登陆注册
19863500000001

第1章

Where Heartbreak House Stands Heartbreak House is not merely the name of the play which follows this preface. It is cultured, leisured Europe before the war.

When the play was begun not a shot had been fired; and only the professional diplomatists and the very few amateurs whose hobby is foreign policy even knew that the guns were loaded. A Russian playwright, Tchekov, had produced four fascinating dramatic studies of Heartbreak House, of which three, The Cherry Orchard, Uncle Vanya, and The Seagull, had been performed in England.

Tolstoy, in his Fruits of Enlightenment, had shown us through it in his most ferociously contemptuous manner. Tolstoy did not waste any sympathy on it: it was to him the house in which Europe was stifling its soul; and he knew that our utter enervation and futilization in that overheated drawingroom atmosphere was delivering the world over to the control of ignorant and soulless cunning and energy, with the frightful consequences which have now overtaken it. Tolstoy was no pessimist: he was not disposed to leave the house standing if he could bring it down about the ears of its pretty and amiable voluptuaries; and he wielded the pickaxe with a will. He treated the case of the inmates as one of opium poisoning, to be dealt with by seizing the patients roughly and exercising them violently until they were broad awake.

Tchekov, more of a fatalist, had no faith in these charming people extricating themselves. They would, he thought, be sold up and sent adrift by the bailiffs; and he therefore had no scruple in exploiting and even flattering their charm.

The Inhabitants Tchekov's plays, being less lucrative than swings and roundabouts, got no further in England, where theatres are only ordinary commercial affairs, than a couple of performances by the Stage Society. We stared and said, "How Russian!" They did not strike me in that way. Just as Ibsen's intensely Norwegian plays exactly fitted every middle and professional class suburb in Europe, these intensely Russian plays fitted all the country houses in Europe in which the pleasures of music, art, literature, and the theatre had supplanted hunting, shooting, fishing, flirting, eating, and drinking. The same nice people, the same utter futility. The nice people could read; some of them could write; and they were the sole repositories of culture who had social opportunities of contact with our politicians, administrators, and newspaper proprietors, or any chance of sharing or influencing their activities. But they shrank from that contact. They hated politics. They did not wish to realize Utopia for the common people: they wished to realize their favorite fictions and poems in their own lives; and, when they could, they lived without scruple on incomes which they did nothing to earn. The women in their girlhood made themselves look like variety theatre stars, and settled down later into the types of beauty imagined by the previous generation of painters. They took the only part of our society in which there was leisure for high culture, and made it an economic, political and; as far as practicable, a moral vacuum; and as Nature, abhorring the vacuum, immediately filled it up with sex and with all sorts of refined pleasures, it was a very delightful place at its best for moments of relaxation. In other moments it was disastrous. For prime ministers and their like, it was a veritable Capua.

Horseback Hall But where were our front benchers to nest if not here? The alternative to Heartbreak House was Horseback Hall, consisting of a prison for horses with an annex for the ladies and gentlemen who rode them, hunted them, talked about them, bought them and sold them, and gave nine-tenths of their lives to them, dividing the other tenth between charity, churchgoing (as a substitute for religion), and conservative electioneering (as a substitute for politics). It is true that the two establishments got mixed at the edges. Exiles from the library, the music room, and the picture gallery would be found languishing among the stables, miserably discontented; and hardy horsewomen who slept at the first chord of Schumann were born, horribly misplaced, into the garden of Klingsor; but sometimes one came upon horsebreakers and heartbreakers who could make the best of both worlds. As a rule, however, the two were apart and knew little of one another; so the prime minister folk had to choose between barbarism and Capua. And of the two atmospheres it is hard to say which was the more fatal to statesmanship.

Revolution on the Shelf Heartbreak House was quite familiar with revolutionary ideas on paper. It aimed at being advanced and freethinking, and hardly ever went to church or kept the Sabbath except by a little extra fun at weekends. When you spent a Friday to Tuesday in it you found on the shelf in your bedroom not only the books of poets and novelists, but of revolutionary biologists and even economists. Without at least a few plays by myself and Mr Granville Barker, and a few stories by Mr H. G. Wells, Mr Arnold Bennett, and Mr John Galsworthy, the house would have been out of the movement. You would find Blake among the poets, and beside him Bergson, Butler, Scott Haldane, the poems of Meredith and Thomas Hardy, and, generally speaking, all the literary implements for forming the mind of the perfect modern Socialist and Creative Evolutionist. It was a curious experience to spend Sunday in dipping into these books, and the Monday morning to read in the daily paper that the country had just been brought to the verge of anarchy because a new Home Secretary or chief of police without an idea in his head that his great-grandmother might not have had to apologize for, had refused to "recognize"some powerful Trade Union, just as a gondola might refuse to recognize a 20,000-ton liner.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 仙袍

    仙袍

    弹指间日月寂灭,生死外岁月轮回,天地容山河,乾坤纳虚无!游尽人间多少客,赤血云霄有少年……
  • 封妖卷

    封妖卷

    “融雪无声浸古道,轻掩浅石没溪桥。奇景依旧人心老,马鸣猿啼风萧萧。”这是一个小少年成长为绝世高手的故事。
  • 灵魂结缔

    灵魂结缔

    神杀了你的亲人,你只能忘却止步吗???看废材骚年如何弑神,成就一代枭雄。
  • 我的吸血鬼王子

    我的吸血鬼王子

    灰姑娘意外邂逅了自己的王子,不过,王子却别有用心,只因为她的血~~~~~源源不断主人公介绍:藤堂静:藤堂家族的私生女,父亲为了权利抛弃静及母亲回去继承大统,母亲为了养自己积劳成疾最重病危去世,唯一依靠的男友也“利用”自己考取名牌大学~~~~~玖兰闲:黑主集团首领,以大一新生进入校园,却隐藏着不为人知的秘密,遇到了静让他看到了自己的完美大餐,不过似乎大餐不容易吃啊~~~~~藤堂拓麻:猎人集团少主,追杀这个世界的吸血鬼,维持吸血鬼与人类的平衡。SA班同学:玖兰闲、藤堂静、若夜纱、琉佳、蓝堂亲们,娜子又挖新坑啦,本人钟情于吸血鬼骑士和SA特优生很久了,骨子里有着血腥的因子和贵族情节,吼吼。借此向樋野まつり和の南マキ先生致敬!!他们的漫画真是我的最爱~~~娜子这厢有礼了~~~~
  • 网游之暴力骑士

    网游之暴力骑士

    有人挡着你前进的路怎么办?砸,把他砸成肉酱!有山脉挡着你前进的路怎么办?砸,把高山全部砸平!有河流挡着你前进的路怎么办?砸,把河水全部砸干!这是一个从没玩过游戏的小白,凭着一往无前的勇气,扫荡数据流、操作流、人海流,站立在最高点的故事。本文的宗旨就是:爽、爽、爽!!!______________________________感谢中国作者素材库免费封面支持
  • 写作与语言教程

    写作与语言教程

    本书是适应21世纪复合型、应用型人才培养而编写的新型教材。着力于提升当代大学生的语言素养和写作能力。其特点是用1+1的形式结构教材的纲目,上编“写作技能”,下编“语言修养”,每编各有一个以实用为根本的知识系统,将语言运用与写作实践紧密结合,加强了写作的实践性和可操作性。本教材适用对象为高校传媒类和艺术类各专业学生,以及广大写作、语言表达艺术爱好者。
  • 冰山王子请微笑

    冰山王子请微笑

    他和她是雪带来的相遇,他和她又是无言的诀别。他对她表面冷淡而又不屑一顾,内心却可用一切护她周全;她对他依旧不忘心头,想尽自己所有换他一次笑颜。喂,我的冰山王子,我莫影儿会把你抓到然后一直霸占到老,问你可愿意?愿意的话就一起白头偕老,不愿意的话就从此形同陌路。到底结果会是怎样?且看“我”如何把冰山拿到手,且看且珍惜。话说冰山时间长了也是会被融化的,我的冰山王子你也是一样的吧?
  • 死也不换娘

    死也不换娘

    本书收集了作者在报刊杂志发表的故事作品44篇,故事情节曲折动人,故事结尾出人意料,故事人物鲜活明朗。该作品风格多样,既有让人掩卷沉思的哲思之作,也有让人扼腕感叹的悲情之笔,既有让人潸然泪下的感恩之赋,也有让人忍俊不禁的幽默之篇。作品体现了责任、奋斗、信仰、博爱、拼搏、诚信、善良等积极的阳光主题,是青少年励志的首选读物。
  • 未来通话

    未来通话

    修手机修出来个传说中能用来砸核桃大哥大以后,张大雷的生活彻底的改变了,不是说天天有核桃吃了,而是能接到来自未来的电话和短信。你想知道几天后的天气预报,没问题,掐掐手指就算出来……张大雷掏出手机翻出天气预报。想知道未来几天股市的走向,没问题,扣扣脚丫就算出来……张大雷掏出手机翻出手机报纸。通话未来,掌握未来,尽在《未来通话》(感谢书友宝宝公爵提供的简介。)感谢破烟头同学提供的书友群:18498569,人员稀少,都来聊天打屁哈!
  • 白心墨

    白心墨

    【本文无泪点,偶尔悲点,其余百分之九十九全是笑点,欢迎参观。】作为叶家唯一一个不会传承魔法的传人,叶柒毫不在意。这不要紧,可她接着就做出气死家主的举动,之后又和禁忌魔兽蛇达成契约――帮蛇族报仇。奇怪的是,叶家的人已经察觉了,却丝毫不管。这是已经把她示若空气,还是有什么不可见人的事……