登陆注册
34926300000041

第41章

"Philip" is not worthy of the author of "Esmond," nor "Daniel Deronda" of the author of "Silas Marner." At that time--the time of the Dorrits and Dombeys--Blackwood's Magazine published a "Remonstrance with Boz"; nor was it quite superfluous. But Dickens had abundance of talent still to display--above all in "Great Expectations" and "A Tale of Two Cities." The former is, after "Pickwick," "Copperfield," "Martin Chuzzlewit," and "Nicholas Nickleby"--after the classics, in fact--the most delightful of Dickens's books. The story is embroiled, no doubt. What are we to think of Estelle? Has the minx any purpose? Is she a kind of Ethel Newcome of odd life? It is not easy to say; still, for a story of Dickens's the plot is comparatively clear and intelligible. For a study of a child's life, of the nature Dickens drew best--the river and the marshes--and for plenty of honest explosive fun, there is no later book of Dickens's like "Great Expectations." Miss Havisham, too, in her mouldy bridal splendour, is really impressive; not like Ralph Nickleby and Monk in "Oliver Twist"--a book of which the plot remains to me a mystery. {4} Pip and Pumblechook and Mr. Wopsle and Jo are all immortal, and cause laughter inextinguishable. The rarity of this book, by the way, in its first edition--the usual library three volumes--is rather difficult to explain. One very seldom sees it come into the market, and then it is highly priced.

I have mentioned more than once the obscurity of Dickens's plots.

This difficulty may be accounted for in a very flattering manner.

Where do we lose ourselves? Not in the bare high-road, but among lanes, between hedges hung with roses, blackberries, morning glories, where all about us is so full of pleasure that our attention is distracted and we miss our way. Now, in Dickens--in "Oliver Twist," in "Martin Chuzzlewit," in "Nicholas Nickleby"--there is, as in the lanes, so much to divert and beguile, that we cease to care very much where the road leads--a road so full of happy marvels. The dark, plotting villains--like the tramp who frightened Sir Walter Scott so terribly, as he came from Miss Baillie's at Hampstead--peer out from behind the hedges now and then. But we are too much amused by the light hearts that go all the way, by the Dodger and Crummles and Mrs. Gamp, to care much for what Ralph, and Monk, and Jonas Chuzzlewit are plotting. It may not be that the plot is so confused, but that we are too much diverted to care for the plot, for the incredible machinations of Uriah Heap, to choose another example. Mr. Micawber cleared these up; but it is Mr. Micawber that hinders us from heeding them.

This, at least, is a not unfriendly explanation. Yet I cannot but believe that, though Dickens took great pains with his plots, he was not a great plotter. He was not, any more than Thackeray, a story-teller first and foremost. We can hold in our minds every thread of Mr. Wilkie Collins' web, or of M. Fortune du Boisgobey's, or of M.

Gaboriau's--all great weavers of intrigues. But Dickens goes about darkening his intrigue, giving it an extra knot, an extra twist, hinting here, ominously laughing there, till we get mystified and bored, and give ourselves up to the fun of the humours, indifferent to the destinies of villains and victims. Look at "Edwin Drood." Aconstant war about the plot rages in the magazines. I believe, for one, that Edwin Drood was resuscitated; but it gives me no pleasure.

He was too uninteresting. Dickens's hints, nods, mutterings, forebodings, do not at all impress one like that deepening and darkening of the awful omens in "The Bride of Lammermoor." Here Scott--unconsciously, no doubt--used the very manner of Homer in the Odyssey, and nowhere was his genius more Homeric. That was romance.

The "Tale of Two Cities" is a great test of the faith--that is in Dickensites. Of all his works it is the favourite with the wrong sort! Ladies prefer it. Many people can read it who cannot otherwise read Dickens at all. This in itself proves that it is not a good example of Dickens, that it is not central, that it is an outlying province which he conquered. It is not a favourite of mine. The humour of the humorous characters rings false--for example, the fun of the resurrection-man with the wife who "flops."But Sidney Carton has drawn many tears down cheeks not accustomed to what Mr. B. in "Pamela" calls "pearly fugitives."It sometimes strikes one that certain weaknesses in our great novelists, in Thackeray as well as Dickens, were caused by their method of publication. The green and yellow leaves flourished on the trees for two whole years. Who (except Alexandre the Great)could write so much, and yet all good? Do we not all feel that "David Copperfield" should have been compressed? As to "Pendennis,"Mr. Thackeray's bad health when he wrote it might well cause a certain languor in the later pages. Moreover, he frankly did not care for the story, and bluffly says, in the preface, that he respited Colonel Altamont almost at the foot of the gallows.

Dickens took himself more in earnest, and, having so many pages to fill, conscientiously made Uriah Heap wind and wriggle through them all.

To try to see blots in the sun, and to pick holes in Dickens, seems ungrateful, and is indeed an ungrateful task; to no mortal man have more people owed mirth, pleasure, forgetfulness of care, knowledge of life in strange places. There never was such another as Charles Dickens, nor shall we see his like sooner than the like of Shakespeare. And he owed all to native genius and hard work; he owed almost nothing to literature, and that little we regret. He was influenced by Carlyle, he adopted his method of nicknames, and of hammering with wearisome iteration on some peculiarity--for example, on Carker's teeth, and the patriarch's white hair. By the way, how incredible is all the Carker episode in "Dombey"! Surely Dickens can never have intended Edith, from the first, to behave as she did! People may have influenced him, as they influenced Scott about "St. Ronan's Well." It has been said that, save for Carlyle, Dickens was in letters a self-taught artist, that he was no man's pupil, and borrowed from none. No doubt this makes him less acceptable to the literary class than a man of letters, like Thackeray--than a man in whose treasure chamber of memory all the wealth of the Middle Ages was stored, like Scott. But the native naked genius of Dickens,--his heart, his mirth, his observation, his delightful high spirits, his intrepid loathing of wrong, his chivalrous desire to right it,--these things will make him for ever, we hope and believe, the darling of the English people.

同类推荐
  • 太公兵法

    太公兵法

    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。
  • 辩正论

    辩正论

    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。
  • 括异志

    括异志

    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。
  • From This World to the Next

    From This World to the Next

    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。
  • 北京梨园金石文字录

    北京梨园金石文字录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 海贼之走近科学

    海贼之走近科学

    我叫罗西南迪,我是吃了游戏果实的游戏人,曾经的世界里充满了网友,而这个世界却没有了你们,网瘾少年们,我要创造一个有你们的世界,这个世界沉浸在无限游戏之中吧,哇咔咔。弘扬科学精神、宣传科学思想、提倡科学方法、传播科学知识。
  • 细数晋商成与败

    细数晋商成与败

    一部《乔家大院》火遍全国,又重新勾起了人们对晋商炽热的兴趣。晋商何以发迹,有着怎样的花样年华,又是什么原因让他们一蹶不振,晋商如何经营,如何用人,如何做人,乔致庸又能否代表晋商整个群体,这一切的一切,本书将给你详尽的答案!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 夜深了你还想我吗

    夜深了你还想我吗

    行色匆匆的人们,站在来去匆匆的车站。他在那笑过,也在那哭过,可是每当他离开的时候,却从未发现有个人一直在他的身后。或许人生本就是在一次又一次的擦肩中度过,然后留下形同陌路般的相遇……
  • 霸道总裁爱上妖艳

    霸道总裁爱上妖艳

    爱上的是妖艳贱货这只是一个脑洞巨大的高中少女在初三晚自习写下的无聊小说人物都是我初中班里的人so不要太在意姓氏什么的啦
  • 末世之天选之王

    末世之天选之王

    人类的文明结束了,但新的文明出现,人族、尸族、虫族三足鼎立,而我,只根本是其中一个渺小的人类罢了……Q群:220890276
  • 仙网一万年

    仙网一万年

    无数纪元的发展,生物、物理、化学、、科技等各学科都发展到了极限,人类终于掌握了空间和时间法则,人成了神,永生成了基本。
  • 兰生幽谷

    兰生幽谷

    海棠红晕润初妍,杨柳纤腰舞自编。笑倚栏杆娇欲眠。情郎前,一半儿芙蓉一半儿艳。
  • 喂!恶魔小心点

    喂!恶魔小心点

    【腾讯独家连载VIP小说只有腾讯才能看到此文的完整版】一次街头的偶遇让他们的命运紧紧联系在了一起……这是一场超华丽浪漫的刻骨铭心的爱情……一段大明星与灰姑娘的纯美之恋……说一句这本书后半部分情节非常虐,非常虐,非常虐……不喜欢看虐文的朋友注意下,看到流眼泪,看到心痛我不负责哦~~嘿嘿
  • 缘起千灯之约

    缘起千灯之约

    作者是个游戏热爱党(????ω????)脑子里有很多千奇百怪的故事,想写出来给大家一起分享,因为是第一次写文有很多不足之处还请大家多多包容多多提建议蟹蟹qwq