Volume Ii Part 1 (1/2)
The Poetical Works of John Dryden.
Vol II.
by John Dryden.
CRITICAL ESTIMATE
OF THE
GENIUS AND POETICAL WORKS OF JOHN DRYDEN.
In our Life of Dryden we promised to say something about the question, how far is a poet, particularly in the moral tendency and taste of his writings, to be tried--and either condemned or justified--by the character and spirit of his age? To a rapid consideration of this question we now proceed, before examining the const.i.tuent elements or the varied fruits of the poet's genius.
And here, unquestionably, there are extremes, which every critic should avoid. Some imagine that a writer of a former century should be tried, either by the standard which prevails in the cultured and civilised nineteenth, or by the exposition of moral principles and practice which is to be found in the Scriptures. Now, it is obviously, so far as taste is concerned, as unjust to judge a book written in the style and manner of one age by the merely arbitrary and conventional rules established in another, as to judge the dress of our ancestors by the fas.h.i.+ons of the present day. And in respect of morality, it is as unfair to visit with the same measure of condemnation offences against decorum or decency, committed by writers living before or living after the promulgation of the Christian code, as it would be to cla.s.s the Satyrs, Priapi, and Bacchantes of an antique sculptor, with their imitations, by inferior and coa.r.s.er artists, in later times. There must be a certain measure of allowance made for the errors of Genius when it was working as the galley-slave of its tradition and period, and when it had not yet received the Divine Light which, s.h.i.+ning into the world from above, has supplied men with higher aesthetic as well as spiritual models of principles, and revealed man's body to be the temple of the Holy Ghost.
To look for our modern philanthropy in that ”Greek Gazette,” the Iliad of Homer--to expect that reverence for the Supreme Being which the Bible has taught us in the Metamorphoses of Ovid--or to seek that refinement of manners and language which has only of late prevailed amongst us, in the plays of Aristophanes and Plautus--were very foolish and very vain.
In ages not so ancient, and which have revolved since the dawn of Christianity, a certain coa.r.s.eness of thought and language has been prevalent; and for it still larger allowance should be made, because it has been applied to simplicity rather than to sensuality--to rustic barbarism, not to civilised corruption--and carries along with it a rough raciness, and a reference to the st.u.r.dy aboriginal beast--just as acorns in the trough suggest the immemorial forests where they grew, and the rich greenswards on which they fell.
In two cases, it thus appears, should the severest censor be prepared to modify his condemnation of the bad taste or the impurity to be found in writers of genius--first, in that of a civilization, perfect in its kind, but dest.i.tute of the refining and sublimating element which a revelation only can supply; and, secondly, in that of those ages in which the lights of knowledge and religion are contending with the gloom of barbarian rudeness. Perhaps there are still two other cases capable of palliation--that of a mind so const.i.tuted as to be nothing, if not a mirror of its age, and faithfully and irresistibly reflecting even its vices and pollutions; or that of a mind morbidly in love with the morbidities and the vile pa.s.sages of human nature. But suppose the case of a writer, sitting under the full blaze of Gospel truth, professedly a believer in the Gospel, and intimately acquainted with its oracles, living in a late and dissipated, not a rude and simple age--possessed of varied and splendid talents, which qualified him to make as well as to mirror, and with a taste naturally sound and manly, who should yet seek to shock the feelings of the pious, to gratify the low tendencies, and fire to frenzy the evil pa.s.sions of his period--he is not to be s.h.i.+elded by the apology that he has only conformed to the bad age on which he was so unfortunate as to fall. Prejudice may, indeed, put in such a plea in his defence; but the inevitable eye of common sense, distinguis.h.i.+ng between necessity and choice, between coa.r.s.eness and corruption, between a man's pa.s.sively yielding to and actively inviting and encouraging the currents of false taste and immorality which he must encounter, will find that plea nugatory, and bring in against the author a verdict of guilty.
Now this, we fear, is exactly the case of Dryden. He was neither a ”barbarian” nor a ”Scythian.” He was a conscious artist, not a high though helpless reflector of his age. He had not, we think, like his relative, Swift, originally any diseased delight in filth for its own sake; was not--shall we say?--a natural, but an artificial _Yahoo_. He wielded a power over the public mind, approaching the absolute, and which he could have turned to virtuous, instead of vicious account--at first, it might have been amidst considerable resistance and obloquy, but ultimately with triumphant success. This, however, he never attempted, and must therefore be cla.s.sed, in this respect, with such writers as Byron, whose powers gilded their pollutions, less than their pollutions degraded and defiled their powers; nay, perhaps he should be ranked even lower than the n.o.ble bard, whose obscenities are not so gross, and who had, besides, to account for them the double palliations of pa.s.sion and of despair.
In these remarks we refer princ.i.p.ally to Dryden's plays; for his poems, as we remarked in the Life, are (with the exception of a few of the Prologues, which we print under protest) in a great measure free from impurity. We pa.s.s gladly to consider him in his genius and his poetical works. The most obvious, and among the most remarkable characteristics of his poetic style, are its wondrous elasticity and ease of movement.
There is never for an instant any real or apparent effort, any straining for effect, any of that ”double, double, toil and trouble,” by which many even of the weird cauldrons in which Genius forms her creations are disturbed and bedimmed. That power of doing everything with perfect and _conscious_ ease, which Dugald Stewart has ascribed to Barrow and to Horsley in prose, distinguished Dryden in poetry. Whether he discusses the deep questions of fate and foreknowledge in ”Religio Laici,” or lashes Shaftesbury in the ”Medal,” or pours a torrent of contempt on Shadwell in ”MacFlecknoe,” or describes the fire of London in the ”Annus Mirabilis,” or soars into lyric enthusiasm in his ”Ode on the Death of Mrs Killigrew,” and ”Alexander's Feast,” or paints a tournament in ”Palamon and Arcite,” or a fairy dance in the ”Flower and the Leaf,”--he is always at home, and always aware that he is. His consciousness of his own powers amounts to exultation. He is like the steed who glories in that tremendous gallop which affects the spectator with fear. Indeed, we never can separate our conception of Dryden's vigorous and vaulting style from the image of a n.o.ble horse, devouring the dust of the field, clearing obstacles at a bound, taking up long leagues as a little thing, and the very strength and speed of whose motion give it at a distance the appearance of smoothness. Pope speaks of his
”Long resounding march, and energy divine.”
Perhaps ”_ease_ divine” had been words more characteristic of that almost superhuman power of language by which he makes the most obstinate materials pliant, melts down difficulties as if by the touch of magic, and, to resume the former figure, comes into the goal without a hair turned on his mane, or a single sweat-drop confessing effort or extraordinary exertion. We know no poet since Homer who can be compared to Dryden in this respect, except Scott, who occasionally, in ”Marmion,”
and the ”Lay of the Last Minstrel,” exhibits the same impetuous ease and fiery fluent movement. Scott does not, however, in general, carry the same weight as the other; and the species of verse he uses, in comparison to the heroic rhyme of Dryden, gives you often the impression of a hard trot, rather than of a ”long-resounding” and magnificent gallop. Scott exhibits in his poetry the soul of a warrior; but it is of a warrior of the Border--somewhat savage and coa.r.s.e. Dryden can, for the nonce at least, a.s.sume the appearance, and display the spirit, of a knight of ancient chivalry--gallant, accomplished, elegant, and gay.
Next to this poet's astonis.h.i.+ng ease, spirit, and elastic vigour, may be ranked his clear, sharp intellect. He may be called more a logician than a poet. He reasons often, and always acutely, and his rhyme, instead of shackling, strengthens the movement of his argumentation. Parts of his ”Religio Laici” and the ”Hind and Panther” resemble portions of Duns Scotus or Aquinas set on fire. Indeed, keen, strong intellect, inflamed with pa.s.sion, and inspirited by that ”ardour and impetuosity of mind”
which Wordsworth is compelled to allow to him, rather than creative or original genius, is the differentia of Dryden. We have compared him to a courser, but he was not one of those coursers of Achilles, who fed on no earthly food, but on the golden barley of heaven, having sprung from the G.o.ds--
[Greek: Xanthon kai Balion, to ama pnoiaesi, petesthaen.
Tous eteke Zephuro anemo Arpua Podargae.]
Dryden resembled rather the mortal steed which was yoked with these immortal twain, the brood of Zephyr and the Harpy Podarga; only we can hardly say of the poet what Homer says of Pedasus--
[Greek: Os kai thnaetos eon, epeth ippois athanatoisi.]
He was _not_, although a mortal, able to keep up with the immortal coursers. His path was on the plains or table-lands of earth--never or seldom in ”cloudland, gorgeous land,” or through the aerial alt.i.tudes which stretch away and above the clouds to the gates of heaven. He can hardly be said to have possessed the power of sublimity, in the high sense of that term, as the power of sympathising with the feeling of the Infinite. Often he gives us the impression of the picturesque, of the beautiful, of the heroic, of the n.o.bly disdainful--but never (when writing, at least, entirely from his own mind) of that infinite and nameless grandeur which the imaginative soul feels shed on it from the mult.i.tudinous waves of ocean--from the cataract leaping from his rock, as if to consummate an act of prayer to G.o.d--from the hum of great a.s.semblies of men--from the sight of far-extended wastes and wildernesses--and from the awful silence, and the still more mysterious sparkle of the midnight stars. This sense of the presence of the _shadow_ of immensity--immensity itself cannot be felt any more than measured--this sight like that vouchsafed to Moses of the ”backparts” of the Divine--the Divine itself cannot be seen--has been the inspiration of all the highest poetry of the world--of the ”Paradise Lost,” of the ”Divina Commedia,” of the ”Night Thoughts,” of Wordsworth and Coleridge, of ”Festus,” and, highest far, of the Hebrew Prophets, as they cry, ”Whither can we go from Thy presence? whither can we flee from Thy Spirit?” Such poets have resembled a blind man, who feels, although he cannot see, that a stranger of commanding air is in the room beside him; so they stand awe-struck in the ”wind of the going” of a majestic and unseen Being. This feeling differs from mysticism, inasmuch as it is connected with a reality, while the mystic dreams a vague and unsupported dream, and the poetry it produces is simply the irresistible cry springing from the perception of this wondrous Some One who is actually near them. The feeling is connected, in general, with a lofty moral and religious nature; and yet not always, since, while wanting in Dryden, we find it intensely discovered, although in an imperfect and perverted shape, in Byron and Rousseau.
In Dryden certainly it exists not. We do not--and in this we have Jeffrey's opinion to back us--remember a single line in his poetry that can be called sublime, or, which is the same thing, that gives us a thrilling shudder, as if a G.o.d or a ghost were pa.s.sing by. Pleasure, high excitement,--rapture even, he often produces; but such a feeling as is created by that line of Milton,
”To bellow through the vast and boundless deep,”
never. Compare, in proof of this, the description of the tournament in ”Palamon and Arcite”--amazingly spirited as it is--to the description of the war-horse in Job; or, if that appear too high a test, to the contest of Achilles with the rivers in Homer; to the war of the Angels, and the interrupted preparations for contest between Gabriel and Satan in Milton; to the contest between Apollyon and Christian in the ”Pilgrim's Progress;” to some of the combats in Spenser; and to that wonderful one of the Princess and the Magician in midair in the ”Arabian Nights,” in order to understand the distinction between the most animated literal pictures of battle and those into which the element of imagination is strongly injected by the poet, who can, to the inevitable s.h.i.+ver of human nature at the sight of struggle and carnage, add the far more profound and terrible s.h.i.+ver, only created by a vision of the concomitants, the consequences--the UNSEEN BORDERS of the b.l.o.o.d.y scene.
Take these lines, for instance:--
”They look anew: the beauteous form of fight Is changed, and war appears a grisly sight; Two troops in fair array one moment showed-- The next, a field with fallen bodies strowed; Not half the number in their seats are found, But men and steeds lie grovelling on the ground.
The points of spears are stuck within the s.h.i.+eld, The steeds without their riders scour the field; The knights, unhorsed, on foot renew the fight-- The glittering faulchions cast a gleaming light; Hauberks and helms are hew'd with many a wound, Out-spins the streaming blood, and dyes the ground.”