Lytton 2
Lytton 2
Lytton 2
Strachey said:
Yet the four Victorians he chose for treatment were not independent of
the moral system of the Victorian Age. His verbal attack against Cardinal
Manning is an attack on the evangelicalism that was to be the defining
characteristic of 19th century culture, an exposure of its hypocrisy and
the emptiness of self-regarding ambitions.
Strachey toppled Florence Nightingale from the pedestal where she was
placed as the legendary lady with the lamp, having saintly and self-
sacrificing qualities. He replaced her with a twentieth century neurotic.
Thus Strachey struck ironically at the popular mythology of Victorian
England, in particular its conscience-saving humanitarianism.
His irony towards the Dr. Arnold probably arose from his own unhappy
schooldays. He depicted Arnold as the most influential teacher of the
Victorian public school system whose cult distorted middle-class
intelligence and set hard the principle of Victorianism into the 20th
century.
There are times, however, when Strachey’s sharp sense of the ridiculous
does find its way into his irony. It is a definite undercurrent in this
treatment of the Chinese diplomatist Li Hung Chang:
“It was Gordon who gave him his first vision of Europe. Nothing
could be more ironical. The half-inspired, half-crazy Englishmen,
… the irresponsible knight-errant whom his countrymen first
laughed at and neglected, then killed and canonized – a figure
staying through the perplexed industrialism of the nineteenth
century like some lost “natural” from an earlier Age.”
Thus irony with its marked possibilities for variation, served Strachey
admirable not only for comic purpose of suggesting change and
dissimilarity which could be significantly and effectively relate to a
background of uniformity in style.
Strachey’s great weapon was irony and ‘Eminent Victorians’ set the tone
for subsequent biographers. It made ‘debunking’ fashionable. Few of
Strachey’s imitators possessed his gift of sharp irony or his picturesque
humour. They inherited from him nothing but his shallow scepticism.
Strachey was in high favour with the wound because they relished the
breaking of ‘Eminent Victorians’ praised till then like idols.
“We doubt if another miscellany of this sort could possess half the
wit and distinction of a biographical style that we find here.”
In 1937 Edgar Johnson praised Strachey’s ironical sense of values and the
largeness of his opinion:
“In Strachey the old Elizabethan lion refines down to a cat. The
lion singles out the enemy to be destroyed; it is the cat, however,
that plays slyly and patiently with the victim.”
Andre Maurois had already spoken of him not only as an iconoclast using
the method of irony but also as a highly gifted writer in the tradition of
the great humorist and as “a very deep psychologist”.
In fact, Lytton Strachey is best known for his ironic attitude towards the
subjects of his biographical studies. His point of view was highly personal
and some of his judgments have been described as exaggerated. But his
sense of form and his witty, ironic style inspired a host of imitators who
were eager to reduce historical figures to life size. He established the
ironical writing of biography as a literary art.
Strachey did not hesitate to include in his biographies the failings, jokes
and whims of his heroes. He believed that a biographer must have a
psychological insight into his character.
A biographer must neither suppress vital facts nor obscure those aspects
of his character which help us visualize his true picture as he lived.
Instead of giving abstractness, Strachey indeed gave a creature of flesh
and blood.
“First class biographies can only be written long after the hero’s
death.”
Strachey had a gift of irony which has hardly been equaled in literature by
anyone since the eighteenth century masters.
Strachey has brought us face to face with men and women, who are
nonetheless fallible human beings and not infallible saints or gods. We
watch them live, think, and quarrel like us. Sometimes they behave
meanly and foolishly and sometimes nobly and wisely.
His intensely personal sketches shocked many critics but delighted many
readers. M. Forster says: