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Craigcrook Castle. By
Gerald Massey, pub. Bogue, London.
WE give a hearty welcome to another
book from Mr. Gerald Massey, a young writer who through hard beginnings of life
has already attained to much, and undoubtedly is capable of more than he has yet
achieved. Craigcrook Castle deserves to be bought and read; there is true
poetry to be found in the little volume, as there was true poetry to be found in
the Ballad of Babe Christabel, and some of the lyrics that accompanied it.
There is sufficient sign in the new book of increased maturity of thought, and
we like it none the worse but all the better for whatever defect of judgment may
still lead the young poet astray in the expression of strong feelings
imperfectly controlled by reason,—as when in the poem of Lady Laura he is found
echoing Mrs. Browning’s Cry of the Factory Children, or, in another place,
bitterly scorning the reception in this country of the Emperor of France, whom
he sees only as Louis Napoleon. We should not care at once wholly to miss
these flashes of the fire of youth; there remains now in Mr. Massey’s verse but
little of the old wild reference to what he once considered social wrongs; in
other respects, also, his muse is soberer, and has not suffered any loss of
power.
We must dwell a little on one cause of misgiving which this
new volume of verse suggests; but it is in no spirit of cold criticism that we
wish to do so. It is natural and right that one of the young poets of the
day should take an interest in the works of others who are travelling, or
endeavouring to travel, with him the same road to fame, and seem to travel at an
equal pace; it is well, also, that he takes pleasure in their efforts.
Only let him not make them objects of his imitation. Upon the manner in
which Mr. Massey sets to work, during the years now passing, to assure the
education of his power as a poet, must depend alone his ultimate success or
failure. We see in the new volume evidence that Mr. Massey spares no pains
to sing well; he is manifestly disposed to submit his strength to careful
training, but we fear that he has of late spent some of his labour in the wrong
direction. A literary career bright in its promise is before him, but he
must observe in time that there is a way of writing which, though it may help
one who is but very little of a poet in emerging for a few days from obscurity,
may by infecting — if it ever can infect deeply— a true poet, rot his verse, and
take the life out of his reputation. Whenever Mr. Massey is so far moved
by his topic as to speak what his own nature dictates, he writes those pages
which enable all his readers to declare with confidence that he is truly a poet.
He never stops to study finery of speech, but touches hearts by singing from his
heart. Incomparably the best things in this volume are two little works
produced under the influence of genuine emotion; one a long poem on the
bereavement of a mother who has lost her last-born infant, called the Mother’s
Idol Broken, and the other that connected series of lyrics, "Glimpses of the
War," which we believe we may say that, taken as a complete work — for they
should be all read together—they form, whatever may be their minute defects, the
most spirited accompaniment to the whole tale of the late war that has been
produced up to this date by any of our English minstrels.
In other parts of the book, wherever there occurs little to
stir the depths out of which come the highest utterances, we are apt to find
that a good artist has been working from bad models. Craigcrook Castle, in
the neighbourhood of Edinburgh, is a ruin with "a tiny town of towers," round
about which roses abound, and from behind which slopes a hill. The poet
tells in his opening verses of the place and of a picnic party there assembled,
he describes some of the persons in it,—an exiled patriot, an English
bridegroom, and so forth, tells that at twilight they remained for a symposium
which they were to enliven with tale and song, and in that way introduces the
collection of his verses. The opening narrative abounds in poet’s
thoughts, and great labour has been manifestly spent upon the composition, but
it has been almost labour in vain, for it is so written that sometimes an entire
page conveys as a whole, however studied its component sentences, no distinct
meaning to the reader. To avoid this very grave defect, Mr. Massey has
only to avoid all effort to say clever things. He is clever, and will not
fail to drop good sayings in sufficient plenty as he goes. What he has
once produced naturally he may test, and if necessary polish, with the utmost of
the skill proper to his art; but he must be more ready to subtract than add.
Let him by no example be induced to sit and puff after the manner of the man who
wishes to be thought a poet, or the frog who wishes to be thought an ox.
If Mr. Massey, having burnt his "Balder" and his "Festus," and all volumes of
that sort, will enter earnestly into communion with Chaucer and Spenser, he will
very soon discover what he has now to unlearn. He will talk then no more
of dewy lanes,
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"that kist us with the breath
Of their green mouths," |
—truly an
unsavoury conceit—or talk about "taking the Maytide in a golden swim," or speak
of love "Warm on the bosom of mellifluous Rest," or of a golden age’s "stirred
precipitate," or tell us such a thing as this, which we don’t understand at all,
about a Blackbird:
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"His Apple-tree hath felt the ruddying breath
Of May upon her yielding leafy lips
And broke in kisses trembling for delight;
Look how her red heart blushes warm in white!
Deep after deep the generous heart of Spring,
So golden-full of glad days, flusht in bloom,
Ripe with all sweetness." |
Or
give such a sketch as this—we have not abridged it by a syllable—of a young
lady:
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"Aurelia with the royal eyes, and breast
Bounding with hurrying heart, wave-wanton,
for
A ripe repose on some Elysian shore:
A glorious passion-flower of Womanhood
Come, golden-natured, to its summer throne:
Her eyes, the stars of burning dreams, so rapt
The spirit moth-like for their fire, you might
Have gone to death by sword-light for their
smile,
And sullen beauty of her mouth’s ripe bloom." |
Or
talk of spirits "toucht in tingling kiss, till every nerve stretched like a
telescope." We shall have no more such compound words as mad-world-strife,
precious-lined, star-smile, or lips "red-ripe to crush their fire-strong wine,
pouting persuasive in perpetual kiss." Then, again, as we are reminded by those
p’s just quoted, Mr. Massey will learn nowhere so well as in the verse of
Spenser how to use with the most exquisite effect the art of alliteration.
Much use is made of it in Craigcrook Castle; but if the sense of it has not been
spoiled by study of spasmodic poets, it perhaps may have been blunted by too
strong a recollection of the "Peter Piper" of our infancy. Thus we are
told that about Craigcrook Castle,
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"With cups of colour reeling Roses rise
On walls and bushes, red and yellow and
white,
A dance and dazzle of Roses range all round." |
More
difficult to our tongues than "Peter Piper picked a peck of pepper" is "Bird
after bird the sweet sharp stillness stirred." Well-managed alliteration
is, we believe, not merely a legitimate, but with some measures an absolutely
necessary charm of English verse. We have specified this sort of defect
only to show the more clearly in what direction Mr. Massey has a tendency to go
astray. He is not very far wrong; we have read his new poems with
enjoyment, with respect; nothing is further from our thoughts than to pick out
petty defects in a depreciatory spirit. We see one of the most hopeful of
our young poets arrived at that point in his course from which two roads widely
diverge. His face is turned towards the road down which it will be hard
for him to travel without being stripped of all his wealth; we therefore cannot
be content to say only, Go on and prosper.
What good verse Mr. Gerald Massey writes when he is feeling
what he says, the greater part of his book shows. Fresh from the poet
comes the thought that hallows the fond bending of the mother over a small curl
of her dead infant’s hair—"A ring of sinless gold that weds two worlds."
Utterly vanished is all affectation, and in his simple truth
the poet speaks when he writes thus of the dead child:
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"And there our Darling lay in coffined calm
Dressed for the grave in raiment like the snow,
And o’er her flowed the white, eternal peace:
The breathing miracle into silence passed:
Never to stretch wee hands, with her dear
smile,
As soft as light-fall on unfolding flowers;
Never to wake us crying in the night;
Our little hindering thing forever gone,
In tearful quiet now we might toil on.
All dim the living lustres motion makes!
No life-dew in the sweet cups of her eyes!
Nought there of our poor 'Splendid’ but her
brow.
A young Immortal came to us disguised,
And in the joy-dance dropt her mask, and
fled.
"The world went lightly by and heeded not
Our death-white windows blinded to the sun;
The hearts that ached within; the measureless
lost;
The Idol broken; our first tryst with Death.
O Life, how strange thy face behind the veil!
And stranger yet will thy strange mystery
seem,
When we awake in death and tell our Dream.
'Tis hard to solve the secret of the Sphinx!
We had a little gold Love garnered up,
To bravely robe our Babe: the Mother’s half
Was turned to mourning raiment for her dead:
Mine bought the first land we called ours—
Her grave.
We were as treasure-seekers in the earth,
When lo, a death’s-head on a sudden stares.
"Clad all in spirit-beauty forth she went;
Her budding spring of life in tiny leaf;
Her gracious gold of babe-virginity
Unminted in the image of our world;
Her faint dawn whitened in the perfect day.
Our early wede away went back to God,
Bearing her life-scroll folded, without stain,
And only three words written on it — two
Our names! Ah, may they plead for us in
heaven!" |
"Lady Laura" is the story of a beneficent lady, who, pitying the children in a
silk-mill near her house, took from it a man destined, after changes fallen upon
both their states, to be her husband. It contains much delicate writing.
We pass it to quote part of a lyric in the series entitled "Glimpses of the
War:"
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WILD is the wintry
weather!
Dark is the night, and cold!
All closely we crowd together,
Within the family fold.
A mute and mighty Shadow flies
Across the land on wings of gloom!
And thro' each Home its awful eyes
May lighten with their stroke of doom.
Life's light burns dim—we hold the breath—
All sit stern in the shadow of Death,
Around the household fire—
This Winter's-night in England,
Straining our ears for the tidings of War,
Holding our hearts, like Beacons, up higher,
For those who are fighting afar.
We talk of Britain's glory,
We sing some brave old song,
Or tell the thrilling story
Of her wrestle with the wrong.
Till we clutch the spirit-sword for the strife,
And into our Rest would rather fall
Down Battle's cataract of life,
Than turn the white face to the wall.
Sing, O, for a charge victorious!
And the meekest face grows glorious!
As we sit by the household fire,
This Winter's-night in England,—
Our souls within us like steeds of War!
And we hold our hearts, like Beacons, up higher,
For those who are fighting afar.
And oft in silence solemn
We peer from Night's dark tent,
And see the quivering column
Like a cloud by lightning rent.
For death, how merry they mount and ride!
Those swords look keen for their lap of gore!
Such Valour leaps out Deified!
Such souls must rend the clay they wore!
How proud they sweep on Glory's track!
So many start! so few come back
To sit by the household fire,
On a Winter's-night in England,
And with rich tears wash their wounds of War,
Where we hold our hearts, like Beacons, up higher,
For those who are fighting afar.
We thrill to the Clarion's clangour,
And harness for the fight:
With the Warrior's glorious anger,
We are nobly mad to smite:
No dalliance, save with Hate, hold we,
Where Life and Death keep bloody tryst,
And all the red Reality
Reels on us through a murder-mist!
Wave upon wave rolls Ruin's flood,
And the hosts of the Tyrant melt in blood,
As we sit by the household fire;
This Winter's-night in England,
And our colour flies out to the music of War,
While we hold our hearts, like Beacons, up higher,
For those who are fighting afar.
Old England still hath Heroes
To wear her sword and shield!
We knew them not while near us,
We know them in the field!
Look! how the Tyrant's hills they climb,
To hurl our gage in his grim hold!
The Titans of the earlier time,
Tho' larger-limb'd, were smaller-soul'd!
Laurel, or Amaranth, light their brow!
Living or dead, we crown them now!
As we sit by the household fire,
This Winter's-night in England:
From the white cliffs watching the storm of War,
Holding our hearts, like Beacons, up higher,
For those who are fighting afar.
O! their brave love hath rootage
In the Old Land, deep and dear,
And Life's ripe, ruddy fruitage
Hangs summering for them here!
And tender eyes, tear-luminous,
Melt thro' the dark of dreamland skies,
While, pleading aye for home and us,
The heart is one live brood of cries!
Old feelings cling! O how they cling!
And sweet birds sing! O how they sing
Them back to the household fire,
This Winter's-night in England,
Where we wait for them weary and wounded from War,
Holding our hearts, like Beacons, up higher,
For those who are fighting afar! |
We will quote, also,
because it is both brief and complete, this
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DIRGE.
O
HAPPY tree;
Green
and fragrant tree;
Spring with budding jewels deckt it like a Bride!
All so
fair it bloomed,
And the
summer air perfumed;
Golden autumn fruitage smiled in crowns of pride.
O human
tree;
Waesome
wailing tree;
In the winter wind how it rocks! how it grieves!
On a
little low grave-mound,
All its
bravery lies discrowned:
O'er its fallen fruit it heaps the withered leaves.
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