Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature eBook

Margaret Ball
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 264 pages of information about Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature.

Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature eBook

Margaret Ball
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 264 pages of information about Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature.

His disapproval of their point of view he expressed more than once.[235] It seemed to him futile and ungentlemanly for the anonymous reviewer to seek primarily for faults, or “to wound any person’s feelings ... unless where conceit or false doctrine strongly calls for reprobation."[236] “Where praise can be conscientiously mingled in a larger proportion than blame,” he said, “there is always some amusement in throwing together our ideas upon the works of our fellow-labourers.”  He thought, indeed, that vituperative and satiric criticism was defeating its own end, in the case of the Edinburgh Review since it was overworked to the point of monotony.  Such criticism he considered futile as well on this account as because he thought it likely to have an injurious effect on the work of really gifted writers.

An admirer of both Jeffrey and Scott, who once heard a conversation between the two men, has recorded a distinction which is exactly what we should expect.[237] He says:  “Jeffrey, for the most part, entertained us, when books were under discussion, with the detection of faults, blunders, absurdities, or plagiarisms:  Scott took up the matter where he left it, recalled some compensating beauty or excellence for which no credit had been allowed, and by the recitation, perhaps, of one fine stanza, set the poor victim on his legs again.”

On Jeffrey Scott’s verdict was, “There is something in his mode of reasoning that leads me greatly to doubt whether, notwithstanding the vivacity of his imagination, he really has any feeling of poetical genius, or whether he has worn it all off by perpetually sharpening his wit on the grindstone of criticism."[238] His comment on Gifford’s reviews was to the effect that people were more moved to dislike the critic for his savagery than the guilty victim whom he flagellated.[239] In the early days of Blackwood’s Magazine Scott often tried to repress Lockhart’s “wicked wit,"[240] and when Lockhart became editor of the Quarterly his father-in-law did not always approve of his work.  “Don’t like his article on Sheridan’s life,"[241] says the Journal.  “There is no breadth in it, no general views, the whole flung away in smart but party criticism.  Now, no man can take more general and liberal views of literature than J.G.L."[242]

With these opinions, Scott was not likely often to undertake the reviewing of books that did not, in one way or another interest him or move his admiration; and he would lay as much stress as possible on their good points.  Gifford told him that “fun and feeling” were his forte.[243] In his early days he was probably somewhat influenced by Jeffrey’s method, and his articles on Todd’s Spenser and Godwin’s Life of Chaucer indicate that he could occasionally adopt something of the tone of the Edinburgh Review.  Years afterwards he refused to write an article that Lockhart wanted for the Quarterly, saying, “I cannot

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.