登陆注册
20260600000006

第6章 Introduction (6)

Love to your mother, wife, and my precious Willie [since the death of his own child he had turned with a yearning affection to my boy].

Let me hear from you soon -- VERY soon! You'll do me more good than medicines!" etc.

On the 25th of the month confidence in Timrod's recovery was confirmed by a letter from Mrs. Goodwin: --"Our brother," she writes, "is decidedly better; and if there be no recurrence of the hemorrhage will, I hope, be soon convalescent!"

A week and upwards passed on in silence. I received no more communications from Columbia. But early in October a vaguely threatening report reached my ears. On the 9th it was mournfully confirmed.

Forty-eight hours before, Henry Timrod had expired!

On the 7th of October, the mortal remains of the poet, so worn and shattered, were buried in the cemetery of Trinity Church, Columbia.

There, in the ruined capital of his native State, whence scholarship, culture, and social purity have been banished to give place to the orgies of semi-barbarians and the political trickery of adventurers and traitors; there, tranquil amid the vulgar turmoil of factions, reposes the dust of one of the truest and sweetest singers this country has given to the world.

Nature, kinder to his senseless ashes than ever Fortune had been to the living man, is prodigal around his grave -- unmarked and unrecorded though it be -- of her flowers and verdant grasses, of her rains that fertilize, and her purifying dews. The peace he loved, and so vainly longed for through stormy years, has crept to him at last, but only to fall upon the pallid eyelids, closed forever; upon the pulseless limbs, and the breathless, broken heart.

Still it is good to know that "After life's fitful fever, he sleeps well."

Yet, from this mere material repose, this quiet of decaying atoms, surely the most skeptical of thinkers, in contemplation of SUCH a life and SUCH a death, must instinctively look from earth to heaven; from the bruised and mouldering clod to the spirit infinitely exalted, and radiant in redemption.

"A calm, a beautiful, a sacred star."

==

The poetic creed of Timrod, expressed in his "Vision of Poesy", set the impress upon all his work. Conscious of his power, he reverently believed in the mission of the poet as prophet and teacher, --"The mission of Genius on Earth! To uplift, Purify, and confirm, by its own gracious gift, The world," -- and he has consecrated his gift to its noblest uses in the discharge of that "high and holy debt".

As lover of man and nature, his sympathy was universal; no theme was too humble for his pen. "The same law that moulds a planet forms a drop of dew." "Humility is power!" "We may trace the mighty sun above even by the shadow of a slender flower." Yet he dealt not with the fleeting; that was only the passing form of the abiding. Passionately fond as he was of Nature, and nourished and refreshed by her always, he never wrote a line of mere descriptive poetry. Nature is only the symbol, the image, to interpret his spiritual meaning. He felt with Milton, in his noble words, that the abiding work is not raised in the heat of youth or the vapors of wine, or by "invocation to dame Memory and her siren daughters, but by devout prayer to that Eternal Spirit who can enrich with all utterance and knowledge, and send out his seraphim with the hallowed fire of his altars to touch and purify the lips of whom He pleases."

Under that inspiration and revelation the poet is a divine interpreter of (in his own words) --"All lovely things, and gentle -- the sweet laugh Of children, Girlhood's kiss, and Friendship's clasp, The boy that sporteth with the old man's staff, The baby, and the breast its fingers grasp --All that exalts the grounds of happiness, All griefs that hallow, and all joys that bless, "To me are sacred; at my holy shrine Love breathes its latest dreams, its earliest hints;I turn life's tasteless waters into wine, And flush them through and through with purple tints.

Wherever Earth is fair, and Heaven looks down, I rear my altars, and I wear my crown."

It was this mission of Poetry that filled his mind and heart and life with abiding light, which made him cling passionately to life, not because of any physical fear of death, but because in that mission Art and Nature were so inexpressibly rich and sweet to him to reveal his message to man. In the benediction of his dying words, "Love is sweeter than rest!"

The moral purity of these poems is their distinctive quality, as it was of the man. With a universal sympathy for all life, still he moved always on the highest planes of thought and feeling and purpose. He seemed always to be impressed in his art with the truth of his own lines, --"There is no unimpressive spot on earth, The beauty of the stars is over all."

His earnestness and deep poetic insight clothed all themes with the beauty and light that is in and over all.

Timrod's melancholy, the finest test of high poetic quality, when purified and spiritualized, has no Byronic bitterness, no selfish morbidness, no impenetrable gloom, but in his own exquisite lines it is, --"A shadowy land, where joy and sorrow kiss, Each still to each corrective and relief, Where dim delights are brightened into bliss, And nothing wholly perishes but Grief.

"Ah, me! -- not dies -- no more than spirit dies;But in a change like death is clothed with wings;A serious angel, with entranc|ed eyes, Looking to far off and celestial things."

Again, in all these poems there is a nameless spell of a simplicity, fervid yet tender, and an imagination, strong yet delicate, both in its perception and expression.

His style, "like noble music unto noble words," is elaborate, yet perfectly natural. There is no trace of labor; grace guides and power impels. So perfect is it at times in its natural power that the mind is almost unconscious of the word-symbol in grasping immediately the thought revealed.

There is in the verse a ceaseless melody and perfect finish.

同类推荐
  • 餐樱庑随笔

    餐樱庑随笔

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Areopagitica

    Areopagitica

    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。
  • 武林藏书录

    武林藏书录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 禅宗杂毒海

    禅宗杂毒海

    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。
  • 修真九要

    修真九要

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 邪王宠妻无限:逆天三小姐

    邪王宠妻无限:逆天三小姐

    现代金牌杀手洛霞被好姐妹与男友设计冤死,眸眼再次睁开变成洛府草包三小姐,被家族欺辱,被旁人看扁,她云淡风轻,论手段,论心计,谁能比得过她?很快,这些狗眼看人低的家伙被她整得吓破胆。当腹黑轻狂的她遇到风华绝代的他,几番较量却把自己给卖了,谁来告诉他,这个视女人如粪土的家伙为何偏偏要缠上她啊?
  • 无上天妖

    无上天妖

    天地乾坤,三千大道,无尽生灵,谁主沉浮?一身三化,自修我道,威临天下,谁与争锋?源起天妖,成就无上,一切尽在——《无上天妖》ps:求收藏、求推荐……
  • 新落樱千年三国恋

    新落樱千年三国恋

    一段诉说三国的故事。一场阴差阳错的意外相爱。他们都是背负使命的人,真的能相拥永久吗?古去今来,最终是否有情人终成眷属?且听碎玉倾杯的爱情,落花无声,美如千年。
  • 炼域记

    炼域记

    现代孤苦普通瘦弱少年鬼使神差越至异世魂武大陆,却身受重伤浑身经脉尽段成为废人,但为了生存,为了有尊严、有价值的生存,他历经无数常人难以想象的磨难,凭借坚韧不拔的毅力,坚持不懈、永不放弃客服重重艰难险阻,炼域强身,秉持苦修,杀出一条震慑异世的强者血路来!终赢得绝世美女青睐,奸吝小人胆寒、万民顶礼膜拜之盖世英豪!
  • 前汉纪

    前汉纪

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 国之主

    国之主

    张子涛遭遇相爱多年的女友劈腿,却为了救一只流浪狗,而遭遇车祸。等到再次睁开眼,这是哪里?我为什么动不了?什么?我竟然是个襁褓中的婴儿?既来之,则安之。前世的张子涛活的太束缚,这一世他决定得活出个新高端,那就是混吃等死!!!
  • 一个人的梦一个人的世界

    一个人的梦一个人的世界

    我一直都在做一些奇怪的梦,梦中,他们一个个出现,一个个消失,最后,只剩下我一个人!现实中他们,一个又一个离我而去,最后成了我一个人的世界!但是....即使如此,我一个人也要走下去!哪怕前方是地狱!
  • 感悟友情:不求回报的85个片段

    感悟友情:不求回报的85个片段

    感悟友情,真挚的友情从来是不求回报的,只记得一句,他是我的朋友。
  • 黄巾燃世录

    黄巾燃世录

    “苍天已死,黄天当立,岁在甲子,天下大吉。”我们是黄巾子弟!烈日旱土,狂风黄沙,我们巍然不动!每一个三国英杰,都恨不能将我们赶尽杀绝!可我们依然系起一抹黄魂,争雄天下!我们要重新书写黄巾的传奇!当千万黄巾在风中飞舞的时候,只有一个字,燃!
  • 战国一哥

    战国一哥

    这是一位变法图强的战国初期政治家,还是一位战无不胜攻无不克的军事奇才。他是战国时代唯一能够打败秦国夺得其土地并将秦国遏制在函谷关内的大将军。他一生中征战无数,在担任西河郡守期间率兵南征北战,为魏国夺取包括秦国在内的土地千里。他共与诸侯国军队大战76次,大胜64次,其余不分胜负,竟然没有一次败绩!他的《吴子兵法》在历史上闻名遐迩,在汉代甚至超过孙子兵法!而且,有证据证明他还是一位历史学家,与《左传》有扯不断的奇特联系……他是谁?战国一哥!