The Art of Writing and Other Essays


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ON SOME TECHNICAL ELEMENTS OF STYLE IN LITERATURE {1}  
There is nothing more disenchanting to man than to be shown the  
springs and mechanism of any art. All our arts and occupations lie  
wholly on the surface; it is on the surface that we perceive their  
beauty, fitness, and significance; and to pry below is to be  
appalled by their emptiness and shocked by the coarseness of the  
strings and pulleys. In a similar way, psychology itself, when  
pushed to any nicety, discovers an abhorrent baldness, but rather  
from the fault of our analysis than from any poverty native to the  
mind. And perhaps in aesthetics the reason is the same: those  
disclosures which seem fatal to the dignity of art seem so perhaps  
only in the proportion of our ignorance; and those conscious and  
unconscious artifices which it seems unworthy of the serious artist  
to employ were yet, if we had the power to trace them to their  
springs, indications of a delicacy of the sense finer than we  
conceive, and hints of ancient harmonies in nature. This ignorance  
at least is largely irremediable. We shall never learn the  
affinities of beauty, for they lie too deep in nature and too far  
back in the mysterious history of man. The amateur, in  
consequence, will always grudgingly receive details of method,  
which can be stated but never can wholly be explained; nay, on the  
principle laid down in Hudibras, that  
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