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I've been looking at my Dover facsimile copy of George Bickham's The Universal Penman, a copperplate calligraphy manual for aspiring men of letters, merchants, and clerks. Most of the pages, intended to be copied out by students, take the form of edifying essays. The bits on "Criticism" really cracked me up, especially this one:
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Julie:
That's a wonderful passage, and a true one. I would add that the same critics are often the ones who fancy themselves the defenders of standards. They take petty lapses as signs of immorality, and then they extrapolate to the sorry state of the world. The writer who misplaces a comma becomes part not only of the sorry state of letters but of the moral decline of civilization. In other cases, the critic attacks a style or genre that he doesn't like (free verse, formal verse, whatever) and makes the same extrapolation: Here's what's wrong with the world! The advantage for the critic is that he doesn't have to deal with any nuances or complexities of the work itself; he merely uses it as a springboard for his jeremiad. Richard |
Do you know the year Pope wrote his poem, An Essay on Criticism? I believe it was right around 1735. |
Pope's "Essay" is from 1709-1711; its authoritative tone and stylistic mastery are all the more impressive when you consider that Pope, at that point, was barely out of his teens....
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Sorry for not posting the pic--I am "without suitable Talents." Still trying to scan it in a legible form.
Julie Stoner |
The 18th C. is the place to go for prose and poetry on critics and criticism.
One of my favourites is this little one from William Wycherley: The Envious Critick The poor in Wit or Judgement, like all Poor, Revile, for having least, those who have more: So 'tis the critick's Scarcity of Wit Makes him traduce them who have most of it. Since to their Pitch himself he cannot raise, He them to his mean level would debase. Acting like Demons, that would All deprive Of Heav'n, to which themselves can ne'er arrive. [This message has been edited by Mark Allinson (edited May 07, 2005).] |
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