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first by a successful career and then by ad- | Reposes self-included at the base. verse fortune, was a great dramatic prob- But this thou know'st." *

lem.

We cannot better illustrate either the character of Philip or that of the stormy times amid which his lot is cast than by the following extracts from a scene in which he discusses the events of the day with Father John of Heda, his counsellor and friend, and formerly his preceptor;

"Artevelde. I never look'd that he should live so long.

He was a man of that unsleeping spirit,
He seem'd to live by miracle: his food
Was glory, which was poison to his mind
And peril to his body. He was one
Of many thousand such that die betimes,
Whose story is a fragment, known to few.
Then comes the man who has the luck to live,
And he's a prodigy. Compute the chances,
And deem there's ne'er a one in dangerous times
Who wins the race of glory, but than he
A thousand men more gloriously endow'd
Have fallen upon the course; a thousand others
Have had their fortunes founder'd by a chance,
Whilst lighter barks push'd past them; to
whom add

A smaller tally, of the singular few
Who, gifted with predominating powers,

B

yet a temperate will and keep the peace. The world knows nothing of its greatest men. Father John. Had Launoy lived, he might have pass'd for great, But not by conquests in the Franc of, Bruges. The sphere, the scale of circumstances, is all Which makes the wonder of the many. Still An ardent soul was Launoy's, and his deeds Were such as dazzled many a Flemish dime. There'll some bright eyes in Ghent be dimm'd

for him.

Artevelde. They will be dim and then be bright again.

All is in busy, stirring, stormy motion,
And many a cloud drifts by and none sojourns.
Lightly is life laid down amongst us now,
And lightly is death mourn'd: a dusk star

blinks

As fleets the rack, but look again, and lo!
In a wide solitude of wintry sky
Twinkles the re-illuminated star,
And all is out of sight that smirch'd the ray.
We have not time to mourn.
Father John.
The worse for us!
He that lacks time to mourn lacks time to mend.
Eternity mourns that. 'Tis an ill cure
For life's worst ills to have no time to feel them.
Where sorrow's held obtrusive and turn'd out,
There wisdom will not enter, nor true power,
Nor aught that dignifies humanity.
Yet such the barrenness of busy life!
From shelf to shelf Ambition clambers up
To reach the naked'st pinnacle of all,
Whilst Magnanimity, absolved from toil,

Philip has won, almost without, seeking them, the affections of a beautiful but unprotected young Flemish heiress, the friend of his sister, Clara van Artevelde. In an interview, in which the confiding grace, ingenuousness, and devotedness of the Lady Adriana are more striking than any chivalrous ardour on her lover's part, he gains the promise of her hand. She has had a less fortunate admirer in the Lord of Occo; and the rejected suitor is stimulated by jealousy, as well as by his political interests, to conspire against his rival. The Earl of Flanders has sent two emissaries, Sir Guisebert Grutt and Sir Simon Bette, to traffic with traitors in the Flemish camp. To divide his enemies, he has also offered an amnesty, on condition that three hundred citizens are delivered up to his justice. A meeting is convened at the Stadt-house; and the Lord of Occo promises to attend it, having first resolved on the assassination of Philip. Fearing, however, that his conspiracy has been discovered, he stays away at the critical moment. For a time the two emissaries are successful with the people; but the moment it becomes Artevelle's turn to speak, their intrigue begins to unravel. His harangue carries the people with him as a storm carries dead leaves. He reminds them of their past achievements, and of the remorseless cruelties practised on them by the earl. He demands who can tell that his own name is not included among the three hundred to be delivered up to torments and death; and at the moment that he finds himself the master of his audience he turns on the delegates, denounces them as traitors, and stabbs Grutt to the heart, while Van den Bosch slays Bette.

The scabbard thrown away, the warparty is at once in the ascendant; and the wealthy burghers are taught that their young chief has left his books, and become such a man of action as may not be trifled with. The Lord of Occo makes his escape, and succeeds also in carrying off Adriana, of whose broad lands he proposes to become heiress. The scene changes to a banquetthe master by a forced marriage with the ing-hall at Bruges, where the Earl of Flanders is magnificently entertained by the mayor and citizens. There is a song on the approaching fall of Ghent,

* Vol. i. p. 21.

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"God help them!
A man that as much knowledge has of war
As I of brewing mead! God help their souls!
A bookish nursling of the monks a meacock!
D'Arlon. My lord, I'm fearful you mistake

the man.

If my accounts be true, the life he's led
Served rather in its transit to eclipse
Than to show forth his nature; and that pass'd,
You'll now behold him as he really is,
One of a cold and of a constant mind,
Not quicken'd into ardent action soon
Nor prompt for petty enterprise; yet bold,
Fierce when need is, and capable of all things."

D'Arlon, although a faithful adherent of his liege lord, the Earl of Flanders, has contracted not only an inviolable friendship with Artevelde, but also a love-troth with Clara. Fortunately for the Lady Adriana, it is in his house at Bruges that Occo and his captive are domiciled by the earl's command. She makes her complaint to the young knight, who at once defies Occo to deadly combat.

The following brief conversation between D'Arlon and Gilbert Matthew, one of the earl's counsellors, is a graphic sketch of that stormy time:

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I knew by that his highness was not happy.
I knew I should be sent for."*

In such brief and interstitial scenes as the one we have quoted the hand of a true mas

ter of dramatic art is seen as much as in passages of the most high-wrought pathos. Genius, even when not essentially dramatic, will often in the most interesting portions of a play produce what is so profound in sentiment or eloquent in expression, that in our enjoyment of it as poetry we forget to ask whether it be dramatic or not. True dra

matic genius includes, besides a philosophic insight into character, a certain careless felicity in dealing with externals. This fact is a thing which we always find among our dramatists in the reigns of Elizabeth and James the First, and which in our modern drama — the tradition having been broken

we almost always lack. The well may be deep and the water pure, but it is commonly without life. The soundest philosophic analysis will not serve as a substitute for a shrewd sharp observation, and that vividness of handling analogous to a hasty sketch by a great painter. This is the great defect of the German drama, Characters are sometimes nobly conceived, and a plot is laboriously devised capable of illustrating them; but the unconscious skill and imita

"Gilbert. No sooner had his highness reached tive instinct which ought to mediate be

the palace

Than he sends back for me.

D'Arlon.

And me the same.

Gilbert. His highness is not happy.
D'Arlon.
That is likely ;
But have you any private cause to think it?
Gilbert. I have observed that when he is not
happy

He sends for me.
D'Arlon. And do you mend his mood?
Gilbert. Nay, what I can. His highness at

such times

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tween the world of abstract conception and outward illustration is wanting. We miss the electric vitality of true art. The distinction is that between the drama taken from life and that drawn from books. England has long been the land of action, and Germany that of thought. In England, moreover, the drama grew up at a time when the passions expressed themselves freely, and when, as among children and races in an early stage of development, the impulses were stronger from having never known restraint or disguise. In Germany

*Vol. i. p. 86.

the drama arose at a period of convention- Second Part. For a long period Artevelde alities and respectabilities as well as of has enjoyed unquestioned power; but the theories. It was a philosophical imitation, storm breaks on him at last. The counnot a living tradition; and with all its mer- sellors of the youthful King of France, its, it shares the defect of Germany's mod- alarmed by the outbreak of popular revolt ern school of religious painters, in which in many parts of Europe, resolve to deprive the highest æsthetic science, directed by the the movement-party of the encouragement noblest aims, cannot make up for the want it derives from the success of the revolt in of inspiration and of popular sympathy. Flanders. The boy-king rejoices in the opportunity of proving his chivalry and aiding his exiled cousin. Artevelde sends Father John of Heda to England, in hopes of winning the alliance of Richard II. For him there has been a change worse than any political event can bring. His wife is dead, and his hearth has long been desolate. A change has taken place in his own character likewise; and it is with a consummate art that the dramatist indicates the effect of time and success on such a character. He has grown more imperious and less scrupulous. Accustomed to see all men bow before him, his own will, guided mainly by considerations of public expediency, has been his main law of action. When warned by Father John that since his elevation he has not been unvisited by worldly pride and its attendant passions, he replies:

The revived English drama has had some of the same refrigerating influences to contend with. It is to Mr. Taylor's keen appreciation of the early English dramatists, evinced by his happy use of a language analogous to theirs, that he owes in no small degree his superiority. His style has been also not a little in his favour. The importance of style is wholly overlooked by those who regard it as but the outward garment of thought. It has more analogy to the skin than to the clothes. It fits closely, adapts itself to every movement, and is quickened by the instinct of life. There is in it a power even beyond its own intention. Style is doubtless in the main the result of a man's intellectual constitution, but it reacts largely on that which has produced it. A style like Mr. Taylor's, with its sharp precision and lightness combined with strength, is incompatible with the feeble, the languid, or the false in conception.

It is a

To proceed with our analysis of Philip van Artevelde. The Earl of Flanders is advised by Gilbert Matthew to starve Ghent into surrender; and he succeeds in cutting off all supplies from the place. Famine sets in, and pestilence follows. But the desperate situation suggests a desperate remedy. Artevelde proposes that five thousand of the bravest and strongest citizens should be supplied with what food still remains, and accompany him on a march to Bruges, the earl's capital. The small but resolute band arrive there a little before sunset. festival; the inhabitants of Bruges have been making merry; and half of them rush out in a state of intoxication to encounter an enemy whom they despise. The setting sun shines in their faces; the archers of Ghent bewilder them with their arrows; the townspeople fall into an ambush; a total rout ensues. Artevelde enters Bruges with the flying troops, and the Earl with difficulty escapes. Gilbert Matthew and the Lord of Occo are taken prisoners, and immediately condemned to death; and the First Part ends with the words,

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Say they so?
Well, if it be so, it is late to mend,
For self amendment is a work of time,

And business will not wait. Such as I am,

For better or for worse, the world must take
me,

For I must hasten on. Perhaps the state
And royal splendour I affect is deem'd
A proof of pride; yet they that these contemn
Know little of the springs that move mankind.
If (which I own not)

I have drunk deeper of ambition's cup,
Be it remember'd that the cup of love
Was wrested from my hand. Enough of this.
Ambition has its uses in the scheme
Of Providence, whose instrument I am
To work some changes in the world or die."*
His thoughts are not as lofty nor his feelings
as pure as they were, but he is as daring
and as sagacious as ever. The King of
France has sent a herald to require his im-
mediate submission, the alternative being
war. The French message is cast in the
haughtiest language. Enthroned in his
chair of state, and surrounded by his coun-
cil, Artevelde flings back the defiance in a
speech which, as an exponent of the revo-
lutionary cause, has probably never been
surpassed. There is in it nothing either of
the daring speculation with which the cause

*Vol. i. p. 177.

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First, of my father: had he lived to know
His glories, deeds, and dignities postponed
To names of barons, earls, and counts (that
here

Are to men's ears importunately common
As chimes to dwellers in the market-place),
He with a silent and a bitter mirth
Had listen'd to the boast; may he his son
Pardon for in comparison setting forth
With his the name of this disconsolate earl!
How stand they in the title-deeds of fame?
What hold and heritage in distant times
Doth each enjoy-what posthumous posses-

sion ?

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An outcast long in dole not undeserved,

And died dependent: there the history ends;
And who of them that hear it wastes a thought
On the unfriended fate of Louis Mâle ?
But turn the page and look we for the tale
Of Artevelde's renown. What man was this?
He humbly born, he highly gifted, rose
By steps of various enterprise, by skill
By native vigour, to wide sway, and took
What his vain rival having could not keep.
His glory shall not cease, though cloth-of-gold
Wrap him no more; for not of golden cloth,
Nor fur, nor minever, his greatness came,
Whose fortunes were inborn: strip me the

two,

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And broad highway to power, that ever then
Was meritoriously administered,
Whilst all its instruments from first to last,
The tools of state for service high or low,
Which virtue meditates. To shake the ground
Were chosen for their aptness to those ends
Deep-founded whereupon this structure stood
Was verily a crime; a treason it was
Conspiracies to hatch against this state
And its free innocence. But now I ask
Where is there on God's earth that polity
Which it is not, by consequence converse,
A treason against nature to uphold?
Whom may we now call free? whom great?
whom wise?

Whom innocent? - the free are only they
Whom power makes free to execute all ills
Their hearts imagine; they alone are great
Whose passions nurse them from their cradles
up
- whom to see

In luxury and lewdness

Is to despise, whose aspects put to scorn
Their station's eminence; the wise, they only
Who wait obscurely till the bolts of heaven
Shall break upon the land, and give them light
Whereby to walk; the innocent-

alas!

Poor innocency lies where four roads meet,
A stone upon her head, a stake driven through
her,

For who is innocent that cares to live?
The hand of power doth press the very life
Of innocency out! What then remains
But in the cause of nature to stand forth,
And turn this frame of things the right side
up?

For this the hour is come, the sword is drawn,
And tell your masters vainly they resist.
Nature that slept beneath their poisonous drugs
Is up and stirring; and from north and south,
From east and west, from England and from

France,

From Germany and Flanders and Navarre, Shall stand against them like a beast at bay. The blood that they have shed will hide no longer

In the blood-sloken soil, but cries to heaven. Their cruelties and wrongs against the poor Shall quicken into Swarms of venomous snakes,

And hiss through all the earth, till o'er the earth,

That ceases then from hissings and from

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For these their sins the nations cast them out;

HENRY TAYLOR.

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pass

From small beginnings, because God is just."

The love-story of Part II. is wholly unlike that of Part I.: with it is closely connected the poetic justice of the play. The love is a guilty love, and conduces in a large degree both to the fall of Artevelde and to his death. Between the two parts of the play a lyrical interlude is interposed, entitled the "Lay of Elena." It is a modified specimen of that poetry abounding in romantic sentiment, imagery, and figure, which, in the body of his work, Mr. Taylor has discarded. It records the fortunes of a beautiful Italian, who, after being betrayed and deserted, has lived for some time with the Duke de Bourbon, one of the French king's uncles, the object of a silly and selfish but passionate love on his part, which she has but feebly returned. Mortified at finding that his devotion to his mistress has made him an object of ridicule, the duke has vented on her his spleen in many a caprice, and spoken of her in insulting terms. On the capture of a Flemish city, Elena has fallen into the hands of the Regent. He protects her, and places a safeguard at her disposal, in case she should wish to return to France. She is in no hurry to return. With all the energy of her wild and wilful nature, the imaginative and melancholy woman, who had looked on love but with selfreproach and despair, fixes her affections on the Regent, still with self-reproach, but no longer in despair. He can hardly be said to return such love as hers; but he has wearied of unhappiness, and to love, as a social need, he is still accessible. But for this disastrous tie peace was still possible. The Duke of Bourbon has despatched Sir Fleureant of Heurlée to the Regent's camp with a request that he would send back Elena, and an implied promise that in return the king shall be prevented, through his influence, from going to war in defence of the Earl of Flanders.

We shall now give an extract from a scene in which the Regent describes his lost wife and his own desolation. It is an illustration of Mr. Taylor's poetry in its more impassioned vein. There is about it a sad rich colouring as of a dusky day in autumn. The character of both the speakers is painted with a lavish hand, and the long

* Vol. i. pp. 172-5.

and melancholy cadences of the metre echo the sadness of a new love which has grown up among omens of woe, and has too much self-reproach about it to promise, almost to desire, happiness. The scene displeases while it charms, and it instructs us while it displeases. Thus to have spoken of his wife to her rival—a rival so unlike her in all save devotedness is what Artevelde would have shrunk from (as we may imagine) in his youth. But his character is in decline; and neither love, nor the memory of love, wears for him any purer light than that of common day. He admires and he deplores the grace and goodness lost; but the "beautiful regards" turned back on him from the land of shadows do not trouble his

heart:

"Artevelde. She was a creature framed by
love divine

For mortal love to muse a life away
In pondering her perfections; so unmoved
Amidst the world's contentions, if they touch'd
Philosophy might look her in the face,
No vital chord nor troubled what she loved,
And like a hermit stooping to the well
That yields him sweet refreshment, might

therein

See but his own serenity reflected
With a more heavenly tenderness of hue!
Yet whilst the world's ambitious empty cares,
Its small disquietudes and insect-stings,
Disturb'd her never, she was one made up
Was one full stream of love from fount to sea.
Of feminine affections, and her life

These are but words.

Ele a. My lord, they're full of meaning. Artevelde. No, they mean nothing.

that

Sinks into silence; 'tis what none can know
which they would speak
That knew not her the silence of the grave-
Whence could I call her radiant beauty back,
It could not come more savouring of heaven
Than it went hence the tomb received her
In their perfection, with nor trace of time
Nor stain of sin upon them; only death
Had turn'd them pale. I would that you had

charms

Living or dead.

seen her

Elena.

I wish I had, my lord;
I should have loved to look upon her much;
For I can gaze on beauty all day long,
And think the all-day long is but too short.
Artevelde. She was so fair that in the angel-
She will not need put on another shape
ic choir
Than that she bore on earth.

Well, well,

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Pain and grief

And I have tamed my sorrow.
she's gone,
Are transitory things no less than joy,
And though they leave us not the men we

were,

Yet they do leave us. You behold me here

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