登陆注册
26524100000288

第288章

Literature is the child of leisure and wealth. It is the produce of minds which by a happy combination of circumstances have been enabled to dispense with the ordinary cares of the world. It can hardly be expected to come from a young country, or from a new and still struggling people. Looking around at our own magnificent colonies, I hardly remember a considerable name which they have produced, except that of my excellent old friend Sam Slick.

Nothing, therefore, I think, shows the settled greatness of the people of the States more significantly than their firm establishment of a national literature. This literature runs over all subjects: American authors have excelled in poetry, in science, in history, in metaphysics, in law, in theology, and in fiction.

They have attempted all, and failed in none. What Englishman has devoted a room to books, and devoted no portion of that room to the productions of America?

But I must say a word of literature in which I shall not speak of it in its ordinary sense, and shall yet speak of it in that sense which of all, perhaps, in the present day should be considered the most ordinary; I mean the every-day periodical literature of the press.

Most of those who can read, it is to be hoped, read books; but all who can read do read newspapers. Newspapers in this country are so general that men cannot well live without them; but to men and to women also in the United States they may be said to be the one chief necessary of life; and yet in the whole length and breadth of the United States there is not published a single newspaper which seems to me to be worthy of praise.

A really good newspaper--one excellent at all points--would indeed be a triumph of honesty and of art. Not only is such a publication much to be desired in America, but it is still to be desired in Great Britain also. I used, in my younger days, to think of such a newspaper as a possible publication, and in a certain degree to look for it; now I expect it only in my dreams. It should be powerful without tyranny, popular without triumph, political without party passion, critical without personal feeling, right in its statements and just in its judgments, but right and just without pride; it should be all but omniscient, but not conscious of its omnipotence;it should be moral, but never strait-laced; it should be well assured but yet modest; though never humble, it should be free from boastings. Above all these things it should be readable, and above that again it should be true. I used to think that such a newspaper might be produced, but I now sadly acknowledge to myself the fact that humanity is not capable of any work so divine.

The newspapers of the States generally may not only be said to have reached none of the virtues here named, but to have fallen into all the opposite vices. In the first place, they are never true. In requiring truth from a newspaper the public should not be anxious to strain at gnats. A statement setting forth that a certain gooseberry was five inches in circumference, whereas in truth its girth was only two and a half, would give me no offense. Nor would I be offended at being told that Lord Derby was appointed to the premiership, while in truth the Queen had only sent to his lordship, having as yet come to no definite arrangement. The demand for truth which may reasonably be made upon a newspaper amounts to this, that nothing should be stated not believed to be true, and that nothing should be stated as to which the truth is important without adequate ground for such belief. If a newspaper accuse me of swindling, it is not sufficient that the writer believe me to be a swindler. He should have ample and sufficient ground for such belief, or else in ****** such a statement he will write falsely. In our private life we all recognize the fact that this is so. It is understood that a man is not a whit the less a slanderer because he believes the slander which he promulgates. But it seems to me that this is not sufficiently recognized by many who write for the public press.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 一笑倾羽

    一笑倾羽

    在秦朝能书会画的倾丞,家境普通,可知却无辜穿越到了现代。在TP高中低调却在学校论坛小有名气的梁羽居然无奈收留了个和自己完全无血缘关系的女孩儿,明明对她没好感,老妈却还要让她和自己一起入学....
  • 给地府办事儿

    给地府办事儿

    参加了个百年度最佳女仙颁奖典礼,奖没拿到,小命儿没了被腹黑冰山判官所救,却被算计到异空间去,神马魔法,神马斗气,那都是神马啊!——————背景为异界奇幻,这里有魔法,有斗气,有魔纹,有各种妖怪,呜呜呜,外星人好口怕,师傅我要回大昆仑!筒子们,这书弃坑了,抱歉啊抱歉……
  • 血手情杀不归路

    血手情杀不归路

    一壶老酒,一身武艺,笑说江湖趣事,解说江湖恩仇。躲在众人宠爱的庇护之下,他可以自在悠闲,只是世事难料,有多少英雄好汉终究会被卷入江湖世事之中。也正因为如此才有英雄的肝肠寸断,才有江湖儿女的爱恨情仇……但是你怎样才能在江湖之中立于不败之地?是消极入世,还是拼搏奋起,打下一片天地,侠士群起,英雄纷争,谁又能定夺天下?
  • 至真至美:苦恋小倔妻

    至真至美:苦恋小倔妻

    他是大名鼎鼎年轻有为的精英总裁,潇洒多金的他,想要什么样的女人没有,女人在他的眼中,不过是虚伪肤浅的愚蠢动物罢了,他那颗游走于感情游戏的心,从来不曾为谁停留。可是自从遇上这个冷傲倔强的女人,一切似乎都变了。只是一个吻而已,这个不要命的女人,竟敢出手狠狠的打他!好,他一定会让她为这个耳光付出代价!就算明知她的心早有所属,她的身恐非完璧,他仍要牢牢的把她拴在身边,即便是相互折磨,也绝不放手!两颗反复纠结的心,几段错综复杂的情,明明深爱,却总是在有意无意中互相伤害。苦恋的漫漫长路上,到底是谁动了谁的情,又是谁伤了谁的心……
  • 市井小侦探

    市井小侦探

    你想知道杀人凶手的故事吗?他们是非同寻常的变态,他们看起来又很普通,他们也许就在你身边,你却全然不知。内衣失窃案、鼠祸、诡画杀人案……脑洞如黑洞,入洞需谨慎。情节紧张,笔触诙谐,欢迎观看。
  • 爱人不要走

    爱人不要走

    周灵,原本是一个普通的少女,意外被霸道总裁尹杰看中。“我看中的女人,不可能逃出我的掌心。”尹杰面色阴沉。商业界的竞争对手,合力对付尹杰,尹杰泰然自若,与周灵携手揭穿对手的诡计阴谋。周灵却意外失忆,心机颇深的周队想要借助失忆,骗得周灵的爱,却被尹杰识破。周灵是否能恢复记忆?
  • 路遥情深

    路遥情深

    人妻受VS渣攻耽美无限狗血剧不喜误入。
  • 厉先生我们离婚吧

    厉先生我们离婚吧

    婚礼上他温柔的对白雪说:“我要给你一个难忘的新婚夜。”当夜,他送给她一个丑陋的“新婚礼物”,并居高临下揪住她的下巴:“我很期待白雪公主嫁给王子之后,是不是真正得到了幸福呢?”婚后四年,他对她却不闻不问,直到一天,白雪将离婚协议书甩在他脸上:“公主我不做了!”
  • 胆商第一情商第二智商第三

    胆商第一情商第二智商第三

    人人都想踏入卓越人士的行列,都想吸取他们成功的经验,但并不是每个人都能获得成功。这些人之所以被称为“卓越人士”,必定是因为他们身上有着普通人所不具备的高贵品质。那么,到底什么样的人才能被称为卓越人士呢?有人说:“他一定是位智商很高的人,因为聪明人要比普通人更容易获得成功。”有人说:“他一定是位受人欢迎的人。”还有人说:“他必定是位骁勇善战的‘将军’,也就是说他是一个敢于冒险的人。”可见,卓越人士一定是位聪明、受人欢迎和勇敢的人,也就是我们现在所说的智商、情商、胆商的“集合体”。
  • 霸道邪王,掩妆太子要出嫁

    霸道邪王,掩妆太子要出嫁

    连载新文《挽心记,王的薄凉冷妃》http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/1332634/求调戏,美人儿们酷爱来吧~*他是天启国人人爱戴的墨邪王殿下。魔域第一美男,容貌绝色,气质绝佳,富可敌国。她是天启国人人唾弃毫的废材太子。性情木讷,容颜丑陋,懦弱不堪,如人偶一般。当女扮男装太子遇上绝世无双皇叔时,究竟会是怎样的风华万世?*她本是二十一世纪顶尖杀手,却离奇穿越。初次见面,他步步紧逼,直至墙角,一双邪魅的魔眸盯着她。她看着眼前绝世的面孔,故作淡定“皇叔,虽然你长得绝世无双但侄儿不喜欢男子。”再次见面,他保她护她帮她,为她惩罚恶臣,插手朝堂,权利滔天。*当次次舍身相救,每每宠溺柔语,她的心不自觉沉沦了,沉沦在他无懈可击的柔情下。久别重逢,她一双绝世的美眸闪着光芒,声音如珠落玉盘,字字敲在他心上“我好像爱上你了。”俊美如俦,绝姿似仙的男子勾起邪魅的笑容,一把将她拉入怀里,轻轻在她耳边喃语“怎么才爱上,你可知我早就爱上了……”*但……当她为他遍体鳞伤时,他却对着别的女人温柔宠溺。当梨花树下他温柔的搂着别的女人时,她感觉心在渐渐冰冻,眸中纵使有着千万般痛苦也无济于事。当他温情的握着别的女人的手出现在她面前时,她感觉那颗冰冻的心支离破碎,疼得令人不能呼吸。她忍住心中的苦涩“你告诉我……你究竟想怎么样……”她满眼血红,眸中满是凄凉,昔日说爱她的人呢?昔日说要护她一生的人呢?难道真的是她太傻了么?“再也不见。”声音淡漠如水,寒冷如冰,仿佛他们从未有过曾经。他说的云淡风轻,她听的心如刀割。她捂住胸口,后退数步,面色苍白。她满目凄凉的看着手中握着的火红色琉璃珠,五指慢慢张开,任凭那火红色的珠子滚落在地。扬起一抹惨然的笑容,看着那张绝世的面孔,无尽的沧桑涌进心口“愿我们再也不见,另外祝你……新婚幸福。”转身,冷风吹着衣带丝绸,玄绫飘在空中,艳紫满天,一瞬间带走无数凄凉与痛苦。她转身,他闭眼。迷雾重重,究竟是谁在痛心?