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Celtic Literature: As when the moon, refulgent lamp of night -by Matthew Arnold   As when the moon, refulgent lamp of night - to call up any number of instances. Latin poetry supplies plenty of instances too; if we put this from Propertius’s Hylas:- . . . manus heroum . . . Mollia composita litora fronde togit - side by side with the line of Theocritus by which it was suggested:- [Greek verse] - we get at the same moment a good specimen both of the conventional and of the Greek way of handling nature. But from our own poetry we may get specimens of the Greek way of handling nature, as well as of the conventional: for instance, Keats’s:- What little town by river or seashore, Or mountain-built with quiet citadel, Is emptied of its folk, this pious morn? is Greek, as Greek as a thing from Homer or Theocritus; it is composed with the eye on the object, a radiancy and light clearness being added. German poetry abounds in specimens of the faithful way of handling nature; an excellent example is to be found in the stanzas called Zueignung, prefixed to Goethe’s poems; the morning walk, the mist, the dew, the sun, are as faithful as they can be, they are given with the eye on the object, but there the merit of the work, as a handling of nature, stops; neither Greek radiance nor Celtic magic is added; the power of these is not what gives the poem in question its merit, but a power of quite another kind, a power of moral and spiritual emotion. But the power of Greek radiance Goethe could give to his handling of nature, and nobly too, as any one who will read his Wanderer,the poem in which a wanderer falls in with a peasant woman and her child by their hut, built out of the ruins of a temple near Cuma,may see. Only the power of natural magic Goethe does not, I think, give; whereas Keats passes at will from the Greek power to that power which is, as I say, Celtic; from his:- |
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