登陆注册
37962000000044

第44章 PEN,PENCIL AND POISON -A STUDY IN GREEN(31)

GILBERT.Ah!it is so easy to convert others.It is so difficult to convert oneself.To arrive at what one really believes,one must speak through lips different from one's own.To know the truth one must imagine myriads of falsehoods.For what is Truth?

In matters of religion,it is simply the opinion that has survived.

In matters of science,it is the ultimate sensation.In matters of art,it is one's last mood.And you see now,Ernest,that the critic has at his disposal as many objective forms of expression as the artist has.Ruskin put his criticism into imaginative prose,and is superb in his changes and contradictions;and Browning put his into blank verse and made painter and poet yield us their secret;and M.Renan uses dialogue,and Mr.Pater fiction,and Rossetti translated into sonnet-music the colour of Giorgione and the design of Ingres,and his own design and colour also,feeling,with the instinct of one who had many modes of utterance;that the ultimate art is literature,and the finest and fullest medium that of words.

ERNEST.Well,now that you have settled that the critic has at his disposal all objective forms,I wish you would tell me what are the qualities that should characterise the true critic.

GILBERT.What would you say they were?

ERNEST.Well,I should say that a critic should above all things be fair.

GILBERT.Ah!not fair.A critic cannot be fair in the ordinary sense of the word.It is only about things that do not interest one that one can give a really unbiassed opinion,which is no doubt the reason why an unbiassed opinion is always absolutely valueless.

The man who sees both sides of a question,is a man who sees absolutely nothing at all.Art is a passion,and,in matters of art,Thought is inevitably coloured by emotion,and so is fluid rather than fixed,and,depending upon fine moods and exquisite moments,cannot be narrowed into the rigidity of a scientific formula or a theological dogma.It is to the soul that Art speaks,and the soul may be made the prisoner of the mind as well as of the body.One should,of course,have no prejudices;but,as a great Frenchman remarked a hundred years ago,it is one's business in such matters to have preferences,and when one has preferences one ceases to be fair.It is only an auctioneer who can equally and impartially admire all schools of Art.No;fairness is not one of the qualities of the true critic.It is not even a condition of criticism.Each form of Art with which we come in contact dominates us for the moment to the exclusion of every other form.

We must surrender ourselves absolutely to the work in question,whatever it may be,if we wish to gain its secret.For the time,we must think of nothing else,can think of nothing else,indeed.

ERNEST.The true critic will be rational,at any rate,will he not?

GILBERT.Rational?There are two ways of disliking art,Ernest.

One is to dislike it.The other,to like it rationally.For Art,as Plato saw,and not without regret,creates in listener and spectator a form of divine madness.It does not spring from inspiration,but it makes others inspired.Reason is not the faculty to which it appeals.If one loves Art at all,one must love it beyond all other things in the world,and against such love,the reason,if one listened to it,would cry out.There is nothing sane about the worship of beauty.It is too splendid to be sane.Those of whose lives it forms the dominant note will always seem to the world to be pure visionaries.

ERNEST.Well,at least,the critic will be sincere.

GILBERT.A little sincerity is a dangerous thing,and a great deal of it is absolutely fatal.The true critic will,indeed,always be sincere in his devotion to the principle of beauty,but he will seek for beauty in every age and in each school,and will never suffer himself to be limited to any settled custom of thought or stereotyped mode of looking at things.He will realise himself in many forms,and by a thousand different ways,and will ever be curious of new sensations and fresh points of view.Through constant change,and through constant change alone,he will find his true unity.He will not consent to be the slave of his own opinions.For what is mind but motion in the intellectual sphere?

The essence of thought,as the essence of life,is growth.You must not be frightened by word,Ernest.What people call insincerity is simply a method by which we can multiply our personalities.

ERNEST.I am afraid I have not been fortunate in my suggestions.

GILBERT.Of the three qualifications you mentioned,two,sincerity and fairness,were,if not actually moral,at least on the borderland of morals,and the first condition of criticism is that the critic should be able to recognise that the sphere of Art and the sphere of Ethics are absolutely distinct and separate.When they are confused,Chaos has come again.They are too often confused in England now,and though our modern Puritans cannot destroy a beautiful thing,yet,by means of their extraordinary prurience,they can almost taint beauty for a moment.It is chiefly,I regret to say,through journalism that such people find expression.I regret it because there is much to be said in favour of modern journalism.By giving us the opinions of the uneducated,it keeps us in touch with the ignorance of the community.By carefully chronicling the current events of contemporary life,it shows us of what very little importance such events really are.By invariably discussing the unnecessary it makes us understand what things are requisite for culture,and what are not.But it should not allow poor Tartuffe to write articles upon modern art.When it does this it stultifies itself.And yet Tartuffe's articles and Chadband's notes do this good,at least.They serve to show how extremely limited is the area over which ethics,and ethical considerations,can claim to exercise influence.Science is out of the reach of morals,for her eyes are fixed upon eternal truths.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 末世荒帝

    末世荒帝

    缥缈仙道,我主沉浮,灭天称帝,我为主宰!
  • 游丐

    游丐

    这是一个乞丐的传奇人生!
  • 通帝之路

    通帝之路

    一个少年,励志成为顶天立地的强者。在他的体内却封印着魔域的无上霸主,安。一个提升实力,为了能够压制身体里的强者;一个百般心思,想要夺取少年的身体。
  • 异界之妖孽,说好的呆萌呢

    异界之妖孽,说好的呆萌呢

    冷情的前世造就了腹黑的小王爷,结果,到了异界,结识到了他从未体验的感情。结果,他居然就用这呆萌的包子脸.......呵呵呵,
  • 大明小爵爷

    大明小爵爷

    一个生活在社会最底层地小混混,紧抱太子朱厚照的大腿斗贪官,开牌坊,虐哒哒,最后官封鲁国公的故事。让我们跟着林易玩转大明吧!
  • 他说她说

    他说她说

    因为我们都不知道未来是什么样子,未来的生活会以什么样的方式出现,所以我们现在能做的就是珍惜眼下,好好地去感受生活。人生真的没有彩排,精彩与不精彩只有自己知道。
  • 久居深海等你来

    久居深海等你来

    那个曾经我爱过的人。翻开一篇篇旧老的回忆。脑海中的他早已不再是我爱过的人。“颜青,你给我滚”也许淡淡的青春,早已不再是向他挥挥手说再见。好像是一夜之间,然后沉湎其间不知道岁月时光的长短。将要走出大门时,却是那么的恋恋不舍,恨不得重头再来。多年以后,他告诉我:颜青,回来吧。垂暮之年,天空是沉碧的。愿时光匆匆流去,我只在乎你。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 逆光夜行

    逆光夜行

    这不是一个乖戾张狂的故事,也不仅仅是某种愤世嫉俗的告白与记述,至少这些不是我们的本意。这不过是怀有相同志向与相同梦想的两条生命共同走过的一段路。——题记
  • 舍得:人生的必修课

    舍得:人生的必修课

    人人都知道“有舍方有得”,人人都明白“舍得乃人生之大智慧”。但是,仍然有太多太多人不能够做到舍得,不能够做到心安理得地舍得,不知道要舍得什么,不知道该怎么舍得,不知道该怎样舍得其所!本书就来向你细细探讲,让你成为真正的舍得达人,真正地掌握舍得艺术。