登陆注册
5379000000046

第46章 ON THE ATHENIAN ORATORS(1)

(August 1824)

"To the famous orators repair, Those ancient, whose resistless eloquence Wielded at will that fierce democratie, Shook the arsenal, and fulmined over Greece To Macedon and Artaxerxes' throne."--Milton.

The celebrity of the great classical writers is confined within no limits, except those which separate civilised from savage man. Their works are the common property of every polished nation. They have furnished subjects for the painter, and models for the poet. In the minds of the educated classes throughout Europe, their names are indissolubly associated with the endearing recollections of childhood,--the old school- room,--the dog-eared grammar,--the first prize,--the tears so often shed and so quickly dried. So great is the veneration with which they are regarded, that even the editors and commentators who perform the lowest menial offices to their memory, are considered, like the equerries and chamberlains of sovereign princes, as entitled to a high rank in the table of literary precedence. It is, therefore, somewhat singular that their productions should so rarely have been examined on just and philosophical principles of criticism.

The ancient writers themselves afford us but little assistance. When they particularise, they are commonly trivial: when they would generalise, they become indistinct. An exception must, indeed, be made in favour of Aristotle. Both in analysis and in combination, that great man was without a rival. No philosopher has ever possessed, in an equal degree, the talent either of separating established systems into their primary elements, or of connecting detached phenomena in harmonious systems. He was the great fashioner of the intellectual chaos; he changed its darkness into light, and its discord into order. He brought to literary researches the same vigour and amplitude of mind to which both physical and metaphysical science are so greatly indebted. His fundamental principles of criticism are excellent. To cite only a single instance:--the doctrine which he established, that poetry is an imitative art, when justlyunderstood, is to the critic what the compass is to the navigator. With it he may venture upon the most extensive excursions. Without it he must creep cautiously along the coast, or lose himself in a trackless expanse, and trust, at best, to the guidance of an occasional star. It is a discovery which changes a caprice into a science.

The general propositions of Aristotle are valuable. But the merit of the superstructure bears no proportion to that of the foundation. This is partly to be ascribed to the character of the philosopher, who, though qualified to do all that could be done by the resolving and combining powers of the understanding, seems not to have possessed much of sensibility or imagination. Partly, also, it may be attributed to the deficiency of materials. The great works of genius which then existed were not either sufficiently numerous or sufficiently varied to enable any man to form a perfect code of literature. To require that a critic should conceive classes of composition which had never existed, and then investigate their principles, would be as unreasonable as the demand of Nebuchadnezzar, who expected his magicians first to tell him his dream and then to interpret it.

With all his deficiencies, Aristotle was the most enlightened and profound critic of antiquity. Dionysius was far from possessing the same exquisite subtilty, or the same vast comprehension. But he had access to a much greater number of specimens; and he had devoted himself, as it appears, more exclusively to the study of elegant literature. His peculiar judgments are of more value than his general principles. He is only the historian of literature. Aristotle is its philosopher.

Quintilian applied to general literature the same principles by which he had been accustomed to judge of the declamations of his pupils. He looks for nothing but rhetoric, and rhetoric not of the highest order. He speaks coldly of the incomparable works of Aeschylus. He admires, beyond expression, those inexhaustible mines of common-places, the plays of Euripides. He bestows a few vague words on the poetical character of Homer. He then proceeds to consider him merely as an orator. An orator Homer doubtless was, and a great orator. But surely nothing is more remarkable, in his admirable works, than the art withwhich his oratorical powers are made subservient to the purposes of poetry. Nor can I think Quintilian a great critic in his own province. Just as are many of his remarks, beautiful as are many of his illustrations, we can perpetually detect in his thoughts that flavour which the soil of despotism generally communicates to all the fruits of genius. Eloquence was, in his time, little more than a condiment which served to stimulate in a despot the jaded appetite for panegyric, an amusement for the travelled nobles and the blue- stocking matrons of Rome. It is, therefore, with him, rather a sport than a war; it is a contest of foils, not of swords. He appears to think more of the grace of the attitude than of the direction and vigour of the thrust. It must be acknowledged, in justice to Quintilian, that this is an error to which Cicero has too often given the sanction, both of his precept and of his example.

同类推荐
  • 郭公案

    郭公案

    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。
  • 咏史诗·昆阳

    咏史诗·昆阳

    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。
  • 读书说

    读书说

    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。
  • 上清诸真人授经时颂金真章

    上清诸真人授经时颂金真章

    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。
  • 女范捷录

    女范捷录

    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
  • 堕仙

    堕仙

    她要上蜀山修仙,只是为了“卧底”救出那条救了她一命、答应护她一世的千年白蛇!却不想白蛇没救出来,却救活了一位被钉死在诛仙柱上的出尘罪仙,成为他徒弟。这是一个,千年白蛇与蜀山修仙小女娃你报我的恩、我报你的恩,报着报着就抱到了一起的故事。
  • 空间之宠妾难养

    空间之宠妾难养

    苏绮沫,异世而来的穿越女,本应是异世高管,却意外来到历史上没有的架空大盛王朝,更是意外获得随身空间,人生信条是:生命诚可贵,爱情价更高,若为自由故,两者皆可抛。陌墨,大盛王朝的当朝四皇子,更是已故元皇后的唯一独子,在这个立贤不立“长”的皇室,他知道一个没有母后的皇子在宫中是多么艰难,他韬光养晦,事事肃吝,在外人看来,他是一个性情阴翳的冷面皇子。他的人生宗旨是:只要自己看上了,就要不择手段地夺过来!桃花林的那一眼,注定了他的纠缠,也造就了他们此生的牵绊。苍劲有力的食指轻抬起她的下颚,拇指来回慢慢摸索“怎么?爷受罚你好像很高兴?”原本深埋着的头在被抬起瞬间立马轻启朱唇“爷说笑了,实际上我很难过!真的很难过!”说着还眨了两下那双黑葡萄般的杏眼,里面瞬间雾气蒙蒙。
  • 梦寐

    梦寐

    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。
  • 田园贵女

    田园贵女

    一朝穿越,看着陌生的山脉,破败的村子,摇摇欲坠的房子,安然额角青筋颤抖,咬牙切齿的想着,还好,还有一群热情好客的村民。所谓滴水之恩当涌泉相报,可要报恩,得先致富。种地?抱歉,她长这么大连农具都没碰过。进城务工?那些没技术含量工资又差的工作怎么配得上她?她还不信了,自己堂堂高级白领会混不下去,小小的一个举动,钱就进了口袋,嘴巴动动,就改变了世世代代贫穷的村民们的命运,只是,这位仁兄,我只是报答一下初来贵地时你们的招待之情,怎么反倒成你的恩人了,你这一副‘大恩大德无以为报唯有以身相许’的表情给谁看呢?“易唯安,你此生最大的梦想是什么?”“娶你。”“……你有没有听过一句话叫癞蛤蟆想吃天鹅肉?”她暗讽。“所以你现在是同意让我吃了吗?”某人眨巴眼睛无辜看着她。“……”说好的矜持呢,说好的老实忠厚呢,安然抚额,这货啥时候脸皮这么厚了,她绝逼不认识他。
  • 窗外有张脸

    窗外有张脸

    一个春末夏初的晚上,地处桂北湘南的高州城雷鸣电闪、风雨大作,已经下了两天两夜的雨不仅未风停雨住,反而越下越大。夜渐深,雨更猛,风裹雨打枝,雷挟电破云,整个高州城仿佛笼罩在一片世界末日的恐惧之中。林南生坐在灯火通明的红房子鞋店里,一边慢悠悠地品着功夫茶,一边望着雾蒙蒙的窗外发呆。大街上偶尔疾驶而过的汽车,以及匆匆跑过窗前的行人,都没能惊扰他的沉思,好象那一切都是另一个世界的事,与他无关。过了一会儿,林南生转头望了望正伏在柜台上瞌睡的女店员李小菲,点了一支烟,透过淡淡的青烟继续他的呆状。
  • 星霸

    星霸

    当我们仰望星空时,是否想过未来的我们会是怎样?当机甲战舰在宇宙中翱翔,当人类的古武崛起的时候,就是人类正式加入宇宙这个大家庭的时候。在这个波澜壮阔的宇宙中,人类不想着强大,最后的结果就意味着灭亡。一个垃圾星球的小子,机缘巧合中,走进了英才辈出,缤纷色彩的宇宙,从此开始了一段传奇。
  • 野蛮甜妻不好宠

    野蛮甜妻不好宠

    某日,有人采访莫绍霆和温陌。采访者:请问莫太太,如果有人欺负您,您会怎么办?温陌一脸淡然:干翻他。采访者:……采访者:如果有人欺负您朋友呢?温陌:毫不犹豫的干翻他。采访者:如果有人欺负莫总呢?温陌倪视一眼坐在一旁的人:当然是保护他啊。一直面无表情的莫绍霆抬眸深深看了她一眼,嘴角微勾。采访者趁机问莫绍霆:莫总,莫太太这么厉害,那莫总肯定更厉害,不知道莫总平日里都干什么呢?莫绍霆:温陌。采访者:啥?莫绍霆邪邪一笑:温陌。采访者:……她好像听懂了。温陌:……
  • 亿万甜妻花样多

    亿万甜妻花样多

    妹妹和未婚夫联手陷害,却让她阴差阳错的做了至高无上的龙太太,龙先生这辈子没有多大的爱好,唯一要做的事情就是宠老婆。“老公,他们欺负我,你说怎么办?”“看你心情喽!想怎么办怎么办?”"老公,他们说你怕老婆。""谁说的,让他站出来。""我说的!""那就算了。"龙太太最高兴做的事情就是教渣渣如何做人。龙先生最得意的事情,就是宠她,宠她。
  • 全类型男神攻略

    全类型男神攻略

    这世上男神犹如黑夜繁星,品种良多,五花八门,总有一款适合你,什么?你全都要!嗯……那你需要一款诸天万界独一无二巧谋善计无所不能全天在线指导的神奇系统一部!来来来,让我们先从你那180的体重开始改变!
  • 泰国人

    泰国人

    本书从多个层面描述了泰国人的性格,探讨其国民性和民族性,书中还选择了一些能反映泰国人民生活和自然风貌的图片。