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The Independence of Landor
by Charles Morgan
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"Do
you think," wrote Carlyle in a letter, having
read, during the year of 1856, a contribution
to Fraser's Magazine, "do you think
the grand old Pagan wrote that piece just now?
The sound of it is like the ring of Roman swords
on the helmets of barbarians! The unsubduable
old Roman!" How fortunate and how deserving
was the man who had that written of his work
in his eighty-first year! How good to have lived
in an age when it was natural, in one of Carlyle's
quality and Carlyle's didactic prejudices, to
write it! The contribution in question was Landor's
dialogue between Alfieri and Metastasio and
contained much of the writer's by no means modern
or popular views on the uses of language. It
is not to be supposed that Carlyle, peasant
that he was and prophet that he was considered
to be, took easily to the scholar, the proud
aristocrat, who, if he could be accused of preaching
at all, so evidently cared more to write well
than to persuade others by what he wrote. There
was not much in common between "Past and Present"
and the poetic dramas, the criticisms of Theocritus
and Catullus or indeed the Collected Works that
had been Landor's preoccupation during the hungry
Forties. Nevertheless, Carlyle could write of
the dialogue in Fraser's as he did.
What he saw in it was not that it was old-fashioned
or pedantic or remote from the controversies
of the day, or that many of its opinions were
from his own point of view heretical, but that
it was independent, unsubduable and, with whatever
weapons, against the barbarians. Victorian criticism
fought hard; it could be blind and partial;
sex and dogma could drive it mad; but it had
the courage of praise and the gift of loyalty;
and it did not occur to Carlyle that the glorious
and antique sculpture of Landor's prose should
be a reason to condemn it. Courage, craftsmanship
and independence were qualities to be praised.
Carlyle, therefore, spoke warmly of their possessor.
That it is not necessary to agree with a man
in order to admire him is a root of literary,
as of social, judgment. This is a truism; all
of who call themselves free men assent to it;
few trouble to safeguard and fewer to exemplify
it. Not in totalitarian countries alone are
grubs nibbling at this necessary root. That
Landor's works are not popular is neither surprising
nor disgusting; the world would not be the world
if they were. He did not write to that end nor
expect to achieve it. The last word in this
matter was his own: "I shall dine late; but
the dining-room will be well-lighted , the guests
few and select"; and it would be at once a failure
in understanding, and contrary to his own taste,
to complain that to-day no communal kitchen
is crowded to salute him. But there are many
highly conscientious people who would now consider
his independence as having been anti-social
even in his own day and as containing nothing
that could be admirable in ours. This raises
the question of what independence is and of
how a just independence varies from age to age.
How does it differ from arrogance or exclusiveness?
What it reserves we know, but what does it give?
There is a solid reason in our own lives to
ask these questions, and it is pleasant to ask
them in the context of Landor. On the morning
which followed his seventy-fifth birthday—that is to say, on the morning of January 31st, 1850—he came downstairs bearing in his hand
a copy of verses, composed presumably before
breakfast, or on the night of his birthday itself,
which for the very reason that they are so familiar.
It would be an affectation not to quote:
I strove with none,
for none was worth my strife,
Nature
I loved, and, next to nature, Art;
I warmed both hands before the fire of life;
It
sinks, and I am ready to depart.
In fact, he was not to depart for nearly fifteen
years, and among us, who have the questionable
habit of centenaries, it may seem a little odd
to write of Landor now. But what is one to do
with "the old Pagan"? Wait twenty years for
the centenary of his death or thirty for the
bicentenary of his birth? He broke all the chronological
rules, and one can only gasp at the incredible
truth that, in his tenure of this earth, he
missed Goldsmith at one extreme and Kipling
at the other by a few months only. Already near
the end of his schooling at Knowle, he was about
to go to Rugby when Dr. Johnson died; he was
of an age with Lamb and twenty years older than
Keats; and yet Swinburne, as a young man, did
him homage, Browning was his friend as Southey
and Wordsworth had been, and, before he died
in Italy, Bridges and Andrew Lang were out of
their 'teens and Hardy was twenty-four. Nor
was it his life only that spanned the centuries;
he wrote from first to last. Other men's lamps
may be put out long before they go to sleep;
his burned unfailingly, his first volume appearing
three years before the Nile and his last within
three of Sadowa.
It is not easy to dismiss such a man as a creature
of his age whose experience is inapplicable
to ours. Of what age—the age of Byron or
of Browning? Of Rousseau or Kossuth? Of Pericles
or the Bard of Sirmio? To the vast range of
his life he added a prodigious reading, a habit
of writing Latin better than all but he and
a few others could write English, a fiery temper
which led him to trouble, a gentleness which
sustained him in it, a perilous gift of enthusiasm,
a keen critical sense to balance it sometimes,
and, to unbalance it again, a preference for
Southey before Wordsworth and Shelley. No one
is likely to hold up his career as a model of
practical wisdom. Though he had leonine and
majestic patience at long range from the tiresome
mice of this world, he had no patience at short;
and the same man who could calmly admit that
a little more recognition might have pleased
him because "there is something of summer even
in the hum of insects" could allow himself to
be jostled in the law-courts by his tenants
at Llanthony and driven into exile and ruin
by two jealous ladies of Bath. Nevertheless,
through all his conflicting wisdoms and follies,
he preserved what his contemporaries recognized
as noble independence. Southey died with his
name on his lips; much younger men—Dickens,
Forster, Browning, and many others—were eager
to serve him; even Byron, who had some provocations
to speak sharply, said nothing worse of him
in "Don Juan" than
And that deep-mouthed
Boeotian Savage Landor
Has taken for a swan rogue Southey's gander.
—and wrote privately to Lady Blessington
(whom indeed he knew to be Landor's friend)
that "he really is a man whose brilliant talents
and profound erudition I cannot help admiring
as much as I respect his character". This from
Byron, of whom Landor was to say that "whenever
he wrote a bad poem he supported his sinking
fame by some signal act of profligacy" but that
"there are things in him strong as poison and
original as sin", was something; and it is this
respect for Landor's character which has come
down to us, though he blotted most of the maxims
in the copy-book, or—what ought to have been
worse—jumbled them up. There was evidently
something in him, besides his genius, which
made him not only a loved, but a valued, member
of society.
This
is an excerpt. To read the rest, please continue
your travels in the Republic by purchasing
No. 12, Fall 2003.
Charles
Morgan's bio is forthcoming. |