PAGE 5
Praed
by
But little he cared, that stripling pale,
For the sinking sun or the rising gale;
For he, as he rode, was dreaming now,
Poor youth, of a woman’s broken vow,
Of the cup dashed down, ere the wine was tasted,
Of eloquent speeches sadly wasted,
Of a gallant heart all burnt to ashes,
And the Baron of Katzberg’s long moustaches.
And these:
Swift as the rush of an eagle’s wing,
Or the flight of a shaft from Tartar string,
Into the wood Sir Rudolph went:
Not with more joy the schoolboys run
To the gay green fields when their task is done;
Not with more haste the members fly,
When Hume has caught the Speaker’s eye.
But in “The Red Fisherman” itself there is nothing that is not good. It is very short, ten small pages only of some five-and-twenty lines each. But there is not a weak place in it from the moment when “the Abbot arose and closed his book” to the account of his lamentable and yet lucky fate and punishment whereof “none but he and the fisherman could tell the reason why.” Neither of the two other practitioners who may be called the masters of this style, Hood and Barham, nor Praed himself elsewhere, nor any of his and their imitators has trodden the breadthless line between real terror and mere burlesque with so steady a foot.
Still not here was his “farthest,” as the geographers say, nor in the considerable mass of smaller poems which practically defy classification. In them, as so often elsewhere in Praed, one comes across odd notes, stray flashes of genius which he never seems to have cared to combine or follow out, such as the unwontedly solemn “Time’s Song,” the best wholly serious thing that he has done, and the charming “L’Inconnue.” But we find the perfect Praed, and we find him only, in the verses of society proper, the second part of the “Poems of Life and Manners” as they are headed, which began, as far as one can make out, to be written about 1826, and the gift of which Praed never lost, though he practised it little in the very last years of his life. Here, in a hundred pages, with a few to be added from elsewhere, are to be found some of the best-bred and best-natured verse within the English language, some of the most original and remarkable metrical experiments, a profusion of the liveliest fancy, a rush of the gayest rhyme. They begin with “The Vicar,” vir nulla non donandus lauru.
[Whose] talk was like a stream, which runs
With rapid change from rocks to roses:
It slipped from politics to puns,
It passed from Mahomet to Moses;
Beginning with the laws which keep
The planets in their radiant courses,
And ending with some precept deep
For dressing eels, or shoeing horses.
Three of the Vicar’s companion “Everyday Characters” are good, but I think not so good as he; the fifth piece, however, “The Portrait of a Lady,” is quite his equal.
You’ll be forgotten–as old debts
By persons who are used to borrow;
Forgotten–as the sun that sets,
When shines a new one on the morrow;
Forgotten–like the luscious peach
That blessed the schoolboy last September;
Forgotten–like a maiden speech,
Which all men praise, but none remember.
Yet ere you sink into the stream
That whelms alike sage, saint, and martyr,
And soldier’s sword, and minstrel’s theme,
And Canning’s wit, and Gatton’s charter,
Here, of the fortunes of your youth,
My fancy weaves her dim conjectures,
Which have, perhaps, as much of truth
As passion’s vows, or Cobbett’s lectures.
Here, and perhaps here first, at least in the order of the published poems, appears that curious mixture of pathos and quizzing, sentiment and satire, which has never been mastered more fully or communicated more happily than by Praed. But not even yet do we meet with it in its happiest form: nor is that form to be found in “Josephine” which is much better in substance than in manner, or in the half-social, half-political patter of “The Brazen Head,” or in “Twenty-eight and Twenty-nine.” It sounds first in the “Song for the Fourteenth of February.” No one, so far as I know, has traced any exact original[2] for the altogether admirable metre which, improved and glorified later in “The Letter of Advice,” appears first in lighter matter still like this: