The
thing which is resented, and, as I think, rightly resented, in that great
modern literature of which Ibsen is typical, is that while the eye that can
perceive what are the wrong things increases in an uncanny and devouring
clarity, the eye which sees what things are right is growing mistier and
mistier every moment, until it almost goes blind with doubt.
If
we compare, let us say, the morality of the Divine Comedy with the
morality of Ibsen’s Ghosts, we shall see all that modern ethics have
really done… Dante describes three moral instruments – Heaven, Purgatory, and
Hell, the vision of perfection, the vision of improvement, and the vision of
failure. Ibsen has only one—Hell.
It
is said, and with truth, that no one could read a play like Ghosts and
remain indifferent to the necessity of an ethical self-command. That is quite
true, and the same is to be said of the most monstrous and material
descriptions of the eternal fire… Realists do in one sense promote
morality—they promote in it in the sense in which the hangman promotes it, in
the sense in which the devil promotes it… Modern realists are indeed
terrorists, like the dynamiters; and they fail just as much in their effort to
create a thrill..
Ibsen
has throughout, and does not disguise, a certain vagueness and a changing
attitude towards what is really wisdom and virtue in this life—a vagueness
which contrasts very remarkably with the decisiveness with which he pounces on
something which he perceives to be a root of evil… We know that the hero of Ghosts
is mad, and we know why he is mad [due to the progress of syphilis
inherited from his profligate father]. We do also know that Dr. Stockman is
sane; but we do not know why he is sane. Ibsen does not profess to know how
virtue and happiness are brought about, in the sense that he professes to know
how our modern sexual tragedies are brought about. There are no cardinal
virtues of Ibsenism. There is no ideal man of Ibsen… this omission does leave
us face to face with… a human consciousness filled with very definite images of
evil, and with no definite image of good.
GK
Chesterton, Heretics
Reflection
– Well, I’m posting
today’s blog post at this odd hour because I had written it all up at my usual
early morning hour, then proceeded to delete it without a trace before I could
post it. My Sundays are such that this is the first chance I have had to
rewrite it.
I think I GKC were mystically transported
to the year 2014 and shown what passes for dramatic art in our day, he would
perhaps change a name or two, an example or two, from the (rather dated now, I
believe) Ibsen to something more au courant, but otherwise would change nothing
of this. Perhaps Scorsese’s Wolf of Wall
Street would serve with its orgies and drugs and financial corruption, or
Martin’s Game of Thrones with its
betrayals, bloodshed, and torture, or O’Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire with its mutilated children and despoiled
innocence.
All suffer from the same affliction of
Ibsen’s drama—vivid, spectacular, virtuoso presentations of evil, human misery,
wicked cruelty… and not much else, really. Certainly there are good characters
in all these dramas, but the same vagueness, the same shrouding in mystery of
exactly why a good character is a good character pervades them, while the
motivations and utter perfidy of the villains is laid bare and clean for all to
see, pocked with stains of blood and other fluids, exit wounds and shattered
lives.
Now I am not one to advocate or enjoy a
sanitized sweet literature or drama. My favorite author of all time is Flannery
O’Connor, who has no shortage of wickedness in her stories. But her stories
also contain some manifestation of grace, of God, of the good, even if it is in
the mode of ‘that which the main character resists, flees, refuses.’ But it’s
there – Heaven is hovering just off stage in her fiction, and Purgatory is
where most of her characters end up by the end.
This is not the case in the modern drama
and literature of the type I mention. And this makes them bad dramas,
ultimately – not morally bad necessarily, but artistically so. They are less
realistic, not more, present the world, hard as it would seem to accomplish
this, as considerably worse than it is. Sin is indeed real, but you know, so is
repentance. Evil and cruelty happen, no argument… but so does kindness,
tenderness, mercy. Hell is real… but I have reason to believe Heaven is, too,
and that the heavenly life is not entirely unknown on earth.
It all hinges upon this terrible
agnosticism of the good and the virtuous that afflicts our modern world. It is
easy to show a man mutilating a child (as in Slumdog Millionaire) and say, ‘that’s bad!’ But what is good? And
why is it good? And where does that goodness come from, and where does it take
us? Any shocker-rocker dramatist with a budget and a bucket of red food
coloring can show us the whole taxonomy and final outcome of evil. But goodness? That requires a coherent
philosophy, a world view where there is indeed virtue and a whole moral order
composed not only of horrors and atrocities but courage, modesty, peace, and
real love.
This is why we need Christian artists—not
to explicitly proselytize through third-rate melodramas, nor to provide ‘sweet’
stories that are as unreal in their way as anything I’m describing, but to show
that alongside evil and filth there is a power of goodness that is strong
enough to conquer and redeem it. Without this, we are lost in the ‘realism’ of
the art of our times, which is actually supremely unreal, and we will lack the
vibrant art and drama that any civilization needs to thrive.
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