登陆注册
5379000000010

第10章 ON THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LITERATURE(1)

(June 1823)

This is the age of societies. There is scarcely one Englishman in ten who has not belonged to some association for distributing books, or for prosecuting them; for sending invalids to the hospital, or beggars to the treadmill; for giving plate to the rich, or blankets to the poor. To be the most absurd institution among so many institutions is no small distinction; it seems, however, to belong indisputably to the Royal Society of Literature. At the first establishment of that ridiculous academy, every sensible man predicted that, in spite of regal patronage and episcopal management, it would do nothing, or do harm. And it will scarcely be denied that those expectations have hitherto been fulfilled.

I do not attack the founders of the association. Their characters are respectable; their motives, I am willing to believe, were laudable. But I feel, and it is the duty of every literary man to feel, a strong jealousy of their proceedings. Their society can be innocent only while it continues to be despicable. Should they ever possess the power to encourage merit, they must also possess the power to depress it. Which power will be more frequently exercised, let every one who has studied literary history, let every one who has studied human nature, declare.

Envy and faction insinuate themselves into all communities. They often disturb the peace, and pervert the decisions, of benevolent and scientific associations. But it is in literary academies that they exert the most extensive and pernicious influence. In the first place, the principles of literary criticism, though equally fixed with those on which the chemist and the surgeon proceed, are by no means equally recognised. Men are rarely able to assign a reason for their approbation or dislike on questions of taste; and therefore they willingly submit to any guide who boldly asserts his claim to superior discernment. It is more difficult to ascertain and establish the merits of a poem than the powers of a machine or thebenefits of a new remedy.Hence it is in literature, that quackery is most easily puffed, and excellence most easily decried.

In some degree this argument applies to academies of the fine arts; and it is fully confirmed by all that I have ever heard of that institution which annually disfigures the walls of Somerset House with an acre of spoiled canvas. But a literary tribunal is incomparably more dangerous. Other societies, at least, have no tendency to call forth any opinions on those subjects which most agitate and inflame the minds of men. The sceptic and the zealot, the revolutionist and the placeman, meet on common ground in a gallery of paintings or a laboratory of science. They can praise or censure without reference to the differences which exist between them. In a literary body this can never be the case. Literature is, and always must be, inseparably blended with politics and theology; it is the great engine which moves the feelings of a people on the most momentous questions. It is, therefore, impossible that any society can be formed so impartial as to consider the literary character of an individual abstracted from the opinions which his writings inculcate. It is not to be hoped, perhaps it is not to be wished, that the feelings of the man should be so completely forgotten in the duties of the academician. The consequences are evident. The honours and censures of this Star Chamber of the Muses will be awarded according to the prejudices of the particular sect or faction which may at the time predominate. Whigs would canvass against a Southey, Tories against a Byron. Those who might at first protest against such conduct as unjust would soon adopt it on the plea of retaliation; and the general good of literature, for which the society was professedly instituted, would be forgotten in the stronger claims of political and religious partiality.

Yet even this is not the worst. Should the institution ever acquire any influence, it will afford most pernicious facilities to every malignant coward who may desire to blast a reputation which he envies. It will furnish a secure ambuscade, behind which the Maroons of literature may take a certain and deadly aim. The editorial WE has often been fatal to rising genius; though all the world knows that it is only a form of speech, very often employed by a single needy blockhead.The academic WEwould have a far greater and more ruinous influence. Numbers, while they increase the effect, would diminish the shame, of injustice. The advantages of an open and those of an anonymous attack would be combined; and the authority of avowal would be united to the security of concealment. The serpents in Virgil, after they had destroyed Laocoon, found an asylum from the vengeance of the enraged people behind the shield of the statue of Minerva. And, in the same manner, everything that is grovelling and venomous, everything that can hiss, and everything that can sting, would take sanctuary in the recesses of this new temple of wisdom.

同类推荐
  • 整饬皖茶文牍

    整饬皖茶文牍

    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。
  • 佛灭度后棺敛葬送经

    佛灭度后棺敛葬送经

    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。
  • 佛说诸行有为经

    佛说诸行有为经

    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。
  • 太上登真三矫灵应经

    太上登真三矫灵应经

    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。
  • 咒魅经

    咒魅经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 裂锦(新版)

    裂锦(新版)

    这是一个悲凉的传奇。傅圣歆为了避免家族企业的破产,不得不依附于曾有宿怨的商界巨子易志维。他们在彼此的试探与挣扎里,慢慢陷入与对方的情感纠葛中。只是现实严酷,容不得她奢望爱情或是幸福。悲情小天后匪我思存感动经典,再续三世纠葛情仇。这一刻的爱情情深似海,而人生,注定寂寞如雪。当文字也开始哭泣……再见记忆中那些明媚的忧伤,觅一个云淡风轻的闲暇午后,在匪我思存的文字里体验一次畅快淋漓的文字之旅!
  • 倾世毒妃:兽王,抱不停

    倾世毒妃:兽王,抱不停

    她,身为二十二世纪的毒医,前职业杀手,前世无爱无恨。一朝异世重生,化身成为紫宸帝国的有名废物,赐婚北王。她是世界上最无情之人却以长情为名:冷眼想看养父一家家破人亡;面对将死的夫婿心中毫无波澜。他身中半兽之毒,命不长久却有征服天下的野心。他们一个习惯了高高在上,见惯了世态炎凉;一个习惯了个独来独往,从不懂人情世故。当这两个同样有着睥睨天下的气势的人相遇,是她先低头服软还是他百炼钢化为绕指柔?
  • 中国当代文学经典必读·1989中篇小说卷

    中国当代文学经典必读·1989中篇小说卷

    《中国当代文学经典必读·1989中篇小说卷》从全国近百种文学刊物当年发表的数以千万字的中篇小说中精选出来,旨在检阅当年中篇小说的创作实绩,公正客观地推行思想性、艺术性俱佳,有代表性,有影响力的中篇小说,实力作家,为新世纪的文学积累做出贡献。
  • 叶选医衡

    叶选医衡

    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。
  • 真情始末

    真情始末

    我们中小学生必须要加强阅读量,以便提高自己的语文素养和写作能力,以便广开视野和见识,促进身心素质不断地健康成长。但是,现在各种各样的读物卷帙浩繁,而广大中小学生时间又十分有限,因此,找到适合自己阅读的读物,才能够轻松快速地达到阅读的效果。
  • 总裁的逃妻

    总裁的逃妻

    本以为这一段情只是人生的一段插曲本以为这一个人只是生命的一个过客可谁知百转千回当再次面对时才发现他依旧在我心底从来不曾远去
  • 无尽愧

    无尽愧

    程闵深于两年后无恙地来到江语面前,便像一根刺一样时时提醒着他带给过她的伤害,带给的无尽痛楚…她信,善恶终有报。可何为善,何为恶,她迷茫了……
  • 秘密恋爱心的秘密

    秘密恋爱心的秘密

    莫毅得了绝症的时候,在何竞心面前演了一场背叛的戏,伤了何竞心的心,他死后,日记中记载了他对何竞心的爱;他觉得他跟何竞心经历了世界最遥远的距离,相爱却……可余明阳却觉得这些都不是最遥远的距离,最遥远的距离是:我爱你,向你倾诉了我的爱,却因为我的过错,你再也不相信我说的每一个字了。余明阳跟方邵旭有一场赌约,可……这个赌约的赢家到最后,为什么变成了彻彻底底的输家——————————明星的爱情就是一场秘密,一场心底深藏的秘密,这场爱情的秘密一旦被揭穿,万劫不复的究竟会是谁???
  • 陪孩子轻松走过高三

    陪孩子轻松走过高三

    本书作者不仅是一位高三教师,同时也是一位备考家长。本书记录了作者本人在高三教学和自己作为备考家长的经历。她所陪考的孩子,在她的陪考下,在高三一年中综合成绩一路上升,并如愿考取一所“211”重点大学。
  • 木偶奇遇记

    木偶奇遇记

    孤独的木匠爷爷亲手制作了一个木偶男孩,午夜,蓝仙女显灵了,她让这个木偶男孩具有了意识,能像其他男孩那样跑跑跳跳了。获得了生命的木偶男孩很快和屋子里的小动物交上了朋友。然而,木偶男孩很快就发现了自己和其他男孩子的不一样。他开始不满足于现状,梦想着找到蓝仙女让她将自己彻底变为一个真正的男孩子。于是,他踏上了旅程。