The heart-thought of this hook being the peculiar doctrine in Philip

Aylwin's Veiled Queen, and the effect of it upon the fortunes

of the hero and the other characters, the name 'The Renascence of

Wonder' was the first that came to my mind when confronting the

difficult question of finding a name for a book that is at once a

love-story and an expression of a creed. But eventually I decided,

and I think from the worldly point of view wisely, to give it simply

the name of the hero.

The important place in the story, however, taken by this creed did

not escape the most acute and painstaking of the critics. Madame

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Galimberti, for instance, in the elaborate study of the book which

she made in the Rivista d' Italia, gave great attention to its

central idea: so did M. Maurice Muret, in the Journal des

Debats; so did M. Henri Jacottet in La Semaine Litteraire.

Mr. Baker, again, in his recently published work on fiction,

described Aylwin as 'an imaginative romance of modern days,

the moral idea of which is man's attitude in face of the unknown,'

or, as the writer puts it, 'the renascence of wonder.' With regard to

the phrase itself, in the introduction to the latest edition of

Aylwin--the twenty-second edition--I made the following brief reply

to certain questions that have been raised by critics both in England

and on the Continent concerning it. The phrase, I said, 'The

Renascence of Wonder,' Is used to express that great revived movement of the soul of man

which is generally said to have begun with the poetry of

Wordsworth, Scott, Coleridge, and others, and after many varieties

of expression reached its culmination in the poems and pictures of

Rossetti. The phrase 'The Renascence of Wonder' merely indicates

that there are two great impulses governing man, and probably not

man only but the entire world of conscious life--the impulse of

acceptance--the impulse to take unchallenged and for granted all

the phenomena of the outer world as they are, and the impulse to

confront these phenomena with eyes of inquiry and wonder.

The painter Wilderspin says to Henry Aylwin, 'The one great event of

my life has been the reading of The Veiled Queen, your

father's hook of inspired wisdom upon the modern Renascence of Wonder

in the mind of man.' And further on he says that his own great

picture symbolical of this renascence was suggested by Philip

Aylwin's vignette. Since the original writing of Aylwin, many years

ago, I have enlarged upon its central idea in the Encyclopaedia

Britannica and in the introductory essay to the third volume of

Chambers's Cyclopaedia of English Literature, and in other

places.




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