so true an eye for Nature and so thorough an appreciation
of the truly humorous elements of New England character,
as distinguished from the vulgar and laughable ones.
The domestic interior of the Jackwood family was drawn
with remarkable truth and spirit, and all the working
characters of the book on a certain average level
of well-to-do rusticity were made to think and talk
naturally, and were as full of honest human nature
as those of the conventional modern novel are empty
of it. An author who puts us in the way to form
some just notion of the style of thought proper to
so large a class as our New England country-people,
and of the motives likely to influence their social
and political conduct, does us a greater service than
we are apt to admit. And the power to conceive
the leading qualities that make up an average representative
and to keep them always clearly in view, so as to
swerve neither toward tameness nor exaggeration, is
by no means common. This power, it seems to us,
Mr. Trowbridge possesses in an unusual degree.
The late Mr. Judd, in his remarkable romance of “Margaret,”
gave such a picture as has never been equalled for
truth of color and poetry of conception, of certain
phases of life among a half-gypsy family in the outskirts
of a remote village, and growing up in the cold penumbra
of our civilization and material prosperity.
But his scene and characters were exceptional, or,
if typical, only so of a very limited class, and his
book, full of fine imagination as it is, is truly
a romance, an ideal and artistic representation, rather
a poem than a story of manners general and familiar
enough to be called real.
Mr. Trowbridge, we think, fails in those elements
of (we had almost said creative) power in which Mr.
Judd was specially rich. If the latter had possessed
the shaping spirit as fully as he certainly did the
essential properties of imagination, he would have
done for the actual, prosaic life of New England what
Mr. Hawthorne has done for the ideal essence that
lies behind and beneath it. But, with all his
marvellous fidelity of dialect, costume, and landscape,
and his firm clutch of certain individual instincts
and emotions, his characters are wanting in any dramatic
unity of relation to each other, and seem to be “moving
about in worlds not realized,” each a vivid
reality in itself, but a very shadow in respect of
any prevailing intention of the story. With the
innate sentiments of a kind of aboriginal human nature
Mr. Judd was at home; with the practical working of
every-day motives he seemed strangely unfamiliar.
It is just here that Mr. Trowbridge’s strength
and originality lie; but, with that not uncommon tendency
to overvalue qualities that we do not possess, and
to attempt their display, to the neglect, and sometimes
at the cost, of others quite as valuable, but which
seem cheap, because their exercise is easy and habitual,—and
therefore, we may be sure, natural and pleasing,—he
insists on being a little metaphysical and over-fine.