robert louis stevenson-第24章
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ak of them afterwards as apt to 〃shame; perhaps to degrade; the beginnings。〃 This is what true dramatic art should never do。 In the ending all that may raise legitimate question in the process … all that is confusing; perplexing in the separate parts … is met; solved; reconciled; at least in a way satisfactory to the general; or ordinary mind; and thus such unity is by it so gained and sealed; that in no case can the true artist; whatever faults may lie in portions of the process…work; say of his endings that 〃they shame; perhaps degrade; the beginning。〃 Wherever this is the case there will be 〃gloom;〃 and there will also be a sad; tormenting sense of something wanting。 〃The evening brings a 'hame';〃 so should it be here … should it especially be in a dramatic work。 If not; 〃We start; for soul is wanting there;〃 or; if not soul; then the last halo of the soul's serene triumph。 From this side; too; there is another cause for the undramatic character; in the stricter sense of Stevenson's work generally: it is; after all; distressful; unsatisfying; egotistic; for fancy is led at the beck of some pre…established disharmony which throws back an abiding and irremovable gloom on all that went before; and the free spontaneous grace of natural creation which ensures natural simplicity is; as said already; not quite attained。
It was well pointed out in HAMMERTON; by an unanonymous author there quoted (pp。 22; 23); that while in the story; Hyde; the worse one; wins; in Stevenson himself … in his real life … Jekyll won; and not Mr Hyde。 This writer; too; might have added that the Master of Ballantrae also wins as well as Beau Austin and Deacon Brodie。 R。 L。 Stevenson's dramatic art and a good deal of his fiction; then; was untrue to his life; and on one side was a lie … it was not in consonance with his own practice or his belief as expressed in life。
In some other matters the test laid down here is not difficult of application。 Stevenson; at the time he wrote THE FOREIGNER AT HOME; had seen a good deal; he had been abroad; he had already had experiences; he had had differences with his father about Calvinism and some other things; and yet just see how he applies the standard of his earlier knowledge and observation to England … and by doing so; cannot help exaggerating the outstanding differences; always with an almost provincial accent of unwavering conviction due to his early associations and knowledge。 He cannot help paying an excessive tribute to the Calvinism he had formally rejected; in so far as; according to him; it goes to form character … even national character; at all events; in its production of types; and he never in any really effective way glances at what Mr Matthew Arnold called 〃Scottish manners; Scottish drink〃 as elements in any way radically qualifying。 It is not; of course; that I; as a Scotsman; well acquainted with rural life in some parts of England; as with rural life in many parts of Scotland in my youth; do not heartily agree with him … the point is that; when he comes to this sort of comparison and contrast; he writes exactly as his father would or might have done; with a full consciousness; after all; of the tribute he was paying to the practical outcome on character of the Calvinism in which he so thoroughly believed。 It is; in its way; a very peculiar thing … and had I space; and did I believe it would prove interesting to readers in general; I might write an essay on it; with instances … in which case the Address to the Scottish Clergy would come in for more notice; citation and application than it has yet received。 But meanwhile just take this little snippet … very characteristic and very suggestive in its own way … and tell me whether it does not justify and bear out fully what I have now said as illustrating a certain side and a strange uncertain limitation in Stevenson:
〃But it is not alone in scenery and architecture that we count England foreign。 The constitution of society; the very pillars of the empire; surprise and even pain us。 The dull neglected peasant; sunk in matter; insolent; gross and servile; makes a startling contrast to our own long…legged; long…headed; thoughtful; Bible… loving ploughman。 A week or two in such a place as Suffolk leaves the Scotsman gasping。 It seems impossible that within the boundaries of his own island a class should have been thus forgotten。 Even the educated and intelligent who hold our own opinions and speak in our own words; yet seem to hold them with a difference or from another reason; and to speak on all things with less interest and conviction。 The first shock of English society is like a cold plunge。〃 (8)
As there was a great deal of the 〃John Bull element〃 (9) in the little dreamer De Quincey; so there was a great deal; after all; of the rather conceited Calvinistic Scot in R。 L。 Stevenson; and it is to be traced as clearly in certain of his fictions as anywhere; though he himself would not perhaps have seen it and acknowledged it; as I am here forced now to see it; and to acknowledge it for him。
CHAPTER XVII … PROOFS OF GROWTH
Once again I quote Goethe:
〃Natural simplicity and repose are the acme of art; and hence it follows no youth can be a master。〃 It has to be confessed that seldom; if ever; does Stevenson naturally and by sheer enthusiasm for subject and characters attain this natural simplicity; if he often attained the counterfeit presentment … artistic and graceful euphony; and new; subtle; and often unexpected concatenations of phrase。 Style is much; but it is not everything。 We often love Scott the more that he shows loosenesses and lapses here; for; in spite of them; he gains natural simplicity; while not seldom Stevenson; with all his art and fine sense of verbal music; rather misses it。 THE SEDULOUS APE sometimes disenchants as well as charms; for occasionally a word; a touch; a turn; sends us off too directly in search of the model; and this operates against the interest as introducing a new and alien series of associations; where; for full effect; it should not be so。 And this distraction will be the more insistent; the more knowledge the reader has and the more he remembers; and since Stevenson's first appeal; both by his spirit and his methods; is to the cultured and well read; rather than to the great mass; his 〃sedulous apehood〃 only the more directly wars against him as regards deep; continuous; and lasting impression; where he should be most simple; natural and spontaneous; he also is most artificial and involved。 If the story…writer is not so much in earnest; not so possessed by his matter that this is allowed to him; how is it to be hoped that we shall be possessed in the reading of it? More than once in CATRIONA we must own we had this experience; directly warring against full possession by the story; and certain passages about Simon Lovat were especially marked by this; if even the first introduction to Catriona herself was not so。 As for Miss Barbara Grant; of whom so much has been made by many admirers; she is decidedly clever; indeed too clever by half; and yet her doom is to be a mere DEUS EX MACHINA; and never do more than just pay a little tribute to Stevenson's own power of PERSIFLAGE; or; if you like; to pay a penalty; poor lass; for the too perfect doing of hat; and really; really; I could not help saying this much; though; I do believe that she deserved just a wee bit better fate than that。
But we have proofs of great growth; and nowhere are they greater than at the very close。 Stevenson died young: in some phases he was but a youth to the last。 To a true critic then; the problem is; having already attained so much … a grand style; grasp of a limited group of characters; with fancy; sincerity; and imagination; … what would Stevenson have attained in another ten years had such been but allotted him? It has over and over again been said that; for long he SHIED presenting women altogether。 This is not quite true: THRAWN JANET was an earlier effort; and if there the problem is persistent; the woman is real。 Here also he was on the right road … t