Luminous shadow and dusky light.—We, who are not poets, but who dare to maintain that poetry is an essential element of our intellectual life, are just now the somewhat helpless witnesses of a discussion in which we are not invited to take a part; a discussion of experts; and yet a discussion in which we are deeply interested even if we be kept outside it.
There are two parties to that discussion; one for whom poetry has, essentially, no relation to thought, but springs from an emotion of the soul of the poet which he transmits to his hearers in words, indeed, but not in any kind of definite thought; the other, and older school, for whom thought is not, indeed, the whole of poetry, but is certainly one of its elements, and is of its very essence.
To take, first, the former school, as presented by one or two of its leading advocates.
Mr. A. E. Housman says: The human faculty which dominated the eighteenth century and informed its literature was the intelligence, and that involved, as Arnold says, ‘some repressing and silencing of poetry’ And again: When I examine my mind and try to discern clearly in the matter, / cannot satisfy myself that there are any such things as poetical ideas.
Again, although it is almost impossible to find pure unmingled poetry, poetry independent of meaning, yet meaning is of the intellect, poetry is not.