How I wish I could go to Chicago and see this:
Shaw vs. Chesterton: The Debate
Speaking of Shaw, I came across this paragraph from an article on Chesterton from 1905 that I found very amusing, discussing and quoting from one of Chesterton's reviews on a play by Shaw. :-)
Speaking of Shaw, I came across this paragraph from an article on Chesterton from 1905 that I found very amusing, discussing and quoting from one of Chesterton's reviews on a play by Shaw. :-)
Perhaps,
however, the most characteristic passage in Mr. Chesterton's critique
is that in which he takes issue with Mr. Bernard Shaw in regard to the
real character of Candida. One would suppose that Mr. Shaw's view of
such a matter would be entitled to some weight—that the creator of a
character in a play would be able to put his finger with some degree of certainty on
the trait or traits which that character was intended to embody or
illustrate. But Mr. Chesterton makes no such concession to the
playright. With an effrontery as audacious as it is amusing he says that
''Mr. Shaw's mistakes about the meaning of his own plays arise from
the same source as his Shakespearian errors—lack of warmth and poesy."
Thus "Candida" always appeared to Mr. Chesterton ''not only as the
noblest work of Mr. Shaw, but as one of the noblest, if not the noblest,
of modern plays; a most square and manly piece of moral truth." And, he
goes on, "with the authority of a close student of the work, I assure
the author of it that if he imagines that he understands the character
of Candida he is quite mistaken." Quoting then from Mr. Shaw's account,
as given by Mr. Huneker, of Candida's character, Mr. Chesterton
controverts with no little skill the dramatist's analysis of the lady's
philosophy of life, maintaining that Candida knew, as all sane people
know, that "convention" is a thing quite as real as "nature," perhaps
much more real.
-The Book Buyer: A Monthly Review of American and Foreign Literature, Volumes 30-33 (1905)
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