The wounded Eros
BY THE SAME AUTHOR Two Gentlemen in Touraine.
( By Richard Sudbury. ) 8vo, cloth, illustrated, and with decorative border, $3.50 postpaid. Automobile Edition , 12mo, cloth, $1.20 net, postage 10 cents. (Duffield & Company, 36 East 21st Street, New York.) Among French Inns. 2d American Edition. 8vo, cloth, decorative, profusely illustrated, $2.00. The same , three quarters morocco, $5.00. (L. C. Page & Co., 200 Summer Street, Boston.) English Edition. (Published by Hodder & Stoughton, London.) The Spirit of Love and other Poems. Limited Edition , numbered, crown 8vo, cloth, gilt top, $2.25 net. Printed and bound at The Riverside Press, Cambridge. (Charles Gibson, 209 Washington Street, Boston.) The Wounded Eros. Limited Edition , uniform with “The Spirit of Love and other Poems,” numbered, crown 8vo, cloth, gilt top, $2.50 net. Printed and bound at the Riverside Press, Cambridge. (Charles Gibson, 209 Washington Street, Boston.)
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Music to hear, why hear’st thou music sadly? Sweets with sweets war not, joy delights in joy: Why lov’st thou that which thou receiv’st not gladly, Or else receiv’st with pleasure thine annoy? Shakespeare, Sonnet VIII.
BY CHARLES GIBSON AUTHOR OF THE SPIRIT OF LOVE AND OTHER POEMS WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE
BOSTON PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR Printed at the Riverside Press Cambridge 1908 COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY CHARLES GIBSON ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
In these Sonnets, the author has set down the record of a passion which makes one more of those stories of the heart written by the poets who have joined the company of Sir Philip Sidney. The company of poets is a glorious one, and the poetic stories are among the most touching expressions of human experience.
We can find no difference between these great chronicles of the heart, beyond the fact of love winning or losing, except what time has made in the fashions of art between the sixteenth and the twentieth centuries. One cannot believe that the complex psychology in the interpretation of modern love makes that love essentially a different thing in man’s nature then in its more primal expression, when social conditions were less reticent and self-conscious in the tameless civilization of the mid-sixteenth century. Here is the ancient and immemorial love of man for woman, whose only change has been the difference between Adam waking to behold Eve beside him and the conventional introduction of the sexes which the custom of the twentieth century demands. The influence of time upon love is not more literal in the science of sociology than in the art of poetry, and one has but to take a typical Elizabethan amatory sonnet-sequence and compare it with Mr. Meredith’s “Modern Love,” Mr. Blunt’s “Esther,” or Mr. Gibson’s “The Wounded Eros,” to be convinced of this opinion. The elemental note in the great sonnet cycles, from Petrarch’s to those of our own day, being the realization of an objective ideal in the opposite sex, with the interpretation of it varying as human society progressed in its ethical, moral, and political aspects, there remains—what has always made the intensity of interest in this poetic form—the circumstance of personality giving tone and temperament to the particulars of this episodic drama of man’s heart. Apart from any consideration of the perfection of art in which any series of related love-sonnets may be dressed, this question of the personal attitude compels interest. It is the private chamber of a human heart opened without reserve, for the intrusion of strangers to behold the truth of a bitter or joyous experience, as fate may decree.