登陆注册
19304400000021

第21章 "THE INVASION OF THE CRIMEA"(7)

Handling this key to his character, Kinglake pursues him into his December treason, contrasts the consummate cleverness of his schemes with the faltering cowardice which shrank, like Macbeth's ambition, from "the illness should attend them," and which, but for the stronger nerve of those behind him, would have caused his collapse, at Paris as at Strasburg and Boulogne, in contact with the shock of action. It is difficult now to realize the commotion caused by this fourteenth chapter of Kinglake's book. The Emperor was at the summit of his power, fresh from Austrian conquest, viewed with alarm by England, whose rulers feared his strength and were distrustful of his friendship. Our Crown, our government, our society, had condoned his usurpation; he had kissed the Queen's cheek, bent her ministers to his will, ridden through her capital a triumphant and applauded guest. And now men read not only a cynical dissection of his character and disclosure of his early foibles, but the hideous details of his deceit and treachery, the phases of cold-blooded massacre and lawless deportation by which he emptied France of all who hesitated to enrol themselves as his accomplices or his tools. Forty years have passed since the terrible indictment was put forth; down to its minutest allegation it has been proved literally true; the arch criminal has fallen from his estate to die in disgrace, disease, exile. When we talk today with cultivated Frenchmen of that half-forgotten epoch, and of the book which bared its horrors, we are met by their response of ardent gratitude to the man who joined to passionate hatred of iniquity surpassing capacity for denouncing it; their avowal that with all its frequent exposure of their military shortcomings and depreciation of their national character, no English chronicle of the century stands higher in their esteem than the history of the war in the Crimea.

The close of the book is grim and tragic in the main, the stir of gallant fights exchanged for the dreary course of siege, intrenchment, mine and countermine. We have the awful winter on the heights, the November hurricane, the foiled bombardments, the cruel blunder of the Karabelnaya assault, the bitter natural discontent at home, the weak subservience of our government to misdirected clamour, the touching help-fraught advent of the Lady Nurses: then, just as better prospects dawn, the Chief's collapse and death. From the morrow of Inkerman to the end, through no fault of his, the historian's chariot wheels drag. More and more one sees how from the nature of the task, except for the flush of contemporary interest then, except by military students now, it is not a work to be popularly read; the exhausted interest of its subject swamps the genius of its narrator. Scattered through its more serious matter are gems with the old "Eothen" sparkle, of periphrasis, aphorism, felicitous phrase and pregnant epithet.

Such is the fine analogy between the worship of holy shrines and the lover's homage to the spot which his mistress's feet have trod;such France's tolerance of the Elysee brethren compared to the Arab laying his verminous burnous upon an ant-hill; the apt quotation from the Psalms to illustrate the on-coming of the Guards; the demeanour of horses in action; the course of a flying cannon-ball;the two ponderous troopers at the Horse Guards; Tom Tower and his Croats landing stores for our soldiers from the "Erminia." Or again, we have the light clear touches of a single line; "the decisiveness and consistency of despotism" - "the fractional and volatile interests in trading adventure which go by the name of Shares" - "the unlabelled, undocketed state of mind which shall enable a man to encounter the Unknown" - "the qualifying words which correct the imprudences and derange the grammatical structure of a Queen's Speech": but these are islets in the sea of narrative, not, as in "Eothen," woof-threads which cross the warp.

To compare an idyll with an epic, it may be said, is like comparing a cameo with a Grecian temple: be it so; but the temple falls in ruins, the cameo is preserved in cabinets; and it is possible that a century hence the Crimean history will be forgotten, while "Eothen" is read and enjoyed. The best judges at the time pronounced that as a lasting monument of literary force the work was over refined: "Kinglake," said Sir George Cornewall Lewis, "tries to write better than he can write"; quoting, perhaps unconsciously, the epigram of a French art critic a hundred years before - IL CHERCHE TOUJOURS A FAIRE MIEUX QU'IL NE FAIT. He lavished on it far more pains than on "Eothen": the proof sheets were a black sea of erasures, intercalations, blots; the original chaotic manuscript pages had to be disentangled by a calligraphic Taunton bookseller before they could be sent to press. This fastidiousness in part gained its purpose; won temporary success;gave to his style the glitter, rapidity, point, effectiveness, of a pungent editorial; went home, stormed, convinced, vindicated, damaged, triumphed: but it missed by excessive polish the reposeful, unlaboured, classic grace essential to the highest art.

Over-scrupulous manipulation of words is liable to the "defect of its qualities"; as with unskilful goldsmiths of whom old Latin writers tell us, the file goes too deep, trimming away more of the first fine minting than we can afford to lose. Ruskin has explained to us how the decadence of Gothic architecture commenced through care bestowed on window tracery for itself instead of as an avenue or vehicle for the admission of light. Read "words" for tracery, "thought" for light, and we see how inspiration avenges itself so soon as diction is made paramount; artifice, which demands and misses watchful self-concealment, passes into mannerism; we have lost the incalculable charm of spontaneity.

Comparison of "Eothen" with the "Crimea" will I think exemplify this truth. The first, to use Matthew Arnold's imagery, is Attic, the last has declined to the Corinthian; it remains a great, an amazingly great production; great in its pictorial force, its omnipresent survey, verbal eloquence, firm grasp, marshalled delineation of multitudinous and entangled matter; but it is not unique amongst martial records as "Eothen" is unique amongst books of travel: it is through "Eothen" that its author has soared into a classic, and bids fair to hold his place. And, apart from the merit of style, great campaigns lose interest in a third, if not in a second generation; their historical consequence effaced through lapse of years; their policy seen to have been nugatory or mischievous; their chronicles, swallowed greedily at the birth like Saturn's progeny, returning to vex their parent; relegated finally to an honourable exile in the library upper shelves, where they hold a place eyed curiously, not invaded:

"devoured As fast as they are made, forgot as soon As done. . . . To have done, is to hang Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail, In monumental mockery."

同类推荐
  • 权书

    权书

    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。
  • 霜

    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。
  • 纤言

    纤言

    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。
  • 锲唐代吕纯阳得道飞剑记

    锲唐代吕纯阳得道飞剑记

    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。
  • 增修教苑清规

    增修教苑清规

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 笑傲昆仑

    笑傲昆仑

    远古之时,神战爆发,天崩地裂。漫长的时间过后,二者相互渗透融合,形成了一处奇异的世界······
  • 炉石客栈

    炉石客栈

    九个伙伴,一盒卡片,十个宝石,一场冒险。我是一个萨满,一个叫做古弈尔的萨满,一直以来愉快的拯救世界就是我的工作,然而一封邀请信彻底改变了我的命运。《炉石客栈》期待您的支持。我是世界的,我又要崛起了!
  • 仙凡尽路

    仙凡尽路

    一剑一青莲,一花一世界。修仙之路,艰难险阻层出不穷,且看白昊持三尺青锋,剑化青莲,荡尽世间不平事!
  • 吉姆爷

    吉姆爷

    在康拉德的诸多作品中,《吉姆爷》是作者个人色彩最为强烈、融入自身生命体验最多的一部作品,也是一部写作技巧极为高明的作品。在这部小说当中,作者分别从不同的叙事角度出发,由不同的讲述者从各自的立场上,勾勒出了吉姆悲剧性的一生。这是一个发生在大海上的故事,一个关于人性和本能的故事,一个关于自我与他人的故事,一个关于妥协与坚持的故事,一个关于绝望与信仰的故事,也是一个走向堕落与自我救赎的故事,堪称《少年派的奇幻漂流》的前身。
  • 寂寞宫廷瑶人湾

    寂寞宫廷瑶人湾

    在一个庄严而华贵的皇宫当中正上演着一场新的传奇!!!本因过着无忧无虑的生活现代女孩荣华影却因一次与她无关的意外而莫名其妙的穿越到了清朝……一段清宫侍女到嫔妃的升级之路就此展开!!!前世的她雍容华贵,今生的她无忧无虑。一个时空穿越,造就了古今穿越的潮流的拉近……
  • Travels in England

    Travels in England

    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。
  • 佛仙异界游

    佛仙异界游

    九五之尊,一统江山;九八之尊,掌管三界;九九至尊,为天地不容,命格超越天地。而他,曾经的小小仙人却在被天道遣送异界后,踏上九九之路。大闹天庭,鼓噪三界,他凭借皇者的威压,霸者的霸气,佛者的慈悲,超三界而独立,成为异世界里名副其实的帝者。
  • 花样年华之情感围栏

    花样年华之情感围栏

    爱情的这道围栏,是情愫的依托。情至深则栏愈固,栏愈固而心越安。爱情如围栏。如篱笆一样的桩木围绕,把热恋中的两人隔离在众人之外、围栏方圆之内。世上最少不了的是醉心于爱情的人,还有那些陷入爱情却试图寻找缺口、挣脱束缚的人……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 帝王石秘密:和氏璧峥嵘

    帝王石秘密:和氏璧峥嵘

    围绕秦赵两国从争夺和氏璧开始,到吕不韦护送异人及幼年秦始皇回到秦国这一段曲曲折折的历史,以还历史原貌为宗旨,生动、全面地展现了那段“如火烈烈”的生活。在这段时期里,吕不韦、蔺相如、廉颇、平原君、秦昭襄王、穰侯、范雎、白起、异人、如姬等历史人物纷纷登场,共同演义出一幕波澜壮阔的历史巨剧……
  • dnf之时空裂隙

    dnf之时空裂隙

    追寻着爱丽丝的预言,冒险家们一步步地走向命运的轨迹。如同被人安排好的一切,究竟是什么在等待着冒险家呢……