The Children by Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell


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Page 3




CHILDREN IN MIDWINTER


Children are so flowerlike that it is always a little fresh surprise to
see them blooming in winter. Their tenderness, their down, their colour,
their fulness--which is like that of a thick rose or of a tight
grape--look out of season. Children in the withering wind are like the
soft golden-pink roses that fill the barrows in Oxford Street, breathing
a southern calm on the north wind. The child has something better than
warmth in the cold, something more subtly out of place and more
delicately contrary; and that is coolness. To be cool in the cold is the
sign of a vitality quite exquisitely alien from the common conditions of
the world. It is to have a naturally, and not an artificially, different
and separate climate.

We can all be more or less warm--with fur, with skating, with tea, with
fire, and with sleep--in the winter. But the child is fresh in the wind,
and wakes cool from his dreams, dewy when there is hoar-frost everywhere
else; he is "more lovely and more temperate" than the summer day and than
the winter day alike. He overcomes both heat and cold by another
climate, which is the climate of life; but that victory of life is more
delicate and more surprising in the tyranny of January. By the sight and
the touch of children, we are, as it were, indulged with something finer
than a fruit or a flower in untimely bloom. The childish bloom is always
untimely. The fruit and flower will be common later on; the strawberries
will be a matter of course anon, and the asparagus dull in its day. But
a child is a perpetual _primeur_.

Or rather he is not in truth always untimely. Some few days in the year
are his own season--unnoticed days of March or April, soft, fresh and
equal, when the child sleeps and rises with the sun. Then he looks as
though he had his brief season, and ceases for a while to seem strange.

It is no wonder that we should try to attribute the times of the year to
children; their likeness is so rife among annuals. For man and woman we
are naturally accustomed to a longer rhythm; their metre is so obviously
their own, and of but a single stanza, without repetition, without
renewel, without refrain. But it is by an intelligible illusion that we
look for a quick waxing and waning in the lives of young children--for a
waxing that shall come again another time, and for a waning that shall
not be final, shall not be fatal. But every winter shows us how human
they are, and how they are little pilgrims and visitants among the things
that look like their kin. For every winter shows them free from the east
wind; more perfectly than their elders, they enclose the climate of life.
And, moreover, with them the climate of life is the climate of the spring
of life; the climate of a human March that is sure to make a constant
progress, and of a human April that never hesitates. The child "breathes
April and May"--an inner April and his own May.

The winter child looks so much the more beautiful for the season as his
most brilliant uncles and aunts look less well. He is tender and gay in
the east wind. Now more than ever must the lover beware of making a
comparison between the beauty of the admired woman and the beauty of a
child. He is indeed too wary ever to make it. So is the poet. As
comparisons are necessary to him, he will pay a frankly impossible
homage, and compare a woman's face to something too fine, to something it
never could emulate. The Elizabethan lyrist is safe among lilies and
cherries, roses, pearls, and snow. He undertakes the beautiful office of
flattery, and flatters with courage. There is no hidden reproach in the
praise. Pearls and snow suffer, in a sham fight, a mimic defeat that
does them no harm, and no harm comes to the lady's beauty from a
competition so impossible. She never wore a lily or a coral in the
colours of her face, and their beauty is not hers. But here is the
secret: she is compared with a flower because she could not endure to be
compared with a child. That would touch her too nearly. There would be
the human texture and the life like hers, but immeasurably more lovely.
No colour, no surface, no eyes of woman have ever been comparable with
the colour, the surface, and the eyes of childhood. And no poet has ever
run the risk of such a defeat. Why, it is defeat enough for a woman to
have her face, however well-favoured, close to a child's, even if there
is no one by who should be rash enough to approach them still nearer by a
comparison.

This, needless to say, is true of no other kind of beauty than that
beauty of light, colour, and surface to which the Elizabethans referred,
and which suggested their flatteries in disfavour of the lily. There
are, indeed, other adult beauties, but those are such as make no
allusions to the garden. What is here affirmed is that the beautiful
woman who is widely and wisely likened to the flowers, which are
inaccessibly more beautiful, must not, for her own sake, be likened to
the always accessible child.

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Books | Photos | Paul Mutton | Wed 24th Apr 2024, 12:31