L£.t. — • • ••^-^5^'^ — ■^K— POEMS -ON- "loGltsleii IfQll, SiitK yeors Jlfter. " {Reprinted from the St. TLomm: Times.) UY- / /t and re:v. w. f. Clarke. -^.».» > J X >. ■ >{ . - TIMES PRINT, ST. THOMAS, ONT. 1892. <; "''<■■'.. ]jmd ipeF^nvSQi^'s gessiFFiisro.. I J 'HE recent (leath of the Poet Laureate, Tennyson, invests his wriiini^s witli new interest, and will induce many to read his poems, who have hitherto been unfamiliar with them. They will re-pay re-perusal in the case of those who are familiar with them. It s a characteristic of true greatness that it growr- upon us. No one takes in Niagara at una view, or thoroughly appreciates it at a single visit. It is only after seeing the majestic scene repeatedly, and gazing at it with pro- longed deliberation, that we are duly impressed with its greatness and grandeur. What is true of the magnificent works of nature, is also true of the great works of art. Illustrations of this might easily be given from the domains of painting, sculpture, mi-sic and poetry. Time, that tests all things, keeps the laurel wreaths which encircles the brow of true greatness not only always green, but ever growing. Almost the only defect in the lateJLord ' Tennyson's poems, is th e vein of sad n ess and even pessimism that runs through them. It is visible in "Locksley Hall," one of his earlier compositions, written amid the bright dreams of youth, and tinges with a very deep gloom, •'Locksley Hall, sixty years after." Concern- ing this, a writer in the Dominion Illustrated, wrote as follows, a few months ago : "The most sanguine optimist and admirer could not fail to be tinged with sadness when the poet, more than half a century after, reviews in his sequel to "Locksley Hall" those bright ''castles in Spain" his youthful imagina- tion had constructed, and discovers that none of them were real. Tennyson regretfully shows in this p lem that bitt' r experience and advancing age have dispelled those youthful visions, and on every side are. he thinks,, indications that the world is getting w^c.rse instead of better. The, publication, q; thij. pessimistic view led to a rather spirited di.scus- sion throughout America and Europe, whiUt Canada contributed her quota in the shape of a _ review by Rev. Dr. Dewart, of Toronto, himself no mean poet. A lofty tone. of.lLoiie.- fulness pervaded this review, and Tennyson's attention was drawn to the fact that as we recede from past events their grossne.ss is ottcn glossed over in our imagination, and the present and future look-corresponding dismal. Dew art's criticism of I ennyson's poems led to another Canadian minister. Rev. W. F. Clarke^ then stationed at St. Thomas, Ont., taking up his literary cudgels and slashing both Tennyson and Dewart. This gentleman had not been suspected of possessing a poetic vein, but it must be confessed he put his own views in vigorous verse. I long since lost my copy of it — cut out of a newspaper at the time — but the opening stanzas have always clung to me since. The discussion in this country, ended here ; but as contributions to a literary topic by Canadian authors, they certainly deserved per- manent preservation." We have much pleasure in presenting these two productions to the readers of the Ti.mfs, by whom, notwithstanding their length, thtiy will doubtless be read with much interest, especially at the present time. THEN ANI» NOW. •Jf^ \ A. Siippleinciital Kcspouse (o Lord Tcuiiy- sou's •*Lock8lcy Hull Sixty Years After" byltcv. E. H. Wcwart, D.D. Though the poet peer of England, in a faitfe; less, mournful strain^ Sings of dark and baleful evils which o'ercast the people's reign, Men of hopeful hearts forget not how our cen- tury has outgrown i ! I ! vW^' jr\X LORD TENNYSON'S PESSIMISM. X / Cruel wronjjs nnd hateful customs that were once on fashion's throne. Why in ever) clime and period have the fearful an-i the old, Glorified the age departed as the Eden uge of gold ? ('han(;e and progress, Jarger freedom, wliich the hanti c)| tirr.e has brought, Arc but signs of hliijht and ruin by the rash and reckless wrought. Forms of life and truth must vary with the spirit of the years ; Fairest blossoms of the springtime, wither ere the fruit apjicars, Every age moulds thought and action by its free and living mind — D<' not cast away the kernel for the roughness of the rind. When the hopes of youth are buoyant, and the pulse of life keeps time To the glad inspiring mueic of love's melodies sublime, All the world is bathed in brightness ; hope pours balm on every smart ; And the bleakest scenes are golden by the sunshine in the heart. I When the fires of life burn dimly, and the false and selfish world Chills our hopeful trust and courage till the flags of faith are furled, Then the world without grows darker ; things . which once seemed good and fair I The desoondent spirit colors with the hues of its despair. Looking backward through the ages of which timid croakers boast. They are black with wrongs and falsehoods, that are nov a vanished host ; For the "good old times" embosomed brainless follies, social crimes, That we would not brook a moment in these kindlier better times. Who that shares the light and freedom, which like blessed sunlight falls On the peasant's lowly cottage freely as on lordly halls. Would go back to times of darkness e'er the sun of freedom rose, And renounce the wealth of blessing which this latest age bestows ? Then the vast and mystic forces. Cod through nature has diffused Were, alike by sage and savage, undiscovered and unused : Now these ])owers like living creatures have been taught by human skill — Wear man's yoke and bear his burdens, faith- ful servants to his will. Learning then was fortune's favor ; to the poor by fate denied ; Now the gates of truth and knowledge unto all stand open wide ; And the poor man's boy, with only honest heart and active brain. May evince his native kingship and the highest rank attain. Then the toiling and the Icnvly, were each petty tyrant's scorn, Doomed to stay with dumb submission in the sphere where they were born ; Now the sons of toil are honored, while their selfish despots cower , For the voice ol honest labor has liecome a voice of power. Then the multitude, unthinking, blindly drank the potion given, Took the words of human teachers as the very words of heaven. Only few with faith and courage, truth herself su])remely prized. While the slaves of custom worshipped what the past had canonized. Now o'er truth's vast sea exploring thought's free pennons are unfurled, There's a mental resunection like the spring- time of a world. , Creed and teacher must be tested as by fire in fiercest light. For the question of the age is, "Is it True AND IS IT Right ?" Law, so long the rich man's weapon, keeping pelf and power secure, Now extends its strong protection to the feeble and the poor, Lonely souls through all the ages, wrought and battled in the van ; Now the range of deeds heroic spans the brotherhood of man. Then, like soulless beasts of burden, men and women bought with gold W'ere by heartless christian brother into life- LOUD TENNYSON'S PESSIMISM. long bondage sold ; Now through every clime and country rings the jubilant decree, That, in spite of race and color, every human soul is free. Christless multitudes, unpitied, down to deeper thraldom swept; Left alone in guilt and darkness while the church supinely slept ; Now to every tribe and nation, where God's name was never named, Messages of free salvation are with living power proclaimed. Is it right, because past evils do not thwart our present aims. To make light of them and cover cruel wrongs with pleasant names? And to slight the fruits of freedom, now to rich and poor supplied, Which through all those vaunted ages were unrighteously denied ? Why bewail the strife and struggles that disturb I this restless time I As the signs of coming chaos, which presage decay and crime ? ji All the cherished light and progress that have ' lifted up the race Have been w^n by throes and conflicts which to bette: things gave place. Brood not over stormy passions, surging 'round some chronic wrong ; High above the noise of battle, faith may hear the victor's song. Toil yields rest, and beauty blossoms from a dark ''unsightly root ;" Unrjpe sourness is the promise of the Autunva's ruddy fruit. In the lives of men and nations, comes no crown of bliss sunipreme. To the stolid and slow-hearted who have floated with the stream. Oft the fires of ardent conflict, heavy burdens, fiercest strife, •, , r' . ..,- Lift the struggling spirit higher ; nerve and beautify the life. Men who weakly cringe and pander to advance some cherished cause. May be counted wise and prudent, win the shallow world's ai:)plause ; .-•- ;.'v, Yet I'd rather brave its hatred, standing lonely in the fight, And be loyal to my conscience, and to whnt is true and right. Ignorance, injustice, folly, linger still, while myriads wait 'Till the valleys are exalted, and the crooked paths made straight ; But the direst ills and follies thfit becloud the worl 1 to-day. Are but shi.des of darker evils that have almost passed away. , Doubtlcs:: prejudice and passion may th^-* restive crwwds unite ; And the blind may lead the blind, 'till thev trample on the right ; Bitter feuds of creeds and classes find no cure in human code ; Men in true and Christly brotherhood, mu>.t bear each other's load . Rough and steep the path of progress ; slowly earth's oppressions die ; Yet the world is rising higher as the burdened years go by. Truth and righteousness, unconquered, in this warfare shall prevail ; This the God of truth has promised, ami his word can never fail. ^.aj •<- •►O »'THE.\ AXI» son.' A Crithiiie on **A !!iiii»i>l(>Hi(>ntal It(>Ki)oii<.f to Lord Toiiiiysoirs "Locksloy Hall Sixty l'< nr» After," by Rov. W. F. C'lnrSi*-. "Poet-peer" and poet-preacher both are ri'.-ht and both are wrong, One has wailed a minor cadence with a ])nlhos all his own. While the other peals an anthem in a \o{\.)\ major tone. 'Tis the old chameleon fable, verified in stately verse, In some things the world is lietter, while in others it is worse; All depends on h(nv you mcw it, in the sun- shine or the shade, When the flowers are blooming brightly, < r the brilliant colours f^ide. Tennyson has penned no libel on the passing LORD TENNYSON'S PESSIMISM. n^e nnd nice, Tor ihcre still arc j^iant evils which humanity (lis'Macc ; Tis a life-liUc (•icime truly that his artist hand has skelchffl, Though his sorrowful examples may he here and there far-fetched. r>ewart, too, has f^nnjured up no fanciful, poetic dicam ; In the sifjns of iuo('crn pro};rcss he has made liis cheerful ilicint.', All is true to human nature, and to present, real life, liut, as ever, gmn] and evil are engaged in I /., deadly strife. Which, upon the whole is mightier, who has V light enough to say ? Does thu'twili<:ht tend to evening or to bright ■! , nv-'ridian day, \it Are^.they gathering glooms that presage an ^^ apjiroaching, dismal night, -' Or dispelling shadows, vanishing before a morning bright? Many hoary wrongs departed, tell of progress on those lines, And, of social peace and comfort, there are many hopeful signs. But the old oppressions linger, though in new and modern forms. And the heavens are black witi cloud-banks that betoken coming storms. Lo ! the European nations, always armed for deadly strife. While with wars and rumors of them, all the foreign air is rife, Britain torn with wild convulsion, law and order set at naught, And the wisest statesmen living, with perplex- ity distraught. Science has yoked up the forces which through nature are diffused, And they lie no longer idle, dormant powers by man unused. But monopolists and nabobs, pouncing on them as their prey, Reproduce the wrongs and hardships of a by- gone feudal day. _ _^^ -r- Coat of armour, bow and arrow, glittering sword and pointed spear. Old-time weapons of rude warfare from the conflict disappear, Acts of I'arliamei.t and charters now empower the favoured few. At their wills to fleece the many, just as barons used to do. Scholarship and education in these days are free to all. But they do not rid the masses of their former captive thrall. They are like "dumii driven cattle," forced, though much against their will, To (jbey tyrannic masters anil submit to bond- age still. Is it now the burning question, in this age (jfvaunled light, What the poet preacher tells us, "Is it true and is it right ?" Kather do nf't men and women in our much enlightened day. Ask on every mooted subject, "Is I'V Safe AND WILL IT Pay?" It is well the poet ])rencher holds the standards of his church Otherwise he soon would be, a theologian in the lu.ch ; Robbed of pulpit, standing, stipend, easy edit(jrial chair. In a far-ofl' country exiled, empty husks his daily fare. Not a decade yet has vanished since a Method- ist divine. Add a Presbyterian preacher, stars that bright with lustre shine. Had to eat their words incautious, to escape sectarian ban, Just because they dared to venture too far forward in the van. Still "the multitude" unheeding blindly "drink the potion given," Take the words of human teachers as the very words of heaven. Only few, with ftiith and courage, truth her- self supremely prize. While the slaves of pious custom, still the dead ' past canonize. _„ ... '..u^ji Still, men meekly cringe and pander to advance some selfish cause. And are counted wise and prudent, win the shallow world's applause. Who dares brave its cruel hatred, standing lonely in the fight, Loyal evermore to conscience, and to what si 1^ LORD TENNYSON'S PESSIMISM, true aiui iit;ht ? :Still, like soulless beasts of l)iinlen, men and women houtjlit withjjold, .Are by heailless I'duc and Mammon i.:to life- long Ixindatje sold, Not the body merely, we with ignominious fetter hind, But that better nature whicli we proudly call "the immortal mind." Christless multitudes uniiitied down to deeper thraldom sweej), Left alone in fjjuilt and darkness, while the angels look and weep, 'For, l)eneath the eaves of churches, heathen perish day by day. Though we jily our mission labors, to the countries far away. .'See the social evil rampant, as it never was of yore. Tramps, and waifs, ard drunkards, wandering pa.-it the sanctuary door; Poverty and want uncared for, while the wealthy hoard their pelf. And devote their lavish thousands, to the pampering of self. And while all these evils fester in the body politic. Rank hypocrisy apparent, niakes the burdened heart grow sick. People doubt the saintliness that, passing on the other side, Asks, "Who is my neighbor ?" with a tone and air of cant and pride. Oh ! it seems an endless reon that we have to hope and wait. Till the valleys are exalted and the crooked paths made straight; Is the world's mellenium ne.ucr thin it was an age ago, When so many signs and portents seem aloud to answer "No'?" IIapi)y tho.se who 'mid the chaos, feel that things are ripeidng ui) To the time when rdl the starving sliall enjoy their "bit and sup," Every form of moial evil sink .nlo oblivion deep, Dalm be given to hearts that ache, aid glad- ness dawn on eyes that weep. \(jthing shoit of love's enthronement in lire hearts and lives of men, Will bring hack to earth's bleik desert, "Para- ilise Resl-^red" again. And, the golden rule established, b otherhoo I and concord hnd Universal welcome in the haunl.i and homes of ad mankind. If this "golden age'' is coming, yen is at oui A'ery tloor, Sudden siicial revolutions must bo for the world in store, Great upheavals, moral earthqurd