General Observations on
Chesterton's Views and Practice of the Arts
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At the heart of
Chesterton's approach is an attempt to restore wonder at the world; he
seeks to defamiliarize us with what we think we know about the world
in order to awaken us to what it is really like. This arises in part
from his own experience of nihilism and despair while he was a young
artist at the Slade School of Art and his recovery from two years of
depression by a return to something increasingly like traditional
faith.
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In general, therefore, he
is suspicious of both a realism in art and literature that offers only
a pessimistic stoicism and of an impressionism that believes we can
only know our subjective responses to the world, not whether they are
actually true information about the world. Both he believes end in
nihilism.
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Instead, a mixture of
surface nonsense and serious purpose are truth-telling responses.
Humility and childlikeness are epistemically necessary, as a sense of
limitations are necessary for the artist to achieve anything
worthwhile.
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The Creator has made the
world with a sense of humor, beauty, and whimsy, and what we might
call farcical, grotesque, or even ugly are just as important in
understanding God's world. With the grotesque often comes a
baby-like joy that should not be despised.
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Chesterton in general
seems to side with popular literature and art--song, traditional
rhyme, fantasy, detective fiction, adventure stories, etc. in part
because they seem to possess a moral common sense that have been
distorted and lost in high art and literature.
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He also has a preference
for paradoxes, proverbs, epigrams, and analogies as proper to
understanding life and humanity. The human imagination--its gifts of
music, painting, and word play--set us apart from the rest of the
animal creation. To seek to eliminate these is to deny large aspects
of our creative grasp of the real.
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Life finally has a noble,
funny, holy, restless, joyous quality that must be attested to in art
and literature if these are to be authentic.
A Defence of Penny
Dreadfuls
One of the strangest examples of the degree
to which ordinary life is undervalued is the example of popular
literature, the vast mass of which we contentedly describe as vulgar. The
boy's novelette may be ignorant in a literary sense, which is only like
saying that a modern novel is ignorant in the chemical sense, or the
economic sense, or the astronomical sense; but it is not vulgar
intrinsically—it is the actual centre of a million flaming imaginations.
. . . The simple need for some kind of ideal world in which fictitious
persons play an unhampered part is infinitely deeper and older than the
rules of good art, and much more important. Every one of us in childhood
has constructed such an invisible dramatis personæ, but it never
occurred to our nurses to correct the composition by careful comparison
with Balzac. In the East the professional story-teller goes from village
to village with a small carpet; and I wish sincerely that anyone had the
moral courage to spread that carpet
and sit on it in Ludgate Circus. But it is not
probable that all the tales of the carpet-bearer are little gems of
original artistic workmanship. Literature and fiction are two entirely
different things. Literature is a luxury; fiction is a necessity. A work
of art can hardly be too short, for its climax is its merit. A story can
never be too long, for its conclusion is merely to be deplored, like the
last halfpenny or the last pipelight. And so, while the increase of the
artistic conscience tends in more ambitious works to brevity and
impressionism, voluminous industry still marks the producer of the true
romantic trash. There was no end to the ballads of Robin Hood; there is no
end to the volumes about Dick Deadshot and the Avenging Nine. These two
heroes are deliberately conceived as immortal.
It is the modern literature of the
educated, not of the uneducated, which is avowedly and aggressively
criminal. Books recommending profligacy and pessimism, at which the high-souled
errand-boy would shudder, lie upon all our drawing-room tables. If the
dirtiest old owner of the dirtiest old bookstall in Whitechapel dared to
display works really recommending polygamy or suicide, his stock would be
seized by the police. These things are our luxuries. And with a hypocrisy
so ludicrous as to be almost unparalleled in history, we rate the
gutter-boys for their immorality at the very
time that we are discussing (with equivocal German
Professors) whether morality is valid at all. At the very instant that we
curse the Penny Dreadful for encouraging thefts upon property, we canvass
the proposition that all property is theft. At the very instant we accuse
it (quite unjustly) of lubricity and indecency, we are cheerfully reading
philosophies which glory in lubricity and indecency. At the very instant
that we charge it with encouraging the young to destroy life, we are
placidly discussing whether life is worth preserving.
But it is we who are the morbid exceptions;
it is we who are the criminal class. This should be our great comfort. The
vast mass of humanity, with their vast mass of idle books and idle words,
have never doubted and never will doubt that courage is splendid, that
fidelity is noble, that distressed ladies should be rescued, and
vanquished enemies spared.
A Defence of Rash Vows
And the end of all this is that maddening
horror of unreality which descends upon the decadents, and compared with
which physical pain itself would have the freshness of a youthful thing.
The one hell which imagination must conceive as most hellish is to be
eternally acting a play without even the narrowest and dirtiest greenroom
in which to be human. And this is the condition of the decadent, of the
aesthete, of the free-lover. To be everlastingly passing through dangers
which we know cannot scathe us, to be taking oaths which we know cannot
bind us, to be defying enemies who we know cannot conquer us—this is the
grinning tyranny of decadence which is called freedom. . . .Emphatically
it will not work. There are thrilling moments, doubtless, for the
spectator, the amateur, and the aesthete; but there is one thrill that is
known only to the soldier who fights for his own flag, to the ascetic who
starves himself for his own illumination, to the lover
who makes finally his own choice. And it is this
transfiguring self-discipline that makes the vow a truly sane thing. It
must have satisfied even the giant hunger of the soul of a lover or a poet
to know that in consequence of some one instant of decision that strange
chain would hang for centuries in the Alps among the silences of stars and
snows. All around us is the city of small sins, abounding in backways and
retreats, but surely, sooner or later, the towering flame will rise from
the harbour announcing that the reign of the cowards is over and a man is
burning his ships.
A Defence of Skeletons
There is a peculiar idea abroad that the
value and fascination of what we call Nature lie in her beauty. But the
fact that Nature is beautiful in the sense that a dado or a Liberty
curtain is beautiful, is only one of her charms, and almost an accidental
one. The highest and most valuable quality in Nature is not her beauty,
but her generous and
defiant ugliness. A hundred instances might be
taken. The croaking noise of the rooks is, in itself, as hideous as the
whole hell of sounds in a London railway tunnel. Yet it uplifts us like a
trumpet with its coarse kindliness and honesty, and the lover in 'Maud'
could actually persuade himself that this abominable noise resembled his
lady-love's name. Has the poet, for whom Nature means only roses and
lilies, ever heard a pig grunting? It is a noise that does a man good—a
strong, snorting, imprisoned noise, breaking its way out of unfathomable
dungeons through every possible outlet and organ. It might be the voice of
the earth itself, snoring in its mighty sleep. This is the deepest, the
oldest, the most wholesome and religious sense of the value of
Nature—the value which comes from her immense babyishness. She is as
top-heavy, as grotesque, as solemn and as happy as a child. The mood does
come when we see all her shapes like shapes that a baby scrawls upon a
slate—simple, rudimentary, a million years older and stronger than the
whole disease that is called Art. The objects of earth and heaven seem to
combine into a nursery tale, and our relation to things seems for a moment
so simple that a dancing lunatic would be needed to do justice to its
lucidity and levity. The tree above my head is flapping like some gigantic
bird standing on one leg; the moon is like the eye of a Cyclops. And,
however
much my face clouds with sombre vanity, or vulgar
vengeance, or contemptible contempt, the bones of my skull beneath it are
laughing for ever.
A Defence of Farce
I have never been able to understand why
certain forms of art should be marked off as something debased and
trivial. A comedy is spoken of as 'degenerating into farce'; it would be
fair criticism to speak of it 'changing into farce'; but as for
degenerating into farce, we might equally reasonably speak of it as
degenerating into tragedy. Again, a story is spoken of as 'melodramatic,'
and the phrase, queerly enough, is not meant as a compliment. To speak of
something as 'pantomimic' or 'sensational' is innocently supposed to be
biting, Heaven knows why, for all works of art are sensations, and a good
pantomime (now extinct) is one of the pleasantest sensations of all. 'This
stuff is fit for a detective story,' is often said, as who should say,
'This stuff is fit for an epic.'
Whatever may be the rights and wrongs of
this mode of classification, there can be no doubt about one most
practical and disastrous effect of it. These lighter or wilder forms of
art, having no standard set up for them, no gust of generous artistic
pride to lift them up, do actually tend to become as bad as they are
supposed to be. Neglected children of the great mother, they grow up in
darkness, dirty and unlettered, and
when they are right they are right almost by
accident, because of the blood in their veins. The common detective story
of mystery and murder seems to the intelligent reader to be little except
a strange glimpse of a planet peopled by congenital idiots, who cannot
find the end of their own noses or the character of their own wives. The
common pantomime seems like some horrible satiric picture of a world
without cause or effect, a mass of 'jarring atoms,' a prolonged mental
torture of irrelevancy. The ordinary farce seems a world of almost piteous
vulgarity, where a half-witted and stunted creature is afraid when his
wife comes home, and amused when she sits down on the doorstep. All this
is, in a sense, true, but it is the fault of nothing in heaven or earth
except the attitude and the phrases quoted at the beginning of this
article. . . .
The artistic justification, then, of farce
and pantomime must consist in the emotions of life which correspond to
them. And these emotions are to an incredible extent crushed out by the
modern insistence on the painful side of life only. Pain, it is said, is
the dominant element of life; but this is true only in a very special
sense. If pain were for one single instant literally the dominant element
in life, every man would be found hanging dead from his own bed-post by
the morning. Pain, as the black and catastrophic thing, attracts the
youthful artist, just as the schoolboy draws devils and skeletons and men
hanging. But joy is a far more elusive and elvish matter, since it is our
reason for existing, and a very feminine reason; it mingles with every
breath we draw and every cup of tea we drink. The literature of joy is
infinitely more difficult, more rare and more triumphant than the
black and white literature of pain. And of
all the varied forms of the literature of joy, the form most truly worthy
of moral reverence and artistic ambition is the form called 'farce'—or
its wilder shape in pantomime. To the quietest human being, seated in the
quietest house, there will sometimes come a sudden and unmeaning hunger
for the possibilities or impossibilities of things; he will abruptly
wonder whether the teapot may not suddenly begin to pour out honey or
sea-water, the clock to point to all hours of the day at once, the candle
to burn green or crimson, the door to open upon a lake or a potato-field
instead of a London street. Upon anyone who feels this nameless anarchism
there rests for the time being the abiding spirit of pantomime.
William Morris and his
School
[T]he limitation of Morris's work lay
deeper . . . . We may best suggest it by a method after his own heart. Of
all the various works he performed, none, perhaps, was so splendidly and
solidly valuable as his great protest for the fables and superstitions of
mankind. He has the supreme credit of showing that the fairy-tales contain
the deepest truth of the earth, the real record of men's feeling for
things. Trifling details may be inaccurate, Jack may not have climbed up
so tall a beanstalk, or killed so tall a giant; but it is not such things
that make a story false; it is a far different class of things that makes
every modern book of history as false as the father of lies; ingenuity,
self-consciousness, hypocritical impartiality. It appears to us that of
all the fairy-tales none contains so vital a moral truth as the old story,
existing in many forms, of Beauty and the Beast. There is written, with
all the authority of a human scripture, the eternal and essential truth
that until we love a thing in all its ugliness we cannot make it
beautiful. This was the weak point in William Morris as a reformer:
that he sought to reform modern life, and that he hated modern life
instead of loving it. Modern London is indeed a beast, big enough and
black enough to be the beast in Apocalypse, blazing with a million eyes,
and roaring with a million voices. But unless the poet can love this
fabulous monster as he is, can feel with some generous excitement his
massive and mysterious 'joie-de-vivre,' the vast scale of his iron anatomy
and the beating of his thunderous heart, he cannot and will not change the
beast into the fairy prince.
Cockneys and Their Jokes
London is in this matter attacked upon its
strongest ground. London is the largest of the bloated modern cities;
London is the smokiest; London is the dirtiest; London is, if you will,
the most sombre; London is, if you will, the most miserable. But London is
certainly the most amusing and the most amused. You may prove that we have
the most tragedy; the fact remains that we have the most comedy, that we
have the most farce. We have at the very worst a splendid hypocrisy of
humour. We conceal our sorrow behind a screaming derision. You speak of
people who laugh through their tears; it is our boast that we only weep
through our laughter. There remains always this great boast, perhaps the
greatest boast that is possible to human nature. I mean the great boast
that the most unhappy part of our population is also the most hilarious
part. The poor can forget that social problem which we (the moderately
rich) ought never to forget. Blessed are the poor; for they alone have not
the poor always with them. The honest poor can sometimes forget poverty.
The honest rich can never forget it.
I believe firmly in the value of all vulgar
notions, especially of vulgar jokes. When once you have got hold of a
vulgar joke, you may be certain that you have got hold of a subtle and
spiritual idea. The men who made the joke saw something deep which they
could not express except by something silly and emphatic. They saw
something delicate which they could only express by something indelicate.
I remember that Mr. Max Beerbohm (who has every merit except democracy)
attempted to analyse the jokes at which the mob laughs. He divided them
into three sections: jokes about bodily humiliation, jokes about things
alien, such as foreigners, and jokes about bad cheese. Mr. Max Beerbohn
thought he understood the first two forms; but I am not sure that he did.
In order to understand vulgar humour it is not enough to be humorous. One
must also be vulgar, as I am. And in the first case it is surely obvious
that it is not merely at the fact of something being hurt that we laugh
(as I trust we do) when a Prime Minister sits on his hat. If that were so
we should laugh whenever we saw a funeral. We do not laugh at the mere
fact of something falling down; there is nothing humorous about leaves
falling or the sun going down. When our house falls down we do not laugh.
All the birds of the air might drop around us in a perpetual shower like a
hailstorm without arousing a smile. If you really ask yourself why we
laugh at a man sitting down suddenly in the street you will discover that
the reason is not only recondite, but ultimately religious. All the jokes
about men sitting down on their hats are really theological jokes; they
are concerned with the Dual Nature of Man. They refer to the primary
paradox that man is superior to all the things around him and yet is at
their mercy.
"On The Wit of
Whistler" from Heretics
The artistic temperament is a disease that
afflicts amateurs. It is a disease which arises from men not having
sufficient power of expression to utter and get rid of the element of art
in their being. It is healthful to every sane man to utter the art within
him; it is essential to every sane man to get rid of the art within him at
all costs. Artists of a large and wholesome vitality get rid of their art
easily, as they breathe easily, or perspire easily. But in artists of less
force, the thing becomes a pressure, and produces a definite pain, which
is called the artistic temperament. Thus, very great artists are able to
be ordinary men-- men like Shakespeare or Browning. There are many real
tragedies of the artistic temperament, tragedies of vanity or violence or
fear. But the great tragedy of the artistic temperament is that it cannot
produce any art.
Whistler could produce art; and in so far
he was a great man. But he could not forget art; and in so far he was only
a man with the artistic temperament. There can be no stronger
manifestation of the man who is a really great artist than the fact that
he can dismiss the subject of art; that he can, upon due occasion, wish
art at the bottom of the sea. . . .Whistler never ceased to be an artist.
As Mr. Max Beerbohm pointed out in one of his extraordinarily sensible and
sincere critiques, Whistler really regarded Whistler as his greatest work
of art. The white lock, the single eyeglass, the remarkable hat-- these
were much dearer to him than any nocturnes or arrangements that he ever
threw off. He could throw off the nocturnes; for some mysterious reason he
could not throw off the hat. He never threw off from himself that
disproportionate accumulation of aestheticism which is the burden of the
amateur. |