In theory,
Twitter is a marvelous tool, a handy way to share interesting things. Even
without an account of my own I follow several Twitter sites kept by people with
interesting minds. I’m reminded of what Guy Davenport writes in the introductory
note to The Hunter Gracchus (1996): “I am not writing for scholars or
fellow critics, but for people who like to read, to look at pictures, and to know
things.” I operate on the assumption that the least interesting thing I can
know about you is your opinion of anything. Tell me what you know, what you've lived. Too
often, opinions camouflage nullity. Hot air masks a vacuum. If you’re an
immunologist, I may want to hear what you have to say about the complexities of
COVID-19. Otherwise, keep a lid on it.
Go here to
read a brief history of ultracrepidarian. The coiner, unsurprisingly, is
William Hazlitt, one of literature’s deftest opinion-puncturers. The neologism
shows up in his demolition of the now-forgotten literary journalist William Gifford: “You have been well called an Ultra-Crepidarian critic.” Hazlitt’s elegant
dismissal of Gifford is bracing: “His slow, snail-paced, bed-rid habits of
reasoning cannot keep up with the whirling, eccentric motion, the rapid,
perhaps extravagant combinations of modern literature.”
Leigh Hunt
took Hazlitt’s evisceration of Gifford to the next logical level and wrote “Ultra-Crepidarius. A Satire on William Gifford.” Dave has unearthed speculation that the ultimate
source of ultracrepidarian is Charles Lamb, called by Hunt “one of the
humblest as well as noblest spirits that exist.” Of course, it was Lamb who wrote of Wordsworth: “He says he does not see much difficulty in writing like
Shakespeare, if he had a mind to try it. It is clear, then, that nothing is
wanting but the mind.”
2 comments:
I once wrote a spoof letter to a national newspaper in which I deployed the phrase 'Ne sutor ultra crepidas'. Unfortunately they took it seriously and printed it.
Thank you -- I must return to Lamb; at least three essays a week for a while, I think.
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