Читать книгу Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 346, August, 1844 - Various - Страница 3

ETCHED THOUGHTS BY THE ETCHING CLUB THE VETERAN'S RETURN

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     The old yew, deck'd in even's parting beams,

       From his red trunk reflects a ruddier ray;

     While, flickering through the lengthen'd shadow, gleams

       Of gold athwart the dusky branches play.

     The jackdaws, erst so bustling on the tower,

       Have ceased their cawing clamour from on high;

     And the brown bat, as nears the twilight hour,

       Circles—the lonely tenant of the sky.


     The soldier there, ere pass'd to distant climes,

       On Sabbath morn his early mates would meet;

     There list the chant of the familiar chimes,

       And the fond glance of young affection greet.

     There, too, at eve—before the twilight grey

       Led the dark hours, when sprites are wont to walk—

     With his sweet Nancy how he joy'd to stray,

       And tell his rustic love in homely talk.


     Now, home return'd, far other thoughts he owns,

       Though still the same the scene that meets his view!

     The same sun glistens o'er the lichen'd stones—

       Scarce one year more seems to have gnarl'd the yew.

     There, too, the hamlet where his boyhood pass'd

       Sends, as of old, its curls of smoke to ken—

     So near, his stalwart arm a stone might cast

       Among the cots that deck the coppiced glen!


     But ere the joys of that domestic glade

       Can wipe the tear from off his rugged brow,

     A stone beneath the yew-tree's ebon shade

       Deep o'er his heart a heavier shade doth throw.

     (Oh! sad indeed, when thus such tidings come

       That stun, even when by slow degrees they steal,)

     That tablet tells how cold within the tomb

       Are hands whose fond warm grasp he long'd to feel.


The "Painter of the Olden Time."—"His shop is his element, and he cannot, with any enjoyment to himself, live out of it.—Dr South." This is very good. The painter has his back to you, and is at work apparently on a wall. Little wots he of the world without. He is embodying angels, and spreading angelic light; himself, slipshod and loosely girdled, centring the radiance he creates. How differently arrayed are body and mind! By the title, we presume Mr Cope means to satirize some modern fops of the profession. Of all Mr Cope's etchings in the volume, we mostly admire "Love's Enemies." It is from the well-known passage of Shakspeare, "Ah me! for aught that ever I could read," &c. The conception is excellent. War, Death, and Sickness are taking off their prisoner Cupid, chained, from the door of an aged couple willing enough to part with him, while their poor broken-hearted daughter, with disheveled hair, hides her face with her hands; and, above her, the hard father's uplifted crutch is ready to speed the departure. It is lightly etched, in very good keeping; so that the grouping is clear, and the moral is perceptible at a glance. His "Rejected Addresses" is of another cast. Here he is in the common and beggarly world: yet represents he no common beggar; for, though he be often so named, he is one of rare accomplishments. "He can write a capital letter, enough to make any of the 'quality people' cry. The begging-letter people give him a shilling for a letter. He is now on the tramp." The man was a lawyer, and so astute that he can so adjust himself and his shadow, that he will hide in it from your scrutiny any habitual expression of his villany. And Cope has been most happy in this idea.

"Morning Prayer" is introduced with a few elegant lines, we presume by Mr Cope himself. They have no name to them. The figure is graceful, the effect tender; but we confess we have been so satiated with such subjects in the Annuals, that we do not relish this as perhaps we ought. From the same cause, we do not dwell upon "The Mother." "The Wanderer— the beggar and his dog," is good. The impostor beggar was in sunshine, and which he turned to his purpose: he could cope with the world's broad glare. This is no impostor; and the atmosphere he breathes is suited to his fortunes. The rejecting hand, with its shadow of the dry skinny fingers, is well conceived.

"The Readers," from Boccaccio, is not happy. The figures are not Italian; nor is the costume of the age of the book. His "Girl and Cupid" is a little gem, reminding us of Schidoni. We presume these lines are by the etcher—

     "Love, in the virgin breast of beauty lying,

     Laughs at the fate for her he doth prepare—

     Will swiftly turn her sweetest smiles to sighing,

     And flee when she is fixed in despair."


We have seen so many ladies with up-turned eyes, called in the annual catalogues "Meditation," that we will not interrupt the calm of Mr Cope's. C.G. Lewis has but one plate, "A Woodland Dell." A quiet spot of shade and flickering sunshine—a streamlet, and a rural bridge. It is sweetly etched, true to the character.

Richard Redgrave, in more than one instance in the book, shows that he has power over the deep and solemn pathetic, as well as over the tender. His first plate is "The Survivors of the Storm." The story is from Petronius, as told by Jeremy Taylor. A floating body of one of a shipwrecked crew lies pillowed on a wave, and is met with by the survivors in their boat. Solemn and awe-stricken is their expression. The plate is of a fine tone, befitting death in that awful shape. This story of Petronius was the subject of a poetical piece, which we remember to have read in a volume of poems by Thomas Flatman, one of the "mob of gentlemen" condemned by Pope, who, nevertheless, did not care about borrowing from him pretty much of his version of the "Animula, blandula, vagula"—the Emperor Adrian's address to his soul. We remember the commencement of the piece:—

     "After a blustering tedious night,

     The winds all hush'd, and the rude tempest o'er,

     Rolling far off upon a briny wave,

     Compassionate Philander spied

     A floating carcass ride,

     That seem'd to beg the kindness of a grave.

     At near approach he thought he knew the man," &c.


His "Fairy Revels" make a light and elegant plate. A fairy group in a frame of leaves. He is here both painter and poet.

     "Hast thou not seen the summer breeze,

     The eddying leaves, and downy feather,

     Whirl round a while beneath the trees,

     Then bear aloft to heaven together?

     With just such motion, gliding light,

     These fairies vanish'd from my sight."


Poor unfortunate Dadd! some years ago he exhibited a picture of this subject, somewhat similarly treated, that was exquisitely ideal.

The "Ellen Orford," from Crabbe's Borough, is good in the effect; but it has not the pathos that usually distinguishes Redgrave. "Rizpah watching her Sons," is very fine. The night, the glaring torchlight, to scare away the approaching wolves, and the paler, more distant light in the sky, with the melancholy mourning Rizpah, are of the best conception. "The Sick Child" has quite the effect of a Rembrandt plate; yet it is very tender—a scene fit for the angelic visit, and pure and devout of thought and purpose is that angel—we do not like the mother. The best description is from Mr Redgrave's own pen.

Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 346, August, 1844

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