WILLIAM SHARP (FIONA MACLEOD) A MEMOIR COMPILED BY HIS WIFE ELIZABETH A. SHARP, ELIZABETH A. SHARP [bill gates best books .txt] 📗
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‘Knitting of the Knots’ and some information about the _Dalt_ and the
_Cho-Alt_ about which I was not clear. He has seen the Light of the
Dead, and his mother saw (before her marriage, and before she even saw
the man himself) her husband crossing a dark stream followed by his
four unborn children, and two in his arms whom afterwards she bore
still-born....”
To me the summer was memorable because of my first visit to Iona. While
there he wrote part of _The Sin-Eater_, and its prefatory dedication
to George Meredith, and projected some of the St. Columba tales; he
renewed impressions of his earlier days on the sacred isle, and stored
new experiences which he afterwards embodied in his long essay on Iona
published in _The Divine Adventure_ volume.
From that Isle of Dreams “Fiona” wrote to Mrs. Tynan-Hinkson:
ISLE OF IONA,
September, 1894.
DEAR MRS. HINKSON,
I am, in summer and autumn, so much of a wanderer through the Isles
and Western Highlands that letters sometimes are long in reaching me.
But your kind note (and enclosure) has duly followed me from Edinburgh
to Loch Goil in eastern Argyll and thence deviously here. It will be a
great pleasure to me to read what you have to say in the _Illus. London
News_ or elsewhere, and I thank you. I wish you could be here. Familiar
with your poetry as I am, I know how you would rejoice not only in the
Iona that is the holy Icolmkill but also in the Iona that is Ithona,
the ancient Celtic Isle of the Druids. There is a beauty here that no
other place has, so unique is it. Of course it does not appeal to all.
The Sound of Iona divides the Island from the wild Ross of Mull by no
more than a mile of water; and it is on this eastern side that the
village and the ancient Cathedral and ruined Nunnery etc. stand. Here it
is as peaceful as, on the west side, it is wild and grand. I read your
letter last night, at sunset, while I was lying on the Cnoc-an-Angeal,
the hillock on the west where the angel appeared to St. Columba. To
the north lay the dim features of the Outer Hebrides: to the west an
unbroken wilderness of waves till they fall against Labrador: to the
south, though invisible, the coastline of Ireland. There was no sound,
save the deep hollow voice of the sea, and a strange reverberation in
a hollow cave underground. It was a very beautiful sight to see the
day wane across the ocean, and then to move slowly homeward through
the gloaming, and linger awhile by the Street of the Dead near the
ruined Abbey of Columba. But these Isles are so dear to me that I think
everyone must feel alike!
I remain
Sincerely yours,
FIONA MACLEOD.
S. I enclose a gillieflower from close to St. Columba’s tomb.
In November came a letter from Mr. Stedman:
137 WEST 78TH ST.,
NEW YORK.
MY DEAREST FRIEND BEYOND SEAS,
For this in truth you now are. An older poet and comrade than you once
held that place in my thoughts, but Time and Work have somehow laid the
sword between us—and neither of us is to blame. I never so well obeyed
Emerson’s advice to recruit our friendship (as we grow older) as when
I won, I scarcely know how or why, your unswerving and ever increasing
affection. In truth, again, it has been of the greatest service to me,
during the most trying portion of my life—the period in which you have
given me so much warmth and air—and never has it been of more worth than
now you might well think otherwise.
My birthday began for me with the “Sharp Number” of _The Chapbook_.
I don’t know what fact of it gave me the more pleasure (it came at a
time when I had a-plenty to worry me)—the beautiful autographic tribute
to myself or the honour justly paid to my dear Esquire-at-arms, whose
superb portrait is the envy of our less fortunate Yankee-torydons. The
last five years have placed you so well to the front, on both sides of
the Atlantic, that I can receive no more satisfying tributes than those
which you have given me before the world. I feel, too, that it is only
during these years that you have come to your full literary strength,
there is nothing which the author of your “Ballads” and of “Vistas”
cannot do.
It is a noteworthy fact which you will be glad to hear, that your letter
lay by my plate, when I came down to breakfast on the morning of October
the eight! The stars in their courses must be in league with you....
Mrs. Stedman sends her love, and says that your portrait is that of a
man grown handsomer, and, she trusts, more discreet and ascetic! The
month and this letter are now ending with midnight.
Ever affectionately yours
EDMUND C. STEDMAN.
The Chap-book was a little semi-monthly issue published by Messrs.
Stone and Kimball, Chicago. No. 9, the “William Sharp” number, appeared
on the 15th of September, three days after that author’s birthday. It
contained the reproduction of an autograph signed poem, by William
Sharp “To Edmund Clarence Stedman in Birthday Greeting 8th October”; an
appreciation of William Sharp’s Poems by Bliss Carmen; “The Birth of a
Soul” one of the Dramatic Interludes afterwards included in _Vistas_,
and a portrait of the Author.
Notwithstanding the paramount interest to the author of the “F. M.”
expression of himself as, “W. S.” he was not idle. After a visit to
Mr. Murray Gilchrist in the latter’s home on the Derbyshire moors, W.
wrote his story “The Gypsy Christ,” founded on a tradition whichhe had learned from his gipsy friends, and set in a weird moorland
surroundings. In _Harper’s_ there appeared a description of the
night-wanderers on the Thames’ embankment, pathetic frequenters of
“The Hotel of the Beautiful Star.” The July number of _The Portfolio_
consisted of a monograph by him on “Fair Women in Painting and Poetry”
(afterwards published in bookform by Messrs. Seeley) which he, at
first, intended to dedicate to Mr. George Meredith. His ‘second
thought’ was approved of by the novelist, who wrote his acknowledgment:
“You do an elusive bit of work with skill. It seems to me, that the
dedication was wisely omitted. Thousands of curdling Saxons are surly
almost to the snarl at the talk about ‘woman.’ Next to the Anarchist,
we are hated.”
The month of July was saddened by the death of our intimate and valued
friend Walter Pater; upon that friend and his work William Sharp wrote
a long appreciation which appeared in _The Atlantic Monthly_. Another
death, at the year-end, caused him great regret, that of Christina
Rossetti, whom he had held in deep regard. He felt, as he wrote to her
surviving brother: “One of the rarest and sweetest of English singers
is silent now. 1882 and 1894 were evil years for English poetry.”
Later he wrote a careful study of her verse for _The Atlantic Monthly._
As a Christmas card that year he gave me a little book of old wood-cut
illustrations, reproduced and printed on Iona. On the inside of the
cover he wrote what he held to be his creed. It is this:
CREDO
“The Universe is eternally, omnipresently and continuously filled with
the breath of God.
“Every breath of God creates a new convolution in the brain of Nature:
and with every moment of change in the brain of Nature, new loveliness
is wrought upon the earth.
“Every breath of God creates a new convolution in the brain of the
Human Spirit, and with every moment of change in the brain of the Human
Spirit, new hopes, aspirations, dreams, are wrought within the Soul of
the Living.
“And there is no Evil anywhere in the Light of this creative Breath: but
only, everywhere, a redeeming from Evil, a winning towards Good.”
PART II ( FIONA MACLEOD ) CHAPTER XV ( THE MOUNTAIN LOVERS )
_The Sin-Eater_
It was soon evident that the noise and confused magnetism of the great
City weighed disastrously on William Sharp. At the New Year, 1895, he
wrote to a friend:
“London I do not like, though I feel its magnetic charm, or sorcery.
I suffer here. The gloom, the streets, the obtrusion and intrusion of
people, all conspire against thought, dream, true living. It is a vast
reservoir of all the evils of civilised life with a climate which makes
me inclined to believe that Dante came here instead of to Hades.”
The strain of the two kinds of work he was attempting to do, the
immediate pressure of the imaginative work became unbearable, “the call
of the sea,” imperative.
As he has related in “Earth, Fire and Water”: “It was all important for
me not to leave in January, and in one way I was not ill-pleased for
it was a wild winter. But one night I awoke hearing a rushing sound in
the street, the sound of water. I would have thought no more of it had
I not recognised the troubled sound of the tide, and the sucking and
lapsing of the flow in muddy hollows. I rose and looked out. It was
moonlight, and there was no water. When after sleepless hours I rose in
the grey morning I heard the splash of waves, I could not write or read
and at last I could not rest. On the afternoon of that day the waves
dashed up against the house.”
An incident showed me that his malaise was curable by one method only.
A telegram had come for him that morning, and I took it to his study. I
could get no answer. I knocked, louder, then louder,—at last he opened
the door with a curiously dazed look in his face. I explained. He
answered “Ah, I could not hear you for the sound of the waves!” It was
the first indication to me, in words, of what troubled him.
That evening he started for Glasgow en route for Arran, where I knew he
would find peace.
“The following morning we (for a kinswoman was with me) stood on the
Greenock pier waiting for the Hebridean steamer and before long were
landed on an island, almost the nearest we could reach that I loved so
well.... That night, with the sea breaking less than a score of yards
from where I lay, I slept, though for three nights I had not been able
to sleep. When I woke the trouble was gone.”
There is a curious point in his telling of this episode. Although the
essay is written over the signature of “Fiona Macleod” and belongs to
that particular phase of work, nevertheless it is obviously “William
Sharp” who _tells_ the story, for the “we” who stood on the pier at
Greenock is himself in his dual capacity; “his kinswoman” is his other
self.
He wrote to me on reaching his destination:
CORRIE, ISLE OF ARRAN,
20: 2: 1895.
“You will have had my telegram of my safe arrival here. There was no
snow to speak of along the road from Brodick (for no steamer comes
here)—so I had neither to ride nor sail as threatened: indeed, owing to
the keen frost (which has made the snow like powder) there is none on
the mountains except in the hollows, though the summits and flanks are
crystal white with a thin veil of frozen snow.
It was a most glorious sail from Ardrossan. The sea was a sheet of
blue and purple washed with gold. Arran rose above all like a dream
of beauty. I was the sole passenger in the steamer, for the whole
island! What made the drive of six miles more beautiful than ever was
the extraordinary fantastic beauty of the frozen waterfalls and burns
caught as it were in the leap. Sometimes these immense icicles hung
straight and long, like a Druid’s beard: sometimes in wrought sheets of
gold, or magic columns and spaces of crystal.
Sweet it was to smell the pine and the heather and bracken,
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