登陆注册
5448300000015

第15章 {4}(2)

Let it be said that coarseness was 'the fashion of the age.' The simple question is, was it a good fashion or a bad? It is said--with little or no proof--that in simple states of society much manly virtue and much female purity have often consisted with very broad language and very coarse manners. But what of that? Drunkards may very often be very honest and brave men. Does that make drunkenness no sin? Or will honesty and courage prevent a man's being the worse for hard drinking? If so, why have we given up coarseness of language? And why has it been the better rather than the worse part of the nation, the educated and religious rather than the ignorant and wicked, who have given it up? Why? Simply because this nation, and all other nations on the Continent, in proportion to their morality, have found out that coarseness of language is, to say the least, unfit and inexpedient; that if it be wrong to do certain things, it is also, on the whole, right not to talk of them; that even certain things which are right and blessed and holy lose their sanctity by being dragged cynically to the light of day, instead of being left in the mystery in which God has wisely shrouded them. On the whole, one is inclined to suspect the defence of coarseness as insincere. Certainly, in our day, it will not hold. If any one wishes to hear coarse language in 'good society' he can hear it, I am told, in Paris: but one questions whether Parisian society be now 'under the sway of a more energetic principle of virtue' than our own. The sum total of the matter seems to be, that England has found out that on this point again the old Puritans were right. And quaintly enough, the party in the English Church who hold the Puritans most in abhorrence are the most scrupulous now upon this very point; and, in their dread of contaminating the minds of youth, are carrying education, at school and college, to such a more than Puritan precision that with the most virtuous and benevolent intentions they are in danger of giving lads merely a conventional education,--a hot-house training which will render them incapable hereafter of facing either the temptations or the labour of the world. They themselves republished Massinger's 'Virgin Martyr,' because it was a pretty Popish story, probably written by a Papist-- for there is every reason to believe that Massinger was one--setting forth how the heroine was attended all through by an angel in the form of a page, and how--not to mention the really beautiful ancient fiction about the fruits which Dorothea sends back from Paradise--Theophilus overcomes the devil by means of a cross composed of flowers. Massinger's account of Theophilus' conversation will, we fear, make those who know anything of that great crisis of the human spirit suspect that Massinger's experience thereof was but small: but the fact which is most noteworthy is this--that the 'Virgin Martyr' is actually one of the foulest plays known. Every pains has been taken to prove that the indecent scenes in the play were not written by Massinger, but by Dekker; on what grounds we know not. If Dekker assisted Massinger in the play, as he is said to have done, we are aware of no canons of internal criticism which will enable us to decide, as boldly as Mr. Gifford does, that all the indecency is Dekker's, and all the poetry Massinger's. He confesses--as indeed he is forced to do--that 'Massinger himself is not free from dialogues of low wit and buffoonery'; and then, after calling the scenes in question 'detestable ribaldry, 'a loathsome sooterkin, engendered of filth and dulness,' recommends them to the reader's supreme scorn and contempt,--with which feelings the reader will doubtless regard them: but he will also, if he be a thinking man, draw from them the following conclusions: that even if they be Dekker's--of which there is no proof--Massinger was forced, in order to the success of his play, to pander to the public taste by allowing Dekker to interpolate these villanies; that the play which, above all others of the seventeenth century, contains the most supralunar rosepink of piety, devotion, and purity, also contains the stupidest abominations of any extant play; and lastly, that those who reprinted it as a sample of the Christianity of that past golden age of High-churchmanship, had to leave out one-third of the play, for fear of becoming amenable to the laws against abominable publications.

No one denies that there are nobler words than any that we have quoted, in Jonson, in Fletcher, or in Massinger; but there is hardly a play (perhaps none) of theirs in which the immoralities of which we complain do not exist,--few of which they do not form an integral part; and now, if this is the judgment which we have to pass on the morality of the greater poets, what must the lesser ones be like?

Look, then, at Webster's two masterpieces, 'Vittoria Corrombona' and the 'Duchess of Malfi.' A few words spent on them will surely not be wasted; for they are pretty generally agreed to be the two best tragedies written since Shakspeare's time.

The whole story of 'Vittoria Corrombona' is one of sin and horror.

The subject-matter of the play is altogether made up of the fiercest and the basest passions. But the play is not a study of those passions from which we may gain a great insight into human nature.

There is no trace--nor is there, again, in the 'Duchess of Malfi'--of that development of human souls for good or evil which is Shakspeare's especial power--the power which, far more than any accidental 'beauties,' makes his plays, to this day, the delight alike of the simple and the wise, while his contemporaries are all but forgotten. The highest aim of dramatic art is to exhibit the development of the human soul; to construct dramas in which the conclusion shall depend, not on the events, but on the characters; and in which the characters shall not be mere embodiments of a certain passion, or a certain 'humour': but persons, each unlike all others; each having a destiny of his own by virtue of his own peculiarities, and of his own will; and each proceeding toward that destiny as he shall conquer, or yield to, circumstances; unfolding his own strength and weakness before the eyes of the audience; and that in such a way that, after his first introduction, they should be able (in proportion to their knowledge of human nature) to predict his conduct under those circumstances. This is indeed 'high art': but we find no more of it in Webster than in the rest. His characters, be they old or young, come on the stage ready-made, full grown, and stereotyped; and therefore, in general, they are not characters at all, but mere passions or humours in human form. Now and then he essays to draw a character: but it is analytically, by description, not synthetically and dramatically, by letting the man exhibit himself in action; and in the 'Duchess of Mall' he falls into the great mistake of telling, by Antonio's mouth, more about the Duke and the Cardinal than he afterwards makes them act. Very different is Shakspeare's method of giving, at the outset, some single delicate hint about his personages which will serve as a clue to their whole future conduct; thus 'showing the whole in each part,' and stamping each man with a personality, to a degree which no other dramatist has ever approached.

But the truth is, the study of human nature is not Webster's aim. He has to arouse terror and pity, not thought, and he does it in his own way, by blood and fury, madmen and screech-owls, not without a rugged power. There are scenes of his, certainly, like that of Vittoria's trial, which have been praised for their delineation of character: but it is one thing to solve the problem, which Shakspeare has so handled in 'Lear,' 'Othello,' and 'Richard the Third,'--'Given a mixed character, to show how he may become criminal,' and to solve Webster's 'Given a ready-made criminal, to show how he commits his crimes.' To us the knowledge of character shown in Vittoria's trial scene is not an insight into Vittoria's essential heart and brain, but a general acquaintance with the conduct of all bold bad women when brought to bay. Poor Elia, who knew the world from books, and human nature principally from his own loving and gentle heart, talks of Vittoria's 'innocence--resembling boldness'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 爱不可探

    爱不可探

    朴素干净的少女,火热明朗的夏天。看似普通,却已经有些隐秘的萌芽在躁动。接触间盗人秘密的少年,严寒的冬天。有时候,就算我们清楚又明白的看清了爱,还是会自卑又无用地探索..........
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 0-6岁育儿经大全集(超值金版)

    0-6岁育儿经大全集(超值金版)

    从育儿角度来说,孩子在6岁之前,帮助他们养成的良好习惯将使其受益一生。美国犹太学者席伯格在《犹太人赚钱智慧》一书中便从育儿角度破译了犹太人培养天才的密码。目前,犹太人在美国的人口比例仅占全美国总人口的3.2%,然而在美国大学攻读博士的犹太人,却几乎占全部博士班学生总数的30%!在美国著名的大学中,犹太籍教授竟然占教授总数的30%~50%!纵观犹太人历年来荣获国际公认最具权威的诺贝尔奖人数,竟然占美国全部得奖人数的32%之多,为其他各民族的数十倍。一切的一切,令人不胜惊讶!
  • 金箓晚朝仪

    金箓晚朝仪

    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。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 越看越想笑的校园笑话(悦读珍藏版)

    越看越想笑的校园笑话(悦读珍藏版)

    《越看越想笑的校园笑话》根据当代小学生的阅读兴趣,精心筛选出集趣味性、益智性为一体的校园笑话,内容积极向上,语言诙谐幽默,让小读者不仅能够在阅读的时候感受到快乐,而且还能够在看笑话的同时学到新的东西。同时,小读者还可以从笑话中积累写作素材,并从中体会与人相处的道理。
  • 我衍诸天

    我衍诸天

    灵气复苏时代,地球即将晋级中阶文明。带着毁灭地球的任务,许衍回到了地球。是毁灭地球成全自己?还是背叛系统守护故土?许衍拍了拍地球意志的肩膀。“大哥!其实我是自己人!”
  • 爱波超能力

    爱波超能力

    左晓瑶正躺在沙发上,对着电视屏幕上的美食节目垂涎欲滴,哥哥左潘增突然切换了频道。晓瑶刚要发飙,却被切换的电视情节吸引了,只见这情节里男女主人公刚刚决定步入婚姻殿堂,女主却因为车祸离开了,男主哭的死去活来。“真可怜,虽然剧情俗套,但是如果摊上这样的事情还真是令人伤心不已”哥哥不禁慨叹。“如果有人能操控这一切就好了,我是说,假如我是爱神的话,绝对不会让这些情节发生”晓瑶肯定的说道,语气充满骄傲。“呦,那你撞一下试试?”哥哥指着电视背景墙。结果,这么一撞她回到了18岁,而且拥有了“爱波超能力”……
  • 我对你未曾动心

    我对你未曾动心

    林梓柠只想好好地谈一场恋爱,可是突然插进来的郑晓纯算怎么回事?她本以为郑晓纯不会威胁到她和苏千晨的感情,可事实向她证明,她错了。而她的几个好朋友也遇到了类似的事情,们会怎样应对呢?
  • 店铺创建设计

    店铺创建设计

    店铺管理丛书·第二辑·安特管理文库。本书借鉴了许多国外店铺的成功经验,并且搜集了大量国内相关行业的资料,力图全面翔实地向有志于店铺经营的读者介绍店铺创建设计的全过程,以及每个环节应该注意的问题和难点。