THE CRITIC AS ARTIST: WITH SOME REMARKS UPON THE IMPORTANCE OF
DOING NOTHING
A dialogue. Part I. Persons:
Gilbert and Ernest. Scene: the library
of a house in Piccadilly, overlooking the Green Park.
Gilbert (at the Piano).
My dear Ernest, what are you laughing at?
Ernest (looking up). At
a capital story that I have just come across in this
volume of Reminiscences that I have found on your
table.
Gilbert. What is the book?
Ah! I see. I have not read it yet.
Is it good?
Ernest. Well, while you have
been playing, I have been turning over the pages with
some amusement, though, as a rule, I dislike modern
memoirs. They are generally written by people
who have either entirely lost their memories, or have
never done anything worth remembering; which, however,
is, no doubt, the true explanation of their popularity,
as the English public always feels perfectly at its
ease when a mediocrity is talking to it.
Gilbert. Yes: the
public is wonderfully tolerant. It forgives
everything except genius. But I must confess
that I like all memoirs. I like them for their
form, just as much as for their matter. In literature
mere egotism is delightful. It is what fascinates
us in the letters of personalities so different as
Cicero and Balzac, Flaubert and Berlioz, Byron and
Madame de Sevigne. Whenever we come across it,
and, strangely enough, it is rather rare, we cannot
but welcome it, and do not easily forget it.
Humanity will always love Rousseau for having confessed
his sins, not to a priest, but to the world, and the
couchant nymphs that Cellini wrought in bronze for
the castle of King Francis, the green and gold Perseus,
even, that in the open Loggia at Florence shows the
moon the dead terror that once turned life to stone,
have not given it more pleasure than has that autobiography
in which the supreme scoundrel of the Renaissance
relates the story of his splendour and his shame.
The opinions, the character, the achievements of
the man, matter very little. He may be a sceptic
like the gentle Sieur de Montaigne, or a saint like
the bitter son of Monica, but when he tells us his
own secrets he can always charm our ears to listening
and our lips to silence. The mode of thought
that Cardinal Newman represented—if that
can be called a mode of thought which seeks to solve
intellectual problems by a denial of the supremacy
of the intellect—may not, cannot, I think,
survive. But the world will never weary of watching
that troubled soul in its progress from darkness to
darkness. The lonely church at Littlemore, where
’the breath of the morning is damp, and worshippers
are few,’ will always be dear to it, and whenever
men see the yellow snapdragon blossoming on the wall
of Trinity they will think of that gracious undergraduate
who saw in the flower’s sure recurrence a prophecy
that he would abide for ever with the Benign Mother
of his days—a prophecy that Faith, in her
wisdom or her folly, suffered not to be fulfilled.
Yes; autobiography is irresistible. Poor, silly,
conceited Mr. Secretary Pepys has chattered his way
into the circle of the Immortals, and, conscious that
indiscretion is the better part of valour, bustles
about among them in that ‘shaggy purple gown
with gold buttons and looped lace’ which he
is so fond of describing to us, perfectly at his ease,
and prattling, to his own and our infinite pleasure,
of the Indian blue petticoat that he bought for his
wife, of the ’good hog’s hars-let,’
and the ‘pleasant French fricassee of veal’
that he loved to eat, of his game of bowls with Will
Joyce, and his ’gadding after beauties,’
and his reciting of Hamlet on a Sunday, and his playing
of the viol on week days, and other wicked or trivial
things. Even in actual life egotism is not without
its attractions. When people talk to us about
others they are usually dull. When they talk
to us about themselves they are nearly always interesting,
and if one could shut them up, when they become wearisome,
as easily as one can shut up a book of which one has
grown wearied, they would be perfect absolutely.
Ernest. There is much virtue
in that If, as Touchstone would say. But do you
seriously propose that every man should become his
own Boswell? What would become of our industrious
compilers of Lives and Recollections in that case?
Gilbert. What has become
of them? They are the pest of the age, nothing
more and nothing less. Every great man nowadays
has his disciples, and it is always Judas who writes
the biography.
Ernest. My dear fellow!
Gilbert. I am afraid it
is true. Formerly we used to canonise our heroes.
The modern method is to vulgarise them. Cheap
editions of great books may be delightful, but cheap
editions of great men are absolutely detestable.
Ernest. May I ask, Gilbert, to whom you allude?
Gilbert. Oh! to all our
second-rate litterateurs. We are overrun by
a set of people who, when poet or painter passes away,
arrive at the house along with the undertaker, and
forget that their one duty is to behave as mutes.
But we won’t talk about them. They are
the mere body-snatchers of literature. The dust
is given to one, and the ashes to another, and the
soul is out of their reach. And now, let me
play Chopin to you, or Dvorak? Shall I play you
a fantasy by Dvorak? He writes passionate, curiously-coloured
things.
Ernest. No; I don’t want
music just at present. It is far too indefinite.
Besides, I took the Baroness Bernstein down to dinner
last night, and, though absolutely charming in every
other respect, she insisted on discussing music as
if it were actually written in the German language.
Now, whatever music sounds like I am glad to say
that it does not sound in the smallest degree like
German. There are forms of patriotism that are
really quite degrading. No; Gilbert, don’t
play any more. Turn round and talk to me.
Talk to me till the white-horned day comes into the
room. There is something in your voice that
is wonderful.
Gilbert (rising from the piano).
I am not in a mood for talking to-night. I
really am not. How horrid of you to smile!
Where are the cigarettes? Thanks. How
exquisite these single daffodils are! They seem
to be made of amber and cool ivory. They are
like Greek things of the best period. What was
the story in the confessions of the remorseful Academician
that made you laugh? Tell it to me. After
playing Chopin, I feel as if I had been weeping over
sins that I had never committed, and mourning over
tragedies that were not my own. Music always
seems to me to produce that effect. It creates
for one a past of which one has been ignorant, and
fills one with a sense of sorrows that have been hidden
from one’s tears. I can fancy a man who
had led a perfectly commonplace life, hearing by chance
some curious piece of music, and suddenly discovering
that his soul, without his being conscious of it, had
passed through terrible experiences, and known fearful
joys, or wild romantic loves, or great renunciations.
And so tell me this story, Ernest. I want to
be amused.
Ernest. Oh! I don’t
know that it is of any importance. But I thought
it a really admirable illustration of the true value
of ordinary art-criticism. It seems that a lady
once gravely asked the remorseful Academician, as
you call him, if his celebrated picture of ‘A
Spring-Day at Whiteley’s,’ or, ’Waiting
for the Last Omnibus,’ or some subject of that
kind, was all painted by hand?
Gilbert. And was it?
Ernest. You are quite incorrigible.
But, seriously speaking, what is the use of art-criticism?
Why cannot the artist be left alone, to create a
new world if he wishes it, or, if not, to shadow forth
the world which we already know, and of which, I fancy,
we would each one of us be wearied if Art, with her
fine spirit of choice and delicate instinct of selection,
did not, as it were, purify it for us, and give to
it a momentary perfection. It seems to me that
the imagination spreads, or should spread, a solitude
around it, and works best in silence and in isolation.
Why should the artist be troubled by the shrill clamour
of criticism? Why should those who cannot create
take upon themselves to estimate the value of creative
work? What can they know about it? If a
man’s work is easy to understand, an explanation
is unnecessary. . . .
Gilbert. And if his work
is incomprehensible, an explanation is wicked.
Ernest. I did not say that.
Gilbert. Ah! but you should
have. Nowadays, we have so few mysteries left
to us that we cannot afford to part with one of them.
The members of the Browning Society, like the theologians
of the Broad Church Party, or the authors of Mr. Walter
Scott’s Great Writers Series, seem to me to
spend their time in trying to explain their divinity
away. Where one had hoped that Browning was a
mystic they have sought to show that he was simply
inarticulate. Where one had fancied that he had
something to conceal, they have proved that he had
but little to reveal. But I speak merely of his
incoherent work. Taken as a whole the man was
great. He did not belong to the Olympians, and
had all the incompleteness of the Titan. He
did not survey, and it was but rarely that he could
sing. His work is marred by struggle, violence
and effort, and he passed not from emotion to form,
but from thought to chaos. Still, he was great.
He has been called a thinker, and was certainly a
man who was always thinking, and always thinking aloud;
but it was not thought that fascinated him, but rather
the processes by which thought moves. It was
the machine he loved, not what the machine makes.
The method by which the fool arrives at his folly
was as dear to him as the ultimate wisdom of the wise.
So much, indeed, did the subtle mechanism of mind
fascinate him that he despised language, or looked
upon it as an incomplete instrument of expression.
Rhyme, that exquisite echo which in the Muse’s
hollow hill creates and answers its own voice; rhyme,
which in the hands of the real artist becomes not
merely a material element of metrical beauty, but
a spiritual element of thought and passion also, waking
a new mood, it may be, or stirring a fresh train of
ideas, or opening by mere sweetness and suggestion
of sound some golden door at which the Imagination
itself had knocked in vain; rhyme, which can turn
man’s utterance to the speech of gods; rhyme,
the one chord we have added to the Greek lyre, became
in Robert Browning’s hands a grotesque, misshapen
thing, which at times made him masquerade in poetry
as a low comedian, and ride Pegasus too often with
his tongue in his cheek. There are moments when
he wounds us by monstrous music. Nay, if he
can only get his music by breaking the strings of
his lute, he breaks them, and they snap in discord,
and no Athenian tettix, making melody from tremulous
wings, lights on the ivory horn to make the movement
perfect, or the interval less harsh. Yet, he
was great: and though he turned language into
ignoble clay, he made from it men and women that live.
He is the most Shakespearian creature since Shakespeare.
If Shakespeare could sing with myriad lips, Browning
could stammer through a thousand mouths. Even
now, as I am speaking, and speaking not against him
but for him, there glides through the room the pageant
of his persons. There, creeps Fra Lippo Lippi
with his cheeks still burning from some girl’s
hot kiss. There, stands dread Saul with the
lordly male-sapphires gleaming in his turban.
Mildred Tresham is there, and the Spanish monk, yellow
with hatred, and Blougram, and Ben Ezra, and the Bishop
of St. Praxed’s. The spawn of Setebos
gibbers in the corner, and Sebald, hearing Pippa pass
by, looks on Ottima’s haggard face, and loathes
her and his own sin, and himself. Pale as the
white satin of his doublet, the melancholy king watches
with dreamy treacherous eyes too loyal Strafford pass
forth to his doom, and Andrea shudders as he hears
the cousins whistle in the garden, and bids his perfect
wife go down. Yes, Browning was great.
And as what will he be remembered? As a poet?
Ah, not as a poet! He will be remembered as
a writer of fiction, as the most supreme writer of
fiction, it may be, that we have ever had. His
sense of dramatic situation was unrivalled, and, if
he could not answer his own problems, he could at least
put problems forth, and what more should an artist
do? Considered from the point of view of a creator
of character he ranks next to him who made Hamlet.
Had he been articulate, he might have sat beside
him. The only man who can touch the hem of his
garment is George Meredith. Meredith is a prose
Browning, and so is Browning. He used poetry
as a medium for writing in prose.
Ernest. There is something in
what you say, but there is not everything in what
you say. In many points you are unjust.
Gilbert. It is difficult
not to be unjust to what one loves. But let
us return to the particular point at issue. What
was it that you said?
Ernest. Simply this: that
in the best days of art there were no art-critics.
Gilbert. I seem to have
heard that observation before, Ernest. It has
all the vitality of error and all the tediousness of
an old friend.
Ernest. It is true. Yes:
there is no use your tossing your head in that petulant
manner. It is quite true. In the best days
of art there were no art-critics. The sculptor
hewed from the marble block the great white-limbed
Hermes that slept within it. The waxers and
gilders of images gave tone and texture to the statue,
and the world, when it saw it, worshipped and was dumb.
He poured the glowing bronze into the mould of sand,
and the river of red metal cooled into noble curves
and took the impress of the body of a god. With
enamel or polished jewels he gave sight to the sightless
eyes. The hyacinth-like curls grew crisp beneath
his graver. And when, in some dim frescoed fane,
or pillared sunlit portico, the child of Leto stood
upon his pedestal, those who passed by, [Greek text
which cannot be reproduced], became conscious of a
new influence that had come across their lives, and
dreamily, or with a sense of strange and quickening
joy, went to their homes or daily labour, or wandered,
it may be, through the city gates to that nymph-haunted
meadow where young Phaedrus bathed his feet, and,
lying there on the soft grass, beneath the tall wind—whispering
planes and flowering agnus castus, began to think
of the wonder of beauty, and grew silent with unaccustomed
awe. In those days the artist was free.
From the river valley he took the fine clay in his
fingers, and with a little tool of wood or bone, fashioned
it into forms so exquisite that the people gave them
to the dead as their playthings, and we find them
still in the dusty tombs on the yellow hillside by
Tanagra, with the faint gold and the fading crimson
still lingering about hair and lips and raiment.
On a wall of fresh plaster, stained with bright sandyx
or mixed with milk and saffron, he pictured one who
trod with tired feet the purple white-starred fields
of asphodel, one ’in whose eyelids lay the whole
of the Trojan War,’ Polyxena, the daughter of
Priam; or figured Odysseus, the wise and cunning,
bound by tight cords to the mast-step, that he might
listen without hurt to the singing of the Sirens,
or wandering by the clear river of Acheron, where the
ghosts of fishes flitted over the pebbly bed; or showed
the Persian in trews and mitre flying before the Greek
at Marathon, or the galleys clashing their beaks of
brass in the little Salaminian bay. He drew with
silver-point and charcoal upon parchment and prepared
cedar. Upon ivory and rose-coloured terracotta
he painted with wax, making the wax fluid with juice
of olives, and with heated irons making it firm.
Panel and marble and linen canvas became wonderful
as his brush swept across them; and life seeing her
own image, was still, and dared not speak. All
life, indeed, was his, from the merchants seated in
the market-place to the cloaked shepherd lying on
the hill; from the nymph hidden in the laurels and
the faun that pipes at noon, to the king whom, in long
green-curtained litter, slaves bore upon oil-bright
shoulders, and fanned with peacock fans. Men
and women, with pleasure or sorrow in their faces,
passed before him. He watched them, and their
secret became his. Through form and colour he
re-created a world.
All subtle arts belonged to him also.
He held the gem against the revolving disk, and the
amethyst became the purple couch for Adonis, and across
the veined sardonyx sped Artemis with her hounds.
He beat out the gold into roses, and strung them together
for necklace or armlet. He beat out the gold
into wreaths for the conqueror’s helmet, or
into palmates for the Tyrian robe, or into masks for
the royal dead. On the back of the silver mirror
he graved Thetis borne by her Nereids, or love-sick
Phaedra with her nurse, or Persephone, weary of memory,
putting poppies in her hair. The potter sat in
his shed, and, flower-like from the silent wheel,
the vase rose up beneath his hands. He decorated
the base and stem and ears with pattern of dainty
olive-leaf, or foliated acanthus, or curved and crested
wave. Then in black or red he painted lads wrestling,
or in the race: knights in full armour, with
strange heraldic shields and curious visors, leaning
from shell-shaped chariot over rearing steeds:
the gods seated at the feast or working their miracles:
the heroes in their victory or in their pain.
Sometimes he would etch in thin vermilion lines upon
a ground of white the languid bridegroom and his bride,
with Eros hovering round them—an Eros like
one of Donatello’s angels, a little laughing
thing with gilded or with azure wings. On the
curved side he would write the name of his friend.
[Greek text which cannot be reproduced] or [Greek
text which cannot be reproduced] tells us the story
of his days. Again, on the rim of the wide flat
cup he would draw the stag browsing, or the lion at
rest, as his fancy willed it. From the tiny perfume-bottle
laughed Aphrodite at her toilet, and, with bare-limbed
Maenads in his train, Dionysus danced round the wine-jar
on naked must-stained feet, while, satyr-like, the
old Silenus sprawled upon the bloated skins, or shook
that magic spear which was tipped with a fretted fir-cone,
and wreathed with dark ivy. And no one came to
trouble the artist at his work. No irresponsible
chatter disturbed him. He was not worried by
opinions. By the Ilyssus, says Arnold somewhere,
there was no Higginbotham. By the Ilyssus, my
dear Gilbert, there were no silly art congresses bringing
provincialism to the provinces and teaching the mediocrity
how to mouth. By the Ilyssus there were no tedious
magazines about art, in which the industrious prattle
of what they do not understand. On the reed-grown
banks of that little stream strutted no ridiculous
journalism monopolising the seat of judgment when
it should be apologising in the dock. The Greeks
had no art-critics.
Gilbert. Ernest, you are
quite delightful, but your views are terribly unsound.
I am afraid that you have been listening to the conversation
of some one older than yourself. That is always
a dangerous thing to do, and if you allow it to degenerate
into a habit you will find it absolutely fatal to
any intellectual development. As for modern
journalism, it is not my business to defend it.
It justifies its own existence by the great Darwinian
principle of the survival of the vulgarest. I
have merely to do with literature.
Ernest. But what is the difference
between literature and journalism?
Gilbert. Oh! journalism
is unreadable, and literature is not read. That
is all. But with regard to your statement that
the Greeks had no art-critics, I assure you that is
quite absurd. It would be more just to say that
the Greeks were a nation of art-critics.
Ernest. Really?
Gilbert. Yes, a nation
of art-critics. But I don’t wish to destroy
the delightfully unreal picture that you have drawn
of the relation of the Hellenic artist to the intellectual
spirit of his age. To give an accurate description
of what has never occurred is not merely the proper
occupation of the historian, but the inalienable privilege
of any man of parts and culture. Still less
do I desire to talk learnedly. Learned conversation
is either the affectation of the ignorant or the profession
of the mentally unemployed. And, as for what
is called improving conversation, that is merely the
foolish method by which the still more foolish philanthropist
feebly tries to disarm the just rancour of the criminal
classes. No: let me play to you some mad
scarlet thing by Dvorak. The pallid figures
on the tapestry are smiling at us, and the heavy eyelids
of my bronze Narcissus are folded in sleep. Don’t
let us discuss anything solemnly. I am but too
conscious of the fact that we are born in an age when
only the dull are treated seriously, and I live in
terror of not being misunderstood. Don’t
degrade me into the position of giving you useful information.
Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to
remember from time to time that nothing that is worth
knowing can be taught. Through the parted curtains
of the window I see the moon like a clipped piece
of silver. Like gilded bees the stars cluster
round her. The sky is a hard hollow sapphire.
Let us go out into the night. Thought is wonderful,
but adventure is more wonderful still. Who knows
but we may meet Prince Florizel of Bohemia, and hear
the fair Cuban tell us that she is not what she seems?
Ernest. You are horribly wilful.
I insist on your discussing this matter with me.
You have said that the Greeks were a nation of art-critics.
What art-criticism have they left us?
Gilbert. My dear Ernest,
even if not a single fragment of art-criticism had
come down to us from Hellenic or Hellenistic days,
it would be none the less true that the Greeks were
a nation of art-critics, and that they invented the
criticism of art just as they invented the criticism
of everything else. For, after all, what is
our primary debt to the Greeks? Simply the critical
spirit. And, this spirit, which they exercised
on questions of religion and science, of ethics and
metaphysics, of politics and education, they exercised
on questions of art also, and, indeed, of the two supreme
and highest arts, they have left us the most flawless
system of criticism that the world has ever seen.
Ernest. But what are the two
supreme and highest arts?
Gilbert. Life and Literature,
life and the perfect expression of life. The
principles of the former, as laid down by the Greeks,
we may not realise in an age so marred by false ideals
as our own. The principles of the latter, as
they laid them down, are, in many cases, so subtle
that we can hardly understand them. Recognising
that the most perfect art is that which most fully
mirrors man in all his infinite variety, they elaborated
the criticism of language, considered in the light
of the mere material of that art, to a point to which
we, with our accentual system of reasonable or emotional
emphasis, can barely if at all attain; studying, for
instance, the metrical movements of a prose as scientifically
as a modern musician studies harmony and counterpoint,
and, I need hardly say, with much keener aesthetic
instinct. In this they were right, as they were
right in all things. Since the introduction of
printing, and the fatal development of the habit of
reading amongst the middle and lower classes of this
country, there has been a tendency in literature to
appeal more and more to the eye, and less and less
to the ear which is really the sense which, from the
standpoint of pure art, it should seek to please, and
by whose canons of pleasure it should abide always.
Even the work of Mr. Pater, who is, on the whole,
the most perfect master of English prose now creating
amongst us, is often far more like a piece of mosaic
than a passage in music, and seems, here and there,
to lack the true rhythmical life of words and the
fine freedom and richness of effect that such rhythmical
life produces. We, in fact, have made writing
a definite mode of composition, and have treated it
as a form of elaborate design. The Greeks, upon
the other hand, regarded writing simply as a method
of chronicling. Their test was always the spoken
word in its musical and metrical relations. The
voice was the medium, and the ear the critic.
I have sometimes thought that the story of Homer’s
blindness might be really an artistic myth, created
in critical days, and serving to remind us, not merely
that the great poet is always a seer, seeing less with
the eyes of the body than he does with the eyes of
the soul, but that he is a true singer also, building
his song out of music, repeating each line over and
over again to himself till he has caught the secret
of its melody, chaunting in darkness the words that
are winged with light. Certainly, whether this
be so or not, it was to his blindness, as an occasion,
if not as a cause, that England’s great poet
owed much of the majestic movement and sonorous splendour
of his later verse. When Milton could no longer
write he began to sing. Who would match the measures
of Comus with the measures of Samson Agonistes, or
of Paradise Lost or Regained? When Milton became
blind he composed, as every one should compose, with
the voice purely, and so the pipe or reed of earlier
days became that mighty many-stopped organ whose rich
reverberant music has all the stateliness of Homeric
verse, if it seeks not to have its swiftness, and
is the one imperishable inheritance of English literature
sweeping through all the ages, because above them,
and abiding with us ever, being immortal in its form.
Yes: writing has done much harm to writers.
We must return to the voice. That must be our
test, and perhaps then we shall be able to appreciate
some of the subtleties of Greek art-criticism.
As it now is, we cannot do so.
Sometimes, when I have written a piece of prose that
I have been modest enough to consider absolutely free
from fault, a dreadful thought comes over me that I
may have been guilty of the immoral effeminacy of using
trochaic and tribrachic movements, a crime for which
a learned critic of the Augustan age censures with
most just severity the brilliant if somewhat paradoxical
Hegesias. I grow cold when I think of it, and
wonder to myself if the admirable ethical effect of
the prose of that charming writer, who once in a spirit
of reckless generosity towards the uncultivated portion
of our community proclaimed the monstrous doctrine
that conduct is three-fourths of life, will not some
day be entirely annihilated by the discovery that the
paeons have been wrongly placed.
Ernest. Ah! now you are flippant.
Gilbert. Who would not
be flippant when he is gravely told that the Greeks
had no art-critics? I can understand it being
said that the constructive genius of the Greeks lost
itself in criticism, but not that the race to whom
we owe the critical spirit did not criticise.
You will not ask me to give you a survey of Greek
art criticism from Plato to Plotinus. The night
is too lovely for that, and the moon, if she heard
us, would put more ashes on her face than are there
already. But think merely of one perfect little
work of aesthetic criticism, Aristotle’s Treatise
on Poetry. It is not perfect in form, for it
is badly written, consisting perhaps of notes dotted
down for an art lecture, or of isolated fragments
destined for some larger book, but in temper and treatment
it is perfect, absolutely. The ethical effect
of art, its importance to culture, and its place in
the formation of character, had been done once for
all by Plato; but here we have art treated, not from
the moral, but from the purely aesthetic point of
view. Plato had, of course, dealt with many definitely
artistic subjects, such as the importance of unity
in a work of art, the necessity for tone and harmony,
the aesthetic value of appearances, the relation of
the visible arts to the external world, and the relation
of fiction to fact. He first perhaps stirred
in the soul of man that desire that we have not yet
satisfied, the desire to know the connection between
Beauty and Truth, and the place of Beauty in the moral
and intellectual order of the Kosmos. The problems
of idealism and realism, as he sets them forth, may
seem to many to be somewhat barren of result in the
metaphysical sphere of abstract being in which he places
them, but transfer them to the sphere of art, and
you will find that they are still vital and full of
meaning. It may be that it is as a critic of
Beauty that Plato is destined to live, and that by
altering the name of the sphere of his speculation
we shall find a new philosophy. But Aristotle,
like Goethe, deals with art primarily in its concrete
manifestations, taking Tragedy, for instance, and
investigating the material it uses, which is language,
its subject-matter, which is life, the method by
which it works, which is action, the conditions under
which it reveals itself, which are those of theatric
presentation, its logical structure, which is plot,
and its final aesthetic appeal, which is to the sense
of beauty realised through the passions of pity and
awe. That purification and spiritualising of
the nature which he calls [Greek text which cannot
be reproduced] is, as Goethe saw, essentially aesthetic,
and is not moral, as Lessing fancied. Concerning
himself primarily with the impression that the work
of art produces, Aristotle sets himself to analyse
that impression, to investigate its source, to see
how it is engendered. As a physiologist and
psychologist, he knows that the health of a function
resides in energy. To have a capacity for a passion
and not to realise it, is to make oneself incomplete
and limited. The mimic spectacle of life that
Tragedy affords cleanses the bosom of much ‘perilous
stuff,’ and by presenting high and worthy objects
for the exercise of the emotions purifies and spiritualises
the man; nay, not merely does it spiritualise him,
but it initiates him also into noble feelings of which
he might else have known nothing, the word [Greek
text which cannot be reproduced] having, it has sometimes
seemed to me, a definite allusion to the rite of initiation,
if indeed that be not, as I am occasionally tempted
to fancy, its true and only meaning here. This
is of course a mere outline of the book. But
you see what a perfect piece of aesthetic criticism
it is. Who indeed but a Greek could have analysed
art so well? After reading it, one does not
wonder any longer that Alexandria devoted itself so
largely to art-criticism, and that we find the artistic
temperaments of the day investigating every question
of style and manner, discussing the great Academic
schools of painting, for instance, such as the school
of Sicyon, that sought to preserve the dignified traditions
of the antique mode, or the realistic and impressionist
schools, that aimed at reproducing actual life, or
the elements of ideality in portraiture, or the artistic
value of the epic form in an age so modern as theirs,
or the proper subject-matter for the artist.
Indeed, I fear that the inartistic temperaments of
the day busied themselves also in matters of literature
and art, for the accusations of plagiarism were endless,
and such accusations proceed either from the thin
colourless lips of impotence, or from the grotesque
mouths of those who, possessing nothing of their own,
fancy that they can gain a reputation for wealth by
crying out that they have been robbed. And I
assure you, my dear Ernest, that the Greeks chattered
about painters quite as much as people do nowadays,
and had their private views, and shilling exhibitions,
and Arts and Crafts guilds, and Pre-Raphaelite movements,
and movements towards realism, and lectured about
art, and wrote essays on art, and produced their art-historians,
and their archaeologists, and all the rest of it.
Why, even the theatrical managers of travelling companies
brought their dramatic critics with them when they
went on tour, and paid them very handsome salaries
for writing laudatory notices. Whatever, in fact,
is modern in our life we owe to the Greeks. Whatever
is an anachronism is due to mediaevalism. It
is the Greeks who have given us the whole system of
art-criticism, and how fine their critical instinct
was, may be seen from the fact that the material they
criticised with most care was, as I have already said,
language. For the material that painter or sculptor
uses is meagre in comparison with that of words.
Words have not merely music as sweet as that of viol
and lute, colour as rich and vivid as any that makes
lovely for us the canvas of the Venetian or the Spaniard,
and plastic form no less sure and certain than that
which reveals itself in marble or in bronze, but thought
and passion and spirituality are theirs also, are
theirs indeed alone. If the Greeks had criticised
nothing but language, they would still have been the
great art-critics of the world. To know the principles
of the highest art is to know the principles of all
the arts.
But I see that the moon is hiding
behind a sulphur-coloured cloud. Out of a tawny
mane of drift she gleams like a lion’s eye.
She is afraid that I will talk to you of Lucian and
Longinus, of Quinctilian and Dionysius, of Pliny and
Fronto and Pausanias, of all those who in the antique
world wrote or lectured upon art matters. She
need not be afraid. I am tired of my expedition
into the dim, dull abyss of facts. There is
nothing left for me now but the divine [Greek text
which cannot be reproduced] of another cigarette.
Cigarettes have at least the charm of leaving one
unsatisfied.
Ernest. Try one of mine.
They are rather good. I get them direct from
Cairo. The only use of our attaches is that they
supply their friends with excellent tobacco.
And as the moon has hidden herself, let us talk a
little longer. I am quite ready to admit that
I was wrong in what I said about the Greeks.
They were, as you have pointed out, a nation of art-critics.
I acknowledge it, and I feel a little sorry for them.
For the creative faculty is higher than the critical.
There is really no comparison between them.
Gilbert. The antithesis
between them is entirely arbitrary. Without the
critical faculty, there is no artistic creation at
all, worthy of the name. You spoke a little
while ago of that fine spirit of choice and delicate
instinct of selection by which the artist realises
life for us, and gives to it a momentary perfection.
Well, that spirit of choice, that subtle tact of
omission, is really the critical faculty in one of
its most characteristic moods, and no one who does
not possess this critical faculty can create anything
at all in art. Arnold’s definition of
literature as a criticism of life was not very felicitous
in form, but it showed how keenly he recognised the
importance of the critical element in all creative
work.
Ernest. I should have said that
great artists work unconsciously, that they were ‘wiser
than they knew,’ as, I think, Emerson remarks
somewhere.
Gilbert. It is really not
so, Ernest. All fine imaginative work is self-conscious
and deliberate. No poet sings because he must
sing. At least, no great poet does. A great
poet sings because he chooses to sing. It is
so now, and it has always been so. We are sometimes
apt to think that the voices that sounded at the dawn
of poetry were simpler, fresher, and more natural
than ours, and that the world which the early poets
looked at, and through which they walked, had a kind
of poetical quality of its own, and almost without
changing could pass into song. The snow lies
thick now upon Olympus, and its steep scarped sides
are bleak and barren, but once, we fancy, the white
feet of the Muses brushed the dew from the anemones
in the morning, and at evening came Apollo to sing
to the shepherds in the vale. But in this we
are merely lending to other ages what we desire, or
think we desire, for our own. Our historical
sense is at fault. Every century that produces
poetry is, so far, an artificial century, and the
work that seems to us to be the most natural and simple
product of its time is always the result of the most
self-conscious effort. Believe me, Ernest, there
is no fine art without self-consciousness, and self-consciousness
and the critical spirit are one.
Ernest. I see what you mean,
and there is much in it. But surely you would
admit that the great poems of the early world, the
primitive, anonymous collective poems, were the result
of the imagination of races, rather than of the imagination
of individuals?
Gilbert. Not when they
became poetry. Not when they received a beautiful
form. For there is no art where there is no style,
and no style where there is no unity, and unity is
of the individual. No doubt Homer had old ballads
and stories to deal with, as Shakespeare had chronicles
and plays and novels from which to work, but they
were merely his rough material. He took them,
and shaped them into song. They become his,
because he made them lovely. They were built
out of music,
And so not built at all,
And therefore built for ever.
The longer one studies life and literature,
the more strongly one feels that behind everything
that is wonderful stands the individual, and that
it is not the moment that makes the man, but the man
who creates the age. Indeed, I am inclined to
think that each myth and legend that seems to us to
spring out of the wonder, or terror, or fancy of tribe
and nation, was in its origin the invention of one
single mind. The curiously limited number of
the myths seems to me to point to this conclusion.
But we must not go off into questions of comparative
mythology. We must keep to criticism.
And what I want to point out is this. An age
that has no criticism is either an age in which art
is immobile, hieratic, and confined to the reproduction
of formal types, or an age that possesses no art at
all. There have been critical ages that have
not been creative, in the ordinary sense of the word,
ages in which the spirit of man has sought to set
in order the treasures of his treasure-house, to separate
the gold from the silver, and the silver from the
lead, to count over the jewels, and to give names
to the pearls. But there has never been a creative
age that has not been critical also. For it
is the critical faculty that invents fresh forms.
The tendency of creation is to repeat itself.
It is to the critical instinct that we owe each new
school that springs up, each new mould that art finds
ready to its hand. There is really not a single
form that art now uses that does not come to us from
the critical spirit of Alexandria, where these forms
were either stereotyped or invented or made perfect.
I say Alexandria, not merely because it was there
that the Greek spirit became most self-conscious,
and indeed ultimately expired in scepticism and theology,
but because it was to that city, and not to Athens,
that Rome turned for her models, and it was through
the survival, such as it was, of the Latin language
that culture lived at all. When, at the Renaissance,
Greek literature dawned upon Europe, the soil had
been in some measure prepared for it. But, to
get rid of the details of history, which are always
wearisome and usually inaccurate, let us say generally,
that the forms of art have been due to the Greek critical
spirit. To it we owe the epic, the lyric, the
entire drama in every one of its developments, including
burlesque, the idyll, the romantic novel, the novel
of adventure, the essay, the dialogue, the oration,
the lecture, for which perhaps we should not forgive
them, and the epigram, in all the wide meaning of
that word. In fact, we owe it everything, except
the sonnet, to which, however, some curious parallels
of thought-movement may be traced in the Anthology,
American journalism, to which no parallel can be found
anywhere, and the ballad in sham Scotch dialect, which
one of our most industrious writers has recently proposed
should be made the basis for a final and unanimous
effort on the part of our second-rate poets to make
themselves really romantic. Each new school,
as it appears, cries out against criticism, but it
is to the critical faculty in man that it owes its
origin. The mere creative instinct does not
innovate, but reproduces.
Ernest. You have been talking
of criticism as an essential part of the creative
spirit, and I now fully accept your theory. But
what of criticism outside creation? I have a
foolish habit of reading periodicals, and it seems
to me that most modern criticism is perfectly valueless.
Gilbert. So is most modern
creative work also. Mediocrity weighing mediocrity
in the balance, and incompetence applauding its brother—that
is the spectacle which the artistic activity of England
affords us from time to time. And yet, I feel
I am a little unfair in this matter. As a rule,
the critics—I speak, of course, of the
higher class, of those in fact who write for the sixpenny
papers—are far more cultured than the people
whose work they are called upon to review. This
is, indeed, only what one would expect, for criticism
demands infinitely more cultivation than creation
does.
Ernest. Really?
Gilbert. Certainly.
Anybody can write a three-volumed novel. It
merely requires a complete ignorance of both life and
literature. The difficulty that I should fancy
the reviewer feels is the difficulty of sustaining
any standard. Where there is no style a standard
must be impossible. The poor reviewers are apparently
reduced to be the reporters of the police-court of
literature, the chroniclers of the doings of the habitual
criminals of art. It is sometimes said of them
that they do not read all through the works they are
called upon to criticise. They do not.
Or at least they should not. If they did so,
they would become confirmed misanthropes, or if I
may borrow a phrase from one of the pretty Newnham
graduates, confirmed womanthropes for the rest of their
lives. Nor is it necessary. To know the
vintage and quality of a wine one need not drink the
whole cask. It must be perfectly easy in half
an hour to say whether a book is worth anything or
worth nothing. Ten minutes are really sufficient,
if one has the instinct for form. Who wants
to wade through a dull volume? One tastes it,
and that is quite enough—more than enough,
I should imagine. I am aware that there are
many honest workers in painting as well as in literature
who object to criticism entirely. They are quite
right. Their work stands in no intellectual relation
to their age. It brings us no new element of
pleasure. It suggests no fresh departure of
thought, or passion, or beauty. It should not
be spoken of. It should be left to the oblivion
that it deserves.
Ernest. But, my dear fellow—excuse
me for interrupting you—you seem to me
to be allowing your passion for criticism to lead you
a great deal too far. For, after all, even you
must admit that it is much more difficult to do a
thing than to talk about it.
Gilbert. More difficult
to do a thing than to talk about it? Not at
all. That is a gross popular error. It
is very much more difficult to talk about a thing
than to do it. In the sphere of actual life
that is of course obvious. Anybody can make history.
Only a great man can write it. There is no mode
of action, no form of emotion, that we do not share
with the lower animals. It is only by language
that we rise above them, or above each other—by
language, which is the parent, and not the child, of
thought. Action, indeed, is always easy, and
when presented to us in its most aggravated, because
most continuous form, which I take to be that of real
industry, becomes simply the refuge of people who have
nothing whatsoever to do. No, Ernest, don’t
talk about action. It is a blind thing dependent
on external influences, and moved by an impulse of
whose nature it is unconscious. It is a thing
incomplete in its essence, because limited by accident,
and ignorant of its direction, being always at variance
with its aim. Its basis is the lack of imagination.
It is the last resource of those who know not how
to dream.
Ernest. Gilbert, you treat the
world as if it were a crystal ball. You hold
it in your hand, and reverse it to please a wilful
fancy. You do nothing but re-write history.
Gilbert. The one duty we
owe to history is to re-write it. That is not
the least of the tasks in store for the critical spirit.
When we have fully discovered the scientific laws that
govern life, we shall realise that the one person
who has more illusions than the dreamer is the man
of action. He, indeed, knows neither the origin
of his deeds nor their results. From the field
in which he thought that he had sown thorns, we have
gathered our vintage, and the fig-tree that he planted
for our pleasure is as barren as the thistle, and
more bitter. It is because Humanity has never
known where it was going that it has been able to
find its way.
Ernest. You think, then, that
in the sphere of action a conscious aim is a delusion?
Gilbert. It is worse than
a delusion. If we lived long enough to see the
results of our actions it may be that those who call
themselves good would be sickened with a dull remorse,
and those whom the world calls evil stirred by a noble
joy. Each little thing that we do passes into
the great machine of life which may grind our virtues
to powder and make them worthless, or transform our
sins into elements of a new civilisation, more marvellous
and more splendid than any that has gone before.
But men are the slaves of words. They rage
against Materialism, as they call it, forgetting that
there has been no material improvement that has not
spiritualised the world, and that there have been few,
if any, spiritual awakenings that have not wasted
the world’s faculties in barren hopes, and fruitless
aspirations, and empty or trammelling creeds.
What is termed Sin is an essential element of progress.
Without it the world would stagnate, or grow old, or
become colourless. By its curiosity Sin increases
the experience of the race. Through its intensified
assertion of individualism, it saves us from monotony
of type. In its rejection of the current notions
about morality, it is one with the higher ethics.
And as for the virtues! What are the virtues?
Nature, M. Renan tells us, cares little about chastity,
and it may be that it is to the shame of the Magdalen,
and not to their own purity, that the Lucretias of
modern life owe their freedom from stain. Charity,
as even those of whose religion it makes a formal
part have been compelled to acknowledge, creates a
multitude of evils. The mere existence of conscience,
that faculty of which people prate so much nowadays,
and are so ignorantly proud, is a sign of our imperfect
development. It must be merged in instinct before
we become fine. Self-denial is simply a method
by which man arrests his progress, and self-sacrifice
a survival of the mutilation of the savage, part of
that old worship of pain which is so terrible a factor
in the history of the world, and which even now makes
its victims day by day, and has its altars in the
land. Virtues! Who knows what the virtues
are? Not you. Not I. Not any one.
It is well for our vanity that we slay the criminal,
for if we suffered him to live he might show us what
we had gained by his crime. It is well for his
peace that the saint goes to his martyrdom.
He is spared the sight of the horror of his harvest.
Ernest. Gilbert, you sound too
harsh a note. Let us go back to the more gracious
fields of literature. What was it you said?
That it was more difficult to talk about a thing than
to do it?
Gilbert (after a pause).
Yes: I believe I ventured upon that simple
truth. Surely you see now that I am right?
When man acts he is a puppet. When he describes
he is a poet. The whole secret lies in that.
It was easy enough on the sandy plains by windy Ilion
to send the notched arrow from the painted bow, or
to hurl against the shield of hide and flamelike brass
the long ash-handled spear. It was easy for
the adulterous queen to spread the Tyrian carpets
for her lord, and then, as he lay couched in the marble
bath, to throw over his head the purple net, and call
to her smooth-faced lover to stab through the meshes
at the heart that should have broken at Aulis.
For Antigone even, with Death waiting for her as
her bridegroom, it was easy to pass through the tainted
air at noon, and climb the hill, and strew with kindly
earth the wretched naked corse that had no tomb.
But what of those who wrote about these things?
What of those who gave them reality, and made them
live for ever? Are they not greater than the
men and women they sing of? ‘Hector that
sweet knight is dead,’ and Lucian tells us how
in the dim under-world Menippus saw the bleaching skull
of Helen, and marvelled that it was for so grim a
favour that all those horned ships were launched,
those beautiful mailed men laid low, those towered
cities brought to dust. Yet, every day the swanlike
daughter of Leda comes out on the battlements, and
looks down at the tide of war. The greybeards
wonder at her loveliness, and she stands by the side
of the king. In his chamber of stained ivory
lies her leman. He is polishing his dainty armour,
and combing the scarlet plume. With squire and
page, her husband passes from tent to tent.
She can see his bright hair, and hears, or fancies
that she hears, that clear cold voice. In the
courtyard below, the son of Priam is buckling on his
brazen cuirass. The white arms of Andromache
are around his neck. He sets his helmet on the
ground, lest their babe should be frightened.
Behind the embroidered curtains of his pavilion sits
Achilles, in perfumed raiment, while in harness of
gilt and silver the friend of his soul arrays himself
to go forth to the fight. From a curiously carven
chest that his mother Thetis had brought to his ship-side,
the Lord of the Myrmidons takes out that mystic chalice
that the lip of man had never touched, and cleanses
it with brimstone, and with fresh water cools it,
and, having washed his hands, fills with black wine
its burnished hollow, and spills the thick grape-blood
upon the ground in honour of Him whom at Dodona barefooted
prophets worshipped, and prays to Him, and knows not
that he prays in vain, and that by the hands of two
knights from Troy, Panthous’ son, Euphorbus,
whose love-locks were looped with gold, and the Priamid,
the lion-hearted, Patroklus, the comrade of comrades,
must meet his doom. Phantoms, are they?
Heroes of mist and mountain? Shadows in a song?
No: they are real. Action! What
is action? It dies at the moment of its energy.
It is a base concession to fact. The world
is made by the singer for the dreamer.
Ernest. While you talk it seems to me to be
so.
Gilbert. It is so in truth.
On the mouldering citadel of Troy lies the lizard
like a thing of green bronze. The owl has built
her nest in the palace of Priam. Over the empty
plain wander shepherd and goatherd with their flocks,
and where, on the wine-surfaced, oily sea, [Greek
text which cannot be reproduced], as Homer calls it,
copper-prowed and streaked with vermilion, the great
galleys of the Danaoi came in their gleaming crescent,
the lonely tunny-fisher sits in his little boat and
watches the bobbing corks of his net. Yet, every
morning the doors of the city are thrown open, and
on foot, or in horse-drawn chariot, the warriors go
forth to battle, and mock their enemies from behind
their iron masks. All day long the fight rages,
and when night comes the torches gleam by the tents,
and the cresset burns in the hall. Those who
live in marble or on painted panel, know of life but
a single exquisite instant, eternal indeed in its
beauty, but limited to one note of passion or one
mood of calm. Those whom the poet makes live
have their myriad emotions of joy and terror, of courage
and despair, of pleasure and of suffering. The
seasons come and go in glad or saddening pageant,
and with winged or leaden feet the years pass by before
them. They have their youth and their manhood,
they are children, and they grow old. It is always
dawn for St. Helena, as Veronese saw her at the window.
Through the still morning air the angels bring her
the symbol of God’s pain. The cool breezes
of the morning lift the gilt threads from her brow.
On that little hill by the city of Florence, where
the lovers of Giorgione are lying, it is always the
solstice of noon, of noon made so languorous by summer
suns that hardly can the slim naked girl dip into
the marble tank the round bubble of clear glass, and
the long fingers of the lute-player rest idly upon
the chords. It is twilight always for the dancing
nymphs whom Corot set free among the silver poplars
of France. In eternal twilight they move, those
frail diaphanous figures, whose tremulous white feet
seem not to touch the dew-drenched grass they tread
on. But those who walk in epos, drama, or romance,
see through the labouring months the young moons wax
and wane, and watch the night from evening unto morning
star, and from sunrise unto sunsetting can note the
shifting day with all its gold and shadow. For
them, as for us, the flowers bloom and wither, and
the Earth, that Green-tressed Goddess as Coleridge
calls her, alters her raiment for their pleasure.
The statue is concentrated to one moment of perfection.
The image stained upon the canvas possesses no spiritual
element of growth or change. If they know nothing
of death, it is because they know little of life,
for the secrets of life and death belong to those,
and those only, whom the sequence of time affects,
and who possess not merely the present but the future,
and can rise or fall from a past of glory or of shame.
Movement, that problem of the visible arts, can be
truly realised by Literature alone. It is Literature
that shows us the body in its swiftness and the soul
in its unrest.
Ernest. Yes; I see now what
you mean. But, surely, the higher you place
the creative artist, the lower must the critic rank.
Gilbert. Why so?
Ernest. Because the best that
he can give us will be but an echo of rich music,
a dim shadow of clear-outlined form. It may,
indeed, be that life is chaos, as you tell me that
it is; that its martyrdoms are mean and its heroisms
ignoble; and that it is the function of Literature
to create, from the rough material of actual existence,
a new world that will be more marvellous, more enduring,
and more true than the world that common eyes look
upon, and through which common natures seek to realise
their perfection. But surely, if this new world
has been made by the spirit and touch of a great artist,
it will be a thing so complete and perfect that there
will be nothing left for the critic to do. I
quite understand now, and indeed admit most readily,
that it is far more difficult to talk about a thing
than to do it. But it seems to me that this
sound and sensible maxim, which is really extremely
soothing to one’s feelings, and should be adopted
as its motto by every Academy of Literature all over
the world, applies only to the relations that exist
between Art and Life, and not to any relations that
there may be between Art and Criticism.
Gilbert. But, surely, Criticism
is itself an art. And just as artistic creation
implies the working of the critical faculty, and,
indeed, without it cannot be said to exist at all,
so Criticism is really creative in the highest sense
of the word. Criticism is, in fact, both creative
and independent.
Ernest. Independent?
Gilbert. Yes; independent.
Criticism is no more to be judged by any low standard
of imitation or resemblance than is the work of poet
or sculptor. The critic occupies the same relation
to the work of art that he criticises as the artist
does to the visible world of form and colour, or the
unseen world of passion and of thought. He does
not even require for the perfection of his art the
finest materials. Anything will serve his purpose.
And just as out of the sordid and sentimental amours
of the silly wife of a small country doctor in the
squalid village of Yonville-l’Abbaye, near Rouen,
Gustave Flaubert was able to create a classic, and
make a masterpiece of style, so, from subjects of
little or of no importance, such as the pictures in
this year’s Royal Academy, or in any year’s
Royal Academy for that matter, Mr. Lewis Morris’s
poems, M. Ohnet’s novels, or the plays of Mr.
Henry Arthur Jones, the true critic can, if it be
his pleasure so to direct or waste his faculty of
contemplation, produce work that will be flawless in
beauty and instinct with intellectual subtlety.
Why not? Dulness is always an irresistible
temptation for brilliancy, and stupidity is the permanent
Bestia Trionfans that calls wisdom from its cave.
To an artist so creative as the critic, what does subject-matter
signify? No more and no less than it does to
the novelist and the painter. Like them, he
can find his motives everywhere. Treatment is
the test. There is nothing that has not in it
suggestion or challenge.
Ernest. But is Criticism really a creative art?
Gilbert. Why should it
not be? It works with materials, and puts them
into a form that is at once new and delightful.
What more can one say of poetry? Indeed, I
would call criticism a creation within a creation.
For just as the great artists, from Homer and AEschylus,
down to Shakespeare and Keats, did not go directly
to life for their subject-matter, but sought for it
in myth, and legend, and ancient tale, so the critic
deals with materials that others have, as it were,
purified for him, and to which imaginative form and
colour have been already added. Nay, more, I
would say that the highest Criticism, being the purest
form of personal impression, is in its way more creative
than creation, as it has least reference to any standard
external to itself, and is, in fact, its own reason
for existing, and, as the Greeks would put it, in
itself, and to itself, an end. Certainly, it
is never trammelled by any shackles of verisimilitude.
No ignoble considerations of probability, that cowardly
concession to the tedious repetitions of domestic
or public life, affect it ever. One may appeal
from fiction unto fact. But from the soul there
is no appeal.
Ernest. From the soul?
Gilbert. Yes, from the
soul. That is what the highest criticism really
is, the record of one’s own soul. It is
more fascinating than history, as it is concerned
simply with oneself. It is more delightful than
philosophy, as its subject is concrete and not abstract,
real and not vague. It is the only civilised
form of autobiography, as it deals not with the events,
but with the thoughts of one’s life; not with
life’s physical accidents of deed or circumstance,
but with the spiritual moods and imaginative passions
of the mind. I am always amused by the silly
vanity of those writers and artists of our day who
seem to imagine that the primary function of the critic
is to chatter about their second-rate work.
The best that one can say of most modern creative
art is that it is just a little less vulgar than reality,
and so the critic, with his fine sense of distinction
and sure instinct of delicate refinement, will prefer
to look into the silver mirror or through the woven
veil, and will turn his eyes away from the chaos and
clamour of actual existence, though the mirror be tarnished
and the veil be torn. His sole aim is to chronicle
his own impressions. It is for him that pictures
are painted, books written, and marble hewn into form.
Ernest. I seem to have heard
another theory of Criticism.
Gilbert. Yes: it
has been said by one whose gracious memory we all
revere, and the music of whose pipe once lured Proserpina
from her Sicilian fields, and made those white feet
stir, and not in vain, the Cumnor cowslips, that the
proper aim of Criticism is to see the object as in
itself it really is. But this is a very serious
error, and takes no cognisance of Criticism’s
most perfect form, which is in its essence purely
subjective, and seeks to reveal its own secret and
not the secret of another. For the highest Criticism
deals with art not as expressive but as impressive
purely.
Ernest. But is that really so?
Gilbert. Of course it is.
Who cares whether Mr. Ruskin’s views on Turner
are sound or not? What does it matter?
That mighty and majestic prose of his, so fervid and
so fiery-coloured in its noble eloquence, so rich
in its elaborate symphonic music, so sure and certain,
at its best, in subtle choice of word and epithet,
is at least as great a work of art as any of those
wonderful sunsets that bleach or rot on their corrupted
canvases in England’s Gallery; greater indeed,
one is apt to think at times, not merely because its
equal beauty is more enduring, but on account of the
fuller variety of its appeal, soul speaking to soul
in those long-cadenced lines, not through form and
colour alone, though through these, indeed, completely
and without loss, but with intellectual and emotional
utterance, with lofty passion and with loftier thought,
with imaginative insight, and with poetic aim; greater,
I always think, even as Literature is the greater
art. Who, again, cares whether Mr. Pater has
put into the portrait of Monna Lisa something that
Lionardo never dreamed of? The painter may have
been merely the slave of an archaic smile, as some
have fancied, but whenever I pass into the cool galleries
of the Palace of the Louvre, and stand before that
strange figure ’set in its marble chair in that
cirque of fantastic rocks, as in some faint light
under sea,’ I murmur to myself, ’She is
older than the rocks among which she sits; like the
vampire, she has been dead many times, and learned
the secrets of the grave; and has been a diver in
deep seas, and keeps their fallen day about her:
and trafficked for strange webs with Eastern merchants;
and, as Leda, was the mother of Helen of Troy, and,
as St. Anne, the mother of Mary; and all this has
been to her but as the sound of lyres and flutes,
and lives only in the delicacy with which it has moulded
the changing lineaments, and tinged the eyelids and
the hands.’ And I say to my friend, ’The
presence that thus so strangely rose beside the waters
is expressive of what in the ways of a thousand years
man had come to desire’; and he answers me,
’Hers is the head upon which all “the ends
of the world are come,” and the eyelids are
a little weary.’
And so the picture becomes more wonderful
to us than it really is, and reveals to us a secret
of which, in truth, it knows nothing, and the music
of the mystical prose is as sweet in our ears as was
that flute-player’s music that lent to the lips
of La Gioconda those subtle and poisonous curves.
Do you ask me what Lionardo would have said had any
one told him of this picture that ’all the thoughts
and experience of the world had etched and moulded
therein that which they had of power to refine and
make expressive the outward form, the animalism of
Greece, the lust of Rome, the reverie of the Middle
Age with its spiritual ambition and imaginative loves,
the return of the Pagan world, the sins of the Borgias?’
He would probably have answered that he had contemplated
none of these things, but had concerned himself simply
with certain arrangements of lines and masses, and
with new and curious colour-harmonies of blue and
green. And it is for this very reason that the
criticism which I have quoted is criticism of the highest
kind. It treats the work of art simply as a starting-point
for a new creation. It does not confine itself—let
us at least suppose so for the moment—to
discovering the real intention of the artist and accepting
that as final. And in this it is right, for the
meaning of any beautiful created thing is, at least,
as much in the soul of him who looks at it, as it
was in his soul who wrought it. Nay, it is rather
the beholder who lends to the beautiful thing its myriad
meanings, and makes it marvellous for us, and sets
it in some new relation to the age, so that it becomes
a vital portion of our lives, and a symbol of what
we pray for, or perhaps of what, having prayed for,
we fear that we may receive. The longer I study,
Ernest, the more clearly I see that the beauty of the
visible arts is, as the beauty of music, impressive
primarily, and that it may be marred, and indeed often
is so, by any excess of intellectual intention on
the part of the artist. For when the work is
finished it has, as it were, an independent life of
its own, and may deliver a message far other than
that which was put into its lips to say. Sometimes,
when I listen to the overture to Tannhauser, I seem
indeed to see that comely knight treading delicately
on the flower-strewn grass, and to hear the voice
of Venus calling to him from the caverned hill.
But at other times it speaks to me of a thousand
different things, of myself, it may be, and my own
life, or of the lives of others whom one has loved
and grown weary of loving, or of the passions that
man has known, or of the passions that man has not
known, and so has sought for. To-night it may
fill one with that OS ?O? ????O?, that Amour de
l’Impossible, which falls like a madness on
many who think they live securely and out of reach
of harm, so that they sicken suddenly with the poison
of unlimited desire, and, in the infinite pursuit of
what they may not obtain, grow faint and swoon or
stumble. To-morrow, like the music of which
Aristotle and Plato tell us, the noble Dorian music
of the Greek, it may perform the office of a physician,
and give us an anodyne against pain, and heal the
spirit that is wounded, and ‘bring the soul
into harmony with all right things.’ And
what is true about music is true about all the arts.
Beauty has as many meanings as man has moods.
Beauty is the symbol of symbols. Beauty reveals
everything, because it expresses nothing. When
it shows us itself, it shows us the whole fiery-coloured
world.
Ernest. But is such work as
you have talked about really criticism?
Gilbert. It is the highest
Criticism, for it criticises not merely the individual
work of art, but Beauty itself, and fills with wonder
a form which the artist may have left void, or not
understood, or understood incompletely.
Ernest. The highest Criticism,
then, is more creative than creation, and the primary
aim of the critic is to see the object as in itself
it really is not; that is your theory, I believe?
Gilbert. Yes, that is my
theory. To the critic the work of art is simply
a suggestion for a new work of his own, that need not
necessarily bear any obvious resemblance to the thing
it criticises. The one characteristic of a beautiful
form is that one can put into it whatever one wishes,
and see in it whatever one chooses to see; and the
Beauty, that gives to creation its universal and aesthetic
element, makes the critic a creator in his turn, and
whispers of a thousand different things which were
not present in the mind of him who carved the statue
or painted the panel or graved the gem.
It is sometimes said by those who
understand neither the nature of the highest Criticism
nor the charm of the highest Art, that the pictures
that the critic loves most to write about are those
that belong to the anecdotage of painting, and that
deal with scenes taken out of literature or history.
But this is not so. Indeed, pictures of this
kind are far too intelligible. As a class, they
rank with illustrations, and, even considered from
this point of view are failures, as they do not stir
the imagination, but set definite bounds to it.
For the domain of the painter is, as I suggested
before, widely different from that of the poet.
To the latter belongs life in its full and absolute
entirety; not merely the beauty that men look at,
but the beauty that men listen to also; not merely
the momentary grace of form or the transient gladness
of colour, but the whole sphere of feeling, the perfect
cycle of thought. The painter is so far limited
that it is only through the mask of the body that
he can show us the mystery of the soul; only through
conventional images that he can handle ideas; only
through its physical equivalents that he can deal with
psychology. And how inadequately does he do it
then, asking us to accept the torn turban of the Moor
for the noble rage of Othello, or a dotard in a storm
for the wild madness of Lear! Yet it seems as
if nothing could stop him. Most of our elderly
English painters spend their wicked and wasted lives
in poaching upon the domain of the poets, marring
their motives by clumsy treatment, and striving to
render, by visible form or colour, the marvel of what
is invisible, the splendour of what is not seen.
Their pictures are, as a natural consequence, insufferably
tedious. They have degraded the invisible arts
into the obvious arts, and the one thing not worth
looking at is the obvious. I do not say that
poet and painter may not treat of the same subject.
They have always done so and will always do so.
But while the poet can be pictorial or not, as he
chooses, the painter must be pictorial always.
For a painter is limited, not to what he sees in
nature, but to what upon canvas may be seen.
And so, my dear Ernest, pictures of
this kind will not really fascinate the critic.
He will turn from them to such works as make him
brood and dream and fancy, to works that possess the
subtle quality of suggestion, and seem to tell one
that even from them there is an escape into a wider
world. It is sometimes said that the tragedy
of an artist’s life is that he cannot realise
his ideal. But the true tragedy that dogs the
steps of most artists is that they realise their ideal
too absolutely. For, when the ideal is realised,
it is robbed of its wonder and its mystery, and becomes
simply a new starting-point for an ideal that is other
than itself. This is the reason why music is
the perfect type of art. Music can never reveal
its ultimate secret. This, also, is the explanation
of the value of limitations in art. The sculptor
gladly surrenders imitative colour, and the painter
the actual dimensions of form, because by such renunciations
they are able to avoid too definite a presentation
of the Real, which would be mere imitation, and too
definite a realisation of the Ideal, which would be
too purely intellectual. It is through its very
incompleteness that art becomes complete in beauty,
and so addresses itself, not to the faculty of recognition
nor to the faculty of reason, but to the aesthetic
sense alone, which, while accepting both reason and
recognition as stages of apprehension, subordinates
them both to a pure synthetic impression of the work
of art as a whole, and, taking whatever alien emotional
elements the work may possess, uses their very complexity
as a means by which a richer unity may be added to
the ultimate impression itself. You see, then,
how it is that the aesthetic critic rejects these
obvious modes of art that have but one message to
deliver, and having delivered it become dumb and sterile,
and seeks rather for such modes as suggest reverie
and mood, and by their imaginative beauty make all
interpretations true, and no interpretation final.
Some resemblance, no doubt, the creative work of
the critic will have to the work that has stirred
him to creation, but it will be such resemblance as
exists, not between Nature and the mirror that the
painter of landscape or figure may be supposed to hold
up to her, but between Nature and the work of the
decorative artist. Just as on the flowerless
carpets of Persia, tulip and rose blossom indeed and
are lovely to look on, though they are not reproduced
in visible shape or line; just as the pearl and purple
of the sea-shell is echoed in the church of St. Mark
at Venice; just as the vaulted ceiling of the wondrous
chapel at Ravenna is made gorgeous by the gold and
green and sapphire of the peacock’s tail, though
the birds of Juno fly not across it; so the critic
reproduces the work that he criticises in a mode that
is never imitative, and part of whose charm may really
consist in the rejection of resemblance, and shows
us in this way not merely the meaning but also the
mystery of Beauty, and, by transforming each art into
literature, solves once for all the problem of Art’s
unity.
But I see it is time for supper.
After we have discussed some Chambertin and a few
ortolans, we will pass on to the question of the critic
considered in the light of the interpreter.
Ernest. Ah! you admit, then,
that the critic may occasionally be allowed to see
the object as in itself it really is.
Gilbert. I am not quite
sure. Perhaps I may admit it after supper.
There is a subtle influence in supper.