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第24章

the library-第24章

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ne; to that final frontispiece for 〃The Rose and the Lily〃〃designed and etched (according to the inscription) by George Cruikshank; age 83;〃 but the plates to the 〃Points of Humour;〃 to Grimm's 〃Goblins;〃 to 〃Oliver Twist;〃 〃Jack Sheppard;〃 Maxwell's 〃Irish Rebellion;〃 and the 〃Table Book;〃 are sufficiently favourable and varied specimens of his skill with the needle; while the woodcuts to 〃Three Courses and a Dessert;〃 one of which is here given; are equally good examples of his work on the block。  The 〃Triumph of Cupid;〃 which begins the 〃Table Book;〃 is an excellent instance of his lavish wealth of fancy; and it contains beside; onenay more than oneof the many portraits of the artist。 He is shown en robe de chambre; smoking (this was before his regenerate days!) in front of a blazing fire; with a pet spaniel on his knee。  In the cloud which curls from his lips is a motley procession of sailors; sweeps; jockeys; Greenwich pensioners; Jew clothesmen; flunkies; and others more illustrious; chained to the chariot wheels of Cupid; who; preceded by cherubic acolytes and banner…bearers; winds round the top of the picture towards an altar of Hymen on the table。  When; by the aid of a pocket…glass; one has mastered these swarming figures; as well as those in the foreground; it gradually dawns upon one that all the furniture is strangely vitalised。  Masks laugh round the border of the tablecloth; the markings of the mantelpiece resolve themselves into rows of madly… racing figures; the tongs leers in a degage and cavalier way at the artist; the shovel and poker grin in sympathy; there are faces in the smoke; in the fire; in the fireplace;the very fender itself is a ring of fantastic creatures who jubilantly hem in the ashes。  And it is not only in the grotesque and fanciful that Cruikshank excels; he is master of the strange; the supernatural; and the terrible。  In range of character (the comparison is probably a hackneyed one); both by his gifts and his limitations; he resembles Dickens; and had he illustrated more of that writer's works the resemblance would probably have been more evident。  In 〃Oliver Twist;〃 for example; where Dickens is strong; Cruikshank is strong; where Dickens is weak; he is weak too。  His Fagin; his Bill Sikes; his Bumble; and their following; are on a level with Dickens's conceptions; his Monk and Rose Maylie are as poor as the originals。  But as the defects of Dickens are overbalanced by his merits; so Cruikshank's strength is far in excess of his weakness。  It is not to his melodramatic heroes or wasp…waisted heroines that we must look for his triumphs; it is to his delineations; from the moralist's point of view; of vulgarity and vice;of the 〃rank life of towns;〃 with all its squalid tragedy and comedy。  Here he finds his strongest ground; and possibly; notwithstanding his powers as a comic artist and caricaturist; his loftiest claim to recollection。

Cruikshank was employed on two only of Dickens's books〃Oliver Twist〃 and the 〃Sketches by Boz。〃 {13}  The great majority of them were illustrated by Hablot K。 Browne; an artist who followed the ill…fated Seymour on the 〃Pickwick Papers。〃  To 〃Phiz;〃 as he is popularly called; we are indebted for our pictorial ideas of Sam Weller; Mrs。 Gamp; Captain Cuttle; and most of the author's characters; down to the 〃Tale of Two Cities。〃  〃Phiz〃 also illustrated a great many of Lever's novels; for which his skill in hunting and other Lever…like scenes especially qualified him。

With the name of Richard Doyle we come to the first of a group of artists whose main work was; or is still; done for the time…honoured miscellany of Mr。 Punch。  So familiar an object is 〃Punch〃 upon our tables; that one is sometimes apt to forget how unfailing; and how good on the whole; is the work we take so complacently as a matter of course。  And of this good work; in the earlier days; a large proportion was done by Mr。 Doyle。  He is still living; although he has long ceased to gladden those sprightly pages。  But it was to 〃Punch〃 that he contributed his masterpiece; the 〃Manners and Customs of ye Englyshe;〃 a series of outlines illustrating social life in 1849; and cleverly commented by a shadowy 〃Mr。 Pips;〃 a sort of fetch or double of the bustling and garrulous old Caroline diarist。  In these captivating pictures the life of thirty years ago is indeed; as the title…page has it; 〃drawn from ye quick。〃  We see the Molesworths and Cantilupes of the day parading the Park; we watch Brougham fretting at a hearing in the Lords; or Peel holding forth to the Commons (where the Irish members are already obstructive); we squeeze in at the Haymarket to listen to Jenny Lind; or we run down the river to Greenwich Fair; and visit 〃Mr。 Richardson; his show。〃  Many years after; in the 〃Bird's Eye Views of Society;〃 which appeared in the early numbers of the 〃Cornhill Magazine;〃 Mr。 Doyle returned to this attractive theme。  But the later designs were more elaborate; and not equally fortunate。  They bear the same relationship to Mr。 Pips's pictorial chronicle; as the laboured 〃Temperance Fairy Tales〃 of Cruikshank's old age bear to the little…worked Grimm's 〃Goblins〃 of his youth。  So hazardous is the attempt to repeat an old success!  Nevertheless; many of the initial letters to the 〃Bird's Eye Views〃 are in the artist's best and most frolicsome manner。  〃The Foreign Tour of Brown; Jones; and Robinson〃 is another of his happy thoughts for 〃Punch;〃 and some of his most popular designs are to be found in Thackeray's 〃Newcomes;〃 where his satire and fancy seem thoroughly suited to his text。  He has also illustrated Locker's well…known 〃London Lyrics;〃 Ruskin's 〃King of the Golden River;〃 and Hughes's 〃Scouring of the White Horse;〃 from which last the initial at the beginning of this chapter has been borrowed。  His latest important effort was the series of drawings called 〃In Fairy Land;〃 to which Mr。 William Allingham contributed the verses。

In speaking of the 〃Newcomes;〃 one is reminded that its illustrious author was himself a 〃Punch〃 artist; and would probably have been a designer alone; had it not been decreed 〃that he should paint in colours which will never crack and never need restoration。〃 Everyone knows the story of the rejected illustrator of 〃Pickwick;〃 whom that and other rebuffs drove permanently to letters。  To his death; however; he clung fondly to his pencil。  In technique he never attained to certainty or strength; and his genius was too quick and creativeperhaps also too desultoryfor finished work; while he was always indifferent to costume and accessory。  But many of his sketches for 〃Vanity Fair;〃 for 〃Pendennis;〃 for 〃The Virginians;〃 for 〃The Rose and the Ring;〃 the Christmas books; and the posthumously published 〃Orphan of Pimlico;〃 have a vigour of impromptu; and a happy suggestiveness which is better than correct drawing。  Often the realisation is almost photographic。  Look; for example; at the portrait in 〃Pendennis〃 of the dilapidated Major as he crawls downstairs in the dawn after the ball at Gaunt House; and then listen to the inimitable context:  〃That admirable and devoted Major above all;who had been for hours by Lady Clavering's side ministering to her and feeding her body with everything that was nice; and her ear with everything that was sweet and flatteringoh! what an object he was!  The rings round his eyes were of the colour of bistre; those orbs themselves were like the plovers' eggs whereof Lady Clavering and Blanche had each tasted; the wrinkles in his old face were furrowed in deep gashes; and a silver stubble; like an elderly morning dew; was glittering on his chin; and alongside the dyed whiskers; now limp and out of curl。〃  A good deal of thisthat fine touch in italics especiallycould not possibly be rendered in black and white; and yet how much is indicated; and how thoroughly the whole is felt!  One turns to the woodcut from the words; and back again to the words from the woodcut with ever…increasing gratification。  Then again; Thackeray's little initial letters are charmingly arch and playful。  They seem to throw a shy side…light upon the text; giving; as it were; an additional and confidential hint of the working of the author's mind。  To those who; with the pre

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