登陆注册
34926300000056

第56章

And little reck I of the censure sharp May idly cavil at an idle lay."People still cavil idly, complaining that Scott did not finish, or did not polish his pieces; that he was not Keats, or was not Wordsworth. He was himself; he was the Last Minstrel, the latest, the greatest, the noblest of natural poets concerned with natural things. He sang of free, fierce, and warlike life, of streams yet rich in salmon, and moors not yet occupied by brewers; of lonely places haunted in the long grey twilights of the North; of crumbling towers where once dwelt the Lady of Branksome or the Flower of Yarrow. Nature summed up in him many a past age a world of ancient faiths; and before the great time of Britain wholly died, to Britain, as to Greece, she gave her Homer. When he was old, and tired, and near his death--so worn with trouble and labour that he actually signed his own name wrong--he wrote his latest verse, for a lady. It ends -"My country, be thou glorious still!"

and so he died, within the sound of the whisper of Tweed, foreseeing the years when his country would no more be glorious, thinking of his country only, forgetting quite the private sorrow of his own later days.

People will tell you that Scott was not a great poet; that his bolt is shot, his fame perishing. Little he cared for his fame! But for my part I think and hope that Scott can never die, till men grow up into manhood without ever having been boys--till they forget that "One glorious hour of crowded life Is worth an age without a name!"Thus, the charges against Sir Walter's poetry are, on the whole, little more than the old critical fallacy of blaming a thing for not being something else. "It takes all sorts to make a world," in poetry as in life. Sir Walter's sort is a very good sort, and in English literature its place was empty, and waiting for him. Think of what he did. English poetry had long been very tame and commonplace, written in couplets like Pope's, very artificial and smart, or sensible and slow. He came with poems of which the music seemed to gallop, like thundering hoofs and ringing bridles of a rushing border troop. Here were goblin, ghost, and fairy, fight and foray, fair ladies and true lovers, gallant knights and hard blows, blazing beacons on every hill crest and on the bartisan of every tower. Here was a world made alive again that had been dead for three hundred years--a world of men and women.

They say that the archaeology is not good. Archaeology is a science; in its application to poetry, Scott was its discoverer.

Others can name the plates of a coat of armour more learnedly than he, but he made men wear them. They call his Gothic art false, his armour pasteboard; but he put living men under his castled roofs, living men into his breastplates and taslets. Science advances, old knowledge becomes ignorance; it is poetry that does not die, and that will not die, while -"The triple pride Of Eildon looks over Strathclyde."JOHN BUNYAN Dr. Johnson once took Bishop Percy's little daughter on his knee, and asked her what she thought of the "Pilgrim's Progress." The child answered that she had not read it. "No?" replied the Doctor;"then I would not give one farthing for you," and he set her down and took no further notice of her.

This story, if true, proves that the Doctor was rather intolerant.

We must not excommunicate people because they have not our taste in books. The majority of people do not care for books at all.

There is a descendant of John Bunyan's alive now, or there was lately, who never read the "Pilgrim's Progress." Books are not in his line. Nay, Bunyan himself, who wrote sixty works, was no great reader. An Oxford scholar who visited him in his study found no books at all, except some of Bunyan's own and Foxe's "Book of Martyrs."Yet, little as the world in general cares for reading, it has read Bunyan more than most. One hundred thousand copies of the "Pilgrim"are believed to have been sold in his own day, and the story has been done into the most savage languages, as well as into those of the civilised world.

Dr. Johnson, who did not like Dissenters, praises the "invention, imagination, and conduct of the story," and knew no other book he wished longer except "Robinson Crusoe" and "Don Quixote." Well, Dr.

Johnson would not have given a farthing for ME, as I am quite contented with the present length of these masterpieces. What books do YOU wish longer? I wish Homer had written a continuation of the Odyssey, and told us what Odysseus did among the far-off men who never tasted salt nor heard of the sea. A land epic after the sea epic, how good it would have been--from Homer! But it would have taxed the imagination of Dante to continue the adventures of Christian and his wife after they had once crossed the river and reached the city.

John Bunyan has been more fortunate than most authors in one of his biographies.

His life has been written by the Rev. Dr. Brown, who is now minister of his old congregation at Bedford; and an excellent life it is.

Dr. Brown is neither Roundhead nor Cavalier; for though he is, of course, on Bunyan's side, he does not throw stones at the beautiful Church of England.

Probably most of us are on Bunyan's side now. It might be a good thing that we should all dwell together in religious unity, but history shows that people cannot be bribed into brotherhood. They tried to bully Bunyan; they arrested and imprisoned him--unfairly even in law, according to Dr. Brown, not unfairly, Mr. Froude thinks--and he would not be bullied.

同类推荐
  • TYPHOON

    TYPHOON

    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。
  • 类经

    类经

    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。
  • 贡愚录

    贡愚录

    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。
  • 峥霄馆评定通俗演义型世言

    峥霄馆评定通俗演义型世言

    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。
  • 岭海焚余

    岭海焚余

    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。
热门推荐
  • 我是一个猎人

    我是一个猎人

    当地球无法居住,人类该何去何从?虽然看似是废土,但是实则不是废土,而是一个混小子为了报仇的故事,很俗。看到这里如果感兴趣的话,就不妨看一看这本书,应该不会让你失望的。
  • 我曾在深渊里见过光

    我曾在深渊里见过光

    偏执的基本含义:过分的偏重于一边的执著。祁肆对舒窈太过于执著了,他对舒窈极度喜爱,只要有关舒窈的一切,他自己的精神就会很不正常,就会有过激的思维。他们说祁肆这是病,得治。他这不是病,不是病,他只是太爱舒窈了,以至不惜一切。他们见过的,见过那不可一世,尊贵无比的男人在女孩的耳边卑微又偏执道:“阿窈,你别不要我,你若是不要我,我会死的”她见过的,见过那个男人抱着她,头靠在她的脖子上,偏执又小心翼翼的说:“阿窈,我不是好人,我是坏人,很坏坏的坏人”“阿窈,我想把你拖入地狱陪我,阿窈我是不是很坏?阿窈会不会不喜欢阿肆?”他们说这个男人是恶魔,是魔鬼。只有舒窈知道这个男人会因为她在花园里睡着了,而发病,这个男人会因为她哭了而手足无措,舒窈知道的祁肆会为了她,做所有人的恶魔,却做她一人的天使。舒窈后悔了,她不想将祁肆救出地狱了,她想陪祁肆永入地狱。世人永远只见表面,不曾见过他们的内心。《我曾在深渊里见过光》又名《祁先生他好撩》
  • 佛骨舍利

    佛骨舍利

    本书内容包括:“释迦牟尼的故事”、“佛祖涅槃”、“阿育王与八万四千塔”、“舍利随佛法东渐”、“法门寺地宫”、“七迎佛骨”等。
  • 他曾爱她如同生命

    他曾爱她如同生命

    慕致深很爱很爱夏芙音,即使他被她伤害了很多很多次,夏芙音很恨很恨慕致深,即使她有一点一点喜欢慕致深……
  • 冥冥的注定

    冥冥的注定

    一场车祸,魂归原位,安颜回归了自己的原位,恢复了原世的记忆,只是偏偏忘了自己与妖君的爱恨情仇。妖君,紧追不舍,本尊看上的女人竟敢如此不听话……看来得用好好教训教训了。“你干嘛总是追着我?”安颜看着这个熟悉脸庞的男人,恶狠狠地说道。“本尊乐意!”冥夜的嘴角微微一翘。忽然从冥夜的身后冒出来了一个小女孩。小女孩看着安颜楚楚可怜看着安颜:“娘亲~”“这孩子我要了……你别挡道!”且看这一家人的爆笑认亲寻妻之路。
  • 极品流氓妃

    极品流氓妃

    穿越了,还被绑架了,有谁比她更悲催?为了活命出卖未谋面夫君,刚刚逃出贼窝,怎么又和新婚夫君双双被抓回?这次没人可以出卖了,怎么办,那就以生相许吧!有句话是怎么说的,生命诚可贵,爱情价更高,若为自由故,两者皆可抛。但是,洞房花烛夜狂拽酷炫叼霸天的新郎带个银色面具是什么诡异事?他步步紧逼,将她逼至床角,嘴角勾起一抹邪魅的笑容,“我信不过你!”她慑慑发抖,“连本姑娘的身体你都看不上,你想要啥?”
  • 月华叹

    月华叹

    世有千世文,墨起白止,笔经夜凉,绘由栩然,落于沐曦。谱写江山,上邪心弦,美人倾城,仙魔孽缘,九州人间,风尘陌世……素笔轻描朱砂,点上红妆,铜镜月华,真假难辨。苍生天下,知己天籁,愿舍谁或为谁,终有一失。山河永寂却话伊人殁,孤霄难解离人殇,花空瘦。白止千世,我为他书千年笔墨,静候佳音,怎知梦里他寻,不知是否情深缘浅。蹉跎千世,今起,慕得千世文,千章叙,为伊消得人憔悴。白止第千世终于沐阁卿居。
  • 幻想的宇宙

    幻想的宇宙

    你知道精神病人的世界观吗?主人公四处拜访这些人,去了解他们的思维。诡异的是,病人们一个个奇怪的理论竟都被一个个事例所有力地证明!那么,他们真的是精神病人吗?永远都要记住,他们才是懂得最多的智者。
  • 都市逍遥剑仙

    都市逍遥剑仙

    一个平凡的少年只因解救了一位被冰封的神秘少女,他平凡的生活从此变得不再平凡了,各种美女接踵而来,危机步步紧逼,神秘势力缤纷而至,危险,机遇,吸引,看林浩风如何掌控乾坤,笑傲九天……
  • 黑道少奶奶

    黑道少奶奶

    初遇:他撞翻了她的船,她被迫泡在海水里观看他和性感女郎一起嘿咻嘿咻!怒上心头,她一脚将光溜溜的他踹入大海,抢了他的游艇和女人之后扬长而去。而他,中东世界的地下君主,跺一跺脚就能让世界黑道风云变色的黑帮少主,赤果果的泡在海里叫天不应叫地不灵。他说:“我倒要看看把你征服后,脱光了扔进海里是什么光景!”好友被绑架了。她威胁他说:“如果小雅出了事,我会端掉你们阴阳门的总部,我,说到做到!”独自去救人的路上,他对她说:“原谅我昨夜的粗暴,我并非故意拿小雅的事要胁你,只是不甘心到死也征服不了你。你等着,这次我侥幸不死,你别想再从我身边逃开!你的身体我要,你的心我也要!”