Puslapio vaizdai
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By this white wandering waste of sea,
Far north, I hear

One face shall never turn to me
As once this year:

Shall never smile and turn and rest
On mine as there,

Nor one most sacred hand be prest
Upon my hair.

I came as one whose thoughts half linger,
Half run before;

The youngest to the oldest singer
That England bore.

I found him whom I shall not find
Till all grief end,

In holiest age our mightiest mind,
Father and friend.

But thou, if anything endure,
If hope there be,

O spirit that man's life left pure,
Man's death set free,

Not with disdain of days that were
Look earthward now;

Let dreams revive the reverend hair,
The imperial brow;

Come back in sleep, for in the life
Where thou art not

We find none like thee. Time and strife
And the world's lot

Move thee no more; but love at least
And reverent heart

May move thee, royal and released
Soul, as thou art.

And thou, his Florence, to thy trust
Receive and keep,

Keep safe his dedicated dust,
His sacred sleep.

So shall thy lovers, come from far,
Mix with thy name

As morning-star with evening-star
His faultless fame.

The only perfect poet is he who makes no man perfect. Landor's fame very surely awaits him, but it will not in any sense be faultless. To the end we see him as it were unconquerable. He keeps an unquailing aspect to the very close, has yielded nothing in the duel he has been fighting so long single-handed with the world, and dies at last with harness on his back. But he is only unvanquished; he is not the victor. Victorious he cannot at any time be said to have shown himself; either over the circumstances from which he suffered, or the genius by which he achieved, so much. Greatness there was always; a something of the heroic element which lifted him, in nearly all that he said and very much that he did, considerably above ordinary stature; but never to be admitted or described without important drawbacks. What was wanting most, in his books and his life alike, was the submission to some kind of law. To this effect a remark was made at the opening of this biography, which has had confirmation in almost every page of it written since. But, though he would not accept those rules of obedience without which no man can wisely govern either himself or others; and though he lived far beyond the allotted term of life without discovering what was true in the profound old say

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ing, that all the world is wiser than any man in the world; his genius, which the possession of such additional knowledge would have rendered more complete, was yet in itself so commanding and consummate as to bring into play the nobler part of his character only and by this his influence will remain over others, while for all that was less noble he will himself have paid the penalty. I am not going now to preach any homily over my old friend. Whatever there was to say has been said already with as much completeness as I found to be open to me. Attempt has been honestly made in this book to estimate with fairness and candour Landor's several writings, as each of them successively appeared; and judgment has been passed, with an equal desire to be strictly just, on all the qualities of his temperament which affected necessarily not his own life only. But, now that the story is told, no one will have difficulty in striking the balance between its good and ill; and what was really imperishable in Landor's genius will not be treasured less, or less understood, for the more perfect knowledge of his character.

What indeed was highest in him receives vivid illustration from that which limited and controlled it. If he had measured everything less by his own unaided impressions, if he had consented at times to judge himself by others instead of always judging others by himself, the originality that distinguishes all his books might have been less intensely marked. It is a great power, as solitude itself is, if a man chooses to risk the danger attending it. To refuse the recognition also of any strength but one's own, to exalt continually one's individual prowess, and to rest all claim to magnanimity and honour on self-assertion rather than self-denial, cannot but be a grave fault in the conduct of· life in modern time; but shift it back into classic ages, and the heroes of Greece and Rome take visible shape once more. Yet was this only a part of Landor's happiest achievement, which was not so circumscribed within Paganism as the general character of his genius and method has led many to suppose. The source from which he drew his inspiration had not so confined him in applying it. Though his mind was cast in the antique mould, it had opened itself to every kind of impression through a long and varied life; he has written with equal excellence in

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both poetry and prose, which can hardly be said of any of his contemporaries; and perhaps the single epithet by which his books would be best described is that reserved exclusively for books not characterised only by genius, but also by special individuality. They are unique. Having possessed them, we should miss them. Their place would be supplied by no others. They have that about them, moreover, which renders it almost certain that they will frequently be resorted to in future time. There are none in the language more quotable. Even where impulsiveness and want of patience have left them most fragmentary, this rich compensation is offered to the reader. There is hardly a conceivable subject, in life or literature, which they do not illustrate by striking aphorisms, by concise and profound observations, by wisdom ever applicable to the needs of men, and by wit as available for their enjoyment. Nor, above all, will there anywhere be found a more pervading passion for liberty, a fiercer hatred of the base, a wider sympathy with the wronged and the oppressed, or help more ready at all times for those who fight at odds and disadvantage against the powerful and the fortunate, than in the writings of WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.

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GENERAL INDEX.

ABLETT, Mr., of Llanbedr-hall, 286;
Landor's bust for, ib.; Landor's
visit to England with, 336-8; Lan-
dor's ode to, 343-4; death of, 465.
Absence of mind, 319-20.

Adair, Robert, takes Landor to the
House of Commons, 68; introduc-
tions to the press, ib. ; his corre-
spondence with Landor, 84-5; on
the Fox administration, 107.
Addington administration, 81.
Addison, on a famous couplet of, 72;
and see 494.

Addison and Steele (Imag. Con.), 316.
Eschines and Phocion (Imag. Con.),
243.

Eschylus, 337, 337, 500, 531.

Alexander, emperor, and Capo d'Is-
trias (Imag. Con.), 247-8.
Alexander and the priest of Hammon
(Imag. Con.), 309.

Alfieri and Metastasio (Imag. Con.),
255; Carlyle on, 256.
Alfieri, on the French, 34; Landor's

liking for, 257; Salomon the Floren-
tine Jew and (Imag. Con.), 257.
American war of 1812, view of, 165;
as to Americans, 166-7, 168-9.
Anacreon and Polycrates (Imag. Con.),
310.

Andrea of Hungary, &c., Landor's,
387-99.

Anecdotes of Landor at Rugby, 9-20,
101; and see Preface.
Angelo, Michael, and Vittoria Col-
onna (Imag. Con.), 421.
Anne of Swansea, 50.
Annual Review 92.
Anti-Jacobin, the, and its successor,

69; attacks on Landor, ib.
Antoir, M., Landor's dispute with,

335.

Antonelli and Gemeau (Imag. Con.),

419; and Pio Nono (Imag. Con.), 420.
Antony and Octavius, scenes for a
study, 482-9.

Architecture, as to, 495.
Aristoteles and Calisthenes (Imag.
Con.), 258.

Arnold of Rugby, 324, 333, 459.
Ascham, Roger, and Lady Jane Grey
(Imag. Con.), 249-50.

Athenæum, appearance of Landor's
ode to Southey in, 341; publication
of Conversations in, 329.

Atlantic Monthly, young lady's recol-
lections in, 89 note, 526-8.
Aurora Leigh, Landor's opinion of,
55 note.

Autobiographical, 70-72.

Aylmer, Rose, 50, 217; her death, 106;
Lamb's fondness for the lines on,
337.

Bacon, Lord, and Richard Hooker
(Imag. Con.), 250.

Baños, Lopez, and Romero Alpuente
(Imag. Con.), 257.

Barry Cornwall (B. W. Procter),
427.

Bath, 103-7; and see 385; a sunset,
469; a miserable squabble and its
close, 506-14; and see 518.
Beaufort, Duke of, lines by Landor
on, 160.

Beauties of England and Wales, er-
ror as to Llanthony corrected, 145.
Beddoes, his Death's Jest-Book, 475.
Belmore, Lady, 468.

Beniowski and Aphanasia (Imag.
Con.), 309.

Benwell, Landor's tutor at Oxford,

21.

B., Landor's tenant at Llanthony, 154,
173-4; Lamb's recollections of the
B. family, 175; their system of an-
noyance, 178-9.

Birch, Walter, Landor's friend at
Rugby, 16; at Oxford, 26; Robert
Landor's recollections of, 95-6, 99;
on the Latin Gebirus, 96-7; corre-
spondence with Landor, 90-101; on

Landor's marriage, 151; notices of
later life, 198 and note.
Birthdays, 385, 432.

Blackwood's Magazine and Landor,
372.

Blake, Wm., Landor attracted by
writings of, 375.

Blake and his brother Humphrey
(Imag. Con.), 420.
Blessington, Lord and Lady, 228,
284-5, 324; the Shakespeare MS.
forwarded to the latter, 354; way
of life at Gore-house, 376-7; letter
from Landor to, 439; death of, 465;
and see 411, 455, 528.

Boccaccio and Petrarch (Imag. Con.),
309.

Boileau, 247.

Bolivar, a revised opinion, 443.
Bonaparte, the one Frenchman Lan-
dor cared to see, 86; his reception
at Paris described by Landor, ib.,
88; note on, to a passage in Gebir,
89-90; in Spain, 116-17; Landor's
later opinion of him and his work,
163; Southey on the last move of,
163, 169; Landor's difference, 169;
see also 185, and 187-8; the Presi
dent of the Senate and (Imag. Con.),
247.

Bonaparte, Louis Napoleon, visit to
Landor, 455; Orsini attempt, 457;
M. de Molé and (Imag. Con.), 419.
Bonaparte, King Louis, 247.
Book of the Church, Southey's, 269,
415.

Books, the first two bought by Lan-
dor, 14; sent from Italy to Southey
and Wordsworth, 199, 274-6.
Bossuet and the Duchess de Font-
anges (Imag. Con.), 309.
Boulter, Archbishop, and Philip Sav-
age (Imag. Con.), 308.

Bowles, Caroline, second wife of Sou-
they, 413, 414-16.
Boxall, Sir Wm., 498.

Brothers, Landor's, 6, 478; see Charles

and Henry Landor.

Brown, Mr. Armitage, the friend of
Keats, 320, 404-5; letter in justifi-
cation of Landor's departure from
Fiesole, 364-5; dedicates his book
to Landor, 404-5; his death, ib..
Browning, E. Barrett, 55 note, 362,
381,425 (on her 'two-word rhyme'),
489, 525.

Browning, Robert, 388, 427-8, 445,
520-5, 529.

Bugeaud, Marshal, and

chieftain (Imag. Con.), 419.

Arab

Bunsen, Arnold, and Julius Hare, 459.
Burgess, Bishop, correspondence with
Landor on Llanthony abbey-church,
147.
Burnet, Bishop, and Humphrey
Hardcastle (Imag. Con.), 246.
Butler, Bishop, at Rugby, 15.
Byron, Lord, Landor on, 270 and
note; remark of Landor's mother
on, 278; for Landor's portrait of,
see 246; and see 199, 427.

Caldwell, Miss, 468.

Calvus, Landor's signature in the
Courier, 171.

Campbell, Thomas, 98.
Canning, 69, 166, 272, 301.
Carlo-Alberto, King, and the Duchess
Belgioiso (Imag. Con.), 419.
Carlyle, on Landor's denunciation of
pluck, 255; on the Alfieri dialogues,
256, 421; concerning his French
Revolution, 419; on the Petrarca
Essay, 438; visits Landor, 454; on
the Old Roman in Landor, 489; and
see 351.
Carmen Triumphale, Southey's, 171.
Caroline, Princess and Queen, 191,

194, 199, 200-1, 202.

Cary, Henry, at Rugby, 15, 96; trans-
lation of Dante, 96, 99; and see 26,
363.
Catherine and Daschkoff (Imag. Con.),
309.

Catullus, 84, 425, 435-6, 438, 448,
496, 501, 505-6.

Chapman, Dr. of Trinity, Oxford,
33.

Charitable Dowager, Landor's com-
edy, 175-6.

Chatham, admiration of, 378.

Chaucer, Boccaccio, and Petrarch
(Imag. Con.), 309.

Chesterfield, Lord, and Lord Chat-
ham (Imag. Con.), 257.

Children, pleasure derived from,
273, 282, 284-5, 333; Landor's
refusal to part with Arnold, 278-9.
Cicero, Marcus Tullius, and Quinctus
(Imag. Con.), 236.

Clarke, Oxford fellow, 35-6.
Cleopatra, question of her age, 483
and note.

Clerke, Captain Shadwell, 259-60.
Cockburn, Sir Alexander, 514-5.
Coleraine, Lord, Rev. Mr. Blooms-
bury, and Rev. Mr. Swan (Imag.
Con.), 303-4.
Coleridge, S. T., on Gebir, 56; Sou-

they's letters to on the same, 59;

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