登陆注册
19665000000025

第25章 PEN,PENCIL AND POISON -A STUDY IN GREEN(12)

On a wall of fresh plaster,stained with bright sandyx or mixed with milk and saffron,he pictured one who trod with tired feet the purple white-starred fields of asphodel,one 'in whose eyelids lay the whole of the Trojan War,'Polyxena,the daughter of Priam;or figured Odysseus,the wise and cunning,bound by tight cords to the mast-step,that he might listen without hurt to the singing of the Sirens,or wandering by the clear river of Acheron,where the ghosts of fishes flitted over the pebbly bed;or showed the Persian in trews and mitre flying before the Greek at Marathon,or the galleys clashing their beaks of brass in the little Salaminian bay.

He drew with silver-point and charcoal upon parchment and prepared cedar.Upon ivory and rose-coloured terracotta he painted with wax,making the wax fluid with juice of olives,and with heated irons making it firm.Panel and marble and linen canvas became wonderful as his brush swept across them;and life seeing her own image,was still,and dared not speak.All life,indeed,was his,from the merchants seated in the market-place to the cloaked shepherd lying on the hill;from the nymph hidden in the laurels and the faun that pipes at noon,to the king whom,in long green-curtained litter,slaves bore upon oil-bright shoulders,and fanned with peacock fans.Men and women,with pleasure or sorrow in their faces,passed before him.He watched them,and their secret became his.Through form and colour he re-created a world.

All subtle arts belonged to him also.He held the gem against the revolving disk,and the amethyst became the purple couch for Adonis,and across the veined sardonyx sped Artemis with her hounds.He beat out the gold into roses,and strung them together for necklace or armlet.He beat out the gold into wreaths for the conqueror's helmet,or into palmates for the Tyrian robe,or into masks for the royal dead.On the back of the silver mirror he graved Thetis borne by her Nereids,or love-sick Phaedra with her nurse,or Persephone,weary of memory,putting poppies in her hair.

The potter sat in his shed,and,flower-like from the silent wheel,the vase rose up beneath his hands.He decorated the base and stem and ears with pattern of dainty olive-leaf,or foliated acanthus,or curved and crested wave.Then in black or red he painted lads wrestling,or in the race:knights in full armour,with strange heraldic shields and curious visors,leaning from shell-shaped chariot over rearing steeds:the gods seated at the feast or working their miracles:the heroes in their victory or in their pain.Sometimes he would etch in thin vermilion lines upon a ground of white the languid bridegroom and his bride,with Eros hovering round them -an Eros like one of Donatello's angels,a little laughing thing with gilded or with azure wings.On the curved side he would write the name of his friend.[Greek text which cannot be reproduced]tells us the story of his days.Again,on the rim of the wide flat cup he would draw the stag browsing,or the lion at rest,as his fancy willed it.From the tiny perfume-bottle laughed Aphrodite at her toilet,and,with bare-limbed Maenads in his train,Dionysus danced round the wine-jar on naked must-stained feet,while,satyr-like,the old Silenus sprawled upon the bloated skins,or shook that magic spear which was tipped with a fretted fir-cone,and wreathed with dark ivy.And no one came to trouble the artist at his work.No irresponsible chatter disturbed him.He was not worried by opinions.By the Ilyssus,says Arnold somewhere,there was no Higginbotham.By the Ilyssus,my dear Gilbert,there were no silly art congresses bringing provincialism to the provinces and teaching the mediocrity how to mouth.By the Ilyssus there were no tedious magazines about art,in which the industrious prattle of what they do not understand.On the reed-grown banks of that little stream strutted no ridiculous journalism monopolising the seat of judgment when it should be apologising in the dock.The Greeks had no art-critics.

GILBERT.Ernest,you are quite delightful,but your views are terribly unsound.I am afraid that you have been listening to the conversation of some one older than yourself.That is always a dangerous thing to do,and if you allow it to degenerate into a habit you will find it absolutely fatal to any intellectual development.As for modern journalism,it is not my business to defend it.It justifies its own existence by the great Darwinian principle of the survival of the vulgarest.I have merely to do with literature.

ERNEST.But what is the difference between literature and journalism?

GILBERT.Oh!journalism is unreadable,and literature is not read.

That is all.But with regard to your statement that the Greeks had no art-critics,I assure you that is quite absurd.It would be more just to say that the Greeks were a nation of art-critics.

ERNEST.Really?

GILBERT.Yes,a nation of art-critics.But I don't wish to destroy the delightfully unreal picture that you have drawn of the relation of the Hellenic artist to the intellectual spirit of his age.To give an accurate description of what has never occurred is not merely the proper occupation of the historian,but the inalienable privilege of any man of parts and culture.Still less do I desire to talk learnedly.Learned conversation is either the affectation of the ignorant or the profession of the mentally unemployed.And,as for what is called improving conversation,that is merely the foolish method by which the still more foolish philanthropist feebly tries to disarm the just rancour of the criminal classes.No:let me play to you some mad scarlet thing by Dvorek.The pallid figures on the tapestry are smiling at us,and the heavy eyelids of my bronze Narcissus are folded in sleep.

同类推荐
  • 能断金刚般若波罗蜜经

    能断金刚般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 无文道灿禅师语录

    无文道灿禅师语录

    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。
  • 云溪俍亭挺禅师语录

    云溪俍亭挺禅师语录

    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。
  • 景景医话

    景景医话

    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。
  • 台湾海防并开山日记

    台湾海防并开山日记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 倾君绝恋之冷冷君心

    倾君绝恋之冷冷君心

    她是一个刺客,一次任务卷入一场勾心斗角的虐爱,阴谋?血海深仇?商界龙头和组织老大,真相一步一步逼近。“你只是他的影子?”他为了保护她,不惜一切骗了她。”如果要恨你就尽管恨吧。“两个男人,一个霸道,一个专宠冷漠,她该何去何从。
  • 变世鸿途

    变世鸿途

    黑色宇宙,地球少年湛深元,借变世之阵,突破虚空境,于宇宙之巅鸿河,决战刹神。惊世之战,响彻天地,灭刹神,平变世。两年后,两个宇宙之间的隔绝处,鸿河,却出现了极大的裂痕,诡异光芒降临,恐怖强者入侵,宇宙即将覆灭……黑色宇宙,走投无路,唯有一法逆苍天;白色宇宙,变世之阵,救世之道亦变世。集齐21种神力,成功启动变世之阵,此乃拯救宇宙的唯一出路,但是阵法的启动却又仅仅是一切的开端……
  • 凌风逍遥传

    凌风逍遥传

    为心爱的女人堕落成魔,世人皆笑我为何成魔?我说坚守本心,一心向道,成魔又有何不好且看我南宫凌风如何成就无上魔体,独掌九天十地
  • 革命军

    革命军

    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。
  • 写给女人

    写给女人

    这是曾经激励过数千万人的著作,它如今也必将激励着你我,在坎坷的人生旅途上,奋力拼搏,享受生活。如果放弃一根小小的荆棘,就可以得到更多的幸福,相信所有的妻子都会回答:我愿意。但真正伟大的妻子并不仅仅如此。她还会成为伴侣背后的支撑,令其获得更大的成就;她亦会娴熟地打理生活,令幸福和美满遍布人生的各个角落。这部久负盛名的经典,不但能令无数女性获得更具活力、更高品质和更令人满意的生活,亦能造就伟大的女人,培养伟大的男人。
  • 空间之锦绣小农女

    空间之锦绣小农女

    沈青燕意外坠楼,再次睁眼,发现自己被亲爹除族,亲母新丧,极品亲戚欺压。不过好在她有空间在手,哪怕身边有再多的极品也不怕,养个小妹那是小菜一碟。可这捡来的麻烦男人,却是腹黑男,先把自己亲妹骗过去,后再慢慢把自己往歪路上去,一步步掉进他爱的陷阱里。本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 万古魔尊

    万古魔尊

    少女淡淡的却带着刺的话使少年走上了一条王者之路。一颗魔心能包容万物,亦能笑傲天地,主宰万物。一双手化为枷锁,困住万个世界。一双腿,脚踏大地,令之颤抖。一双眼,射出万丈冰冷光芒。何其最强者,我便是最强者!
  • 戮魔

    戮魔

    什么?我是魔王?这不可能!和平千年,恶魔诞生。人兽魔族,血脉相通。灵魂欲望,恶魔猎手。到底只是一种幻象,还是真实的世界?社会的黑暗,人心的险恶,难以捉摸。主人公幼年受尽欺辱与折磨,被一女孩所救,莫名其妙拜了一个老头为师,学魔法,练武技,其中坎坷重重,磨难不断,主人公毅然向前,走向巅峰之路,创造大陆奇迹。大陆千年浩劫,三族联合,共抗亡灵……
  • 人类地球未解之谜

    人类地球未解之谜

    本读本是我们在新时期为当代青少年量身定做、专业打造的一套融科学性、知识性、趣味性为一体的全方位提升青少年素质水平的优秀图书。它涵盖了青少年在成长的重要时期不可或缺的科普知识,带领青少年探索神秘的大千世界,激发青少年对科学及未知空间的求知欲。我们希望以此引领青少年探求无穷的科学知识,让青少年在对知识的渴求与完善中不断成就自我。
  • 荀子(中华国学经典)

    荀子(中华国学经典)

    《荀子》的文章论题鲜明,结构严谨,说理透彻,有很强的逻辑性。语言丰富多彩,善于比喻,排比偶句很多,有他特有的风格,对后世说理文章有一定影响。《荀子》中的五篇短赋,开创了以赋为名的文学体裁;他采用当时民歌形式写的《成相篇》,文字通俗易懂,运用说唱形式来表达自己的政治、学术思想,对后世也有一定影响。荀况不愧为我国古代一位伟大的思想家和杰出的文学家、教育家。此外,荀子还是阴阳家的代表人物之一。