In Good Company. Coulson Kernahan
me on that first meeting, but I am not sure that the impression I then formed was accurate.
I came away feeling as if I had been in the company of a creature living in an unreal world, whereas now I think that, to the man whom I had left behind in that book-lined room, life was infinitely more real than it is to us. I had left behind me, given over to ecstatic abandonment to the mood of the moment, and believing intensely in the reality and actuality of all which that mood called forth, or created, a child at play with his toys, for in spite of the magnificence and the maturity of his intellect (may I not say because of the magnificence and the maturity of his intellect?) the child lived on and was alive to the last in Algernon Charles Swinburne as it lives in few others.
What he had meant when he spoke of writing poetry “to escape from boredom” was that he was a tired child turning for comfort, self-forgetfulness and consolation to his toys; and to him (happy man!) even his life-work, even Poetry itself, was, in a sense, a toy. That was why to the last he turned to it—an old man in years, though I could never bring myself to think of him as old—with such eager and childlike anticipation. The child heart, which could exult and build up dreams around his toys, remained; but his toys were changed—that was all. That was why he so loved and was so loved by children. They recognised him, bearded man as he was, as one of themselves. That was why he was so instantly at home with them, and they with him. That, too, was why he so revelled in Mr. Kenneth Grahame’s The Golden Age—not with the mild reminiscent and ruminant interest and pleasure of a staid grown-up, chewing the cud of childhood, but with a boy of ten’s actual and intense identification with, and abandonment of himself to the part he was acting, and with all a boy of ten’s natural and innate love of fun and of mischief. I have seen him literally dance and caper and whistle (yes, whistle) with all an eager boy’s rapture, over some new toy treasure-trove, in the shape of a poem, by himself or by a friend, a “find” in the shape of a picture, a print, or a coveted first edition, picked up, during his rambles, at a stall.
“Eccentricity of genius,” you say?
Not at all. It meant merely that his boyhood was as immortal as his genius, as ineradicable as his intellectual greatness.
Warm as was my regard for Algernon Charles Swinburne the man, profound as is my admiration of him as a poet, I am not sure that to this child-side of him must not be attributed much that was noblest and most lovable in his noble and lovable personality, as well as much that was loftiest and most enduring in his work.
Of him we must say, as Mr. William Watson has so finely said of Tennyson, that he
Is heard for ever, and is seen no more;
but in seeking, for the purpose of these Recollections, to conjure the living man before me, in striving to recall my conversations with him, and in remembering, as I always do and shall remember, his great-heartedness, I am reminded of what Watts-Dunton once said to me in a letter.
“You will recall,” he wrote, “what Swinburne was remarking to you the other day, when we were discussing the envy, hatred and malice of a certain but very small section of the literary craft. ‘Yes,’ said Swinburne, ‘but these are the intellectually-little writing fellows who do not matter and who do not count. The biggest men, intellectually, are always the biggest-natured. Great hearts go generally with great brains.’ ”
And I think—I am sure—that the saying is true.
LORD ROBERTS
“ORDERED OUT”
In Memoriam: Roberts, F.M., V.C.
Died on Service, 1914
“When I was ordered out——”
Lord Roberts, in a letter to the writer.
Prouder to serve than to command was he:
“When I was ordered”—thus a soldier’s soul
Answered, as from the ranks, the muster roll,
When came the call: “England hath need of thee.”
At Duty’s bidding, not by Glory lured,
For peace, not war, he strove; and peace was his—
Not the base peace which more disastrous is
Than war, but peace abiding and assured.
Thereafter followed long, untroubled years,
Wherein some said: “See rise the star of peace,
The morn of Arbitration. Wars must cease.
Away with sword and shield—Millennium nears!”
“Keep shield to breast, keep bright your sword, and drawn!” Rang out his answer. “On the horizon’s rim I see great armies gather, and the dim, Grey mists of Armageddon’s bloody dawn!”
Few heeded, many scoffed, some merry grew,
And “Dotard!” cried, because, for England’s sake
For whom his son lay dead, he bade her wake,
And a great soldier spoke of what he knew.
Yet spoke—distasteful task!—against his will;
Death he had dared, but dared not silent be—
That were to England blackest treachery—
Wherefore he spoke: his voice is sounding still!
Even the while he spoke, the while they mocked
(With silent dignity their taunts were borne),
Europe, that laughing rose, as ’twere at morn,
At night, distraught, and in delirium rocked.
As the hung avalanche is suddenly hurled
Down the abyss, though but a pebble stirred,
So a crowned monster’s will, a Kaiser’s word,
Plunged into Armageddon half a world,
And Chaos was again. Crashed the blue skies
Above, as if to splinters. Was God dead?
Or deaf? or dumb? or reigned there, in His stead,
Only a devil in a God’s disguise?
Staggered and stunned, our England backward reeled
A moment. Then, magnificent, erect,
Flashed forth her sword, her ally to protect,
And over prostrate Belgium cast her shield.
Above the babel of voices, mists of doubt,
Rang forth his stern “To arms!” England to nerve;
Too old to fight, but not too old to serve,
Again he hears the call—is “ordered out.”
“Roberts!” the voice was Duty’s, arm’d and helm’d,
“To France! where India, greatly loyal, lands
Her stalwarts, and the bestial horde withstands
That raped and ravaged, burned and overwhelmed
“Heroic Belgium. Roberts, ’gainst the foe
No voice like thine can the swart Indians fire
To valour, and to loyalty inspire;
Roberts! to France!” Came answer calm: “I go.”
Nor once reproached: “I warned. You gave no heed,”
Nor pleaded fourscore years—“Ah, that I could!”
He who had England saved, an England would,
Only of England thought, in England’s