<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page34" id="page34"></SPAN></span>
<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<h2>HOW TO READ A CLASSIC</h2>
<p>Let us begin experimental reading with Charles Lamb. I choose Lamb for various
reasons: He is a great writer, wide in his appeal, of a highly sympathetic
temperament; and his finest achievements are simple and very short. Moreover, he may
usefully lead to other and more complex matters, as will appear later. Now, your
natural tendency will be to think of Charles Lamb as a book, because he has arrived
at the stage of being a classic. Charles Lamb was a man, not a book. It is extremely
important that the beginner in literary study should always form an idea of the man
behind the book. The book is nothing but the expression of the man. The book is
nothing but the man trying to talk to you, trying to impart to you some of his
feelings. An experienced student will divine the man <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page35" id="page35"></SPAN></span> from the book, will understand the man
by the book, as is, of course, logically proper. But the beginner will do well to aid
himself in understanding the book by means of independent information about the man.
He will thus at once relate the book to something human, and strengthen in his mind
the essential notion of the connection between literature and life. The earliest
literature was delivered orally direct by the artist to the recipient. In some
respects this arrangement was ideal. Changes in the constitution of society have
rendered it impossible. Nevertheless, we can still, by the exercise of the
imagination, hear mentally the accents of the artist speaking to us. We must so
exercise our imagination as to feel the man behind the book.</p>
<p>Some biographical information about Lamb should be acquired. There are excellent
short biographies of him by Canon Ainger in the <i>Dictionary of National
Biography</i>, in Chambers's <i>Encyclopædia</i>, and in Chambers's
<i>Cyclopædia of English Literature</i>. If you have none of these (but you
ought to have the last), <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page36" id="page36"></SPAN>[pg
36]</span> there are Mr. E.V. Lucas's exhaustive <i>Life</i> (Methuen, 7s. 6d.), and,
cheaper, Mr. Walter Jerrold's <i>Lamb</i> (Bell and Sons, 1s.); also introductory
studies prefixed to various editions of Lamb's works. Indeed, the facilities for
collecting materials for a picture of Charles Lamb as a human being are prodigious.
When you have made for yourself such a picture, read the <i>Essays of Elia</i> the
light of it. I will choose one of the most celebrated, <i>Dream Children: A
Reverie</i>. At this point, kindly put my book down, and read <i>Dream Children</i>.
Do not say to yourself that you will read it later, but read it now. When you have
read it, you may proceed to my next paragraph.</p>
<p>You are to consider <i>Dream Children</i> as a human document. Lamb was nearing
fifty when he wrote it. You can see, especially from the last line, that the death of
his elder brother, John Lamb, was fresh and heavy on his mind. You will recollect
that in youth he had had a disappointing love-affair with a girl named Ann Simmons,
who afterwards married a man named Bartrum. You will know <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page37" id="page37"></SPAN></span> that one of the influences of his
childhood was his grandmother Field, housekeeper of Blakesware House, in
Hertfordshire, at which mansion he sometimes spent his holidays. You will know that
he was a bachelor, living with his sister Mary, who was subject to homicidal mania.
And you will see in this essay, primarily, a supreme expression of the increasing
loneliness of his life. He constructed all that preliminary tableau of paternal
pleasure in order to bring home to you in the most poignant way his feeling of the
solitude of his existence, his sense of all that he had missed and lost in the world.
The key of the essay is one of profound sadness. But note that he makes his sadness
beautiful; or, rather, he shows the beauty that resides in sadness. You watch him
sitting there in his "bachelor arm-chair," and you say to yourself: "Yes, it was sad,
but it was somehow beautiful." When you have said that to yourself, Charles Lamb, so
far as you are concerned, has accomplished his chief aim in writing the essay. How
exactly he produces his effect can never be fully explained. But one reason of his
success is certainly his regard for <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page38" id="page38"></SPAN></span> truth. He does not falsely idealise his brother, nor
the relations between them. He does not say, as a sentimentalist would have said,
"Not the slightest cloud ever darkened our relations;" nor does he exaggerate his
solitude. Being a sane man, he has too much common-sense to assemble all his woes at
once. He might have told you that Bridget was a homicidal maniac; what he does tell
you is that she was faithful. Another reason of his success is his continual regard
for beautiful things and fine actions, as illustrated in the major characteristics of
his grandmother and his brother, and in the detailed description of Blakesware House
and the gardens thereof.</p>
<p>Then, subordinate to the main purpose, part of the machinery of the main purpose,
is the picture of the children—real children until the moment when they fade
away. The traits of childhood are accurately and humorously put in again and again:
"Here John smiled, as much as to say, 'That would be foolish indeed.'" "Here little
Alice spread her hands." "Here Alice's little right foot played an <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page39" id="page39"></SPAN></span> involuntary movement,
till, upon my looking grave, it desisted." "Here John expanded all his eyebrows, and
tried to look courageous." "Here John slily deposited back upon the plate a bunch of
grapes." "Here the children fell a-crying ... and prayed me to tell them some stories
about their pretty dead mother." And the exquisite: "Here Alice put out one of her
dear mother's looks, too tender to be upbraiding." Incidentally, while preparing his
ultimate solemn effect, Lamb has inspired you with a new, intensified vision of the
wistful beauty of children—their imitativeness, their facile and generous
emotions, their anxiety to be correct, their ingenuous haste to escape from grief
into joy. You can see these children almost as clearly and as tenderly as Lamb saw
them. For days afterwards you will not be able to look upon a child without recalling
Lamb's portrayal of the grace of childhood. He will have shared with you his
perception of beauty. If you possess children, he will have renewed for you the charm
which custom does very decidedly stale. It is further to be noticed that the measure
of his success in picturing the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page40" id="page40"></SPAN></span> children is the measure of his success in his main
effect. The more real they seem, the more touching is the revelation of the fact that
they do not exist, and never have existed. And if you were moved by the reference to
their "pretty dead mother," you will be still more moved when you learn that the girl
who would have been their mother is not dead and is not Lamb's.</p>
<p>As, having read the essay, you reflect upon it, you will see how its emotional
power over you has sprung from the sincere and unexaggerated expression of actual
emotions exactly remembered by someone who had an eye always open for beauty, who
was, indeed, obsessed by beauty. The beauty of old houses and gardens and aged
virtuous characters, the beauty of children, the beauty of companionships, the
softening beauty of dreams in an arm-chair—all these are brought together and
mingled with the grief and regret which were the origin of the mood. Why is <i>Dream
Children</i> a classic? It is a classic because it transmits to you, as to
generations before you, distinguished emotion, because it makes you respond to the
throb <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page41" id="page41"></SPAN></span> of life
more intensely, more justly, and more nobly. And it is capable of doing this because
Charles Lamb had a very distinguished, a very sensitive, and a very honest mind. His
emotions were noble. He felt so keenly that he was obliged to find relief in
imparting his emotions. And his mental processes were so sincere that he could
neither exaggerate nor diminish the truth. If he had lacked any one of these three
qualities, his appeal would have been narrowed and weakened, and he would not have
become a classic. Either his feelings would have been deficient in supreme beauty,
and therefore less worthy to be imparted, or he would not have had sufficient force
to impart them; or his honesty would not have been equal to the strain of imparting
them accurately. In any case, he would not have set up in you that vibration which we
call pleasure, and which is super-eminently caused by vitalising participation in
high emotion. As Lamb sat in his bachelor arm-chair, with his brother in the grave,
and the faithful homicidal maniac by his side, he really did think to himself, "This
is beautiful. Sorrow is <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page42" id="page42"></SPAN>[pg
42]</span> beautiful. Disappointment is beautiful. Life is beautiful. <i>I must tell
them</i>. I must make them understand." Because he still makes you understand he is a
classic. And now I seem to hear you say, "But what about Lamb's famous literary
style? Where does that come in?"</p>
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