FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  
period of life is short and not to be recalled: but to spread glory by deeds, that is what valour can do."] [Footnote 11: "They wer' amid the shadows by night in loneliness obscure Walking forth i' the void and vasty dominyon of Ades; As by an uncertain moonray secretly illumin'd One goeth in the forest, when heav'n is gloomily clouded, And black night hath robb'd the colours and beauty from all things." --ROBERT BRIDGES. ] [Footnote 12: "All that is known, all that is felt, is God."] V. AFTER MILTON And after Milton, what is to happen? First, briefly, for a few instances of what has happened. We may leave out experiments in religious sentiment like Klopstock's _Messiah_. We must leave out also poems which have something of the look of epic at first glance, but have nothing of the scope of epic intention; such as Scott's longer poems. These might resemble the "lays" out of which some people imagine "authentic" epic to have been made. But the lays are not the epic. Scott's poems have not the depth nor the definiteness of symbolic intention--what is sometimes called the epic unity--and this is what we can always discover in any poetry which gives us the peculiar experience we must associate with the word epic, if it is to have any precision of meaning. What applies to Scott, will apply still more to Byron's poems; Byron is one of the greatest of modern poets, but that does not make him an epic poet. We must keep our minds on epic intention. Shelley's _Revolt of Islam_ has something of it, but too vaguely and too fantastically; the generality of human experience had little to do with this glittering poem. Keats's _Hyperion_ is wonderful; but it does not go far enough to let us form any judgment of it appropriate to the present purpose.[13] Our search will not take us far before we notice something very remarkable; poems which look superficially like epic turn out to have scarce anything of real epic intention; whereas epic intention is apt to appear in poems that do not look like epic at all. In fact, it seems as if epic manner and epic content were trying for a divorce. If this be so, the traditional epic manner will scarcely survive the separation. Epic content, however, may very well be looking out for a match with a new manner; though so far it does not seem to have found an altogether satisfactory partner. But there are one or two poems in which the old union seems still happy. Most
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  



Top keywords:

intention

 

manner

 

Footnote

 

experience

 

content

 

greatest

 

modern

 

precision

 
meaning
 

applies


glittering

 

Revolt

 

vaguely

 

fantastically

 

Shelley

 

generality

 

present

 
separation
 

survive

 

divorce


traditional
 

scarcely

 

altogether

 

satisfactory

 

partner

 

judgment

 

purpose

 

Hyperion

 

wonderful

 

search


scarce

 

notice

 

remarkable

 
superficially
 

imagine

 
gloomily
 

forest

 

moonray

 

secretly

 

illumin


clouded

 
ROBERT
 
BRIDGES
 
things
 

colours

 

beauty

 
uncertain
 

valour

 

spread

 

period