登陆注册
15683400000010

第10章 CHAPTER II(1)

Principal Writings

The true visionary is often a man of action, and Shelley was a very peculiar combination of the two. He was a dreamer, but he never dreamed merely for the sake of dreaming; he always rushed to translate his dreams into acts. The practical side of him was so strong that he might have been a great statesman or reformer, had not his imagination, stimulated by a torrential fluency of language, overborne his will. He was like a boat (the comparison would have pleased him) built for strength and speed, but immensely oversparred. His life was a scene of incessant bustle. Glancing through his poems, letters, diaries, and pamphlets, his translations from Greek, Spanish, German, and Italian, and remembering that he died at thirty, and was, besides, feverishly active in a multitude of affairs, we fancy that his pen can scarcely ever have been out of his hand. And not only was he perpetually writing; he read gluttonously. He would thread the London traffic, nourishing his unworldly mind from an open book held in one hand, and his ascetic body from a hunch of bread held in the other. This fury for literature seized him early. But the quality of his early work was astonishingly bad. An author while still a schoolboy, he published in 1810 a novel, written for the most part when he was seventeen years old, called 'Zastrozzi', the mere title of which, with its romantic profusion of sibilants, is eloquent of its nature. This was soon followed by another like it, 'St. Irvyne, or the Rosicrucian'. Whether they are adaptations from the German [2] or not, these books are merely bad imitations of the bad school then in vogue, the flesh-creeping school of skeletons and clanking chains, of convulsions and ecstasies, which Miss Austen, though no one knew it, had killed with laughter years before.[3] "Verezzi scarcely now shuddered when the slimy lizard crossed his naked and motionless limbs. The large earthworms, which twined themselves in his long and matted hair, almost ceased to excite sensations of horror"--that is the kind of stuff in which the imagination of the young Shelley rioted. And evidently it is not consciously imagined; life really presented itself to him as a romance ofthis kind, with himself as hero--a hero who is a hopeless lover, blighted by premature decay, or a wanderer doomed to share the sins and sorrows of mankind to all eternity. This attitude found vent in a mass of sentimental verse and prose, much of it more or less surreptitiously published, which the researches of specialists have brought to light, and which need not be dwelt upon here.

[2 So Mr. H. B. Forman suggests in the introduction to his edition of Shelley's Prose Works. But Hogg says that he did not begin learning German until 1815.]

[3 'Northanger Abbey', satirising Mrs. Radcliffe's novels, was written before 1798, but was not published until 1818.]

But very soon another influence began to mingle with this feebly extravagant vein, an influence which purified and strengthened, though it never quite obliterated it. At school he absorbed, along with the official tincture of classical education, a violent private dose of the philosophy of the French Revolution; he discovered that all that was needed to abolish all the evil done under the sun was to destroy bigotry, intolerance, and persecution as represented by religious and monarchical institutions. At first this influence combined with his misguided literary passions only to heighten the whole absurdity, as when he exclaims, in a letter about his first disappointed love, "I swear, and as I break my oaths, may Infinity, Eternity, blast me--never will I forgive Intolerance!" The character of the romance is changed indeed; it has become an epic of human regeneration, and its emotions are dedicated to the service of mankind; but still it is a romance. The results, however, are momentous; for the hero, being a man of action, is no longer content to write and pay for the printing: in his capacity of liberator he has to step into the arena, and, above all, he has to think out a philosophy.

An early manifestation of this impulse was the Irish enterprise already mentioned. Public affairs always stirred him, but, as time went on, it was more and more to verse and less to practical intervention, and after 1817 he abandoned argument altogether for song. But one pamphlet, 'A Proposal for putting Reform to the Vote' (1817), is characteristic of the way in which he was always labouring to do something, not merely toventilate existing evils, but to promote some practical scheme for abolishing them. Let a national referendum, he says, be held on the question of reform, and let it be agreed that the result shall be binding on Parliament; he himself will contribute 100 pounds a year (one-tenth of his income) to the expenses of organisation. He is in favour of annual Parliaments. Though a believer in universal suffrage, he prefers to advance by degrees; it would not do to abolish aristocracy and monarchy at one stroke, and to put power into the hands of men rendered brutal and torpid by ages of slavery; and he proposes that the payment of a small sum in direct taxes should be the qualification for the parliamentary franchise. The idea, of course, was not in the sphere of practical politics at the time, but its sobriety shows how far Shelley was from being a vulgar theory- ridden crank to whom the years bring no wisdom.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 邪狂少

    邪狂少

    他不是完美的,可他是一直在向完美迈进。他一生无数挫折,可他却在其中破茧成蝶,终成大道。且看痞子般的他如何坐拥花丛,玩转天下。
  • 自然:消灭的自然灾难

    自然:消灭的自然灾难

    本书介绍了可怕的洪水灾害、我国历史上的洪灾、凶猛的泥石流灾害、不期而至的血崩灾害、海冰灾害的危害、难测的火山灾害、地震的产生和危害等。
  • 那些年我们一起追过的他

    那些年我们一起追过的他

    待我长发及腰,少年你娶我可好?作者第一部小说,多提点提点。
  • 浴火弃妃

    浴火弃妃

    大婚当日,花轿被劫,失去贞洁,被弃集市;一夕之间,她从尊重的王妃沦为皇家的耻辱,羡慕的对象沦为嗤笑的弃妃。侯门深深,寂寥相守,心如止水,不争宠,不承恩。原以为,能够安然度日,然,迎接她的,却是永无止境的折磨和羞辱;原以为,她与他,共同携手,一起进退,她便能够得到他的爱情;孰料,终于不过是一场镜花水月,一场海市蜃楼。当他亲手端过堕胎药,放在她的面前,冰冷无情的命令她喝下时;那一刻,她的心死了。他如此的狠心,只因为他心爱的女人失去了孩子;痛楚猛然袭来,折磨她的,不仅是触目惊心的鲜红,倾流直下的眼泪,还有身心巨裂的情殇。她无声的哭笑,眸中尽是凄楚。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 凡尔纳科幻故事精选(中)

    凡尔纳科幻故事精选(中)

    儒勒·凡尔纳是19世纪法国科幻小说大师,被誉为“科学幻想之父”。他的作品卷帙洁繁,包罗万象。本套书精选了凡尔纳的许多名篇,充分表现了凡尔纳的独特艺术思维,阅读这些科幻故事,有助于启发人类智慧和激发热爱科学、追求科学的热情,从而全面提高我们的科学文化素质。
  • 农民经商理财法律案例精讲

    农民经商理财法律案例精讲

    本书主要立足于农民如何依法从事经营活动,通过对典型案例的分析及链接最新法律,介绍相关法律知识,让农民群众从一个个鲜活、真实的法律案例中学懂法、会用法。全书共分为五个部分,第一部分是公司设立、经营纠纷案例,介绍农民开办公司可能遇到的相关法律问题;第二部分是合伙企业、个体工商户设立、经营纠纷案例,针对个体工商户及合伙企业设立及经营会遇到与公司不同的法律问题;第三部分是经商税费纠纷案例,通过对典型案例的分析,介绍农民如何避免经商理财过程中的税费纠纷;第四部分是合同纠纷案例,该部分通过对具有代表性的案例分析,让农民学会如何签订、履行合同;第五部分是防范投资风险案例,目的是教农民学会防范投资风险。
  • 乱天人

    乱天人

    顺天为凡,逆天为仙;世人皆想逆天成仙,我却偏偏顺天做人;成仙难,做人更难;那就让我这一介凡夫俗子;踏着众生尸骨,饮着万物心血;成就我自己的乱天霸业。
  • 孤独侠情之之惊天一剑
  • 恶魔校草的呆萌宝贝

    恶魔校草的呆萌宝贝

    夏暖心喊:“你别过来,你过来,我打死你!”“呵,开玩笑。”
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)