登陆注册
14326000000070

第70章

When we attend to the language which savages employ on any solemn occasion, it appears that man is a poet by nature. Whether at first obliged by the mere defects of his tongue, and the scantiness of proper expressions, or seduced by a pleasure of the fancy in stating the analogy of its objects, he clothes every conception in image and metaphor. 'We have planted the tree of peace,' says an American orator; 'we have buried the axe under its roots: we will henceforth repose under its shade; we will join to brighten the chain that binds our nations together.' Such are the collections of metaphor which those nations employ in their public harangues. They have likewise already adopted those lively figures, and that daring freedom of language, which the learned have afterwards found so well fitted to express the rapid transitions of the imagination, and the ardours of a passionate mind.

If we are required to explain, how men could be poets, or orators, before they were aided by the learning of the scholar and the critic? we may inquire, in our turn, how bodies could fall by their weight, before the laws of gravitation were recorded in books? Mind, as well as body, has laws, which are exemplified in the practice of men, and which the critic collects only after the example has shewn what they are.

Occasioned, probably, by the physical connection we have mentioned, between the emotions of a heated imagination, and the impressions received from music and pathetic sounds, every tale among rude nations is repeated in verse, and is made to take the form of a song The early history of all nations is uniform in this particular. Priests, statesmen, and philosophers, in the first ages of Greece, delivered their instructions in poetry, and mixed with the dealers in music and heroic fable.

It is not so surprising, however, that poetry should be the first species of composition in every nation, as it is, that a style apparently so difficult, and so far removed from ordinary use, should be almost as universally the first to attain its maturity. The most admired of all poets lived beyond the reach of history, almost of tradition. The artless song of the savage, the heroic legend of the bard, have sometimes a magnificent beauty, which no change of language can improve, and no refinements of the critic reform.

Under the supposed disadvantage of a limited knowledge, and a rude apprehension, the simple poet has impressions that more than compensate the defects of his skill. The best subjects of poetry, the characters of the violent and the brave, the generous and the intrepid, great dangers, trials of fortitude and fidelity, are exhibited within his view, or are delivered in traditions which animate like truth, because they are equally believed. He is not engaged in recalling, like Virgil or Tasso, the sentiments or scenery of an age remote from his own: he needs not be told by the critic,(22*) to recollect what another would have thought, or in what manner another would have expressed his conception. The simple passions, friendship, resentment, and love, are the movements of his own mind, and he has no occasion to copy. Simple and vehement in his conceptions and feelings, he knows no diversity of thought, or of style, to mislead or to exercise his judgement. He delivers the emotions of the heart, in words suggested by the heart: for he knows no other. And hence it is, that while we admire the judgement and invention of Virgil, and of other later poets, these terms appear misapplied to Homer.

Though intelligent, as well as sublime, in his conceptions, we cannot anticipate the lights of his understanding, nor the movements of his heart: he appears to speak from inspiration, not from invention; and to be guided in the choice of his thoughts and expressions by a supernatural instinct, not by reflection.

The language of early ages, is in one respect, simple and confined; in another, it is varied and free: it allows liberties, which, to the poet of after times, are denied.

In rude ages men are not separated by distinctions of rank or profession. They live in one manner, and speak one dialect. The bard is not to chuse his expression among the singular accents of different conditions. He has not to guard his language from the peculiar errors of the mechanic, the peasant, the scholar, or the courtier, in order to find that elegant propriety, and just elevation, which is free from the vulgar of one class, the pedantic of the second, or the flippant of the third. The name of every object, and of every sentiment, is fixed; and if his conception has the dignity of nature, his expression will have a purity which does not depend on his choice.

With this apparent confinement in the choice of his words, he is at liberty to break through the ordinary modes of construction; and in the form of a language not established by rules, may find for himself a cadence agreeable to the tone of his mind. The liberty he takes, while his meaning is striking, and his language is raised, appears an improvement, not a trespass on grammar. He delivers a style to the ages that follow, and becomes a model from which his posterity judge.

But whatever may be the early disposition of mankind to poetry, or the advantage they possess in cultivating this species of literature; whether the early maturity of poetical compositions arise from their being the first studied, or from their having a charm to engage persons of the liveliest genius, who are best qualified to improve the eloquence of their native tongue; it is a remarkable fact, that, not only in countries where every vein of composition was original, and was opened in the order of natural succession; but even at Rome, and in modern Europe, where the learned began early to practise on foreign models, we have poets of every nation, who are perused with pleasure, while the prose writers of the same ages are neglected.

同类推荐
  • 日本国志

    日本国志

    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。
  • 张文端公诗选

    张文端公诗选

    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。
  • 贾氏谭录

    贾氏谭录

    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。
  • 古文约选序例

    古文约选序例

    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。
  • 太古土兑经

    太古土兑经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 女神住我家

    女神住我家

    二十年前,探寻人类身体极限的一级项目在深海秘密进行,两千个少年被选为目标,因为组织内部矛盾,项目被终止,但是那些少年几乎已经成为超级人类,无法曝光,只好将他们冰冻冷藏。二十年后的今天,一个少年从深海走出,进入这个对他来说有些陌生的现代世界。
  • 傲世邪女

    傲世邪女

    从未做过好人的她,好不容易做一次好人,竟然给穿越了!这也就算了!她不就是想改善哈条件打劫了一个穷鬼?那知道那个所谓滴穷鬼竟然是当朝太子,而且还是个小气鬼,不就扇了他两巴掌?至于派几百人追杀她?得神剑,炼灵丹,收灵兽,纵横异世,翻手为云,覆手为雨,成就一段传奇。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 荒天地

    荒天地

    这里妖兽遍地部族争霸无数人为了生存,为了部落,抛头颅,洒热血这,是妖族肆虐的大荒时代这,也是无数修士为了长生,纵死无悔的修仙时代大明神国荆州境内,林风的修仙之路,从这里开始
  • 珠翠志异

    珠翠志异

    一次意外,让我拥有无尽的生命。那个男人到底是谁?与白琪的意外相逢,带我走进一个活了几百年都没有涉足的灵异领域。天使,魔鬼,僵尸,神邸,魑魅,魍魉,女煞,邪教,飞天玉屏上方雕刻的女人犹如镜子中的自己。猜,下一次夜幕降临时是什么在你的窗外?
  • 找个姐姐当女友

    找个姐姐当女友

    漂亮姐姐?温柔女友?我很烦,别用专一妨碍我的花心路
  • 二十九维度卷尺

    二十九维度卷尺

    一个孤儿的励志向上的进化之路一个少年的坚毅勇猛的上进之旅一场自己走,别人追的维度进化我心有卷尺,丈量本宇宙
  • 葛仙翁肘后方备急方

    葛仙翁肘后方备急方

    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。
  • 一个不一样的衰神

    一个不一样的衰神

    告诉你,这是你逼我的,我笑给你看……张小顺,一个平凡的名字,却经历了不平凡的一生,他英俊神武,放浪不羁,叱咤风云,笑看人生……万花丛中过,沾得一身香……好吧,以上纯属扯淡。无法过普通人生活的他,被迫幼年离家,远离父母亲人,一个字形容足矣,可怜啊!吃苦受累外加遭罪,还得伺候人!学艺多年却依然无法回家,还险些酿成大祸。只好换个环境找找灵感……可哪曾想,地方换完了,居然还是伺候人,这次居然是伺候……ps:新人新书,不喜勿喷,本书非爽文,虽然是慢热型,但慢的会很有节奏……
  • 巧克力味的青春

    巧克力味的青春

    青春,像一场雨,雨中总有一些人从陪你一起躲或一起淋。青春,就像巧克力,苦中带甜,甜中有苦。青春总有一些人经过却在心里留下抹不掉的影子。就像余筱筱的青春里有等待,有幸福,有冷凝,有安泽轩一样。这是一个关于小爱情的温暖故事。
  • exo之粉瞳女孩

    exo之粉瞳女孩

    她,十七岁遭男朋友背叛在一年的时间休完大学,离开父母独自一人去一个陌生的国家——韩国,成了十二个个性不同的少年的助理,一段新的旅程才刚刚开始,当十二个人告白的一刻她该如何选择?作者声明这是和exo之等你爱我琳莫一样的并不是抄袭是一个人写的。