Optimism, or the utmost possible praise of all things, ought to be
the keynote of criticism. It may appear to be an audacious assertion,
but it may be tested by one very large and simple process.
Compare the reality of a man's criticism when praising anything
with its reality when excluding anything, and we shall all feel
how much more often we agree with the former than with the latter.
A man says, for example, "The Yorkshire moors are incomparably splendid,"
and we wholly agree. He goes on, "their superiority to the mere
hills of Surrey--" and we instantly disagree with him. He says,
"the Iliad, the highest expression of man's poetical genius,"
and all our hearts assent. He adds, "towering high above
all our Hamlets and Macbeths," and we flatly deny it.
A man may say, "Plato was the greatest man of antiquity,"
and we admit it; but if he says "he was far greater than Aischylus,"
we demur. Briefly, in praising great men we cheerfully agree
to a superlative, but we emphatically decline a comparative.
We come very near to the optimism of that universal superlative
which in the morning of the world declared all things to be very good.
One of the results of this fact is that when a critic is really
large-minded and really sympathetic and comprehensive, and really
has hold of a guiding and enlightening idea, he should still watch
with the greatest suspicion his own limitations and rejections.
His praise will almost certainly be sound, his blame should always
remain to his own mind a little dubious.
-May 3, 1902, The Speaker
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