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A Modern Epic
Oscar Wilde
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       _ (Pall Mall Gazette, March 13, 1885.)
       In an age of hurry like ours the appearance of an epic poem more than five thousand lines in length cannot but be regarded as remarkable. Whether such a form of art is the one most suited to our century is a question. Edgar Allan Poe insisted that no poem should take more than an hour to read, the essence of a work of art being its unity of impression and of effect. Still, it would be difficult to accept absolutely a canon of art which would place the Divine Comedy on the shelf and deprive us of the Bothwell of Mr. Swinburne. A work of art is to be estimated by its beauty not by its size, and in Mr. Wills's Melchior there is beauty of a rich and lofty character.
       Remembering the various arts which have yielded up their secrets to Mr. Wills, it is interesting to note in his poems, here the picturesque vision of the painter, here the psychology of the novelist, and here the playwright's sense of dramatic situation. Yet these things, which are the elements of his work of art though we arbitrarily separate them in criticism, are in the work itself blended and made one by the true imaginative and informing power. For Melchior is not a piece of poetic writing merely; it is that very rare thing, a poem.
       It is dedicated to Mr. Robert Browning, not inappropriately, as it deals with that problem of the possible expression of life through music, the value of which as a motive in poetry Mr. Browning was the first to see. The story is this. In one of the little Gothic towns of Northern Germany lives Melchior, a dreamer and a musician. One night he rescues by chance a girl from drowning and lodges her in a convent of holy women. He grows to love her and to see in her the incarnation of that St. Cecily whom, with mystic and almost mediaeval passion, he had before adored. But a priest separates them, and Melchior goes mad. An old doctor, who makes a study of insanity, determines to try and cure him, and induces the girl to appear to him, disguised as St. Cecily herself, while he sits brooding at the organ. Thinking her at first to be indeed the Saint he had worshipped, Melchior falls in ecstasy at her feet, but soon discovering the trick kills her in a sudden paroxysm of madness. The horror of the act restores his reason; but, with the return of sanity, the dreams and visions of the artist's nature begin to vanish; the musician sees the world not through a glass but face to face, and he dies just as the world is awakening to his music.
       The character of Melchior, who inherits his music from his father, and from his mother his mysticism, is extremely fascinating as a psychological study. Mr. Wills has made a most artistic use of that scientific law of heredity which has already strongly influenced the literature of this century, and to which we owe Dr. Holmes's fantastic Elsie Venner, Daniel Deronda--that dullest of masterpieces--and the dreadful Rougon-Macquart family with whose misdeeds M. Zola is never weary of troubling us.
       Blanca, the girl, is a somewhat slight sketch, but then, like Ophelia, she is merely the occasion of a tragedy and not its heroine. The rest of the characters are most powerfully drawn and create themselves simply and swiftly before us as the story proceeds, the method of the practised dramatist being here of great value.
       As regards the style, we notice some accidental assonances of rhyme which in an unrhymed poem are never pleasing; and the unfinished short line of five or six syllables, however legitimate on the stage where the actor himself can make the requisite musical pause, is not a beauty in a blank verse poem, and is employed by Mr. Wills far too frequently. Still, taken as a whole, the style has the distinction of noble melody.
       There are many passages which, did space permit us, we would like to quote, but we must content ourselves with saying that in Melchior we find not merely pretty gems of rich imagery and delicate fancy, but a fine imaginative treatment of many of the most important modern problems, notably of the relation of life to art. It is a pleasure to herald a poem which combines so many elements of strength and beauty.
       Melchior. By W. G. Wills, author of Charles I., Olivia, etc., and writer of Claudian. (Macmillan and Co.) _
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Introduction
Dinners And Dishes
A Modern Epic
Shakespeare On Scenery
A Bevy Of Poets
Parnassus Versus Philology
Hamlet At The Lyceum
Two New Novels I
Henry The Fourth At Oxford
Modern Greek Poetry
Olivia At The Lyceum
As You Like It At Coombe House
A Handbook To Marriage
Half-Hours With The Worst Authors
One Of Mr. Conway's Remainders
To Read Or Not To Read
Twelfth Night At Oxford
The Letters Of A Great Woman
News From Parnassus
Some Novels I
A Literary Pilgrim
Beranger In England
The Poetry Of The People
The Cenci
Helena In Troas
Pleasing And Prattling
Balzac In English
Two New Novels II
Ben Jonson
The Poets' Corner I
A Ride Through Morocco
The Children Of The Poets
New Novels I
A Politician's Poetry
Mr. Symonds' History Of The Renaissance
A 'jolly' Art Critic
A Sentimental Journey Through Literature
Common-Sense In Art
Miner And Minor Poets
A New Calendar
The Poets' Corner II
Great Writers By Little Men
A New Book On Dickens
Our Book-Shelf
A Cheap Edition Of A Great Man
Mr. Morris's Odyssey
A Batch Of Novels
Some Novels II
The Poets' Corner III
Mr. Pater's Imaginary Portraits
A Good Historical Novel
New Novels II
Two Biographies Of Keats
A Scotchman On Scottish Poetry
Literary And Other Notes I
Mr. Mahaffy's New Book
Mr. Morris's Completion Of The Odyssey
Sir Charles Bowen's Virgil
Literary And Other Notes II
Aristotle At Afternoon Tea
Early Christian Art In Ireland
Literary And Other Notes III
The Poets' Corner IV
Literary And Other Notes IV
The Poets' Corner V
Venus Or Victory
Literary And Other Notes V
The Poets' Corner VI
M. Caro On George Sand
The Poets' Corner VII
A Fascinating Book
The Poets' Corner VIII
A Note On Some Modern Poets
Sir Edwin Arnold's Last Volume
Australian Poets
Some Literary Notes I
Poetry And Prison
The Gospel According To Walt Whitman
The New President
Some Literary Notes II
One Of The Bibles Of The World
Poetical Socialists
Mr. Brander Matthews' Essays
Some Literary Notes III
Mr. William Morris's Last Book
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Poets' Corner IX
Some Literary Notes IV
Mr. Froude's Blue-Book
Some Literary Notes V
Ouida's New Novel
Some Literary Notes VI
A Thought-Reader's Novel
The Poets' Corner X
Mr. Swinburne's Last Volume
Three New Poets
A Chinese Sage
Mr. Pater's Last Volume
Primavera