This section contains 16,585 words (approx. 56 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Buckler, William E. “Facing the Enemy Within: An Examination of the Moralist Mythos in Culture and Anarchy.” In Matthew Arnold's Prose: Three Essays in Literary Enlargement, pp. 67-112. New York: AMS Press, Inc., 1983.
In the following essay, Buckler analyzes Arnold's role as a critical moralist, focusing on the high standard that the author set for himself and the society in which he lived.
In the “Introduction” to Culture and Anarchy,1 Matthew Arnold said that, in his opinion, “the speech most proper, at present, for a man of culture to make to a body of his fellow-countrymen … is Socrates': Know thyself!” He thus rooted his Essay in Political and Social Criticism, an essay which wears contemporaneousness like an identifying badge and takes on a generation of Liberal social and political advocates in direct, toe-to-toe fashion, quite unmistakably in the classical moralist tradition. Adopting his motto from Jesus, his...
This section contains 16,585 words (approx. 56 pages at 300 words per page) |