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tion of the darker chambers of the mind; he treats for the most part thoughts already familiar to educated men with a wellknown richness and delicate variety of language. We would willingly accept a few more thoughts like this

'how many will say "forgive" and find

A sort of absolution in the sound

To hate a little longer.'

And here we note a remarkable contrast with Mr. Browning, whose great originality is as marked as the imperfection of his workmanship.

Mr. Tennyson's poetry is then the work of a highly sensitive and fastidious artist, keenly alive to the criticism of his own cultivated mind, and choosing rather to limit the range of his imagination than to run any risk of its breaking a wing; but we are obliged, at the same time, to admit that a want of this freedom of inspiration is, even within these limits, some drawback upon its charm. With the power of presenting ideas, before unknown to men, comes also a magic skill of weaving in the unseen with the seen, even in the most familiar things; and a strange lustre is thereby given to the work, a lustre often overlooked, but precious as the fragrance of the choicest wines to those who know how to prize it. In many ways the Laureate's work reminds us of that of our very best modern Gothic architects. The edifice is faultless, every detail shows a delicate taste, and a love and understanding of the best works of the past, while the structure as a whole shows, if not grandeur, at least beauty in its proportions, and simplicity in its effects; yet there lacks after all the indescribable freshness and vigour which are more often indeed attributes of times and peoples than of individuals. In one particular, however, Mr. Tennyson may claim an equality with any other poet-namely, in the singular charm and propriety of his similes; and this merit is one of a very high order. It is not right to look upon these as mere embellishments set upon the text as gems upon a chalice. Even a single word dropped into an attentive mind, like a stone into still water, propagates an impulse in all directions, causing infinite radiations of thought, and stirring up diverse ideas along the many ways of association. Hence the more sensitive the mind, the more complete will be the resulting circles of thought, and responsive chords will be awakened in them by delicate vibrations which in coarser minds are lost. Thus it is with Mr. Tennyson: impressions upon his mind and senses call up associated ideas and memories in an infinite number of directions, and those are chosen which, by fitness or contrast, may arouse in the reader

the

the required combinations of thought, and assimilate his state of feeling to that of the poet. Similes of the best kind then are not mere illustrations, but are, as it were, beautiful views opened up in the paths of our thought, intensifying our moods by contrast, or enlarging them by sympathy. When Wordsworth, seeing an infant's grave sheltered behind that of its mother, compares it to a lamb screened by its dam from the winds of March, he not only points out the relation of the tombs, and of mother to child; but also, in these few words, death is contrasted with youth and spring, and we are reminded of the bitter influences which bring them together. When, again, Mr. Tennyson compares Enoch Arden's fatal attraction to the light about the hearth of Philip Ray, with the dash of the weary bird of passage against the beacon-blaze, the solitude of Arden is consciously or unconsciously made the more intense to us, as birds of passage, in their appointed courses, fly not singly but in flocks. Thus was Enoch; lonely, and cut off from the guidance and the fellowship of men. How could the high devotion of Enoch's love be brought more strikingly before us than in these few words

[his] 'face

All-kindled by a still and sacred fire
That burned as on an altar;'

or how many words could better strike the key of final rest and peace in God than these?

'Haunting a holy text and still to that

Returning as the bird returns at night.'

Figures of equal beauty, and opening out great spaces for our imagination, may be found in every page, and are, as we have said, the natural expression of a genius remarkable more for breadth and continuity, within a certain orbit, than for altitude or isolated intensities. A rich and meditative poetry, full of sweet combinations and of gentle and honourable sympathies, is the art of Mr. Tennyson; and, being such, is singularly fitted for that kind of poetry in which he delights, and in which he is so eminently successful-we mean the domestic lyric. All critics have taken pleasure in dwelling upon the exceeding loveliness of these poems; and it has no doubt been felt, though not very clearly pointed out, that the 'Idylls of the King' are heroic in name only, and are in truth pictures of the joys and sorrows, the passions and the courtesies of the world about us, purified and ennobled by a beautiful idealism. If King Arthur is come again, it is 'as a modern gentleman of stateliest port.'* For the

*The Morte d'Arthur.'

purification

purification of our domestic manners, and for the refinement and elevation of modern society, Mr. Tennyson's poetry has accomplished much, and will yet accomplish more; and those poems of his, such as the 'May Queen,' Lady Godiva' (which is also modern in its meaning), and others of the like great excellence, being perhaps the most perfect of their kind, will never be forgotten. This leads us, in conclusion, to consider again the great popularity of Mr. Tennyson's poetry, and to inquire anxiously whether this popularity is an argument against the permanence of his fame. If we have shown that it is a popularity based upon true sympathy with the noblest, the gentlest, and the most beautiful tendencies of modern life, and never with any of its flashy impulses, then we may not only congratulate Mr. Tennyson upon this reward of his patient labour, but also the English people upon their choice of a laureate, who, if he seldom soars beyond the limits of their gaze, has never, on the other hand, descended to any unworthy artifice or turned an ear to the ignoble or impure.

ART. IV.-1. Port Royal. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, Vols. I. to V. Paris, 1840 to 1859.

2. Causeries du Lundi. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, de 1 Académie Française. Vols. I. to XV. Paris, 1851 to 1862.

3. Nouveaux Lundis. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, de l'Académie Française. Vols. I. to IV. Paris, 1863 to 1865.

4. Portraits Littéraires. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, de l'Académie Française. 4 vols. Nouvelle édition. Paris, 1864.

5. Portraits Contemporains et Divers. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, de l'Académie Française. 3 vols. Nouvelle édition. 1860.

6. Tableau Historique et Critique de la 16ème Siècle. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve. 7. Poésies Complètes de Sainte-Beuve. mentée. Paris, 1845.

Paris,

Poésie Française au Paris, 1843.

Édition revue et aug

S. Etude sur Virgile, suivie d'une étude sur Quintus de Smyrne. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, de l'Académie Française. Paris, 1857. 9. Chateaubriand et son groupe littéraire sous l'Empire. Cours professé à Liége en 1848-1849. Par C. A. Sainte-Beuve, de l'Académie Française. Paris, 1861. 10. Volupté. Par Sainte-Beuve. 2 vols.

2 vols. Brussels, 1834. SAINTE-BEUVE is an exceedingly able man—among the first, if not indeed the very first, of contemporary French critics. He has been a writer now for very nearly forty

M.

years.

years. His own country has not been slow to set the seal of its approval on his talents; he has been a Member of the Academy since 1845, and has, within the last few months, been appointed to a seat in the Senate-a distinction but rarely awarded to one whose titles are so exclusively literary. His works are numerous, and embrace topics, not indeed so likely to attract the attention of English as of French readers, but which yet have no slight importance in the estimation of all educated men. Probably no living author has been on intimate terms with so many of his notable contemporaries. How is it then, that such a man should be so little known in England?

The first essential qualification for success beyond the limits of an author's native land, is power, or at any rate some strong, distinctive feature in thought or style. Of the graceful and delicate in either, it is always difficult for the foreigner to obtain a correct appreciation. He cannot generally enter into those niceties, those subtle shades and gradations, that exquisite finish of literary workmanship which a native will value so highly. We should scarcely expect a Frenchman or German to entertain feelings of very enthusiastic admiration for Charles Lamb, for instance, or Mr. Tennyson. The more striking beauties of Byron or Macaulay would probably produce a far stronger and readier impression on his mind. Now the style of M. Sainte-Beuve is neither oratorical nor ambitious, and he has not made himself the consistent advocate of any doctrine or system. He is the very reverse of a dogmatic thinker-the peculiarity of his intellect consists in its power of assimilating the thoughts of others-its pliancy is its strength. He is not a smart or showy writer. Indeed, we could scarcely find in all his works a brilliant or a glowing page, or one that would not lose all charm by being detached from its context. Hence it comes that he has made little impression upon English readers in general, although he is well known (as will appear before the close of this article) to some of our ablest critics.

The character of M. Sainte-Beuve's writings will be best understood if we regard them in connexion with the author's personal career, which they for the most part faithfully reflect. It was on the 23rd of December, 1804-scarcely more than a year after Boulogne had been the scene of Napoleon's gigantic preparations for the invasion of England-that Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve first saw the light in that town. Even before his birth a grievous misfortune had fallen He was the child. upon born into a home of mourning; no father's love was destined to shine upon his youthful path. The care of his education thus devolved upon Madame Sainte-Beuve, a lady in whose veins flowed Vol. 119.-No. 237,

G

English

English blood, and who early, it is said, initiated her son into the mysteries of our language and literature. When the boy had reached the age of from fourteen to fifteen years, he went to Paris and pursued his studies in one of the large metropolitan schools. Here he met with considerable schoolboy success, carried off more than the ordinary number of prizes, and made among his professors at least one acquaintance, destined to exercise an influence on his future career. In the mean while, medicine was the profession he adopted, and for some time he devoted himself zealously to the study of the healing art.

We know how dangerous it is to take a work of fiction or semi-fiction, and endeavour to select those passages in which the author has given glimpses into his own life and character. Nevertheless, it is impossible to avoid remarking the numerous coincidences between the career of the imaginary person on whom M. Sainte-Beuve fathered his first volume of poems, and the early life of M. Sainte-Beuve himself. Equally impossible is it to avoid the conclusion, that if these marked coincidences exist in matters of which every one may judge, there must also exist others of a more subtle character. Like the author of his literary being, Joseph Delorme is born towards the beginning of this century,' is an only son, who has lost his father at an early age,' is brought up with great care by his mother, comes to Paris when about fourteen years of age to finish his education, and embraces the medical profession. Like M. Sainte-Beuve, also, Joseph Delorme has at this stage of his existence abandoned the religious principles he had learned at his mother's knee, and professed himself a disciple of the godless eighteenth century. Nor are these the only points of similarity; but we think they are enough, even if sundry passages in his writings did not warrant the same conclusion, to justify us in considering that in the Life, Poems, and Thoughts of the melancholy and suicidal Joseph Delorme, M. Sainte-Beuve intended us to see a poetised version of his own experiences. We may especially regard the book as a true account of the struggles which had taken place in the author's breast between the claims of medicine and science on the one hand, and of literature and the muses on the other. This conflict was a sharp and anxious one. Every motive of prudence probably impelled the young man to remain in a profession in which he had already won golden opinions, and in which success seemed pretty nearly certain. Literature, as Sir Walter Scott was in the habit of saying, is a good crutch, but a bad leg; and notwithstanding the fervour of his Wertherism, the probability is that M. SainteBeuve was aware of the fact. Even admirers of the 'literature

of

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