always the man is conscious of the hollowness of his
triumph, and the world takes a pretty accurate measure
of it. It is the privilege of the novelist, without
introducing into such a career what is called disaster,
to satisfy our innate love of justice by letting us
see the true nature of such prosperity. The unscrupulous
man amasses wealth, lives in luxury and splendor, and
dies in the odor of respectability. His poor
and honest neighbor, whom he has wronged and defrauded,
lives in misery, and dies in disappointment and penury.
The novelist cannot reverse the facts without such
a shock to our experience as shall destroy for us
the artistic value of his fiction, and bring upon
his work the deserved reproach of indiscriminately
“rewarding the good and punishing the bad.”
But we have a right to ask that he shall reveal the
real heart and character of this passing show of life;
for not to do this, to content himself merely with
exterior appearances, is for the majority of his readers
to efface the lines between virtue and vice. And
we ask this not for the sake of the moral lesson, but
because not to do it is, to our deep consciousness,
inartistic and untrue to our judgment of life as it
goes on. Thackeray used to say that all his talent
was in his eyes; meaning that he was only an observer
and reporter of what he saw, and not a Providence
to rectify human affairs. The great artist undervalued
his genius. He reported what he saw as Raphael
and Murillo reported what they saw. With his
touch of genius he assigned to everything its true
value, moving us to tenderness, to pity, to scorn,
to righteous indignation, to sympathy with humanity.
I find in him the highest art, and not that indifference
to the great facts and deep currents and destinies
of human life, that want of enthusiasm and sympathy,
which has got the name of “art for art’s
sake.” Literary fiction is a barren product
if it wants sympathy and love for men. “Art
for art’s sake” is a good and defensible
phrase, if our definition of art includes the ideal,
and not otherwise.
I do not know how it has come about that in so large
a proportion of recent fiction it is held to be artistic
to look almost altogether upon the shady and the seamy
side of life, giving to this view the name of “realism”;
to select the disagreeable, the vicious, the unwholesome;
to give us for our companions, in our hours of leisure
and relaxation, only the silly and the weak-minded
woman, the fast and slangy girl, the intrigante and
the “shady”—to borrow the language
of the society she seeks—the hero of irresolution,
the prig, the vulgar, and the vicious; to serve us
only with the foibles of the fashionable, the low tone
of the gay, the gilded riffraff of our social state;
to drag us forever along the dizzy, half-fractured
precipice of the seventh commandment; to bring us
into relations only with the sordid and the common;
to force us to sup with unwholesome company on misery
and sensuousness, in tales so utterly unpleasant that