An Essay on Comedy
by George Meredith
ON THE IDEA OF COMEDY AND OF THE USES OF THE COMIC SPIRIT {1}
Good Comedies are such rare productions, that
notwithstanding the
wealth of our
literature in the Comic element, it would not occupy
us long to run over the English list. If they are brought to the
test I shall propose, very reputable Comedies will be found unworthy
of their station, like the ladies of Arthur's Court when they were
reduced to the
ordeal of the mantle.
There are plain reasons why the Comic poet is not a frequent
apparition; and why the great Comic poet remains without a fellow.
A society of
cultivated men and women is required,
wherein ideas are
current and the perceptions quick, that he may be supplied with
matter and an
audience. The semi-barbarism of merely giddy
communities, and
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emotional periods, repel him; and also a
state of marked social inequality of the sexes; nor can he whose
business is to address the mind be understood where there is not a
moderate degree of
intellectual activity.
Moreover, to touch and
kindle the mind through
laughter, demands
more than sprightliness, a most subtle
delicacy. That must be a
natal gift in the Comic poet. The substance he deals with will show
him a
startlingexhibition of the dyer's hand, if he is without it.
People are ready to
surrender themselves to witty thumps on the
back, breast, and sides; all except the head: and it is there that
he aims. He must be subtle to
penetrate. A
corresponding acuteness
must exist to
welcome him. The necessity for the two conditions
will explain how it is that we count him during centuries in the
singular number.
'C'est une etrange entreprise que celle de faire rire les honnetes
gens,' Moliere says; and the difficulty of the
undertaking cannot be
over-estimated.
Then again, he is beset with foes to right and left, of a character
unknown to the
tragic and the lyric poet, or even to philosophers.
We have in this world men whom Rabelais would call agelasts; that is
to say, non-laughers; men who are in that respect as dead bodies,
which if you prick them do not bleed. The old grey boulder-stone
that has finished its peregrination from the rock to the
valley, is
as easily to be set rolling up again as these men laughing. No
collision of circumstances in our
mortalcareer strikes a light for
them. It is but one step from being agelastic to misogelastic, and
the [Greek text which cannot be reproduced], the
laughter-hating,
soon learns to
dignify his
dislike as an
objection in
morality.
We have another class of men, who are pleased to consider themselves
antagonists of the
foregoing, and whom we may term hypergelasts; the
excessive laughers, ever-laughing, who are as clappers of a bell,
that may be rung by a
breeze, a grimace; who are so
loosely put
together that a wink will shake them.
'. . . C'est n'estimer rien qu'estioner tout le monde,'
and to laugh at everything is to have no
appreciation of the Comic
of Comedy.
Neither of these
distinct divisions of non-laughers and over-
laughers would be entertained by
reading The Rape of the Lock, or
seeing a
performance of Le Tartuffe. In relation to the stage, they
have taken in our land the form and title of Puritan and
Bacchanalian. For though the stage is no longer a public offender,
and Shakespeare has been revived on it, to give it
nobility, we have
not yet entirely raised it above the
contention of these two
parties. Our
speaking on the theme of Comedy will appear almost a
libertine
proceeding to one, while the other will think that the
speaking of it
seriously brings us into
violentcontrast with the
subject.
Comedy, we have to admit, was never one of the most honoured of the
Muses. She was in her
origin, short of s
laughter, the loudest
expression of the little
civilization of men. The light of Athene
over the head of Achilles illuminates the birth of Greek Tragedy.
But Comedy rolled in shouting under the
divineprotection of the Son
of the Wine-jar, as Dionysus is made to
proclaim himself by
Aristophanes. Our second Charles was the
patron, of like benignity,
of our Comedy of Manners, which began
similarly as a combative
performance, under a
licence to
deride and
outrage the Puritan, and
was here and there Bacchanalian beyond the Aristophanic example:
worse,
inasmuch as a
cynical licentiousness is more
abominable than
frank filth. An
eminent Frenchman judges from the quality of some
of the stuff dredged up for the
laughter of men and women who sat
through an Athenian Comic play, that they could have had small
delicacy in other affairs when they had so little in their choice of
entertainment. Perhaps he does not make sufficient
allowance for
the regulated
licence of plain
speaking proper to the
festival of
the god, and claimed by the Comic poet as his inalienable right, or
for the fact that it was a
festival in a season of
licence, in a
city accustomed to give ear to the boldest
utterance of both sides
of a case. However that may be, there can be no question that the
men and women who sat through the
acting of Wycherley's Country Wife
were past blushing. Our tenacity of national impressions has caused
the word theatre since then to prod the Puritan
nervoussystem like
a satanic
instrument; just as one has known Anti-Papists, for whom
Smithfield was redolent of a
sinister smoke, as though they had a
later
recollection of the place than the lowing herds. Hereditary
Puritanism,
regarding the stage, is met, to this day, in many
families quite undistinguished by
arrogant piety. It has subsided
altogether as a power in the
profession of
morality; but it is an
error to suppose it
extinct, and
unjust also to forget that it had
once good reason to hate, shun, and
rebuke our public shows.
We shall find ourselves about where the Comic spirit would place us,
if we stand at middle distance between the inveterate opponents and
the drum-and-fife supporters of Comedy: 'Comme un point fixe fait
remarquer l'emportement des autres,' as Pascal says. And were there
more in this position, Comic
genius would flourish.
Our English idea of a Comedy of Manners might be imaged in the
person of a blowsy country girl--say Hoyden, the daughter of Sir
Tunbelly Clumsy, who, when at home, 'never disobeyed her father
except in the eating of green gooseberries'--transforming to a
varnished City madam; with a loud laugh and a mincing step; the
crazy ancestress of an accountably fallen
descendant. She bustles
prodigiously and is punctually smart in her speech, always in a
fluster to escape from Dulness, as they say the dogs on the Nile-
banks drink at the river
running to avoid the
crocodile. If the
monster catches her, as at times he does, she whips him to a froth,
so that those who know Dulness only as a thing of ponderousness,
shall fail to recognise him in that light and airy shape.
When she has frolicked through her five Acts to surprise you with
the information that Mr. Aimwell is converted by a sudden death in
the world outside the scenes into Lord Aimwell, and can marry the
lady in the light of day, it is to the credit of her vivacious
nature that she does not
anticipate your
calling her Farce. Five is
dignity with a trailing robe;
whereas one, two, or three Acts would
be short skirts, and degrading. Advice has been given to
householders, that they should follow up the shot at a
burglar in
the dark by hurling the
pistol after it, so that if the bullet
misses, the
weapon may strike and assure the
rascal he has it. The
point of her wit is in this fashion supplemented by the
rattle of
her tongue, and
effectively, according to the
testimony of her
admirers. Her wit is at once, like steam in an engine, the motive
force and the
warningwhistle of her
headlong course; and it
vanishes like the track of steam when she has reached her terminus,
never troubling the brains afterwards; a merit that it shares with
good wine, to the joy of the Bacchanalians. As to this wit, it is
warlike. In the neatest hands it is like the sword of the cavalier
in the Mall, quick to flash out upon slight
provocation, and for a
similar office--to wound. Commonly its attitude is entirely
pugilistic; two blunt fists rallying and countering. When harmless,
as when the word 'fool' occurs, or allusions to the state of
husband, it has the sound of the smack of harlequin's wand upon
clown, and is to the same
extent exhilarating. Believe that idle
empty
laughter is the most
desirable of recreations, and significant
Comedy will seem pale and
shallow in
comparison. Our popular idea
would be hit by the sculptured group of Laughter
holding both his
sides, while Comedy pummels, by way of tickling him. As to a
meaning, she holds that it does not conduce to making merry: you
might as well carry
cannon on a racing-yacht. Morality is a duenna
to be circumvented. This was the view of English Comedy of a
sagacious essayist, who said that the end of a Comedy would often be
the
commencement of a Tragedy, were the curtain to rise again on the
performers. In those old days
femalemodesty was protected by a
fan, behind which, and it was of a
convenient semicircular breadth,
the ladies present in the theatre
retired at a signal of decorum, to
peep, covertly askant, or with the option of so peeping, through a