Literature and Life (Complete) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 661 pages of information about Literature and Life (Complete).

Literature and Life (Complete) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 661 pages of information about Literature and Life (Complete).

III.

A survey of this sort imparts no just sense of the facts, and I own that I am impatient of merely naming authors and books that each tempt me to an expansion far beyond the limits of this essay; for, if I may be so personal, I have watched the growth of our literature in Americanism with intense sympathy.  In my poor way I have always liked the truth, and in times past I am afraid that I have helped to make it odious to those who believed beauty was something different; but I hope that I shall not now be doing our decentralized literature a disservice by saying that its chief value is its honesty, its fidelity to our decentralized life.  Sometimes I wish this were a little more constant; but upon the whole I have no reason to complain; and I think that as a very interested spectator of New York I have reason to be content with the veracity with which some phases of it have been rendered.  The lightning—­or the flash-light, to speak more accurately—­has been rather late in striking this ungainly metropolis, but it has already got in its work with notable effect at some points.  This began, I believe, with the local dramas of Mr. Edward Harrigan, a species of farces, or sketches of character, loosely hung together, with little sequence or relevancy, upon the thread of a plot which would keep the stage for two or three hours.  It was very rough magic, as a whole, but in parts it was exquisite, and it held the mirror up towards politics on their social and political side, and gave us East-Side types—­Irish, German, negro, and Italian—­which were instantly recognizable and deliciously satisfying.  I never could understand why Mr. Harrigan did not go further, but perhaps he had gone far enough; and, at any rate, he left the field open for others.  The next to appear noticeably in it was Mr. Stephen Crane, whose Red Badge of Courage wronged the finer art which he showed in such New York studies as Maggie:  A Girl of the Streets, and George’s Mother.  He has been followed by Abraham Cahan, a Russian Hebrew, who has done portraits of his race and nation with uncommon power.  They are the very Russian Hebrews of Hester Street translated from their native Yiddish into English, which the author mastered after coming here in his early manhood.  He brought to his work the artistic qualities of both the Slav and the Jew, and in his ‘Jekl:  A Story of the Ghetto’, he gave proof of talent which his more recent book of sketches—­’The Imported Bride groom’—­confirms.  He sees his people humorously, and he is as unsparing of their sordidness as he is compassionate of their hard circumstance and the somewhat frowsy pathos of their lives.  He is a Socialist, but his fiction is wholly without “tendentiousness.”

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Literature and Life (Complete) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.