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THE LITERARY DISCIPLINE




OTHER BOOKS BY JOHN ERSKINE


    THE MORAL OBLIGATION TO BE INTELLIGENT AND OTHER ESSAYS

    THE KINDS OF POETRY AND OTHER ESSAYS

    DEMOCRACY AND IDEALS

    GREAT AMERICAN WRITERS (With W. P. Trent)

_POETRY_

    ACTÆON AND OTHER POEMS

    THE SHADOWED HOUR

    HEARTS ENDURING

        _A Play in one Scene_

    COLLECTED POEMS 1907-1922




                                   THE
                           LITERARY DISCIPLINE

                                   BY
                              JOHN ERSKINE
              _Professor of English at Columbia University_

                             [Illustration]

                                NEW YORK
                           DUFFIELD & COMPANY
                                  1923

                         Copyright, 1922, by the
                          NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW

                           Copyright, 1923, by
                           DUFFIELD & COMPANY

                          _Printed in U. S. A._




TO GEORGE EDWARD WOODBERRY




CONTENTS


                                                 PAGE

         PREFACE                                   ix

      I. DECENCY IN LITERATURE                      3

     II. ORIGINALITY IN LITERATURE                 47

    III. THE CULT OF THE NATURAL                   91

     IV. THE CULT OF THE CONTEMPORARY             137

      V. THE CHARACTERS PROPER TO LITERATURE      187




PREFACE


The following chapters were first published serially in _The North
American Review_, from November, 1922, to March, 1923. For their
reappearance in this volume I have made slight changes in them all, and
have inserted in the fourth chapter a few paragraphs written for _The
Bookman_ of July, 1922. The editors of both magazines have my thanks for
permission to reprint.

The title of the book will disclose at once the critical theory
underlying these essays; they are studies in the discipline which
literature imposes on those who cultivate it as an art, and their
doctrine is that language as a medium of expression has certain
limitations which the writer must respect, and that the psychology of
his audience limits him also in what he may say, if he would gain a wide
hearing and keep it. To know what can be said in words, and what effect
it will have on your readers, is the inward art of writing, much more
important even than the management of a sentence or the shaping of a
paragraph.

I write here of literature as an art. Since I mean to exclude, as not
art, many books of undoubted importance and of wide appeal, I must
attempt at least to defend a distinction that to certain readers will
seem arbitrary. A book may tell us of a life we already know about, or
of a life we as yet do not know; the pleasure it gives us will be of
recognition or of curiosity satisfied. Of course no books fall absolutely
into one or the other of such extremes, but it is fairly accurate to say
that every successful book does give us information, a new experience, or
brings back an old experience to recognize. Though both kinds of books
may be equally well written, we are inclined to ask only instruction
from the one kind, but permanent enjoyment from the other. One is a
document in history or sociology, in ethics or psychology; the other,
as I understand it, is a work of art. If our country has not proved a
favorable birth-place for literary works of art, the reason probably
lies in our history rather than in lack of able writers. Ours has always
been, and still is, an unknown land; the reader of American works has
primarily been looking for information about America. The early visitors
from Europe wrote us up for the enlightenment of their friends at home,
and since our world has changed rapidly, we still write up ourselves,
for our own enlightenment. The too brief flourishing of literature as an
art in New England was possible only because life there for one moment
in our history was so stable that a considerable body of readers had
much experience in common; having had their curiosity satisfied as to
their own life, they could recognize it and reflect upon the literary
portrait of it. But the New England moment in our literature proved an
exception, and we are so accustomed now to read novels and poems, not as
art, but as bulletins of information from the west, the northwest, the
middle west or the south, that we are losing the sense of living art in
the New England writers themselves, and are considering them more and
more as documents in a past civilization. Since we have so great need of
documents, I realize that I prejudice myself with many readers when I say
that my chief interest is in literature as art—in the books which reflect
the unchanging aspects of human experience, rather than in the reports of
our temporary condition.

If literature in our country has suffered from our passion for
information, I believe it has also been damaged in our day by a bad
philosophy of esthetics which has encouraged the writer to think much of
himself and little of his audience. Literature is an art of expression,
we say in the old phrase, and it expresses life. But whose life? The
writer’s, of course, replies the philosophy I happen not to like. No; if
a book ever becomes famous, it is because it expresses the experience of
the reader. The writer’s personality will pervade it, but we must be able
to recognize ourselves in it before we can admit that it portrays life
truly.

The function of criticism, as I understand it, is to discover, in the
past experience of the race, what books have won a secure place in men’s
affections, and to find out if possible why men have been permanently
fond of them. A great critic would be a scientist, observing the
behavior of the reader in the presence of certain stories or poems,
and recording the kind of effect produced by various arrangements of
character and plot, or by different employments of language. Such a
critic was Aristotle in the _Poetics_. The art of literature has never
had an observer more accurate or more penetrating, and those who return
constantly to his wise pages will understand why I have quoted him so
often, and often have drawn upon him for aid when I have not used his
name.

I must record my gratitude to two living philosophers also, towers of
strength to those of us who love books as works of art—George Santayana
and Frederick J. E. Woodbridge. The first has taught me through his
books—are any books more beautiful than his written in English today? The
second has enriched me with his daily companionship and with those spoken
words, grave or gay but always wise, which his friends and disciples
learn to save up for remembrance.

And I have offered this book in my dedication to our one poet-critic
in America who has spent his genius in the service of literature as
art, and as art alone. I do not know whether what I have written will
be altogether acceptable to him, and if I put his honored name in the
forefront of my pages, it is not to shield me from deserved criticism.
But writing on this theme, I must bear witness to his leadership among
all in this country who in my lifetime have known how to prize the
immortal things in great books—imagination, ideal humanity, beauty, and
the kind of truth that is beauty. In a day when literary criticism has
been contentious and personal, more like a political campaign in a tough
ward than anything that Spenser or Sidney or Shelley would recognize as
a pilgrimage to wisdom, Mr. Woodberry has written nothing ungenerous or
harsh of new arrivals less scholarly, less gifted, less accomplished and
less chivalrous than himself. He has

    Let the younger and unskilled go by
    To win his honour and to make his name.

Indeed, more than anyone else among us, he has kept his faith that
youth, given time enough, will discover art as it will find out other
incarnations of beauty, and will achieve new miracles in its worship.
Twenty-five years ago he taught us to love the masters in poetry—no
easier thing to do for boys then than it is now. We have still to acquire
his hospitality toward the future, to look on with his good humor and
sympathy while the immature in the world of art, as elsewhere, try to
rearrange the universe, not knowing that it has been here for some time
and is set in its ways.

                                                                    J. E.




THE LITERARY DISCIPLINE




I

DECENCY IN LITERATURE


I

The quarrel with indecent art is an old one, and the present discussion
of improper books, with threats of censorship, begins to rally itself
in two familiar camps—on one side the moralists, showing in the heat of
debate less understanding of art than they probably have, and on the
other side the writers, showing in the same heat somewhat less concern
for morals than it is to be hoped they feel. The censorious seem disposed
to suppress on the ground of indecency almost any kind of book they
happen not to like; the writers seem at times to argue that all books
are equally good, or, at least, should be free and equal. These are the
old exaggerations of the quarrel. Yet in two important respects the
present discussion is quite novel and more than usually interesting; for
one thing, the attack now is less on obscenity, about which there are
no two opinions, than on indecency, of which we have at the moment no
adequate definition; for another thing, the writers themselves, perhaps
for the first time in history, have no definition of literary decency to
offer, and seem not greatly interested in forming one.

Censorships are usually exercised for the protection of religious or
political doctrine, and whatever may be said against the method, at
least in the field of religion or politics the censor knows clearly
what he wishes to protect. But if we now would protect decency, we must
first define the term. It is not enough to have a moral conviction on
the subject; we must have also some principle outside of our emotional
prejudices, based on something more lasting than fashion. In the present
welter of contradictions and opprobrium it is sometimes thought indecent
to wear bobbed hair or short skirts; for the morals of the school,
teachers have been dismissed who rolled their stockings below the knee.
Obviously, these are not great faults in decency, if faults at all; a
good deal of camel must have been swallowed before justice could be done
to these gnats. Some of our neighbors wish to suppress certain plays;
others wish to suppress the theatre. Some wish to suppress Swinburne
and Baudelaire, with one hand as it were, while distributing with the
other copies of the Bible containing the _Song of Songs_. A minister of
this type, earnest in his work for decency and quite muddled as to what
it is, told me that he could not give his approval to the _Spoon River
Anthology_, brilliant though it was; he could approve of no book that
portrayed fornication. Yet he must have read the story of Lot’s daughters
and their behavior with their father. He approved of the Bible, and
he would probably not call it indecent. What is decency, then, or its
opposite?

At this point the writers ought to stand up and answer. In other ages
they would have done so; they would have thought no one so competent
as the artist to define decency in his own field, and they would have
stated their definition from the point of view of art. They would have
called it “decorum” instead of “decency”, but they would have meant the
same thing—fitness or propriety in the particular art they practised.
When Milton made his famous plea on ethical grounds for freedom of the
press, he went on, as an artist, to say that of course there are good
and bad books, and when a book has had its chance, it must submit to the
judgment of the competent. He was writing in an age when the reader might
be expected to have some training in artistic definitions of decorum.
If books are to enjoy freedom of publication now, it seems incumbent
upon the writers to define the decency of their art, and to spread the
knowledge of the definition, as widely as possible, that the competent
reader of today may have a standard by which to judge.


II

It ought to be possible now, as it once was, to define decency in terms
outside our emotions, not variable with our private taste but fixed in
the conditions of the artist’s work. When man is inspired by the world
he sees to make some lasting record of his feeling about it, and selects
a medium to express himself in,—wood, stone, metal, color, language,—he
immediately encounters certain problems and difficulties in his medium,
certain limitations in it which he must submit to, if he would convey
his meaning with precision. The limitations of his medium, therefore,
dictate to the artist his first lessons in decorum. For if you will not
respect those limitations, you will find yourself saying what you did
not intend; instead of beauty, you will convey some effect humorous or
grotesque or ugly. It is at least bearable to see actual garments on
the wax figures in shop-windows; we dress up dolls. But not even the
shop window could tolerate a marble statue with clothes on. When the
artist learns that some things, though excellent in themselves, do not
come out in his medium with the effect he desires, his good sense and
the sincerity of his art compel him to leave these subjects for other
mediums. The themes he thus abandons are not indecent in the sense of
obscenity or filth, not bad in themselves, but they do not fit his
art—or, as writers used to say, do not belong to its decorum.

The decorum of art may seem to the moralist far less important than the
decency his own strong emotions feel after, but the moralist is wrong.
The decorum of art is the deeper kind of decency, for it is based on
lasting principles, and it leads to an understanding of the positive
good in art, to beauty, as the moralist’s concern for decency often does
not. You cannot explain on moral grounds why the glorification of the
body in Walt Whitman, let us say, is sometimes disconcerting, yet the
glorification of it in Greek sculpture seems not only decent but noble.
The artist could explain the matter if he understood the decorum of
artistic mediums. In so far as he does not understand it, he adds to the
confusion of the arts in our time; he fills our magazines, for example,
with photographs of Greek dances, and is himself, let us hope, disturbed
by the grotesque contortions he has perpetuated. The dance was probably
a graceful flow of motion; of all that flow, however, only a few moments
would be in the decorum of the camera—moments of poise, in which motion
might be suggested but not represented. But the photographer was charmed
by the moments of motion, which are the essence of dance decorum, and
he gives us a picture of grim-faced ladies suspended in the air, with
frantic gestures of fingers and toes.

In literature, since the medium is language, decorum is a question of the
limitations and capacities of words. The great limitation of language
is that it must be heard or read one word at a time, though most of
the things we wish to speak of in this world should be thought of or
seen all at once, and their true outline and their total effect may be
dislocated by piecemeal expression. To represent in language a landscape
or a person, a building or any intellectual architecture, is, strictly
speaking, impossible; we can merely make statements, carefully selected,
about the subject, and trust that no matter how dismembered in the
telling, it will somehow come together again in the hearer’s mind, thanks
largely to the hearer’s imagination. Where the suggestion is so slight
and the collaboration so great, the writer is under some obligation to be
precise and conscientious in what he suggests. His responsibility might
perhaps seem less when he is telling a story; if language is inapt for
the portrayal of stationary things having mass, structure and extent, we
might suppose it better fitted to the representation of action, which
like language occurs in sequence of time. But even in the recital of
events, language has to name separately in an artificial order events
which actually coincide, and the reader’s imagination must put the
fragments together again. _“Indeed,” replied Mr. Jones_, or, _Mr. Jones
replied, “Indeed!”_ Neither formula quite represents what happened. In
life, when we heard the “Indeed!” the sound would tell us not only what
was said but also who said it. No wonder the poets have so often thought
of the drama as the most satisfying literary form, for when a play is
acted, words convey in it all that they can convey in life, and they
are aided, as in life, by other kinds of language—by gesture, facial
expression, scenery, which speak to the eye while the voice is speaking
to the ear.

Because words must be spoken one after another, there are not only some
things which are hard to say in that medium, but others which in certain
circumstances should not be said at all. No matter how much we select the
sounds, our utterance will lay a fairly even emphasis on all the things
we name; therefore, if we wish to subordinate some part of the picture,
to pass over it with no emphasis at all, we cannot throw it into shadow,
as a painter can—we must leave it out altogether. A painter may portray
a face half in shadow, so that one ear is barely discernible; looking
at the picture you do not see the shadowed ear, and do not miss it. But
if some one tells you in words that the ear is in shadow, at once the
ear enjoys special emphasis, the opposite of the painter’s intention. Or
suppose the portrait is not shadowed, but all the features are clear; and
suppose the artist has focused your attention on the eyes, or has brought
out some characteristic expression. You can attend to the picture exactly
as you look at the subject in life—noticing what is important in it, but
not examining it otherwise in detail. The head has two ears, but you do
not count them. If, however, the writer describes the face as it is in
life, or as it is in the portrait, he may speak only of the chief focus
or expression of it; he must not say that the subject has two ears. If
he does so, he will be indecent in his art, and may seem to the original
of the portrait insulting in his manners.

All literary accounts of the human body raise this problem, not a problem
of squeamishness or puritanism, but of decorum. The classical Greeks
seem to have mastered the question either by instinctive good taste or
by analysis, as they mastered so many other problems in art with which
we are only beginning to wrestle. They cannot be accused of prudishness
where the body is concerned; they loved its naked beauty, and in their
sculpture they portrayed it frankly, with a serious and unflagging
delight. Yet in their poetry they did not portray it; they merely noted
the total effect of physical beauty, and omitted details, as we should
omit the number of ears in the portrait. In the classical Homer, to be
sure, there remained even after much expurgating certain stereotyped
labels of the body; goddesses are “ox-eyed”, beautiful women are
“deep-bosomed.” But the phrases are so conventional that they probably
called up a general sense of approval, rather than a specific detail,
as the word “mortals” calls up to us the general idea of men, rather
than the fact of death. Aside from such phrases Homer and the other
classical poets suggest the body without detail, trying to render the
general effect the body makes in life—its femininity, its masculinity—at
the same time avoiding any such attention to anatomical detail as in
real life would seem, to the Greek and to us, morbid or clinical. The
sculptor, working in another medium, can use the details the poet must
omit; when we look at his Apollo or his Aphrodite we see not a naked
body but a divine presence. The effect of divinity is not furnished by
any anatomical member, nor interfered with by any. The body in detail
is before us, but the expression, the something divine we feel, is in
the attitude or the character. The wise poet, knowing the limitations
and dangers of his medium, tries to reproduce only the attitude or the
character. Later sculptors, in the decadence that followed the Periclean
age, deserted the decorum of their own medium, and called attention
to separate parts of the body—to ribs or veins, neck or breasts. In
literature a parallel decadence occurred; the poets tried to give the
effect of beauty, not in Homer’s way, by avoiding physical detail, but by
citing it. They managed to suggest not beauty but sex.

The modern lover of beauty who quite properly wishes to restore the body
to its rightful honor and reverence, usually appeals to the Greeks for
his precedent. But if he wishes to celebrate the body in detail, he
should appeal not to the Greeks but to the poets of the Renaissance.
The praise of the body in the Renaissance is sometimes explained as
springing from a newly recovered delight in material beauty. It should
also be explained as a reaction, on the part of earnest, even puritanical
moralists, against other moralists who, they thought, viewed life but
partially and cramped the human soul. In our own language, Edmund Spenser
and John Milton led in this praise of beauty—moralists both; as in modern
times Walt Whitman led the praise, a moralist also, whether or not his
detractors admit it. But a moral purpose is a dangerous approach to
art, whether you are a critic or a poet. Whitman is perhaps the easiest
illustration to begin with. He felt that to the pure every part of the
body is sacred, and at its best is a thing of beauty. Had he been a
sculptor, he would have proceeded to make statues which probably would
have shocked nobody. Working in language, however, he mistook the decorum
of the art, and wrote as though he were sculptor or painter, and the
result is in those anatomical catalogues from which no beauty emerges,
whatever else does. He differs as widely as possible from Edmund Spenser
in most things, but in this one matter they are alike. Milton was too
close to the Greeks to go wrong, even with his moral impulse to assert
the honor of the body; his impassioned praise of wedded love, and his
remarks on the glory of nakedness when Adam and Eve first appear in his
epic, put no strain on literary decorum. But Spenser’s moral enthusiasm
for beauty leads to such physical inventories as his picture of Belphœbe,
in the second book of the _Faerie Queene_, or of his own bride, in
the _Amoretti_ and the _Epithalamium_—an accounting of eyes, teeth,
hair, neck, shoulders, breasts, waist, arms and legs. Many a critic has
suggested that his poems have the character of painting or of tapestry,
and had he actually worked in a pictorial medium, he would have made the
effect he desired. In his portrait of Serena naked among the savages, in
the sixth book of the _Faerie Queene_, he followed Homer’s method with
admirable success. No English poet is more spiritual than he—all the more
impressive the indecorum to which his moral earnestness occasionally
brought him, and all the more helpful his example ought to be to modern
beauty-lovers who fancy that the decorum of an art need not be studied
and obeyed.

Through ignorance of decorum in language a moralist sometimes comes
to grief in the opposite direction; wishing to indicate indecency,
he sometimes through reticence stumbles upon the Homeric method and
portrays beauty instead. A while ago a minister of some name, an
aggressive defender of decency, preached a sermon on the dangers which
at the moment he saw threatening us from the arts. According to the
newspapers, he said that if certain theatrical managers could get it by
the police, we should have a show in which a naked woman in one scene
posed before a black velvet curtain. Wishing to touch the sulphurous
subject as gingerly as possible, he merely suggested the lovely contrast
of body and background; those of his congregation who had seen it forgot
their moral danger and remembered the Venus de Milo in the Louvre. It
occurred to some of them that this material might be indecorous in the
pulpit; in the theatre, however—well, they were not unwilling to see it,
if it was actually put on.


III

The principle of literary decorum which applies to the representation
of the body applies also to the allied theme of sex. The body is a fit
subject for literature, but not in detail. Sex is a proper subject for
literature, so long as it is represented as a general force in life, and
particular instances of it are decent so long as they illustrate that
general force and turn our minds to it; but sexual actions are indecent
when they cease to illustrate the general fact of sex, and are studied
for their own sake; like the ears in the portrait, they then assume
an emphasis they do not deserve. This seems to be the decorum of the
theme as great writers have treated it, and this is the decorum which
men instinctively adopt in discussion, if they have not been trained
to think that all discussion of sex is naughty. People so trained will
call any book indecent which in any way touches the theme. When _Trilby_
appeared years ago, many of us then youngsters were protected (in vain)
from the lovely story because Trilby had been somebody’s mistress before
the romance began. So to an earlier generation _The Scarlet Letter_ had
seemed dangerous because Hester Prynne’s child was illegitimate. But
neither book had physical passion for its theme, though the force of sex
in life, for good or evil, gave each story most of its interest and its
pathos. How indecent in the artistic sense, how indecorous, either book
might have been, we realize by supposing that Du Maurier had centred
attention on Trilby’s early and sordid affairs, before she met her true
love, or that Hawthorne had given us in detail the experiences of Hester
in Arthur Dimmesdale’s arms. One has an uneasy feeling that so the books
might have been written today; the general fact of sex and its influence
would not operate as a colossal force in the story, but would be deduced
in an argument or assumed as an hypothesis—modern specialists in sex are
so uncertain of its existence—and the focus would have been on the animal
behavior of human beings, which the hypothesis of sex would explain.
This kind of book is indecent, though it is usually too psychological in
manner to disturb the censorious, and entirely too frequent in recent
literature to suppress.

We turn for relief to the decorum of great literature. “From the roof
David saw a woman washing herself, and the woman was very beautiful to
look upon.” The painter might give the details of that beauty; the writer
could not. But he could continue: “And David sent and inquired after
the woman. And one said, Is not this Bathsheba, the daughter of Eliam,
the wife of Uriah the Hittite? And David sent messengers and took her,
and she came in unto him, and he lay with her; and she returned unto her
house. And the woman conceived, and sent and told David, and said, I am
with child. And David sent to Joab, saying, Send me Uriah the Hittite.”
So begins one of the greatest of stories from both points of view,
artistic and moral. Is it too frank for our taste? Would the minister who
described so well the naked woman and the black velvet, set this story
also before his congregation? He ought to, for it is a masterpiece of
decency. David’s passion, Bathsheba’s acceptance of it and her consequent
terror, were important only as beginning the spiritual tragedy; the old
writer names the facts and passes on to his great subject. To have
begun less frankly would have been to misrepresent life and spoil the
moral; to have elaborated the scene of David’s love-making would have
been indecent. In the same decorum the classical Greeks told their
stories; Helen eloped with Paris; Œdipus had children by his own mother;
Clytemnestra killed her husband and made her lover king—so much of the
fact is necessary in each case to understand the magnificent and tragic
consequences; but the Greek poets did not pry further into the details of
passion.

There are, of course, unhealthy minds which have developed a mania
for obscenity, and at the other extreme of exaggeration there are the
unbalanced minds which do not care to admit the existence of sex. But
sex, in one form or another, is in the thoughts of most people most of
the time, and common folk—and the great poets—speak of it constantly,
and in the same way. In unsophisticated society, among sincere and
simple men, the references to sex are at once reticent and frank; it is
recognized and respected as gravitation might be or as the sea is by
sailors—as a power always immanent, in contact with which men may be lost
or saved. Gossip in that kind of society may whisper that such a girl had
a child by such a boy only a month after their wedding, or that so and
so is not really the son of his supposed father. Exactly this kind of
scandal furnishes material to Homer and to the old prophets in the Bible,
to Dante and to Shakespeare, for sex is one of the permanent sides of our
moral world. If this treatment of it is essential to a complete picture
of life, the thinness of American literature may well come from lack of
frankness; but current attempts to correct the thinness by dwelling on
physical details are seeking frankness in the wrong direction and are but
so many offenses against literary decorum. One reason why we cling with
such pride to _The Scarlet Letter_ is that with all its shortcomings as a
novel it bases its great moral vision on just such a complete and decent
observation of life as our books do not usually give us.


IV

In this discussion of sex our attention has shifted from the problem of
language to the question of the general and the particular in art—that
is, from the principle of decorum involving the medium of literature
to the principle of decorum involving its subject-matter. This second
principle, rightly understood, marks the chief difference between
contemporary art and what some of us still believe was the great art
of the world hitherto—the best of the Greek, the best of the medieval.
When you look at life naturally, in the directions dictated by your
spontaneous impulses, it is your own life that seems important, your
private fortunes, your personal ambitions. Everything that belongs to
you seems peculiar, because it is not natural at first to compare the
lives of others with our own. A poet who presents experience from this
angle of individuality will always make a strong initial appeal and
perhaps a lasting one, since he falls in with our instincts, and this
accord will seem to us evidence of something profound. Such a poet, to
some extent, was Euripides, who imagined his characters sympathetically
from their private points of view, and portrayed for us the egotism of
human nature in its most tragic form. It is not fair to say that in
his world men and women need only to explain themselves in order to be
right; but, at least, after they have explained themselves it is hard
to tell who are right and who are wrong. Such another poet is Browning,
who represents human nature one individual at a time, always from the
individual’s point of view. By such a simple and primitive method he
obtains effects of obvious richness—he shows how varied life is, since
there are so many individuals in it, and how novel it perpetually must
be, since each of us is discovering the world for the first time, and
how much right there is in every man’s cause, once he has the chance
to speak for himself. If we had all the works of Euripides, we should
probably find in them as rich and varied a world as Browning’s, expressed
with clearer and more direct poetic genius. Our contemporary taste is
rather solidly for this kind of literature—Browning flourishes more and
more, and Euripides has been revived; and if you really approve of the
individualistic approach to art, it is hard to see how you can call
anything indecent. Anything that is natural to any kind of character must
get a hearing.

But men can also be imaginative enough to look at life as a whole—first,
perhaps, to look out at all other men, and then to stand off and look
at all men, oneself included. When you begin to take an interest in
other men, you notice of course that their lives are not like yours, not
so important nor interesting nor promising, but in their drabness they
are all curiously alike; they all, with slight variation, are born, are
brought up, fall in love according to their lights, marry, earn their
living, have children, grow old, and die. When this uniformity begins
to interest you, you are making your first intelligent acquaintance
with life; and when you have looked at mankind and included yourself in
the picture, when you have admitted however reluctantly that the single
addition does not change the total effect, that life is still simple and
uniform and that you are less peculiar than you thought—then you have
seen yourself at last as one of the human race.

To see this calls for imagination and for the Greek virtue which we
translate as magnanimity—great-mindedness. The virtue is not to be
acquired all at once. We have made a great advance when we can think of
life in terms not of ourselves but of moral and material aspects and
powers—in terms of youth and age, for example, of strength or beauty or
pride. This is the allegorical stage of our pilgrimage in wisdom, no mean
stage to reach, though it happens to be out of fashion just now. We are
acquainted with it in the old morality plays, especially in the almost
popular _Everyman_, and perhaps in Æschylus, especially in _Prometheus
Bound_.

But our advance is greatest when we can recognize these aspects and
powers in the individuals around us—when our observation includes at
one and the same time the general truths of life and the particular
instances. The poet preëminently master of this sane wisdom was
Sophocles, who, in Arnold’s familiar phrase, saw life steadily and saw it
whole. The point of view which he represented is the most magnanimous,
the least egotistical, that art has yet taken, and one would have to
think meanly of the race to believe that we shall not return to it,
as to the noblest part of the Greek legacy. But Sophocles was only
the illustration of a decorum generally practised. In the brief and
magnificent period which left us our greatest perfection in the arts,
the Athenians thought of the individual as important if he illustrated
for the moment the general truths or fortunes of life, but his strictly
private fate was insignificant.

This attitude has been explained by saying that the Greeks, having no
gift for introspection, took always an objective view of life, but such a
formula hardly accounts for all the illustrations of magnanimity. When
Athens was in her glory, for example, it was only the public buildings
that were glorious; no individual, not even Pericles himself, thought of
putting Phidias to decorate his private home. Again, in the _Antigone_
Sophocles is introspective enough—as introspective as Euripides or Ibsen
himself—but the introspection is concerned with the general theme of
piety, of one’s duty to blood relations, not at all with the love story
of Antigone. She was betrothed to the son of the king who condemned her
to death, and the fact proves tragic for the son and for the king, but
the love of the two young people is their private business, and the poet
therefore does not let his heroine discuss the problem of piety from that
point of view.

It was the genius of Shakespeare and of Molière, even in comedy, to
preserve the same decorum. They show us those aspects of man’s fortune
which are of interest to all men; of course we are free to fill in the
gaps according to our taste in gossip, but the dramatist awakens our
feelings and calls our attention only to general experiences and common
wisdom. In Shakespeare, _Measure for Measure_ is a good example, a noble
tragedy and a decent play. It is less glorious than the _Antigone_,
obviously, since it shows human nature resisting temptation rather than
establishing an ideal, but the grimness of its subject and the fact
that it portrays an indecent character do not make it indecent, as some
critics think. Its power is its probing into general truths of life,
chiefly into the capriciousness of temptation where sex is concerned, and
into the various forms of the fear of death.

Claudio, condemned to die and convinced that there is no hope, persuades
himself that he does not care to live; but immediately he has a chance
to live at the cost of his sister’s honor, and he finds himself slipping
into casuistry to make his escape possible even on such terms. Here is
introspection of the Sophoclean sort, touching the psychology not of a
particular man but of all of us. Walter Pater remarked the paradox that
Angelo is tempted to his fall by sight of the pure-minded Isabella, the
incarnation of virtue. He might have named other paradoxes of Isabella’s
influence. She fascinates all the men she meets, good or bad. At the end
of the play the Duke announces that he intends to marry her himself,
and since he gives her little opportunity to dispute this plan, we may
speculate how far his motives differ essentially from Angelo’s. But
Lucio, the wretch so steeped by habit in indecency that he can hardly
frame a clean sentence, is immediately and permanently sensitive
to Isabella’s beauty of soul as well as of body. Why? Shakespeare
merely exhibits the paradox, in his characteristic way, without hint
of explanation. But we may read a lesson in decorum, if we wish, in
the decency of art, from the first speech of Lucio to Isabella in the
nunnery, when the dirty-minded wretch, having none but coarse formulas in
his vocabulary, tries to address her with the reverence he feels.


V

On all this the moralist may comment that decency as a matter of art is
one thing, and the protection of public morals is another; that however
artists may be interested in the decorum of their medium, or in the
general truth of their subject-matter, the public is also interested in
the motives and the possible effects of their writing. Granted; but if
the moral point is to be made, as against the artistic, the artist has
his own conclusions to draw. The first is that one may as reasonably
question the motives of the vice-suppressors as the motives of the
artists. Better not to question the motives of either, but if the mean
insinuation begins, it must in justice spread in both directions. The
woman before the velvet curtain, described by the preacher, seemed a
vision of loveliness; yes, you may say, but what would be the motives
of those who produce such an exhibition—worship of beauty, or wish to
capitalize our baser impulses? The question is unanswerable unless
you can see into men’s hearts, but it applies also to the minister
who preached the sermon; was he interested only in morals, or was
he capitalizing to some extent our craving for the sensational? An
artist would be content to answer that where the result is beautiful,
in the decorum of the art, it is sensible as well as kind to suppose
men’s motives of the best; and when the result is not beautiful, it is
sufficient to condemn the result, without reference to the motives.

But the more actively censorious hold that the weak need to be saved from
themselves; that a constant brooding upon indecencies is the death of
the soul. Well, if it is obscenity that we war against, by all means root
it out, for it can be recognized at a glance, and the reformer need not
brood long upon it. But in the realm of art in which decency rises, the
suppression of indecency involves as much brooding on it by the reformer
as by the endangered public—in fact, the reformer must specialize in such
brooding. Whether or not it is to the death of his soul, it seems to be
to the impairment of his taste. You cannot give all your time to bad
art and know much about good. The rôle of the censor would take on some
dignity if there ever were a censor who was a connoisseur, who was the
patron of good poets and painters, who actively supported a clean stage.
But then, if you had the taste for the best, no inducement whatever would
make you give your life to the detection of indecency.

Human nature is wiser in the long run than any censor; in the long run
the books of the highest decency hold their place in fame by crowding
out the others. The public suppresses indecent books by reading decent
ones. Every artist would respectfully suggest this method to all censors.
Perhaps the censors will say that the method is too slow—that it takes
too long for the good books to crowd out the others. It does take too
long now, but why not hasten the process by calling attention to the
good books, instead of delaying it by advertising the bad? If the energy
which now tries to suppress books sure to be forgotten in fifty years,
were directed to the encouragement of the few books which after fifty
years might still be worth reading, the final verdict of fame might be
hastened. But there seems to be a decorum in morals too, or perhaps two
decorums, a creative and a negative—one seeking to displace evil by a
positive good, the other too much preoccupied with the evil to notice the
good at all.




II

ORIGINALITY IN LITERATURE


I

If we accept the doctrine of criticism today, originality is a great
virtue in a writer, and if we believe the book advertisements, all the
new writers as they appear, and as they reappear, have this virtue to a
striking, even to an explosive extent. But with all their originality,
some of the new books turn out to be dull, and if we reconsider for a
moment the books men have finally judged great, we observe that they were
rather destitute of the kind of originality we talk of nowadays.

“In poetry, a new cadence means a new idea”, wrote the imagist some time
ago, defending the use of free verse. The doctrine was in the interest
of the cadence, but it implied something larger and more significant,
that in poetry newness of ideas is desirable. More recently, an American
critic remarked, in effect, that what Lytton Strachey has accomplished in
his literary portraits is nothing but what Gamaliel Bradford accomplished
in his, and since Mr. Bradford’s portraits came first, they should
have the credit and the praise which an undiscriminating world bestows
on Mr. Strachey’s. If the question of priority is raised in this kind
of writing, perhaps something should be said for Plutarch; but are we
sure we should raise the question of priority? What arrests us in the
remark of the American critic is the undebated assumption that literary
excellence derives from doing something before somebody else does it. Is
it the business of art to discover new ideas, or indeed to busy itself
much with any ideas, as separated from emotion and the other elements
of complete experience? Is it the originality of genius in art to say
something no one has ever thought of before, or to say something we all
recognize as important and true? As for the mere question of priority,
even stupid things have been said for a first time; do we wear the laurel
for being the first to say them?

One suspects that the new cadence will persist in poetry only if we like
it, and that Mr. Bradford’s reputation will outstrip Mr. Strachey’s only
if we prefer what he wrote, and if by chance we care for neither, then
both will be neglected, though one preceded the other by a hundred years.
Excellence is the only originality that art considers. They understand
these things better in France. There the young poet even of the most
radical school will respect the bias of art towards continuity rather
than toward novelty, toward the climax of a tradition rather than its
beginning; his formula of self-confidence will be, “Victor Hugo was a
great poet, Alfred de Musset was a great poet, and now at last I’m here.”
But in America the parallel gospel is, “Poor Tennyson couldn’t write, nor
Longfellow, of course; now for the first time let’s have some poetry.”

The writers finally judged great, so far from sharing our present concern
for originality, would probably not even understand it. What is the
object of literature? they would ask. Of course, if it is to portray the
individual rather than human nature, or those aspects of life which stand
apart from life in general, then each book may have something queer in
it, something not in any other book and in that sense original; but then
the reader, before long, will be looking for peculiarity in every book
he buys—it must be, not better, but “different”, to use an American
term in esthetics; and the writer then who would meet this demand for
the peculiar must make a fresh start with every book. What bad luck,
they would say, to be forever a primitive, to be condemned, after every
success, to produce something in another vein, the first of its kind.
Originality in this sense will be continually undermined by fame, for
the more an author is read, and the more people become accustomed to his
world, the less he will seem original. On the other hand, if the reader
looks for originality, there will be no fame, for no matter how popular
an author is, we shall read his book only once, and then be waiting for
his next novelty.

But if the object of literature is still, as it was for the great
writers, to portray human nature, then the only new thing the artist
will look for is a greater success in his art. Human nature is old and
unchangeable; he will hope to make a better portrait than has yet been
made—better, at any rate, for his own people and his own age, and if
possible better absolutely. There is nothing new about religion or love
or friendship, war, sunsets, the sea, danger or death, yet something
remains to be told of each eternal theme, and when a book comes which
tells the whole, which satisfies some hitherto unexpressed yearnings or
defines more sharply something hitherto half-seen, then that portrait of
human nature serves our purposes until we have a still finer, and other
versions meanwhile are neglected and forgotten. We remember how many
accounts of Romeo and Juliet there were before Shakespeare told the story
to suit us, and how many records of the journey to hell before Dante told
us the whole truth of that pilgrimage; perhaps we know the many desperate
attempts, long since mercifully swallowed up in oblivion, to portray the
American Indian before Fenimore Cooper made the picture the world wanted.
The achievements of literature are all, as in these instances, a gradual
reworking of traditional or popular or folk material, and in the process
it is precisely because the subject is not original that the audience can
decide how well it has been portrayed. A sequence of writers interpreting
Life are therefore like a succession of virtuosos playing the classics,
each trying to give us the true Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Schumann. Their
renderings will be different enough, but the music is the same, and we
know it by heart. The player who calls our attention to most beauty in
it, will be original or unique in the only way that art permits.

The example of the musician may not seem to all writers a fair parallel;
they may protest that the writer creates, as the composer does, but the
player only interprets what is already created. But they are wrong, and
the parallel is correct. The writer does not create as the composer does.
Music is an ultimate pleasure in itself, like the taste of sugar; so long
as it delights us, we do not ask what it means. Moreover, since there
is no question of its meaning, we may not need a previous experience to
find some enjoyment in it; it may be satisfactory at first contact. Of
course every art gives a more subtle pleasure as we become practised in
appreciating it, yet the contrast between music and literature remains
a real one, since without any knowledge of life at all men and even
children often penetrate deeply into the heart of music, but without some
knowledge of life they are stopped at the very threshold of literature.
The key to that door is some first-hand acquaintance with life. Music
has no other subject-matter than itself, but literature has life for
its content, and to find one’s way about in it, we must recognize what
it is dealing with. Life is a music already composed. It has been here
a long time, and had become already an ancient history when the first
poets began to play upon it. They merely said for us the things we had
been vainly feeling after, they brought out the colors our eyes had
almost missed, they defined sharply the flavors and the half tastes that
had haunted us. The amateurs in the audience listen spellbound when the
master plays to perfection a piece they have struggled with; this is more
to them than the loveliest of new sonatas, for it is their own world in a
better light. So mankind will listen to the authentic poet who completes
their half-realized selves; and will say of him, somewhat with the woman
of Samaria, “He told me all the things that ever I did.”

If the audience enjoy the music best when they have tried to play it
themselves, they love it next best when they have heard it often, and
they like it least, sometimes not at all, when they hear it for the first
time. The reader likes poetry best when he has lived what it interprets;
next best when he has heard often of the adventures it renders; least,
even to the point of detestation, when he never entered that region of
life at all, not even by hearsay. In such a predicament the real ground
of his objection to the art is that it is original, at least so far as he
is concerned, but the experience of his discomfort will hide the cause of
it from him; not himself but the art will seem to him inadequate—is he
not as much alive as any one ever was? The book, he will say, portrays a
world that is dead. Let us start fresh and be original; let us portray my
world.


II

In the slow fermentation of human societies, as fresh elements work
their way to the top and for a time give their flavor to history, the
new arrival is likely to herald himself in some such terms in a protest
against the art which, because he has as yet no share in it, seems to
him old and worn out, and in a cry for original expression which to
those with a longer memory of the world will be quite familiar. There
have been new arrivals before, and their wish to start fresh is the
cause rather than the result of decadence. For it is only in a figure
of speech that art declines or prospers—it is the artists who are less
competent or more so than their predecessors, and the poet who tells us
that the period before him is at an end, is really proclaiming that he
cannot improve upon it, and if the other poets are like himself, the
preceding period is indeed ended. There is no other reason why the great
moments of literature were not prolonged. Shakespeare was better than his
predecessors, but he was not perfection; why did not the drama continue
to develop? Ben Jonson, being himself a new arrival, and being, for
all his book learning, outside the spiritual regions which Elizabethan
drama had mainly portrayed, thought of course that a new kind of art was
needed. He is in danger now of sharing the ignominy of all writers who
coming after greater men pay homage through jealousy. Tennyson was not
the greatest of poets; why did not his successors treat him as though he
were a Greene or a Marlowe, and make Shakespearean improvements in him?
To hear the critics of today rail against his art, one might suppose he
had hopelessly damaged the language by using it, or that rhyme and meter
had come to a bad end at his hands. The poet who talks this way about his
predecessors is never the one who is conscious of the power to swallow
them up. If Shakespeare had been a little man, he would have taken one
look at Marlowe’s _Faustus_, and given up the Elizabethan drama as a
creaking and antiquated machine for moral doctrine. Had he been really
ignorant of the long-stored-up energies and impulses which were coming to
action in his marvellous hour, had he lacked the instinct to recognize
them even when badly expressed, and to express them better, he might have
walked the streets of London as the oriental arrival walked in Athens,
or as the invader from the north walked in Rome—with a conviction that
the day of this sort of thing was over. Nothing would remain but to be
original.

If the clamor for originality is strong in the United States, it
is, perhaps, because here are many arrivals, and the newcomer not
infrequently desires us to change our ways in the interest of his
comfort. We have so much good will toward him, and we are so conscious
of the fine things the various races may bring to our commonwealth, that
we usually hesitate to speak frankly of his qualifications as writer
or critic. He often brings a rare aptitude for art, and frequently he
desires to write, but writing is the one art where his ignorance of life
will handicap him. In painting an eye for color, in music an ear for tone
and harmony, may carry him through, but in literature he will write in an
acquired language, and even if it were his native tongue, in literature
his attitude toward the art will be conditioned by his knowledge of
life. He will perhaps assert rather vigorously that his knowledge is
superior; has he not borne hardships and risen above them? Those who
have not suffered, he will say, know nothing of life. He will think you
cold-blooded if you tell him the better way to say it—that those who
have not suffered, know nothing of suffering. If he desires to write
the literature of suffering, he is probably competent, but since he is
usually a person of strong energy, with a constructive temperament, he
does not wish to write merely the literature of suffering, nor does he
usually wish his children to repeat his hardship, though he may have said
that only by such discipline comes knowledge. He usually desires to write
about the world in general, as every one would write, and for this task
he usually has had experience too meagre or too special. It is only in
the United States, after his arrival, that he most often makes his first
contact with the older literature—not of America but of his own land;
if he has had the experience necessary for understanding it, he absorbs
it eagerly, but if his hardships in his fatherland deprived him of the
necessary equipment, he will announce that the old literature is played
out and meaningless. He is like the native students in South African
schools, who may read the skating episode in Wordsworth’s _Prelude_, but
cannot get the shiver of the ice or the scratch of the steel runners.
Those who have been with us for several generations and who through
economic or other causes have missed that rich acquaintance with life
which would explain what the great writers talk about, are likely to join
the most recent comer in a plea for originality. Their fortunes are to
be pitied, but their advice in art is hardly to be followed. No amount
of sympathy or admiration for them as human beings will accredit them
as critics, for art is long, as we have heard, and the approaches to it
are long also; though we may teach democracy fast enough to win our vote
after five years, we must know at first-hand youth and maturity, and have
a suspicion of what old age is like, in the world the poet writes of,
before we can give a fair opinion whether he has written well. But if the
newcomer recovers here the adventure of life which his hardships cheated
him of in the old country, he will find that the great literature of the
world represents that adventure faithfully and vitally; it is merely a
question of patience with him, since he is energetic and the upturn of
the new world is exciting, and it is hard for him to believe that the old
shadows in art of a life he has not yet lived will ever again take living
form or pulse again in his imagination.

A new world, a new life, a new art. This is the sequence his hopes dwell
on, though every term in it is debatable. Is there a new world, or a
new life, or a new art? Sometimes we are told that in a new world life
must automatically be new, but the doctrine is not convincing, for at
other times we are summoned to originality, as to another duty, by the
argument that in a new world we ought to be ashamed to lead still an old
life. Sometimes we hear that a new life inevitably means a new art, and
we reflect that if life now differs from what it once was, we need take
no thought for our originality, for we shall be different in spite of
ourselves; even by the old methods art will achieve something new; if we
would write of love, for example, we need only tell the truth about the
passion as we know it, and since the love we know is like nothing that
ever was on sea or land, our romance will be like nothing that ever was
in song or story. Why all this fret about it? And if religion and war
and sorrow and death are all by hypothesis quite other than they once
were, how can we escape originality when we report them in the setting
of the new world and the new life? But the fact is that those who call
for originality in art are not quite sure, after all, that the age is
a new one—they would feel safer if some further vestiges of the past
could be obliterated; and though they justify a new art by speaking much
of their new life, it is far from clear that they really think life
is new, or at heart desire it to be so. Social and political systems,
yes—but life? Horrible indeed is the vision of an absolutely original
career for one who loves his fellows and prefers to take his experience
outside a madhouse. “Your prayer is answered,” says the original Apollo,
touching the original poet’s ears, trembling with originality: “you will
have always a new cadence and a new idea; neither the language nor the
substance of your communications will ever have occurred before in human
experience. Your art will be unique and solitary. Nothing that men have
done before will you condescend to repeat—neither to sleep, nor to eat,
nor to travel, nor to know passion, pain, suffering or peace.” The poet,
lured by the prophecy, might think at last that he had achieved fame, but
Apollo would be there to remind him that his was like no fame achieved
before—not like Shelley’s or Shakespeare’s. He might lose his heart, and
in the throes of love might fancy he knew at last the meaning of Romeo’s
story or Tristram’s, but the god would remind him that his was a special
kind of love, not like the very ancient impulse that moved the sun and
the other stars.

We need some divine reminder that our true desire is to realize in
ourselves the best of old experience—not to find an original life, but
to bring on the stage once more as far as possible the old procession
of passions, sorrows and delights. The latest of us hopes he is not too
late to taste for himself the high flavor of life which those before him
talked so much about. If falling in love is a business incidental to
adolescence, yet it is immensely hastened by our reading and by what we
have heard; those whom the passion does not touch usually worry about
their immunity instead of being thankful for it, and anything is better
than never to have loved at all. It is not passion entirely that fills
the hearts of the lovers brought at last to each other’s arms; at least,
the single thought with which the two hearts beat may be a triumphant
“Now I know for myself.” Similarly, however strange it may seem, we
welcome sorrow and suffering, or we feel ourselves cheated rather than
blest if none of it comes our way. Death, too, is less unwelcome than it
might fairly be. At least those who faced it and have been reprieved,
often remember that a satisfaction in knowing the worst took some of the
terror away. There it was at last, the old shadow that waylays us all.

Desiring to discover for ourselves the well known and traditional
experience, we desire at the same time a more excellent version of it
than our predecessors have enjoyed. We would love as Romeo did, but
we like to think that Romeo never loved so well, and ours is a more
wonderful Juliet. Even our sorrows will be greater, if we have our
way, for in the intensity with which we explore the old experiences we
feel rightly that we ought to equal or surpass other men. We dread the
operation for appendicitis, before we undergo it; then we reach the
point of satisfaction in finding out for ourselves what the operation
is like; then finally we are persuaded that the operation was unusually
severe, the worst of its kind. This is the artist in us, trying for
distinction. And if with the old material of life we seek the distinction
of excellence of statement, our motive is not simply a desire to surpass
others, nor a desire to indicate progress, but often it is the hope to
report the experience once for all. Art has always a dying part in it,
as artists well know—some part which must constantly be restored by
restatement. Try as he may to express only permanent things, the artist
will include something that is aside from the main purpose, that goes out
of date. Of course if an artist deliberately strives to be contemporary,
and succeeds, his work to that extent will shortly become unintelligible;
later poets will then try their hand at refurbishing or restoring the
essential thing in the picture, and incidentally, without meaning
to, they will include some contemporary and insignificant material of
their own, which in time may precipitate another revision. What we call
classics are the lucky masterpieces in which the permanent elements are
so many and the transitory so few, that it seems useless and impertinent
to revise them.


III

The desire for originality is not new, and explanations of it are
old. Some of them are based on the supposed working of the artistic
temperament. The artist, it is said, craves expression at all costs,
and if the craving is not satisfied in one direction, it will reach in
another. If we cannot pour all of our energy into our painting or our
music, we may express the surplus in long hair and flowing cravat. This
explanation, even if it were true, would imply that the artist desires
notoriety rather than expression, for you cannot express yourself unless
you speak a language your audience already knows, but eccentricity,
which is the extreme form of originality, will attract attention even
if it is not understood. But artists are not likely to admit that this
theory does justice to their temperament. They will remark that few of
the greatest masters have been eccentric in their appearance, none of
them in their subject-matter. Like other men they fitted the society in
which their lot fell, except that they had a genius for feeling life more
vitally than other men. So many of them, like Chaucer or Shakespeare or
Scott, cultivated the art of living close to their fellows and sharing
an average fate, that we half suspect the less gifted would do the same
if they could; for the artist who is original in dress or manners is not
likely to meet human nature in its normal state—rather, his neighbors
will whisper when he appears, and nudge each other, and he will never
see what manners they use toward those who are not queer. Poets with
an original or eccentric subject-matter meet the same fate. Could Poe
or Baudelaire learn anything about us if they came among us with a
reputation for the abnormal? Would we not unconsciously close to them
our usual impulses, in our curiosity to observe their strangeness? To
the artist who loves life in the sane way of a Chaucer, a Montaigne, a
Molière, such a welcome would be calamitous; rather hide anything that
distinguishes him from others, even the fact that he can write, if by
this caution he may draw closer to his sensitive race, and observe the
undisturbed mystery and beauty of natural life.

Indeed, the whole question of originality, this desire for novelty, is
in the end a question of our love of life. In the moments when we love
life passionately we are not likely to get too much of it, and we do not
ask to exchange it for another kind. When art and politics were creative,
in the heyday of writers, painters, architects and statesmen who later
seem to us almost solitary in their excellence, there was still no taking
thought to be original; they fell in love, rather, with the obvious.
Columbus made no voyage in search of originality—simply there had been
too many hints and rumors for him to stay at home any longer. Some very
original spirits, we may suppose, took no stock in his expedition. For
Shakespeare or Molière play-writing was an obvious task, and an old one;
they may have expected to do successfully what others had only tried, but
except for the success they aimed at nothing new. Where great poets have
spoken on the matter themselves, their point of view is quite clear. At
the end of the _Vita Nuova_ Dante announced his hope to write of Beatrice
such things as had never been written of any woman. Not to write a new
kind of book, for women had been praised before, as he implied, and
there had been poems of vision and pilgrimages through hell; but his
hope was to excel. He determined to speak no more of his blessed lady
until he could praise her worthily, and to praise such a woman worthily
would be to write such things as had been written of no other. In the
same mood Milton promised his great epic—in passionate love of the best
before him, and in the assurance of doing as well or better—“I began
thus to assent both to them and divers of my friends here at home, and
not less to an inward prompting, which now grew daily upon me, that by
labour and intense study, which I take to be my portion in this life,
joined with the strong propensity of nature, I might leave something so
written to after-times as they should not willingly let it die.” This is
the great manner of the poets. But in the opening words of Rousseau’s
_Confessions_, to take an opposite example, we have the accent of the
modern disease; he would undertake, he said, an enterprise of which there
had never been a parallel, and of which there would be no imitation—he
would tell the truth about one man, about himself. He promised no
excellence except the uniqueness of the subject, for truth-telling,
though always desirable, can hardly be important unless the subject is
worth while.

Rousseau’s book is great in spite of its introductory sentence; his
subject after all was not unique, for each of us can follow his example
and write at least one book about ourselves; and perhaps he told less
of the unvarnished truth than he intended, for being an artist in
every fiber of his body, he selected from his experience not his most
singular adventures, but his adventures in those realms of experience—in
sex, for example—which his readers were surest to understand and find
interesting. But with his famous announcement, whether or not he followed
it, our malady began. Hence all the poems and novels of autobiography,
all the diaries of young men and maidens, old men and children, all the
bouquets of verse still showered upon us in which the poet confides his
intimate symptoms. In all this there is little to remind us of great
art, or of the times in which great art has been made; the resemblance
is rather to a hospital or an old folks’ home, where the inmates find
importance in the fact that they have been there longer than their
fellows, or are younger, or a little less blind and deaf. Hence also
our difficulty in understanding earlier literature, of a date when not
originality but excellence was the aim. When we first read Shakespeare’s
sonnets or Sidney’s, we conclude with satisfaction that the poet was
writing out of his heart, in the Rousseau fashion. But when we learn
that these stories are works of art, dramatic renderings of life, and
that the “I” who speaks in the lines is first of all the hero of the
story, whether or not he is the poet too; and when we learn further that
much of the material is adapted from earlier poets, used over again as
we use old words to make up new sentences—then perhaps our respect for
the master vanishes, our ideal is cracked; they were not such original
poets after all. It is the defect of our taste. We forget that the oldest
phrases, if they have the poetic excellence of being true to all of us,
are renewed and become personal in the adventure of each individual.
Though Job ought to get the credit, by all modern standards, of uttering
that very original profession of faith, “I know that my redeemer liveth”,
yet the words were too full of possible meanings to remain linked with
Job’s private misfortunes; being already immortal, they seem never to
have been said for a first time. Lover after lover has found in his
own passion the meaning of some old song, perhaps “My love is like the
red, red rose”, which until the passion fell on him seemed sentimental
and silly. And Rousseau himself in the _Confessions_, at the very
outset of his egotism, of his originality, of his indecorous opposing
of the individual to the race, records his boyhood love of an old
folk-song—precisely the kind of art from which his doctrine led us away.

But nowadays the desire for originality comes not only from the writer;
a certain class of readers also demand it, the kind of person who reads
with an eye out for imitations and plagiarisms. That plot has been used
before, he says, when two men are in love with the same woman—or, that
character is copied from so-and-so, when Pierrot’s father forgives the
returning prodigal. There are reviewers of this type also, who read
their victims into categories, calling this poet Tennysonian, that
novelist Meredithian, that essayist Emersonian. Such categories become
less definite as we read back into the past, for over the range of a few
centuries no plot is new, nor does any writer seem altogether unlike the
others. There is such a thing as plagiarism, yet unless one is a fanatic
for originality, the question of plagiarism is of no great importance;
the world is not interested, and if the author is concerned from whom
the play or the plot is stolen, his concern is more for his property
than for his art. If his work is stolen unchanged, it is still as good
art as it was before; if the thief has mangled it, his plagiarized
version will not be so good as the authentic text; but if by luck he
has improved on what he took, it becomes his, bag and baggage, so far
as fame is concerned. Who were the authors of those songs Burns made
over into his masterpieces? Who were those dramatists and chroniclers
whom Shakespeare rewrote? The names in many cases can be looked up, but
they are of no account. The world feels that the great writer conferred
a benefit by improving on the earlier work. What is far more important,
the world also feels that the great writer, in improving on another man’s
work, actually invaded no private rights, for the material of literature
is life, and life is no one’s private property. After the invention of
printing, writers saw the possibility of financial dividends from their
works, and plagiarism is an aspect of this financial question, but it has
otherwise nothing to do with art. The world in general continues to think
of art in the old way, as creation rather than as business, and it quite
properly cares little who does the creating, or who afterward receives a
money reward. What were Homer’s annual earnings? Or was it really Homer?
Or who besides David wrote his psalms? We know instinctively that these
questions are trivial.

But imitation in art is often more apparent than real. If a poet is in
touch with his age, he will write of the subjects that interest him, and
other poets in touch with the age will also write about what interests
them, and consequently they may all write of much the same thing; they
are not imitating each other, but they are enjoying a common pleasure, to
which one of them may have shown the way. We often say that the popular
writer is trying to catch the favor of the public by giving it what
it likes, and in some instances he may be calculating and his motives
unworthy. But it is more probable that being typical of his age, he
simply likes the same things as his fellows. The Elizabethan Londoner
liked historical plays; did Shakespeare write them only to please his
audience, or rather did he not share the general taste? The principle
here implied will explain why any poets who have an enormous popularity
will have also an enormous so-called influence. They are popular because
they share the people’s taste, and the people therefore find in their
work what they like; but if their subject-matter is so popular, many
others will be writing of it too. The resulting resemblance is not really
an influence, or rarely is; it is a contemporary tendency. The poet who
is best in the lot will be remembered. All ran, but one receives the
prize. However, those who came in second and third are neither imitators
nor plagiarists.


IV

To submit oneself to the impersonal discipline of art is hard for
the young. Few young writers are lured into the profession by the
impossibility of being original in their craft, or by the excellent
chance their best works have of becoming anonymous with time. We can
imagine them pleading for the rights of their personalities; what on
earth did the old pagan mean by his proud _non omnis moriar_, if his
personality was not to survive in his work? For their comfort let us add
that personality in art is indestructible. If we have any of it, it will
live. And if we mean personality when we say originality, thinking of the
author rather than of his subject, then we may add also that genuine
personality is original in spite of itself. How hard it is to tell a
story twice the same way; how difficult to form anything permanent, even
habits; how impossible to get once for all into a rut. A dull lecture,
though we hear it a second time word for word, is subtly changed, for we
no longer hear it the first time, and “afflictions induce callosities”,
as Sir Thomas Browne said, and “sorrows destroy us or themselves.” The
record we buy for our phonograph, though we liked it at first, may empty
itself with each repetition, till the charm is gone; even the photograph
of our dear ones, framed on the wall, has a tendency at last to merge
itself in the wall paper. Whatever is repeated in our consciousness
becomes mechanical and unnoticed, or the edge of it is blunted. To
restore the sharp edges of impression, to bring back the first flavor
of things, is the ideal of life and of art; only strong personality
can do it, but where such a personality comes, it is irresistible and
undisguisable. It shows up best in those attitudes of life which in other
hands have grown drab and sordid; the contrast brings out the genius.
This kind of success in life is the art of the actor who plays a long
run, and who gives even in the one hundredth performance the impression
of a fresh experience. A poorer actor would have needed a new play long
before. Or we might say that art is a summary of life—and where will
personality show itself sooner than in summarizing? When Lafcadio Hearn
lectured to his Japanese students, he followed the reading of each
English poem by a brief paraphrase in prose, which usually is the most
precious part of his criticism; for in the retelling, his personality
emphasized what he liked in the verses. If we could ask Tennyson, Morris,
Browning, Arnold and Meredith each to write out a summary of something
we all know, we should have five criticisms, and five revelations of
personality. And there are more personalities in the world than we may
realize; only they waste themselves in the search for the original, when
all that is needed is to be sincere.




III

THE CULT OF THE NATURAL


I

It belongs with the confusion of esthetics in our time that the same
people who ask art to be original often ask it to be natural. Being
natural would appear at first sight the least original of programmes.
Even if by originality we mean personality, yet there still seems
some contradiction in the wish at one and the same time to develop a
strong personality and to remain in a state of nature. Since it is
the thoroughbred, not the wild animal, that is distinguished from his
fellows, and the cultivated bloom, not the field flower, that charms by
its single self rather than in quantity, a condition of impulse close
to the unsifted accidents of life would seem to promise an art notable
chiefly for its volume, its indistinction and its insignificance. But
those who ask art to be natural never mean completely natural. In their
wiser moments they are only asking art not to be artificial, or at least
to help them forget it is artificial. They demand a “realistic and
romantic naturalism”, or “a world of honest, and often harsh reality”,
and what they are looking for is indicated by the fact that they find
something convincingly lifelike in a drama of low life or an American
vulgarization of a French farce, but something strained and mechanical in
a comedy by Sheridan or Oscar Wilde. Art, no doubt, is still desirable in
literature—art shot through with crude material, to reassure us that we
are human. Since all plays are highly artificial, naturalness is hardly
the word for the virtue of good plays; they are convincing, rather, they
take us frankly into another world, and for the moment make us forget it
is not our world of everyday. Yet those who ask the stage to be natural
are apparently reassured when through the imaginary world of art breaks
some accent of ordinary speech, some aspect of our common sordidness.
Here, it seems, we touch earth and are strengthened.

The cult of the natural at its best asks of the medium of art also,
as well as of the subject, that it wear a common aspect, untouched by
artifice. Many of the new poets take as their ideal “the sequence of
the spoken phrase”, with a special dislike of all “inversions”; the
“language of common speech” will serve their purposes. Yet most of them
are better poets than their theories would indicate, and their practise,
like Wordsworth’s in a similar predicament, is perhaps sufficient guide
to the kind of naturalness they are after. _An Extempore Effusion upon
the Death of James Hogg_ is the kind of naturalness Wordsworth fell into
when he was off his guard. “Other poets”, says a more modern cultivator
of naturalism, “will come and perchance perfect where these men have
given the tools. Other writers, forgetting the stormy times in which
this movement had its birth, will inherit in plenitude and calm that for
which they have fought.” Most of us who are convinced that all speech is
artful in so far as it is intelligible, can occasionally put up with a
bit of fine writing like this, but we note in passing that “perchance”
and “plenitude” are not the language of common speech today. As for the
fear of inversions and the sacredness of the natural word-order, it is
enough for the moment to observe that no one order is natural for all
peoples, nor for any one speech at all times; different word-orders
express different states of emotion, even different ideas, and one is
as natural as the other. “Tell me not in mournful numbers” or “Tell not
me in mournful numbers”—which is the natural order? From another and
contemporary New England poet, who sticks valiantly for the natural
sequence of speech, we may examine a characteristic line, which has as
high a percentage of nature in it as absence of art can insure—“I must
pass that door to go to bed.” Would it be less natural to say, “To go to
bed, I must pass that door”?

To practise artifice and yet to seem spontaneous, to be natural and yet
to achieve art—these ancient paradoxes against which the cultivators
of the natural arrive, in both the subject-matter and the medium of
literature, need to be examined in greater detail, but it is well to
observe them first in a general way, in order to mark how much confusion
lies on the very surface of such thinking. It is emotion perhaps rather
than thinking; it is a protest in another form against what seems old and
inherited; it is an impatience with art itself. Yet art exerts its old
charm upon us all, and the worshipper of the natural succumbs unawares to
every triumph over nature. In American letters we fix on Abraham Lincoln
as our type of natural expression; the legend of his humble beginnings
and the plainness of his manner deceive us into a conviction that he was
less indebted to art than Thomas Jefferson, and we therefore talk of the
rhetorical extravagances of the Declaration and contrast them with the
Attic simplicities of the Gettysburg Address. Perhaps we see a final
proof of our sound taste in the story that Matthew Arnold gave up the
Address for lost when he got to the colloquial “proposition”; “dedicated
to the proposition”, we say, was more than his artificial spirit could
bear. Whether Arnold expressed such an opinion, or whether he would
have been right in so doing, is of less consequence than our emotional
readiness, if we cultivate the natural, to accept the Lincoln speech as
an illustration of our ideal, and to set it over against the artifice of
Jefferson’s great document—to detect a literary manner in such a phrase
as “When in the course of human events”, and nothing but naturalness in
“Fourscore and seven years ago”—or to find an empty and sounding rhetoric
in “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”, but only the democratic
syllables of common sense in “government of the people, by the people,
for the people.” Both documents are as rich as they can well be in
rhetoric, as all great oratory is, and of the two, Lincoln’s as a matter
of fact is rather more artful in the progress of its ideas.


II

Our confusion in the search for the natural in art springs from the many
different meanings that attach to both words, art and nature. For most
of us, perhaps, art is a decoration, something supplementary to life; in
the spirit of this definition we understand what it is to cultivate the
arts—to buy pictures when our means will permit us that addition to more
primary interests, or to attend the opera after the preliminary stages of
our social pilgrimage. We use the word art so often in this bad sense,
with the implication of insincerity, that there is something bracing in
any invitation to return to nature and to be once more what we were while
we still were honest with ourselves and had a sense of humor.

This nature that we return to, haunts our thoughts as a fixed state
in which the wise soul can find enduring refuge. Just how we get the
idea that nature is stable, is not easy to see; the notion often
exists in our minds side by side with a deep conviction that life is a
flux, and that time and space are but relative terms in the universal
stream. But perhaps it is the outer appearance of the world, nature as
landscape, that first suggests a refuge even against time, mountains
are so immovable in their mysterious silence for us as for Wordsworth,
the ocean is so untamable for us, as it was for Byron. Perhaps also the
contemplation of the changing universe during the past century of daring
and imaginative science has endowed nature with a romantic career of
its own, such as the old humanists ascribed only to men; perhaps the
progress of stars, planets and solar systems, observed or guessed at,
suggests in spite of the evolution it illustrates a deeper kind of rest
in the laws by which that evolution conducts itself; so that the last
result of turning from human art to watch the behavior of inanimate
things is the conviction that nothing is really inanimate, but that all
move in the wisdom of an art superhuman, in an order peaceful and eternal
as only a divine vitality could conceive. When we think of nature in this
sense of the word, leaving man out of the picture, ourselves too as far
as possible who do the thinking, we are ready to say with Emerson that
art is an impertinent intrusion, nature is all. “Nature in the common
sense refers to essences unchanged by man; space, the air, the river, the
leaf; art is applied to the mixture of his will with the same things,
as in a house, a canal, a statue, a picture; but his operations taken
together are so insignificant,—a little shaping, baking, patching and
washing,—that in an impression so grand as that of the world on the human
mind they do not vary the result.”

We can speak of nature in this all-embracing way so long as, like
Emerson for the moment, we lay aside every thought of man and of the
moral world which he creates or brings under his control, and in which
his responsibility is fixed. But once we resume that human outlook, we
begin to use the word natural in at least two other senses. In the first
place we use it to describe the process of life, that constant birth or
becoming which seems to have been present to the mind of the Greek also
when he used his word for nature—as when Aristotle says, in a famous
phrase, that art is an imitation of nature, meaning that the process of
art is a copy of the processes of birth and becoming, and creates by the
same methods that life does. In this sense of the word nature is like
art, not opposed to it, and with this interpretation Polixenes tried to
rebuke the cult of the natural in Perdita, who would not have in her
garden a flower artificially bred:

    Yet nature is made better by no mean,
    But nature makes that mean: so, o’er that art
    Which you say adds to nature, is an art
    That nature makes. You see, sweet maid, we marry
    A gentler scion to the wildest stock,
    And make conceive a bark of baser kind
    By bud of nobler race: this is an art
    Which does mend nature—change it rather: but
    The art itself is nature.

We use the word nature also to describe the raw material of life which is
the result of a previous birth or becoming. It is what some earlier art,
human or divine, has already worked on, and what we must work on now if
art is to continue. Nature in this sense is the marble, the color, the
language which are to be the mediums of various arts; human passions and
instincts also, the social and the material environments which attend our
lives, the accidents of fortune which make up their plots; and since all
this is what art must work upon, nature so defined is forever somewhat
opposed to art, as inanimate materials are opposed to the workman, as
the wood and the chisel are opposed to the carpenter. For art is the
use of the materials of life for human benefit, a method employed for
a premeditated end in a world which except for art might seem given
over to chance. Because it is a rearrangement and a control of nature
to effect the will of man, life itself, so far as it becomes civilized,
becomes an art. But in a world as old as ours the raw material with
which art deals is itself the result of art; the wood has been already
shaped into boards, the chisel and the hammer have been made into tools
before the carpenter touches them, and the environment in which the
carpenter is born, the instincts and passions he inherits, the turns and
coincidences of his fate, are all probably the result of what others
before him made of their materials and opportunities. Thinking of life
so, we see it as an alternation of nature and art, or as an alternation
in which what first is art becomes afterwards nature, all the achievement
of one generation turning into mere starting point and opportunity for
the next; and thinking of life so, we understand how nature, to the
true artist, is forever set over against art in a contrast that implies
affection rather than antagonism, for those who instead of defining
art as a decorative supplement to life identify it with civilization
itself, are free to love nature without abandoning an ideal, as a
sculptor is free to love fine marble, or the painter to love his medium
of tint and tone. With time and by such a process of reworking, nature
draws nearer and nearer to art; the raw material is made constantly
more orderly by rearrangement, as a field is enriched by plowing in the
crops. Even in the sphere of human character this is true, in the very
seat of the natural, in our instincts and passions; for though we may
agree that character should be measured by a moral career rather than
by impulses wholly innate, yet it is well to reflect that your impulses
and sentiments, if you are born and brought up in Florence or Chartres,
Heidelberg or Seville, are likely to be different from the impulses
and sentiments natural to a child born or brought up in The Bronx or
in Hoboken. In the eyes of the naturalist, nature is all, as Emerson
said, and art only a little shaping, baking, patching and washing, but
to the artist who carries in his imagination something of the scope of
agelong growth and creation, the truth is what Nature said to the poet in
Voltaire’s dialogue—“They call me nature, but by this time I am become
all art.”


III

The possibility, then, of returning to nature disappears when we realize
how long a road we have traveled; all that the most primitive minded of
us can do is to stick close to the raw material of his own life, to the
circumstances with which the art of his predecessors surrounded him. This
is the nature which the realists cultivate today. They report those facts
of life from which art might take its beginning, but they report them as
much as possible in an arrested state, for fear they might pass on into
art. Among the poets one, catching the accent of the spoken language,
gives us the language of one phase of New England; another, with a
like faithfulness to the natural cadence, gives us another kind of New
England speech; a third has the colloquialism of Illinois. They are all
artists, or they would not mean much to us, but in so far as they have
followed their own ideals of the natural they have laid aside some of
the magician’s robes to which by inheritance they are entitled, and they
leave with us their renderings of our world in a form of utterance less
noble than their theme and out of harmony with it. In our prose and verse
alike, the studied inadequacy of style to the occasion is a standing
reproach to us, all the worse since it is often the pose of an inverted
vanity, like the democratic conviction still flourishing in the land that
the dinner coat or the evening coat is an artifice of a worn-out society,
whereas the senatorial frock coat and wide hat are natural and God-given
sheathings of our original nakedness.

To revert to the starting point of our lives is to seek nature in vain,
since the alternations of art and nature proceed relentlessly, whether
we rest our dead weight on the process or try to help it along. It is a
vain flattery of our reluctance to travel, to take our seat always in
the last car. But, however futile, the cult of the natural in literature
has a reasonable explanation, and it is well to understand with sympathy
why it is likely to recur periodically in a civilization that must feel
its age more and more. Art criticizes life, as we have often been told,
by selecting or sifting it; that is what the word criticism means.
The authority that art has over us, its right to make such a sifting,
derives not from books but from the human brain itself, from the method
of memory; we remember only by forgetting most of the things we have
done or have suffered, and rearranging the rest. As we grow older life
becomes clearer, we say, thanks to this selection and forgetting. When
art sifts life, then, it is only imitating the process of nature, and
when we observe the process we can understand why the Greeks said that
memory was the mother of the muses. But this sifting of life on the part
of memory and of art is progressive, and in all honesty we may wonder at
times whether it has not gone too far. Some of the clarity of vision,
the firmness of doctrine, which is the reward of old age, may be not the
genuine harvesting of experience which is almost the gift of prophecy;
it may be rather a partial memory which seems clear because so much has
been left out. If a poet could get a first-hand impression of life, his
art would be one sifting of nature; if he reacts not only to nature but
to the interpretations of other poets, his art is a second sifting,
more highly organized, perhaps, more intelligible, than is normally
recorded from immediate contact with life. It makes no difference
whether we call these siftings poetry or criticism, since poetry, as
Arnold reminded us, is a criticism of life. The poet may submit his
sensitiveness to nature as sifted through three or four or any number
of interventions of personality, and we may call the result poetry, or
criticism, or criticism of criticism; very often we cannot tell, and
the poet does not know, whether the life that stimulates him is direct
or transmitted. But in each remove from the first contact with nature,
in each additional intervention of personality, we get a clearer order
and a finer intelligibility—truth instead of facts, formulas instead of
experiences, and fewer exceptions. The literature, then, which begins in
naturalism will at last emerge in philosophy, if we allow it time enough,
and the biography of an individual will be condensed and generalized into
a proverb.

There are two good reasons, however, for suspecting this economical
result. One is that the proverb is probably not true. To arrive at it,
in each successive sifting we have left out something, and the total of
all the omissions has become almost as comprehensive as the original
experience. We must go back and gather up the discarded fragments of
our adventure, in order to qualify properly our too simple and absolute
summary of life. The art of the historian, we often fear, progresses by
some such over-elimination; archæology sometimes rescues him by restoring
large sections of a past, the absence of which he had not noticed, but in
periods too recent for archæology to take him by surprise, he constantly
rewrites his history, to sift it more to his mind, until we may suspect
that his account is nearer to our philosophy than to the original facts.
In history this tendency is hardly a matter of concern, for if we have a
criticism of the eighteenth century which satisfies us, we are content,
and the eighteenth century, being dead and gone, will not mind; the poet,
therefore, can look on with equanimity while the historians propose to
rewrite our national life in order to bring it more in harmony with our
present sentiments toward this or that other country; the poet knows
that history is not a science but one of the most fascinating of the
arts, closely allied to eloquence in its mission to teach and persuade,
and that having to do strictly with the past it enjoys rare freedom in
sifting its facts. But the poet himself enjoys no such freedom. Whatever
he writes will be checked up by the life we now live; his readers will
look into their hearts and criticize. If therefore he has gained his
clarity by leaving out things essential in our experience, we reject him
as too far from our reality to be of consequence to the race. He may be
a philosopher; he is no poet.

His philosophy may even be true, and yet his right to the laurel may be
justly denied. For the special service of art is to make us live more
intensely in the very life which art sifts and selects—in fact, the
sifting has for its conscious purpose a more vivid realization of what we
live through, and a novel or a play is successful, from the standpoint
of imaginative literature, only in the degree to which we enter the
work, become ourselves the hero, fall in love with the heroine, hate
the villain. In this sense the dime novel and the melodrama, though
carelessly branded by the theorist as bad art, are likely to be very
good art indeed, and the over-reasoned story, though adorned with subtle
reflection and refinements of diction, is in fact poor art, as the
average person in his heart knows, for in such books the reflection
upon life is paid for by a failure to represent what the reflection is
about. If the author would only share with us the adventures that caused
him to reflect, we could do our own reflecting upon them, but if he
will not share the secret which inspires him, we do not care much what
philosophizing he does. Literature continues to be great so long as the
sifting it makes it really a selection only from life, and what remains
is for the imagination still a first-hand experience; when the residue
grows thin to the imagination and addresses itself rather to logic, we
feel justified in making whatever return we can to our starting point in
nature, to reassure ourselves there, if we cannot in the book, that this
human life we love is still with us.


IV

If such a taking to cover is observed in much writing today, the writers
who in one form or another now cultivate nature rather than art may
plead with justice that the best literature our country produced before
them was perilously deficient in a sense of reality. If they do so
plead, however, they ought to be consistent. If they think that so great
an artist as Hawthorne was deficient in reality, that transcendental
philosophy occupies too much room in his romances and the sense of
actual American life too little, then they ought not to tell us at
the same time that Poe and Whitman are our great poets, for those
two were even further along toward the abstract than Hawthorne. And
there will be an increasing obligation on those who in each generation
of the fast-ripening world make a return to nature, to provide some
demonstration that it is not life after all they are running away from.
Some men have taken to the hermit’s cell to find God; others to avoid
responsibility. As civilization becomes greater in quantity, with more
discoveries of science, with more apparatus of education, we need more
and more the poetic genius that will dedicate this material to great
ends, and by articulating for us what we can recognize as our best ideal,
teach us to simplify life by casting off the other less significant
interests. The solution of all this raw material for art can only be
a greater art. When we turn back from this heroic opportunity to take
refuge in what is for us nature, we must convince ourselves, if we can
that our retreat does not indicate in us inadequate equipment or weak
nerve or small heart.

In our present cult of the natural there is cause to suspect some such
lack of skill and courage. The plea that our predecessors were so
deficient in reality that we, to save the day, must exhibit less art than
theirs, will not go in the long run. Our new poetry is curiously relaxed
and enervated in temper, ground-hugging, grey and flat; if we have moods
which such writing adequately represents, we have other moments more
cheerful and creative, which our architecture and our engineering manage
to express, but which cannot be guessed at in our poetry, not as much as
the oak can be guessed at in the acorn. Our novels, too, have lost their
courage, and though they often represent photographically the machine of
civilization which builds up around us, and which now is the raw material
on which our art is to operate, they do not even attempt to portray the
spirit of the artist which actually pervades the land, the joy in putting
the machine to human uses, the almost divine ecstasy in having made so
much of nature subject already to the mind. This mood of confidence in
art is as much a fact in our national life as the number of gallons that
flow over Niagara each hour, but the poets and novelists seem to have
taken fright.

In both verse and prose, in style as well as subject, the cult of the
natural has limited our writers to a few individualistic attitudes, and
has taken from them the power to speak with authority on all subjects
for us all. We have no American poet, no American novelist; each is
the poet or novelist of Vermont or Boston or Maine or Chicago—whatever
scene is to him by birth or habit his natural world. To find a universal
utterance of universal experience is the aim and the tendency of art,
but the cult of nature compels us to return each in what state he came.
The counsel to use the language of ordinary speech limits us to the
speech of some locality; and such limitation is a fatal handicap for
great poetry. The advice to use only the natural word-order limits us to
the word-order which each of us finds natural, whereas it is our duty, on
the contrary, if we make any claim to mastery in literature, to enlarge
our vocabulary even beyond the words our family and our neighbors made
natural to us, and to cultivate all the variety of word-order our speech
permits, that we may enrich and refine our style, and render our meaning
more precise. The temptation to get along with a small vocabulary and a
meagre change of construction is altogether too natural; we did not need
this premeditated urging to a still greater poverty. Hitherto the best
remedy for a narrow equipment in language has been to read constantly
in the great writers; it was they who extended the powers of speech and
laid upon each tongue the shape and cadence which to the ill-informed
might seem the gift of nature. But now that the ideal of the writer is to
shrink to the measure of the conversation he is used to, how shall our
nobler moments find expression? Not even in reading old authors, for by
the contemporary doctrine of naturalness the old masters are artificial.
“Whither thou goest, I will go, and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy
people shall be my people, and thy God my God. Where thou diest, will I
die, and there will I be buried.” ... “At her feet he bowed, he fell, he
lay down; at her feet he bowed, he fell; where he bowed there he fell
down dead.” ... “Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be
broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at
the cistern. Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was, and the
spirit shall return unto God who gave it.”

These cadences are not natural, and they are not modeled on the sounds
that habitually fill our ears. Their distinction, or if you like, their
condemnation, is that they are works of art. Such language gets away
as far as it can from time and place, and by much sifting out from
unessentials it tries to preserve a universal appeal. If you can write
this way at all, you can write as well in New York as in London, as well
now as in 1611.

The purpose of art is to make its subject-matter also universal, to sift
and rearrange the raw material of life into a history that will have as
much meaning as possible for as many readers as possible, for as long as
possible. But the cult of the natural tends to the opposite effect—to
make the subject-matter of literature temporary in its interest and
limited in its meaning. The Broadway entertainments which please us for
the moment, since they conform to our taste in the spontaneous, the
impromptu and the natural, are but the raw material of drama; good plays
might be made out of them; but in each case the author stops the story
before we pass from nature to art. It is natural, in the sense of our
definition, that a stoker in modern times should have two ideas—that
to the idle and effete he may seem akin to the missing link, and that
since he is at the bottom of society, he must be supporting it. Quite
a philosophy can be made out of two ideas, and these two, when put
together, as in a recent drama, promise an explosion. But after all,
nothing explodes. The man simply enunciates his two ideas in different
accents of violence, until the author thinks it is time to stop, and
gets him strangled in the zoo. An artist would have been interested to
see in action a character with such a philosophy. We have recently seen
another play with an idea, a very simple one; by any means in her power a
girl is going to capture the man she loves. Since the only means in her
power are eccentric ones, we watch her eccentricity with astonishment for
three acts; her behavior is original, like nothing that ever was or will
be, and our interest is held by the growing desperation of her ingenuity.
Well, she gets him—for much the same reason that the philosophic stoker
was strangled, because it is time for the audience to go home. An artist
would have granted her ambition as natural, and her success as natural
too; he would have shown us, however, what happened after her success,
when her philosophy of opportunism in etiquette would have met its
test. Had _Much Ado About Nothing_ been written by the author of either
of the plays just described, the famous comedy would never have got
further than the raw material of the story, the legend that Benedick and
Beatrice waged a merry war between them; we should have had an evening’s
entertainment of jokes and insults, made gradually more intensive, more
violent and more surprising in order to hold us till the last curtain.
Shakespeare, choosing the way of art, begins rather at the point where
the wit of Beatrice and Benedick is exhausted; they have the reputation
for it, but their public efforts show signs of strain and flagging. From
this start in nature the play proceeds to represent what happened to
Benedick and Beatrice, the witty enemies, when serious accidents brought
their fates together.


V

Nowhere in literature, perhaps, is art so obviously essential and
naturalism so obviously fatal as in drama, for drama, by exhibiting life
to us directly, quickens to its utmost whatever desire we have to see
our fellows move on from their natural beginnings to some achievement or
significant conclusion. Impulses, ideas, motives, prejudices, passions,
and as we now say, complexes, are all natural forms of energy; in real
life they weary us if they have only a lyric expression, and we wish
they would get started into action. Their attempts toward action may
be thwarted, and such a defeat may be tragically significant, but at
least they should try, and if instead of trying they waste themselves
in talk, they become not energies but nuisances. It is for this reason,
we suppose, that Aristotle long ago cautioned us that tragedy, or all
drama, is an imitation not of men but of an action, and that plot is the
essential thing. He might have said that character may exist in a state
of nature, but plot presupposes art in life, a selection from all other
incidents of one succession of events which so selected have a meaning.
What he did say was that without action there can be no drama, but there
may be without character. Plot is a generalization of life, in which the
actors may or may not be portrayed as individuals. The woman who lost
the piece of silver, the good Samaritan, the mother of Œdipus, are clear
enough in their universal relation to the story in which they appear;
their personalities may be restated to suit our taste, or left undefined.
We read in the newspaper that a man jumps into the river to save a
drowning child, and having got to land, discovers that he has rescued his
own son. We live in that drama without asking what was the character of
the father or what was the psychology of the son.

It is remarkable how Shakespeare illustrates Aristotle’s doctrine, by
showing his characters in action and by avoiding as far as possible an
analysis of their motives, their instincts, their prejudices, their
passions. Life with him finds expression in art or not at all. It is a
mirror indeed which he applies to nature, not a microscope; in his glass
we see the form of virtue and the features of vice, we know who are
good and who are bad, at least as accurately as we form such judgments
in life, but we do not know the motives of the good or the bad. What
were Falstaff’s motives? Should he be acted as a comic or a tragic
character? Why did Portia like Bassanio? Why did Cordelia take such
an absolute stand with her father? What did Hero think of Claudio, or
Hermione of Leontes, after the restoration to the jealous husband? Was
Hamlet’s mother an accessory to the murder of his father, or did her
conscience trouble her only because she had made a second marriage and in
such haste? The profundity of Shakespeare’s art lies in his genius for
representing the surface of action; in art as in ethics, life is chiefly
conduct, and it is enough that behind conduct lies unprobed the same
mystery that lies behind existence itself.

But since naturalism thinks otherwise, Shakespeare is no longer our
example. Browning is more in our vein. For him the natural man, the raw
material of each one of us, the hidden instincts and impulses, must be
the whole subject, and action he finds useful only in the fragmentary
incidents that must be premised before you can conclude anything even
about instincts. Few verdicts in criticism are wider of the mark than
the too familiar saying that Browning’s genius is Shakespearean. He
is the opposite of Shakespeare. He is absorbed in what we call in a
loose way psychology, in the original man apart from his conduct, or
as far apart from it as you can separate him. To be so concerned about
motives and instincts is to be a kind of inverted dramatist, moving
back from action instead of toward it; it is no wonder, therefore, that
Browning’s so-called dramas fail on the stage, since in that direct
relation to the audience their static naturalness, their inability to
live out a significance in conduct, is pitilessly revealed. Everybody
examines himself and talks about himself, as God made him; nothing
gets under way; the audience is finally delivered by the death of the
soliloquizer, not in a zoo, but more politely, it may be, in a gondola.
“Even if you string together a set of speeches expressive of character,”
said Aristotle, “though well finished in diction and in thought, yet
you will not produce the essential tragic effect nearly so well as with
a play which, however deficient in these respects, yet has a plot and
artistically constructed incidents.” To return to nature absolutely
would be to return to silence. Short of silence, to return to nature in
literature is to confess your private character in monologue. Browning is
master in that kind. It would be untactful to name the writers today who
share the mastery with him, and perhaps it is enough merely to suggest
the idea. To save time we might prudently meditate rather upon the few
poets and novelists remaining whose art gets further than monologue.

Meanwhile the universe marches on its secret errand, not altogether
secret since it marches, and its art is slowly dramatized in its vast
conduct. Art for art’s sake is a formula inspiring if taken in a noble
sense, but in any sense it is intelligible as a programme deliberately
chosen. To cultivate nature for nature’s sake is absurd. For nature is
here without our aid, and to preserve it in what we call its pure state,
we need cultivate nothing—unless it be a more animal contentedness to
profit in indolence by the art of those who came before us.




IV

THE CULT OF THE CONTEMPORARY


I

“The end of playing”, said Hamlet, “both at the first and now, was and
is, to show the very age and body of the time, his form and presence.” It
would seem that Hamlet thought the business of art was to portray the age
in which the artist lived, not only to address his contemporaries, but to
speak to them about themselves. The cult of the contemporary, then, in
our own day could ask for no better text than this phrase of the Prince
of Denmark; what a pity he uttered it so long ago!

Shakespeare did not agree with Hamlet—at least, he made some pretence
to show his Elizabethan audience the form and presence of remote times
and far-away countries, Rome and Athens, Denmark itself, Italy, Scotland,
Bohemia, the age of King John and the Richards and the Henrys, the
time and place, whatever they were, of _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, the
_Tempest_, _Cymbeline_, the _Winter’s Tale_. And Hamlet himself, be it
noted, is hardly faithful to his theory, for when he asks the players to
repeat a favorite speech of his, it turns out to be Æneas’s tale to Dido.
It was from a piece, he said, that pleased not the million, perhaps never
had a second performance, but in the judgment of the competent and in his
own opinion it was an excellent play. Perhaps the million were at the
moment bred exclusively to appreciate contemporary themes; costume plays
were not the fashion. Hamlet’s other choice in drama is poor evidence
of his esthetic theory; the murder of Gonzaga seems to have been already
ancient history, but he chose it to catch the conscience of the king,
since the story fitted his own household tragedy. Shall we follow the
hint, and suggest that Hamlet, like Shakespeare, really had nothing in
common with those who would make contemporary life the proper subject for
art? Perhaps he would not have mentioned the age and body of the time,
if he had not just said that the end of playing is to show scorn her own
image, if indeed the purpose of his meddling with the drama at all, at
that moment, had not been to sting the royal murderer into a confession
of his guilt.

The cult of the contemporary follows logically from the cult of the
natural. If we are to write of a life untouched with art, we can write
only of life about us, as our fathers left it to us—our best of nature,
the talent buried in a napkin; and if we are to use the ordinary
language of men, we must use today’s language, the only speech that to
us is ordinary. And if it is possible to understand the search for the
natural as an effort to correct the generalizing tendency in literature,
we may also find a sympathetic explanation of the insistence on the
contemporary, when we recall how many writers have reasoned themselves
into a determination to walk in the ways of their heart and in the
sight of their eyes. Did not Homer celebrate the glory of Hellenism?
Did not Virgil celebrate the empire of Rome? Well, then, we ought to
celebrate the United States, our United States, rather than the country
of Washington or Jefferson; we ought to celebrate the hour and the place
we know, for we ought to love what we know—New York, Boston, Chicago
or the Middle West. This conclusion seems rational, but the desired
enthusiasm does not follow; the celebration of the contemporary in our
literature is as dreary in its results as the worship of the natural,
inspired merely by the sense of some duty rather than by delight in what
is portrayed. Homer’s zest for Hellenism is undeniable, and the instinct
is right that we, too, must love life as he loved it before we can write
as he wrote. For the moment we postpone the question, whether we must
not also live a life as noble in kind as he portrayed. Virgil, writing
in a more complicated, a sadder age, none the less loved imperial Rome,
and we are right to think that before we shall be worthy to sing of our
own land, in its own grave and complex era, we must take it to heart,
problems and all. “The proof of a poet”, said Whitman, “shall be sternly
deferred till his country absorbs him as affectionately as he absorbed
it.” But Whitman’s own practise is a provoking comment on his saying; he
succeeded remarkably in loving his land under an eternal form; the form
and presence of his day he did not leave us. His poems are no guide-books
to Manhattan and Long Island in 1855; even his beloved ferry-boats are
dateless.

In what sense, then, would Whitman have us love our country, the home
of our own times, and how did Homer and Virgil, as artists, love the
Greece or the Rome they knew? To be of one’s age, yet to be immortal, is
a problem more subtle perhaps than to achieve an art that seems natural,
but it can be solved in the same way, by defining the terms of our
esthetic, and by referring them, as to a touchstone, to what we know of
our common human nature. The question can also be narrowed at the start,
and very profitably, by pressing home our reflections on Hamlet’s remark
to the players. There is one kind of writing which does confine itself
to the feature of virtue and the image of scorn, and which does indeed,
for that very reason, limit itself always to giving the form and presence
of the time—the kind of writing, that is, which indicts human nature
instead of portraying it. Our better selves, our ideals, are of no time,
but our faults are personal responsibilities and strictly contemporary.
Satire, therefore, which holds up to merriment or to scorn what is
ridiculous or base, must always take a present subject, and in general
any art that leans toward the consideration of our shortcomings will lean
also toward the life enacted at the moment. If Hamlet meant to trap the
king, of course he would write into the old play the very murder the king
had committed only three or four months ago; this would not be satire in
the usual sense, but it would serve the same end, to convict the guilty
and to reform the world. The cult of the contemporary, then, is proper
quite literally for satire; it remains only to ask how far it is proper
for art.

But is satire not art? Did not Martial and Juvenal, Dryden and Pope write
highly artistic satires? There is an art of satire, we must answer, as
there is an art of preaching and an art of prosecuting a criminal case.
But if there is a distinction between art and morals, then satire belongs
to the world of ethics, and of ethics on the grim side, rather than to
the world of beauty and delight. To survey and judge the morals of one’s
age is a serious office that no thoughtful and sensitive person seems
altogether to neglect; if the purpose of art is to make such a survey, as
Hamlet seems to say, then _Twelfth Night_ is hardly a masterpiece in art,
and _Sandford and Merton_ is certainly one. If art, on the other hand,
has for its purpose to salvage out of our crude days the truth which can
be translated into beauty, and which so translated may be a joy for ever,
then art will have as little as possible to do with men’s faults—what
faults are joys for ever?—and the kind of writing which confines itself
to our frailties or our sins will be as far removed as possible from
art. Moreover, the moralist desires a cure of souls, and when the fault
is remedied, who will care for the satire or even understand it? It is
easy enough, without taking thought, to perish with our own time, but it
is one of the oldest hopes art has held out to natural man, that being
purified into art he should not altogether die. But mortality is germane
to satire. When we read Dryden’s terrible excoriations of Og and Doeg, we
can only wonder who were the human beings he hated so, and when we come
to know something of their lives and characters, we are more confused to
name the moral impulse in him which made it necessary to fix them in so
warm a hell. In art, loving your own times does not mean loving to find
fault with them.


II

A genuine love of your own time is the recognition, in what you meet in
it, of those best moments which crave to be made accessible even for the
remotest of ages following. To immortalize any given moment, however,
is to take it out of the temporary and somehow to find a language for
it so general in its appeal that hereafter it may preserve in its own
significance the trivial circumstances from which it first arose.
Whenever a genuine love of life stirs the artist, it will be a passion
for what he thinks is the best in his own day; even if he is antiquarian
and takes for object of his devotion some medieval phase of life, it
is medievalism in his own day that he worships. Such a passion leads
the writer toward the future, for since it is an ideal passion, yet to
be realized, he instinctively proclaims it to posterity, or tries to;
but in his search for the right language in which to utter it, he as
instinctively turns to the past. To cultivate the contemporary in art
is therefore as absurd as to waste effort cultivating the natural, for
the present, like nature, is always with us; but the problem for the
artist is to express a vision which necessarily points toward the future
in language which necessarily trails from the past. We cannot remind
ourselves too often that even the single words of common speech must be
used by each one of us perhaps a lifetime before they are charged with
emotions or sharpened to precise meanings, and before the writer can
use them with full effect they must be so charged and sharpened for all
his readers. The language of poetry, moreover, is far more than single
words; it is chiefly the metaphors and the legends, the characters and
the episodes, which the race has met with so often that at last they
suggest accurately to all men the same feelings and the same thoughts.
Life at each moment may be on its way to become something to talk with,
but only the rash would try to express a serious ideal through a picture
of that life which is still near us, and therefore still imperfectly
seasoned or digested. The patriotism that Shakespeare dramatized for
his audience was certainly a passion for the England of Elizabeth; that
is why he expressed it through Faulconbridge, the child of Richard the
Lion-Hearted, or through John of Gaunt, or through Henry V. Why did he
not put Elizabeth on his stage, with Raleigh and Spenser and Drake and
Sidney? Was he blind to the glory of his own hour? He seems not to have
been so, but in his own hour neither the Queen nor any of her great
courtiers was as clear a figure to the emotions as time has since made
them all; the sentiment of the audience would be divided as to each one
of them, the adherents to Rome still perhaps cursing Henry’s daughter
in their hearts, the friends of Ireland perhaps cursing the poet of the
_Faerie Queene_. But the wise dramatist was on safe ground, he knew, when
the audience heard their common love of country issue unprejudiced from
the lips of old Gaunt, who died two centuries earlier:

    This fortress, built by nature for herself,
    Against infection and the hand of war;
    This happy breed of men, this little world,
    This precious stone set in the silver sea,
    Which serves it in the office of a wall,
    Or as a moat defensive to a house,
    Against the envy of less happier lands;
    This blessed spot, this earth, this realm, this England.

When a poet turns to the past for language with which to express his
love of the present or his vision of the future, he soon learns that not
all epochs lend themselves with equal felicity to his purpose; he must
select that aspect of the past which is adequate in nobility and energy
to what he has to say, and he must select that aspect of the past which
will be understood emotionally by his readers. We are prepared, every
one of us perhaps, to admit the necessity of this twofold selection, but
to admit so much is to admit a good deal; it is to admit that not all
epochs are equally available for the language of art, and that though
we exist in our own time, it may be the part of wisdom and good taste
to derive our artistic speech from another period. When Molière’s hero
pronounces his scorn of artificial verse and contrasts with it an old
song of the people, he is rejecting a fashion that was contemporary and
temporary for one that was lasting. When Homer wrote of ancient Troy, or
when Æneas sang the founding of Rome, either poet was choosing the date
of his story with the same taste with which he selected his theme, or
selected the words of which to make his lines; he was choosing what the
race after long reflection had realized was dignified, noble and true in
feeling. The poet, whoever he was, that left us the _Song of Roland_,
no doubt was expressing a sentiment toward France which flourished in
his own day, and which may have been very foreign to the feelings of
the original Roland; as in the other instances, the old story had to be
changed and expurgated to make it altogether the vehicle of contemporary
experience; yet he was right in taking the great figure of Roland for
the outer clothing or language of his emotions, since heroic sentiments
had already connected themselves with Charlemagne’s peer, as they had
not yet with William of Normandy, nor with his immediate predecessors.
In English history there have been efficient and picturesque rulers in
plenty, yet the poets were right who have retold their national epics in
the story of Arthur rather than in the biographies of Alfred or Edward I
or Cromwell; for the Arthurian legend as the race has chosen to remember
it is of richer fabric emotionally and of a simpler structure than any
nearer and more actual history could well be. Theodore Roosevelt, for all
we know, may have been a greater man than Cromwell, and time may make him
seem more significant, but if the poet wishes to say things about the
strenuous life, he had better say them now through the image of Cromwell,
about whom our emotions are more classified; better still if he says
them through the image of King Arthur, who much more than Cromwell has
become a precise symbol in the imagination. Arthur was to have been the
hero of Milton’s epic—at least, Milton considered him for a possible hero
but discarded him in favor, not of Cromwell or Hampden, but of Adam; and
again the choice was wise, since Adam is still an image more universally
understood than any of Milton’s contemporaries, and we know what we are
expected to feel when we hear his story.

To say then that in writing, even when our purpose is art and not
satire, we should express ourselves in terms of the life about us, is
to lay down a formula which has been contradicted in practise by the
influential writers of the world. To find a language already wide-spread
and therefore intelligible, the artist will always draw to some extent
on the past, even though he does so unconsciously, and how far he goes
back into the past will depend on what it is he wants to express. In
_Henry Esmond_, Thackeray used the age of Marlborough to express a flavor
of romance that could not be said in life of a later date. But when
he had satire for his purpose, as in _Vanity Fair_, he chose a period
comparatively modern. It is but fair to observe, however, that Thackeray
follows this principle with very uncertain skill. The period he chose for
his great satire was somewhat more remote than for _Pendennis_ or _The
Newcomes_, where his purpose was less obviously and exclusively moral;
the resulting effect in each case is somewhat peculiar, since most of us,
unless we count up the dates, perhaps get the impression that _Vanity
Fair_ was the contemporary book. In one sense it makes little difference,
and we might use the illustration to indicate that it is the method of
treatment, rather than the life portrayed, that will make a book seem
contemporary. But we are left to wonder also whether Thackeray did not
intend _Vanity Fair_ to be more satirical in its effect than it actually
is, and _The Newcomes_ to be less so. Did the great but easy-going artist
make here a careless choice of the time for his story?

Even the writers who seem now to have been most contemporary were really
not so; what seems contemporary in them are eternal aspects of life,
which even in their day were old. We sometimes doubt the value of those
scholarly labors which search out for us the sources, so-called, of the
great poets, the residuum of earlier times which they adapted to express
their genius; but these labors would be justified sufficiently by the
answer they give to those who think that art speaks through contemporary
life. They think that we should look in our heart and write, as Sidney
did, or return directly to nature, as did Wordsworth, forgetting
that when Sidney looked in his heart to write, he wrote some masterly
translations and paraphrases of earlier Italian or French poems, and
that when Wordsworth drew on his personal experience, as in the immortal
lines to the Cuckoo, he recast an earlier fine poem by Michael Bruce.
The believers in the contemporary urge us to paint the record of our own
times as immediately as Chaucer wove his neighbors into the tapestry of
the Canterbury Tales; they do not know how many versions there were of
the famous tales before Chaucer shaped them to his own purposes. Indeed,
so much of the past has gone into all that we now are or say or do, that
the attempt to detach ourselves from the best that has gone before is
in a way a denial of contemporary character to our own times, or to any
other period; for the quality of civilization in 1923 which distinguishes
it from civilization in 1823 is the gift, for good or evil, of the
hundred years in between; and to be contemporary with any moment in
history is to be aware of all the past that still is articulate in that
moment.


III

If a writer fails to use the past as the language with which to express
his present, the reason may be that he does not know the past, or that
he has theoretical objections to using it so, even though the great
writers have followed no other method. But this reason is rarely the
true one. Today as at other times any sincere writer will be interested
in the great examples of his art, and will find them out, and probably
the same instincts will eventually show themselves in his work as in
the work of his predecessors. Undoubtedly there are poets and novelists
today who through a mistaken cult of the natural are striving for a
strictly contemporary utterance—rejecting, that is, all that they can
recognize in our speech as having a history. If their scholarship were
more complete, they would have to reject even the meagre vocabulary
of word, image and legend they are now content to use. But the writer
who willingly would avail himself of the full inheritance in his art
finds himself limited perhaps for another reason—he finds that his
readers do not know the past, that many of them cultivate an ignorance
of it, and that, therefore, if he uses it to speak with, he may not be
understood. It is part of the discipline which every art imposes on
those who practise it, that they must speak in terms intelligible to
their audience. It remains to ask, of course, who are the audience? and
the writer, if he is sufficiently courageous, stubborn, or hopeful, may
choose to address a more intelligent audience than he finds in his day,
an audience who he thinks will at last recover the traditional tongue in
which he speaks, and for whom it will be worth his while to wait. This
may seem to some of us the only way out, but we know it is a precarious
way. Such a brilliant belated justification came to the Greek classics at
the Renaissance; it has come in music to such a giant as Bach, who was,
as we say, ahead of his own day; but to expect it to come to us merely
because our contemporaries do not appreciate us is entirely too obvious a
self-flattery. The sane artist will rather do his best to say what he has
to say in language his day understands, and he will try also to encourage
his audience in the recovery of a larger language, so that he may say
more to them.

This question whether the reader has sufficient command of the inherited
language of literature is always an acute one for the author; the lasting
successes in literature have been made at those moments when a knowledge
of the past was wide-spread, and the audience were as familiar with the
older literature as the writers were. Historical as Virgil seems to us in
the _Æneid_, almost antiquarian, he offered to his first readers nothing
they were not familiar with, and little that would not immediately
kindle an emotion. In one sense then he may be said to have spoken in
a contemporary language. But neither he nor his audience would have
understood the doctrine that art becomes great by being contemporary, and
that it becomes contemporary by discrediting the past. “To have great
poets, there must be great audiences too”, said Whitman, and here, as
elsewhere, we are coming to realize, he got at the permanent truth of
the matter. For it is a sound observation of literary historians that a
country exercises its impulses toward art, in any period, as much by
what it reads of the older books as by what it writes; the two activities
must go together if the contemporary great writer is to get a competent
hearing, and they must be studied together if we are to estimate justly
the culture of an epoch. In what was produced, some decades of the
eighteenth century in England look to us destitute of poetry, but in
those very moments Spenser, Shakespeare and Milton were widely loved, and
enjoyed perhaps a more humane and significant treatment from the critics
than they have often had since. The weakness of contemporary poetry in
Addison’s time, in Warton’s and Gray’s, was not that they knew the elder
masters, but that their practise departed so widely from them and became
so contemporary. The revival in the romantic age was brought about by
rejecting the kind of art the early eighteenth century wrote, and by
building on the still earlier art the eighteenth century had the wisdom
to love.

In our day and in our land the question of the audience is peculiarly
acute, and it has been rendered more so by the intentional efforts of
those who believe that literature should be contemporary. Even without
those efforts we, who come from many countries, with different race
memories and with the legacy of different cultures, should have had
difficulty enough to achieve a common language adequately rich in
the best things of the past and welded into some continuity with our
American future. If we write in those terms which to an Italian would be
emotional, we shall hardly stir the pulses of a Scotchman or a Slav, and
if we waken the race-memories of the Spanish or the French, we may leave
quite cold the Dutch in Pennsylvania or the Swede in Minnesota. Our first
hope, to which some of us still desperately cling, is that we may lose
no one of these racial inheritances, but that by a jealous conserving
and study of each of them, and by teaching them all to our children, we
may build up one of the richest cultures that the accidents of migration
have ever permitted the race to compose. The literature of America in a
thousand years would carry in its majestic overtones the essential beauty
of all the civilizations that have made their entry through our ports,
the essential beauty too of the wonderful Indian civilizations which our
European coming dispossessed, and above these overtones, perhaps, the
far-off suggestions of the Greek and Roman worlds and the immemorial East.

But this hope, whether or not it could be realized, is so far as we
can see at present a fantastic dream; our progress toward it has been
slight—better, to be frank, we have made no progress, rather we have
lost ground. There is less general culture of that sort in the United
States now than there was fifty years ago. It has seemed wise to many
of us, therefore, to moderate our hopes, and to aim at mastering, not
all our heritages in common, but at least one tradition, and that the
tradition of this country from the revolution till the present day. Such
a program might be carried out in our schools—not in the colleges, since
only a fraction of the country’s youth gets to college, but in those
early school years through which all the boys and girls may reasonably
be expected to pass; and there would be nothing illogical in burdening
the schools with the task, for the training of a common consciousness,
cultural or otherwise, in a land of immigrants is the chief problem of
elementary education. We thought, then, that we might all absorb our own
past and the few decades that preceded our coming, so that hereafter the
spokesmen of the nation, poets, dramatists, preachers, statesmen, might
at least touch some common chords in us all by naming those who built
up the opportunities we enjoy. This program is still in force in other
departments of study than literature, but the teachers of literature
have been largely won over to the cult of the contemporary; so far from
building up in the land a great audience for the great poets to sing to,
many energetic teachers of literature are persuading these children, if
persuasion is necessary, to read only books of the day, about things
of the day, and by inference to neglect as really negligible anything
written yesterday or written about other times and other problems than
ours. Our dream of a cosmopolitan culture has shrunk in practise to an
educational discipline which will make us more insular and provincial
than we are already, more selfish, more contemptuous of other times and
of other peoples, and still further disinherited from great art.

The movement began a few years ago in a protest against the narrow
choice of books permitted by the requirements for entrance to college.
Some of the schools thought they could do their best work if their
teachers—and their pupils—could select the books for this arduous study;
there could be some wise consulting of taste, some adaptation to special
temperaments. So long as the choice was still to be made from books of
recognized merit, it was unreasonable to deny this request. But the trend
toward the contemporary developed quickly; if we consulted the taste and
the temperament of our students, the children of many racial traditions,
we found that few of the older writers were easy for them to understand;
the difficulty of bridging over the gap between traditions was too
great for many of our teachers to solve, or perhaps they themselves were
not at home in the tradition either of the books or of the students;
and the most graceful form of surrender was to study only what was easy
for everybody. The process was paralleled in society outside of the
schoolroom, in the change in ideals and in competence which overtook
professed criticism in our reviews; but the heart of the matter was and
still is in the centers of education.

A teacher of English in New York City recently presented the case for
contemporary literature vs. the classics, in some such argument as this:
When she was in college, she said, the faculty took such an inhospitable
view of the world about them that only one author, of all those they
studied in literature classes, was still alive when they studied his
books. She and her fellow students felt somehow cramped and cheated,
not to be studying more books of which the authors were still living. In
other words, whereas the critics in Mr. Shaw’s play could not judge the
work till they knew who wrote it, these lovers of the contemporary could
not estimate a book till they knew whether the author was in or out of
the graveyard. In these better days, the teacher went on to say, she and
her colleagues allow for the natural desire of their students to read
what is written at the moment—a life of a prominent man like Theodore
Roosevelt, the work of a columnist in the daily press, the popular plays,
the most talked-of novels. Such reading, she explained, gives opportunity
for ethical or social or political discussion in class; she meant, it
seems, that you can argue whether the Middle West was fairly portrayed,
and if so, what should be done to cure it, or whether we should have gone
into the war at all, or if so, what should have been done to make the
lot of the private easier, and establish the officer on a less privileged
plane. Out of this open discussion of spontaneous interest in current
events, will come, she thought, a finer taste for the best in art.

It is obvious that the training, such as it is, which is to produce this
finer taste is a training not in art at all, but in Americanization, if
you choose to call it so, in sociology or in politics. These purposes are
good in their place, but if they usurp the classroom where literature
as an art should be taught, we need expect no aid from the schools
in training us to a common culture, not at least so far as the word
applies to poetry, to romance, to the drama, to the novel. We might
Americanize ourselves in literature by reading our older poets—three of
them, Whitman, Poe and Emerson, of influence in the whole world today;
we might read our elder novelists, two of whom, Cooper and Hawthorne,
at their best were among the prose-poets of the nineteenth century;
or we might read Parkman, an historian not likely to be surpassed for
the beauty of his spirit, for the solidity of his method, and for the
romantic charm of his subject, by any who will hereafter write about this
land. We might read Lincoln, about whom we talk so much, and we might
profitably read Jefferson and Hamilton. We might even discover the charm
of the colonial records, north and south, and the heroic poetry of our
frontier, as it pushed through wilderness and across plain and canyon,
to face at last the Orient again and our inscrutable future. This kind
of Americanization would produce class discussion of some dignity, even
though it had nothing to do immediately with the art of literature, for
it would give us, not only a sense of our common destiny, but an escape
from our own circumstances into other days and other minds, and it would
cultivate the sympathy and the imagination once thought to be the fruit
of literary study. But to discuss always and exclusively only what is
under our own noses, to study a life of Mr. Roosevelt not because it is
a great biography but because it is about Mr. Roosevelt, and to study
novels not because they are good novels, but because they are about us,
is to find ourselves in the end just where we were in the beginning,
with our prejudices more firmly rooted and our skin a bit thicker to any
joy or sorrow in the world not our own. As for the ability to understand
great writing when it comes to us, we have learned only this, that since
Mr. Roosevelt lived nearer our day than Dr. Johnson, the biography of
him is a better biography and a more interesting one than Boswell could
write, and we need not read Boswell; and since Main Street is nearer to
us than Salem, Mr. Lewis is a greater novelist than Hawthorne, and we
need not read Hawthorne. Enough to know that the whole contains the part.


IV

Well, then, says the teacher of current literature, there never can be
any great books, for you approve of nothing contemporary, and every
book, unfortunately, has to be written in its own time. Yes, in a sense,
anything you write, on however remote a subject, will be of your time and
will represent it; Walter Pater was expressing one phase of Victorian
England when he wrote _Marius the Epicurean_. But the artist hopes to
appeal to more than the present generation; even the most contemporary
of our contemporaries, who read no books of which the authors are not
living, cherish some ambition to have their own works read after they
themselves are gone. And since the fame of a book depends on its ability
to meet the interest of readers over a long period of time, the life
of our works will depend on two things—on our gift for selecting the
matter which is permanently interesting to men, and on the willingness
or unwillingness of any generation to be interested in the same things
as its predecessors. If readers are now brought up to neglect as a
matter of course any works of literature that once were loved, there
will be no fame for any one hereafter, and no masters of the art, but
only in each publishing season a nine days’ wonder. But if human nature
still asserts its primal interests, in spite of mistaken teaching, and
continues to like in the long run the same things that have been loved
in the past, then the writer will finally be reckoned great who answers,
not the mood of his hour, but the spirit of those constant demands. He
will get his inspiration from life as he knows it; he will express it
in an eternal form, as we say—at least in a form so durable that instead
of our understanding his work through the incident that inspired it, we
shall know of the incident through the work. Molière has so immortalized
one moment of his times in his _Précieuses Ridicules_; without the play,
would we know much of the temporary affectation? And to be quite frank,
has not something died in the play, along with what was contemporary in
it, so that we enjoy it now with an historical effort not needed to be
at home, let us say, with Falstaff? Tennyson really immortalized the
Charge of the Light Brigade, for the incident on so many grounds has
since proved regrettable that we should be glad to forget it, but for
the poem, and we begin to be sorry that the poem is anchored to so much
that was transitory. Our own civil war poet, Henry Howard Brownell, true
genius if we ever had one, wrote his verses on the very scene, after the
fights he had passed through as Farragut’s secretary on the flagship,
and the virulence of contemporary passion is in his work forever, an
embarrassing alloy. But of the danger of being contemporary, Dante is the
great illustration. It is not hard to see what an impact his great poem
must have made on his first hearers, it was so immediate in its reference
to persons, places, incidents, crimes and disasters which Florence, Rome
and Italy well knew; but what an effort it is now to recover all those
allusions to the times, indeed how impossible! We wrestle with them, if
at all, because the greatness of the poem bears up their leaden weight;
and the poem is great for what is least contemporary in it, for the
vision which Dante drew from his masters, and which he handed on to the
future in images of the past.

The impulse to be contemporary is in our time, and perhaps always was,
an impulse to tell the news. This impulse is felt perhaps in all the
arts, but most in books and in the theatre, less in music, still less in
painting, and least in architecture and sculpture. From these last we can
learn, if we need a reminder, what are the conditions of enduring art,
and what, in contrast to popularity, is fame. Sculpture and architecture,
from the substantial nature of their medium, must submit to be looked
at more than once, to be lived with, finally to be judged by the good
opinions of many men over a long period of time; and a good opinion
of such work, so lived with, will depend less on the first impression
than on habitual contact. For such work popularity is difficult, if not
impossible. A book about the war may be a popular book; the Farragut
statue in Madison Square is not a popular statue. What statue is
popular? It can have only the better kind of success, if any; like the
Farragut, it can be famous, loved and returned to over an indefinite
length of time. For we can read a book once and throw it aside, or hear
music or see a play but once, and then criticize it; it lies entirely
in our choice whether we shall read or hear twice. How different our
criticism would be if it were based on at least half a dozen readings
and hearings! But the bronze and the building are not easily removed
or ignored, and even the painting has a good chance of being looked at
more than once. It is not surprising then that the sculptor, like the
architect or the painter, attends to the conditions on which fame is
secured, since popularity is denied him, and makes his appeal to revised
judgments and to second thoughts.

It would be a misfortune to seem to say that the author who misses
popularity is necessarily an artist, or that even temporary success is
not to be admired. But in American letters we are beginning to wonder
why our great successes are so transitory; why a writer who sells more
copies of his first book than did Thackeray or Dickens, does not continue
like them to reach a large public with succeeding books; and why he does
not, like them, continue to be read after he has ceased to write. The
explanation suggested is that most American writers, not only today but
throughout the last twenty-five years, have written as journalists—have
put out their material not as life but as news about life, and the
critics have discussed it as news, and the readers have come to look
for the news in it, and for nothing else. Some novelists still writing
began their work with successful stories of local color, which we read
in order to learn about Louisiana or Pennsylvania or the Middle West,
and having got the information we were looking for, we went elsewhere to
look into other novelties. It goes without saying that in this process we
readers have done injustice to many a work of art; _Old Creole Days_ and
_Main Traveled Roads_ have something for the permanent reader, as well as
for the news-seeker, and _Trilby_—to speak of an English book—is still
a magnificent romance of friendship and chivalry, though it expired of
its own success as a bulletin from the Latin Quarter and a document in
hypnotism.

At least, says again the lover of current things, you must write in the
language of the hour. Some beauty is lost when the poet does not speak
in his native tongue, or when we cannot read him in it. Well, some
languages are better than others; Greek was a better language, more
precise, more varied, more forceful and more colorful, than English or
any of the modern tongues. But all language changes, as the works of art
in language do not; in literature we have this haunting paradox, that
through a temporary medium we can build something imperishable. Much
as we may dislike literature in translation, it is perhaps salutary to
remember that literary masterpieces must survive in translation or not at
all. In what language were the parables spoken? If Homer were not Homer
still in English or French or German, how much of Homer would the world
know? Some bouquet of his own time is gone, but perhaps we should not
have liked it if it had remained. At least we have kept what we liked;
we have kept what suited our spiritual needs, we have loved Andromache
and Hector, and wondered in the old way why such fine men as Achilles and
Agamemnon should quarrel, and have decided, as all our fathers have done,
that for so beautiful a woman as Helen to waste her time on so mean a
fellow as Paris, there must have been queer influences at work. To live
in art in this timeless way, is to satisfy what is eternal in ourselves;
it is to leave behind us the limitations of our hour, our place, and our
language. And unless art is wide enough for us to live in it so, we shall
trifle with it only for an hour, and without regret let it go the way of
other contemporary things.




V

THE CHARACTERS PROPER TO LITERATURE


I

Our impulse might be to say that any character at all is proper to
literature, or to any phase of literature, for we have long ago discarded
that convention of ancient story which introduced the hero and heroine
always as nobly born, or if at first they were not gentlefolk, yet in the
last chapter they were shown to be prince and princess in disguise. Our
leading characters now may have whatever origin God wills; the author
does not interfere. No longer do we reserve the peasant, the poor or
the ignorant for the foot of our list of _dramatis personæ_, nor do we
smuggle them into the scene at resting moments, for comic relief. Since
human nature is the subject of art, and since the Almighty (we quote
Lincoln for this) showed us where to put the emphasis in human nature,
by creating common folk in the vast majority, we have even followed the
example with an excess of enthusiasm, until the elect are pretty well
put down from their former seat in literature, and in their stead are
the socially humble and the mentally weak. For a hundred years or more
we have been pressing this charitable revolution. Wordsworth, though
not the first to try it, first won a considerable hearing in English
poetry for the beggar, the pedlar, the afflicted, the half-witted—a
hearing for them, that is, as central figures in the poems where they
occur; and shortly afterwards the novelists, on the irresistible tide of
humanitarianism, invited not only our attention but our admiration for
persons who hitherto had seemed obscure and unfortunate. Dickens perhaps
went too far, we now feel; he demonstrated the weakness of the gentry,
and sent them to the background of the story, where we are willing enough
they should remain, but he also tried to endow the lower classes with
so much delicacy, tact, and spirit that his leading persons seem to be
gentry still, masquerading in a temporary eclipse of fortune, like the
lost prince and princess of the fairy tale. But he taught us how to carry
on his unfinished revolution; since he stripped sentimentality, all that
sort of nonsense, from the gentry, we have known at last how to strip it
from the bourgeois. Some of our novelists riddle the polite world for us,
others tell us the unflinching truth about our middle classes. We have no
heroes; any character can get into our literature, if we may use him as
a target rather than worship him as a god.

It is too late to return, even if we desired to do so, to the sentimental
misreading of social conditions against which our modern realism, however
grim, tries honestly to protest, and there is a form of discourse in
which human frailties can properly be discussed; social science or the
science of ethics would neither of them deserve the name of science
if we excluded from their consideration any aspect of human character
or conduct—just as medicine would fail in its office if we forbade it
to study any part or function of the body. But it is not too late to
ask ourselves the difference between science and art; between a story
which represents our physical actions with that conscience in detail
which would aid a medical diagnosis, and a story through which Helen’s
body walks, a joy forever; between a record of our neighbors just as
they are, or a bit meaner, and a picture of men and women as we would
gladly be. Anything printed may be called literature, even last year’s
time-tables, but if we preserve in the word an emphasis upon art rather
than upon information, we may ask after all whether certain characters,
or certain attitudes toward character, are not essential to art; or,
putting it another way, we may ask whether the type of character we
portray will not determine the kind of art we produce, with or without
our will, and whether the kind of character we portray will not finally
classify our writing for us as art or as social document.

To have our novel appraised as a social document may seem to us a
compliment, and we may be glad to escape the equivocal verdict that our
picture of life is art. The terms are unimportant and our prejudices in
words may be respected. But the fact remains that some books we are
to read many times, and permanently, whereas others are for a season
only, and may be read but once; and books which must serve us in ways so
different would seem to need certain special privileges of method and
material—they may even be permitted certain varieties of emphasis not
usually found in life. The temporary writing helps us on our way, and
we ought to have one honorable name for it all—newspapers, telephone
directory, time-tables, all our telegrams and most of our letters. We
stop over them only for a moment, in order to go about our business more
conveniently. But the other kind of books will detain us forever, or
will try to—and this kind of literature is art; we return thither for no
information and for no immediate aid in our daily affairs, but rather to
taste again an experience we enjoyed before, to meet old friends, to
breathe an atmosphere which we crave, and which is hard to find elsewhere.

If this distinction needs often to be made between the literature which
is information and the literature which is art, it is because both kinds
of book use the same medium, and speech is the commonest of mediums.
Painting or music escape such a confusion, but writing is a slippery
craft, now running to a bare record or to good advice, now drifting
into a music of words, articulating a beauty that seems ageless and
impersonal, and sometimes doing a bit of all these things at once. In
daily conversation, when we talk of anything in human interest, we use
the same words as literature is made of; what more natural than to
conclude that literature therefore may deal with any subject we talk of?
We resent the suggestion that art should be narrower than life itself.
Yet if we admit any difference at all between art and life, between
literature and our average conversations, between books which give
information and books which give delight, and if art is the record of
that aspect of life we delight in not for the moment but permanently,
then art is indeed narrower than life itself; outside of it will remain
the trivial things, however likable, of our daily round, which we forget
gladly, so many other pleasant and trivial things supplant them; and
outside of it also will remain very important issues which we hope and
resolve shall be temporary—the grave wrongs and errors which call not for
eternal contemplation but for reform. Face to face with such problems,
we often feel that art is inadequate. What can poetry do for the sick or
the dying? What solace is there in music or sculpture for the wretchedly
poor? The answer to such questions is not in art but in conduct; death
calls for fortitude, sickness must be cured, poverty must be relieved;
and if books deal with such subjects, it is not for a literary end, but
to aid us in practical remedies. Indeed, to have a literary ambition as
we contemplate another’s misery, would seem possible only for a fiend; it
is in the merit of Mrs. Stowe’s story of Uncle Tom that the book seems a
protest from the soul rather than a work of art. If there are sins and
misfortunes, it may be necessary to spread the news, as though the house
were on fire, but if we really care for our house we shall not linger to
enjoy the cadence of the thrilling call. On the other hand, if we are to
lose ourselves in a book or a play, if we are to live in it repeatedly,
ourselves the hero, in love with the heroine, and hating the villain,
then the book or play must give us an experience in some sense better
than the life ordinarily available to us; who would waste a moment
on Cleopatra in a book, if he knew where to find her in the world? Or
perhaps in life she was less charming than Plutarch said she was, or than
Shakespeare showed her to be; perhaps we could not be drawn irresistibly
to her until the poet made her better than she was—made her, that is, a
character proper for the literature which is to be enjoyed as art.


II

The effect of the excellence or the inferiority of the character on
the book was long ago observed by Aristotle, when he said that tragedy
and the epic—that is, all serious literature—will aim at representing
men as better than in actual life, and that comedy and satire will
represent them as worse. In this second kind of writing, he added,
satire came first, and it was Homer who laid down the principles of
comedy, by dramatizing the ludicrous instead of composing personal
satire. This famous observation of the ancient critic has been too often
read as doctrine, as though Aristotle were telling us what should take
place in literature, whereas he is recording what actually does take
place. If you wish to write a story or a play in which the reader can
lose himself with delight, you must portray character better than the
reader, character which in some degree satisfies and strengthens his
aspirations. If you wish the reader to laugh at the world, or to scorn
it, or to feel the need of improving it, you portray for him character
in a condition inferior to his estimate of himself; if you wish him to
profit by that wholesome self-observation which we call the comic-spirit,
you mingle satire with tragedy—you show him character which satisfies his
aspirations, so that he will identify himself with it, and which at the
same time is inferior in some respects to what he would prefer to be, so
that he must laugh at himself. He will have a tendency to save the day
for self-respect by laughing, not at himself, but at human nature, and
the universal comic spirit will then have come to birth, akin to both
satire and tragedy, but more nearly a dramatizing of the ludicrous, as
Aristotle said, than a scoring of personal faults.

These principles, it goes without saying, are not accepted by writers
today; the average author is not aware of them, or if he is, he takes
refuge in another remark of Aristotle’s, that perhaps tragedy was
destined to develop into something different from the type of poetry
produced by Æschylus, Sophocles and Euripides; perhaps new principles,
we say, in the too familiar formula, are needed for new material. So
think many of our poets and novelists who give us sordid and wretched
characters to contemplate, yet invite us to feel toward them not the
satiric regret, but the old pity and terror of noble tragedy. That
the principles do persist, however, very much as Aristotle described
them, is evidenced by the difficulty the readers still have with such
books; the authors argue their case, or critics argue it for them, but
common humanity remains unconvinced that misery is a proper subject
for permanent contemplation. In our age especially, when the impulse
to social good works is highly developed, it is a curious paradox that
writers should expect us to associate in art, as habitual companions,
with types of character which in real life we should hasten to rescue and
to change. It is generous of the writers to suppose that in a humane age
the reader will be ready to discern the heroic even beneath handicaps
and afflictions, and probably the reader is thus ready, but the writers
forget that in any age, particularly in a humane one, we do not like to
contemplate, in the permanence of art, heroic character smothered beneath
handicaps and afflictions. And in justice to the embarrassed reader it
should be added that often the character is not heroic at all, and the
only claim put forth for it is that it might have been attractive if it
had not been smothered.

Perhaps it is the influence of Wordsworth that still spreads this
confusion in our writing. The effect of many of his best known poems
has never been wholly satisfactory, not even to his admirers; he drew
moral lessons from objects humble or mean, and since his own interest
was in the moral lesson, he sometimes was careless of the emotional
appeal which the object, left standing as it were in the poem, might
make on the reader. In one sense he was not a nature-lover, though he
had recourse to nature for ethical wisdom; it was only the wisdom he
cared about, and we have an unpleasant impression, which perhaps does
him injustice, that when he had got a moral idea out of the primrose
by the river’s brim, he was through with the primrose for the day. The
same impression, unfortunately, is made by his portrayal of humble or
mean characters. He obviously does not identify his better fortunes
with their misery, nor does he enter dramatically or imaginatively into
their lives; he is content to draw a moral from them, and the reader,
in his day and still in ours, is surprised that misery in the picture,
having produced a moral, is promptly dropped as though of no further
concern. The old leech-gatherer serves a purpose when his courage
against frightful odds cheers up a moodish poet; the old beggar at the
door moves us to gratitude that another man’s poverty keeps fresh in
us our springs of charity. Much good this does the leech-gatherer or
the beggar! And if there is to be no help for them, their presence is a
bit disturbing in the background of so much complacence. We wish there
were more tenderness in these poems that talk so much of feeling. And
when Wordsworth deliberately sets out to enlist our admiration for the
heroic, we may find ourselves facing such dumb human misery as we have
in _Michael_, the heroism of a wrecked family and an abandoned farm.
With relief we turn to the passages in the _Prelude_ where the poet no
longer looks down benignly on the wretched, but gives expression to the
ideal life which he himself desires to attain; there, where he shows life
better than it is, we can go with him and lose ourselves in the vision.

It is our poets who chiefly defy Aristotle’s wise warning, and try with
Wordsworth to convert into a theme for meditation what is really a
subject for philanthropy. Our novelists tend more and more to give us
an inferior world, but not for our admiration; we may smile at it, or
despise it, or try to cure it. This is satire, an achievement in morals
rather than in art, and from the advertisements on the book covers it
is clear that the publisher at least knows that the author is revealing
something medicinal, something unpleasant but good for us. If we prefer
to write satires, we are at least achieving our ambition. But the reader
of the American novel today, whether he reads Mrs. Wharton, or Sinclair
Lewis, or whether he goes back to an earlier period and reads W. D.
Howells, is usually reading about other people, rarely about himself;
he has noticed those faults in his neighbors before. We have to go far
back in our literature to find a novel in which the American future is
implicit, a story into which we can enter as into a world we are glad is
ours. Perhaps we must go back as far as the _Scarlet Letter_, in which a
modern audacity of thought seems breaking through an antique repression,
and we can identify profound speculations of our own with the wisdom in
Hester’s heart or Arthur Dimmesdale’s. It has been pointed out before
how much Hawthorne gained by making his chief characters noble in the
Greek way, tragic characters better than in actual life; for the sin of
the woman and the minister was common enough in the world among weak or
vulgar characters, and the impulse even in Hawthorne’s time might well
have been to keep the story, for purposes of edification or realism, in
the low tone in which it first occurred. But we cannot easily take to
heart the sins of people who are obviously our inferiors; only the sins
of good people rouse in us tragic pity or terror, for that is the kind
of sin, if any, we should commit. Hawthorne therefore makes the minister
a saint, and if Hester is not a saint at the beginning, she is so at
the end of her ordeal, and in the sufferings of both our own heart has
been wrung. In the _House of the Seven Gables_, however, the reader is a
looker-on rather than an actor, for the characters are not better than
life, their experience is therefore not ours, and since we cannot cure
their unhappiness, we are sorry to watch it. In that story our greatest
romancer was on the road toward the modern habit of satire, a road which
he had marked out for us clearly enough in some of his early sketches and
tales.

The trend away from the literature of art to the literature of satire
is all the more remarkable in our day because the exigencies of satire
compel the American to deny wholesale his better self. There might be
some apparent reason for not writing in the epic or the tragic tone if in
order to do so we had to assume virtues we all knew we lacked; but why
make a religion of writing satire, when to do so we must conceal the few
virtues we are sure we have? Mr. Howells took it to be his duty to tell
the unvarnished truth about human society as he knew it, but you would
not guess from his novels that America ever produced so charming a man
as Mr. Howells and those literary friends of his of whom, outside his
novels, he wrote lovingly. So Mr. Lewis pictures America today—leaving
out of the picture the satirical criticism of America in which he leads,
and so Mrs. Wharton shows us the narrower world of fashion, with no one
in it so gifted, so admirably trained, as Mrs. Wharton. The best of us
is hard enough to express, as Rabbi Ben Ezra knew, but how odd that we
prefer not to express it, whether difficult or easy—that we deliberately
conceal what we have set our hearts on. We name half a dozen characters
from his plays in whom Shakespeare seems to be portraying himself,
and without too subtle a discrimination we recognize ideals of our own
in all of them. Pendennis seems to be Thackeray himself, and so seems
Henry Esmond and Clive Newcome, and we flatter ourselves that the great
novelist incorporated in those portraits some of our own best features.
We—and Cervantes—are incarnated in Don Quixote.

The contrast between information and art in our books, and the tendency
to stress information with a moral bent, are both thrown into sharper
relief by the success of American architecture in expressing more and
more a significant and lasting beauty. Nothing might seem at first
more utilitarian than a building, and few things in our country seem
less permanent, we have such a passion for altering. Yet art has made
its greatest progress with us in architecture, and the stages of the
progress have been accompanied by just such a selection and choice of
subject as Aristotle’s remarks about character would imply. In our cities
a genuine impulse toward beauty began to show itself two decades ago in
shop-windows. Where else should beauty appear but in the enterprises we
care most about? Since we were lovers of business, we began to indicate
the beauty that business has in our eyes. The shop-window ceased to
be, what in country hardware stores it still often is, a place where
samples of all the merchandise were displayed, an order card from which
you could plan your purchases; it became rather a scene of loveliness
to contemplate for its own sake, an attraction to hold you rooted to
the spot rather than a stimulus to hurry you inside to buy. Probably
the shop-windows in our great streets could not be justified now on a
purely economic basis; they have been lifted into the realm of beauty
and are things to remember. But for this kind of shop-window not every
article the store sells is “proper”, in the Aristotelian sense; nothing
ridiculous is shown, though ridiculous things are bought and sold,
nothing trivial is shown, and nothing that discloses too publicly the
animal conditions in which we lead our spiritual life. With a different
selection of articles which the store for our convenience must sell, we
might have a comic window, the sight of which would cause us to smile
at ourselves, or a satiric one, which would teach us to laugh at our
fellowman.

The buildings themselves, moreover, have become beautiful by expressing
what we genuinely love to contemplate, and not all kinds of buildings
were proper to that happy end. For mere sale and barter, any shed in
the market-place might serve, but if we think of traffic in the large
way that Ruskin suggested, as something potentially heroic and noble,
as a feeding of the hungry and a clothing of the naked, as a soldierly
occupying of outposts against poverty and wretchedness, as a campaign of
conquest against nature, and as an exchange at last of spiritual hungers
and satisfactions among men, then our houses of business should look
like temples. So they begin to look, and only a very blind critic here
and there still fails to see that so they should look. With our love of
traffic goes our love of travel. In this country travel is necessary, but
it is also an ideal. Any sort of railway station will serve as a place
to buy a ticket or board a train, and until recently almost any kind of
barracks did serve for those purposes. But the haphazard building could
not express our delight in travel, our enjoyment of distance and speed
and punctilious arrivings and departings. The pleasant casualness of the
stage-coach and the road-side inn does not really appeal to us, except
in exotic moments; our religion of travel is uttered in the Pennsylvania
Station in New York, and in other such structures fast rising throughout
the country, where the ritualistic atmosphere, produced by carefully
selected elements from the buildings of antiquity, have little to do with
buying your ticket and a great deal to do with the American spirit. We
breathe more freely as we enter them, and enjoy the space and the height;
our instinctive comment is, “This is something like!” as though some part
of us had found expression at last. And if this success in architecture
is as yet in the field of business and travel, among public buildings,
the reason probably is that in those fields we know what our aspirations
are. In ecclesiastical architecture, by way of contrast, we are less
clear. We feel that if the Woolworth building is so lovely, it is but
respectable to improve the appearance of our churches, so we put up very
wonderful Gothic chapels and cathedrals—only to find, perhaps, that they
are a sort of weight on our conscience rather than an expression of our
desires; we sometimes try to cultivate the religion that produced them,
in order that so eloquent a language may have more content in its words.

When we turn back from our architecture to our books, we have the right
to ask why poetry and the novel address themselves exclusively to what is
in essence satire, to the portrayal of us as worse than we are, or with
our aspirations left out; why we as readers must be invited to absorb
mere information about ourselves and our country; why we so seldom meet
in the pages offered to us the kind of men and women we admire or ought
to admire. The arts all express the same thing, at any given moment,
and if we are equally proficient in them, they ought to achieve the same
grandeur and the same beauty. Against the trivial and drab contents of
much of our poetry and the condescending realism of much of our prose
American architecture now stands, a reproach and an indictment; for the
imaginative power and sweep of our buildings is hardly discernible in
our books. The architects have followed old wisdom, by making their work
ideal, better than life. The writers, in a stubborn wrong-headedness, in
defiance of the readers’ psychology, portray characters worse than in
actual life, and sometimes ask us to admire them.


III

To ask what characters are proper to literature as an art, and to point
out that the character better than life will express our ideals, and
that the character worse than life will invite our satire, is only to
raise in another way the old problems of the universal as against the
particular in art, of the contemporary as against the eternal. To be
strictly personal is in the end to be contemporary, and to be strictly
contemporary is to give, whether or not we intend it, the effect of
satire. If our picture of life is to appeal to the reader, and to many
readers, as their own world, not simply as their neighbors’ private house
into which they are prying, it must have general human truth beyond
what is strictly personal; and if it is to be read with that sense of
proprietorship by many people over a stretch of time, it must not limit
itself to the peculiarities of any one moment. It is true that the writer
himself lives but one life and is circumscribed by time and place; if
there were no such thing as imagination he would only record what he
is, for the enlightenment of others who are just like him; without
imagination he would not know of a better character than his, or of a
worse one, and we should be spared the discipline of satire, but at the
price of art. The problem for the writer, as for any other artist, is
to imagine the lives of other men, and the lives that he and other men
aspire to; his business is to select from personal adventure what is
generally important, and to see it against the background of universal
experience. Can any one imagine universal experience? Perhaps not, but
the nearer he comes to this difficult success the more readers the world
over will find meaning in what he writes. To have a personal career is no
ground for conceit in an artist—every one has as much; the achievement is
to state our experience so that it is the experience of other people too.

If we portray characters as better than in actual life, there is no
great difficulty in making them seem universal; for it is a radical gift
in human conceit to fancy that anything admirable or desirable has a
possible connection with ourselves. If we do not at first discover what
there is in common between Romeo or Lincoln or Achilles or General Lee
and ourselves, yet if we admire them we shall find the resemblance, or
try to create it. This is the power of great imaginative art, that the
admirable things in it generate a kind of universal emulation, and the
story or statue which has been said to imitate nature succeeds at last
in persuading men and women quite naturally to imitate it. The power of
a great book over human conduct, even its influence at last upon what
might seem instinctive conduct, is immeasurable. In the troubadour art of
love before Dante’s time, a true lover was taught to turn pale at sight
of his lady, and at the unexpected sight of her to faint; Dante loved
that literature, and he grew pale and fainted by second nature—just as
women once learned to blush at certain things, and afterward learned not
to blush. How many lives were affected, for good or evil, throughout
Europe and America, by the alluring power of Byron’s heroes and heroines?
The poet, then, who represents character as better than actual life, as
possessing, that is, something that we desire but have not, has already
made his hero universal, and must some day accept the responsibility of
having dedicated his readers to that general ideal. We may question Byron
on moral grounds by asserting that his hero, after whom so many lives
were patterned, was really not deserving of any imitation; just as an
Oriental reformer from India might tell us that the traffic and travel
of which our architecture is an expression are both of them trivial
enterprises, mere distractions from the contemplative ends of life.
But such criticism lies outside of art. To understand the discipline
which art imposes on us it is enough to observe the kind of character
which does make an ideal effective in literature, and the kind that
precipitates us into satire.

The real difficulty for the writer is not, then, in generalizing the
characters which embody his ideal, and which therefore are better than in
actual life; what he will chiefly need for his success is to have the
ideals. But even with a consciousness of deep aspiration he may wish to
include in the picture whole characters or parts of character which are
not what they should be, and which yet are likable, even lovable; and
to give this double effect of inferiority in some sense, together with
charm in some sense, is, it seems, very difficult, for this is the effect
of comedy, and comedy is rare in any literature, almost entirely absent
from our own. If you represent a character as worse than in actual life,
the condescending attitude of the reader will not automatically draw the
portrait into some universal relation; the writer must add something
universally admirable to the particular weakness we look down on.
Beatrice and Benedick have exhausted their wit, and they are the victims
of a plot to marry them off to each other; for such inferiority to their
companions we cannot admire them. But Shakespeare makes them both loyal
to their friends and generous in their delight in life, and Beatrice has
the good sense to know innocence when she sees it; these qualities we
can identify with our own virtues, and for these we admire the hero and
heroine. The poet further generalizes both characters by reminding us
through their meditations that to fall in love is not the work of reason,
and that even the wittiest scoffers succumb; here too we gladly recognize
our own experience. We can therefore smile at the foibles of the young
people, partly because these foibles are incident to all human nature,
and partly because, even with the foibles, we like to identify ourselves
in imagination with the supplementary virtues. Socrates was trying to
persuade Aristophanes and Agathon, in the gray dawn after the Symposium,
that the art of comedy and the art of tragedy are the same; and so far
at least he was right, in that the universal rendering which character
must receive in both, gives to the comic effect some of the pity, though
none of the terror, which tragedy evokes. But Socrates did not say that
the art of tragedy is identical with the art of satire.

When comedy is at its best—that is, when we have made the inferior
character universal by showing that its faults are natural, or by adding
to it some general virtues—we may indeed go further and say that comedy
produces perhaps the terror as well as the pity of tragedy, and that
the two kinds of writing are, as Socrates said, but one. The tragic or
epic hero, portrayed as better than in actual life, may have faults,
but so far from despising him on that account, we may not even smile;
we like him so much that the faults seem his misfortune. Moreover, if
we refer the weakness of the comic character to nature itself, how can
we be hard on the individual? And if we add to the faults positive and
lovable virtues, will not the comic character seem at last to be tragic?
In English drama Falstaff is perhaps the prince of comic characters,
so vitally imagined that he lives on the stage apart from any plot; he
is a living person, with no virtues at all, yet infinitely likable. He
can be played to make the groundlings laugh, but most of us after we
have laughed taste profound tragedy in what we have laughed at. He is
almost majestic in those moments of cowardice when he portrays himself
exactly as he is—when he sees himself, as it were, from outside, and
points to those aspects of his frailty which belong to mankind. An
actor might play the scenes on the battle-field in _Henry IV_ so as to
inspire, not laughter at the fat knight’s depravity, but a pitiful and
self-accusing silence. When he finds the corpse of Sir Walter Blunt,
just slain—“Soft! who are you? Sir Walter Blunt!—There’s Honour for you!
Here’s no vanity!... I have led my ragamuffins where they are peppered;
there’s but three of my hundred and fifty left alive, and they are for
the town’s end, to beg during life.... I like not such grinning honour as
Sir Walter hath. Give me life; which if I can save, so; if not, honour
comes unlooked for.”

In French drama Molière brought comedy to an excellence not matched,
perhaps, in any other literature, and no imaginative writing is richer
than his in general ideas. We laugh at the amusing situation, or delight
in the frankly artificial balancing of the plot, but on second thoughts
we fall silent, contemplating the universal sweep of humanity, ourselves
included, which he has uncovered for us.

The most obvious example for American readers is in _Tartuffe_, where
the unhappy Elmire has difficulty in proving to her husband Orgon that
Tartuffe, whom he greatly admires, is a treacherous friend and is
actually making love to her. She finally admits Tartuffe to her room,
having first hidden her husband under the table, from which he has
promised to emerge if Tartuffe should go beyond the bounds of decency.
Tartuffe, of course, makes love in the clearest terms to his friend’s
wife, but Orgon remains concealed. “Before we go any further”, says
Elmire, “just look down the hall to make sure my husband isn’t coming.”
“Why worry about him?” says Tartuffe, “we can lead him around by the
nose.” Then Orgon comes from under the table. Where has the comedy
brought us? Is it not to a contemplation of our own vanity, the source of
the sense of honor in us all? Are we laughing at Tartuffe and Orgon, or
are we thinking of ourselves?

Falstaff and Tartuffe illustrate the generalizing of inferior characters
by the ascribing of their faults to human nature. A good illustration of
the comic character which enlists our admiration and is a genuine ideal
is Huckleberry Finn. His ignorance, his poverty, and his lack of humor
would seem to disqualify him for any heroic career in literature, yet he
is a veritable hero, in the sense that we gladly put ourselves in his
point of view and return again and again to live for an hour or so in his
experience. The reason is that along with his inferior qualities he has
characteristics and he has a fortune which seem better than ours; he is
loyal to Tom and the negro Jim, he has a simple faith and zest in life,
and he has exciting adventures and gets romance out of scenes we should
otherwise find dull. He flatters us too by admiring people and things
which from his praise we know we should treat satirically. To know what
comedy is, as opposed to satire, we have but to read his story again
and compare it with any current indictment of the scene in which his
adventure was laid.


IV

If the principles of tragedy, comedy and satire are as implicit in our
psychology now as when Aristotle described them, and if the principles
of decorum, of art, and of the timeless and the impersonal in art, are
as rooted in life as they are declared to be, there might seem to be no
great need to preach them; the practice of literature would disclose them
in spite of our ignorance. Try as we might to make a lovable hero out of
an inferior character, he would still emerge a figure in satire or, if
we generalized his faults, a figure in comedy; in serious literature,
only a character better than in real life would give satisfaction. Though
we do not doubt that the principles of art will thus be rediscovered
pragmatically by the unescapable discipline of literature, yet it is
something of a pity to go through such lengths of experiment in order to
find out what was known before. And the great danger in our country is
that we may not push the experiment to the tedious but profitable end at
which sound knowledge awaits us; we may grow weary of the discipline, and
take refuge in parody or in sentimentality. These two avenues of escape
from the problem have cursed American literature before, and signs are
not wanting that they now are the temptations of those who yesterday were
our “new” writers and promised brave things. Face to face with characters
worse than in actual life, we may find our own satiric attitude
monotonous, but to handle such material otherwise than satirically, we
must master the art of comedy, and comedy is an art too difficult. What
Bret Harte and Riley and Eugene Field did in such circumstances was
to obscure the meanness of the subject by sentimentality, instead of
illuminating it by the comic spirit. Spoon River has been celebrated
before, though we may not have recognized the subject with the old
sentimental surface removed; much of our contemporary satire has been the
kind of surgical operation necessary to separate the American reader from
the sentimentality which in his heart he likes. Since it is in his heart,
he may express it again quite shamelessly, this time as a protest against
too much satire, and we may have another welter of old oaken buckets and
old swimming holes and little boy blues—the literature that provides the
satisfaction of a good cry, without the over-exertion of tragic pity or
terror. Already we have again the familiar and dilettante essay, the
imitation of eighteenth-century style, even in newspaper columns, the
interminable parodies of Horace, which in this country have been the
advance signals of the sentimental wave.

We can but hope that the signs may prove deceptive, and that literature
in America will not wait much longer for the characters and subjects
proper to it, and proper to the dramatic hour we live in—characters and
subjects expressing that better part of us which has given our land its
direction and its power, and expressing also that other world of the
spirit which man builds for elbow-room to exercise his genuine ideals in,
and carries it around with him, and sets it up to be a tabernacle in the
wilderness of this natural world.