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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Victorian Age, Part One
>
Lesser Poets of the Middle and Later Nineteenth Century
>
Bon Gaultier Ballads
Aytouns
Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers
Percival Leigh; W. J. Prowse; Mortimer Collin
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XIII. The Victorian Age, Part One.
VI.
Lesser Poets of the Middle and Later Nineteenth Century
.
§ 9.
Bon Gaultier Ballads
.
If it be urged that
Firmilian
requires for its full appreciation rather more knowledge of past literature than most people can be expected to possess, that plea cannot avail as regards the famous and delightful
Bon Gaultier Ballads
which Aytoun, some years earlier, wrote with Theodore Martin.
Ta Fhairshon
and the parody of
Locksley Hall
have probably been the most popular pieces; but it may, perhaps, be questioned whether
George of Gorbals
8
a burlesque both of the metre and the manner of Mrs. Browningis not the best of all. Aytouns scholarship, his mastery of phrase and metre, his sardonic humour and, behind it, that blend of romance and passion, without which so-called humorous verse is apt to be merely funny or merely horse-playful, made it difficult for him to go wrong; while his powers in criticism and in satiric prose-narrative were hardly less.
23
The historical influence of two such books as
The Ingoldsby Legends
and
The Bon Gaultier Ballads,
following, as it did, on the exceptional development of satiric verse of the lighter description from
The Rolliad
onwards through Canning and his group to Moore and others with Hood and Praed following,
9
is greater than has always been allowed for. Among the numerous sources of amusement provided by a certain recent tendency to regard early and mid-Victorian things as characterised by dull conventionalism alternating with silly sentimentality, there is hardly any one which is so much of a
fons Bandusiae
as the memory of these two books, of Thackerays light verse and of the enormous popularity of at least the first two collections. For, at least, twenty years past there has been no master of the laugh who has produced anything approaching them. In fact, there have been pessimists who have held that, since the departure of C. S. C. and J. K. S. and the comparative desertion by W. S. Gilbert of the pure lighter lyric unconnected with the stage, the gloomy assertion of Theodore de Banville, much earlier justified in French,
Mais á prèsent cest bien fini de rire
has transferred itself to English.
24
Certainly, however, no such thing was true from 1830 to 1890 or even a little later; and we must briefly survey here the bearers of that torch of laughter which some very grave and precise persons have not hesitated to indicate as one of the most triumphant and idiosyncratic possessions of humanity at large and of English humanity rather specially.
25
Note 8
. Not so entitled, though generally so called. It is part of another poem
A Nuptial Song.
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Note 9
. The subject of this, otherwise
The Rhyme of Sir Launcelot Bogle,
matters nothing, but it is curiously difficult to trace it to anything actual. Aytouns partner, interrogated on the subject late in life, declared that he had forgotten, if, indeed, he ever knew; and venerable citizens of Glasgow (the scene) have been unable to do more than assign it to some unchronicled municipal squabble. Not thus unknown should be the facts that suggested.
Nay! tarry till they come quoth Neish unto the rum
They are working at the mum
And the gin!
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]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Aytouns
Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers
Percival Leigh; W. J. Prowse; Mortimer Collin
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