Yardley Oak; of immense Size and imposing Appearance. —
Cowper’s Description singularly illustrative of his complete Mastery over
Language.— Peasant’s Nest. — The Poet’s Vocation peculiarly one of
Revolution. — The School of Pope ; supplanted in its unproductive Old Age by
that of Cowper. — Cowper’s Coadjutors in the Work. — Economy of Literary
Revolution. — The old English Yeoman. — Quit Olney. — Companions in the
Journey. — Incident. — Newport Pagnell. — Mr. Bull and the French Mystics. —
Lady of the Fancy. — Champion of all England. — Pugilism. — Anecdote.
Half an hour’s leisurely walking — and, in consideration of
my companion’s three score and eleven summers, our walking was exceedingly
leisurely—brought us, through field and dingle, and a country that
presented, as we ascended, less of an agricultural and more of a pastoral
character, to the woods of Yardley Lodge. We enter through a coppice on a
grassy field, and see along the opposite side a thick oak wood, with a
solitary brick house, the only one in sight, half hidden amid foliage in a
corner. The oak wood has, we find, quite a character of its own. The greater
part of its trees, still in their immature youth, were seedlings within the
last forty years: they have no associates that bear in their well-developed
proportions, untouched by decay, the stamp of solid mid-aged tree-hood; but
here and there, — standing up among them, like the long-lived sons of Noah,
in their old age of many centuries, amid a race cut down to the three score
and ten, — we find some of the most ancient oaks in the empire, — trees that
were trees in the days of William the Conqueror. These are mere hollow
trunks, of vast bulk, but stinted foliage, in which the fox shelters and the
owl builds, — mere struldbrugs of the forest. The bulkiest and most
picturesque among their number we find marked by a white-lettered board: it
is a hollow pollard of enormous girth, twenty-eight feet five inches in
circumference a foot above the soil, with skeleton stumps, bleached white by
the winters of many centuries, stretching out for a few inches from amid a
ragged drapery of foliage that sticks close to the body of the tree, and
bearing on its rough gray bole wens and warts of astounding magnitude. The
trunk, leaning slightly forward, and wearing all its huger globosities
behind, seems some fantastic old-world mammoth, seated kangaroo-fashion on
its haunches. Its foliage this season had caught a tinge of yellow, when the
younger trees all around retained their hues of deep green; and, seen in the
bold relief which it owed to the circumstance, it reminded me of AEneas’
golden branch, glittering bright amid the dark woods of Cumea. And such is
Yardley oak, the subject of one of the finest descriptions in English
poetry, — one of the most characteristic, too, of the muse of Cowper. If
asked to illustrate that peculiar power which he possessed above all modern
poets, of taking the most stubborn and untractable words in the language,
aud bending them with all ease round his thinking, so as to fit its every
indentation and irregularity of outline, as the ship-carpen-ter adjusts the
stubborn planking, grown flexible in his hand, to the exact mould of his
vessel, I would at once instance some parts of the description of Yardley
oak. But farewell, noble tree! so old half a century ago, when the poet
conferred on thee immortality, that thou dost not seem older now!
“Time made thee what thou wast, — king of the woods;
And Time hath made thee what thou art, — a cave
For owls to roost in. Once thy spreading houghs
O’erhung the champaign; and the numerous flocks
That grazed it stood beneath that ample cope
Uncrowded, yet safe sheltered from the storm.
No flock frequents thee now. Thou hast outlived
Thy popularity, and art become
(Unless verse rescue thee a while) a thing
Forgotten as the foliage of thy youth.
While thus through all the stages thou hast pushed
Of treeship, — first a seedling hid in grass;
Then twig; then sapling; and, as century rolled
Slow after century, a giant bulk
Of girth enormous, with moss-cushioned root
Upheaved above the soil, and sides embossed
With prominent wens globose, — till, at the last,
The rottenness, which time is charged to inflict
On other mighty ones, found also thee.”
I returned with my guide to the rustic bridge; resumed my
walk through the hitherto unexplored half of the chestnut colonnade; turned
the corner; and then, passing downwards along the lower side of the park,
through neglected thickets, — the remains of an extensive nursery run wild,
—I struck outwards beyond its precincts, and reached a whitened
dwelling-house that had been once the “ Peasant’s Nest.” But nowhere else in
the course of my walk had the hand of improvement misimproved so sadly. For
the hill-top cottage,
“Environed with a ring of branchy elms
That overhung the thatch,”
I found a modern hard-cast farm-house, with a square of
offices attached, all exceedingly utilitarian, well kept, stiff, and
disagreeable. It was sad enough to find an erection that a journeyman
bricklayer could have produced in a single month substituted for the
“peaceful covert” Cowper had so oftea wished his own, and which he had so
frequently and fondly visited. But those beauties of situation which
awakened the admiration, and even half excited the envy, of the pqet,
improvement could not alter; and so they are now what they ever were. The
diagonal valley to which I have had such frequent occasion to refer is just
escaping from the park at its lower corner: the slope, which rises from the
runnel to the level, still lies on the one hand within the enclosure; but it
has escaped from it on the other, and forms, where it merges into the higher
grounds, the hill-top on which the “ Nest ” stands ; and the prospect, no
longer bounded by the tall belting of the park, is at once very extensive
and singularly beautiful.
“Here Ouse, slow winding through a level plain
Of spacious meads, with cattle sprinkled o’er,
Conducts the eye along its sinuous course
Delighted. There, fast-rooted in their hank,
Stand, never overlooked, our favorite elms,
That screen the herdsman’s solitary hut;
While far beyond, and overthwart the stream,
That, as with molten glass, inlays the vale,
The sloping land recedes into the clouds,
Displaying on its varied side the grace
Of hedge-row beauties numberless, square towers,
Tall spire, from which the sound of cheerful bells
Just undulates upon the listening ear,
Groves, heaths, and smoking villages remote.”
Leaving the farm-house, I descended into the valley; passed
along a tangled thicket of yew, plane and hazel, in which I lingered a while
to pick blackberries and nuts, where Cowper may have picked them; came out
upon the Olney road by the wicket gate through which he used to quit the
highway and strike up to the woodlands; and, after making my old woman
particularly happy by a small gratuity, returned to Olney.
I trust it will not be held that my descriptions of this
old-fashioned park, with its colonnade and its avenues, its dells and its
dingles, its alcove and its wilderness, have been too minute. It has an
interest as independent of any mere beauty or picturesqueness which it may
possess, as the field of Bannockburn or the meadows of Runnimede. It
indicates the fulcrum, if I may so speak, on which the lever of a great
original genius first rested, when it upturned from its foundations an
effete school of English verse, and gave to the literature of the country a
new face. Its scenery, idealized into poetry, wrought one of the greatest
literary revolutions of which the history of letters preserves any record.
The school of Pope, originally of but small compass, had sunk exceedingly
low ere the times of Cowper: it had become, like Nebuchadnezzar’s tree, a
brass-bound stump, that sent forth no leafage of refreshing green, and no
blossoms ,of pleasant smell; and yet, for considerably more than half a
century, it had been the only existing English school. And when the first
volume of “Poems by William Cowper, Esq., of the Inner Temple,” issued from
the press, there seemed to be no prospect whatever of any other school
rising to supplant it. Several writers of genius had appeared in the period,
and had achieved for themselves a standing in literature; nor were they
devoid of the originality, in both their thinking and the form of it,
without which no writer becomes permanently eminent. But their originality
was specific and individual, and terminated with themselves; whereas the
school of Pope, whatever its other defects, was of a generic character. A
second Collins, a second Gray, a second Goldsmith, would have been mere
timid imitators, — mere mock Paganinis, playing each on the one exquisite
string of his master, and serving by his happiest efforts but to establish
the fidelity of the imitation. But the poetry of Pope formed an instrument
of larger compass and a more extensive gamut, and left the disciples room to
achieve for themselves, in running over the notes of their master, a certain
amount of origin ality. Lyttelton’s “Advice to Belinda,” and Johnson’s
“London,” exhibit the stamp of very different minds; and the “Pursuits of
Literature” is quite another sort of poem from the “Triumphs of Temper;” but
they all alike belong to the school of Pope, and bear the impress of the
“Moral Essays,” the “Satires,” or the “Rape of the Lock.” The poetical mind
of England had taken an inveterate set; it had grown up into artificial
attitudes, like some superannuated posture-maker, and had lost the gait and
air natural to it. Like the painter in the fable, it drew its portraits less
from the life than from cherished models and familiar casts approved by the
connoisseur ; and exhibited nature, when it at all exhibited it, through a
dim haze of colored conventionalities. And this school, grown rigid and
unfeeling in its unproductive old age, it was part of the mission of Cowper
to supplant and destroy. He restored to English literature the wholesome
freshness of nature, and sweetened and invigorated its exhausted atmosphere,
by letting in upon it the cool breeze and the bright sunshine. The old park,
with its noble trees and sequestered valleys, were to him what the writings
of Pope and of Pope’s disciples were to his contemporaries: he renewed
poetry by doing what the first poets had done.
It is not uninteresting to mark the plan on which nature
delights to operate in producing a renovation of this character in the
literature of a country. Cowper had two vigorous coadjutors in the work of
revolution; and all three, though essentially unlike in other respects,
resembled one another in the preliminary course through which they were
prepared for their proper employment. Circumstances had conspired to throw
them all outside the pale of the existing literature. Cowper, at the ripe
age of thirty-three, when breathing in London the literary atmosphere of the
day, amid his friends, — the Lloyds, Colmans, and Bonnel Thorntons, — was a
clever and tasteful imitator, but an imitator merely, both in his prose and
his verse. His prose in “The Connoisseur” is a feeble echo of that of
Addison; while in his verse we find unequivocal traces of Prior, of Philips,
and of Pope, but scarce any trace whatever of a poet at least not inferior
to the b^St of them, — Cowper himself. Events over which he had no control
suddenly removed him outside this atmosphere, and dropped him into a
profound retirement, in which for nearly twenty years he did not peruse the
works of any English poet. The chimes of the existing literature had fairly
rung themselves out of his head, ere, with a heart grown familiar in the
interval with all earnest feeling, — an intellect busied with ever ripening
cogitation, — an eye and ear conversant, day after day, and year after year,
with the face and voice of nature, — he struck, as the keynotes of his own
noble poetry, a series of exquisitely modulated tones, that had no
counterparts in the artificial gamut. Had his preparatory course been
different, — had he been kept in the busy and literary world, instead of
passing, in his insulated solitude, through the term of second education,
which made him what we all know, — it seems more than questionable whether
Cowper would have ever taken his place in literature as a great original
poet.^ His two coadjutors in the work of
*Cowper himself seems to have been thoroughly aware that his
long seclusion from the world of letters told in his favor. “I reckon it
among my principal advantages as a composer of verses,” we find him saying,
in one of his letters to the younger Unwin, “that I have not read an English
poet these thirteen years, and but one these twenty years. Imitation even of
the best models is my aversion. It is servile and mechanical, — a trick that
has enabled many to usurp the name of author, who could not have written at
all, if they had not written upon the pattern of some one indeed original.
But when the ear and taste have been much accustomed literary revolution,
were George Crabbe and Robert Burns. The one, self-taught, and wholly shut
out from the world of letters, laid in his vast stores of observation, fresh
from nature, in an obscure fishing village on the coast of Suffolk; the
other, educated in exactly the same style and degree, — Crabbe had a little
bad Latin, and Burns a little bad French, — and equally secluded from the
existing literature, achieved the same important work on the bleak farm of
Mossgiel. And the earlier compositions of these three poets,— all of them
true backwoodsmen in the republic of letters, — clearers of new and untried
fields in the rich unopened provinces, — appeared within five years of each
other—Crabbe’s first and Burns’ last. This process of renovating a worn-out
literature does certainly seem a curious one. Circumstances virtually
excommunicated three of the great poetic minds of the age, and flung them
outside the literary pale; and straightway they became founders of churches
of their own, and carried away with them all the people. to the manner of
others, it is almost impossible to avoid it; and we imitate in spite of
ourselves, just in proportion as we admire.”
Cowper, however, was better adapted by nature, and more
prepared by previous accomplishment, for the work of literary revolution,
than either Bums or Crabbe. His poetry — to return to a previous
illustration, rather, however, indicated than actually employed — was in the
natural what Pope’s was in the artificial walk, — of a generic character;
whereas theirs was of a strongly specific cast. The writers who have
followed Crabbe and Burns we at once detect as imitators; whereas the
writers to whom Cowper furnished the starting note have attained to the
dignity of originals. He withdrew their attention from the old models, —
thoroughly commonplaced by reproduction, — and sent them out into the fields
and the woods with greatly enlarged vocabularies, to describe new things in
fresh language. And thus has he exercised an indirect but potent influence
on the thinking and mode of description of poets whose writings furnish
little or no trace of his peculiar style or manner. Even in style and
manner, however, we discover in his pregnant writings the half-developed
germs of after schools. In his lyrics we find, for instance, the starting
notes of not a few of the happiest lyrics of Campbell. The noble ode “On the
Loss of the Royal George” must have been ringing in the ears of the poet who
produced the “Battle of the Baltic;” and had the “Castaway” and the “Poplar
Field” been first given to the world in company with the “Exile of Erin” and
the “Soldier’s Dream,” no critic could have ever suspected that they had
emanated from quite another pen. We may find similar traces in his works of
the minor poems of the Lake School. “The Distressed Travellers, or Labor in
Vain;” “The Yearly Distress, or Tithing-Time;” “The Colubriad;” “The Retired
Cat;” “The Dog and the Water Lily;” and “The Diverting History of John
Gilpin,” — might have all made their first appearance among the “Lyrical
Ballads,” and would certainly have formed high specimens of the work. But it
is not form and manner that the restored literature of England mainly owes
to Cowper, — it is spirit and life; not so much any particular mode of
exhibiting nature, as a revival of the habit of looking at it.
I had selected as my inn at Olney a quiet old house, kept by
a quiet old man, who, faithful to bygone greatness, continued to sell his
ale under the somewat faded countenance of the late Duke of York. On my
return, I found him smoking a pipe, in his clean, tile-paved kitchen, with a
man nearly as old as himself, but exceedingly vigorous for his years, — a
fresh-colored, square-shouldered, deep-chested, English-looking man, with
good sense and frank good-humor broadly impressed on every feature. The warm
day and the long walk had rendered me exceedingly thirsty: I had been
drinking, as I came along, at every runnel; and I now asked the landlord
whether he could not get me something to slake my drought less heady than
his ale. “O,” said his companion, taking from his pocket half a dozen fine
jargonelle pears, and sweeping them towards me across the old oak table,
“these are the things for your thirst.” I thanked him, and picked out of the
heap a single pear. “O,” he exclaimed, in the same tone of refreshing
frankness,take all, take all; they are all of my own rearing; I have
abundance more on my trees at home.” With so propitious a beginning, we were
soon engaged in conversation. He was, as I afterwards learned from my host,
a very worthy man, Mr. Hales, of Pemberton, the last, or nearly the last, of
the race of old English yeomen in this part of the country. His ancestors
had held their small property of a few fields for centuries, and he
continued to hold it still. He well remembered Cowper, he told me; Newton
had left Olney before his day, some sixty-five or sixty-six years ago; but
of Thomas Scott he had some slight recollection. The connection of these men
with the locality had exerted, he said, a marked influence on the theologic
opinions and beliefs of the people; and there were few places in England, in
consequence, in which the Puseyistic doctrines had made less way. The old
parishioners of Newton and Scott, and the town’s folk and neighbors of
Cowper, had felt, of course, an interest in their writings; and so there
were more copies of the “Poems,” and the “Cardiphonia,” and the “Force of
Truth,” and the “Essays,” scattered over the place, than over perhaps any
other locality in England. 4qd so the truth was at least known in Olney, and
its neighborhood, whatever use might be made of it. I inquired whether he
had ever heard of one Moses Brown, who had been curate in Olney exactly a
hundred years before, — a good man, a poet, and a friend of James Hervey,
and whose poems, descriptive and devotional, though not equal by a great
deal to those of Cowper, had passed through several editions in their day.
Mr. Hales had barely heard that such a man there had been, and had some
recollection of an aged woman, one of his daughters. I parted from the old
frank yeoman, glad I should have seen so fine a specimen of a class fast
hastening to extinction. The reader will remember that Gulliver, in the
island of the sorcerers, when the illustrious dead were called up to hold
converse with him, had the curiosity to summon, among the rest, a few
English yeomen of the old stamp, — “once so famous,” says the satirist, “for
the simplicity of their manners, diet, and dress, — for justice in their
dealings, — for their true spirit of liberty and love of their country.” And
I deemed myself somewhat in luck in having found a representative of the
class still in the land of the living, considerably more than a century
after Swift had deemed it necessary to study his specimens among the dead.
After exhausting the more interesting walks of the place, I
quitted Olney next morning for the railway, by an omnibus that plies daily
between Bedford and Wolverton. There were two gentlemen in the vehicle. The
one dressed very neatly in black, with a white neck-cloth and somewhat
prim-looking beaver hat, I at once set down as a Dissenting minister; the
other, of a rather more secular cast, but of staid and sober aspect, might,
I inferred, be one of his deacons or elders. They were engaged, as I
entered, in discussing some theological question, which they dropped,
however, as we drove on through the street, and evinced a curiosity to know
where Newton and Thomas Scott had lived. I pointed out to them the house of
Cowper, and the house and church pf Newton; and, in crossing the famous
bridge over the Ouse, directed their attention to the distant village of
Weston-Underwood, in which Scott had officiated for many years as a curate.
And so I got fairly into their good graces, and had my share assigned me in
the conversation. They discussed Newton and Scott, and characterized as
sound and excellent the “Commentary” of the one and the “Letters” of the
other; but the labors of Cowper, whose rarer genius, and intellect of finer
texture, seemed removed beyond the legitimate range of their appreciation,
they regarded apparently as of less mark and importance. I deemed them no
inadequate representatives of a worthy section of the English people, and of
an obvious power in the country, — a power always honestly and almost always
well directed, but rather in obedience to the instincts of a wise religion
than the promptings of a nicely-discriminating intelligence. The more
secular-looking traveller of the two, on ascertaining that I had come from
Edinburgh, and was a citizen of the place, inquired whether I was not
a ‘parishioner of Dr. Chalmers, — the one Scotchman, by the way, with whose
name I found every Englishman of any intelligence in some degree acquainted;
and next, whether I was not a member of the Free Church. The Disruption both
gentlemen regarded as a great and altogether extraordinary event. They knew
almost nothing of the controversy which had led to it; but there was no
mistaking the simple fact of which it was an embodiment, namely, that from
four to five hundred ministers of the Established Church had resigned their
livings on a point of principle. To this effect, at least, the iron tongue
of rumor had struck with no uncertain sound; and the tones were of a kind
suited not to lower the aspirations of the religious sentiment, nor to cast
a shade of suspicion on its reality as a principle of conduct.
In the middle of a weary ascent immediately over the old
yeoman’s hamlet of Pemberton, the horse that dragged us fairly stood still:
and so we had to get out and walk; and though we paced over the ground quite
leisurely enough, both vehicle and driver were left far behind ere we got to
the top of the hill. We paused, and paused, and sauntered on for a few
hundred yards at a time, and then paused again and again; and still no
omnibus. At length, the driver came puffing up behind us afoot, on the way
to Newport Pagnell, he said, for another “hanimal,” for his “poor hoss” had
foundered on that “cussed hill.” My fellow-traveller, the presumed deacon,
proved considerably more communicative than his companion the minister. He
had, I found, notwithstanding his gravity, some town-bred smartness about
him, and was just a little conceited withal; or, I should perhaps rather
say, was not quite devoid of what constitutes the great innate impression of
the true Englishman, — an impression of his own superiority, simply in
virtue of his country, over all and sundry who speak his language with an
accent not native to the soil. But I never yet quarrelled with a feeling at
once so comfortable and so harmless, and which the Scotch — though in a form
less personal as it regards the individual entertaining it, and with an eye
more to Scotland in the average — cherish as strongly ; and so the
Englishman and I agreed during our walk excellently well. He had unluckily
left his hat in the vehicle, bringing with him instead, what served as his
coach-cap, a pinched Glengary bonnet, which, it must be confessed, looked
nearly as much out of place on his head as Captain Knock-dunder’s cocked
hat, trimmed with gold lace, when mounted high over philabeg and plaid, on
the head of the redoubted captain. And on nearing the village of Skirvington,
he seemed to feel that the bonnet was not the sort of head-dress in which a
demure Englishman looked most himself. “It might do well enough for a
Scotchman like me,” he said, “but not so well for him.” I wore, by chance, a
tolerably good hat, and proposed making a temporary exchange, until we
should have passed the village; but fate declared itself against the
transaction. The Englishman’s bonnet would have lain, we found, like a
coronet upon a cushion on the Scotch head; and the Scotch hat, on the other
hand, threatened to swallow up the Englishman. I found myself in error in
deeming him an acquaintance of our fellow-traveller the minister : he did
not even know his name, and was exceedingly anxious to find it out, — quite
fidgety on the point; for he was, he said, a profoundly able man, and, he
was certain, a person of note. At the inn at Newport Pagnell, however, he
succeeded, I know not how, in ferreting the name out; and whispered into my
ear, as we went, that he was assured he was in the right in deeming our
companion somebody: the gentleman in black beside us was no other than Dr.-.
But the doctor’s name was wholly unfamiliar to me, and I have since
forgotten it.
Newport Pagnell! I had but just one association with the
place, besides the one formed as I had passed through its streets two
evenings before, on the night of riot and clamor: it had been for many years
the home of worthy, witty, bluff William Bull, — the honest Independent
minister who used so regularly to visit poor Cowper in his affliction, ere
Cowper had yet become famous, and whom the affectionate poet learned so
cordially to love. How strangely true genius does brighten up whatever
object it falls upon! It is, to borrow from Sir Walter’s illustration, the
playful sunbeam, that, capriciously selecting some little bit of glass or
earthen ware in the middle of a ploughed field, renders it visible across
half a country, by the light which it pours upon it. An old astronomer, ere
the heavens had been filled up with their fantastic signs, — crabs, and
fish, and scorpions, bulls and rams, and young ladies, and locks of young
ladies’ hair, — could give a favorite toy or pet companion a place in the
sky; but it is only the true poet who possesses an analogous power now. He
can fix whatever bauble his fancy rests upon high in the literary heavens;
and no true poet ever exercised the peculiar privilege of his order more
sportively than Cowper. He has fixed Mr. Bull’s tobacco-box and his pipe
amid the signs, and elicited many a smile by setting the honest man
a-smoking high up in the moon. But even to the moon his affection followed
him, as may be seen from the characteristic passage, glittering, as is
Cowper’s wont, with an embroidery of playful humor, inwrought into a
sad-colored groundwork of melancholy, in which he apostrophizes the worthy
minister in his new lodgment. “Mon aimable and tres cher ami," — it is not
in the power of chaises or chariots to carry you where my affections will
not follow you. If I heard that you were gone to finish your days in the
moon, I should not love you the less, but should contemplate the place of
your abode as often as it appeared in the heavens, and say, ‘ Farewell, my
friend, forever! Lost, but not forgotten! Live happy in thy lantern, and
smoke the remainder of thy pipes in peace. Thou art rid of earth, — at
least, of all its cares, — and so far can I rejoice in thy removal; and as
to the cares that are to be found in the moon, I am resolved to suppose them
lighter than those below, — heavier they can hardly be.’ ”
Cowper’s translations of the better devotional poems of
Madame Guion were made at the request of Mr. Bull, who, though himself a
Calvinist, was yet so great an admirer of the mystic Frenchwoman, —
undoubtedly sincere, though not always judicious, in her devotional
aspirations, — that he travelled on one occasion twenty miles to see her
picture. He urged him, too, during that portion of partial convalescence in
which his greater poetical works were produced, again to betake himself to
the composition of original hymns; but it was the hour of the power of
darkness, and this second request served but to distress the mind of the
suffering poet. He had “no objection,” he said, “to giving the graces of the
foreigner an English dress,” but “insuperable ones to affected exhibitions
of what he did not feel.” — “Ask possibilities,” he adds, “and they shall be
performed ; but ask no hymns from a man suffering from despair, as I do. I
could not sing the Lord’s song, were it to save my life, banished as I am,
not to a strange land, but to a remoteness from His presence, in comparison
with which the distance from east to west is no distance, — is vicinity and
cohesion.” Alas, poor Cowper! — sorely smitten by the archers, and ever
carrying about with him the rankling arrow in the wound. It is not
improbable that one of the peculiar doctrines of the Mystics, though it
could scarce have approved itself to his judgment, may have yet exercised a
soothing influence on the leading delusion of his unhappy malady; and that
he may have been all the more an admirer of the writings of Madame Guion, —
for a great admirer he was, — in consequence of her pointed and frequent
allusion to it. It was held by the class of Christians to which she
belonged, — among the rest, by Fenelon, — that it would be altogether
proper, and not impossible, for the soul to acquiesce in even its own
destruction, were it to be God’s will that it should be destroyed. We find
the idea brought strongly out in one of the poems translated by Cowper; but
it is in vain now to inquire respecting the mood of strangely-mingled
thought and feeling, — of thought solid and sane, and of acute feeling,
quickened by madness, — in which he must have given to it its first
embodiment in English verse.
“Yet lie leaves me,—cruel fate!
Leaves me in my lost estate.
Have I sinned? O, say wherein;
Tell me, and forgive my sin!
King and Lord, whom I adore,
Shall I see thy face no more?
Be not angry; I resign
Henceforth all my will to thine:
I consent that Thou depart,
Though thine absence breaks my heart.
Go, then, and forever too;
All is right that Thou wilt do.”
A mile beyond Skirvington, when we had almost resigned
ourselves to the hardship of walking over all the ground which we had
bargained for being carried over, we were overtaken by the omnibus drawn by
the “fresh hoss.” It stopped for a few seconds as we entered Newport Pagnell,
to pick up a passenger; and a tall, robust, hard-featured female, of some
five-and-forty or so, stepped in. Had we heard, she asked, when adjusting
herself with no little bustle in a corner of the conveyance,— had we heard
how the great fight had gone? No! — my two companions had not so much as
heard that a great fight there had been. “O dear!” exclaimed the robust
female, “not heard that Bendigo challenged Caunt for the championship !—ay,
and he has beaten him too. Three hundred guineas a-side! ” — “Bad work, I am
afraid,” said the gentleman in black. — “Yes,” exclaimed the robust female;
“bad work, foul work; give ’em fair play, and Bendigo is no match for Caunt.
Hard stiff fellow, though! But there he is!” We looked out in the direction
indicated, and saw the champion of all England standing at a public-house
door, with a large white patch over one eye, and a deep purple streak under
the other. He reminded me exceedingly of Bill Sikes, in the illustrations by
Cruikshank of Oliver Twist. For two mortal hours had he stood up, under the
broiling sun of the previous day, to knock down, and be knocked down in
turn, all in a lather of blood and sweat, and surrounded by a ring of the
greatest scoundrels in the kingdom. And the ninety-third round had
determined him the best man of two, and the champion of all England. I felt
convinced, however, like the old king in the ballad, that England holds
“Within its realme,
Five hundred as good as hee.”
There had been sad doings in the neighborhood, — not a little
thieving in the houses, several robberies on the highway, and much
pocket-picking among the crowds; in short, as the reporter of a sporting
paper, “The Era,” who seemed to have got bitten somehow, summed up his
notice of the fight,— “ had the crowds brought together been transported en
masse to Botany Bay, they would have breathed forth such a moral pestilence
as would have infected the atmosphere of the place.” Pugilism has been
described as one of the manifestations of English character and manners. I
suspect, however, that in the present day it manifests nothing higher than
the unmitigated blackguardism of England’s lowest and most disreputable men.
Regarding the English ladies who take an interest in it, I must of course
venture nothing untender; indeed, I saw but a single specimen of the class,
and that for but twenty minutes or so, for the robust female left us at the
first stage.
A pugilist, notwithstanding his pugilism, may be, I doubt
not, a brave fellow; the bottom he displays is, in most instances, the
identical quality which, in the desperate tug of war, so distinguishes, over
all the other troops of Europe, the British soldier. But the “science of
defence” can have in itself no tendency either to strengthen native courage,
or to supply the want of it. It must take its place rather among those
artificial means of inspiring confidence, that, like the bladders of the
swimmer, serve but to induce a state of prostration and helplessness when
they unexpectedly give way; and can be but an indifferent preparation for
meeting full in front the bayonet-point that breaks in upon its guards, or
the whizzing bullet that beats them down. I have been told by an aged
relative, now deceased, who saw much service, that in the first great naval
battle in which he was engaged, and the first great storm he experienced,
there were two men—one in each instance—whose cowardice was palpable and
apparent to the whole -crew, and who agreed so far in character, that each
was the champion pugilist and bully of his vessel. The dastard in the
engagement— that of Camperdown — was detected coiling up his craven bulk in
a place of concealment, out of reach of the shot: the dastard in the storm
was rendered, by the extremeness of his terror, unfit for duty. The vessel
in which my relative sailed at the time — the same relative who afterwards
picked up the curious shell amid the whistling of the bullets in Egypt — was
one of those old-fashioned, iron-fastened ships of the line that, previous
to the breaking out of the first revolutionary war, had been lying in dock
for years, and that, carefully kept, so far at least as externals were
concerned, looked extremely well when first sent to sea, but proved
miserable weather-boats amid the straining of a gale, when their stiff rusty
bolting began to slacken and work out. The gale, in this especial instance,
proved a very tremendous one ; and the old Magnificent went scudding before
it, far into the Northern Ocean, under bare poles. She began to open in the
joints and seams like a piece of basket-work; and though the pumps were
plied incessantly by half-hour relays, the water rose fast within the hold,
and she threatened to settle down. My relative was stationed in the
well-room during one of the night-watches, just as the tempest had reached
its crisis, to take note of the state of the leakage; and a man came round
every quarter of an hour to receive his report. The water, dimly visible by
the lantern of horn, rose fast along the gauge, covering, inch after inch,
four feet and a half,—four feet nine, — five feet, — five feet three, — five
feet and a half: the customary quarter of an hour had long elapsed, yet no
one appeared to report; and the solitary watcher, wondering at the delay,
raised the little hatch directly above head, and stepped out upon the orlop,
to represent the state of matters below. Directly over the opening, a
picture of cold, yellow terror, petrifying into stone, stood the cowed
bruiser, with a lantern dangling idly from his finger points. “What make you
here?” asked my relative.—“Come to report.” — “Report! is that reporting?” —
“O! — how many feet water?” — “Five and a half.” — “Five feet and a half!”
exclaimed the unnerved bully, striking his hands together, and letting his
lantern fall into the open hatch,— “Five feet and a half! Gracious heaven!
it’s all over with us!” Nothing, I have oftener than once heard my relative
remark, so strongly impressed him, during the terrors of the gale, as the
dread-impressed features and fear-modulated tones of that unhappy man. |