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قراءة كتاب Matthew Arnold
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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
MATTHEW ARNOLD
Eldest son of Thomas Arnold, D.D., and Mary Penrose
Born | 1822 |
Entered Winchester College | 1836 |
Transferred to Rugby School | 1837 |
Scholar of Balliol | 1840 |
Entered Balliol College | 1841 |
Newdigate Prizeman | 1843 |
B.A. | 1844 |
Fellow of Oriel | 1845 |
Private Secretary to Lord Lansdowne | 1847 |
Inspector of Schools | 1851 |
Married Frances Lucy Wightman | 1851 |
Professor of Poetry at Oxford | 1857 |
D.C.L. | 1870 |
Resigned Inspectorship | 1886 |
Died | 1888 |
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
This book is intended to deal with substance rather than with form. But, in estimating the work of a teacher who taught exclusively with the pen, it would be perverse to disregard entirely the qualities of the writing which so penetrated and coloured the intellectual life of the Victorian age. Some cursory estimate of Arnold's powers in prose and verse must therefore be attempted, before we pass on to consider the practical effect which those powers enabled him to produce.
And here it behoves a loyal and grateful disciple to guard himself sedulously against the peril of overstatement. For to the unerring taste, the sane and sober judgment, of the Master, unrestrained and inappropriate praise would have been peculiarly distressing.
This caution applies with special force to our estimate of his rank in poetry. That he was a poet, the most exacting, the most paradoxical criticism will hardly deny; but there is urgent need for moderation and self-control when we come to consider his place among the poets. Are we to call him a great poet? The answer must be carefully pondered.
In the first place, he did not write very much. The total body of his poetry is small. He wrote in the rare leisure-hours of an exacting profession, and he wrote only in the early part of his life. In later years he seemed to feel that the "ancient fount of inspiration"