登陆注册
26127200000001

第1章

INTRODUCTION

Partial collections of English poems, decided by a common subject or bounded by narrow dates and periods of literary history, are made at very short intervals, and the makers are safe from the reproach of proposing their own personal taste as a guide for the reading of others.But a general Anthology gathered from the whole of English literature--the whole from Chaucer to Wordsworth--by a gatherer intent upon nothing except the quality of poetry, is a more rare enterprise.It is hardly to be made without tempting the suspicion--nay, hardly without seeming to hazard the confession--of some measure of self-confidence.Nor can even the desire to enter upon that labour be a frequent one--the desire of the heart of one for whom poetry is veritably "the complementary life" to set up a pale for inclusion and exclusion, to add honours, to multiply homage, to cherish, to restore, to protest, to proclaim, to depose; and to gain the consent of a multitude of readers to all those acts.Many years, then--some part of a century--may easily pass between the publication of one general anthology and the ****** of another.

The enterprise would be a sorry one if it were really arbitrary, and if an anthologist should give effect to passionate preferences without authority.An anthology that shall have any value must be made on the responsibility of one but on the authority of many.There is no caprice; the mind of the maker has been formed for decision by the wisdom of many instructors.It is the very study of criticism, and the grateful and profitable study, that gives the justification to work done upon the strongest personal impulse, and done, finally, in the mental solitude that cannot be escaped at the last.In another order, moral education would be best crowned if it proved to have quick and profound control over the first impulses; its finished work would be to set the soul in a state of law, delivered from the delays of self- distrust; not action only, but the desires would be in an old security, and a wish would come to light already justified.This would be the second--if it were not the only--liberty.Even so an intellectual education might assuredly confer ******* upon first and solitary thoughts, and confidenceand composure upon the sallies of impetuous courage.In a word, it should make a studious anthologist quite sure about genius.And all who have bestowed, or helped in bestowing, the liberating education have given their student the authority to be free.Personal and singular the choice in such a book must be, not without right.

Claiming and disclaiming so much, the gatherers may follow one another to harvest, and glean in the same fields in different seasons, for the repetition of the work can never be altogether a repetition.The general consent of criticism does not stand still; and moreover, a mere accident has until now left a poet of genius of the past here and there to neglect or obscurity.This is not very likely to befall again; the time has come when there is little or nothing left to discover or rediscover in the sixteenth century or the seventeenth; we know that there does not lurk another Crashaw contemned, or another Henry Vaughan disregarded, or another George Herbert misplaced.There is now something like finality of knowledge at least; and therefore not a little error in the past is ready to be repaired.This is the result of time.Of the slow actions and reactions of critical taste there might be something to say, but nothing important.No loyal anthologist perhaps will consent to acknowledge these tides; he will hardly do his work well unless he believe it to be stable and perfect; nor, by the way, will he judge worthily in the name of others unless he be resolved to judge intrepidly for himself.

Inasmuch as even the best of all poems are the best upon innumerable degrees, the size of most anthologies has gone far to decide what degrees are to be gathered in and what left without.The best might make a very small volume, and be indeed the best, or a very large volume, and be still indeed the best.But my labour has been to do somewhat differently--to gather nothing that did not overpass a certain boundary-line of genius.Gray's Elegy, for instance, would rightly be placed at the head of everything below that mark.It is, in fact, so near to the work of genius as to be most directly, closely, and immediately rebuked by genius; it meets genius at close quarters and almost deserves that Shakespeare himself should defeat it.Mediocrity said its own true word in the Elegy:

"Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, And waste its sweetnesson the desert air."

But greatness had said its own word also in a sonnet:

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 火影之火遁至尊

    火影之火遁至尊

    作为穿越大军中的一员,林羽觉得好无奈,为什么就我的金手指是破烂啊,这不公平!就算是只有火遁我都要逆天,看我火遁称霸天下!!
  • 晓青你别跑

    晓青你别跑

    穿越后发现自己是原产地土著人士。前世惨死,前夫失踪。她回来破解迷案,一路奋勇打怪中拐了一个废材美城主。前世有憾,今生无悔。晓青:其实我是一个吃货。百里墨:看在什么地方吃。
  • 红尘魔尊之冷如玉

    红尘魔尊之冷如玉

    一把神奇的古剑,一段曲折的人生她生就不平凡,无奈家道中落,堕入红尘历尽磨难她却从未忘记心中的仇恨,堕仙成魔,执掌二界她贵为魔主,可她却只是一个女人当她揭开万世情缘报得血海深仇之时,却也是元神覆灭之日到了最后,她才发现,爱人,只是一个幻想
  • 网游之创世三国

    网游之创世三国

    呵呵,以前写的小说都tj了,贼尴尬,不知道这才能撑多久~
  • 闪婚萌娇妻

    闪婚萌娇妻

    她是落魄千金,他是名门少校。一次邂逅,他将她吃干抹净。本来就无情,又何来谈爱?在床上,你情我愿。在床下,互不相识。一纸婚约,将两个人死死牵在一起。“你爱我?”他冷笑。她不语。“你认真了。”转眼就见他拥着前任出现在各大媒体面前。她捂着受伤的心,冷笑。她约前任,传绯闻。他将她压在床上,说,你和他们是什么关系?她笑。OK,不说是吧,做到她说。喂……你……混蛋!
  • 时空旅行之情缘

    时空旅行之情缘

    小说中的剧情虽然虚构,但理论上存在,就当普及一下科学知识开拓一下视野,如果你相信我,也浪费不了您多少时间,反正也是免费的,就当占用您几秒钟,不知福不符合您的情感,不行可以叉掉,谢谢!
  • 极品禁书

    极品禁书

    一个年轻人带着一本叫《大内禁书》的秘笈穿越到了异界!那里是冷兵器和魔法交织的空间,一身中华武功在身的他,所谓的剑圣、法神,统统都是浮云!兽血沸腾!接受武力和美色的考验,成就一个极品男人的神话!
  • 重生之顾俏神飞

    重生之顾俏神飞

    有这样一个女人,她美丽、聪明、骄傲,集万千宠爱与一身,却总为了一个注定不属于她的男人横冲直撞而变得面目全非,然后众叛亲离。重生前的顾俏用尽三十三年的生命去追寻一个不爱她的男人,辜负了真正能够为她付出生命的男人;重生后的顾俏不为复仇,只为遇见他,然后好好爱他……
  • 商帮传奇(第一部)——晋商风骨

    商帮传奇(第一部)——晋商风骨

    本书以晋商的传承开篇,梳理了晋商数百年来的的发展脉络,浓墨重彩地书写了晋商的兴起、辉煌与传承,重现了晋商驰骋华夏的神彩。以平遥、太谷、祁县为代表的商贸金融前驱,举商贸大业,夺金融之声,票号汇天下,称雄数百年,创造了亘古未有的世纪性繁荣。并且对诸多代表性人物进行了深入地介绍,通过一部部商海传奇再现了晋商享誉数百年的商道智慧。
  • 一朝权在手

    一朝权在手

    “粗而优则仕”!“文革”后期,公社书记曹兀龙因“粗”鲁蛮横而当上了水泉县的代理县委书记。此人没什么文化却无师自通地深谙官场心理学,为了取掉那个“代”字,他结党营私,瞒上欺下,先拉拢精明的朱仕第使其成为县委常委和自己的“智囊”,又把亲信白彦虎的姘妇吕翠儿也拉进了常委班子,于是在与县委副书记刘忠、孙铁的较量中占得上风,成了实实在在的“水泉王”。正在志得意满之时,“四人帮”倒了,他也随之倒了台。历史好像有意捉弄他,和他开了个玩笑。小说主要描写水泉县委内部的斗争。在小小的县城里山头林立,勾心斗角,每一个人都在算计谁是我的人,我是谁的人,权力斗争一波未平一波又起,谁都无法摆脱它的左右,生活秩序一片混乱。