Henry Craik, ed. English Prose. 1916.
Vol. I. Fourteenth to Sixteenth Century
Walter Savage Landor (17751864)
[Walter Savage Landor, the son of a Warwick physician, was born in 1775. At Rugby, where he was partly educated, the ungovernable temper that brought so much misery into his life displayed itself from the first, and at the headmaster’s request he was removed. A private tutor prepared him for the University, and at eighteen he entered Trinity College, Oxford, but was rusticated in 1794. The rustication led to a quarrel with his father, and he left home for London, where during a short residence he published his first volume of Poems (1795). After a reconciliation with his father Landor retired on an allowance to South Wales, where he wrote Gebir, published in 1798. On his father’s death in 1805 he settled in Bath, and in 1808 went on an expedition to Spain to assist in driving out the French armies of occupation. After his return he purchased the estate of Llanthony in Wales, and in 1811 married a Miss Thuiller. In the same year he published Count Julian. In 1814 came the first of a series of quarrels with his wife, and Landor crossed to France alone. A reconciliation was brought about in the following year, and until 1835 the Landors lived in Italy, where their eldest son was born in 1817. During these years spent at Como, Pisa, Florence, and Fiesole were written the Imaginary Conversations (vols. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5), and in 1834 the Citation and Examination of William Shakespeare. A second serious quarrel with his wife took place in 1835, and Landor returned to England. Pericles and Aspasia was published in 1836, and the Pentameron in 1837. From 1838 until 1857 he resided at Bath, and published a new series of the Imaginary Conversations in 1846; the Hellenics and a collection of Latin poems [Pœmata et Inscriptiones) in 1847. In 1853 appeared Imaginary Conversations of Greeks and Romans and the Last Fruit off an Old Tree. Landor’s conduct at Bath involved him in grave difficulties arising out of quarrels and scandals, which culminated in a law-suit on the publication of Dry Sticks fagoted by W. S. Landor. While the suit was pending he left England for the last time, and judgment, with a thousand pounds’ costs, was given against him in his absence. Finding life with his family at his Villa Gherardesca in Fiesole impossible, on the advice of Robert Browning and other friends, he took rooms for himself in Florence, where in 1863 he published Heroic Idyls, his last work. Landor died at Florence in 1864.]
For an author who makes such continual demand upon our appreciation, who is so full of fine thoughts, Landor is singularly disconnected, frequently unreasonable; and, since his creed of rebellion against kings and priests is merely passionate and elementary, to take him seriously, as we take Milton, in his disquisitions upon politics or religion is impossible. A search for any underlying unity in his thought would be in vain, the lack of sequence in his ideas is a weariness to the reader, and, if it can be said with truth that his writings present any philosophy, it is an unschematised philosophy that bears no fruit.
But when all this has been said, the rest is admiration. Let it not be claimed for Landor that he is a creative artist of the first order, a sure critic of art or life, that he reaches the sympathies that lie at the roots of our higher spiritual nature. He is a critic of genius, a writer of indisputable originality, who in his best moments mingles a marvellous grace and sweetness with his strength, displays a largeness and sanity in his choice of subject as in the management of his form, and preserves throughout his work a certain royalty of mien, writing as one familiar with great circumstances and great men.
Unlike most poets he preferred his prose to his poetry—“Poetry was always my amusement, prose my study and business”—and he was unlike them in this also that, while the law under which he worked was the law of the severest parsimony, he permitted himself indulgence in a richer vein of fancy and employed a more copious imagery in his prose than in his verse. The Imaginary Conversations compel an interest somewhat akin to the interest of Plutarch. We have in English no such storehouse of epigrammata weighty with a simple gravity of thought, nor, save in the plays of Shakespeare, an equal body of writing which presents such noble groups of men and women with more natural directness or with purer human feeling. For these reasons the dialogues must remain a part of ever current literature, and for one other reason. The author who is a child of his age and speaks a word to his own time secures success, and with success comes at least a transient glory; to style alone the forgetful fates are kind. Without achieving success Landor by reason of his style takes undisputed place among the masters of English prose. The majestic march, the solemn cadences and sustained harmonies of his Roman period are among the golden joys of the student of literature. Landor’s was the art of the statuary. His instinct was for that form of excellence which consists in firmly outlined intellectual drawing, and “words that fit the thing.” To achieve distinction in this manner is to be subject to no changes of fashion, and to be numbered among those in whose quiet gardens, as in the courts of some ancient college, the artist loves to linger, to recall and meditate the past, secure from the bustle of the crowd and the faces of anxious men.