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the ancien regime-第13章

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into Louis XV。's Petit Trianon; or other den of aristocratic

iniquity; but left behind her; parents nursing shame and sullen

indignation; even while they fingered the ill…gotten price of their

daughter's honour; and left behind also; perhaps; some unhappy boy

of her own class; in whom disappointment and jealousy were

transformedand who will blame him?into righteous indignation;

and a very sword of God; all the more indignant; and all the more

righteous; if education helped him to see; that the maiden's

acquiescence; her pride in her own shame; was the ugliest feature in

the whole crime; and the most potent reason for putting an end;

however fearful; to a state of things in which such a fate was

thought an honour and a gain; and not a disgrace and a ruin; in

which the most gifted daughters of the lower classes had learnt to

think it more noble to becomethat which they becamethan the

wives of honest men。



If you will read fairly the literature of the Ancien Regime; whether

in France or elsewhere; you will see that my facts are true。  If you

have human hearts in you; you will see in them; it seems to me; an

explanation of many a guillotinade and fusillade; as yet explained

only on the ground of madnessan hypothesis which (as we do not yet

in the least understand what madness is) is no explanation at all。



An age of decay; incoherence; and makeshift; varnish and gilding

upon worm…eaten furniture; and mouldering wainscot; was that same

Ancien Regime。  And for that very reason a picturesque age; like one

of its own landscapes。  A picturesque bit of uncultivated mountain;

swarming with the prince's game; a picturesque old robber schloss

above; now in ruins; and below; perhaps; the picturesque new

schloss; with its French fountains and gardens; French nymphs of

marble; and of flesh and blood likewise; which the prince has

partially paid for; by selling a few hundred young men to the

English to fight the Yankees。  The river; too; is picturesque; for

the old bridge has not been repaired since it was blown up in the

Seven Years' War; and there is but a single lazy barge floating down

the stream; owing to the tolls and tariffs of his Serene Highness;

the village is picturesque; for the flower of the young men are at

the wars; and the place is tumbling down; and the two old peasants

in the foreground; with the single goat and the hamper of vine…

twigs; are very picturesque likewise; for they are all in rags。



How sad to see the picturesque element eliminated; and the quiet

artistic beauty of the scene destroyed;to have steamers puffing up

and down the river; and a railroad hurrying along its banks the

wealth of the Old World; in exchange for the wealth of the Newor

hurrying; it may be; whole regiments of free and educated citizen…

soldiers; who fight; they know for what。  How sad to see the alto

schloss desecrated by tourists; and the neue schloss converted into

a cold…water cure。  How sad to see the village; church and all;

built up again brand…new; and whitewashed to the very steeple…top;

a new school at the town…enda new crucifix by the wayside。  How

sad to see the old folk well clothed in the fabrics of England or

Belgium; doing an easy trade in milk and fruit; because the land

they till has become their own; and not the prince's; while their

sons are thriving farmers on the prairies of the far West。  Very

unpicturesque; no doubt; is wealth and progress; peace and safety;

cleanliness and comfort。  But they possess advantages unknown to the

Ancien Regime; which was; if nothing else; picturesque。  Men could

paint amusing and often pretty pictures of its people and its

places。



Consider that word; 〃picturesque。〃  It; and the notion of art which

it expresses; are the children of the Ancien Regimeof the era of

decay。  The healthy; vigorous; earnest; progressive Middle Age never

dreamed of admiring; much less of painting; for their own sake; rags

and ruins; the fashion sprang up at the end of the seventeenth

century; it lingered on during the first quarter of our century;

kept alive by the reaction from 1815…25。  It is all but dead now;

before the return of vigorous and progressive thought。  An admirer

of the Middle Ages now does not build a sham ruin in his grounds; he

restores a church; blazing with colour; like a medieval

illumination。  He has learnt to look on that which went by the name

of picturesque in his great…grandfather's time; as an old Greek or a

Middle Age monk would have doneas something squalid; ugly; a sign

of neglect; disease; death; and therefore to be hated and abolished;

if it cannot be restored。  At Carcassone; now; M。 Viollet…le…Duc;

under the auspices of the Emperor of the French; is spending his

vast learning; and much money; simply in abolishing the picturesque;

in restoring stone for stone; each member of that wonderful museum

of Middle Age architecture:  Roman; Visigothic; Moslem; Romaine;

Early English; later French; all is being reproduced exactly as it

must have existed centuries since。  No doubt that is not the highest

function of art:  but it is a preparation for the highest; a step

toward some future creative school。  As the early Italian artists;

by careful imitation; absorbed into their minds the beauty and

meaning of old Greek and Roman art; so must the artists of our days

by the art of the Middle Age and the Renaissance。  They must learn

to copy; before they can learn to surpass; and; meanwhile; they must

learnindeed they have learntthat decay is ugliness; and the

imitation of decay; a making money out of the public shame。



The picturesque sprang up; as far as I can discover; suddenly;

during the time of exhaustion and recklessness which followed the

great struggles of the sixteenth century。  Salvator Rosa and Callot;

two of the earliest professors of picturesque art; have never been

since surpassed。  For indeed; they drew from life。  The rags and the

ruins; material; and alas! spiritual; were all around them; the

lands and the creeds alike lay waste。  There was ruffianism and

misery among the masses of Europe; unbelief and artificiality among

the upper classes; churches and monasteries defiled; cities sacked;

farmsteads plundered and ruinate; and all the wretchedness which

Callot has immortalisedfor a warning to evil rulersin his

Miseres de la Guerre。  The world was all gone wrong:  but as for

setting it right againwho could do that?  And so men fell into a

sentimental regret for the past; and its beauties; all exaggerated

by the foreshortening of time; while they wanted strength or faith

to reproduce it。  At last they became so accustomed to the rags and

ruins; that they looked on them as the normal condition of humanity;

as the normal field for painters。



Only now and then; and especially toward the latter half of the

eighteenth century; when thought began to revive; and men dreamed of

putting the world to rights once more; there rose before them

glimpses of an Arcadian ideal。  Country lifethe primaeval calling

of menhow graceful and pure it might be!  How gracefulif not

pureit once had been!  The boors of Teniers and the beggars of

Murillo might be true to present fact; but there was a fairer ideal;

which once had been fact; in the Eclogues of Theocritus; and the

Loves of Daphnis and Chloe。  And so men took to dreaming of

shepherds and shepherdesses; and painting them on canvas; and

modelling them in china; according to their cockney notions of what

they had been once; and always ought to be。  We smile now at Sevres

and Dresden shepherdesses; but the wise man will surely see in them

a certain pathos。  They indicated a craving after something better

than boorishness; and the many men and women may have become the

gentler and purer by looking even at them; and have said sadly to

themselves:  〃Such might have been the peasantry of half Europe; had

it not been for devastations of the Palatinate; wars of succession;

and the wicked wills of emperors and kings。〃







LECTURE IIITHE EXPLOSIVE FORCES







In a former lecture in this Institution; I said that the human race

owed more to the eighteenth century than to any century since the

Christian era。  It may seem a bold assertion to those who value duly

the century which followed the revival of Greek literature; and

consider that the eighteenth century was but the child; or rather

grandchild; thereof。  But I must persist in my opinion; even though

it seem to be inconsistent with my description of the very same era

as one of decay and death。  For side by side with the death; there

was manifold fresh birth; side by side with the decay there was

active growth;side by side with them; fostered by them; though

generally in strong opposition to them; whether conscious or

unconscious。  We must beware; however; of trying to find between

that decay and that growth a bond of cause and effect where there is

really none。  The general decay may ha
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