An Englishman Looks at the World eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about An Englishman Looks at the World.

An Englishman Looks at the World eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about An Englishman Looks at the World.
he doesn’t want—­Problems.  He wants to dream of the bright, thin, gay excitements of a phantom world—­in which he can be hero—­of horses ridden and lace worn and princesses rescued and won.  He wants pictures of funny slums, and entertaining paupers, and laughable longshoremen, and kindly impulses making life sweet.  He wants romance without its defiance, and humour without its sting; and the business of the novelist, he holds, is to supply this cooling refreshment.  That is the Weary Giant theory of the novel.  It ruled British criticism up to the period of the Boer war—­and then something happened to quite a lot of us, and it has never completely recovered its old predominance.  Perhaps it will; perhaps something else may happen to prevent its ever doing so.

Both fiction and criticism to-day are in revolt against that tired giant, the prosperous Englishman.  I cannot think of a single writer of any distinction to-day, unless it is Mr. W.W.  Jacobs, who is content merely to serve the purpose of those slippered hours.  So far from the weary reader being a decently tired giant, we realise that he is only an inexpressibly lax, slovenly and under-trained giant, and we are all out with one accord resolved to exercise his higher ganglia in every possible way.  And so I will say no more of the idea that the novel is merely a harmless opiate for the vacant hours of prosperous men.  As a matter of fact, it never has been, and by its nature I doubt if it ever can be.

I do not think that women have ever quite succumbed to the tired giant attitude in their reading.  Women are more serious, not only about life, but about books.  No type or kind of woman is capable of that lounging, defensive stupidity which is the basis of the tired giant attitude, and all through the early ’nineties, during which the respectable frivolity of Great Britain left its most enduring marks upon our literature, there was a rebel undertow of earnest and aggressive writing and reading, supported chiefly by women and supplied very largely by women, which gave the lie to the prevailing trivial estimate of fiction.  Among readers, women and girls and young men at least will insist upon having their novels significant and real, and it is to these perpetually renewed elements in the public that the novelist must look for his continuing emancipation from the wearier and more massive influences at work in contemporary British life.

And if the novel is to be recognised as something more than a relaxation, it has also, I think, to be kept free from the restrictions imposed upon it by the fierce pedantries of those who would define a general form for it.  Every art nowadays must steer its way between the rocks of trivial and degrading standards and the whirlpool of arbitrary and irrational criticism.  Whenever criticism of any art becomes specialised and professional whenever a class of adjudicators is brought into existence, those adjudicators are apt to become as a class distrustful of their immediate

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
An Englishman Looks at the World from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.