Sweet rose, whose hue angry and brave A Sweet spring, full of sweet days and roses, THE BOSOM SIN: A SONNET BY GEORGE HERBERT. Lord, with what care hast thou begirt us round! The sound of Glory ringing in our ears: Yet all these fences and their whole array LOVE UNKNOWN. Dear friend, sit down, the tale is long and sad: I hold for two lives, and both lives in me. (I sigh to say) And have good cause: there it was dipt and dyed, T* Indeed 'tis true. I did and do commit (I sigh to tell) Unto my house, where to repair the strength I found that some had stuff'd the bed with thoughts, The thorns did quicken what was grown too dull: CHAPTER XX. THE FORMER SUBJECT CONTINUED THE NEUTRAL STYLE, OR THAT COMMON TO PROSE AND POETRY, EXEMPLIFIED BY SPECIMENS FROM CHAUCER, HERBERT, AND OTHERS. I HAVE no fear in declaring my conviction, that the excellence defined and exemplified in the preceding chapter is not the characteristic excellence of Mr. Wordsworth's style; because I can add with equal sincerity, that it is precluded by higher powers. The praise of uniform adherence to genuine, logical English is undoubtedly his; nay, laying the main emphasis on the word uniform, I will dare add that, of all contemporary poets, it is his alone. For, in a less absolute sense of the word, I should certainly include Mr. Bowles, Lord Byron, and, as to all his later writings, Mr. Southey, the exceptions in their works being so few and unimportant. But of the specific excellence described in the quotation from Garve, I appear to find more, and more undoubted specimens in the works of others; for instance, among the minor poems of Mr. Thomas Moore, and of our illustrious Laureate. To me it will always remain a singular and noticeable fact; that a theory, which would establish this lingua communis, not only as the best, but as the only commendable style, should have proceeded from a poet, whose diction, next to that of Shakspeare and Milton, appears to me of all others the most individualized and characteristic. And let it be remembered, too, that I am now interpreting the controverted passages of Mr. Wordsworth's critical preface by the purpose and object, which may be supposed to have intended, rather than by the sense * [The three poems are at pp. 87, 40, and 133 respectively.-S. C.] he which the words themselves must convey, if they are taken without this allowance. A person of any taste, who had but studied three or four of Shakspeare's principal plays, would without the name affixed scarcely fail to recognize as Shakspeare's a quotation from any other play, though but of a few lines. A similar peculiarity, though in a less degree, attends Mr. Wordsworth's style, whenever he speaks in his own person; or whenever, though under a feigned name, it is clear that he himself is still speaking, as in the different dramatis persona of THE RECLUSE. Even in the other poems, in which he purposes to be most dramatic, there are few in which it does not occasionally burst forth. The reader might often address the poet in his own words with reference to the persons introduced : "It seems, as I retrace the ballad line by line 29 That but half of it is theirs, and the better half is thine." Who, having been previously acquainted with any considerable portion of Mr. Wordsworth's publications, and having studied them with a full feeling of the author's genius, would not at once claim as Wordsworthian the little poem on the rainbow? "The Child is father of the Man, &c."t Or in the LUCY GRAY? "No mate, no comrade Lucy knew; *[Altered from The Pet Lamb, P. W. p. 30.-S. C.] P. W. p. 2, line 7. "My heart leaps up when I behold So was it when my life began; The Child is father of the Man; And I could wish my days to be Bound each to each by natural piety."—S. C.] [Ib. i. p. 16.-S. C.] Or in the IDLE SHEPHERD-BOYS ?* "Along the river's stony marge That plaintive cry! which up the hill Need I mention the exquisite description of the Sea Loch in THE BLIND HIGHLAND BOY. Who but a poet tells a tale in such language to the little ones by the fire-side as "Yet had he many a restless dream; Both when he heard the eagle's scream, Near where their cottage stood. For to this lake, by night and day, Then hurries back the road it came- As long as earth shall last. * [Ib. i. p. 31.-S. C.] [Tb. iii. pp. 145-6. Mr. Wordsworth has altered "sweetly" in the last |