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Miscellanies by Oscar Wilde
page 39 of 312 (12%)
still lingers about some beautiful creeds, and searching for experience
itself, and not for the fruits of experience; when he has got its secret,
he will leave without regret much that was once very precious to him. 'I
am always insincere,' says Emerson somewhere, 'as knowing that there are
other moods': 'Les emotions,' wrote Theophile Gautier once in a review of
Arsene Houssaye, 'Les emotions ne se ressemblent pas, mais etre emu--voila
l'important.'

Now, this is the secret of the art of the modern romantic school, and
gives one the right keynote for its apprehension; but the real quality of
all work which, like Mr. Rodd's, aims, as I said, at a purely artistic
effect, cannot be described in terms of intellectual criticism; it is too
intangible for that. One can perhaps convey it best in terms of the
other arts, and by reference to them; and, indeed, some of these poems
are as iridescent and as exquisite as a lovely fragment of Venetian
glass; others as delicate in perfect workmanship and as single in natural
motive as an etching by Whistler is, or one of those beautiful little
Greek figures which in the olive woods round Tanagra men can still find,
with the faint gilding and the fading crimson not yet fled from hair and
lips and raiment; and many of them seem like one of Corot's twilights
just passing into music; for not merely in visible colour, but in
sentiment also--which is the colour of poetry--may there be a kind of
tone.

But I think that the best likeness to the quality of this young poet's
work I ever saw was in the landscape by the Loire. We were staying once,
he and I, at Amboise, that little village with its grey slate roofs and
steep streets and gaunt, grim gateway, where the quiet cottages nestle
like white pigeons into the sombre clefts of the great bastioned rock,
and the stately Renaissance houses stand silent and apart--very desolate
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