Billeder på siden
PDF
ePub

Carlyle notices, as one of Goethe's chief gifts, "his emblematic intellect, his never-failing tendency to transform into shape, into life, the feeling that may dwell in him. Every thing has form, has visual existence; the poet's imagination bodies forth the forms of things unseen, and his pen turns them into shape.” The same is, I believe, remarkable, probably too remarkable, in Richter: and is especially characteristic of Carlyle himself, who to a figurative genius, like Goethe's, adds a passion which Goethe either had not or chose to suppress, which brands the truth doubledeep. And who can doubt that Bacon, could it possibly have been his own, would have clothed Bentham's bare argument with cloth of gold ?

He says again, "Reasons plainly delivered, and always after one manner, especially with fine and fastidious minds, enter heavily and dully; whereas, if they be varied, and have more life and vigour put into them by these forms and imaginations, they carry a stronger apprehension, and many times win the mind to a resolution." Which, if it be true in any matter, most of all surely in morals, for the most part so old, so trite, and, in this naughty world, so dull. Are not all minds "fine and fastidious" in these matters, grown apt to close against any but the most musical voice?

Which also (to join the snake's head and tail of this rambling overgrown Preface) may account, rightly or wrongly, for my rejection of these essayists aforesaid (who crippled their native genius by a style which has left them "more of the ballast than the sail "), and my adoption of earlier and later writers. Not, as I said before, in copious draughts of their eloquenceand what pages of Bacon and Browne it is far easier to bear than forbear!--but where the writer has gone to the heart of a matter, the centre of the circle, hit the nail on the head, and driven it home-proverbwise, in fast. For in proportion as any writer tells the truth, and tells it figuratively or poetically, and yet so as to lie in a nutshell, he cuts up sooner or later into proverbs shorter or longer, and gradually gets down into general circulation.

Some extracts are from note-books, where the author's name was forgot; some from the conversation of friends that must alike remain anonymous; and some that glance but lightly at the truth are not without purpose inserted to relieve a book of dogmatic morals. "Durum et durum non faciunt murum." And now Mountain opens and discovers

POLONIUS: A COLLECTION OF WISE SAWS AND MODERN INSTANCES

QUICKNESS OF WIT

I MAKE no more estimation of repeating a great number of names or words upon once hearing, or the pouring forth of a number of verses or rhymes extempore, or the making of a satirical simile of every thing, or the turning of every thing to a jest, or the falsifying or contradicting of every thing by cavil, or the like, (whereof in the faculties of the mind there is great copia, and such as by device and practice may be brought to an extreme degree of wonder,) than I do of the tricks of tumblers, funambules, baladines-the one being the same in the mind that the other is in the body; matters of strangeness without worthiness.

Bacon.

"Quickness is among the least of the mind's properties, and belongs to her in almost her lowest state;

« ForrigeFortsæt »