登陆注册
4705400000165

第165章

It is impossible to deny, however, that Walpole's writings have real merit, and merit of a very rare, though not of a very high kind. Sir Joshua Reynolds used to say that, though nobody would for a moment compare Claude to Raphael, there would be another Raphael before there was another Claude. And we own that we expect to see fresh Humes and fresh Burkes before we again fall in with that peculiar combination of moral and intellectual qualities to which the writings of Walpole owe their extraordinary popularity.

It is easy to describe him by negatives. He had not a creative imagination. He had not a pure taste. He was not a great reasoner. There is indeed scarcely any writer in whose works it would be possible to find so many contradictory judgments, so many sentences of extravagant nonsense. Nor was it only in his familiar correspondence that he wrote in this flighty and inconsistent manner, but in long and elaborate books, in books repeatedly transcribed and intended for the public eye. We will give an instance or two; for without instances readers not very familiar with his works will scarcely understand our meaning. In the Anecdotes of Painting, he states, very truly, that the art declined after the commencement of the civil wars. He proceeds to inquire why this happened. The explanation, we should have thought, would have been easily found. He might have mentioned the loss of a king who was the most munificent and judicious patron that the fine arts have ever had in England, the troubled state of the country, the distressed condition of many of the aristocracy, perhaps also the austerity of the victorious party.

These circumstances, we conceive, fully account for the phaenomenon. But this solution was not odd enough to satisfy Walpole. He discovers another cause for the decline of the art, the want of models. Nothing worth painting, it seems, was left to paint. "How picturesque," he exclaims, "was the figure of an Anabaptist!"--as if puritanism had put out the sun and withered the trees; as if the civil wars had blotted out the expression of character and passion from the human lip and brow; as if many of the men whom Vandyke painted had not been living in the time of the Commonwealth, with faces little the worse for wear; as if many of the beauties afterwards portrayed by Lely were not in their prime before the Restoration; as if the garb or the features of Cromwell and Milton were less picturesque than those of the round-faced peers, as like each other as eggs to eggs, who look out from the middle of the periwigs of Kneller. In the Memoirs, again, Walpole sneers at the Prince of Wales, afterwards George the Third, for presenting a collection of books to one of the American colleges during the Seven Years' War, and says that, instead of books, his Royal Highness ought to have sent arms and ammunition, as if a war ought to suspend all study and all education; or as if it were the business of the Prince of Wales to supply the colonies with military stores out of his own pocket. We have perhaps dwelt too long on these passages; but we have done so because they are specimens of Walpole's manner.

Everybody who reads his works with attention will find that they swarm with loose and foolish observations like those which we have cited; observations which might pass in conversation or in a hasty letter, but which are unpardonable in books deliberately written and repeatedly corrected.

He appears to have thought that he saw very far into men; but we are under the necessity of altogether dissenting from his opinion. We do not conceive that he had any power of discerning the finer shades of character. He practised an art, however, which, though easy and even vulgar, obtains for those who practise it the reputation of discernment with ninety-nine people out of a hundred. He sneered at everybody, put on every action the worst construction which it would bear, "spelt every man backward," to borrow the Lady Hero's phrase, "Turned every man the wrong side out, And never gave to truth and virtue that Which simpleness and merit purchaseth."

In this way any man may, with little sagacity and little trouble, be considered by those whose good opinion is not worth having as a great judge of character.

It is said that the hasty and rapacious Kneller used to send away the ladies who sate to him as soon as he had sketched their faces, and to paint the figure and hands from his housemaid. It was in much the same way that Walpole portrayed the minds oft others. He copied from the life only those glaring and obvious peculiarities which could not escape the most superficial observation. The rest of the canvas he filled up, in a careless dashing way, with knave and fool, mixed in such proportions as pleased Heaven. What a difference between these daubs and the masterly portraits of Clarendon!

同类推荐
  • 古今译经图纪续

    古今译经图纪续

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • TOM SAWYER ABROAD

    TOM SAWYER ABROAD

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲红梨记

    六十种曲红梨记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 张真人金石灵砂论

    张真人金石灵砂论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金刚般若论会释

    金刚般若论会释

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 从虚幻走到现实

    从虚幻走到现实

    武侠世界:小李飞刀与灵犀一指数强孰弱?电影世界:武林高手和超级英雄难分高低?动漫世界:一拳琦玉vs超赛悟空,谁更胜一筹?修仙世界:神界神皇能否战胜洪荒祖巫?高武世界:三千武道强者横压宇宙,镇压一切敌!四十亿年后地球武道崛起,再起波澜!超脱世界:我是虚假还是真是,待我破开次元维度一探究竟。主世界:虚无帝国破灭万千宇宙,谁与争锋!【另一本书,二次元,《我们的目标是星辰宇宙》。】
  • 惊华天女嫡女妖娆

    惊华天女嫡女妖娆

    一个传奇般的女子,一个被大陆的人所敬仰的女子,别人只知道她光鲜的一面,却不知她曾经所遭受的一切。从小就被父母打入导致不能让她修炼的东西,还将她的灵魂撕裂混入异世,导致她从小低人一等,直到两片灵魂结合,得到了上古传承,修炼突飞猛进,从此她踏上一条强者路
  • 三月婚情,只要宝宝不要爹

    三月婚情,只要宝宝不要爹

    2016年7月新书《一吻倾情,总裁的秘婚佳妻》开更啦,求收藏~~~~http://wkkk.net/a/1311352/她不相信婚姻,却在遇见他的时候,提出结婚。他也不相信婚姻,却鬼迷心窍的同意了。不过,新婚生活似乎美好的超出他的预期。他喜欢每天早晨餐桌上摆好的营养早餐;他喜欢每天下班之前接到她的电话,问他要不要回家吃晚饭;他喜欢所谓的夫妻生活,事后抱着她睡的感觉很好。总之,婚姻生活其实也没有他想像的那么糟糕。他以为他和她的日子,过得相当和谐。可是该死的!她居然在结婚三个月之后,提出离婚!结婚的时候,他没有考虑就同意了,可是离婚?他要好好考虑一下。他还没有考虑出个结果来就已经气炸了!她把离婚协议书放在他的面前,一百万的赡养费是她提的唯一要求。他勾唇冷笑,三个月换一百万,她打的是这样的如意算盘。原来她要的,不过是他的钱!他本来可以不签字,他本来可以什么都不给她。到底他还是签字了,一百万也亲自打进她的账户。他把离婚协议书甩到她脸上,“滚,老子再也不想看见你!”世界这么小。七年之后再相遇,她还是美丽的叫他恨的牙痒痒,只是身边多了个6岁的儿子,父不详。所有人都说那个孩子简直就是缩小版的他,仔细一看,确实很像。她说:“孩子是我的,和你没关系,请记住,我们早就离婚了。”原来,她和他结婚,为的只是要个孩子,她不相信婚姻,只要宝宝不要宝宝的爹!靠!他也不相信婚姻!但是,儿子和儿子的妈,他、都、要!
  • 青春不负对的人

    青春不负对的人

    阳光下,两颗心,逐渐被拉近,最终捆绑在一起……
  • 夜神泣:月下美人

    夜神泣:月下美人

    仙路飘渺,红尘难舍。夜紫曦,一个生在软红十丈中的公主,机缘巧合之下踏入仙道纷争。本以为是无意,却不想是天命所定。她以一介女子之躯,肩负起守护六界的职责,只是那潜藏在暗处的危机却让人喘不过气来。这世间果真有诛不尽的邪魔妖道,果真有笑不尽的世俗庸人。红尘情真,江湖义重。当夜紫曦一招击败神魔之主后便失踪,此时世间出现了一座号称天下第一的楼——潇湘楼,楼主夜飘渺与夜紫曦是不是同一个人?无数的疑问,无数的谜团,再次掀起一阵腥风血雨……
  • 唯有你如此不同

    唯有你如此不同

    当一个人,他存在的证据被家族抹杀,甚至连逃离过去都成了奢求。活着成了最卑微的愿望,却又在深不见底的黑暗中,遇到了此生唯一的温暖。当烈火燃尽时,自会有凤凰涅槃,当爱上一个人,就会为她征服世界。
  • 情在更深处

    情在更深处

    花一样的年龄逝去,留下的是美好的回忆,因为有了你,我不会感到孤寂,幸福是你带给我的甜果,有它我会时常想起你。你是我生命的唯一。山峰无石,树木无根,但我爱你的心会永生。岁月的流失,带着你我走向天边,因为有你,我的生活精彩无限,爱你的心儿怦怦然,愿你快乐每一天。夏日夜空的月儿小船弯弯,载着你我飞向瑶池之颠,看星星点缀的黑缎,唱一生中欢乐的歌谣,永远爱你的人与你同在!无论前世、今生还是下辈子,只要有你,我就会好,心暖意坚。
  • 故河口物语V

    故河口物语V

    这是一部有关一群拓荒者的小说。全篇以鹿女的“父辈之家”为主线,祖母贯穿始终。父亲的家大口阔之梦,母亲的粮食梦,小姑的读书梦,二叔的渔船梦……等为主要内容。糅合着鹿女及笔者的童年记忆与最初生活的体验。使之成为一部自然人情风物相结合的小说。更展示那个时期人不敌自然的悲惨,人与人之间诚挚忘我的的情感,与人对自然无限崇爱热切的矛盾心理。
  • 凌叔华文集:古韵

    凌叔华文集:古韵

    描绘了生长在清末民初官宦人家中的一个小女孩整个童年的生活体验及所观所感。这个复杂的旧式文人的大家庭中,有威严的父亲;美丽聪慧又哀婉的五妈;争风吃醋,勾心斗角的三妈和六妈;还有自己那位贤良无争的母亲;十几个兄弟姐妹;远近亲姑妈等等及佣人仆妇无数。她从小就见惯了姨太太为争宠幸、地位而争风吃醋的场面。书中还为读者讲述,叔华随了花匠老周,出门去逛隆福寺,买花肥,看曾给慈禧太后管理颐和园的花匠朋友;当那位精通六国语言的辜鸿铭来访时,叔华站在一旁,看爸爸和他一起赏竹,争论国事,等着吃云片糕;年少时留学日本,体味樱花开时绚烂之极的快乐和悲凉。
  • 千金裘

    千金裘

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。