登陆注册
38542700000001

第1章 Shelley and His Age(1)

In the case of most great writers our interest in them as persons is derived from out interest in them as writers; we are not very curious about them except for reasons that have something to do with their art.With Shelley it is different.

During his life he aroused fears and hatreds, loves and adorations, that were quite irrelevant to literature; and even now, when he has become a classic, he still causes excitement as a man.His lovers are as vehement as ever.For them he is the "banner of *******," which,"Torn but flying, Streams like a thunder-cloud against the wind."He has suffered that worst indignity of canonisation as a being saintly and superhuman, not subject to the morality of ordinary mortals.He has been bedaubed with pathos.Nevertheless it is possible still to recognise in him one of the most engaging personalities that ever lived.What is the secret of this charm? He had many characteristics that belong to the most tiresome natures; he even had the qualities of the man as to whom one wonders whether partial insanity may not be his best excuse--inconstancy expressing itself in hysterical revulsions of feeling, complete lack of balance, proneness to act recklessly to the hurt of others.Yet he was loved and respected by contemporaries of tastes very different from his own, who were good judges and intolerant of bores--by Byron, who was apt to care little for any one, least of all for poets, except himself; by Peacock, who poured laughter on all enthusiasms; and by Hogg, who, though slightly eccentric, was a Tory eccentric.The fact is that, with all his defects, he had two qualities which, combined, are so attractive that there is scarcely anything they will not redeem-- perfect sincerity without a thought of self, and vivid emotional force.All his faults as well as his virtues were, moreover, derived from a certain strong feeling, coloured in a peculiar way which will be explained in what follows--a sort of ardour of universal benevolence.One of his letters ends with these words:

"Affectionate love to and from all.This ought to be not only the vale of a letter, but a superscription over the gate of life"--words which, expressing not merely Shelley's opinion of what ought to be, but what he actually felt, reveal the ultimate reason why he is still loved, and the reason, too, why he has so often been idealised.For this universal benevolence is a thing which appeals to men almost with the force of divinity, still carrying, even when mutilated and obscured by frailties, some suggestion of St.Francis or of Christ.

The object of these pages is not to idealise either his life, his characte, or his works.The three are inseparably connected, and to understand one we must understand all.The reason is that Shelley is one of the most subjective of writers.It would be hard to name a poet who has kept his art more free from all taint of representation of the real, ****** it nor an instrument for creating something life-like, but a more and more intimate echo or emanation of his own spirit.In studying his writings we shall see how they flow from his dominating emotion of love for his fellow-men; and the drama of his life, displayed against the background of the time, will in turn throw light on that emotion.His benevolence took many forms--none perfect, some admirable, some ridiculous.It was too universal.He never had a clear enough perception of the real qualities of real men and women; hence his loves for individuals, as capricious as they were violent, always seem to lack something which is perhaps the most valuable element in human affection.If in this way we can analyse his temperament successfully, the process should help us to a more critical understanding, and so to a fuller enjoyment, of the poems.

This greatest of our lyric poets, the culmination of the Romantic Movement in English literature, appeared in an age which, following on the series of successful wars that had established British power all over the world, was one of the gloomiest in our history.If in some ways the England of 1800-20 was ahead of the rest of Europe, in others it lagged far behind.The Industrial Revolution, which was to turn us from a nation of peasants and traders into a nation of manufacturers, had begun; but its chief fruits as yet were increased materialism and greed, and politically the period was one of blackest reaction.Alone of European peoples we had been untouched by the tide of Napoleon's conquests, which, when it receded from the Continent, at least left behind a framework of enlightened institutions, while our success in the Napoleonic wars only confirmed the ruling aristocratic families in their grip of the nation which they had governed since the reign of Anne.This despotism crushed the humble and stimulated the high-spirited to violence, and is the reason why three such poets as Byron, Landor, and Shelley, though by birth and fortune members of the ruling class, were pioneers as much of political as of spiritual rebellion.Unable to breathe the atmosphere of England, they were driven to live in exile.

It requires some effort to reconstruct that atmosphere to-day.

同类推荐
  • 虚损启微

    虚损启微

    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。
  • 锲华严五十要问答序

    锲华严五十要问答序

    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。
  • 银色女经

    银色女经

    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。
  • 要修科仪戒律钞

    要修科仪戒律钞

    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。
  • 韬晦术

    韬晦术

    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
  • 不过是个家啊

    不过是个家啊

    一个家,三四代人。在这片厚重的土地上,经历了苦难,贫穷......平凡生活的种种。这是我的故事,也是我母亲眼里的家。我的回忆,更是我的生活。各种骗局,偏见之后。我只想说,这只是个家啊!如果不介意,听听我的故事吧,也许这也是很多平凡人正在经历的......
  • 天下霸君

    天下霸君

    三十年前一场祸及整个大陆的战争被淹没,秩序重建。三十年后故人之子重出大陆,披荆斩棘,重走先辈路。
  • 白日臆想症

    白日臆想症

    想要灵魂契合又想要争执有趣想要陪伴又想要新鲜感人这么贪心是不是都归功于自己的白日臆想症
  • 王妃哪里逃呀

    王妃哪里逃呀

    别的人穿越都是肤白貌美大长腿,我穿越穷得要死,不过好歹上天对我不薄,送我一个王爷。且看我如何玩转江湖
  • 我的两世生活

    我的两世生活

    在魔族和人类战争这个时代,人类诞生了一个具有神秘体质的人叶凌晨,他在这场战争中会如何做呢?做完后又会发生什么。
  • 竹相日记

    竹相日记

    这部小说其实主要就是写写沙雕作者周围发生的小事情啦,希望给大家带去开心哟。
  • 独一无二的猫先生

    独一无二的猫先生

    某天清晨,鹿漫漫正准备睡到大天黑,还没有来得及实施就被门铃声打断。开门一看一个纸盒摆在门口,一只猫头从纸盒里冒出来。又是最亲爱的姐姐送来的宠物,鹿漫漫已经数不清这俩年来帮她养了多少次宠物。“好可爱,这只猫叫什么名字?”宠物店员问。啥?名字?鹿漫漫看了一眼橘猫,“肥肥。”“肥肥~”“肥肥!”“肥肥!!”某日杂志上万千少女梦中情人祁修远捧着肥肥出现在鹿漫漫的面前,“怎么?之前还叫我肥肥,我才走了没几天你就把人家忘了?”传闻中的霸总似乎和现实有点不一样。鹿漫漫:什么叫有点,这根本不一样!
  • 世界文学速查手册

    世界文学速查手册

    本书编者以“运用小篇幅,讲述文学史”为理念,遴选世界历史上极富影响力、极具个性且在大众传媒中出现频率较高的350多位文学家。50多部名著和近70个文学流派,按欧美、亚非两大部分进行编辑,并辅以近1000幅与文字内容相契合的图片,将文学家、文学作品和文学流派的成就和影响简明而具象地呈现在读者面前。《世界文学速查手册》力图通过科学的体例、精练的文字、新颖的版式以及丰富的图片等多种要素的有机结合,使读者在快速获取文学知识的同时,轻松获得更为广阔的文化视野和审美感受,不仅是一本帮助青少年和普通读者了解和掌握世界文学的理想工具书,还是一本为专业人士提供信息的图片资料库。
  • 九型人格与领导力

    九型人格与领导力

    《九型人格与领导力》:一本有关如何建立理想团队、成为卓有成效的领导者的好书。九型人格是地球上最古老的人类发展体系,是一种深层次了解人的方法和学问。它能够帮助人们自我觉察同时了解他人。由于企业的生存依赖于人们之间的合作,九型人格在管理界的作用也不可小觑。伯格达博士以她组织发展与咨询经验的深厚背景,撰写了《九型人格与领导力》,为担任中高层管理者提供了绝佳建议,告诉他们如何发挥自己的特色魅力,做一名个性鲜明,有明确处世风格,高效率的管理者。在管理中常见的问题是“我们的部门精英有着五花八门的个性,如何将他们团结在一起”或是“我应该具备怎样的管理风格”,答案是“认识你自己”。不能因为一个人的人格类型来决定是否雇用他,也不要盲目效仿别人的管理经验。《九型人格与领导力》帮你运用九型人格体系将帮助你了解自己、了解他人的真实状况,在管理层面游刃有余,建立自己的管理风格,让员工各显神通。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!