登陆注册
19902100000093

第93章 CHAPTER XV(6)

There seem to be plenty of artists of every kind, but their standard of success is mostly low. The beginner too early gets commercial employment in (174) which he is not held up to any high ideal. This brings us back to the lack of a well-knit artistic tradition to educate both the artist and the public, the lack of a type, "the non-existence" as Mr. Russell Sturgis says; "Of an artistic community with a mind of its own and a certain general agreement as to what a work of art ought to be." This lack involves the weakness of the criticism which is required to make the artist see himself as he ought to be. "That criticism is nowhere in proportion to the need of it," says Henry James, "is the visiting observer's first and last impression梐n impression so constant that it at times swallows up or elbows out every other."The antipathy between art and the commercial spirit, however, is often much overstated. As a matter of history art and literature have flourished most conspicuously in prosperous commercial societies, such as Athens, Florence, Venice, the communes of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the trading cities of Germany, the Dutch Republic and the England of Elizabeth.

Nothing does more than commerce to awaken intelligence, enterprise and a free spirit, and these are favorable to ideal production. It is only the extreme one-sidedness of our civilization in this regard that is prejudicial.

It is also true梐nd here we touch upon something pertaining more to the very nature of democracy than the matters so far mentioned梩hat the zeal for diffusion which springs from communication and sympathy has in it much that is not directly favorable to the finer sorts of production.

Which is the better, fellowship or distinction? There (175) is much to be said on both sides, but the finer spirits of our day lean toward the former, and find it more human and exhilarating to spread abroad the good things the wnrld already has than to prosecute a lonesome search for new ones. l notice among the choicest people l know梩hose who seem to me most representative of the inner trend of democracy梐 certain generous contempt for distinction and a passion to cast their lives heartily on the general current. But the highest things are largely those which do not immediately yield fellowship or diffuse joy. Though making in the end for a general good, they are as private in their direct action as selfishness itself, from which they are not always easily distinguished. They involve intense self-consciousness. Probably men who follow the whispers of genius will always be more or less at odds with their fellows.

Ours, then, is an Age of Diffusion. The best minds and hearts seek joy and self-forgetfulness in active service, as in another time they might seek it in solitary worship; God, as we often hear, being sought more through human fellowship and less by way of isolate self-consciousness than was the case a short time since.

I need hardly particularize the educational and philanthropic zeal that, in one form or another, incites the better minds among our contemporaries and makes them feel guilty when they are not in some way exerting themselves to spread abroad material or spiritual goods. No one would wish to see this zeal diminished; and perhaps it makes in the long run for every kind of worthy achievement; but its immediate effect is often to multiply the commonplace, giving point to De Tocqueville's reflection (176) that "in aristocracies a few great pictures are produced, in democratic countries a vast number of insignificant ones." [14] In a spiritual as well as a material sense there is to tendency to fabricate cheap goods fort an uncritical market. " Men and gods are too extense." [15] Finally, all theories that aim to deduce from social conditions the limits of personal achievement must be received with much caution. It is the very nature of a virile sense of self to revolt from the usual and the expected and pursue a lonesome road. Of course it must have support, but it may find this in literature and imaginative intercourse. So, in spite of everything, we have had in America men of signal distinction梥uch, for instance, as Emerson, Thoreau and Whitman梐nd we shall no doubt have more. We need fear no dearth of inspiring issues; for if old ones disappear energetic minds will always create new ones by making greater demands upon life.

The very fact that our time has so largely cast off all sorts of structure is in one way favorable to enduring production, since it means that we have fallen back upon human nature, upon that which is permanent and essential, the adequate record of which is the chief agent in giving life to any product of the mind.

Endnotes Demcracy in America, vol. ii, book iv, chap. 7. But elsewhere he expresses the opinion that this levelling and confusion is only temporary. See, for example, book iii, chap. 21. Republic, book viii. Outre-Mer. English Translation, 306. See the final chapter of his French Traits. Conversation with Eckermann, May 12, 1825. French Traits, 385, 387, 393. Poe is the only notable exception that occurs to me. Memorials of Edward Burne-Jones, ii, 100, 101. Our most notable group of writers梖lourishing at Concord and Boston about 1850梚s, of course, connected with the maturing, in partial isolation, of a local type of culture, now disintegrated and dispersed on the wider currents of the time. Outre-Mer, 25. In his essay on Balzac. Democracy in America, vol. ii, book i, chap. 10. Henry Van Brunt, Greek Lines, 225. Some of these phrases, such as "illiterate combinations," could never apply to the work of good architects. Democracy in America, vol. ii, book i, chap. 11. Emerson, Alphonso of Castile.

同类推荐
  • 国朝汉学师承记

    国朝汉学师承记

    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。
  • 大乘起信论别记

    大乘起信论别记

    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。
  • 台湾文献丛刊清圣祖实录选辑

    台湾文献丛刊清圣祖实录选辑

    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。
  • Meteorology

    Meteorology

    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。
  • 尊隐

    尊隐

    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
  • 施肥知识(中)

    施肥知识(中)

    肥料是作物的粮食。农作物生长需要的营养元素,现在已经知道的有22多种,其中碳、氢、氧可以从空气和水中获得,一般不需要以肥料的形式提供。氮、磷、钾在作物体内含量较高,吸收得也较多,占干物重的百分之几到千分之几,称为“大量元素”。氮、磷、钾三种元素在土壤中含量普遍较少,需要以肥料的形式补充,所以特别称它们为“肥料三要素”。钙、镁、硫一般称为“中量元素”。铜、锌、铁、锰、硼、钼等元素,作物需要量少,称为“微量元素”。
  • 听说每颗星星都会寂寞

    听说每颗星星都会寂寞

    他为她而伤心,她却和他走了,他和她相遇,他却把她当成了她,她为爱不顾一切,可她却突然回来,我许她淡薄为她关闭所有琐之事的窗,在人心中所有恋人要求永远,她孤独的灵魂,灵魂的孤独要求他留下,这正是我所爱的。
  • 爱情悄然来临

    爱情悄然来临

    大学生苏衣在游戏中一次偶然遇到了大神被围殴,好心出手帮了一下,就此与大神保持着一种奇特的关系,后来经过一场意外竟发现学校新来帅老师就是游戏大神,经历了种种阻挠,最后走到了一起..
  • 妖面皇后乱世妃

    妖面皇后乱世妃

    也许是听到了声音,那半陷入昏迷之中的男子,挣扎了一下,微微睁开了双眸,灵璃儿顿时觉得天地万物都不存在了,她眼里就只剩下了这双眼睛!
  • 瓦洛兰遗迹

    瓦洛兰遗迹

    站在阳台上发着呆的白恒突然间就穿越了,更离谱的是他居然发现自己穿越到一个刀塔与英雄联盟合二为一的世界。这个世界怎么诞生的?刀塔和英雄联盟相爱了?他们生的宝宝?这不是重点,重点是刀塔和英雄联盟谁是公的,谁是母的?这也不是重点,那刀塔里面的三项属性怎么办,英雄联盟里面的法术强度怎么搞?好吧,其实那些都不是重点,这尼玛从屁股上抽出一本书是要闹哪样?
  • 棋经

    棋经

    《棋经》,又称《棋经十三篇》,是中国悠久的棋文化中的一朵奇葩。它从内容到体裁到篇目设计,都是模仿《孙子十三篇》全书首篇总论棋局,以为黑白之棋,正合阴阳之分。以下各篇则从“得算”、“权舆”等各个角度,分别论述了对弈的战略战术,对弈者应有的品德作风。论述深刻,内容丰富。
  • 无限之海贼我为王

    无限之海贼我为王

    少年刘帆意外来到了一个新的世界,属于海贼王的世界,到这里,他发现这里有为数众多的跟他一样的穿越者,到底为什么会来到这个世界,又是谁创造了这个世界,回家的欲望和种种谜团鞭策着少年一步步的成长为威震一方的大人物。他相信,最终他会君临天下,解决所有的谜团。
  • 法集名数经

    法集名数经

    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。
  • 未来芯片

    未来芯片

    重生?重生!不就是重生吗?那你见到过重生到6岁的嘛?!重生7岁,飞入脑中的未来芯片。心怀天下大志,手拥青梅竹马。快哉!快哉!
  • 太古仙人异界逍遥

    太古仙人异界逍遥

    奥斯大陆,诸神的禁地,戴天一个在洪荒夺体现代青年,在不周山倒之时,被传送到了奥斯大陆。诸神囚禁渎神者的监狱,戴天进入其中,将关押在第十层的渎神者放出,并击杀,但也引来了神格高手的查探。