button to main menu  Gents Mag 1850 part 2 p.464

button introduction
button list, 3rd qtr 19th century
button previous page button next page
Gentleman's Magazine 1850 part 2 p.464

The congregating temper that pervades
Our unripe years, not wasted, should be taught
To minister to works of high attempt -
Works which the enthusiast would perform with love.
Youth should be awed, religiously possessed
With a conviction of the power that waits
On knowledge, when sincerely sought and prized
For its own sake, on glory and on praise
If but by labour won, and fit to endure
The passing day; should learn to put aside
Her trappings here, should strip them off abashed
Before antiquity and stedfast truth
And strong book-minded-ness; and over all
A healthy sound simplicity should reign,
A seemly plainness, name it what you will,
Republican or pious.
"The long vacation" restored Wordsworth to haunts more congenial to his temper that either the gaieties or solemnities of Cambrdige. But we must pass over the fourth chapter entirely, and merely extract from the fifth a dream of the poet's which for its clear and sublime vision is surpassed, in our opinion, by nine of his later creations, and has few rivals in the entire cycle of verse, Christian or heathen. We have said already that Wordsworth fervently admired the sublimer mathematics. The poet and geometrician are in fact correlates of one another: both reign over a realm of order: both are independent of the fleeting forms and fashions of social existence, and divide, as it were, between them the world of human power. The dream is this: the poet had been reading "Don Quixote" by the sea side, and while his brain was still impressed with the delicate tracery of Cervantain fancy, he wandered, as if by an unconscious antagonism of thought, into speculations upon pure geometry; at length "his senses yielded to the sultry air," and he passed into a dream.

I saw before me stretched a boundless plain
Of sandy wilderness, all black and void,
And, as I looked around, distress and fear
Came creeping over me, when at my side -
Close at my side - an uncouth shape appeared
Upon a dromedary, mounted high.
He seemed an Arab of the Bedouin tribes:
A lance he bore, and underneath one arm
A stone, and in the opposite hand a shell
Of a surpassing brightness. At the sight
Much I rejoiced, not doubting but a guide
Was present, one who with unerring skill
Would through the deseert lead me; and while yet
I looked and looked, self-questioned what this freight
Which this new comer carried through the waste
Could mean, the Arab told me that the stone
(To give it in the language of the dream)
Was "Euclid's Elements;" and "This," said he,
"Is something of more worth;" and at the word
Stretched forth the shell, so beautiful in shape,
In colour so resplendent, with command
That I should hold it to my ear. I did so,
And heard that instant in an unknown tongue,
Which yet I understood, articulate sounds,
A loud prophetic blast of harmony:
An ode, in passion uttered, which foretold
Destruction to the children of the earth
By deluge, now at hand. No sooner ceased
The song, than the Arab with calm look declared
That all would come to pass of which the voice
Had given forewarning, and that he himself
button next page

button to main menu Lakes Guides menu.