登陆注册
15732400000018

第18章 IN MEMORIAM.(2)

They had not developed, much less had they published, their "general ideas." Even in his journal of the Cruise of the Beagle Darwin's ideas were religious, and he naively admired the works of God. It is strange that Mr Harrison has based his criticism, and his theory of Tennyson's want of originality, on what seems to be a historical error. He cites parts of In Memoriam, and remarks, "No one can deny that all this is exquisitely beautiful; that these eternal problems have never been clad in such inimitable grace . . . But the train of thought is essentially that with which ordinary English readers have been made familiar by F. D. Maurice, Professor Jowett, Ecce Homo, Hypatia, and now by Arthur Balfour, Mr Drummond, and many valiant companies of Septem [why Septem?] contra Diabolum." One must keep repeating the historical verity that the ideas of In Memoriam could not have been "made familiar by" authors who had not yet published anything, or by books yet undreamed of and unborn, such as Ecce Homo and Jowett's work on some of St Paul's Epistles. If these books contain the ideas of In Memoriam, it is by dint of repetition and borrowing from In Memoriam, or by coincidence. The originality was Tennyson's, for we cannot dispute the evidence of dates.

When one speaks of "originality" one does not mean that Tennyson discovered the existence of the ultimate problems. But at Cambridge (1828-1830) he had voted "No" in answer to the question discussed by "the Apostles," "Is an intelligible [intelligent?] First Cause deducible from the phenomena of the universe?" He had also propounded the theory that "the development of the human body might possibly be traced from the radiated vermicular molluscous and vertebrate organisms," thirty years before Darwin published The Origin of Species. To be concerned so early with such hypotheses, and to face, in poetry, the religious or irreligious inferences which may be drawn from them, decidedly constitutes part of the poetic originality of Tennyson. His attitude, as a poet, towards religious doubt is only so far not original, as it is part of the general reaction from the freethinking of the eighteenth century. Men had then been freethinkers avec delices. It was a joyous thing to be an atheist, or something very like one; at all events, it was glorious to be "emancipated." Many still find it glorious, as we read in the tone of Mr Huxley, when he triumphs and tramples over pious dukes and bishops. Shelley said that a certain schoolgirl "would make a dear little atheist." But by 1828-1830 men were less joyous in their escape from all that had hitherto consoled and fortified humanity.

Long before he dreamed of In Memoriam, in the Poems chiefly Lyrical of 1830 Tennyson had written -"'Yet,' said I, in my morn of youth, The unsunn'd freshness of my strength, When I went forth in quest of truth, 'It is man's privilege to doubt.' . . .

Ay me! I fear All may not doubt, but everywhere Some must clasp Idols. Yet, my God, Whom call I Idol? Let Thy dove Shadow me over, and my sins Be unremember'd, and Thy love Enlighten me. Oh teach me yet Somewhat before the heavy clod Weighs on me, and the busy fret Of that sharp-headed worm begins In the gross blackness underneath.

Oh weary life! oh weary death!

Oh spirit and heart made desolate!

Oh damned vacillating state!"

Now the philosophy of In Memoriam may be, indeed is, regarded by robust, first-rate, and far from sensitive minds, as a "damned vacillating state." The poet is not so imbued with the spirit of popular science as to be sure that he knows everything: knows that there is nothing but atoms and ether, with no room for God or a soul.

He is far from that happy cock-certainty, and consequently is exposed to the contempt of the cock-certain. The poem, says Mr Harrison, "has made Tennyson the idol of the Anglican clergyman--the world in which he was born and the world in which his life was ideally passed--the idol of all cultured youth and of all aesthetic women. It is an honourable post to fill"--that of idol. "The argument of In Memoriam apparently is . . . that we should faintly trust the larger hope."That, I think, is not the argument, not the conclusion of the poem, but is a casual expression of one mood among many moods.

The argument and conclusion of In Memoriam are the argument and conclusion of the life of Tennyson, and of the love of Tennyson, that immortal passion which was a part of himself, and which, if aught of us endure, is living yet, and must live eternally. From the record of his Life by his son we know that his trust in "the larger hope"was not "faint," but strengthened with the years. There are said to have been less hopeful intervals.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 般若蜜多心经口语化现代语言解说

    般若蜜多心经口语化现代语言解说

    用口语化的现代语言解说《般若蜜多心经》,让佛经浅显易懂,让更多人能够看懂佛经。
  • 逆天噬灵

    逆天噬灵

    他是一个身负血脉诅咒的山野小子。而她是身份尊贵的帝国公主。他们的相遇到底是对是错?看主角木翎一步步的走出诅咒,重回巅峰!
  • 桃运圣尊

    桃运圣尊

    他,原是凯撒庭宇宙的掌控者鸿蒙圣尊;他,百万年前为了拯救宇宙陷入休眠;他,胸前挂着一把黄金圣剑项链而出生。邱时熊注定是一个不平凡的人,为了快速恢复实力重塑金身,只好选择阴阳双休。萝莉,御女,校花,女神,空姐,护士,卖花女,女杀手,女警察,公主,狐狸精等等,一大波香艳来袭,什么学霸,什么富二代,什么官宦子弟,什么修真者,在他眼里都是空气。突破仙人境界成为天神后,他便开始去河外星系,寻找他的弟子鸿钧道祖,混鯤老祖,杨梅道尊,女蜗娘娘,伏羲大帝,陆压道君。
  • 礼法华经仪式

    礼法华经仪式

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 默示录学院

    默示录学院

    食堂着火又不关我事,那是电线想要自焚。什么?!要我退学?!!!不用这样吧。切!退就退,本小姐才不稀罕。默示录学院对能力研究???我去好了!!!
  • 捕鬼无悔

    捕鬼无悔

    一场突如其来的背叛,凝聚了一声声凄凉悲绝的嘶吼与呐喊;一片血流成河的万古沧桑,化为了一段永不泯灭的记忆;一颗养育仇恨的种子,哺育了一次又一次惊心动魄的屠杀......混沌的世界,荒芜的大地,荆棘之中,是谁在历练中淡漠,是谁在悲痛中微笑,又是谁....不流一滴血,却哭干了满眶泪水?她与他本是无缘,却因各自的执念而相逢,相爱,相杀。原来,前世今生的轨道早已注定,却也早已偏离...世间混杂,纷纷扰扰。唯有孤者独坐苍穹,傲视天下!寡唇轻抬,淡吐四字:「捕鬼,无悔」
  • 太真玉帝四极明科经

    太真玉帝四极明科经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 苍澜图

    苍澜图

    十六岁的学生江澜在完成不为人知的英雄事迹后只能靠欺天来保住自己的生命,然而代价就是他只能停留在另一个奇异的世界。整个地球都想让他死,他偏偏就要好好的活着,他要更强!总有一天,他要强势回归!
  • 炼狱邪少

    炼狱邪少

    无情的放逐,众生的嘲讽,在炼狱中崛起,踏上世人仰望的巅峰。正派中被埋没的天才,却走入炼狱成为了邪教的教主。究竟如何才能在强者林立的世界杀出自己的血路?
  • 寻宝小分队

    寻宝小分队

    他是游弋在生死边缘的战神,他是行走在灯红酒绿中的妖精,她是沉迷于珍宝古玩中的防伪器,他是徘徊于城市角落里的拾荒者,他是凌驾在三尺方台上的育书人,他们有一个共同的职业:军人!