That’s about
the time I close the book and put it back on the shelf. What bothers me most
about bullies is their presumption that not only am I wrong but it’s their divine
right to set me straight. It was drummed into me as a newspaper reporter that you
never sermonize readers, never instruct them in how to sanitize their thoughts
and clean up their opinions. Present the facts and walk away. Readers are big
boys and girls who don’t need a nanny.
The sentence
quoted above is from a chutzpah-laced letter Charles Lamb wrote to William
Wordsworth on Jan. 30, 1801. Lamb had read the recently published second
edition of Lyrical Ballads, and
generally likes the new poems Wordsworth has included. But he objects to “The Old Cumberland Beggar”: “[T]he instructions conveyed in it are too direct and
like a lecture: they don’t slide into the mind of the reader while he is
imagining no such matter.”
Wordsworth,
of course, disregarded Lamb’s observation. His later, longer, meditative poems
are often marred by an enthusiasm for preaching. Lamb goes on:
“This fault,
if I am right, is in a ten-thousandth worse degree to be found in Sterne and
many many novelists and modern poets, who continually put a signpost up to show
where you are to feel. They set out with assuming their readers to be stupid. .
. . There is implied an unwritten compact between author and reader: I will
tell you a story, and
I suppose you will understand it.”
Lamb’s
criticism of Wordsworth’s pushiness is hardly unique. In his Feb. 3, 1818 letter to John Hamilton Reynolds, Keats asks:
"It may be
said that we ought to read our contemporaries, that Wordsworth, etc., should have
their due from us. But, for the sake of a few fine imaginative or domestic
passages, are we to be bullied into a certain Philosophy engendered in the
whims of an Egotist? . . . We hate poetry that has a palpable design upon us,
and, if we do not agree, seems to put its hand into its breeches pocket. Poetry
should be great and unobtrusive . . .”
In my edition of Lamb (Modern Library, 1935), the quotes you provide come from a letter dated "January 1801" (Letter 86). A letter to Wordsworth dated "January 30, 1801" comes just before the letter you cite from (Letter 85). A minor point, I know, but I thought I'd point it out.
ReplyDeleteA great post, though - as always.