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Essay(s) by Alice Meynell
The Foot
Alice Meynell
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       Time was when no good news made a journey, and no friend came near, but a welcome was uttered, or at least thought, for the travelling feet of the wayfarer or the herald. The feet, the feet were beautiful on the mountains; their toil was the price of all communication, and their reward the first service and refreshment. They were blessed and bathed; they suffered, but they were friends with the earth; dews in grass at morning, shallow rivers at noon, gave them coolness. They must have grown hard upon their mountain paths, yet never so hard but they needed and had the first pity and the readiest succour. It was never easy for the feet of man to travel this earth, shod or unshod, and his feet are delicate, like his colour.
       If they suffered hardship once, they suffer privation now. Yet the feet should have more of the acquaintance of earth, and know more of flowers, freshness, cool brooks, wild thyme, and salt sand than does anything else about us. It is their calling; and the hands might be glad to be stroked for a day by grass and struck by buttercups, as the feet are of those who go barefoot; and the nostrils might be flattered to be, like them, so long near moss. The face has only now and then, for a resting-while, their privilege.
       If our feet are now so severed from the natural ground, they have inevitably lost life and strength by the separation. It is only the entirely unshod that have lively feet. Watch a peasant who never wears shoes, except for a few unkind hours once a week, and you may see the play of his talk in his mobile feet; they become as dramatic as his hands. Fresh as the air, brown with the light, and healthy from the field, not used to darkness, not grown in prison, the foot of the _contadino_ is not abashed. It is the foot of high life that is prim, and never lifts a heel against its dull conditions, for it has forgotten liberty. It is more active now than it lately was--certainly the foot of woman is more active; but whether on the pedal or in the stirrup, or clad for a walk, or armed for a game, or decked for the waltz, it is in bonds. It is, at any rate, inarticulate.
       It has no longer a distinct and divided life, or none that is visible and sensible. Whereas the whole living body has naturally such infinite distinctness that the sense of touch differs, as it were, with every nerve, and the fingers are so separate that it was believed of them of old that each one had its angel, yet the modern foot is, as much as possible, deprived of all that delicate distinction: undone, unspecialized, sent back to lower forms of indiscriminate life. It is as though a landscape with separate sweetness in every tree should be rudely painted with the blank--blank, not simple--generalities of a vulgar hand. Or as though one should take the pleasures of a day of happiness in a wholesale fashion, not "turning the hours to moments," which joy can do to the full as perfectly as pain.
       The foot, with its articulations, is suppressed, and its language confused. When Lovelace likens the hand of Amarantha to a violin, and her glove to the case, he has at any rate a glove to deal with, not a boot. Yet Amarantha's foot is as lovely as her hand. It, too, has a "tender inward"; no wayfaring would ever make it look anything but delicate; its arch seems too slight to carry her through a night of dances; it does, in fact, but balance her. It is fit to cling to the ground, but rather for springing than for rest.
       And, doubtless, for man, woman, and child the tender, irregular, sensitive, living foot, which does not even stand with all its little surface on the ground, and which makes no base to satisfy an architectural eye, is, as it were, the unexpected thing. It is a part of vital design and has a history; and man does not go erect but at a price of weariness and pain. How weak it is may be seen from a footprint: for nothing makes a more helpless and unsymmetrical sign than does a naked foot.
       Tender, too, is the silence of human feet. You have but to pass a season amongst the barefooted to find that man, who, shod, makes so much ado, is naturally as silent as snow. Woman, who not only makes her armed heel heard, but also goes rustling like a shower, is naturally silent as snow. The vintager is not heard among the vines, nor the harvester on his threshing-floor of stone. There is a kind of simple stealth in their coming and going, and they show sudden smiles and dark eyes in and out of the rows of harvest when you thought yourself alone. The lack of noise in their movement sets free the sound of their voices, and their laughter floats.
       But we shall not praise the "simple, sweet" and "earth-confiding feet" enough without thanks for the rule of verse and for the time of song. If Poetry was first divided by the march, and next varied by the dance, then to the rule of the foot are to be ascribed the thought, the instruction, and the dream that could not speak by prose. Out of that little physical law, then, grew a spiritual law which is one of the greatest things we know; and from the test of the foot came the ultimate test of the thinker: "Is it accepted of Song?"
       The monastery, in like manner, holds its sons to little trivial rules of time and exactitude, not to be broken, laws that are made secure against the restlessness of the heart fretting for insignificant liberties--trivial laws to restrain from a trivial freedom. And within the gate of these laws which seem so small, lies the world of mystic virtue. They enclose, they imply, they lock, they answer for it. Lesser virtues may flower in daily liberty and may flourish in prose; but infinite virtues and greatness are compelled to the measure of poetry, and obey the constraint of an hourly convent bell. It is no wonder that every poet worthy the name has had a passion for metre, for the very verse. To him the difficult fetter is the condition of an interior range immeasurable.
       [The end]
       Alice Meynell's essay: The Foot
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Addresses
Anima Pellegrina!
At Monastery Gates
The Audience
Authorship
The Barren Shore
The Boy
By The Railway Side
The Century Of Moderation
Ceres' Runaway
Charlotte And Emily Bronte
Charmian
The Child Of Subsiding Tumult
The Child Of Tumult
Children In Burlesque
Children In Midwinter
Cloud
The Colour Of Life
Composure
A Counterchange
The Daffodil
Decivilized
A Derivation
Domus Angusta
Donkey Races
Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes
Dry Autumn
Eleonora Duse
Expression
Eyes
Fair And Brown
Fellow Travellers With A Bird
The Fields
The Flower
Flower of the Mind
The Foot
Grass
Habits And Consciousness
Harlequin Mercutio
Have Patience, Little Saint
The Honours Of Mortality
The Horizon
The Hours Of Sleep
Illness
The Illusion Of Historic Time
Innocence And Experience
James Russell Lowell
July
The Ladies Of The Idyll
The Lady Of The Lyrics
Laughter
The Lesson Of Landscape
Letters
The Letters Of Marceline Valmore
The Little Language
Madame Roland
The Man With Two Heads
Mr. Coventry Patmore's Odes
Mrs. Dingley
Mrs. Johnson
A Northern Fancy
Out Of Town
Pathos
Penultimate Caricature
The Plaid
Pocket Vocabularies
A Point Of Biography
The Point Of Honour
Popular Burlesque
Prue
Rain
Real Childhood
Rejection
A Remembrance
The Rhythm Of Life
Rushes And Reeds
The Sea Wall
The Seventeenth Century
Shadows
Solitude
Some Thoughts Of A Reader Of Tennyson
The Spirit Of Place
The Sun
Swinburne's Lyrical Poetry
Symmetry And Incident
The Tethered Constellations
That Pretty Person
Tithonus
The Tow Path
Two Burdens
Under The Early Stars
The Unit Of The World
The Unready
Unstable Equilibrium
A Vanquished Man
Victorian Caricature
Wells
Winds Of The World
A Woman In Grey
The Young Children