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Poetry And Prison
Oscar Wilde
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       _ (Pall Mall Gazette, January 3, 1889.)
       Prison has had an admirable effect on Mr. Wilfrid Blunt as a poet. The Love Sonnets of Proteus, in spite of their clever Musset-like modernities and their swift brilliant wit, were but affected or fantastic at best. They were simply the records of passing moods and moments, of which some were sad and others sweet, and not a few shameful. Their subject was not of high or serious import. They contained much that was wilful and weak. In Vinculis, upon the other hand, is a book that stirs one by its fine sincerity of purpose, its lofty and impassioned thought, its depth and ardour of intense feeling. 'Imprisonment,' says Mr. Blunt in his preface, 'is a reality of discipline most useful to the modern soul, lapped as it is in physical sloth and self-indulgence. Like a sickness or a spiritual retreat it purifies and ennobles; and the soul emerges from it stronger and more self-contained.' To him, certainly, it has been a mode of purification. The opening sonnets, composed in the bleak cell of Galway Gaol, and written down on the fly-leaves of the prisoner's prayer-book, are full of things nobly conceived and nobly uttered, and show that though Mr. Balfour may enforce 'plain living' by his prison regulations, he cannot prevent 'high thinking' or in any way limit or constrain the freedom of a man's soul. They are, of course, intensely personal in expression. They could not fail to be so. But the personality that they reveal has nothing petty or ignoble about it. The petulant cry of the shallow egoist which was the chief characteristic of the Love Sonnets of Proteus is not to be found here. In its place we have wild grief and terrible scorn, fierce rage and flame-like passion. Such a sonnet as the following comes out of the very fire of heart and brain:
       God knows, 'twas not with a fore-reasoned plan
       I left the easeful dwellings of my peace,
       And sought this combat with ungodly Man,
       And ceaseless still through years that do not cease
       Have warred with Powers and Principalities.
       My natural soul, ere yet these strifes began,
       Was as a sister diligent to please
       And loving all, and most the human clan.
       God knows it. And He knows how the world's tears
       Touched me. And He is witness of my wrath,
       How it was kindled against murderers
       Who slew for gold, and how upon their path
       I met them. Since which day the World in arms
       Strikes at my life with angers and alarms.
       And this sonnet has all the strange strength of that despair which is but the prelude to a larger hope:
       I thought to do a deed of chivalry,
       An act of worth, which haply in her sight
       Who was my mistress should recorded be
       And of the nations. And, when thus the fight
       Faltered and men once bold with faces white
       Turned this and that way in excuse to flee,
       I only stood, and by the foeman's might
       Was overborne and mangled cruelly.
       Then crawled I to her feet, in whose dear cause
       I made this venture, and 'Behold,' I said,
       'How I am wounded for thee in these wars.'
       But she, 'Poor cripple, would'st thou I should wed
       A limbless trunk?' and laughing turned from me.
       Yet she was fair, and her name 'Liberty.'
       The sonnet beginning
       A prison is a convent without God--
       Poverty, Chastity, Obedience
       Its precepts are:
       is very fine; and this, written just after entering the gaol, is powerful:
       Naked I came into the world of pleasure,
       And naked come I to this house of pain.
       Here at the gate I lay down my life's treasure,
       My pride, my garments and my name with men.
       The world and I henceforth shall be as twain,
       No sound of me shall pierce for good or ill
       These walls of grief. Nor shall I hear the vain
       Laughter and tears of those who love me still.
       Within, what new life waits me! Little ease,
       Cold lying, hunger, nights of wakefulness,
       Harsh orders given, no voice to soothe or please,
       Poor thieves for friends, for books rules meaningless;
       This is the grave--nay, hell. Yet, Lord of Might,
       Still in Thy light my spirit shall see light.
       But, indeed, all the sonnets are worth reading, and The Canon of Aughrim, the longest poem in the book, is a most masterly and dramatic description of the tragic life of the Irish peasant. Literature is not much indebted to Mr. Balfour for his sophistical Defence of Philosophic Doubt which is one of the dullest books we know, but it must be admitted that by sending Mr. Blunt to gaol he has converted a clever rhymer into an earnest and deep-thinking poet. The narrow confines of the prison cell seem to suit the 'sonnet's scanty plot of ground,' and an unjust imprisonment for a noble cause strengthens as well as deepens the nature.
       In Vinculis. By Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, Author of The Wind and the Whirlwind, The Love Sonnets of Proteus, etc. etc. (Kegan Paul.) _
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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