登陆注册
18989900000163

第163章

One of his innumerable whims was an extreme unwillingness to be considered a man of letters. Not that he was indifferent to literary fame. Far from it. Scarcely any writer has ever troubled himself so much about the appearance which his works were to make before posterity. But he had set his heart on incompatible objects. He wished to be a celebrated author, and yet to be a mere idle gentleman, one of those Epicurean gods of the earth who do nothing at all, and who pass their existence in the contemplation of their own perfections. He did not like to have anything in common with the wretches who lodged in the little courts behind St. Martin's Church, and stole out on Sundays to dine with their bookseller. He avoided the society of authors. He spoke with lordly contempt of the most distinguished among them.

He tried to find out some way of writing books, as M. Jourdain's father sold cloth, without derogating from his character of Gentilhomme. "Lui, marchand? C'est pure medisance: il ne l'a jamais ete. Tout ce qu'il faisait, c'est qu'il etait fort obligeant, fort officieux; et comme il se connaissait fort bien en etoffes, il en allait choisir de tons les cotes, les faisait apporter chez lui, et en donnait a ses amis pour de l'argent."

There are several amusing instances of Walpole's feeling on this subject in the letters now before us. Mann had complimented him on the learning which appeared in the Catalogue of Royal and Noble Authors; and it is curious to see how impatiently Walpole bore the imputation of having attended to anything so unfashionable as the improvement of his mind. "I know nothing.

How should I? I who have always lived in the big busy world; who lie a-bed all the morning, calling it morning as long as you please; who sup in company; who have played at faro half my life, and now at loo till two and three in the morning; who have always loved pleasure; haunted auctions. . . . How I have laughed when some of the Magazines have called me the learned gentleman. Pray don't be like the Magazines." This folly might be pardoned in a boy. But a man between forty and fifty years old, as Walpole then was, ought to be quite as much ashamed of playing at loo till three every morning as of being that vulgar thing, a learned gentleman.

The literary character has undoubtedly its full share of faults, and of very serious and offensive faults. If Walpole had avoided those faults, we could have pardoned the fastidiousness with which he declined all fellowship with men of learning. But from those faults Walpole was not one jot more free than the garreteers from whose contact he shrank. Of literary meannesses and literary vices, his life and his works contain as many instances as the life and the works of any member of Johnson's club. The fact is, that Walpole had the faults of Grub Street, with a large addition from St. James's Street, the vanity, the jealousy, and the irritability of a man of letters, the affected superciliousness and apathy of a man of ton.

His judgment of literature, of contemporary literature especially, was altogether perverted by his aristocratical feelings. No writer surely was ever guilty of so much false and absurd criticism. He almost invariably speaks with contempt of those books which are now universally allowed to be the best that appeared in his time; and, on the other hand, he speaks of writers of rank and fashion as if they were entitled to the same precedence in literature which would have been allowed to them in a drawing-room. In these letters, for example, he says that he would rather have written the most absurd lines in Lee than Thomson's Seasons. The periodical paper called The World, on the other hand, was by "our first writers." Who, then, were the first writers of England in the year 1750? Walpole has told us in a note. Our readers will probably guess that Hume, Fielding, Smollett, Richardson, Johnson, Warburton, Collins, Akenside, Gray, Dyer, Young, Warton, Mason, or some of those distinguished men, were in the list. Not one of them. Our first writers, it seems, were Lord Chesterfield, Lord Bath, Mr. W. Whithed, Sir Charles Williams, Mr. Soame Jenyns, Mr. Cambridge, Mr. Coventry.

Of these seven personages, Whithed was the lowest in station, but was the most accomplished tuft-hunter of his time. Coventry was of a noble family. The other five had among them two seats in the House of Lords, two seats in the House of Commons, three seats in the Privy Council, a baronetcy, a blue riband, a red riband, about a hundred thousand pounds a year, and not ten pages that are worth reading. The writings of Whithed, Cambridge, Coventry, and Lord Bath are forgotten. Soame Jenyns is remembered chiefly by Johnson's review of the foolish Essay on the Origin of Evil.

Lord Chesterfield stands much lower in the estimation of posterity than he would have done if his letters had never been published. The lampoons of Sir Charles Williams are now read only by the curious, and, though not without occasional flashes of wit, have always seemed to us, we must own, very poor performances.

Walpole judged of French literature after the same fashion. He understood and loved the French language. Indeed, he loved it too well. His style is more deeply tainted with Gallicism than that of any other English writer with whom we are acquainted. His composition often reads, for a page together, like a rude translation from the French. We meet every minute with such sentences as these, "One knows what temperaments Annibal Caracci painted." "The impertinent personage!" "She is dead rich." "Lord Dalkeith is dead of the small-pox in three days." "It will now be seen whether he or they are most patriot."

同类推荐
  • 人间词话删稿

    人间词话删稿

    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。
  • 将赴黔州先寄本府中

    将赴黔州先寄本府中

    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。
  • 梅道士水亭

    梅道士水亭

    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。
  • 魏庆之词话

    魏庆之词话

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 温公日记

    温公日记

    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
  • 黄帝太乙八门逆顺生死诀

    黄帝太乙八门逆顺生死诀

    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。
  • 你是我的红颜

    你是我的红颜

    对男人来说,女人最可贵的品质莫过于,当他贫穷,你不嫌弃他的贫穷,当他富贵,你配的上他的富贵。但做到这一点对女人来说太难了。
  • 西王母女修正余十则

    西王母女修正余十则

    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。
  • 无间丧尸

    无间丧尸

    无——论陈峰如何仰天长嚎,如何丧心病狂,他终究不是一只彻头彻尾的丧尸。间——歇性的失忆之后,陈峰记起自己曾经属于人类……一个即将沦丧的物种。丧——失一个人的身体,他在无间中求生存。尸——血沸腾,陈峰在一片磅礴天地间重生……
  • 那年我们的青春都在谈恋爱

    那年我们的青春都在谈恋爱

    路上和一个笨蛋撞车,我的法拉利啊,哼,喜欢恶作剧的丫头遇上恶魔邪少会撞出什么样的火花呢。最让人吐血的是竟然和他同居,5555为什么会这么倒霉啊
  • TFBOYS之一生一世我爱你

    TFBOYS之一生一世我爱你

    TFBOYS之一生一世我爱你。当三个青涩的男孩变成三个恋爱中的少年,当三位女孩遇见三个男孩,她们会擦出怎样的爱情火花呢?敬请期待。
  • 魔法之门

    魔法之门

    魔法已成为历史,斗气也在慢慢退化,这是一个被封印的世界一个天才少年,背负着命中注定的使命,去开启“魔法之门”然而门后又将是一个怎样的世界呢?
  • 风华天章

    风华天章

    曾经的绝世天才陨落,如今似曾相识的那一段风流,一曲欲唱还休的天道沉吟,造就了三世的命运纠葛。是背叛,是阴谋,还是,天道诛仙的无情?
  • 神魔记事(上)

    神魔记事(上)

    幻之大陆英雄的化身凝聚成圣灵的法印,具有传说中神奇力量的圣灵法印这一次主动选择了它的继承人。纯真质朴的少年雷斯特在懵懵懂懂中继承了英雄的力量,在聪慧美丽的艾娜的陪伴下,踏入了纷乱的红尘……
  • 霹雳警探

    霹雳警探

    一个是明朝的锦衣卫,一个是现代的美女警探。在同一个屋檐下,一个是房客,一个是房东。在生活中,一个武艺高强,一个聪明睿智。针尖对麦芒的生活中,两个人携手破案究竟又会擦出怎样的火花。