Introduction to Matthew Arnold
BIOGRAPHICAL
ESSAY
The most characteristic work of the English poet and critic Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) deals with the difficulty of preserving personal values in a world drastically transformed by industrialism, science, and democracy.
Matthew Arnold was born at Laleham on the
Thames on Dec. 24, 1822. His father, Dr. Thomas Arnold, one of the worthies whom
Lytton Strachey was to portray somewhat critically in Eminent Victorians,
became the celebrated master of Rugby School, and his ideals of Christian
education were influential. As a young man, Matthew Arnold saw something of
William Wordsworth, Robert Southey, and other veterans of English romanticism.
Educated at Rugby and then at Balliol College, Oxford, he early began to write
poetry. The closest friend of his youth was Arthur Hugh Clough, a poet and
sometime disciple of Dr. Arnold, whose death Matthew Arnold would later mourn in
his elegy "Thyrsis."
In 1844 Arnold took a second-class honors
degree at Oxford, and the following year he was elected to a fellowship at Oriel
College. After some teaching he became private secretary to Lord Lansdowne, who
eventually had him appointed to an inspectorship of schools, a difficult,
demanding job which required Arnold to do a good deal of traveling and which he
held for most of his life.
Several of Arnold's early poems express his
hopeless love for a girl he calls Marguerite. Scholars have been unable to
identify an original for this girl, and whether she existed at all is a
question. In 1851 Arnold married Frances Lucy Wightman, the daughter of a judge.
The marriage was a happy one, and some of Arnold's most attractive poems are
addressed to his children.
Career as a
Poet
In 1849 Arnold, under the pseudonym "A,"
published a collection of short lyric poems called The Strayed Reveller;
the sale was poor and the book was withdrawn. In 1852 he published another
collection, Empedocles on Etna and Other Poems, but this too, after a
sale of 50 copies, was withdrawn. Two poems in this collection, however, require
special notice. The first, "Empedocles on Etna," is in dramatic form, though it
consists mostly of a series of monologues in which the hero, a Sicilian
philosopher, meditates on the transient glories and satisfactions of human life
and then throws himself into the volcano. The second is Arnold's long poem on
Tristram and Iseult, which again uses the monologue form. Tristram, watched over
by Iseult of Brittany, is dying; he remembers his past happiness with Iseult of
Ireland, who arrives just before he dies for a brief, passionate
reunion.
In 1853 Arnold published a collection called
simply Poems; it included poems from the two earlier collections as well
as others never before published, notably "Sohrab and Rustum" and "The Scholar
Gypsy." The former is a short epic; in style it is frequently reminiscent of
John Milton but very beautiful in its own right. The Persian hero Rustum has
never seen his son Sohrab, who is raised by the Tatars and becomes one of the
bravest of their warriors. The two men meet in single combat, and just as the
son recognizes his father, the former falls dead. "The Scholar Gypsy" is based
on an old story of an Oxford student who left his university and joined a gypsy
band; his spirit is supposed still to haunt the Oxford countryside. The poem
contrasts the life of the legendary gypsy with Arnold's own times, which he
finds sick, divided, and distracting.
Poems: Second
Series (1855) includes another
small blank-verse epic, "Balder Dead." Arnold takes his subject from Norse
mythology. Balder, god of the sun, has been killed by a trick of the evil Loki,
god of mischief. The gods mourn his death, and Hermod goes to the land of the
shades to persuade Hela to return Balder to the land of the living. Hela agrees
on condition that all living things mourn for Balder; and so they do, with the
fatal exception of Loki. Balder is resigned to his death, and at the conclusion
of the poem there is a promise of better things when this generation of gods has
passed away.
In 1857 Arnold was elected to the
professorship of poetry at Oxford, and he held this post for the next decade. He
was the first professor of poetry to give his lectures in English rather than in
Latin.
In 1858 Arnold published Merope, a classical tragedy, which concerns the revenge of a young man on a tyrant who has killed the young man's father and married his mother. New Poems (1867) includes "Thyrsis: A Monody," the pastoral elegy in which Arnold again celebrates the Oxford countryside and mourns the death of his friend Clough. The poem invites comparison with other great classical elegies in English--for example, Milton's "Lycidas" and Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Adonais." In 1869 Arnold collected his poems in two volumes. An important new poem is "Rugby Chapel," in which he pays tribute to his father. Although Arnold wrote both epic and dramatic poetry, his best poems are probably his lyrics, such poems as "Dover Beach," "To Marguerite--Continued," and "The Buried Life."
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Literary and Social
Criticism
In 1861 Arnold published his lectures On
Translating Homer and in the next year On Translating Homer: Last
Words. He first isolates the main characteristics of the Homeric style and
then considers a number of translations of Homer and the degree of their success
in duplicating these characteristics in English. The books are lively
introductions to classical poetry and urge English writers to imitate Homer's
"grand style."
Arnold's two-volume Essays in
Criticism (1865 and 1888) includes essays on a variety of writers--Marcus
Aurelius, Heinrich Heine, Leo Tolstoy, and Wordsworth among them. His critical
essays are concerned with the discipline and preservation of taste at a time
when literary standards were threatened by commercialism and mass education.
With schoolmasterly repetitiousness Arnold attacks English provincialism, or
"Philistinism" as he calls it. He particularly values the quality of "high
seriousness," an author's power to concentrate on the perpetually important
issues in human life. Arnold suggests that his readers keep always in mind
certain sublime moments in literature which will serve as "touchstones" in the
judgment of contemporary work.
Of the several books which Arnold wrote on
politics and sociology the most important is Culture and Anarchy (1869).
He criticizes 19th-century English politicians for their lack of purpose and
their excessive concern with the machinery of society. The English people--and
the narrow-minded middle class in particular--lack "sweetness and light," a
phrase which Arnold borrowed from Jonathan Swift. England can only be saved by
the development of "culture," which for Arnold means the free play of critical
intelligence, a willingness to question all authority and to make judgments in a
leisurely and disinterested way.
Of the four books in which Arnold dealt with
the threat to religion posed by science and historical scholarship, the most
important is Literature and Dogma (1873). He argues that the Bible
has the importance of a supremely great literary work, and as such it cannot be
discredited by charges of historical inaccuracy. And the Church, like any other
time-honored social institution, must be reformed with care and with a sense of
its historical importance to English
culture.
Arnold was one of the great Victorian
controversialists, and his books are contributions to a national discussion of
literature, religion, and education. His style is witty, ironic, and varied; he
exhorts his readers, chides them, even teases them. His books were widely read,
and in the magazines in which he regularly published he defended his views
against all comers. In 1883 and 1886 he toured the United States and gave
lectures, in which he tried to win Americans to the cause of
culture.
On April 15, 1888, Arnold went to Liverpool
to meet his beloved daughter, and he died there of a sudden heart
attack.
FURTHER
READINGS
Two important collections of Arnold's
letters are Letters of Matthew Arnold, 1848-1888, edited by George W. E.
Russell (2 vols., 1895-1896), and The Letters of Matthew Arnold to Arthur
Hugh Clough, edited by Howard Foster Lowry (1932). The standard introduction
to Arnold is Lionel Trilling, Matthew Arnold (1939; 2d ed. 1949). A more
recent critical study, synthesizing earlier views, is William A. Madden,
Matthew Arnold: A Study of the Aesthetic Temperament in Victorian England
(1967). Two excellent works devoted to Arnold's poetry are Wendell Stacy
Johnson, The Voices of Matthew Arnold: An Essay in Criticism (1961), and
A. Dwight Culler, Imaginative Reason: The Poetry of Matthew Arnold
(1966). A contrasting approach to the poems is G. Robert Stange, Matthew
Arnold: The Poet as Humanist (1967).
More specialized works include William
Robbins, The Ethical Idealism of Matthew Arnold (1959); Patrick McCarthy,
Matthew Arnold and the Three Classes (1964); and Warren D. Anderson,
Matthew Arnold and the Classical Tradition (1965). "Matthew Arnold" in T.
S. Eliot, The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism (1932; 2d ed. 1964),
is an examination of Arnold by an influential 20th-century
critic.
