登陆注册
19665000000043

第43章 PEN,PENCIL AND POISON -A STUDY IN GREEN(30)

GILBERT.The difference between objective and subjective work is one of external form merely.It is accidental,not essential.All artistic creation is absolutely subjective.The very landscape that Corot looked at was,as he said himself,but a mood of his own mind;and those great figures of Greek or English drama that seem to us to possess an actual existence of their own,apart from the poets who shaped and fashioned them,are,in their ultimate analysis,simply the poets themselves,not as they thought they were,but as they thought they were not;and by such thinking came in strange manner,though but for a moment,really so to be.For out of ourselves we can never pass,nor can there be in creation what in the creator was not.Nay,I would say that the more objective a creation appears to be,the more subjective it really is.Shakespeare might have met Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in the white streets of London,or seen the serving-men of rival houses bite their thumbs at each other in the open square;but Hamlet came out of his soul,and Romeo out of his passion.They were elements of his nature to which he gave visible form,impulses that stirred so strongly within him that he had,as it were perforce,to suffer them to realise their energy,not on the lower plane of actual life,where they would have been trammelled and constrained and so made imperfect,but on that imaginative plane of art where Love can indeed find in Death its rich fulfilment,where one can stab the eavesdropper behind the arras,and wrestle in a new-made grave,and make a guilty king drink his own hurt,and see one's father's spirit,beneath the glimpses of the moon,stalking in complete steel from misty wall to wall.Action being limited would have left Shakespeare unsatisfied and unexpressed;and,just as it is because he did nothing that he has been able to achieve everything,so it is because he never speaks to us of himself in his plays that his plays reveal him to us absolutely,and show us his true nature and temperament far more completely than do those strange and exquisite sonnets,even,in which he bares to crystal eyes the secret closet of his heart.Yes,the objective form is the most subjective in matter.Man is least himself when he talks in his own person.Give him a mask,and he will tell you the truth.

ERNEST.The critic,then,being limited to the subjective form,will necessarily be less able fully to express himself than the artist,who has always at his disposal the forms that are impersonal and objective.

GILBERT.Not necessarily,and certainly not at all if he recognises that each mode of criticism is,in its highest development,simply a mood,and that we are never more true to ourselves than when we are inconsistent.The aesthetic critic,constant only to the principle of beauty in all things,will ever be looking for fresh impressions,winning from the various schools the secret of their charm,bowing,it may be,before foreign altars,or smiling,if it be his fancy,at strange new gods.What other people call one's past has,no doubt,everything to do with them,but has absolutely nothing to do with oneself.The man who regards his past is a man who deserves to have no future to look forward to.When one has found expression for a mood,one has done with it.You laugh;but believe me it is so.Yesterday it was Realism that charmed one.One gained from it that NOUVEAU FRISSONwhich it was its aim to produce.One analysed it,explained it,and wearied of it.At sunset came the LUMINISTE in painting,and the SYMBOLISTE in poetry,and the spirit of mediaevalism,that spirit which belongs not to time but to temperament,woke suddenly in wounded Russia,and stirred us for a moment by the terrible fascination of pain.To-day the cry is for Romance,and already the leaves are tremulous in the valley,and on the purple hill-tops walks Beauty with slim gilded feet.The old modes of creation linger,of course.The artists reproduce either themselves or each other,with wearisome iteration.But Criticism is always moving on,and the critic is always developing.

Nor,again,is the critic really limited to the subjective form of expression.The method of the drama is his,as well as the method of the epos.He may use dialogue,as he did who set Milton talking to Marvel on the nature of comedy and tragedy,and made Sidney and Lord Brooke discourse on letters beneath the Penshurst oaks;or adopt narration,as Mr.Pater is fond of doing,each of whose Imaginary Portraits -is not that the title of the book?-presents to us,under the fanciful guise of fiction,some fine and exquisite piece of criticism,one on the painter Watteau,another on the philosophy of Spinoza,a third on the Pagan elements of the early Renaissance,and the last,and in some respects the most suggestive,on the source of that Aufklarung,that enlightening which dawned on Germany in the last century,and to which our own culture owes so great a debt.Dialogue,certainly,that wonderful literary form which,from Plato to Lucian,and from Lucian to Giordano Bruno,and from Bruno to that grand old Pagan in whom Carlyle took such delight,the creative critics of the world have always employed,can never lose for the thinker its attraction as a mode of expression.By its means he can both reveal and conceal himself,and give form to every fancy,and reality to every mood.

By its means he can exhibit the object from each point of view,and show it to us in the round,as a sculptor shows us things,gaining in this manner all the richness and reality of effect that comes from those side issues that are suddenly suggested by the central idea in its progress,and really illumine the idea more completely,or from those felicitous after-thoughts that give a fuller completeness to the central scheme,and yet convey something of the delicate charm of chance.

ERNEST.By its means,too,he can invent an imaginary antagonist,and convert him when he chooses by some absurdly sophistical argument.

同类推荐
  • 荆州记

    荆州记

    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。
  • Cymbeline

    Cymbeline

    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。
  • 比丘尼受戒录

    比丘尼受戒录

    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。
  • 脉诀乳海

    脉诀乳海

    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。
  • 西山亮禅师语录

    西山亮禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 吾皇盛宠:惊世妃子笑

    吾皇盛宠:惊世妃子笑

    十二岁那年,他在宫苑繁花下的荒唐行径,害她神魂受惊,午夜噩梦惊醒;十三岁那年,他惊鸿一瞥再不能忘怀,幽梦恼襄王,势要摘下那朵倾国之花;十五岁那年,他说:“杭儿,我会让你成为全天下最幸福的女人。”尝矜绝代色,复恃倾城姿。此女本应天上有,不知为谁落人间。。。
  • 词坛丛话

    词坛丛话

    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。
  • 异界星灵

    异界星灵

    陆雷穿越了。他很倒霉。因为他莫名退化到自己六岁时的身体,而且丧失了一切记忆。不过他也很幸运。因为他被一头因丧子之痛导致精神失常的母龙收养了。十年后,他在契约首个星灵时意外恢复了一点记忆。这时,他惊讶的发现……“什么?这白羊座星灵之钥竟然是我家大门钥匙!”“金牛座星灵之钥竟然是我家铁门钥匙!”“……”于是,一段关于星灵的传奇便从此在艾波利大陆流传。
  • 海明武神

    海明武神

    也不知是前世跟她有缘,还是今生跟她有约……也不知是一见钟情,还是命中注定……总之,这一刻,海明竟然……竟然爱上公主……从此,他踏上了惊险的旅程,只为取公主妻。因为,公主是他的宿命。
  • 残酷总裁无心妻

    残酷总裁无心妻

    一个为爱狂野的男人,一个为爱满身伤痕的女人。在豪门圈子里,明明是最受瞩目的一对恋人。暗地里,女人却是一个被囚的金丝鸟,永远也飞不出他的掌控。待到真正了解了自己的心时,爱情却好像离她远去。
  • EXO之姐姐

    EXO之姐姐

    一岁那年,莫清被养父母收养,随了养母的姓氏姓安,从此有了一个家。那时候,莫清关于孤儿院的记忆,几乎没有。一岁半,养母生了个弟弟,难产而亡,弟弟随了养父的姓氏,叫朴灿烈。养父希望他的生命能够灿烂,热烈。安莫清守着小小的婴儿,心里发誓,要对弟弟好。
  • 破天战神

    破天战神

    一个少年,一把剑,一根项链牵扯出一段恩怨情仇,谱写出一个少年的崛起。本书结合了中西玄幻,绚烂的魔法、武技带你进入一个神奇的世界。
  • 我欲轮回逆苍天

    我欲轮回逆苍天

    有一剑,名曰九幽,有一人,名为陈阳,人为仇生,剑为人狂,情路,为谁所困,巅峰又为谁而弃。
  • 虚空的夏之恋

    虚空的夏之恋

    原来,他的每一个改变,都能轻易地让我落泪。此刻的我,眼泪早就像潮水般汹涌着,原谅我,任由悲伤流放。
  • 三国武林群侠传

    三国武林群侠传

    二十年前天心集团挖出了一台神秘的上古机器,这台拥有史前文明的机器可以让玩家自由穿越虚拟时空。萧羽凡,天心集团有史以来最年轻的策划总监;楚狂歌,天心集团天赋最高的程序工程师。一台揭开上古神仙失踪之谜的神秘机器,野心勃勃的楚狂歌妄图长生不老,一统天下。萧羽凡意外卷入神秘的三国世界,只是这个三国为什么有那么多武侠高手乱入?萧峰和郭靖的降龙十八掌到底谁更厉害?金庸和古龙小说谁的武侠人物武功更高?吕布能否捍卫三国第一猛将的位置?是楚狂歌一统天下,而是萧羽凡力挽狂澜与即倒?更多精彩,尽在《煞血三国》