greatness by the largeness of his ‘view of life’?
How wide, one would like to know, was Milton’s
‘view of humanity’? And, though Wordsworth’s
sense of the position of man in the universe was far
more profound than Dante’s, who will venture
to assert that he was the greater poet? The truth
is that we have struck here upon a principle which
lies at the root, not only of Mr. Bailey’s criticism
of Racine, but of an entire critical method—the
method which attempts to define the essential elements
of poetry in general, and then proceeds to ask of
any particular poem whether it possesses these elements,
and to judge it accordingly. How often this method
has been employed, and how often it has proved disastrously
fallacious! For, after all, art is not a superior
kind of chemistry, amenable to the rules of scientific
induction. Its component parts cannot be classified
and tested, and there is a spark within it which defies
foreknowledge. When Matthew Arnold declared that
the value of a new poem might be gauged by comparing
it with the greatest passages in the acknowledged
masterpieces of literature, he was falling into this
very error; for who could tell that the poem in question
was not itself a masterpiece, living by the light
of an unknown beauty, and a law unto itself?
It is the business of the poet to break rules and to
baffle expectation; and all the masterpieces in the
world cannot make a precedent. Thus Mr. Bailey’s
attempts to discover, by quotations from Shakespeare,
Sophocles, and Goethe, the qualities without which
no poet can be great, and his condemnation of Racine
because he is without them, is a fallacy in criticism.
There is only one way to judge a poet, as Wordsworth,
with that paradoxical sobriety so characteristic of
him, has pointed out—and that is, by loving
him. But Mr. Bailey, with regard to Racine at
any rate, has not followed the advice of Wordsworth.
Let us look a little more closely into the nature
of his attack.
‘L’epithete rare,’ said the De Goncourts,’voila
la marque de l’ecrivain.’ Mr. Bailey
quotes the sentence with approval, observing that
if, with Sainte-Beuve, we extend the phrase to ‘le
mot rare,’ we have at once one of those invaluable
touch-stones with which we may test the merit of poetry.
And doubtless most English readers would be inclined
to agree with Mr. Bailey, for it so happens that our
own literature is one in which rarity of style, pushed
often to the verge of extravagance, reigns supreme.
Owing mainly, no doubt, to the double origin of our
language, with its strange and violent contrasts between
the highly-coloured crudity of the Saxon words and
the ambiguous splendour of the Latin vocabulary; owing
partly, perhaps, to a national taste for the intensely
imaginative, and partly, too, to the vast and penetrating
influence of those grand masters of bizarrerie—the
Hebrew Prophets—our poetry, our prose,
and our whole conception of the art of writing have
fallen under the dominion of the emphatic, the extraordinary,