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    Introduction

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    To the irreverent--and which of us will claim entire exemption from that
    comfortable classification?--there is something very amusing in the
    attitude of the orthodox criticism toward Bernard Shaw. He so obviously
    disregards all the canons and unities and other things which every
    well-bred dramatist is bound to respect that his work is really unworthy
    of serious criticism (orthodox). Indeed he knows no more about the
    dramatic art than, according to his own story in "The Man of Destiny,"
    Napoleon at Tavazzano knew of the Art of War. But both men were
    successes each in his way--the latter won victories and the former
    gained audiences, in the very teeth of the accepted theories of war and
    the theatre. Shaw does not know that it is unpardonable sin to have his
    characters make long speeches at one another, apparently thinking that
    this embargo applies only to long speeches which consist mainly of
    bombast and rhetoric. There never was an author who showed less
    predilection for a specific medium by which to accomplish his results.
    He recognized, early in his days, many things awry in the world and he
    assumed the task of mundane reformation with a confident spirit. It
    seems such a small job at twenty to set the times aright. He began as an
    Essayist, but who reads essays now-a-days?--he then turned novelist with
    no better success, for no one would read such preposterous stuff as he
    chose to emit. He only succeeded in proving that absolutely rational men
    and women--although he has created few of the latter--can be most
    extremely disagreeable to our conventional way of thinking.

    As a last resort, he turned to the stage, not that he cared for the
    dramatic art, for no man seems to care less about "Art for Art's sake,"
    being in this a perfect foil to his brilliant compatriot and
    contemporary, Wilde. He cast his theories in dramatic forms merely
    because no other course except silence or physical revolt was open to
    him. For a long time it seemed as if this resource too was doomed to
    fail him. But finally he has attained a hearing and now attempts at
    suppression merely serve to advertise their victim.

    It will repay those who seek analogies in literature to compare Shaw
    with Cervantes. After a life of heroic endeavor, disappointment,

    slavery, and poverty, the author of "Don Quixote" gave the world a
    serious work which caused to be laughed off the world's stage forever
    the final vestiges of decadent chivalry.

    The institution had long been outgrown, but its vernacular continued to
    be the speech and to express the thought "of the world and among the
    vulgar," as the quaint, old novelist puts it, just as to-day the novel
    intended for the consumption of the unenlightened must deal with
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