thing
whereby he relates this author to his following and to the
world. The young man John, Colonel Sprowle with his 'social
entertainment,' the Landlady and her daughter, and the Poor
Relation, almost make up the sum of the comic personages, and fifty
per cent. of the things they say--no more--are good enough to remain
after the bloom of their
vulgarity has worn off. But that half is
excellent, keen, jolly,
temperate; and because of that temperance--
the most stimulating and fecundating of qualities--the
humour of it
has set the
literature of a
hemisphere to the tune of mirth. Like
Mr. Lowell's it was
humour in
dialect--not Irish
dialect nor negro,
but American; and it made New England aware of her
comedy. Until
then she had felt within herself that there was nothing to laugh at.
'Nature is in
earnest when she makes a woman,' says Dr. Oliver
Wendell Holmes. Rather, she takes herself
seriously when she makes
the average
spiritual woman: as
seriously as that woman takes
herself when she makes a novel. And in a like mood Nature made New
England and endowed her with purpose, with mortuary frivolities,
with long views, with
energetic provincialism.
If we remember best The Wonderful One-Hoss Shay, we do so in spite
of the religious and
patheticmotive of the greater part of Dr.
Holmes's work, and of his fancy, which should be at least as
conspicuous as his
humour. It is fancy rather than
imagination; but
it is more perfect, more
definite, more fit, than the larger art of
imagery, which is apt to be vague, because it is
intellectual and
adult. No grown man makes quite so
definitemental images as does a
child; when the mind ages it thinks stronger thoughts in vaguer
pictures. The young mind of Dr. Holmes has less
intellectualimagination than
intelligent fancy. For example: 'If you ever saw
a crow with a king-bird after him, you will get an image of a dull
speaker and a
livelylistener. The bird in sable
plumage flaps
heavily along his straightforward course, while the other sails
round him, over him, under him, leaves him, comes back again, tweaks
out a black
feather, shoots away once more, never losing sight of
him, and finally reaches the crow's perch at the same time the crow
does;' but the
comparison goes on after this at
needless length,
with explanations. Again: 'That
blessed clairvoyance which sees
into things without
opening them: that
gloriouslicence which,
having shut the door and
driven the
reporter from the keyhole, calls
upon Truth,
majestic Virgin! to get off from her
pedestal and drop
her
academic POSES.' And this, of the Landlady: 'She told me her
story once; it was as if a grain that had been ground and bolted had
tried to individualise itself by a special
narrative.' 'The riotous
tumult of a laugh, which, I take it, is the mob-law of the
features.' 'Think of the Old World--that part of it which is the
seat of ancient civilisation! . . . A man cannot help marching in
step with his kind in the rear of such a procession.' 'Young folk
look on a face as a unit; children who go to school with any given
little John Smith see in his name a
distinctive appellation.' And
that
exquisitely" target="_blank" title="ad.精巧地,优美地">
exquisitelysensitive passage on the
nervousoutward movement
and the
inward tranquillity of the woods. Such things are the best
this good author gives us, whether they go gay with metaphor, or be
bare thoughts shapely with their own truth.
Part of the charm of Dr. Holmes's
comment on life, and of the
phrasewherein he secures it, arises from his
singularvigilance. He has
unpreoccupied and alert eyes. Strangely enough, by the way, this
watchfulness is for once as much at fault as would be the slovenly
observation of an ordinary man, in the
description of a horse's
gallop, 'skimming along within a yard of the ground.' Who shall
trust a man's
nimble eyes after this, when habit and
credulity have
taught him? Not an inch nearer the ground goes the horse of fact at
a
gallop than at a walk. But Dr. Holmes's
vigilance helps him to
somewhat squalid purpose in his studies of New England
inland life.
Much careful
literature besides has been spent, after the example of
Elsie Venner and the Autocrat, upon the
cottage worldliness, the
routine of
abundant and common comforts achieved by a distressing
household industry, the shrillness, the
unrest, the best-parlour
emulation, the ungraceful
vanity, of Americans of the country-side
and the country-town; upon their affections made
vulgar by
undemonstrativeness, and their consciences made
vulgar by
demonstrativeness--their kindness by reticence, and their religion
by candour.
As for the question of
heredity and of individual
responsibilitywhich Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes proposes in Elsie Venner, it is
strange that a man whom it had
sincerely disquieted should present
it--not in its own insolubility but--in caricature. As though the
secrets of the inherited body and soul needed to be heightened by a
bit of
burlesque physiology! It is in spite of our protest against
the
invention of Elsie's
horrible plight--a
conception and
inventionwhich Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes should feel to be essentially
frivolous--that the serpent-maiden moves us deeply by her last 'Good
night,' and by the gentle
phrase that tells us 'Elsie wept.' But
now, if Dr. Holmes shall succeed in proposing the question of
separate
responsibility so as to
convince every civilised mind of
his doubts, there will be
curiously little change
wroughtthereby in
the
discipline of the world. For Dr. Holmes
incidentally lets us
know that he cherishes and values the
instinct of intolerance and
destructiveness in presence of the cruel, the self-loving, and the
false. Negation of separate moral
responsibility, when that
negation is tempered by a
workinginstinct of intolerance and
destructiveness, will deal with the felon, after all, very much in
the manner achieved by the present
prevalentjudicialness,
unscientific though it may be. And to say this is to
confess that
Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes has worked, through a number of books, to
futile purpose. His books are justified by something quite apart
from his purpose.
JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
The United States have produced authors not a few; among some names
not the most famous, perhaps, on the popular tongue, are two or
three names of their poets; but they have hardly given to the world
more than one man of letters--judicious,
judicial, disinterested,
patient, happy,
temperate,
delighted. The
colonial days, with the
'painful' divines who brought the
parish into the
wilderness; the
experi
mental period of
ambition and attempts at a
literature that
should be young as the soil and much younger than the race; the
civil-war years, with a
literature that matched the self-conscious
and inexpert
heroism of the army;--none of these periods of the
national life could fitly be represented by a man of letters. And
though James Russell Lowell was the
contemporary of the
'transcendentalists,' and a man of middle age when the South
seceded, and though indeed his fame as a Yankee
humourist is to be
discerned through the smoke and the dust, through the
gravity and
the
burlesque, of the war, clear upon the other side, yet he was
virtually the child of national
leisure, of
moderation and
education, an American of the seventies and onwards. He represented
the little-recognised fact that in ripeness, not in rawness,
consists the
excellence of Americans -an
excellence they must be
content to share with
contemporary nations, however much it may cost
them to
abandon we know not what bounding
ambitions which they have
never succeeded in
definitely describing in words. Mr. Lowell was a
refutation of the fallacy that an American can never be American
enough. He ranked with the students and the critics among all
nations, and nothing marks his transatlantic conditions except,
perhaps, that his scholarliness is a little
anxious and would not
seem so; he enriches his
phrases
busily, and yet would seem
composed; he makes his allusions tread closely one upon another, and
there is an assumed
carelessness, and an ill-concealed
vigilance, as
to the effect their number and their erudition will produce upon the
reader. The American
sensitiveness takes with him that pleasantest
of forms; his style
confesses more than he thinks of the loveable
weakness of national
vanity, and asks of the stranger now and again,
'Well, what do you think of my country?'
Declining, as I do, to separate style in expression from style in
the thought that informs it--for they who make such a
separation can
hardly know that style should be in the very
conception of a
phrase,
in its antenatal history, else the word is neither choice nor
authentic--I recognise in Mr. Lowell, as a prose author, a sense of
proportion and a
delicacy of
selection not surpassed in the
criticalwork of this
critical century. Those small volumes, Among My Books
and My Study Windows, are all pure
literature. A fault in
criticismis the rarest thing in them. I call none to mind except the strange
judgment on Dr. Johnson: 'Our present concern with the Saxons is
chiefly a
literary one. . . Take Dr. Johnson as an
instance. The
Saxon, as it appears to me, has never shown any
capacity for art,'
and so forth. One wonders how Lowell read the passage on Iona, and