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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hound of Heaven, by Francis Thompson
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  • Title: The Hound of Heaven
  • Author: Francis Thompson
  • Illustrator: Stella Langdale
  • Release Date: December 21, 2009 [EBook #30730]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOUND OF HEAVEN ***
  • Produced by Al Haines
  • [Illustration: Cover art]
  • [Illustration: Front end papers]
  • THE HOUND OF HEAVEN
  • [Illustration]
  • [Frontispiece:
  • When she lit her glimmering tapers
  • Round the day's dead sanctities _Page 52_]
  • [Illustration: Title page]
  • THE HOUND OF HEAVEN
  • _By_ FRANCIS THOMPSON
  • WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
  • STELLA LANGDALE
  • NEW YORK
  • DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
  • 1926
  • COPYRIGHT, 1922,
  • BY DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, INC.
  • PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
  • INTRODUCTION
  • The Rev. Mark J. McNeal, S. J., who was one of the successors of
  • Lafcadio Hearn in the chair of English Literature at the Tokyo Imperial
  • University, in an interesting article recounts the following incident
  • of his experience in that institution. "I was seated on the examining
  • board with Professor Ichikawa, the dean of the English department...
  • There entered the room a student whom I recognized as among the best in
  • the class, a sharp young chap with big Mongolian eyes, and one who had
  • never to my knowledge given any hint of even a leaning toward
  • Christianity. I remembered, however, that his thesis submitted for a
  • degree had been a study of Francis Thompson. Following the usual
  • custom, I began to question him about his thesis.
  • "'Why did you choose Thompson?'
  • "'Well, he is quite a famous poet.'
  • "'What kind of poet is he?'
  • "'We might call him a mystic.'
  • "'Is he a mystic of the orthodox sort, like Cynewulf or Crashaw; or an
  • unorthodox mystic, like Blake or Shelley?'
  • "'Oh, he's orthodox.'
  • "'Well, now, what do you consider his greatest production?'
  • "'Why, I should say "The Hound of Heaven."
  • "'Well, what on earth does Thompson mean by that Hound?'
  • "'He means God.'
  • "'But is not that a rather irreverent way for Thompson to be talking
  • about God, calling Him a hound? What does he mean by comparing God to
  • a hound?'
  • "'Well, he means the pursuit of God.'
  • "'Oh, I see, Thompson is pursuing God, is he?'
  • "'Oh, no. He is rather running away from God.'
  • "'Well, then, God is pursuing Thompson, is that it?'
  • "'Yes, that's it.'
  • [Illustration: Titanic glooms of chasmèd fears _Page 45_]
  • '"But, see here; according to Thompson's belief God is everywhere,
  • isn't He?'
  • "'Yes.'
  • "'Well, then, how can God be going after Thompson? Is it a physical
  • pursuit?'
  • "'No. It is a moral pursuit.'
  • "'A moral pursuit! What's that? What is God after?'
  • "'He is after Thompson's love.'
  • "And then we, the Jesuit and the Buddhist, began to follow the windings
  • and turnings of that wondrous poem, the most mystic and spiritual thing
  • that has been written since St. Teresa laid down her pen. What the
  • other member of the examining board thought of it all I never heard.
  • But I think I acquired a satisfactory answer to that question so often
  • put to me: Can the Japanese really grasp a spiritual truth? Do they
  • really get at the meaning of Christianity? This, of a race that has
  • produced more martyrs than any other nation since the fall of Rome and
  • that kept the Faith for two centuries without a visible symbol or
  • document!"
  • The incident supplies matter for other conclusions more germane to the
  • subject of this essay. The late Bert Leston Taylor, a journalist whose
  • journalism had a literary facet of critical brilliance, once declared
  • that he could not perceive the excellence of Francis Thompson's poetry.
  • When someone suggested that it might be that he was not spiritual
  • enough, the retort was laconic and crushing, "Or, perhaps, not
  • ecclesiastical enough." Like most good retorts Taylor's had more wit
  • than truth. He was obsessed by the notion, prevalent among a certain
  • class of literary critics, that Francis Thompson's fame was the
  • artificially stimulated applause of a Catholic coterie, whose
  • enthusiasm could hardly be shared by readers with no particular
  • curiosity about Catholic ideas or modes of religion. It was probably
  • this obsession which prompted that able critic, Mr. H. D. Traill, to
  • write to Mr. Wilfrid Meynell when the "Hound of Heaven" first appeared:
  • "I quite agree with you in thinking him a remarkable poet, but, if he
  • is ever to become other than a 'poet's poet' or 'critic's poet'--if
  • indeed it is worth anyone's ambition to be other than that--it will
  • only be by working in a different manner. A 'public' to appreciate the
  • 'Hound of Heaven' is to me inconceivable." Mr. William Archer, an
  • experienced judge of popular likes, was of the same opinion. "Yet,"
  • Francis Thompson's biographer tells us, "in the three years after
  • Thompson's death the separate edition of the 'Hound of Heaven' sold
  • fifty thousand copies; and, apart from anthologies, many more thousands
  • were sold of the books containing it." When the "Hound of Heaven" is
  • selected for study, and explained in words of one syllable, by a young
  • Japanese student in the Tokyo Imperial University almost thirty years
  • after the poem was published, one can hardly maintain that it calls for
  • certain ecclesiastical affiliations before it can be understood and
  • felt, or that its "public" is necessarily circumscribed.
  • It must be owned indeed that Francis Thompson was a puzzle to his
  • contemporaries of the nineties. He paid the usual penalty of vaulting
  • originality. The decade is famous for its bold experiments and shining
  • successes in the art of poetry. One might expect that a public, grown
  • accustomed to exquisitely wrought novelties and eager to extend them a
  • welcome, would have been preordained to recognize and hail the genius
  • of Thompson. But it was not so. The estheticism of the nineties, for
  • all its sweet and fragile flowers, was rooted in the dark passions of
  • the flesh. Its language was the language of death and despair and
  • annihilation and the Epicurean need of exhausting the hedonistic
  • possibilities of life ere the final engulfing in darkness and silence.
  • When the speech of Thompson, laden with religion and spirituality and
  • Christian mystery, broke with golden turbulence upon the world of the
  • nineties, the critics were abashed and knew not what to think of it.
  • The effect was somewhat like that produced by Attwater, in Stevenson's
  • "The Ebb-Tide," when he began suddenly to discourse on Divine Grace to
  • the amazement of Herrick and his crew of scoundrels from the stolen
  • _Farallone_. "Oh," exclaimed the unspeakable Huish, when they had
  • recovered breath, "Oh, look 'ere, turn down the lights at once, and the
  • Band of 'Ope will oblige! This ain't a spiritual séance." It had
  • something akin to the madness of poor Christopher Smart when he fell
  • into the habit of dropping on his knees and praying in the crowded
  • London streets. There was incongruity, verging on the indecent, in
  • this intrusion of religion into art, as if an archangel were to attend
  • an afternoon tea in Mayfair or an absinthe session in a Bohemian cafe.
  • It was, in Dr. Johnson's phrase, "an unnecessary deviation from the
  • usual modes of the world" which struck the world dumb.
  • The poetry of Francis Thompson appeared in three small volumes:
  • "Poems," published in 1893; "Sister Songs," in 1895; and "New Poems,"
  • in 1897. The first of these volumes contained the "Hound of Heaven";
  • though it staggered reviewers at large, they yielded dubious and
  • carefully measured praise and waited for developments. The pack was
  • unleashed and the hue-and-cry raised on the coming of "Sister Songs"
  • and "New Poems." Andrew Lang and Mr. Arthur Symons led the chorus of
  • disapproval. It is amusing to read now that Francis Thompson's "faults
  • are fundamental. Though he uses the treasure of the Temple, he is not
  • a religious poet. The note of a true spiritual passion never once
  • sounds in his book." Another critic of the poet declares that "nothing
  • could be stronger than his language, nothing weaker than the impression
  • it leaves on the mind. It is like a dictionary of obsolete English
  • suffering from a severe fit of delirium tremens." A prominent literary
  • periodical saw, in the attempt to foist Thompson on the public as a
  • genuine poet, a sectarian effort to undermine the literary press of
  • England. In the course of a year the sale of "Sister Songs" amounted
  • to 349 copies. The "New Poems" fared worse; its sale, never large,
  • practically ceased a few years after its appearance, three copies being
  • sold during the first six months of 1902.
  • [Illustration: Across the margent of the world I fled _Page 47_]
  • And all this despite strong recommendations from fastidious quarters.
  • George Meredith's recognition was instantaneous and unreserved.
  • Henley's was accompanied by reproofs. Mr. Richard LeGallienne was
  • enthusiastic. Mr. William Archer said to a friend, "This is not work
  • which can possibly be _popular_ in the wide sense; but it is work that
  • will be read and treasured centuries hence by those who really care for
  • poetry." And he wrote to Thompson, "I assure you no conceivable
  • reaction can wipe out or overlay such work as yours. It is firm-based
  • on the rock of absolute beauty; and this I say all the more confidently
  • because it does not happen to appeal to my own speculative, or even my
  • own literary, prejudices." The most extravagant admirer of all, and
  • the one who will probably turn out to have come nearer the mark than
  • any of Francis Thompson's contemporaries, was Mr. J. L. Garvin, the
  • well known English leader-writer in politics and literature. "After
  • the publication of his second volume," he wrote in the English
  • _Bookman_, March 1897, "when it became clear that the 'Hound of Heaven'
  • and 'Sister Songs' should be read together as a strict lyrical
  • sequence, there was no longer any comparison possible except the
  • highest, the inevitable comparison with even Shakespeare's Sonnets.
  • The Sonnets are the greatest soliloquy in literature. The 'Hound of
  • Heaven' and 'Sister Songs' are the second greatest; and there is no
  • third. In each case it is rather consciousness imaged in the magic
  • mirror of poetry than explicit autobiography.... Even with the
  • greatest pages of 'Sister Songs' sounding in one's ears, one is
  • sometimes tempted to think the 'Hound of Heaven' Mr. Thompson's
  • high-water mark for unimaginable beauty and tremendous import--if we do
  • damnably iterate Mr. Thompson's tremendousness, we cannot help it, he
  • thrusts the word upon us. We do not think we forget any of the
  • splendid things of an English anthology when we say that the 'Hound of
  • Heaven' seems to us, on the whole, the most wonderful lyric (if we
  • consider 'Sister Songs' as a sequence of lyrics) in the language. It
  • fingers all the stops of the spirit, and we hear now a thrilling and
  • dolorous note of doom and now the quiring of the spheres and now the
  • very pipes of Pan, but under all the still sad music of humanity. It
  • is the return of the nineteenth century to Thomas à Kempis.... The
  • regal air, the prophetic ardors, the apocalyptic vision, Mr. Thompson
  • has them all. A rarer, more intense, more strictly predestinate genius
  • has never been known to poetry. To many this will seem the simple
  • delirium of over-emphasis. The writer signs for those others, nowise
  • ashamed, who range after Shakespeare's very Sonnets the poetry of a
  • living poet, Francis Thompson."
  • We do not associate Mr. Arnold Bennett with any of the ideas in
  • religion or literature which supplied impulse to Francis Thompson. It
  • is a surprise of the first magnitude to find him carried away into the
  • rapture of prophecy by the "Sister Songs." "I declare," he says in an
  • article appearing in July, 1895, "that for three days after this book
  • appeared I read nothing else. I went about repeating snatches of
  • it--snatches such as--
  • 'The innocent moon, that nothing does but shine,
  • Moves all the labouring surges of the world.'
  • My belief is that Francis Thompson has a richer natural genius, a finer
  • poetical equipment, than any poet save Shakespeare. Show me the
  • divinest glories of Shelley and Keats, even of Tennyson, who wrote the
  • 'Lotus Eaters' and the songs in the 'Princess,' and I think I can match
  • them all out of this one book, this little book that can be bought at
  • an ordinary bookseller's shop for an ordinary prosaic crown. I fear
  • that in thus extolling Francis Thompson's work, I am grossly outraging
  • the canons of criticism. For the man is alive, he gets up of a morning
  • like common mortals, not improbably he eats bacon for breakfast; and
  • every critic with an atom of discretion knows that a poet must not be
  • called great until he is dead or very old. Well, please yourself what
  • you think. But, in time to come, don't say I didn't tell you." A
  • whole generation of men has passed away since these words appeared; but
  • they do not seem to be so fantastic and whimsical now as they seemed to
  • be then.
  • [Illustration: I said to dawn: Be sudden _Page 47_]
  • It can scarcely be claimed that the prophecies of Meredith, Mr. Garvin,
  • and Mr. Arnold Bennett were of the kind which ultimately assures the
  • event. The reading-world dipped curiously into the pages about which
  • there was so much conflict of opinion; it was startled and bewildered
  • by a novel and difficult form of verse; and finally it agreed with the
  • majority of critics that it was mostly nonsense--too Catholic to be
  • catholic. The poems sold badly, the 'Hound of Heaven' faring best. It
  • is a common mark of genius to be ahead of its time. Even Thompson's
  • coreligionists were cold. Indeed, it may be said they were the
  • coldest. If the general reading-public of the nineties suspected
  • Thompson of being a Victorian reactionary of ultra-montane mould, the
  • Catholic public feared him for his art. It was a wild unfettered thing
  • which took strange liberties with Catholic pieties and could not be
  • trusted to run in divine grooves. One can afford to extenuate the
  • attitude of reserve. It was a period when brilliant heterodoxies and
  • flaunting decadence were in the air. The fact is, that critics and
  • public delivered Thompson over to the Catholics; and the Catholics
  • would have nothing to do with him. Canon Sheehan could write of
  • Thompson in 1898:
  • "Only two Catholics--literary Catholics--have noticed this surprising
  • genius--Coventry Patmore and Wilfrid Meynell. The vast bulk of our
  • coreligionists have not even heard his name, although it is already
  • bruited amongst the Immortals; and the great Catholic poet, for whose
  • advent we have been straining our vision, has passed beneath our eyes,
  • sung his immortal songs, and vanished." This was written almost ten
  • years before Thompson died, but after his resolve to write no more
  • poetry.
  • It is easily within the probabilities that, small as was Thompson's
  • audience during his lifetime, it would have been still smaller but for
  • the extraneous interest excited by the strange story of his life. He
  • was born on December 16, 1859, in Preston, Lancashire, whence he went
  • at the age of eleven to Ushaw College, a Catholic boarding school for
  • boys. This is the college where Lafcadio Hearn received his education;
  • he had left the school a year or two before young Thompson's arrival.
  • Both boys were designed for the priesthood. Hearn lost his faith then
  • or shortly afterwards: Thompson's irregular habits of dreamy
  • abstraction rendered him unfit for a sacerdotal career. When he had
  • completed his course at college, where he had distinguished himself in
  • English composition and attained respectable standing in the classics,
  • his father, a hard-working physician, entered the lad, now eighteen, as
  • a student of medicine in Owen College, Manchester. The Thompson family
  • had moved from Preston to Ashton-under-Lyne, where proximity to
  • Manchester made it possible for the young medical student to spend his
  • nights at home.
  • Francis was of the silent and secretive sort where he could not hope to
  • find intelligent sympathy. This, and some cloudy compromise with his
  • sense of filial dutifulness, will perhaps explain why he passed six
  • years as a student of medicine without any serious purpose of becoming
  • a physician and without informing his father of his disinclination.
  • Three examinations and three failures at intervals of a year were
  • necessary to convince the father of the true state of affairs. Stern
  • measures were adopted; and, although the consequences were pitifully
  • tragical, it is hard to blame the father of Francis. How are we to
  • discover the extraordinary seal in a case that requires special and
  • extraordinary treatment?
  • Francis was twenty-four years old with no more idea than a child's of
  • how life is planned on practical lines of prosperity. The senior
  • Thompson thought it time for him to learn and issued orders to find
  • employment of some remunerative kind. Accordingly during the next two
  • years Francis served indifferently for brief periods as a clerk in the
  • shop of a maker of surgical instruments and as a canvasser of an
  • encyclopedia. Both experiments in the art of making a living were
  • failures, increasing paternal dissatisfaction. The desperate young man
  • then enlisted in the army, and after a few weeks' of drilling was
  • rejected on the score of physical weakness.
  • [Illustration:
  • I knew how the clouds arise,
  • Spumèd of the wild sea-snortings _Page 51_]
  • During these shiftless and unhappy years as a listless medical student
  • and laggard apprentice the poet's chief solace was the public library
  • of Manchester. In his daily absences from home his misery suggested
  • another solace of a sinister kind. After a severe illness during his
  • second year of medicine his mother, says his biographer, presented him
  • with a copy of De Quincey's "Confessions of an Opium Eater." It is
  • incredible that a _helluo librorum_, like Thompson, should have reached
  • the age of twenty without ever having read a book which is one of the
  • first to attract every bright school-boy. This would be particularly
  • true of a school-boy who lived near Manchester, De Quincey's own town.
  • But the evidence seems to be against probabilities. Thompson succumbed
  • completely to the influence of the great genius whose temper and
  • circumstances of life were singularly like his own. Experiments in
  • laudanum were made and habits contracted which accentuated a natural
  • unfitness to wrestle with the practical problems of getting on and
  • rendered family intercourse drearier than ever.
  • In 1885, when he was twenty-six years old, Francis decided to leave
  • home. After a week in Manchester he requested and received from his
  • father the price of a railway ticket for London. The trip to the vast
  • and strange city must have been made with only the vaguest of plans for
  • the future. The despairing youth seemed to have no other purpose than
  • to rid his father of his vexatious presence. There were friends in
  • London, on one of whom Francis was directed to call for a weekly
  • allowance from home. But a temperamental reluctance kept the young man
  • away from those who could help him, and even the weekly allowance after
  • a while came to be unclaimed. The rough, cyclonic forces of the huge
  • city caught this helpless child of a man's years in the full swing of
  • their blind sweep and played sad tricks with him. In a period
  • extending over nearly three years Francis Thompson led the life of a
  • vagrant in the streets and alleys. He made one or two brave essays at
  • regular work of the most commonplace character, but without success.
  • The worn copies of Aeschylus and Blake in the pockets of this ragged
  • and gaunt roustabout contained no useful hints for the difficulties of
  • the peculiar situation; its harshness could be transmuted into
  • temporary and blessed oblivion by a drug whenever the means for
  • purchase could be acquired. The Guildhall Library was much frequented
  • until shabbiness was excluded by the policeman. This outcast poet,
  • approaching thirty years of age, was at various times a bootblack, a
  • newsboy, a vendor of matches, a nocturnal denizen of wharves and
  • lounger on the benches of city-parks. His cough-racked frame was the
  • exposed target of cold and rain and winds. He became used to hunger.
  • At one time a six-pence, for holding a horse, was his only earnings for
  • a week. It was while he was aimlessly roaming the streets one night
  • almost delirious from starvation that a prosperous shoe-merchant,
  • benevolently engaged in religious rescue-work, came across Thompson,
  • and, struck by the incongruity of his gentle speech, induced him to
  • accept employment in his shop. But one cannot allow business to suffer
  • on account of an inveterate blunderer, even though the blunderer wear
  • wings and has endeared himself to the family. Mr. McMaster, kindly
  • Anglican lay-missionary, who deserves grateful remembrance for
  • recognizing and temporarily helping merit under the most deceptive
  • disguise, was obliged much against his inclination to dismiss Francis
  • and to allow him to fall back into the pit of squalor and vagabondage.
  • But the few months of reprieve had supplied Thompson with the impulse
  • to write. Shortly after he was dropped from the McMaster establishment
  • Mr. Wilfrid Meynell, the editor of _Merry England_, a Catholic
  • magazine, received the following letter: "_Feb. 23rd, '87_--Dear
  • Sir,--In enclosing the accompanying article for your inspection, I must
  • ask pardon for the soiled state of the manuscript. It is due, not to
  • slovenliness, but to the strange places and circumstances under which
  • it has been written. For me, no less than Parolles, the dirty nurse
  • experience has something fouled. I enclose stamped envelope for a
  • reply, since I do not desire the return of the manuscript, regarding
  • your judgment of its worthlessness as quite final. I can hardly expect
  • that where my prose fails my verse will succeed. Nevertheless, on the
  • principle of 'Yet will I try the last,' I have added a few specimens of
  • it, with the off chance that one may be less poor than the rest.
  • Apologizing very sincerely for any intrusion on your valuable time, I
  • remain yours with little hope,
  • "Francis Thompson.
  • "Kindly address your rejection to the Charing Cross Post Office."
  • [Illustration:
  • Naked I wait Thy love's uplifted stroke!
  • ..... smitten me to my knee;
  • I am defenceless utterly _Page 55_]
  • The unpromising aspect of the manuscript, thus introduced, was the
  • occasion of editorial neglect for some months. When at last Mr.
  • Meynell gave it his attention he was electrified into action. He wrote
  • to the address given by Thompson. The letter was returned from the
  • dead-letter office after many days. Then he published one of the poems
  • mentioned in the letter, "The Passion of Mary," in the hope that the
  • author would disclose his whereabouts. The plan succeeded and brought
  • a letter from Thompson with a new address. Mr. Meynell tried to waylay
  • him at the new address, a chemist's shop in Drury Lane, but with
  • characteristic shiftlessness the poet forgot to call there for possible
  • letters. But the seller of drugs finally established communications
  • between the editor and the poet, and one day, more than a year after
  • Thompson's first literary venture had been sent, he visited the office
  • of _Merry England_. Mr. Everard Meynell, the poet's biographer, thus
  • describes the entrance of the poet into his father's sanctum. "My
  • father was told that Mr. Thompson wished to see him. 'Show him up,' he
  • said, and was left alone. Then the door opened, and a strange hand was
  • thrust in. The door closed, but Thompson had not entered. Again it
  • opened, again it shut. At the third attempt a waif of a man came in.
  • No such figure had been looked for; more ragged and unkempt than the
  • average beggar, with no shirt beneath his coat and bare feet in broken
  • shoes, he found my father at a loss for words. 'You must have had
  • access to many books when you wrote that essay,' was what he said.
  • 'That,' said Thompson, his shyness at once replaced by an acerbity that
  • afterwards became one of the most familiar of his never-to-be-resented
  • mannerisms, 'that is precisely where the essay fails. I had no books
  • by me at the time save Aeschylus and Blake.' There was little to be
  • done for him at that interview save the extraction of a promise to call
  • again. He made none of the confidences characteristic of a man seeking
  • sympathy and alms. He was secretive and with no eagerness for plans
  • for his benefit, and refused the offer of a small weekly sum that would
  • enable him to sleep in a bed and sit at a table."
  • By patience and delicately offered kindnesses Mr. and Mrs. Meynell at
  • length won the difficult privilege of helping the shy, nervous,
  • high-strung spirit wandering in pain, hunger and exile amid the
  • indecencies of extreme penury in a great city. They were helped by the
  • friendly sympathy and care of Premonstratensian and Franciscan monks.
  • Thompson had sounded, and become familiar with, the depths of social
  • degradation in all its external aspects of sordidness. The most
  • extraordinary part of his singular experience is that he affords a
  • striking instance of the triumph of soul and mind over beleaguering
  • circumstance. The nightmare of his environment failed to subdue him.
  • He preserved his spiritual sensitiveness, and literary ideals of a most
  • exalted kind, through the most depressing and demoralizing experiences.
  • The following passage in that first essay offered to Mr. Meynell,
  • entitled "Paganism: Old and New," a vindication of Christian over pagan
  • ideals in art, shows the rich, colorful tone of mind of one who could
  • walk unstained among the world's impurities. "Bring back then, I say,
  • in conclusion, even the best age of Paganism, and you smite beauty on
  • the cheek. But you _cannot_ bring back the best age of Paganism, the
  • age when Paganism was a faith. None will again behold Apollo in the
  • forefront of the morning, or see Aphrodite in the upper air loose the
  • long lustre of her golden locks. But you _may_ bring back--_dii
  • avertant omen_--the Paganism of the days of Pliny, and Statius, and
  • Juvenal; of much philosophy, and little belief; of superb villas and
  • superb taste; of banquets for the palate in the shape of cookery, and
  • banquets for the eye in the shape of art; of poetry singing dead songs
  • on dead themes with the most polished and artistic vocalisation; of
  • everything most polished, from the manners to the marble floors; of
  • vice carefully drained out of sight, and large fountains of virtue
  • springing in the open air;--in one word, a most shining Paganism
  • indeed--as putrescence also shines." Unlike George Gissing and so many
  • others who had to wade to celebrity through sloughs of bitter
  • destitution, Francis Thompson felt no inclination to capitalize his
  • expert knowledge of back streets and alleys for profit and the morbid
  • entertainment of the curious. His single failing in yielding to the
  • attraction of an insidious drug seemed to be impotent to affect his
  • high admirations and his clear perceptions in the regions of honor and
  • religion.
  • [Illustration:
  • Yea, faileth now even dream
  • The dreamer _Page 55_]
  • It is surely one of the literary glories of a distinguished family that
  • Mr. and Mrs. Meynell succeeded in helping Thompson to emancipate
  • himself from the enslavement of a tyrannic habit. His poetic genius
  • began to flower in the new liberty. For the next ten years interest in
  • his poetry and literary friends and connections, few and select, made
  • his life comparatively happy. But he maintained a large measure of
  • independence to the last. That he was never ungrateful to those who
  • befriended him, his poems are ample proof. But in London he always had
  • his own lodgings in a cheap but respectable quarter of the city. His
  • unpunctual and preoccupied manner sometimes created small distresses
  • for his devoted friends to relieve. During the last ten years of his
  • life he wrote little poetry. His vitality, never vigorous, was ebbing
  • and unequal to the demands of inspired verse. But during these years
  • of decline he wrote much golden prose. He was a regular and highly
  • valued contributor to the _Academy_, the _Athenaeum_, the _Nation_, and
  • the _Daily Chronicle_. One can hardly fail to be impressed by the mere
  • industry of a writer of reputed slack habits of work. The published
  • volume of his selected essays is literary criticism, as learned and
  • allusive as Matthew Arnold's, and as nicely poised, with the advantage
  • of being poised in more rarified heights than Arnold's wings could hope
  • to scale. In this book is his classic and most wonderful essay on
  • Shelley, written before his strength began to flag, in which prose
  • seems to be carried off its feet, as it were, in a very storm of poetic
  • impulse. The published essays are not a tithe of Thompson's writings
  • for the press. Moreover, we have a study of Blessed John de la Salle,
  • a little volume on "Health and Holiness," and a large "Life of St.
  • Ignatius Loyola," none of them suggesting even remotely the plantigrade
  • writing of the mechanical hack.
  • During the last year of his life, when consumption had almost
  • completely undermined resistance, his old habit reasserted its empire.
  • But it was not for long, and can hardly be said to have hastened the
  • end, which came on November 13, 1907, in the Hospital of St. John and
  • St. Elizabeth. He was buried in St. Mary's Cemetery, Kensal Green, and
  • on his coffin were roses from George Meredith's garden, with the
  • poet-novelist's message: "A true poet, one of the small band."
  • The "Hound of Heaven" has been called the greatest ode in the English
  • language. Such was the contemporary verdict of some of the most
  • respected critics of the time, and the conviction of its justness
  • deepens with the passing of years. Recall the writers of great odes,
  • Milton, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Collins, Wordsworth, Keats, Shelley,
  • Coleridge,--the best they have done will not outstare the "Hound of
  • Heaven." Where shall we find its equal for exaltation of mood that
  • knows no fatigue from the first word to the last? The motion of
  • angelic hosts must be like the movement of this ode, combining in some
  • marvellous and mysterious way the swiftness of lightning with the
  • stately progress of a pageant white with the blinding white light of an
  • awful Presence. The note of modernness is the quality which is most
  • likely to mislead us in forecasting favorably the durability of
  • contemporary poetry, appealing as it does to so many personal issues
  • irrelevant to the standards of immortal art. This is precisely the
  • note which is least conspicuous in the "Hound of Heaven." The poem
  • might have been written in the days of Shakespeare, or, in a different
  • speech, by Dante or Calderon. The Rev. Francis P. LeBuffe, S. J., has
  • written an interesting book on the "Hound of Heaven," pointing out the
  • analogy between the poem and the psalms of David; and another Jesuit,
  • the late Rev. J. F. X. O'Connor, in a published "Study" of the poem,
  • says that in it Francis Thompson "seems to sing, in verse, the thought
  • of St. Ignatius in the spiritual exercises,--the thought of St. Paul in
  • the tender, insistent love of Christ for the soul, and the yearning of
  • Christ for that soul which ever runs after creatures, till the love of
  • Christ wakens in it a love of its God, which dims and deadens all love
  • of creatures except through love for Him. This was the love of St.
  • Paul, of St. Ignatius, of St. Stanislaus, of St. Francis of Assist, of
  • St. Clare, of St. Teresa."
  • [Illustration:
  • The hid battlements of Eternity:
  • Those shaken mists a space unsettle, then
  • Round the half-glimpsed turrets slowly wash again _Page 56_]
  • The neologisms and archaic words employed in the poem seem to be a
  • legitimate and instinctive effort of the poet's inspiration to soar
  • above the limitations of time and to liberate itself from the transient
  • accretions of a living, and therefore constantly changing, mode of
  • speech. He strove after an enfranchisement of utterance, devoid of
  • stratifying peculiarities, assignable to no age or epoch, and
  • understood of all. A soul-shaking thought, prevalent throughout
  • Christendom, was felt imaginatively by a highly endowed poet, and, like
  • impetuous volcanic fires that fling heavenward mighty fragments and
  • boulders of mountain in their red release, found magnificent expression
  • in elemental grandeurs of language, shot through with the wild lights
  • of hidden flames and transcending all pettiness of calculated artifice
  • and fugitive fashion.
  • The dominating idea in the "Hound of Heaven" is so familiar, so--one
  • might say--innate, that it is almost impudent to undertake to explain
  • it. Even in the cases of persons to whom the reading of poetry is an
  • uncultivated and difficult art, there is an instantaneous leap of
  • recognition as the thought emerges from the cloudy glories of the poem.
  • Still, modern popular systems of philosophy are so dehumanizing in
  • their tendencies, and so productive of what may be called secondary and
  • artificially planted instincts, that it is perhaps not entirely useless
  • to attempt to elucidate the obvious.
  • "The heavens," says Hazlitt, "have gone farther off and become
  • astronomical." The home-like conception of the universe in mediaeval
  • times, when dying was like going out of one room into another, and man
  • entertained a neighborly feeling for the angels, has a tendency to
  • disappear as science unfolds more and more new infinities of time and
  • space, new infinities of worlds and forms of life. The curious notion
  • has crept in, that man must sink lower into insignificance with every
  • new discovery of the vastness and huge design of creation. God would
  • seem to have over-reached Himself in disclosing His power and majesty,
  • stunning and overwhelming the intellect and heart with the crushing
  • weight of the evidences of His Infinity. We have modern thinkers
  • regarding Christian notions of the Godhead as impossible to a mind
  • acquainted with the paralyzing revelations of scientific knowledge.
  • The late John Fiske used to deride what he called the anthromorphism of
  • the Christian idea of God, as of a venerable, white-bearded man. And
  • these philosophers deem it more reverent to deny any personal
  • relationship between God and man for the reason that God is too great
  • to be interested in man, and man too little to be an object of interest.
  • Before indicating the essential error of this attitude, it is necessary
  • to state, merely for the sake of historical accuracy, that the
  • Christian conception of the Godhead, as expressed by St. Thomas
  • Aquinas, Dante, Lessius, and a host of Christian writers, has never
  • been approached in its sublime suggestions of Infinite and Eternal
  • power and glory by any modern philosopher. In the second and third
  • Lectures of Cardinal Newman's, "Scope and Nature of University
  • Education," there is an outline of the Christian teaching of the nature
  • of God which, in painstaking accuracy of thought and sheer grandeur of
  • conception, has no counterpart in modern literature.
  • Let us always remember that telescope and microscope in all the range
  • of their discoveries have not uncovered the existence of anything
  • greater than man himself. The most massive star of the Milky Way is
  • not so wonderful as the smallest human child. Moreover man's present
  • entourage of illimitable space and countless circling suns and planets
  • cannot be said to have cost an omnipotent God more trouble, so to
  • speak, than a universe a million times smaller. The prodigality of the
  • Creator reveals His endless resources; if the vision of sidereal
  • abysses and flaming globes intimidates me and makes me cynical about my
  • unimportance, is it not because I have lost the high consciousness of a
  • spiritual being and forgotten the unplumbed chasms which separate
  • matter from mind?
  • [Illustration:
  • Whether man's heart or life it be which yields
  • Thee harvest, must Thy harvest fields
  • Be dunged with rotten death? _Page 57_]
  • In Francis Thompson's Catholic philosophy, which must be partially
  • understood if the reader is to get at the heart of the "Hound of
  • Heaven," the tremendous manifestations of God's attributes of power
  • prepare us to expect equally tremendous manifestations of His
  • attributes of love. The more prodigal God is discovered to be in
  • lavish expenditures of omnipotence in the material universe, the more
  • alert the soul becomes to look for and to detect overwhelming surprises
  • of Divine Love. Hence, to Thompson there was nothing irrational in the
  • special revelation of God to man, in His Incarnation, His death on the
  • cross, and His sacramental life in the Church. The Divine energy of
  • God's love, as displayed in the supernatural revelation of Himself,
  • seems to be even vaster and more intense than the Divine energy of
  • creation displayed in the revelation of nature. Every new revelation
  • of God's power and wisdom which science unfolds serves only to restore
  • a balance in our mind between God's power and God's love. The more
  • astronomical the heavens become, the closer they bring God to us.
  • Another conception of God to be kept in mind, if we are to grasp the
  • meaning of the "Hound of Heaven," is the omniscient character, the
  • infinite perfection, of God's knowledge. God sees each of us as fully
  • and completely as if there were no one else and nothing else to see
  • except us. Practically speaking, God gives each one of us His
  • undivided attention. And through this spacious channel of His Divine
  • and exclusive attention pour the ocean-tides of His love. The weak
  • soul is afraid of the terrible excess of Divine Love. It tries to
  • elude it; but Love meets it at every cross-road and by-path, down which
  • it would run and hide itself, and gently turns it back.
  • Francis Thompson, in an interpretation of "A Narrow Vessel," has left
  • us in prose a description of human weakness and wilfulness reluctant of
  • its true bliss. The following passage is an excellent commentary on
  • the "Hound of Heaven." "Though God," he says, "asks of the soul but to
  • love Him what it may, and is ready to give an increased love for a poor
  • little, the soul feels that this infinite love demands naturally its
  • whole self, that if it begin to love God it may not stop short of all
  • it has to yield. It is troubled, even if it did go a brief way, on the
  • upward path; it fears and recoils from the whole great surrender, the
  • constant effort beyond itself which is sensibly laid on it. It falls
  • back with relieved contentment on some human love, a love on its own
  • plane, where somewhat short of total surrender may go to requital,
  • where no upward effort is needful. And it ends by giving for the
  • meanest, the most unsufficing and half-hearted return, that utter
  • self-surrender and self-effacement which it denied to God. Even (how
  • rarely) if the return be such as mortal may render, how empty and
  • unsatiated it leaves the soul. One always is less generous to love
  • than the other."
  • God walks morning, noon and eve in the garden of the soul, calling it
  • to a happiness which affrights it. And the timid and self-seeking soul
  • strives to hide itself under the stars, under the clouds of heaven,
  • under human love, under the distractions of work and pleasure and
  • study, offers itself as a wistful servitor to child and man and nature,
  • if they will but afford it a refuge from the persistent and gentle
  • accents of pursuivant Love. But all things are in league with God, Who
  • made and rules them. They cannot conspire against Him. They betray
  • the refugee. He turns in abject surrender, and is astonished to find
  • the rest and happiness that he quested for so wildly. The Divine
  • thwartings which had harassed the soul become a tender mystery of
  • Infinite Love forcing itself upon an unworthy and unwilling creature.
  • Someone has said that every life is a romance of Divine Love. The
  • "Hound of Heaven" is a version of that romance which smites the soul
  • into an humble mood of acknowledgment and penitence.
  • JAMES J. DALY, S. J.
  • OF "THE HOUND OF HEAVEN"
  • Francis Thompson, born in Preston in 1859, spent the greater part of
  • his mature life in London where he died in 1907. He was educated at
  • Ushaw College near Durham, and afterwards went to Owens College,
  • Manchester, to qualify as a doctor.
  • But his gift as prescriber and healer lay elsewhere than in the
  • consulting-room. He walked to London in search of a living, finding,
  • indeed, a prolonged near approach to death in its streets; until at
  • length his literary powers were discovered by himself and by others,
  • and he began, in his later twenties, an outpouring of verse which
  • endured for a half-decade of years--his "Poems," his "Sister Songs,"
  • and his "New Poems."
  • "The Hound of Heaven" "marked the return of the nineteenth century to
  • Thomas à Kempis." The great poetry of it transcended, in itself and in
  • its influence, all conventions; so that it won the love of a Catholic
  • Mystic like Coventry Patmore; was included by Dean Beeching in his
  • "Lyra Sacra" among its older high compeers; and gave new heart to quite
  • another manner of man, Edward Burne-Jones.
  • W. M.
  • [Illustration]
  • ILLUSTRATIONS
  • When she lit her glimmering tapers . . . . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
  • Titanic glooms of chasmed fears
  • Across the margent of the world I fled
  • I said to dawn: Be sudden
  • I knew how the clouds arise
  • Naked I wait Thy love's uplifted stroke!
  • Yea, faileth now even dream
  • The hid battlements of Eternity
  • Whether man's heart or life it be which yields
  • I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways
  • Lest, having Him, I must have naught beside
  • Thunder-driven, They clanged His chariot
  • In her wind-walled palace
  • I shook the pillaring hours
  • And now my heart is as a broken fount
  • That Voice is round me like a bursting sea
  • [Illustration:
  • I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways
  • Of my own mind]
  • THE HOUND OF HEAVEN
  • I fled Him, down the nights and down the days;
  • I fled Him, down the arches of the years;
  • I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways
  • Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears
  • I hid from Him, and under running laughter.
  • Up vistaed hopes, I sped;
  • And shot, precipitated,
  • Adown Titanic glooms of chasmèd fears,
  • From those strong Feet that followed, followed after.
  • But with unhurrying chase,
  • And unperturbèd pace,
  • Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
  • They beat--and a Voice beat
  • More instant than the Feet--
  • "All things betray thee, who betrayest Me."
  • [Illustration]
  • I pleaded, out law-wise,
  • By many a hearted casement, curtained red,
  • Trellised with intertwining charities
  • (For, though I knew His love Who followèd,
  • Yet was I sore adread
  • Lest, having Him, I must have naught beside);
  • But, if one little casement parted wide,
  • The gust of His approach would clash it to.
  • Fear wist not to evade as Love wist to pursue.
  • Across the margent of the world I fled,
  • And troubled the gold gateways of the stars,
  • Smiting for shelter on their clangèd bars;
  • Fretted to dulcet jars
  • And silvern chatter the pale ports o' the moon.
  • I said to dawn: Be sudden; to eve: Be soon--
  • With thy young skyey blossoms heap me over
  • From this tremendous Lover!
  • Float thy vague veil about me, lest He see!
  • I tempted all His servitors, but to find
  • My own betrayal in their constancy,
  • In faith to Him their fickleness to me,
  • Their traitorous trueness, and their loyal deceit.
  • To all swift things for swiftness did I sue;
  • Clung to the whistling mane of every wind.
  • But whether they swept, smoothly fleet,
  • The long savannahs of the blue;
  • Or whether, Thunder-driven,
  • They clanged His chariot 'thwart a heaven
  • Plashy with flying lightnings round the spurn o' their feet:--
  • Fear wist not to evade as Love wist to pursue.
  • Still with unhurrying chase,
  • And unperturbèd pace,
  • Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
  • Came on the following Feet,
  • And a Voice above their beat--
  • "Naught shelters thee, who wilt not shelter Me."
  • [Illustration:
  • Thunder-driven,
  • They clanged His chariot 'thwart a heaven
  • Plashy with flying lightnings round the spurn o' their feet]
  • [Illustration]
  • I sought no more that after which I strayed
  • In face of man or maid;
  • But still within the little children's eyes
  • Seems something, something that replies,
  • _They_ at least are for me, surely for me!
  • I turned me to them very wistfully;
  • But just as their young eyes grew sudden fair
  • With dawning answers there,
  • Their angel plucked them from me by the hair.
  • [Illustration: In her wind-walled palace]
  • Come then, ye other children,
  • Nature's--share
  • With me" (said I) "your delicate fellowship;
  • Let me greet you lip to lip,
  • Let me twine with you caresses,
  • Wantoning
  • With our Lady-Mother's vagrant tresses,
  • Banqueting
  • With her in her wind-walled palace,
  • Underneath her azured daïs,
  • Quaffing, as your taintless way is,
  • From a chalice
  • Lucent-weeping out of the dayspring."
  • So it was done;
  • _I_ in their delicate fellowship was one--
  • Drew the bolt of Nature's secrecies.
  • _I_ knew all the swift importings
  • On the wilful face of skies;
  • I knew how the clouds arise,
  • Spumèd of the wild sea-snortings;
  • All that's born or dies
  • Rose and drooped with; made them shapers
  • Of mine own moods, or wailful or divine--
  • With them joyed and was bereaven.
  • I was heavy with the even,
  • When she lit her glimmering tapers
  • Round the day's dead sanctities.
  • I laughed in the morning's eyes.
  • I triumphed and I saddened with all weather,
  • Heaven and I wept together,
  • And its sweet tears were salt with mortal mine;
  • Against the red throb of its sunset-heart
  • I laid my own to beat,
  • And share commingling heat;
  • But not by that, by that, was eased my human smart.
  • In vain my tears were wet on Heaven's grey cheek.
  • For ah! we know not what each other says,
  • These things and I; in sound _I_ speak--
  • _Their_ sound is but their stir, they speak by silences.
  • Nature, poor stepdame, cannot slake by drouth;
  • Let her, if she would owe me,
  • Drop yon blue bosom-veil of sky, and show me
  • The breasts o' her tenderness:
  • Never did any milk of hers once bless
  • My thirsting mouth.
  • Nigh and nigh draws the chase,
  • With unperturbèd pace,
  • Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
  • And past those noisèd Feet
  • A Voice comes yet more fleet--
  • "Lo! naught contents thee, who content'st not Me."
  • [Illustration]
  • [Illustration:
  • I shook the pillaring hours
  • And pulled my life upon me]
  • Naked I wait Thy love's uplifted stroke!
  • My harness piece by piece Thou hast hewn from me,
  • And smitten me to my knee;
  • I am defenceless utterly.
  • I slept, methinks, and woke,
  • And, slowly gazing, find me stripped in sleep.
  • In the rash lustihead of my young powers,
  • I shook the pillaring hours
  • And pulled my life upon me; grimed with smears,
  • I stand amid the dust o' the mounded years--
  • My mangled youth lies dead beneath the heap.
  • My days have crackled and gone up in smoke,
  • Have puffed and burst as sun-starts on a stream.
  • Yea, faileth now even dream
  • The dreamer, and the lute the lutanist;
  • Even the linked fantasies, in whose blossomy twist
  • I swung the earth a trinket at my wrist,
  • Are yielding; cords of all too weak account
  • For earth, with heavy griefs so overplussed.
  • Ah! is Thy love indeed
  • A weed, albeit an amaranthine weed,
  • Suffering no flowers except its own to mount?
  • Ah! must--
  • Designer infinite!--
  • Ah! must Thou char the wood ere Thou canst limn with it?
  • My freshness spent its wavering shower i' the dust;
  • And now my heart is as a broken fount,
  • Wherein tear-drippings stagnate, spilt down ever
  • From the dank thoughts that shiver
  • Upon the sighful branches of my mind.
  • Such is; what is to be?
  • The pulp so bitter, how shall taste the rind?
  • I dimly guess what Time in mists confounds;
  • Yet ever and anon a trumpet sounds
  • From the hid battlements of Eternity:
  • Those shaken mists a space unsettle, then
  • Round the half-glimpsèd turrets slowly wash again;
  • But not ere Him who summoneth
  • I first have seen, enwound
  • And now my heart is as a broken fount,
  • Wherein tear-drippings stagnate, spilt down ever
  • From the dank thoughts that shiver
  • With glooming robes purpureal, cypress-crowned;
  • His name I know, and what his trumpet saith.
  • Whether man's heart or life it be which yields
  • Thee harvest, must Thy harvest fields
  • Be dunged with rotten death?
  • [Illustration:
  • And now my heart is as a broken fount,
  • Wherein tear-drippings stagnate, spilt down ever
  • From the dank thoughts that shiver]
  • [Illustration]
  • Now of that long pursuit
  • Comes on at hand the bruit;
  • That Voice is round me like a bursting sea:
  • "And is thy earth so marred,
  • Shattered in shard on shard?
  • Lo, all things fly thee, for thou fliest Me!
  • Strange, piteous, futile thing,
  • Wherefore should any set thee love apart?
  • Seeing none but I makes much of naught" (He said),
  • "And human love needs human meriting:
  • How hast thou merited--
  • Of all man's clotted clay the dingiest clot?
  • Alack, thou knowest not
  • How little worthy of any love thou art!
  • Whom wilt thou find to love ignoble thee,
  • Save Me, save only Me?
  • All which I took from thee I did but take,
  • Not for thy harms,
  • But just that thou might'st seek it in My arms.
  • All which thy child's mistake
  • Fancies as lost, I have stored for thee at home:
  • Rise, clasp My hand, and come."
  • Halts by me that footfall:
  • Is my gloom, after all,
  • Shade of His hand, outstretched caressingly?
  • "Ah, fondest, blindest, weakest,
  • I am He Whom thou seekest!
  • Thou dravest love from thee, who dravest Me."
  • [Illustration: That Voice is round me like a bursting sea]
  • [Illustration]
  • [Illustration: Back end papers]
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