登陆注册
38603500000040

第40章

The Erewhonians five hundred years ago understood nothing of all this--I doubt whether they even do so now. They wanted to get the nearest thing they could to a stuffed man whose stuffing should not grow mouldy. They should have had some such an establishment as our Madame Tussaud's, where the figures wear real clothes, and are painted up to nature. Such an institution might have been made self-supporting, for people might have been made to pay before going in. As it was, they had let their poor cold grimy colourless heroes and heroines loaf about in squares and in corners of streets in all weathers, without any attempt at artistic sanitation--for there was no provision for burying their dead works of art out of their sight--no drainage, so to speak, whereby statues that had been sufficiently assimilated, so as to form part of the residuary impression of the country, might be carried away out of the system.

Hence they put them up with a light heart on the cackling of their coteries, and they and their children had to live, often enough, with some wordy windbag whose cowardice had cost the country untold loss in blood and money.

At last the evil reached such a pitch that the people rose, and with indiscriminate fury destroyed good and bad alike. Most of what was destroyed was bad, but some few works were good, and the sculptors of to-day wring their hands over some of the fragments that have been preserved in museums up and down the country. For a couple of hundred years or so, not a statue was made from one end of the kingdom to the other, but the instinct for having stuffed men and women was so strong, that people at length again began to try to make them. Not knowing how to make them, and having no academics to mislead them, the earliest sculptors of this period thought things out for themselves, and again produced works that were full of interest, so that in three or four generations they reached a perfection hardly if at all inferior to that of several hundred years earlier.

On this the same evils recurred. Sculptors obtained high prices--the art became a trade--schools arose which professed to sell the holy spirit of art for money; pupils flocked from far and near to buy it, in the hopes of selling it later on, and were struck purblind as a punishment for the sin of those who sent them.

Before long a second iconoclastic fury would infallibly have followed, but for the prescience of a statesman who succeeded in passing an Act to the effect that no statue of any public man or woman should be allowed to remain unbroken for more than fifty years, unless at the end of that time a jury of twenty-four men taken at random from the street pronounced in favour of its being allowed a second fifty years of life. Every fifty years this reconsideration was to be repeated, and unless there was a majority of eighteen in favour of the retention of the statue, it was to be destroyed.

Perhaps a ******r plan would have been to forbid the erection of a statue to any public man or woman till he or she had been dead at least one hundred years, and even then to insist on reconsideration of the claims of the deceased and the merit of the statue every fifty years--but the working of the Act brought about results that on the whole were satisfactory. For in the first place, many public statues that would have been voted under the old system, were not ordered, when it was known that they would be almost certainly broken up after fifty years, and in the second, public sculptors knowing their work to be so ephemeral, scamped it to an extent that made it offensive even to the most uncultured eye.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 逝约

    逝约

    “你,有过约定吗?”“有的呢!”“你,有遵守过他吗?”“有吧!”“那,你有遗忘过吗?”“遗忘?应该是有的吧!不过,我已经记不起来了!”“看来,你的约定逝去了呢?”“约定,会逝去?”“会的,他们和人类一样,随约定之人的生而相生,伴约定之人的死而轮回,如此循环,直到约定之人将其遵守,然后逝去!”“这不对啊!”“有何不对?”“轮回之人既已轮回便是一个新的生命,前世之约早已忘却,又该如何遵守?他们依附轮回之人又有何意义?”“有的啊,这,只是另一段因果的开始罢了!”“另一段因果?”“对,由逝约引起的因果!”“逝约?那是什么?”
  • 冷王独宠:宝宝还你一生

    冷王独宠:宝宝还你一生

    这是一部女主前世为报仇与恶势力同归于尽的故事。哪想一朝穿越,那人却是个傻的⊙_⊙,不过还好还好,她是正常的啊。这位冷面王是谁?什么,居然是前世守护她的爱人!好吧,那我就用一生还他的生死相护喽。
  • 一笑若嫣

    一笑若嫣

    你名声四射,我却戎马兵将,杀尽越国者。那时,只因你在皇朝上的一句话,我偏偏落入了你的魔掌。可后来,你我却兵戎相见。
  • 九洲魔君

    九洲魔君

    寻天道,化魔君。觅红颜,揽知己。天地不可欺我,我于万物为尘埃。九洲沧海为局,谁又堪棋手?万千载世何为?烟消云散,举手之间,握乾坤。
  • 始,雪舞

    始,雪舞

    一个意外进入异界的少女与一国皇子相爱的故事……
  • 重生天价妻:老公,我超甜

    重生天价妻:老公,我超甜

    江暖暖受尽江家母女欺辱,重生一世,她手撕渣男贱女,刷新新形象。白天虐渣,“老公,我什么都没有,心里好空。”墨连城双手捧上所有财产,“暖暖,这些都给你,包括我也给你。”“老公,我的手好疼。”墨连城捧过她的手,俊美的脸庞尽显心疼,“傻老婆,以后打人这种事情,让老公来。”“老公,我命好苦,缺少父爱母爱。”墨连城宠溺的吻了吻她额头,“宝贝,余生我们用爱浇灌他长大。”
  • 霸气少男PK清纯少女

    霸气少男PK清纯少女

    霸气的精英会会长奇奇怪怪的爱上一个平凡的单纯,善良的少女。
  • 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!
  • THE YELLOW FAIRY BOOK

    THE YELLOW FAIRY BOOK

    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。
  • 不娇不惯富养女孩

    不娇不惯富养女孩

    本书语重心长地指出,对于女孩,父母可以给她爱,但是一定要有原则、理智地去爱。父母要充分认识女孩的性格特征、天赋和优势、缺陷与不足,并采取不同于男孩的培养方法,运用最契合女孩心理特征和成长规律的教育方式,才能培养出最优秀的女孩。富养不是娇生惯养,不是任意妄为,而是给孩子安静、平和、精致的生活,在这种健康的成长环境培养女孩的自信,让她从小懂得尊重他人,做一个有品位、有气质的独立女孩。