From a College Window. Benson Arthur Christopher. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Benson Arthur Christopher
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066249601
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       Arthur Christopher Benson

      From a College Window

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066249601

       I

       THE POINT OF VIEW

       II

       ON GROWING OLDER

       III

       BOOKS

       IV

       SOCIABILITIES

       V

       CONVERSATION

       VI

       BEAUTY

       VII

       ART

       VIII

       EGOTISM

       IX

       EDUCATION

       X

       AUTHORSHIP

       XI

       THE CRITICISM OF OTHERS

       XII

       PRIESTS

       XIII

       AMBITION

       XIV

       THE SIMPLE LIFE

       XV

       GAMES

       XVI

       SPIRITUALISM

       XVII

       HABITS

       XVIII

       RELIGION

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      I have lately come to perceive that the one thing which gives value to any piece of art, whether it be book, or picture, or music, is that subtle and evasive thing which is called personality. No amount of labour, of zest, even of accomplishment, can make up for the absence of this quality. It must be an almost wholly instinctive thing, I believe. Of course, the mere presence of personality in a work of art is not sufficient, because the personality revealed may be lacking in charm; and charm, again, is an instinctive thing. No artist can set out to capture charm; he will toil all the night and take nothing; but what every artist can and must aim at, is to have a perfectly sincere point of view. He must take his chance as to whether his point of view is an attractive one; but sincerity is the one indispensable thing. It is useless to take opinions on trust, to retail them, to adopt them; they must be formed, created, truly felt. The work of a sincere artist is almost certain to have some value; the work of an insincere artist is of its very nature worthless.

      I mean to try, in the pages that follow, to be as sincere as I can. It is not an easy task, though it may seem so; for it means a certain disentangling of the things that one has perceived and felt for oneself from the prejudices and preferences that have been inherited, or stuck like burrs upon the soul by education and circumstance.

      It may be asked why I should thus obtrude my point of view in print; why I should not keep my precious experience to myself; what the value of it is to other people. Well, the answer to that is that it helps our sense of balance and proportion to know how other people are looking at life, what they expect from it, what they find in it, and what they do not find. I have myself an intense curiosity about other people's point of view, what they do when they are alone, and what they think about. Edward FitzGerald said that he wished we had more biographies of obscure persons. How often have I myself wished to ask simple, silent, deferential people, such as station-masters, butlers, gardeners, what they make of it all! Yet one cannot do it, and even if one could, ten to one they would not or could not tell you. But here is going to be a sedate confession. I am going to take the world into my confidence, and say, if I can, what I think and feel about the little bit of experience which I call my life, which seems to me such a strange and often so bewildering a thing.

      Let me speak, then, plainly of what that life has been, and tell what my point of view is. I was brought up on ordinary English lines. My father, in a busy life, held a series of what may be called high official positions. He was an idealist, who, owing to a vigorous power of practical