登陆注册
18902400000066

第66章 Slum Novelists and the Slums(3)

We are undemocratic, then, in our religion, as is proved by our efforts to "raise" the poor. We are undemocratic in our government, as is proved by our innocent attempt to govern them well.

But above all we are undemocratic in our literature, as is proved by the torrent of novels about the poor and serious studies of the poor which pour from our publishers every month.

And the more "modern" the book is the more certain it is to be devoid of democratic sentiment.

A poor man is a man who has not got much money. This may seem a simple and unnecessary description, but in the face of a great mass of modern fact and fiction, it seems very necessary indeed;most of our realists and sociologists talk about a poor man as if he were an octopus or an alligator. There is no more need to study the psychology of poverty than to study the psychology of bad temper, or the psychology of vanity, or the psychology of animal spirits.

A man ought to know something of the emotions of an insulted man, not by being insulted, but simply by being a man. And he ought to know something of the emotions of a poor man, not by being poor, but simply by being a man. Therefore, in any writer who is describing poverty, my first objection to him will be that he has studied his subject.

A democrat would have imagined it.

A great many hard things have been said about religious slumming and political or social slumming, but surely the most despicable of all is artistic slumming. The religious teacher is at least supposed to be interested in the costermonger because he is a man;the politician is in some dim and perverted sense interested in the costermonger because he is a citizen; it is only the wretched writer who is interested in the costermonger merely because he is a costermonger. Nevertheless, so long as he is merely seeking impressions, or in other words copy, his trade, though dull, is honest.

But when he endeavours to represent that he is describing the spiritual core of a costermonger, his dim vices and his delicate virtues, then we must object that his claim is preposterous;we must remind him that he is a journalist and nothing else.

He has far less psychological authority even than the foolish missionary.

For he is in the literal and derivative sense a journalist, while the missionary is an eternalist. The missionary at least pretends to have a version of the man's lot for all time;the journalist only pretends to have a version of it from day to day.

The missionary comes to tell the poor man that he is in the same condition with all men. The journalist comes to tell other people how different the poor man is from everybody else.

If the modern novels about the slums, such as novels of Mr. Arthur Morrison, or the exceedingly able novels of Mr. Somerset Maugham, are intended to be sensational, I can only say that that is a noble and reasonable object, and that they attain it. A sensation, a shock to the imagination, like the contact with cold water, is always a good and exhilarating thing; and, undoubtedly, men will always seek this sensation (among other forms) in the form of the study of the strange antics of remote or alien peoples. In the twelfth century men obtained this sensation by reading about dog-headed men in Africa.

In the twentieth century they obtained it by reading about pig-headed Boers in Africa. The men of the twentieth century were certainly, it must be admitted, somewhat the more credulous of the two.

For it is not recorded of the men in the twelfth century that they organized a sanguinary crusade solely for the purpose of altering the singular formation of the heads of the Africans. But it may be, and it may even legitimately be, that since all these monsters have faded from the popular mythology, it is necessary to have in our fiction the image of the horrible and hairy East-ender, merely to keep alive in us a fearful and childlike wonder at external peculiarities.

But the Middle Ages (with a great deal more common sense than it would now be fashionable to admit) regarded natural history at bottom rather as a kind of joke; they regarded the soul as very important.

Hence, while they had a natural history of dog-headed men, they did not profess to have a psychology of dog-headed men.

They did not profess to mirror the mind of a dog-headed man, to share his tenderest secrets, or mount with his most celestial musings.

They did not write novels about the semi-canine creature, attributing to him all the oldest morbidities and all the newest fads.

It is permissible to present men as monsters if we wish to make the reader jump; and to make anybody jump is always a Christian act.

But it is not permissible to present men as regarding themselves as monsters, or as making themselves jump. To summarize, our slum fiction is quite defensible as aesthetic fiction;it is not defensible as spiritual fact.

One enormous obstacle stands in the way of its actuality.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 书与艺术

    书与艺术

    本书为“书文化”系列读本之一,是围绕“书与艺术”展开的读书随笔。从艺术欣赏的角度,通过诸多艺术大家对音乐、绘画、舞蹈等的亲身讲述以及作者对身边艺术的感悟,将读者带入艺术类书籍所独具的浓厚的艺术氛围,体验至美的艺术境界,领略伟大的艺术精神、艺术情操和艺术精髓。
  • 血色婚礼之无爱逃妻

    血色婚礼之无爱逃妻

    她,新婚之日是美丽幸福的新娘!新婚之夜却是一个欣赏者,那一幕她接受不了。他谋划六年,三年对她极尽热烈追求,只为让她替父还债,新婚夜,他毫不留情将她推到另一个陌生男人的怀抱。囚禁她的父亲,带陌生女人回家,都不过是折磨她的手段。而她,软弱甜美的小女人,竟然,逃了?再次的邂逅,是美丽的童话,还是痛苦的延续。
  • 雪之少女

    雪之少女

    小说是根据雪之少女游戏所写,如影响到原作者将立即停更。
  • 冥修天下

    冥修天下

    一个亡灵,一个冥修,看他们二人如何踏上复仇之路?冥修之旅,本来就是一条跌宕的修真路,每个人都为寻道而来,怀罪其身,身世不解是个谜题,它到底是福还是祸?在复仇的道路上,到底要付出什么样的高昂代价才能踏上成神之路,冥修本来就是这么的离奇。
  • 一些报应

    一些报应

    张大坦一家人跟上张大坦有钱有势的时候,是呼风唤雨,落了难遭了殃一家人落得了一个,让人唏嘘的下场。
  • 韩娱之为你守护

    韩娱之为你守护

    如果我和你是同一个国家那我们能否相遇(近距离的那种)如果我和你同一个职业那我们能否相识(亲近的那种)如果我喜欢你,你又恰好也喜欢我我和你又是怎样的结局cr.金钟大
  • 大道吞天

    大道吞天

    一片千里雷霆大海,悬浮于万里天空。一条七彩天路,从雷霆大海中伸出,天路尽头,隐隐可以看到一座高大的天门——南天门。一个全身金光的身影,行走在天路上,高昂着头,看着那高大雄伟的天门,好似便能将整个天地都吞噬——
  • 星启之门

    星启之门

    末日来临,人类面对的不仅是异域生灵的侵略,还要警惕背后的刀子。自私、贪婪、背叛、残暴、欲望……挣扎在死亡和恐惧边缘的人类,黑暗的本性被无限放大。难民营。冰冷的地面上,躺着一个衣衫褴褛的女人,她还活着,可眼神空洞的没有一丝光彩,身旁一个脏兮兮的小女孩,摇晃着她的胳膊,怯生生的问道:“妈妈,这个世界会好吗?”
  • 北郭集

    北郭集

    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。
  • 到世界去

    到世界去

    一个花甲之年的学者在世界各地的游走笔记,在路上,他经历了可能遇到的各种惊奇、刺激和彪剽悍的事,见到了许多有趣的人物,自然景观固然美不胜收,人文遗迹固然别具魅力,但这个世界到底是由“人”组成的,而这些人国籍不同,生活阅历、背景、见识想法各异,很容易碰撞出思想的火花。