CHAPTER V: MR. MORRIS'S POEMS
"Enough," said the pupil of the wise Imlac, "you have convinced me thatno man can be a poet." The study of Mr. William Morris's poems, in thenew collected edition, {5} has convinced me that no man, or, at least, nomiddle-aged man, can be a critic. I read Mr. Morris's poems (thanks tothe knightly honours conferred on the Bard of Penrhyn, there is now noambiguity as to 'Mr. Morris'), but it is not the book only that I read.The scroll of my youth is unfolded. I see the dear place where first Iperused "The Blue Closet"; the old faces of old friends flock around me;old chaff, old laughter, old happiness re-echo and revive. St. Andrews,Oxford, come before the mind's eye, with
"Many a place That's in sad case Where joy was wont afore, oh!"
as Minstrel Burne sings. These voices, faces, landscapes mingle with themusic and blur the pictures of the poet who enchanted for us certainhours passed in the paradise of youth. A reviewer who finds himself inthis case may as well frankly confess that he can no more criticise Mr.Morris dispassionately than he could criticise his old self and thefriends whom he shall never see again, till he meets them
"Beyond the sphere of time, And sin, and grief's control, Serene in changeless prime Of body and of soul."
To write of one's own "adventures among books" may be to provideanecdotage more or less trivial, more or less futile, but, at least, itis to write historically. We know how books have affected, and do affectourselves, our bundle of prejudices and tastes, of old impressions andrevived sensations. To judge books dispassionately and impersonally, ismuch more difficult--indeed, it is practically impossible, for our owntastes and experiences must, more or less, modify our verdicts, do whatwe will. However, the effort must be made, for to say that, at a certainage, in certain circumstances, an individual took much pleasure in "TheLife and Death of Jason," the present of a college friend, is certainlynot to criticise "The Life and Death of Jason."
There have been three blossoming times in the English poetry of thenineteenth century. The first dates from Wordsworth, Coleridge, Scott,and, later, from Shelley, Byron, Keats. By 1822 the blossoming time wasover, and the second blossoming time began in 1830-1833, with young Mr.Tennyson and Mr. Browning. It broke forth again, in 1842 and did notpractically cease till England's greatest laureate sang of the "Crossingof the Bar." But while Tennyson put out his full strength in 1842, andMr. Browning rather later, in "Bells and Pomegranates" ("Men and Women"),the third spring came in 1858, with Mr. Morris's "Defence of Guenevere,"and flowered till Mr. Swinburne's "Atalanta in Calydon" appeared in 1865,followed by his poems of 1866. Mr. Rossetti's book of 1870 belonged, indate of composition, mainly to this period.
In 1858, when "The Defence of Guenevere" came out, Mr. Morris must havebeen but a year or two from his undergraduateship. Every one has heardenough about his companions, Mr. Burne Jones, Mr. Rossetti, Canon Dixon,and the others of the old _Oxford and Cambridge Magazine_, where Mr.Morris's wonderful prose fantasies are buried. Why should they not berevived, these strangely coloured and magical dreams? As literature, Iprefer them vastly above Mr. Morris's later romances in prose--"TheHollow Land" above "News from Nowhere!" Mr. Morris and his friends wereactive in the fresh dawn of a new romanticism, a mediaeval and Catholicrevival, with very little Catholicism in it for the most part. Thisrevival is more "innerly," as the Scotch say, more intimate, more"earnest" than the larger and more genial, if more superficial,restoration by Scott. The painful doubt, the scepticism of the Ages ofFaith, the dark hours of that epoch, its fantasy, cruelty, luxury, noless than its colour and passion, inform Mr. Morris's first poems. Thefourteenth and the early fifteenth century is his "period." In "TheDefence of Guenevere" he is not under the influence of Chaucer, whosenarrative manner, without one grain of his humour, inspires "The Life andDeath of Jason" and "The Earthly Paradise." In the early book the ruggedstyle of Mr. Browning has left a mark. There are cockney rhymes, too,such as "short" rhyming to "thought." But, on the whole, Mr. Morris'searly manner was all his own, nor has he ever returned to it. In thefirst poem, "The Queen's Apology," is this passage:--
"Listen: suppose your time were come to die, And you were quite alone and very weak; Yea, laid a-dying, while very mightily
"The wind was ruffling up the narrow streak Of river through your broad lands running well: Suppose a hush should come, then some one speak:
"'One of these cloths is heaven, and one is hell, Now choose one cloth for ever, which they be, I will not tell you, you must somehow tell
"'Of your own strength and mightiness; here, see!' Yea, yea, my lord, and you to ope your eyes, At foot of your familiar bed to see
"A great God's angel standing, with such dyes, Not known on earth, on his great wings, and hands, Held out two ways, light from the inner skies
"Showing him well, and making his commands Seem to be God's commands, moreover, too, Holding within his hands the cloths on wands;
"And one of these strange choosing-cloths was blue, Wavy and long, and one cut short and red; No man could tell the better of the two.
"After a shivering half-hour you said, 'God help! heaven's colour, the blue;' and he said, 'Hell.' Perhaps you then would roll upon your bed,
"And cry to all good men that loved you well, 'Ah, Christ! if only I had known, known, known.'"
There was nothing like that before in English poetry; it has the_bizarrerie_ of a new thing in beauty. How far it is really beautifulhow can I tell? How can I discount the "personal bias"? Only I knowthat it is unforgettable. Again (Galahad speaks):--
"I saw One sitting on the altar as a throne, Whose face no man could say he did not know, And, though the bell still rang, he sat alone, With raiment half blood-red, half white as snow."
Such things made their own special ineffaceable impact.
Leaving the Arthurian cycle, Mr. Morris entered on his especiallysympathetic period--the gloom and sad sunset glory of the late fourteenthcentury, the age of Froissart and wicked, wasteful wars. To Froissart itall seemed one magnificent pageant of knightly and kingly fortunes; heonly murmurs a "great pity" for the death of a knight or the massacre ofa town. It is rather the pity of it that Mr. Morris sees: the heartsbroken in a corner, as in "Sir Peter Harpedon's End," or beside "TheHaystack in the Floods." Here is a picture like life of what befell ahundred times. Lady Alice de la Barde hears of the death of her knight:--
"ALICE
"Can you talk faster, sir? Get over all this quicker? fix your eyes On mine, I pray you, and whate'er you see Still go on talking fast, unless I fall, Or bid you stop.
"SQUIRE
"I pray your pardon then, And looking in your eyes, fair lady, say I am unhappy that your knight is dead. Take heart, and listen! let me tell you all. We were five thousand goodly men-at-arms, And scant five hundred had he in that hold; His rotten sandstone walls were wet with rain, And fell in lumps wherever a stone hit; Yet for three days about the barriers there The deadly glaives were gather'd, laid across, And push'd and pull'd; the fourth our engines came; But still amid the crash of falling walls, And roar of bombards, rattle of hard bolts, The steady bow-strings flash'd, and still stream'd out St. George's banner, and the seven swords, And still they cried, 'St. George Guienne,' until Their walls were flat as Jericho's of old, And our rush came, and cut them from the keep."
The astonishing vividness, again, of the tragedy told in "Geffray TesteNoire" is like that of a vision in a magic mirror or a crystal ball,rather than like a picture suggested by printed words. "Shameful Death"has the same enchanted kind of presentment. We look through a "magiccasement opening on the foam" of the old waves of war. Poems of a purefantasy, unequalled out of Coleridge and Poe, are "The Wind" and "TheBlue Closet." Each only lives in fantasy. Motives, and facts, and"story" are unimportant and out of view. The pictures arise distinct,unsummoned, spont
aneous, like the faces and places which are flashed onour eyes between sleeping and waking. Fantastic, too, but with more of arecognisable human setting, is "Golden Wings," which to a slight degreereminds one of Theophile Gautier's _Chateau de Souvenir_.
"The apples now grow green and sour Upon the mouldering castle wall, Before they ripen there they fall: There are no banners on the tower,
The draggled swans most eagerly eat The green weeds trailing in the moat; Inside the rotting leaky boat You see a slain man's stiffen'd feet."
These, with "The Sailing of the Sword," are my own old favourites. Therewas nothing like them before, nor will be again, for Mr. Morris, afterseveral years of silence, abandoned his early manner. No doubt it wasnot a manner to persevere in, but happily, in a mood and a moment neverto be re-born or return, Mr. Morris did fill a fresh page in Englishpoetry with these imperishable fantasies. They were absolutely neglectedby "the reading public," but they found a few staunch friends. Indeed, Ithink of "Guenevere" as FitzGerald did of Tennyson's poems before 1842.But this, of course, is a purely personal, probably a purely capricious,estimate. Criticism may aver that the influence of Mr. Rossetti wasstrong on Mr. Morris before 1858. Perhaps so, but we read Mr. Morrisfirst (as the world read the "Lay" before "Christabel"), and my ownpreference is for Mr. Morris.
It was after eight or nine years of silence that Mr. Morris produced, in1866 or 1867, "The Life and Death of Jason." Young men who had read"Guenevere" hastened to purchase it, and, of course, found themselves incontact with something very unlike their old favourite. Mr. Morris hadtold a classical tale in decasyllabic couplets of the Chaucerian sort,and he regarded the heroic age from a mediaeval point of view; at allevents, not from an historical and archaeological point of view. It wasnatural in Mr. Morris to "envisage" the Greek heroic age in this way, butit would not be natural in most other writers. The poem is not muchshorter than the "Odyssey," and long narrative poems had been out offashion since "The Lord of the Isles" (1814).
All this was a little disconcerting. We read "Jason," and read it withpleasure, but without much of the more essential pleasure which comesfrom magic and distinction of style. The peculiar qualities of Keats,and Tennyson, and Virgil are not among the gifts of Mr. Morris. Aspeople say of Scott in his long poems, so it may be said of Mr.Morris--that he does not furnish many quotations, does not glitter in"jewels five words long."
In "Jason" he entered on his long career as a narrator; a poet retellingthe immortal primeval stories of the human race. In one guise or anotherthe legend of Jason is the most widely distributed of romances; the NorthAmerican Indians have it, and the Samoans and the Samoyeds, as well asall Indo-European peoples. This tale, told briefly by Pindar, and atgreater length by Apollonius Rhodius, and in the "Orphica," Mr. Morristook up and handled in a single and objective way. His art was alwayspictorial, but, in "Jason" and later, he described more, and was lessapt, as it were, to flash a picture on the reader, in some incommunicableway.
In the covers of the first edition were announcements of the "EarthlyParadise": that vast collection of the world's old tales retold. Onemight almost conjecture that "Jason" had originally been intended for apart of the "Earthly Paradise," and had outgrown its limits. The tone ismuch the same, though the "criticism of life" is less formally andexplicitly stated.
For Mr. Morris came at last to a "criticism of life." It would not havesatisfied Mr. Matthew Arnold, and it did not satisfy Mr. Morris! Theburden of these long narrative poems is _vanitas vanitatum_: thefleeting, perishable, unsatisfying nature of human existence, the dream"rounded by a sleep." The lesson drawn is to make life as full and asbeautiful as may be, by love, and adventure, and art. The hideousness ofmodern industrialism was oppressing to Mr. Morris; that hideousness hewas doing his best to relieve and redeem, by poetry, and by all the manyarts and crafts in which he was a master. His narrative poems are,indeed, part of his industry in this field. He was not born to slaymonsters, he says, "the idle singer of an empty day." Later, he setabout slaying monsters, like Jason, or unlike Jason, scattering dragon'steeth to raise forces which he could not lay, and could not direct.
I shall go no further into politics or agitation, and I say this muchonly to prove that Mr. Morris's "criticism of life," and prolonged,wistful dwelling on the thought of death, ceased to satisfy himself. Hisown later part, as a poet and an ally of Socialism, proved this to betrue. It seems to follow that the peculiarly level, lifeless, decorativeeffect of his narratives, which remind us rather of glorious tapestriesthan of pictures, was no longer wholly satisfactory to himself. There isplenty of charmed and delightful reading--"Jason" and the "EarthlyParadise" are literature for The Castle of Indolence, but we do miss astrenuous rendering of action and passion. These Mr. Morris had renderedin "The Defence of Guinevere": now he gave us something different,something beautiful, but something deficient in dramatic vigour.Apollonius Rhodius is, no doubt, much of a pedant, a literary writer ofepic, in an age of Criticism. He dealt with the tale of "Jason," andconceivably he may have borrowed from older minstrels. But the Medea ofApollonius Rhodius, in her love, her tenderness, her regret for home, inall her maiden words and ways, is undeniably a character more living,more human, more passionate, and more sympathetic, than the Medea of Mr.Morris. I could almost wish that he had closely followed that classicaloriginal, the first true love story in literature. In the same way Iprefer Apollonius's spell for soothing the dragon, as much terser andmore somniferous than the spell put by Mr. Morris into the lips of Medea.Scholars will find it pleasant to compare these passages of theAlexandrine and of the London poets. As a brick out of the vast palaceof "Jason" we may select the song of the Nereid to Hylas--Mr. Morris isalways happy with his Nymphs and Nereids:--
"I know a little garden-close Set thick with lily and with rose, Where I would wander if I might From dewy dawn to dewy night, And have one with me wandering. And though within it no birds sing, And though no pillared house is there, And though the apple boughs are bare Of fruit and blossom, would to God, Her feet upon the green grass trod, And I beheld them as before. There comes a murmur from the shore, And in the place two fair streams are, Drawn from the purple hills afar, Drawn down unto the restless sea; The hills whose flowers ne'er fed the bee, The shore no ship has ever seen, Still beaten by the billows green, Whose murmur comes unceasingly Unto the place for which I cry. For which I cry both day and night, For which I let slip all delight, That maketh me both deaf and blind, Careless to win, unskilled to find, And quick to lose what all men seek. Yet tottering as I am, and weak, Still have I left a little breath To seek within the jaws of death An entrance to that happy place, To seek the unforgotten face Once seen, once kissed, once rest from me Anigh the murmuring of the sea."
"Jason" is, practically, a very long tale from the "Earthly Paradise," asthe "Earthly Paradise" is an immense treasure of shorter tales in themanner of "Jason." Mr. Morris reverted for an hour to his fourteenthcentury, a period when London was "clean." This is a poetic license;many a plague found mediaeval London abominably dirty! A Celt himself,no doubt, with the Celt's proverbial way of being _impossibiliumcupitor_, Mr. Morris was in full sympathy with his Breton Squire, who, inthe reign of Edward III., sets forth to seek the Earthly Paradise, andthe land where Death never comes. Much more dramatic, I venture tothink, than any passage of "Jason," is that where the dreamy seekers ofdreamland, Breton and Northman, encounter the stout King Edward III.,whose kingdom is of this world. Action and fantasy are met, and thewanderers explain the nature of their quest. One of them speaks of deathin many a form, and of the flight from death:--
"His words nigh made me weep, but while he spoke I noted how a mocking smile just broke The thin line of the Prince's lips, and he Who carried the afore-named armoury Puffed out his wind-beat cheeks and whistled low: But the King smiled, and said, 'Can it be so? I know not, and ye
twain are such as find The things whereto old kings must needs be blind. For you the world is wide--but not for me, Who once had dreams of one great victory Wherein that world lay vanquished by my throne, And now, the victor in so many an one, Find that in Asia Alexander died And will not live again; the world is wide For you I say,--for me a narrow space Betwixt the four walls of a fighting place. Poor man, why should I stay thee? live thy fill Of that fair life, wherein thou seest no ill But fear of that fair rest I hope to win One day, when I have purged me of my sin. Farewell, it yet may hap that I a king Shall be remembered but by this one thing, That on the morn before ye crossed the sea Ye gave and took in common talk with me; But with this ring keep memory with the morn, O Breton, and thou Northman, by this horn Remember me, who am of Odin's blood.'"
All this encounter is a passage of high invention. The adventures inAnahuac are such as Bishop Erie may have achieved when he set out to findVinland the Good, and came back no more, whether he was or was notremembered by the Aztecs as Quetzalcoatl. The tale of the wanderers wasMr. Morris's own; all the rest are of the dateless heritage of our race,fairy tales coming to us, now "softly breathed through the flutes of theGrecians," now told by Sagamen of Iceland. The whole performance isastonishingly equable; we move on a high tableland, where no tall peaksof Parnassus are to be climbed. Once more literature has a narrator, onthe whole much more akin to Spenser than to Chaucer, Homer, or SirWalter. Humour and action are not so prominent as contemplation of apageant reflected in a fairy mirror. But Mr. Morris has said himself,about his poem, what I am trying to say:--
"Death have we hated, knowing not what it meant; Life have we loved, through green leaf and through sere, Though still the less we knew of its intent; The Earth and Heaven through countless year on year, Slow changing, were to us but curtains fair, Hung round about a little room, where play Weeping and laughter of man's empty day."
Mr. Morris had shown, in various ways, the strength of his sympathy withthe heroic sagas of Iceland. He had rendered one into verse, in "TheEarthly Paradise," above all, "Grettir the Strong" and "The Volsunga" hehad done into English prose. His next great poem was "The Story ofSigurd," a poetic rendering of the theme which is, to the North, what theTale of Troy is to Greece, and to all the world. Mr. Morris took theform of the story which is most archaic, and bears most birthmarks of itssavage origin--the version of the "Volsunga," not the German shape of the"Nibelungenlied." He showed extraordinary skill, especially in makinghuman and intelligible the story of Regin, Otter, Fafnir, and the DwarfAndvari's Hoard.
"It was Reidmar the Ancient begat me; and now was he waxen old, And a covetous man and a king; and he bade, and I built him a hall, And a golden glorious house; and thereto his sons did he call, And he bade them be evil and wise, that his will through them might be wrought. Then he gave unto Fafnir my brother the soul that feareth nought, And the brow of the hardened iron, and the hand that may never fail, And the greedy heart of a king, and the ear that hears no wail.
"But next unto Otter my brother he gave the snare and the net, And the longing to wend through the wild-wood, and wade the highways wet; And the foot that never resteth, while aught be left alive That hath cunning to match man's cunning or might with his might to strive.
"And to me, the least and the youngest, what gift for the slaying of ease? Save the grief that remembers the past, and the fear that the future sees; And the hammer and fashioning-iron, and the living coal of fire; And the craft that createth a semblance, and fails of the heart's desire; And the toil that each dawning quickens, and the task that is never done; And the heart that longeth ever, nor will look to the deed that is won.
"Thus gave my father the gifts that might never be taken again; Far worse were we now than the Gods, and but little better than men. But yet of our ancient might one thing had we left us still: We had craft to change our semblance, and could shift us at our will Into bodies of the beast-kind, or fowl, or fishes cold; For belike no fixed semblance we had in the days of old, Till the Gods were waxen busy, and all things their form must take That knew of good and evil, and longed to gather and make."
But when we turn to the passage of the _eclaircissement_ between Sigurdand Brynhild, that most dramatic and most _modern_ moment in the ancienttragedy, the moment where the clouds of savage fancy scatter in the lightof a hopeless human love, then, I must confess, I prefer the simple,brief prose of Mr. Morris's translation of the "Volsunga" to his ratherperiphrastic paraphrase. Every student of poetry may make the comparisonfor himself, and decide for himself whether the old or the new is better.Again, in the final fight and massacre in the hall of Atli, I cannot butprefer the Slaying of the Wooers, at the close of the "Odyssey," or thelast fight of Roland at Roncesvaux, or the prose version of the"Volsunga." All these are the work of men who were war-smiths as well assong-smiths. Here is a passage from the "murder grim and great":--
"So he saith in the midst of the foemen with his war-flame reared on high, But all about and around him goes up a bitter cry From the iron men of Atli, and the bickering of the steel Sends a roar up to the roof-ridge, and the Niblung war-ranks reel Behind the steadfast Gunnar: but lo, have ye seen the corn, While yet men grind the sickle, by the wind streak overborne When the sudden rain sweeps downward, and summer groweth black, And the smitten wood-side roareth 'neath the driving thunder-wrack? So before the wise-heart Hogni shrank the champions of the East As his great voice shook the timbers in the hall of Atli's feast, There he smote and beheld not the smitten, and by nought were his edges stopped; He smote and the dead were thrust from him; a hand with its shield he lopped; There met him Atli's marshal, and his arm at the shoulder he shred; Three swords were upreared against him of the best of the kin of the dead; And he struck off a head to the rightward, and his sword through a throat he thrust, But the third stroke fell on his helm-crest, and he stooped to the ruddy dust, And uprose as the ancient Giant, and both his hands were wet: Red then was the world to his eyen, as his hand to the labour he set; Swords shook and fell in his pathway, huge bodies leapt and fell; Harsh grided shield and war-helm like the tempest-smitten bell, And the war-cries ran together, and no man his brother knew, And the dead men loaded the living, as he went the war-wood through; And man 'gainst man was huddled, till no sword rose to smite, And clear stood the glorious Hogni in an island of the fight, And there ran a river of death 'twixt the Niblung and his foes, And therefrom the terror of men and the wrath of the Gods arose."
I admit that this does not affect me as does the figure of Odysseusraining his darts of doom, or the courtesy of Roland when the blindedOliver smites him by mischance, and, indeed, the Keeping of the Stair byUmslopogaas appeals to me more vigorously as a strenuous picture of war.To be just to Mr. Morris, let us give his rendering of part of theSlaying of the Wooers, from his translation of the "Odyssey":--
"And e'en as the word he uttered, he drew his keen sword out Brazen, on each side shearing, and with a fearful shout Rushed on him; but Odysseus that very while let fly And smote him with the arrow in the breast, the pap hard by, And drove the swift shaft to the liver, and adown to the ground fell the sword From out of his hand, and doubled he hung above the board, And staggered; and whirling he fell, and the meat was scattered around, And the double cup moreover, and his forehead smote the ground; And his heart was wrung with torment, and with both feet spurning he smote The high-seat; and over his eyen did the cloud of darkness float.
"And then it was Amphinomus, who drew his whetted sword And fell on, making his onrush 'gainst Odysseus the glorious lord, If perchance he might get him out-doors: but Telemachus him forewent, And a cast of the brazen war-spear from behind him therewith sent Amidmost of his shoulders, that drave through his breast and out, And clattering he fell, and the earth all the breadth of his f
orehead smote."
There is no need to say more of Mr. Morris's "Odysseus." Close to theletter of the Greek he usually keeps, but where are the surge and thunderof Homer? Apparently we must accent the penultimate in "Amphinomus" ifthe line is to scan. I select a passage of peaceful beauty from BookV.:--
"But all about that cavern there grew a blossoming wood, Of alder and of poplar and of cypress savouring good; And fowl therein wing-spreading were wont to roost and be, For owls were there and falcons, and long-tongued crows of the sea, And deeds of the sea they deal with and thereof they have a care But round the hollow cavern there spread and flourished fair A vine of garden breeding, and in its grapes was glad; And four wells of the white water their heads together had, And flowing on in order four ways they thence did get; And soft were the meadows blooming with parsley and violet. Yea, if thither indeed had come e'en one of the Deathless, e'en he Had wondered and gladdened his heart with all that was there to see. And there in sooth stood wondering the Flitter, the Argus-bane. But when o'er all these matters in his soul he had marvelled amain, Then into the wide cave went he, and Calypso, Godhead's Grace, Failed nowise there to know him as she looked upon his face; For never unknown to each other are the Deathless Gods, though they Apart from one another may be dwelling far away. But Odysseus the mighty-hearted within he met not there, Who on the beach sat weeping, as oft he was wont to wear His soul with grief and groaning, and weeping; yea, and he As the tears he was pouring downward yet gazed o'er the untilled sea."
This is close enough to the Greek, but
"_And flowing on in order four ways they thence did get_"
is not precisely musical. Why is Hermes "The Flitter"? But I have oftenventured to remonstrate against these archaistic peculiarities, which tosome extent mar our pleasure in Mr. Morris's translations. In hisversion of the rich Virgilian measure they are especially out of place.The "AEneid" is rendered with a roughness which might better befit atranslation of Ennius. Thus the reader of Mr. Morris's poeticaltranslations has in his hands versions of almost literal closeness, and(what is extremely rare) versions of poetry by a poet. But hisacquaintance with Early English and Icelandic has added to the poet astrain of the philologist, and his English in the "Odyssey," still morein the "AEneid," is occasionally more _archaic_ than the Greek of 900B.C. So at least it seems to a reader not unversed in attempts to fitthe classical poets with an English rendering. But the true test is inthe appreciation of the lovers of poetry in general.
To them, as to all who desire the restoration of beauty in modern life,Mr. Morris has been a benefactor almost without example. Indeed, wereadequate knowledge mine, Mr. Morris's poetry should have been criticisedas only a part of the vast industry of his life in many crafts and manyarts. His place in English life and literature is unique as it ishonourable. He did what he desired to do--he made vast additions tosimple and stainless pleasures.