登陆注册
14818400000001

第1章

By AJ Grieve A French student of English letters (M. Paul Oursel) has written the following lines:

"Depuis deux siecles les Essais forment une branche importante de la litterature anglaise; pour designer un ecrivain de cette classe, nos voisons emploient un mot qui n'a pas d'equivalent en francais; ils disent: un essayist. Qu'est-ce qu'un essayist?

L'essayist se distingue du moraliste, de l'historien, du critique litteraire, du biographe, de l'ecrivain politique; et pourtant il emprunte quelque trait a chacun d'eux; il ressemble tour a tour a l'un ou a l'autre; il est aussi philosophe, il est satirique, humoriste a ses heures; il reunit en sa personne des qualities multiples; il offre dans ses ecrits un specimen de tous les genres. On voit qu'il n'est pas facile de definir l'essayist; mais l'exemple suppleera a la definition. On connaitra exactement le sens du mot quand on aura etudie l'ecrivain qui, d'apres le jugement de ces compatriotes, est l'essayist par excellence, ou, comme on disait dans les anciens cours de litterature, le Prince des essayists."

Macaulay is indeed the prince of essayists, and his reign is unchallenged. "I still think--says Professor Saintsbury (Corrected Impressions, p. 89 f.)--that on any subject which Macaulay has touched, his survey is unsurpassable for giving a first bird's-eye view, and for creating interest in the matter. . . . And he certainly has not his equal anywhere for covering his subject in the pointing-stick fashion. You need not--you had much better not--pin your faith on his details, but his Pisgah sights are admirable. Hole after hole has been picked in the "Clive" and the "Hastings," the "Johnson" and the "Addison," the "Frederick" and the "Horace Walpole," yet every one of these papers contains sketches, summaries, precis, which have not been made obsolete or valueless by all the work of correction in detail."

Two other appreciations from among the mass of critical literature that has accumulated round Macaulay's work may be fitly cited, This from Mr. Frederic Harrison:-

"How many men has Macaulay succeeded in reaching, to whom all other history and criticism is a sealed book, or a book in an unknown tongue! If he were a sciolist or a wrongheaded fanatic, this would be a serious evil. But, as he is substantially right in his judgments, brimful of saying common-sense and generous feeling, and profoundly well read in his own periods and his favourite literature, Macaulay has conferred most memorable services on the readers of English throughout the world. He stands between philosophic historians and the public very much as journals and periodicals stand between the masses and great libraries. Macaulay is a glorified journalist and reviewer, who brings the matured results of scholars to the man in the street in a form that he can remember and enjoy, when he could not make use of a merely learned book. He performs the office of the ballad-maker or story-teller in an age before books were known or were common. And it is largely due to his influence that the best journals and periodicals of our day are written in a style so clear, so direct, so resonant."

And this from Mr. Cotter Morison "Macaulay did for the historical essay what Haydn did for the sonata, and Watt for the steam engine; he found it rudimentary and unimportant, and left it complete and a thing of power. . . .

To take a bright period or personage of history, to frame it in a firm outline, to conceive it at once in article-size, and then to fill in this limited canvas with sparkling anecdote, telling bits of colour, and facts, all fused together by a real genius for narrative, was the sort of genre-painting which Macaulay applied to history. . . . And to this day his essays remain the best of their class, not only in England, but in Europe. . . . The best would adorn any literature, and even the less successful have a picturesque animation, and convey an impression of power that will not easily be matched. And, again, we need to bear in mind that they were the productions of a writer immersed in business, written in his scanty moments of leisure, when most men would have rested or sought recreation. Macaulay himself was most modest in his estimate of their value. . . . It was the public that insisted on their re-issue, and few would be bold enough to deny that the public was right."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天针

    天针

    不想当流氓的裁缝不是好的救世主。多年后,世界联邦政府门前,衣尊的雕像前。每日都是人头攒动,吊念之人,络绎不绝。雕像纪念碑上撰写着:“感谢他为了全人类做出的贡献。”可还有谁记得,他曾经只是一个郁郁不得志的小混混。
  • 腹黑!夫人你真行

    腹黑!夫人你真行

    夫妻一场,日久生情......你信吗?她苏柒一个堂堂的心理学家,看透了摸索了各种各样的人心,如今,她需要完全参透他的心......这个作为总裁的他,居然真的为她动了心?“顾子煜,你真的......”“我真的爱上你了。”怎么办?她真的没看出来他说假话了啊。“所以,老婆,准备沦陷吧。”
  • 终年雪

    终年雪

    白龙渊,极北之地,像一条不可跨越的大河拦在各国面前,不可跨越……北边是否有海,不为人知。
  • THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    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。
  • 武能之三国大战

    武能之三国大战

    一个住在地球的小男孩,他名叫霍海峻,是一个孤儿,因为一次过生日许愿而穿越到三国时代,开始了他的三国之旅!
  • 进化计划

    进化计划

    感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!当文明社会支离破碎的时候,世界会变成什么样?一种作用于一切活物的药剂,创造出文明的顶点。一对兄妹,陷入漩涡般迷雾里,到底他们是进化还是变异?是人类还是异种?解开谜团的钥匙,却是另一个迷。在这末日之中什么才是异类。
  • 辉煌之时

    辉煌之时

    异世皇座竟然身死,寻常世界竟然藏龙卧虎,这是没落的辉煌还是隐藏?轩辕黄帝神农炎帝,远古帝王真的是早已身死还是远走高飞?这一切是天道的规律还是至强的约束?
  • 学长记忆

    学长记忆

    从收到大学录取通知书的那天起,本书的男主角就梦想在大学谈一场轰轰烈烈的恋爱,可是现实竟不尽人意,在他进入校门后发现自己专业的男女比列达到30:1,自己班上一个女生也没有,名副其实的和尚班。但是没有阻止他想要摆脱单身汉的意志,作为一个音、体、美全才,在一年时间内,在认识几百个个女生后,男主一直没有找到自己想要的爱情。最后在大二的时候谈了一场失败的恋爱,男主开始成长,渐渐成熟。直到大三的时候男主遇到一个叫万俟悠扬的女孩,纤弱清丽的倩影,静谧高雅的身躯,幽怨含情的眉眼。。。。。。
  • 盗贼大师:聚变

    盗贼大师:聚变

    一个普普通通的盗贼在一次偶然的时刻,获得了一个惊世骇俗的力量,它可以飞檐走壁,无所不能,甚至还成为了许多美女的偶像,一个个都想和他交往,但都被他拒绝了,直到后来...
  • 随心而行

    随心而行

    最重要的,这是一部轻松的、扮猪吃虎的爽文,描述一种人人向往的装13生活。不重生,不穿越,异能的存在还近似没有,这样的小说主角有啥看头啊!主角光环去哪了?这才是最装的境界!身为猎人一样打遍天下无敌手!在这个故事中,高手就是高手,他们即使变成了主角的垫脚石,但也绝不会沦落为泛泛之辈,因为,屹立巅峰之人,从始至终,只有他们。本小说宗旨:加强读者代入感,提升读者优越感