MIST hung gray along the river, and upon the fields. From the
cottage,
little and lonely, shone candlelight, that looked sad to the
wanderer
without in the autumnal dark: he turned and faced the
fields, and the dim
river. And the music, the triumphing music, the
rich voices of the violin,
came sounding down the garden from the
cottage. His mood, his mind, were
those of the Flemish poet, who
murmurs in sighing verse:
Et je suis dans la nuit. . . . Oh! c’est si bon la
nuit!
Ne rien faire . . . se taire . . . et bercer son
ennui,
Au rhythme agonisant de lointaine musique. . . .
For this was the last evening of his life: he felt sure of
that: and,
foolish martyr to his own weakness that he was, he
fell to meditating
upon the sad scenery and circumstance of his death. The
gray mist
upon river and field, the acrid odours of autumn flowers in the
garden,
the solitariness of melancholy twilight, these were right and
fitting: but
there, in the cottage behind him, was his best friend,
speaking with
him through music, giving him his Ave
atque Vale upon the violin. A
choice incident! And instinctively
he began to find phrases for it,
plangent, mournful, suitable to the
elegiac sonnet. True, his friend was
not all that he could have wished: an
excellent musician of common
sense, well dressed and healthy, with nothing
of Chopin about him,
nothing of Paganini. But the sonnet need not mention
the musician,
only his music. So he looked at the dim river and the misty
fields,
and thought of long, alliterative, melancholy words.
Immemorial,
irrevocable, visionary, marmoreal. . . .
The Lyceum was responsible for
this. That classic journal, reviewing
his last book of verses,
had told him that though he should vivisect
his soul in public for
evermore, he would find there nothing worth
revealing, and nothing to
compensate the spectators for their painful and
pitying emotions. He had
thought it a clumsy sarcasm, ponderous no
less than rude: but he could not
deny its truth. Tenderly opening his
book, he lighted upon these lines:
Ah, day by swift malignant day,
Life vanishes in vanity:
Whilst I, life’s phantom victim, play
The music of my misery.
Draw near, ah dear delaying Death!
Draw near, and silence my sad breath.
The
132
The lines touched him; yet he could not think them a valuable utter-
ance:
nor did he discover much fine gold in his sonnet, which began:
Along each melancholy London street,
Beneath the heartless stars, the indifferent moon,
I walk with sorrow, and I know that soon
Despair and I will walk with friendly feet.
It was good, but Shakespeare and Keats, little as he could
comprehend
why, had done better. He sat in his Temple chambers,
nursing these
dreary cogitations, for many hours of an October day, until
the musician
came to interrupt him: and to the violinist the versifier
confessed.
‘I am just thirty,’ he began, ‘and quite useless. I have a
good
education, and a little money. I must do something: and
poetry is
what I want to do. I have published three volumes, and they
are
entirely futile. They are not even bad enough to be interesting. I
have
not written one verse that any one can remember. I have tried a
great
many styles, and I cannot write anything really good and fine in any
one
of them.’ He turned over the leaves with a hasty and irritated
hand.
‘There, for instance!’ This is an attempt at the sensuous
love-lyric:
listen!
Sometimes, in very joy of shame,
Our flesh becomes one living flame:
And she and I
Are no more separate, but the same.
Ardour and agony unite;
Desire, delirium, delight:
And I and she
Faint in the fierce and fevered night.
Her body music is: and ah,
The accords of lute and viola,
When she and I
Play on live limbs love’s opera!
It’s a lie, of course: but even if it were true, could any
one care to
read it? Then why should I want to write it? And why
can’t I
write better? I know what imagination is, and poetry, and all the
rest
of it. I go on contemplating my own emotions, or inventing them,
an
nothing comes of it but this. And yet I’m not a perfect fool. That,
said the musician, ‘is true, though it is not your fault: but you soon
will
133
will be, if you go on maundering like
this by yourself. Come down to
my cottage by the river, and invent a new
profession.’ And they went.
But the country is dangerous to persons of weak mind, who
examine
much the state of their emotions; they indulge there in
delicious
luxuries of introspection. The unhappy poet brooded upon his
futility,
with occasional desperate efforts to write something like the
Ode to Duty
or the Scholar Gypsy: dust and ashes! dust and ashes! Suddenly the
horror of a long life spent in following the will-o’-the-wisp, or in
questing
for Sangrails and Eldorados, fell upon him: he refused to become
an
elderly mooncalf. The river haunted him with its facilities for
death,
and he regretted that there were no water-lilies on it: still, it
was cold
and swift and deep, overhung by alders, and edged by whispering
reeds.
Why not? He was of no use: if he went out to the colonies, or
upon
the stock exchange, he would continue to write quantities of
average
and uninteresting verse. It was his destiny: and the word pleased
him.
There was a certain distinction in having a destiny, and in defeating
it
by death. He had but a listless care for life, few ties that he
would
grieve to break, no prospects and ambitions within his reach.
Upon
this fourth evening, then, he went down to the end of the garden,
and
looked towards the river.
The sonnet was done at last, and he smiled to find himself
admiring
it. In all honesty, he fancied that death has inspired
him well. He had
read, surely he had read, worse sestets.
‘I shall not hear what any morrow saith:
I only hear this my last twilight say
Cease thee from sighing and from bitter breath,
For all thy life with autumn mist is gray!
Dirged by loud music, down to silent death
I pass, and on the waters pass away.’
A pity that it should be lost: but to leave it upon the bank
would
be almost an affectation. Besides, there was pathos in
dying with his
best verses upon his lips: verses that only he and the
twilight should
hear. Night fell fast and very gloomy, with scarce a star.
Leaning
upon the gate, he tried to remember the names of modern poets
who
have killed themselves: Chatterton, Gerard de Nerval. They, at
least,
could write poetry, and their failure was not in art. Yet he could
live
his poetry, as Milton and Carlyle, he thought, had recommended: live
it
by dying, because he could not write it. ‘What Cato did and Addison
approved’ had its poetical side: and no one without a passion for poetry
would
134
would die in despair at failure in it.
The violin sent dancing into the
night an exhilarating courtly measure of
Rameau: ‘The Dance of
Death!’ said the poet, and was promptly ashamed of so
obvious and
hackneyed a sentiment. At the same time, there was something
strange
and rare in drowning yourself by night to the dance-music of
your
unconscious friend.
The bitter smell of aster and chrysanthemum was heavy on the
air;
‘balms and rich spices for the sad year’s death,’ as he had
once written:
and he fancied, though he could not be sure, that he caught a
bat’s thin
cry. The ‘pathetic fallacy’ was extremely strong upon him, and
he
pitied himself greatly. To die so futile and so young! A minor
Hamlet
with Ophelia’s death! And at that, his mind turned to
Shakespeare,
and to a famous modern picture, and to the Lady of Shalott.
He
imagined himself floating down and down to some mystical mediaeval
city, its torchlights flashing across his white face. But for that, he
should be dressed differently; in something Florentine perhaps: certainly
not in a comfortable smoking-coat by a London tailor. And at that, he
was
reminded that a last cigarette would not be out of place: he lighted
one,
and presently fell to wondering whether he was mad or no. He
thought not:
he was sane enough to know that he would never write
great poetry, and to
die sooner than waste life in the misery of vain
efforts. The last wreath
of smoke gone upon the night, not without a
comparison between the wreath
and himself, he opened the garden gate,
and walked gently down the little
field, at the end of which ran the
river. He went through the long grass,
heavy with dew, looking up at
the starless sky, and into the impenetrable
darkness. Of a sudden, with
the most vivid surprise of his life, he fell
forward, with a flashing sensa-
tion of icy water bubbling round his face,
blinding and choking him; of
being swirled and carried along-, of river
weeds clinging round his head;
of living in a series of glimpses and
visions. Mechanically striking out
across stream, he reached the bank,
steadied and rested himself for an
instant by the branch of an overhanging
alder, then climbed ashore.
There he lay and shivered; then, despite the
cold, tingled with shame,
and blushed; then laughed; lastly, got up and
shouted. The shout rose
discordantly above the musician’s harmonies, and he
heard some one
call his name. ‘It’s that moon-struck poet of mine,’ said
he, and went
down to the gate. ‘Is that you?’ he cried, ‘and where are
you?’ And
out of the darkness beyond came the confused and feeble
answer
fell into the river—and I’m—on the wrong side.’ The practical man
wasted
139
wasted no words, but made for the
boathouse, where he kept his punt:
and in a few minutes the shivering poet
dimly descried his rescuer in
mid-stream. The lumbering craft grounded, and
the drowned man, with
stiff and awkward movement, got himself on board.
‘What do you
mean,’ said the musician, ‘by making me play Charon on this
ghostly
river at such an hour?’ ‘I was—thinking of things,’ said the poet,
‘and
it was pitch dark—and I fell in.’ They landed; and the dewy field,
the
autumnal garden, the rich night air, seemed to be mocking him. His
teeth chattered, and he shook, and still he mumbled bits of verse. Said
the
musician, as they entered the little cottage: ‘The first thing for you
to
do is to take off those things, and have hot drinks in bed, like Mr.
Pickwick.’ Said the doomed man, quaking like an aspen: ‘Yes, but I
must
write out a sonnet first, before I forget it.’ He did.
LIONEL JOHNSON
MLA citation:
Johnson, Lionel. “Incurable.” The Pageant, 1896, pp. 131-139. Pageant Digital Edition, edited by Frederick King and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2019-2021. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2021. https://1890s.ca/pag1-johnson-incurable/