On Something

Hilaire Belloc
On Something

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Title: On Something
Author: H. Belloc
Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7354] [Yes, we are more than
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Language: English

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SOMETHING ***

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ON SOMETHING
BY
H. BELLOC

DEDICATION
To Somebody
CONTENTS
A PLEA FOR THE SIMPLER DRAMA
ON A NOTEBOOK
ON UNKNOWN PEOPLE
ON A VAN TROMP
HIS CHARACTER
ON THRUPPENNY BITS
ON THE HOTEL AT PALMA AND A PROPOSED GUIDE-BOOK
THE DEATH OF WANDERING PETER
THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE
A NORFOLK MAN

THE ODD PEOPLE
LETTER OF ADVICE AND APOLOGY TO A YOUNG BURGLAR
THE MONKEY QUESTION: AN APPEAL TO COMMON SENSE
THE EMPIRE BUILDER
CAEDWALLA
A UNIT OF ENGLAND
THE RELIC
THE IRONMONGER
A FORCE IN GAUL
ON BRIDGES
A BLUE BOOK
PERIGEUX OF THE PERIGORD
THE POSITION
HOME
THE WAY TO FAIRYLAND
THE PORTRAIT OF A CHILD
ON EXPERIENCE
ON IMMORTALITY
ON SACRAMENTAL THINGS
IN PATRIA

Of the various sketches in this book some appear for the first time,
others are reprinted by courtesy of the Proprietors and Editors of The
Westminster Gazette, The Clarion, The English Review, The Morning
Post and The Manchester Guardian, in which papers they appeared.

A PLEA FOR THE SIMPLER DRAMA
It is with the drama as with plastic art and many other things: the plain
man feels that he has a right to put in his word, but he is rather afraid
that the art is beyond him, and he is frightened by technicalities.
After all, these things are made for the plain man; his applause, in the
long run and duly tested by time, is the main reward of the dramatist as
of the painter or the sculptor. But if he is sensible he knows that his
immediate judgment will be crude. However, here goes.
The plain man sees that the drama of his time has gradually passed
from one phase to another of complexity in thought coupled with
simplicity of incident, and it occurs to him that just one further step is
needed to make something final in British art. We seem to be just on
the threshold of something which would give Englishmen in the
twentieth century something of the fullness that characterized the
Elizabethans: but somehow or other our dramatists hesitate to cross that
threshold. It cannot be that their powers are lacking: it can only be
some timidity or self-torture which it is the business of the plain man to
exorcise.
If I may make a suggestion in this essay to the masters of the craft it is
that the goal of the completely modern thing can best be reached by
taking the very simplest themes of daily life--things within the
experience of the ordinary citizen--and presenting them in the majestic
traditional cadence of that peculiarly English medium, blank verse.
As to the themes taken from the everyday life of middle-class men and
women like ourselves, it is true that the lives of the wealthy afford
more incident, and that there is a sort of glamour about them which it is
difficult to resist. But with a sufficient subtlety the whole poignancy of
the lives led by those who suffer neither the tragedies of the poor nor
the exaltation of the rich can be exactly etched. The life of the
professional middle-class, of the business man, the dentist, the
money-lender, the publisher, the spiritual pastor, nay of the playwright

himself, might be put upon the stage--and what a vital change would be
here! Here would be a kind of literary drama of which the interest
would lie in the struggle, the pain, the danger, and the triumph which
we all so intimately know, and next in the satisfaction (which
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