societycold spectators of a colder spectacle repeatedly masked in the warm colors of dissimulating love. In such a world the distinction between a woman and a thing of beauty is continually collapsing, as one sees in Landon's wonderful lines "Lady, thy face is very beautiful," where we are never sure if the text is addressing a mirror, a painting, or a woman.
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A poet of dis enchantments, Landon works by putting the vagueries of imagination on full display:
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| | Ay, gaze upon her rose-wreath'd hair, And gaze upon her smile: Seem as you drank the very air Her breath perfumed the while: ("Revenge," 1829)
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The enchanted i(s)land is equally under the spell of the assenting "Ay" and the gazing eye. The relation between the "Ay" and the eye is a recurrent preoccupation:
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| | Ay, moralize,is it not thus We've mourn'd our hope and love? Alas! there's tears for every eye, A hawk for every dove. ("A Child Screening a Dove from a Hawk, 1825)
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Here Landon muses on a painting by Thomas Stewardson, which is triangulated by two fearful eyes (dove, child) and one cold eye (hawk). Studying the aesthetics of the painter's moralizing and sympathetic eye, the poem succeeds through its ironic and self-conscious appropriation of the hawk's point of view.
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The cruelty of the poemnot to be separated from its sentimental sympathiesanticipates the equally cruel drama displayed in "Revenge," which retraces Blake's "torments of love and jealousy":
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| | But this is fitting punishment To live and love in vain, O my wrung heart, be thou content, And feed upon his pain.
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In this world, love's "yes" is Joined to the spectacular eye ("Ay, gaze . . .") and the coupling proves disastrous. Landon's speaker succeeds by entering fully into the terms of the relationship. Identifying with
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