A good critic should be like God in the great saying of a
Scottish mystic. George Macdonald said that God was easy to please
and hard to satisfy. That paradox is the poise of all good
artistic appreciation. Without the first part of the paradox
appreciation perishes, because it loses the power to appreciate.
Good criticism, I repeat, combines the subtle pleasure in a thing
being done well with the simple pleasure in it being done at all.
It combines the pleasure of the scientific engineer in seeing
how the wheels work together to a logical end with the pleasure
of the baby in seeing the wheels go round. It combines the pleasure
of the artistic draughtsman in the fact that his lines of charcoal,
light and apparently loose, fall exactly right and in a perfect relation
with the pleasure of the child in the fact that the charcoal makes
marks of any kind on the paper. And in the same fashion it combines
the critic's pleasure in a poem with the child's pleasure in a rhyme.
-Fancies Versus Fads (1923)
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