Select Poems of Sidney Lanier by Sidney Lanier
page 48 of 175 (27%)
page 48 of 175 (27%)
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and made a discovery in the physics of music that the Professor of Physics
in the University of Virginia thought considerable.** -- * `Gates', p. 29. ** See `West', p. 23. -- In the second place, Lanier thinks that a poet's knowledge of his art should be scientific. It was this that led him to write `The Science of English Verse', the motto of which is, "But the best conceptions cannot be, save where science and genius are." In `The English Novel' he declares that "not a single verse was ever written by instinct alone since the world began,"* and fortifies his statement by Ben Jonson's tribute to Shakespeare, -- "For a good poet's made as well as born, And such wert thou." But Lanier clearly saw that no formal laws and no amount of scientific knowledge could alone make a poet, as appears from the motto above quoted, from the closing chapter of `The Science of English Verse', which tells us that the educated love of beauty is the artist's only law, and from this other motto, from Sir Philip Sidney: "A Poet, no industrie can make, if his owne Genius bee not carried unto it." -- * `The English Novel', p. 33. -- |
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