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第15章

the ancien regime-第15章

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and ruins; the fashion sprang up at the end of the seventeenth

century; it lingered on during the first quarter of our century;

kept alive by the reaction from 1815…25。  It is all but dead now;

before the return of vigorous and progressive thought。  An admirer

of the Middle Ages now does not build a sham ruin in his grounds; he

restores a church; blazing with colour; like a medieval

illumination。  He has learnt to look on that which went by the name

of picturesque in his great…grandfather's time; as an old Greek or a

Middle Age monk would have doneas something squalid; ugly; a sign

of neglect; disease; death; and therefore to be hated and abolished;

if it cannot be restored。  At Carcassone; now; M。 Viollet…le…Duc;

under the auspices of the Emperor of the French; is spending his

vast learning; and much money; simply in abolishing the picturesque;

in restoring stone for stone; each member of that wonderful museum

of Middle Age architecture:  Roman; Visigothic; Moslem; Romaine;

Early English; later French; all is being reproduced exactly as it

must have existed centuries since。  No doubt that is not the highest

function of art:  but it is a preparation for the highest; a step

toward some future creative school。  As the early Italian artists;

by careful imitation; absorbed into their minds the beauty and

meaning of old Greek and Roman art; so must the artists of our days

by the art of the Middle Age and the Renaissance。  They must learn

to copy; before they can learn to surpass; and; meanwhile; they must

learnindeed they have learntthat decay is ugliness; and the

imitation of decay; a making money out of the public shame。



The picturesque sprang up; as far as I can discover; suddenly;

during the time of exhaustion and recklessness which followed the

great struggles of the sixteenth century。  Salvator Rosa and Callot;

two of the earliest professors of picturesque art; have never been

since surpassed。  For indeed; they drew from life。  The rags and the

ruins; material; and alas! spiritual; were all around them; the

lands and the creeds alike lay waste。  There was ruffianism and

misery among the masses of Europe; unbelief and artificiality among

the upper classes; churches and monasteries defiled; cities sacked;

farmsteads plundered and ruinate; and all the wretchedness which

Callot has immortalisedfor a warning to evil rulersin his

Miseres de la Guerre。  The world was all gone wrong:  but as for

setting it right againwho could do that?  And so men fell into a

sentimental regret for the past; and its beauties; all exaggerated

by the foreshortening of time; while they wanted strength or faith

to reproduce it。  At last they became so accustomed to the rags and

ruins; that they looked on them as the normal condition of humanity;

as the normal field for painters。



Only now and then; and especially toward the latter half of the

eighteenth century; when thought began to revive; and men dreamed of

putting the world to rights once more; there rose before them

glimpses of an Arcadian ideal。  Country lifethe primaeval calling

of menhow graceful and pure it might be!  How gracefulif not

pureit once had been!  The boors of Teniers and the beggars of

Murillo might be true to present fact; but there was a fairer ideal;

which once had been fact; in the Eclogues of Theocritus; and the

Loves of Daphnis and Chloe。  And so men took to dreaming of

shepherds and shepherdesses; and painting them on canvas; and

modelling them in china; according to their cockney notions of what

they had been once; and always ought to be。  We smile now at Sevres

and Dresden shepherdesses; but the wise man will surely see in them

a certain pathos。  They indicated a craving after something better

than boorishness; and the many men and women may have become the

gentler and purer by looking even at them; and have said sadly to

themselves:  〃Such might have been the peasantry of half Europe; had

it not been for devastations of the Palatinate; wars of succession;

and the wicked wills of emperors and kings。〃







LECTURE IIITHE EXPLOSIVE FORCES







In a former lecture in this Institution; I said that the human race

owed more to the eighteenth century than to any century since the

Christian era。  It may seem a bold assertion to those who value duly

the century which followed the revival of Greek literature; and

consider that the eighteenth century was but the child; or rather

grandchild; thereof。  But I must persist in my opinion; even though

it seem to be inconsistent with my description of the very same era

as one of decay and death。  For side by side with the death; there

was manifold fresh birth; side by side with the decay there was

active growth;side by side with them; fostered by them; though

generally in strong opposition to them; whether conscious or

unconscious。  We must beware; however; of trying to find between

that decay and that growth a bond of cause and effect where there is

really none。  The general decay may have determined the course of

many men's thoughts; but it no more set them thinking than (as I

have heard said) the decay of the Ancien Regime produced the new

Regimea loose metaphor; which; like all metaphors; will not hold

water; and must not be taken for a philosophic truth。  That would be

to confess manwhat I shall never confess him to bethe creature

of circumstances; it would be to fall into the same fallacy of

spontaneous generation as did the ancients; when they believed that

bees were bred from the carcass of a dead ox。  In the first place;

the bees were no bees; but fliesunless when some true swarm of

honey bees may have taken up their abode within the empty ribs; as

Samson's bees did in that of the lion。  But bees or flies; each

sprang from an egg; independent of the carcass; having a vitality of

its own:  it was fostered by the carcass it fed on during

development; but bred from it it was not; any more than Marat was

bred from the decay of the Ancien Regime。  There are flies which; by

feeding on putridity; become poisonous themselves; as did Marat:

but even they owe their vitality and organisation to something

higher than that on which they feed; and each of them; however;

defaced and debased; was at first a 〃thought of God。〃  All true

manhood consists in the defiance of circumstances; and if any man be

the creature of circumstances; it is because he has become so; like

the drunkard; because he has ceased to be a man; and sunk downward

toward the brute。



Accordingly we shall find; throughout the 18th century; a stirring

of thought; an originality; a resistance to circumstances; an

indignant defiance of circumstances; which would have been

impossible; had circumstances been the true lords and shapers of

mankind。  Had that latter been the case; the downward progress of

the Ancien Regime would have been irremediable。  Each generation;

conformed more and more to the element in which it lived; would have

sunk deeper in dull acquiescence to evil; in ignorance of all

cravings save those of the senses; and if at any time intolerable

wrong or want had driven it to revolt; it would have issued; not in

the proclamation of new and vast ideas; but in an anarchic struggle

for revenge and bread。



There are races; alas! which seem; for the present at least;

mastered by circumstances。  Some; like the Chinese; have sunk back

into that state; some; like the negro in Africa; seem not yet to

have emerged from it; but in Europe; during the eighteenth century;

were working not merely new forces and vitalities (abstractions

which mislead rather than explain); but living persons in plenty;

men and women; with independent and original hearts and brains;

instinct; in spite of all circumstances; with power which we shall

most wisely ascribe directly to Him who is the Lord and Giver of

Life。



Such persons seemedI only say seemedmost numerous in England and

in Germany。  But there were enough o

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