登陆注册
14331300000012

第12章

Garrick produced a passage that he had once heard the Doctor commend, in which he NOW found, if I remember rightly, sixteen faults, and made Garrick look silly at his own table. When I told Mr. Johnson the story, "Why, what a monkey was David now," says he, "to tell of his own disgrace!" And in the course of that hour's chat he told me how he used to tease Garrick by commendations of the tomb-scene in Congreve's 'Mourning Bride,'

protesting, that Shakespeare had in the same line of excellence nothing as good. "All which is strictly TRUE," said he; "but that is no reason for supposing Congreve is to stand in competition with Shakespeare: these fellows know not how to blame, nor how to commend." I forced him one day, in a similar humour, to prefer Young's deion of "Night" to the so much admired ones of Dryden and Shakespeare, as more forcible and more general. Every reader is not either a lover or a tyrant, but every reader is interested when he hears that"Creation sleeps; 'tis as the general pulse Of life stood still, and nature made a pause;An awful pause--prophetic of its end."

"This," said he, "is true; but remember that, taking the compositions of Young in general, they are but like bright stepping-stones over a miry road. Young froths and foams, and bubbles sometimes very vigorously; but we must not compare the noise made by your tea-kettle here with the roaring of the ocean."Somebody was praising Corneille one day in opposition to Shakespeare.

"Corneille is to Shakespeare," replied Mr. Johnson, "as a clipped hedge is to a forest." When we talked of Steele's Essays, "They are too thin," says our critic, "for an Englishman's taste: mere superficial observations on life and manners, without erudition enough to make them keep, like the light French wines, which turn sour with standing awhile for want of BODY, as we call it."Of a much-admired poem, when extolled as beautiful, he replied, "That it had indeed the beauty of a bubble. The colours are gay," said he, "but the substance slight." Of James Harris's Dedication to his "Hermes," I have heard him observe that, though but fourteen lines long, there were six grammatical faults in it. A friend was praising the style of Dr. Swift;Mr. Johnson did not find himself in the humour to agree with him: the critic was driven from one of his performances to the other. At length, "You MUST allow me," said the gentleman, "that there are STRONG FACTS in the account of 'The Four Last Years of Queen Anne.'" "Yes, surely, sir,"replies Johnson, "and so there are in the Ordinary of Newgate's account."This was like the story which Mr. Murphy tells, and Johnson always acknowledged: how Mr. Rose of Hammersmith, contending for the preference of Scotch writers over the English, after having set up his authors like ninepins, while the Doctor kept bowling them down again; at last, to make sure of victory, he named Ferguson upon "Civil Society," and praised the book for being written in a NEW manner. "I do not," says Johnson, "perceive the value of this new manner; it is only like Buckinger, who had no hands, and so wrote with his feet." Of a modern Martial, when it came out: "There are in these verses," says Dr. Johnson, "too much folly for madness, I think, and too much madness for folly." If, however, Mr.

Johnson lamented that the nearer he approached to his own times, the more enemies he should make, by telling biographical truths in his "Lives of the Later Poets," what may I not apprehend, who, if I relate anecdotes of Mr.

Johnson, am obliged to repeat expressions of severity, and sentences of contempt? Let me at least soften them a little by saying that he did not hate the persons he treated with roughness, or despise them whom he drove from him by apparent scorn. He really loved and respected many whom he would not suffer to love him. And when he related to me a short dialogue that passed between himself and a writer of the first eminence in the world, when he was in Scotland, I was shocked to think how he must have disgusted him. "Dr. ---- asked me," said he, "why I did not join in their public worship when among them? for," said he, "I went to your churches often when in England." "So," replied Johnson, "I have read that the Siamese sent ambassadors to Louis Quatorze, but I never heard that the King of France thought it worth his while to send ambassadors from his court to that of SIAM." He was no gentler with myself, or those for whom I had the greatest regard. When I one day lamented the loss of a first cousin killed in America, "Prithee, my dear," said he, "have done with canting. How would the world be worse for it, I may ask, if all your relations were at once spitted like larks, and roasted for Presto's supper?" Presto was the dog that lay under the table while we talked. When we went into Wales together, and spent some time at Sir Robert Cotton's, at Lleweny, one day at dinner I meant to please Mr. Johnson particularly with a dish of very young peas. "Are not they charming?" said I to him, while he was eating them. "Perhaps," said he, "they would be so--to a PIG."I only instance these replies, to excuse my mentioning those he made to others.

When a well-known author published his poems in the year 1777: "Such a one's verses are come out," said I. "Yes," replied Johnson, "and this frost has struck them in again. Here are some lines I have written to ridicule them; but remember that I love the fellow dearly now, for all I laugh at him:--

"'Wheresoe'er I turn my view, All is strange, yet nothing new;Endless labour all along, Endless labour to be wrong;Phrase that Time has flung away;

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 书坑

    书坑

    “坑了二十余年的书,这别具一格的葬礼,或许是命中注定!”虽有不甘,却无力回天!或许是苍天有眼,让我在这书中世界苟延残喘!既然我还是我,便我命由我,由不得天!任你鬼神棋局,与我何干?命已至此,逆了苍天有何难?
  • 炙焰焚情

    炙焰焚情

    为什么?为什么她会有这种命运?难道只是因为她的才能?不,如果真是这样,她宁愿不要,她要的只是自由!所以她要逃!可是世人怎么如此冷漠,难道,她想要的就是这个?不她不要谁?有谁来救救她!他是倒了什么霉,打从一出门就诸事不顺,倒霉的事情一件接着一件,好样的,摊了个费神的妹妹,他是没的选的,但他是脑子坏了,还是精神错乱了,居然会去理睬一个他生平最痛恨的’女人’,啧看看来他是该好好想想了
  • 尧尧无期,爱在咫尺

    尧尧无期,爱在咫尺

    也许最浪漫的事,就是在你不认识他时,他已默默爱上了你,在你遇见他时,他正慢慢打动着你,在你爱上他时,他已深爱你入骨髓……
  • 风雨结

    风雨结

    纵有千千结,纵有千千解。当我还处在稚嫩之时,仿佛已经有一道线把你牵到了我身边第一次相遇,我和你在枫树下擦肩而过只依稀记得你轻轻的说了一句‘枫的离开是叶的追逐还是树不挽留……’那时候,我们都还太年轻现在,我想追求你了和我在一起好吗?
  • 镜之传说

    镜之传说

    雪岚消,天风渺,踏歌百世我为豪;青花飘,苍龙啸,剑舞红尘一场笑。真与假的世界,究竟谁是镜中人......
  • 白雪乌鸦

    白雪乌鸦

    一百年前,一场鼠疫在东北大地蔓延,共有六万多人为此失去生命;仅有两万多人口的哈尔滨傅家甸,疫毙者竟达五千余人!迟子建用她沉静而饱满的叙述,带我们走进那座灾难笼罩下的城市。沉闷混沌的日子、迷惘诡异的氛围;所有深藏的爱怨情仇,在死亡的重压下活力萌发,枝缠叶绕,难解难分……
  • 鼠皇战帝

    鼠皇战帝

    “你穿越啦?”“嗯”“那你为毛不开心?”“别人穿越不是天赋异秉,就是王室富家公子哥,再不济的,起码还能混个人样,我他玛一穿越,竟然变成了一只老鼠,我高兴的起来吗我?”异界重生,看我平统鼠域,勇斗苍猫,得逆天修炼秘籍,展我辈鼠之皇威……
  • 可止骄矜

    可止骄矜

    魔法意在创造,黑魔法意在代价交换。理论上来说,魔法是不可能创造生命体的,但是黑魔法建立在交换的理论上,可以用生命转换生命。但是这种东西是不被大众认可的……
  • 咖啡有点咸

    咖啡有点咸

    张诺说:“李文雅,你是不是喜欢女人?”莫小棋说:“李文雅,你什么时候才能有个正形呢?”程晨说:“李文雅,为什么我就是没办法喜欢你呢?”韩多多说:“李文雅,你真坏啊~”王啸天说:“李文雅,你就不是个女人~”吴琛说:“李文雅,我喜欢朱小迪,非常喜欢!”朱小迪说:“李文雅,再见。”谢宇翔说:“李文雅,我来了。”我叫李文雅,今年27岁,未婚。莫小棋说过,咖啡加盐是眼泪的味道。我试过,有点咸,有点涩,胸口有点闷,感觉很混乱,却又很深刻,就像被我挥霍掉的青春......
  • 花仙传

    花仙传

    彩虹大陆,花香缠绕下的婴儿刚刚出世,就逢家族之变。失忆后的他,能不能克服困难,救回母亲,为大陆带来和平,尽在仙魔之劫!修炼之人,当以气海内虹气颜色划分为——渐落红、初入尘、分洪荒、遮绿阴、去青芒、掌澜苑、破紫府,然而,传说太古时期有能将七气凝而归一者,即为虹仙!