coheres, the 
artistic purpose is more or less evident in every part; and the order in 
which each was put upon paper is of as little consequence as the place 
or time or date or the state of the weather. Wordsworth has been 
particular enough to let it be known, where he composed the last verse 
of a poem first. With some artists the writing is a mere copying from 
memory of what is completely elaborated in the whole or in long 
passages: Milton wrote thus, through a habit made necessary by his 
blindness; and so Mozart, whose incessant labors trained his genius in 
the paths of musical learning, or brought learning to be its slave, till his 
first conceptions were often beyond the reach of elaboration, and 
remained so clear in his own mind that he could venture to perform in 
public concertos to which he had written only the orchestral or 
accessory parts. Other artists work _seriatim_; some can work only 
when the pen is in their hands; and the blotted page speaks eloquently 
enough of the artistic processes of mind to which their most passionate 
passages are subjected before they come to the reader's eye. Think of 
the fac-simile of Byron's handwriting in "Childe Harold"! It shows a 
soul rapt almost beyond the power of writing. But the blots and 
erasures were not made by a "fine frenzy"; they speak no less 
eloquently for an artistic taste and skill excited and alert, and able to 
guide the frenzy and give it a contagious power through the forms of 
verse,--this taste and this skill and control being the very elements by 
which his expressions become an echo of the poet's soul,--pleasing, or, 
in the uncultivated, helping to form, a like taste in the hearer, and 
exciting a like imagined condition of feeling and poetic vision. 
Yet if it were made a question, to be decided from internal evidence, 
whether the scene here analyzed was written before or after the rest of 
the piece, a strong argument for its being written before might be found
in the peculiar impression it leaves upon the fancy. Let us suppose we 
follow the author while he runs it over, which he does quite rapidly, 
since there are no blotted lines, but only here and there a comma to be 
inserted. He designed to open his tragedy. He finds he has set a 
scene,--in his mind's eye the entrance-hall to an Athenian house, which 
he thinks he has presently intimated plainly enough to be Timon's 
house. Here he has brought forward four actors and made them speak 
as just meeting; they come by twos from different ways, and the first 
two immediately make it known that the other two are a merchant and 
jeweller, and almost immediately that they themselves are, one a 
painter, the other a poet. They have all brought gifts or goods for the 
lord Timon. The Athenian Senators pass over, and, as becomes their 
dignity, are at once received in an inner hall,--the first four remaining 
on the stage. All is so far clear. He has also, by the dialogue of the 
Painter and Poet, made in itself taking to the attention through the 
picture and the flighty recitation, suggested and interested us 
incidentally in the character of Timon, and conveyed a vague misgiving 
of misfortune to come to him. And there is withal a swelling pomp, 
three parts rhetorical and one part genuinely poetical, in the Poet's style, 
which gives a tone, and prepares the fancy to enter readily into the 
spirit of the tragedy. This effect the author wished to produce; he felt 
that the piece required it; he was so preoccupied with the Timon he 
conceived that he sets to work with a Timon-rich hue of fancy and 
feeling; to this note he pitches himself, and begins his measured march 
"bold and forth on." What he has assumed to feel he wishes spectators 
to feel; and he leaves his style to be colored by his feeling, because he 
knows that such is the way to make them feel it. And we do feel it, and 
know also that we are made thus to feel through an art which we can 
perceive and admire. On the whole, this introduction opens upon the 
tragedy with just such a display of high-sounding phrases, such a fine 
appropriateness, such a vague presentiment, and such a rapid, yet artful, 
rising from indifference to interest, that it seems easiest to suppose the 
author to be writing while his conceptions of what is to follow are 
freshest and as yet unwrought out. We cannot ask him; even while we 
have overlooked him in his labor, his form has faded, and we are again 
in this dull every-day Present.
We have seen him take up his    
    
		
	
	
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