登陆注册
5249100000021

第21章 {5}(6)

After all, the great fact stands, that the only lasting poet of that generation was a Puritan; one who, if he did not write dramas in sport, at least acted dramas in earnest. For drama means, etymologically, action and doing: and of the drama there are, and always will be, two kinds: one the representative, the other the actual; and for a world wherein there is no superabundance of good deeds, the latter will be always the better kind. It is good to represent heroical action in verse, and on the stage: it is good to 'purify,' as old Aristotle has it, 'the affections by pity and terror.' There is an ideal tragedy, and an ideal comedy also, which one can imagine as an integral part of the highest Christian civilisation. But when 'Christian' tragedy sinks below the standard of heathen Greek tragedy; when, instead of setting forth heroical deeds, it teaches the audience new possibilities of crime, and new excuses for those crimes; when, instead of purifying the affections by pity and terror, it confounds the moral sense by exciting pity and terror merely for the sake of excitement, careless whether they be well or ill directed: then it is of the devil, and the sooner it returns to its father the better for mankind. When, again, comedy, instead of stirring a divine scorn of baseness, or even a kindly and indulgent smile at the weaknesses and oddities of humanity, learns to make a mock of sin,--to find excuses for the popular frailties which it pretends to expose,--then it also is of the devil, and to the devil let it go; while honest and earnest men, who have no such exceeding love of 'Art' that they must needs have bad art rather than none at all, do the duty which lies nearest them amid clean whitewash and honest prose. The whole theory of 'Art, its dignity and vocation,' seems to us at times questionable, if coarse facts are to be allowed to weigh (as we suppose they are) against delicate theories. If we are to judge by the example of Italy, the country which has been most of all devoted to the practice of 'Art,' then a nation is not necessarily free, strong, moral, or happy because it can 'represent' facts, or can understand how other people have represented them. We do not hesitate to go farther, and to say that the now past weakness of Germany was to be traced in a great degree to that pernicious habit of mind which made her educated men fancy it enough to represent noble thoughts and feelings, or to analyse the representations of them: while they did not bestir themselves, or dream that there was a moral need for bestirring themselves, toward putting these thoughts and feelings into practice. Goethe herein was indeed the type of a very large class of Germans: God grant that no generation may ever see such a type common in England; and that our race, remembering ever that the golden age of the English drama was one of private immorality, public hypocrisy, ecclesiastical pedantry, and regal tyranny, and ended in the temporary downfall of Church and Crown, may be more ready to do fine things than to write fine books; and act in their lives, as those old Puritans did, a drama which their descendants may be glad to put on paper for them long after they are dead.

For surely these Puritans were dramatic enough, poetic enough, picturesque enough. We do not speak of such fanatics as Balfour of Burley, or any other extravagant person whom it may have suited Walter Scott to take as a typical personage. We speak of the average Puritan nobleman, gentleman, merchant, or farmer; and hold him to have been a picturesque and poetical man,--a man of higher imagination and deeper feeling than the average of court poets; and a man of sound taste also. What is to be said for his opinions about the stage has been seen already: but it seems to have escaped most persons' notice, that either all England is grown very foolish, or the Puritan opinions on several matters have been justified by time.

On the matter of the stage, the world has certainly come over to their way of thinking. Few highly educated men now think it worth while to go to see any play, and that exactly for the same reasons as the Puritans put forward; and still fewer highly educated men think it worth while to write plays: finding that since the grosser excitements of the imagination have become forbidden themes, there is really very little to write about.

But in the matter of dress and of manners, the Puritan triumph has been complete. Even their worst enemies have come over to their side, and the 'whirligig of time has brought about its revenge.'

Most of their canons of taste have become those of all England. High Churchmen, who still call them Roundheads and Cropped-ears, go about rounder-headed and closer cropt than they ever went. They held it more rational to cut the hair to a comfortable length than to wear effeminate curls down the back. We cut ours much shorter than they ever did. They held (with the Spaniards, then the finest gentlemen in the world) that sad, i.e. dark colours, above all black, were the fittest for all stately and earnest gentlemen. We all, from the Tractarian to the Anythingarian, are exactly of the same opinion.

同类推荐
  • A Plea for Old Cap Collier

    A Plea for Old Cap Collier

    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。
  • 释家观化还愚经

    释家观化还愚经

    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。
  • 独立

    独立

    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。
  • 云山集

    云山集

    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。
  • 贵直论

    贵直论

    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。
热门推荐
  • 小辨斋偶存

    小辨斋偶存

    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。
  • 唐语林

    唐语林

    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。
  • 繁华落尽只为等你

    繁华落尽只为等你

    沈姰从来没有想过,这样的事情会发生在自己身上。她竟然被婆婆老公,断送了婚姻!
  • 教你学成语(下)(学生语言文字写作学习手册)

    教你学成语(下)(学生语言文字写作学习手册)

    语言文字的简称就是语文。语文是人文社会科学的一门重要学科,是人们相互交流思想的工具。它既是语言文字规范的实用工具,又是文化艺术,同时也是用来积累和开拓精神财富的一门学问。
  • 沙弥学戒仪轨颂注

    沙弥学戒仪轨颂注

    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。
  • 快穿法则之我家宿主帅到爆

    快穿法则之我家宿主帅到爆

    原语死了,是被自己炸死的。而且,死后还绑定了一个病态系统。“我亲爱的主人,我相信凭借你的实力肯定可以战胜眼前的困难的。所以,还得请主人好好努力哦!”“当然!毕竟,以后还要和你“好好”执行任务的,不是吗?”原语疾速奔跑着,躲避着身后的丧尸,而她的左臂已被丧尸啃得血肉模糊。而这一切,都是系统的手笔!-----------------------------------------------------“系统,你说这人呐,就是见不得别人比他好。可我就不同,我希望你好好的,好好地从斗兽场里出来。”“我亲爱的主人,我定会不辜负你的期望。”系统听闻,笑了笑,挣扎着站起身,向在空中冷眼旁观的原语鞠了个躬。“啧啧,又是这幅虚伪的模样,无趣!”绑定了一个病态的系统又怎样呢?我啊,跟系统都是同一种人呢。
  • 倾城农门妻

    倾城农门妻

    二丫这辈子没吃过好的就成亲之前吃了个烧鸡就被噎死了……21世纪孤魂一朝穿越,打渣男、斗极品亲戚、经商致富,还顺带跟男人调情说爱。活的她只想大喊一声“好爽!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 机长烈爱,非你莫属

    机长烈爱,非你莫属

    (已完结)一对是青梅竹马,一对是契约情人。请看美丽空姐与酷帅机长之间的千回百转,痴痴缠缠。(慢热文,往后更精彩!)————————我是林筱晓。我一生最大的愿望就是让冷柏航爱上我。因为他不会,所以这只能是愿望。当某天一不小心圈圈又叉叉后,你老套地来求婚,我别别扭扭又屁颠颠地答应,然后开始一场围墙内的拉力赛。你要低调隐婚,好,隐婚就隐婚。你要充分自由,好,自由就自由。只是,当你说要分手,我真的说不出分手就分手。。。。。。爱上你,只需一秒。忘记你,却要一生。拼尽所有后,我终于学会放弃,开始忘记。背起行囊,我将要开始一场旅程,目的是没有你的地方。你说,你的生命可以没有我。那么,我的生命也将没有你。【我是冷柏航。我把天空拉得很近,却把爱情推得很远。我后悔了。不管她是否喝了孟婆汤,不管她是否有了新的爱,我要寻回她。不择手段,用尽深情。】
  • 一错成婚:总裁太难撩

    一错成婚:总裁太难撩

    婚礼上的男人,是一个陌生的男人,是这个城市中大名鼎鼎,年少多金的萧慕辰。这本应该是欧阳佳佳和男友定好结婚的日子,新郎换成了别人……脑海中出现了两张充满嘲笑和不屑的笑脸,她的闺蜜和男友,他们两个原本是她最信任的人,却没想到一直被他们耍弄!一个星期前的一场车祸,让她遇上了现在的结婚对象,豪门子弟萧慕辰……欧阳佳佳是从婚介所里跑出去的,没有跑之前,她还在陪着闺蜜演戏,闺蜜帮她挑选十几个男人的照片,没有一个是她满意的。最后,她终于忍无可忍,演不下去,她毕竟没有闺蜜戏演得好,更没有闺蜜的城府……一个星期之后,欧阳佳佳的婚礼如期举行,这场婚礼也不过是对一个人的承诺。
  • 很奇怪我爱你

    很奇怪我爱你

    这世上最甜蜜的事情是什么呢?对于林柚曦而言,最甜蜜的时刻莫过于郑陶对她的不离不弃吧。曾经那个会在前未婚夫婚礼上撒纸钱的姑娘,也渐渐收起棱角,缓缓盛开。这世上总有很多很奇怪的事情,小怪兽永远打不过奥特曼、机器猫的口袋总能掏出不一样的东西。可最奇怪的事情莫过于,曾经最不可能的两个人,最后竟然相爱了。像飞鸟和鱼、像林柚曦和郑陶。多奇怪,就这样爱上你。