Matthew Arnold

To George Cruikshank, Esq.

ON SEEING FOR THE FIRST TIME HIS PICTURE OF ‘THE BOTTLE’, IN THE COUNTRY

Artist, whose hand, with horror wing’d, hath torn  
From the rank life of towns this leaf: and flung  
The prodigy of full-blown crime among  
Valleys and men to middle fortune born,  
Not innocent, indeed, yet not forlorn:  
Say, what shall calm us, when such guests intrude,  
Like comets on the heavenly solitude?  
Shall breathless glades, cheer’d by shy Dian’s horn,  
Cold-bubbling springs, or caves? Not so! The Soul  
Breasts her own griefs: and, urg’d too fiercely, says:
‘Why tremble? True, the nobleness of man  
May be by man effac’d: man can control  
To pain, to death, the bent of his own days.  
Know thou the worst. So much, not more, he can.’

First published 1849

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