of men and the magical notions of nature which they
had inherited from the Middle Age received a corroboration
from those neoplatonist dreamers, whom they confounded
with the true Greek philosophers. But, now that
Bacon has spoken, and that Europe has obeyed him,
surely, among the most practical, common sense, and
scientific nation of the earth, severely scientific
imagery, imagery drawn from the inner laws of nature,
is necessary to touch the hearts of men. They
know that the universe is not such as poets paint it;
they know that these pretty thoughts are only pretty
thoughts, springing from the caprice, the vanity,
very often from the indigestion of the gentlemen who
take the trouble to sing to them; and they listen,
as they would to a band of street musicians, and give
them sixpence for their tune, and go on with their
work. The tune outside has nothing to do with
the work inside. It will not help them to be
wiser, abler, more valiant—certainly not
more cheerful and hopeful men, and therefore they
care no more for it than they do for an opera or a
pantomime, if as much. Whereupon the poets get
disgusted with the same hard-hearted prosaic world—which
is trying to get its living like an industrious animal
as it is—and demand homage—for
what? For making a noise, pleasant or otherwise?
For not being as other men are? For pleading
“the eccentricities of genius” as an excuse
for sitting like naughty children in the middle of
the schoolroom floor, in everybody’s way, shouting
and playing on penny trumpets, and when begged to
be quiet, that other people may learn their lessons,
considering themselves insulted, and pleading “genius”?
Genius!—hapless byword, which, like charity,
covers nowadays the multitude of sins, all the seven
deadly ones included! Is there any form of human
folly which one has not heard excused by “He
is a genius, you know—one must not judge
him by common rules.” Poor genius, to have
come to this! To be, when confessed, not a reason
for being more of a man than others, but an excuse
for being less of a man, less amenable than the herd
to the common laws of humanity, and therefore less
able than they to comprehend its common duties, common
temptations, common sins, common virtues, common destinies.
Of old the wise singer did by virtue of feeling with
all, and obeying with all, learn to see for all, to
see eternal laws, eternal analogies, eternal consequences,
and so became a seer, vates, prophet; but now he is
become a genius, a poetical pharisee, a reviler of
common laws and duties, the slave of his own private
judgment, who prophesies out of his own heart, and
hath seen nothing but only the appearances of things
distorted and coloured by “genius.”
Heaven send the word, with many more, a speedy burial!