登陆注册
18997000000012

第12章

Stevenson, and has brought in an element out of keeping with the steady lurid tragedy of fraternal hatred. For all the rest, it were a hard judge that had anything but praise. The brilliant blackguardism of the Master; his touch of sentiment as he leaves Durisdeer for the last time, with a sad old song on his lips; his fascination; his ruthlessness; his irony;--all are perfect. It is not very easy to understand the Chevalier Bourke, that Barry Lyndon, with no head and with a good heart, that creature of a bewildered kindly conscience; but it is easy to like him. How admirable is his undeflected belief in and affection for the Master! How excellent and how Irish he is, when he buffoons himself out of his perils with the pirates! The scenes are brilliant and living, as when the Master throws the guinea through the Hall window, or as in the darkling duel in the garden. It needed an austere artistic conscience to make Henry, the younger brother, so unlovable with all his excellence, and to keep the lady so true, yet so much in shadow.

This is the best woman among Mr. Stevenson's few women; but even she is almost always reserved, veiled as it were.

The old Lord, again, is a portrait as lifelike as Scott could have drawn, and more delicately touched than Scott would have cared to draw it: a French companion picture to the Baron Bradwardine. The whole piece reads as if Mr. Stevenson had engaged in a struggle with himself as he wrote. The sky is never blue, the sun never shines:

we weary for a "westland wind." There is something "thrawn," as the Scotch say, about the story; there is often a touch of this sinister kind in the author's work. The language is extraordinarily artful, as in the mad lord's words, "I have felt the hilt dirl on his breast-bone." And yet, one is hardly thrilled as one expects to be, when, as Mackellar says, "the week-old corpse looked me for a moment in the face."Probably none of Mr. Stevenson's many books has made his name so familiar as "Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde." I read it first in manuscript, alone, at night; and, when the Butler and Mr. Urmson came to the Doctor's door, I confess that I threw it down, and went hastily to bed. It is the most gruesome of all his writings, and so perfect that one can complain only of the slightly too obvious moral; and, again, that really Mr. Hyde was more of a gentleman than the unctuous Dr. Jekyll, with his "bedside manner."So here, not to speak of some admirable short stories like "Thrawn Janet," is a brief catalogue--little more--of Mr. Stevenson's literary baggage. It is all good, though variously good; yet the wise world asks for the masterpiece. It is said that Mr. Stevenson has not ventured on the delicate and dangerous ground of the novel, because he has not written a modern love story. But who has? There are love affairs in Dickens, but do we remember or care for them?

Is it the love affairs that we remember in Scott? Thackeray may touch us with Clive's and Jack Belsize's misfortunes, with Esmond's melancholy passion, and amuse us with Pen in so many toils, and interest us in the little heroine of the "Shabby Genteel Story."But it is not by virtue of those episodes that Thackeray is so great. Love stories are best done by women, as in "Mr. Gilfil's Love Story"; and, perhaps, in an ordinary way, by writers like Trollope. One may defy critics to name a great English author in fiction whose chief and distinguishing merit is in his pictures of the passion of Love. Still, they all give Love his due stroke in the battle, and perhaps Mr. Stevenson will do so some day. But Iconfess that, if he ever excels himself, I do not expect it to be in a love story.

Possibly it may be in a play. If he again attempt the drama, he has this in his favour, that he will not deal in supernumeraries. In his tales his minor characters are as carefully drawn as his chief personages. Consider, for example, the minister, Henderland, the man who is so fond of snuff, in "Kidnapped," and, in the "Master of Ballantrae," Sir William Johnson, the English Governor. They are the work of a mind as attentive to details, as ready to subordinate or obliterate details which are unessential. Thus Mr. Stevenson's writings breathe equally of work in the study and of inspiration from adventure in the open air, and thus he wins every vote, and pleases every class of reader.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宠妾无状:腹黑女丞相

    宠妾无状:腹黑女丞相

    他是大燕权势滔天的靳丞相。传说,他喜好男风,府中男宠可媲美陛下后宫。只是无人知道他,竞是她!穿越而来,他是大燕权势滔天的靳丞相。相传,他喜好男风,府中男宠可媲美陛下后宫。他是惊才艳艳的二皇子。却是大燕皇帝此生最痛恨之人!未满三岁,就被自己的父皇赶出大燕都城!一场赐婚,她竟成了他的妾妃!“男男”也能成婚?“相爷,相爷。二皇子送来的纳妾文书!”一侍卫将手中的折子呈上。软榻上的绝美“男子”缓缓的睁开眼,勾唇冷笑“要本相为妾,看来他是做好了断子绝孙的打算!”
  • 火象邪君

    火象邪君

    邪气凛然的纨绔少爷在火炉里练就霸道神功。铁杆粉丝群:7586957
  • 神念无敌

    神念无敌

    一念杀一人,千里不留行。这是一个修念者的世界,强大的念力是由人的念想汇聚而成,不同的念想成就不同的人生,一念之差,即可以成佛,也可以成魔,而我的人生注定与任何人都不相同。
  • 冰灵修真

    冰灵修真

    世人皆可修仙,但无人达到修真。究竟何为修真,是实力至高无上,还是心境达到天人合一?看刘贤,这位孤独的天才,正道的死敌,在与世界对抗的生命历程寻找修真的真谛。
  • 家中有鬼

    家中有鬼

    小成买回一幅绢画后,家里便不再平静,一幅绢画,到底埋葬了多少秘密?绢画的背后,是一个娇妻对战死疆场的丈夫数千年的执爱与等待!为了帮助她,小成远赴北地,他能否找到已被埋葬了几千年的历史真相,想知道大汉不灭的军魂吗?想知道神秘的九转罗盘吗?此文将带你进入古老的国度……
  • EXO牵动你的心弦

    EXO牵动你的心弦

    一段文字,演绎着一个故事,或许悲伤,或许难过,但也有开心、幸福和甜蜜。一场风景,两个人的对白,一段感情的蔓延,有时让人措不及防,可能撕心裂肺,也可能幸福美满。故事再生动,结局再美满,戏如人生,好比你就是故事中的主人翁,看着读着便入了戏,痛了心。记录每一份感动,创造每一个属于EXO的小故事,让EXO的时代继续翻涌、继续前行,继续WEAREONE!
  • 萌宠来袭之娘子乖乖让我疼

    萌宠来袭之娘子乖乖让我疼

    娘子,你要对我负责!【某只狐君可怜兮兮的看着自己娘子】哼,凭什么!【不屑,凭什么,不满】因为你把我看关了,你得对我负责。【再次可怜兮兮的望着自家娘子】哼,你现在吃姑凉的,住本姑凉的,穿本姑凉的,睡本姑凉的,本姑凉不就不小心看了你洗澡嘛,还让本姑凉负责,门都木有!!!!【非常非常不满。】那有窗户木有,总之娘子得对为夫负责。【一副赖定了的样子。】【表示简介很渣,文文绝对有爱】作者真的是第一次写
  • 极品男医号

    极品男医号

    ········································三十岁的医科大学教授方南因为兴趣进深山寻觅古书中记载的草药。山洞奇遇,身体异变,各种特殊功能从天而降。过目不忘,察言观色,天赋异禀,无形气劲。方南就此展开了一条神医之路。纵横都市,美女如云,看我方南如何玩转人生。····································不一样的精彩,送给喜欢文学的你。笑而不宇为你倾情打造都市新篇章!!!!!
  • 银魂之白夜叉降临

    银魂之白夜叉降临

    银魂有一段至今空白的往昔,那便是攘夷往事。而那段惊心动魄的往事,曾经并肩的joy4和那个记忆里永远温柔微笑的松阳三三。一切的一切,任时光流逝,都依然会在我们眼眸深处停驻,永不褪色。此文意在还原白夜叉曾经彻骨的过往。尽力与动漫接轨,动漫或漫画里出现的片段都会尽力还原。热血悲伤向,无任何腐向。有的只是明媚的开始,和最后的离散。
  • 武侠之开天

    武侠之开天

    这是一个江湖与庙堂共存的世界。这是一个武夫与世家对立的世界。这是一个万事不精的小小少年想要回家的故事。