Page:Blackwood's Magazine volume 056.djvu/348

342 This thousand-featured splendour—

Thousand-featured without flaw!—

At last, his vision reveling

On her ravishing mouth, he saw

“It closed; and then remember’d

That she spoke not.—‘Stay to dine,

And name her wishes after’—

To these sounds he could assign

A sense, for still he heard them,

Echoing silvery and divine.”

Sir Hubert having reveled on her ravishing mouth, and having, by a strong effort of intelligence, mastered the meaning of the very occult proposition which issued therefrom, namely, that the lady would “stay to dine, and name her wishes after;” and, moreover, having seen—“It closed”—he shortly afterwards saw it opened, for the purpose of eating his hawk, which, as the reader knows, he had felt himself under the necessity of killing for the fair widow’s entertainment. We pass over the relation of the circumstances which, as the lady discovers, render her mission fruitless, and which are detailed in a strain of the most vapid silliness—and proceed to the interview which brings about the union of Mabel and Sir Hubert. The latter, some time after these occurrences, pays a visit to the castle.

“Half reclined

Along a couch leans Mabel,

Deeply musing in her mind

Something her bosom echoes.

O’er her face, like breaths of wind

“Upon a summer meadow,

Serious pleasures live; and eyes

Large always, slowly largen,

As if some far-seen surprise

Approach’d,—then fully orb them,

At near sound of one that sighs.”

Her eyes having recovered their natural size, a good deal of conversation ensues, the result of which is given in the following stanza, which forms a fit conclusion for the story of such a passion—

“Her hands are woo’d with kisses,

They refuse not the caress,

Closer, closer, ever closer,

Vigorous lips for answer press!

Feasting the hungry silence

Comes, sob-clad, a silver ‘yes.’”

There are several smaller poems interspersed throughout the volume. Mr Tennyson has his “Claribels,” and “Isabels,” and “Adelines,” and “Eleanores”—ladies with whom he frequently plays strange, though, we admit, by no means ungraceful vagaries; and Mr Patmore, as in duty bound, and following the imitative bent of his genius, must also have his Geraldine to dally with. The two following stanzas of playful namby-pambyism, are a specimen of the manner in which this gentleman dandles his kid:—

“We are in the fields. Delight!

Look around! The bird’s-eyes bright;

Pink-tipp’d daisies; sorrel red,

Drooping o’er the lark’s green bed;

Oxlips; glazed buttercups,

Out of which the wild bee sups;

See! they dance about thy feet!

Play with, pluck them, little Sweet!

Some affinity divine

Thou hast with them, Geraldine.

“Now, sweet wanton, toss them high;

Race about, you know not why.

Now stand still, from sheer excess

Of exhaustless happiness.

I, meanwhile, on this old gate,

Sit sagely calm, and perhaps relate

Lore of fairies. Do you know

How they make the mushrooms grow?

Ah! what means that shout of thine?

You can’t tell me, Geraldine.”

Our extracts are now concluded; and in reviewing them in the mass, we can only exclaim—this, then, is the pass to which the poetry of England has come! This is the life into which the slime of the Keateses and Shelleys of former times has fecundated! The result was predicted about a quarter of a century ago in the pages of this Magazine; and many attempts were then made to suppress the nuisance at its fountainhead. Much good was accomplished: but our efforts at that time were only partially successful; for nothing is so tenacious of life as the spawn of frogs—nothing is so vivacious as corruption, until it has reached its last stage. The evidence before us shows that this stage has been now at length attained. Mr Coventry Patmore’s volume has reached the ultimate terminus of poetical degradation; and our conclusion, as well as our hope is, that the fry must become extinct in him. His poetry (thank Heaven!) cannot corrupt into any thing worse than itself.