calydon
Tristram of Lyonesse
Click
here
to shop the
Bartleby Bookstore
.
Welcome
·
Press
·
Advertising
·
Linking
·
Terms of Use
· © 2008
Bartleby.com