we have in our minds Colonel Newcome as really as we
have Charles Lamb and Coleridge and De Quincey.
We are absorbed, as we read, in the evolution of the
characters of perhaps only half a dozen people; and
yet all the world, all great, roaring, struggling London,
is in the story, and Clive, and Philip, and Ethel,
and Becky Sharpe, and Captain Costigan are a part
of life. It is the flowery month of May; the scent
of the hawthorn is in the air, and the tender flush
of the new spring suffuses the Park, where the tide
of fashion and pleasure and idleness surges up and
down-the sauntering throng, the splendid equipages,
the endless cavalcade in Rotten Row, in which Clive
descries afar off the white plume of his ladylove
dancing on the waves of an unattainable society; the
club windows are all occupied; Parliament is in session,
with its nightly echoes of imperial politics; the thronged
streets roar with life from morn till nearly morn
again; the drawing-rooms hum and sparkle in the crush
of a London season; as you walk the midnight pavement,
through the swinging doors of the cider-cellars comes
the burst of bacchanalian song. Here is the world
of the press and of letters; here are institutions,
an army, a navy, commerce, glimpses of great ships
going to and fro on distant seas, of India, of Australia.
This one book is an epitome of English life, almost
of the empire itself. We are conscious of all
this, so much breadth and atmosphere has the artist
given his little history of half a dozen people in
this struggling world.
But this background of a great city, of an empire,
is not essential to the breadth of treatment upon
which we insist in fiction, to broad characterization,
to the play of imagination about common things which
transfigures them into the immortal beauty of artistic
creations. What a simple idyl in itself is Goethe’s
“Hermann and Dorothea”! It is the
creation of a few master-touches, using only common
material. Yet it has in it the breadth of life
itself, the depth and passion of all our human struggle
in the world-a little story with a vast horizon.
It is constantly said that the conditions in America
are unfavorable to the higher fiction; that our society
is unformed, without centre, without the definition
of classes, which give the light and shade that Heine
speaks of in “Don Quixote”; that it lacks
types and customs that can be widely recognized and
accepted as national and characteristic; that we have
no past; that we want both romantic and historic background;
that we are in a shifting, flowing, forming period
which fiction cannot seize on; that we are in diversity
and confusion that baffle artistic treatment; in short,
that American life is too vast, varied, and crude for
the purpose of the novelist.