Page:Blackwood's Magazine volume 056.djvu/626

624 Wash thy feet, my beloved, that they should run

Quick to deny me 'neath the morning sun,—

And do thy kisses, like the rest, betray?—

The cock crows coldly.—Go, and manifest

A late contrition, but no bootless fear!

For when thy deathly need is bitterest,

Thou shalt not be denied, as I am here—

My voice, to God and angels, shall attest,—

Because I this man, let him be clear."

One more sonnet, and we bid adieu to these very favourable specimens of Miss Barrett's genius:—

" 'O dreary life!' we cry, 'O dreary life!'

And still the generations of the birds

Sing through our sighing, and the flocks and herds

Serenely live while we are keeping strife

With Heaven's true purpose in us, as a knife

Against which we may struggle. Ocean girds

Unslacken'd the dry land: savannah-swards

Unweary sweep: hills watch, unworn; and rife

Meek leaves drop yearly from the forest-trees,

To show, above, the unwasted stars that pass

In their old glory. O thou God of old!

Grant me some smaller grace than comes to these;—

But so much patience, as a blade of grass

Grows by contented through the heat and cold."

There is a poem in these volumes entitled the "Cry of the Human"—some stanzas of which are inspired by profound feeling, and written with a rare force and simplicity of style; but as other parts of it arc obscure, and as it appears to us to be of very unequal merit, we shall not quote the whole of it. In addition to the faults which are to be found in the poem itself, its title is objectionable, as embodying one of Miss Barrett's worst mannerisms, and one for which we think that no allowance ought to be made. She is in the habit of employing certain adjectives in a substantive sense. She does so here. In other places she writes "Heaven assist the Human," "Leaning from my human," that is, stooping from my rank as a human being. In one passage she says,

" Till the heavenly Infinite

Falling off from our Created—

nature being understood after the word "created." The word "Divine" is one which she frequently employs in this substantive fashion. She also writes "Chanting down the Golden"—the golden what?

" Then the full sense of your mortal

Rush'd upon you deep and loud."

For "mortal," read "mortality." It is true that this practice may be defended to a certain extent by the example and authority of Milton. But Miss Barrett is mistaken if she supposes that her frequent and prominent use of such a form of speech, can be justified by the rare and unobtrusive instances of it which are to be found in the Paradise Lost. To use an anomalous expression two or three times in a poem consisting of many thousand lines, is a very different thing from bringing the same anomaly conspicuously forward, and employing it as a common and favourite mode of speech in a number of small poems. In the former case, it will be found that the expression is vindicated by the context, and by the circumstances under which it is employed; in the latter case it becomes a nuisance which cannot be too rigorously put down. One step further and we shall kind ourselves talking, in the dialect of Yankeeland, of "us poor Humans!" However, as the point appears to us to be one which does not admit of controversy, we shall say no more on the subject, but shall proceed to the more agreeable duty of quoting the greater portion of Miss Barrett's poem, which may be regarded as a commentary on the prayer—"The Lord be merciful to us sinners."