A HISTORY OF ENGLISH ROMANTICISM IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
by
HENRY A. BEERS
Author of _A Suburban Pastoral_, _The Ways of Yale_, etc.
New York Henry Holt and Company
1918
ROMANCE
My love dwelt in a Northern land. A grey tower in a forest green Was hers, and far on either hand The long wash of the waves was seen, And leagues on leagues of yellow sand, The woven forest boughs between.
And through the silver Northern light The sunset slowly died away, And herds of strange deer, lily-white, Stole forth among the branches grey; About the coming of the light, They fled like ghosts before the day.
I know not if the forest green Still girdles round that castle grey; I know not if the boughs between The white deer vanish ere the day; Above my love the grass is green, My heart is colder than the clay.
ANDREW LANG.
PREFACE.
The present volume is a sequel to "A History of English Romanticism in the Eighteenth Century" (New York; Henry Holt & Co., 1899). References in the footnotes to "Volume I." are to that work. The difficulties of this second part of my undertaking have been of a kind just opposite to those of the first. As it concerns my subject, the eighteenth century was an age of beginnings; and the problem was to discover what latent romanticism existed in the writings of a period whose spirit, upon the whole, was distinctly unromantic. But the temper of the nineteenth century has been, until recent years, prevailingly romantic in the wider meaning of the word. And as to the more restricted sense in which I have chosen to employ it, the mediaevalising literature of the nineteenth century is at least twenty times as great as that of the eighteenth, both in bulk and in value. Accordingly the problem here is one of selection; and of selection not from a list of half-forgotten names, like Warton and Hurd, but from authors whose work is still the daily reading of all educated readers.
As I had anticipated, objection has been made to the narrowness of my definition of _romanticism_. But every writer has a right to make his own definitions; or, at least, to say what his book shall be about. I have not written a history of the "liberal movement in English literature"; nor of the "renaissance of wonder"; nor of the "emancipation of the ego." Why not have called the book, then, "A History of the Mediaeval Revival in England"? Because I have a clear title to the use of _romantic_ in one of its commonest acceptations; and, for myself, I prefer the simple dictionary definition, "pertaining to the style of the Christian and popular literature of the Middle Ages," to any of those more pretentious explanations which seek to express the true inwardness of romantic literature by analysing it into its elements, selecting one of these elements as essential, and rejecting all the rest as accidental.
M. Brunetiere; for instance, identifies romanticism with lyricism. It is the "emancipation of the ego." This formula is made to fit Victor Hugo, and it will fit Byron. But M. Brunetiere would surely not deny that Walter Scott's work is objective and dramatic quite as often as it is lyrical. Yet what Englishman will be satisfied with a definition of _romantic_ which excludes Scott? Indeed, M. Brunetiere himself is respectful to the traditional meaning of the word. "Numerous definitions," he says, "have been given of Romanticism, and still others are continually being offered; and all, or almost all of them, contain a part of the truth. Mme. de Stael was right when she asserted in her 'Allemagne' that Paganism and Christianity, the North and the South, antiquity and the Middle Ages, having divided between them the history of literature, Romanticism in consequence, in contrast to Classicism, was a combination of chivalry, the Middle Ages, the literatures of the North, and Christianity. It should be noted, in this connection, that some thirty years later Heinrich Heine, in the book in which he will rewrite Mme. de Stael's, will not give such a very different idea of Romanticism." And if, in an analysis of the romantic movement throughout Europe, any single element in it can lay claim to the leading place, that element seems to me to be the return of each country to its national past; in other words, mediaevalism.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A History of English Romanticism in the Nineteenth
- 2: All romanticists are resurrectionists
- 3: The education of Edward Waverley
- 4: That Ariosto was a better poet than Homer
- 5: Although Byron was a peer and inherited his domain
- 6: Land of brown heath and shaggy wood
- 7: It is transferred to Cumberland
- 8: Wordsworth himself pointed out the difference
- 9: The march of the Nortons to Brancepeth
- 10: Where danced the moon on Monan's rill
- 11: Glenfinlas and The Eve of St
- 12: When the Minstrelsy was published
- 13: Breaking up the couplets into a series of irregular stanzas
- 14: And held slack allegiance to the King of Lothian and Fife
- 15: Vos Grecs ne sont pas des Grecs
- 16: Heine was not troubled in the same way
- 17: The epitomizer of mediaeval thought
- 18: Less confidently the amori and the cortesie
- 19: La cathedrale gothique restauree
- 20: 9 Scott's ascription of Sir Tristram to Thomas the Rhymer
- 21: Wordsworth was far from being an acrid quack
- 22: Ils devaient mettre la verite locale
- 23: Les mouvements de l'ame fourniraient a peine quelques lignes
- 24: 53 See Studies in Mediaeval Life and Literature
- 25: 4 Brandl is dissatisfied with the term Lake School
- 26: And Shelley and Keats in Italy
- 27: Wordsworth more romantic than Chatterton
- 28: Instead of closing at each couplet
- 29: His sonnets continue the elegiac strain of Shenstone
- 30: When Tom Warton was master there
- 31: And whether the sylph of Pope
- 32: That art is just as poetical as nature
- 33: Though not in couplets but in ottava rima
- 34: When Warton issued the first volume of his Essay on Pope
- 35: The stanza form is never complex
- 36: The Ancient Mariner is the baseless fabric of a vision
- 37: Coleridge admitted its improbability
- 38: And Christabel saw the lady's eye
- 39: Will remind all readers of Christabel
- 40: The critical view of Shakspere
- 41: That Saintsbury applies this title to Coleridge
- 42: In his Specimens of British Poets 1822
- 43: 23 Keats quotes this line in a letter about Edmund Kean
- 44: Dante was the genuine homme du moyen age
- 45: But Warton felt Dante's greatness
- 46: The Inferno in 1785 with a specimen from Ariosto
- 47: And generally to the Ugolino and Francesca passages
- 48: And therein quite the opposite of Dante
- 49: Shelley also employed terza rima in his fragmentary pieces
- 50: Was Leigh Hunt's Story of Rimini 1816 Mr
- 51: Which included Chaucer and Spenser
- 52: Like our own romanticist poet Longfellow
- 53: And Dante was a Catholic Calvinist
- 54: Holding a poor decrepit standard out
- 55: In the sense in which Hyperion is classical
- 56: All seem anti Grecian and anti Charlemagnish
- 57: He admired the Story of Rimini
- 58: Sigismonda and Tancred are characters
- 59: The Catholic elegancies of his poem
- 60: In Keats is the romantic escape
- 61: 2 A new translation of the Orlando
- 62: Goethe pronounced the Inferno abominable
- 63: Romanticism existed in solution
- 64: Established by Friedrich Schlegel at Berlin in 1798
- 65: Goerres was teaching in the university
- 66: Hettner Die Romantische Schule
- 67: Explains that the French incline towards classic poetry
- 68: De Stael fell into the hands of the Schlegels
- 69: A number of the romanticists were Catholic by birth
- 70: Novalis composed Marienlieder
- 71: The romantic movements in England and Germany offer
- 72: An enthusiasm for Albrecht Duerer
- 73: And especially the ballads of Uhland
- 74: The Schlegels were far superior to Lessing
- 75: When Schlegel seeks to depreciate the poet Buerger
- 76: Like the fancy of our excellent Ludwig Tieck
- 77: But Tieck did really write this story
- 78: Boyesen gives a subtler interpretation
- 79: And Der Zauberring had been translated even earlier
- 80: Uhland studied the poems of Ossian
- 81: A large part of Des Knaben Wunderhorn
- 82: Tieck met Coleridge in England in 1818
- 83: The fountainhead of eighteenth century classicism
- 84: The romantic artist par excellence was Eugene Delacroix
- 85: Had inspired Monpon with a savage
- 86: Literary liberty is the child of political liberty
- 87: Seems to have been invented with an application to Philothee
- 88: Minuit bientot raised a tempest of hisses and applause
- 89: And the free use of enjambement or run over lines
- 90: And discovering Shakspere under the translation
- 91: While the beard became a badge of romanticism
- 92: And Gerard de Nerval got it from his father
- 93: Hernani is full of effective stage devices
- 94: A year before Hernani was acted
- 95: The love for solitude and the desert
- 96: He was a sentimentalist and a rhetorician
- 97: When Stendhal published his Racine et Shakspere
- 98: Othello turned into a comedy
- 99: He blames Schiller for copying Shakspere
- 100: Ou gemissaient les saints cantiques
- 101: Upon the historical plays of Shakspere
- 102: Romantic from classical literature
- 103: There was the architect Jule Vabre
- 104: Gautier describes also a manuscript piece of Nerval
- 105: Bertrand La Fin du Classicisme
- 106: 4 Histoire du Romantisme 1874
- 107: At Rouen was printed in 1826 Du Classique et du Romantique
- 108: In the work of the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood
- 109: Less after the manner of the Waverley novels
- 110: Cast Childe Harold into Spenserian verse
- 111: Thalaba and The Curse of Kehama
- 112: Which Southey thought mainly worthless
- 113: Aimed against Spanish intrigues
- 114: And the rime was merely assonant or vowel rime
- 115: The Civil Wars of Granada 1595
- 116: Also gave specimens from the Romancero
- 117: As were likewise Lockhart and Hogg
- 118: Like The Brownie of Bodsbeck a Tale of the Covenanters
- 119: It rang se sweit through the grim Lommond
- 120: Arnold knew very little Celtic
- 121: Mangan's paraphrases from the Gaelic
- 122: Founded on an ancient bardic tale
- 123: 20 There is Sydney Dobell's Keith of Ravelston
- 124: Agnes and Sir Galahad are monologues
- 125: The Arthurian cycle of legends
- 126: Though modestly entitled Idylls
- 127: This conception is latent in Malory
- 128: And only accidentally mediaeval
- 129: And The Rime of the Duchess May
- 130: In the ballad of action Kingsley ranks very close to Scott
- 131: Illustrations of Tennyson 1891
- 132: Nimue was the first form of Vivien
- 133: To the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood
- 134: Every Pre Raphaelite landscape background
- 135: The three different coloured steps to the door of Purgatory
- 136: The Pre Raphaelite movement in art
- 137: Ruskin denied that the Pre Raphaelites were unimaginative
- 138: Rossetti did not keep up his German
- 139: But like all the neo romanticists
- 140: Yet Rossetti strikes one as being Catholic
- 141: And Sir Percival were fed with the Sanc Grael
- 142: Unnumbered heads Bowed with their aureoles
- 143: Rossetti's ballads and ballad romances
- 144: Twice Rossetti essayed the historical ballad
- 145: Rossetti was not university bred
- 146: And with mediaeval architecture
- 147: The public response was such as met Millais
- 148: His love of Gothic architecture
- 149: With the exception of the Morte Darthur
- 150: When reading such poems as Rapunzel
- 151: Even Jason is treated as a romance
- 152: Byron declaims and Wordsworth moralises
- 153: The influence of the Icelandic sagas
- 154: It is full of Eddaic poetry and mythology
- 155: But Swinburne much more from Shelley
- 156: But two marks of the Pre Raphaelite and
- 157: And full of the Pre Raphaelite colour
- 158: The dramatic diction is fashioned after the Elizabethans
- 159: With which spear Sir Balin smites King Pellam
- 160: But Swinburne has contributed freely to critical literature
- 161: The Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood
- 162: They have given the vivification required Saintsbury
- 163: 36 Recollections of Rossetti
- 164: In the old fourteener of Chapman
- 165: Francis Oliphant afterwards husband of Margaret Oliphant
- 166: The art and architecture of mediaeval Christianity
- 167: Newman said that Keble made the Church of England poetical
- 168: The most ambitious of these is The Dream of Gerontius
- 169: Digby was inspired by the ideal of knighthood
- 170: Of meditation between sombre pillars
- 171: Specimens of Gothic Architecture
- 172: Pugin denounces alike the Renaissance and the Reformation
- 173: And Duerer on Italian painters was wholesome
- 174: Ruskin's adhesion to Gothic was without compromise
- 175: The High Church and Romanist parties
- 176: But Gurth did belong to Cedric
- 177: And like both Ruskin and Carlyle
- 178: It was primitive Teutonic rather than mediaeval
- 179: Stedman distinguishes as Neo Romanticists
- 180: Is the history of a certain squire of Poitou
- 181: Is O'Shaughnessy's weird ballad Bisclaveret
- 182: Shimmering soft like damoisels
- 183: Are even more closely realistic than Thackeray who
- 184: A sentence or two from Arnold's essay on Heinrich Heine
- 185: Where have you seen a Parterre better grac'd
- 186: The flowers and brushwood that conceal the base
- 187: Songs of Life and Death 1872
- 188: Selections in Koch's Deutsche National Litteratur
- 189: Le Romantisme et l'Editeur Renduel
- 190: Geschichte der Deutschen Litteratur
- 191: 310 Ballads of Irish Chivalry
- 192: 310 Erfindung des Rosenkranzes
- 193: 163 Histoire du Romantisme Gautier
- 194: Ancient and Modern Motherwell
- 195: 386 Poets and Poetry of Munster
- 196: 357 Short Studies Higginson
