Saturday, May 26, 2012

Commonplace Book

'The mistake our "aesthetes" made, these lovers of Egyptian dancers and Babylonian masks, is that they suppose the simplicity of Lamb's subjects debar him from the rare effects. Ah! They little know! He can take the wistfulness of children, and the quaint gestures of dead Comedians, and the fantasies of old worm-eaten folios, and the shadows of sun-dials upon cloistered lawns, and the heartbreaking evasions of such as "can never know love," and out of these things he can make a music as piteous and lovely as Ophelia's songs. It is a curious indication of the lack of real poetic feeling in the feverish art-neophytes of our age that they should miss these things in Elia. One wonders if they have ever felt the remote translunar beauty that common faces and old, dim, pitiful things can wear sometimes. It would seem not...'

from Visions and Revisions by John Cowper Powys (Charles Lamb chapter)

No comments:

Post a Comment