The name says, indeed, so exactly and so fully3 what they are that little remains4 for their bibliographer5 to add beyond the meagre historical detail here given. Their short and simple annals could be eked6 out by confidences which would not appreciably7 enrich the materials of the literary history of their time, and it seems better to leave them to the imagination of such posterity8 as they may reach. They are rather helplessly frank, but not, I hope, with all their rather helpless frankness, offensively frank. They are at least not part of the polemic9 which their author sustained in the essays following them in this volume, and which might have been called, in conformity10 with 'My Literary Passions', by the title of 'My Literary Opinions' better than by the vague name which they actually wear.
They deal, to be sure, with the office of Criticism and the art of Fiction, and so far their present name is not a misnomer11. It follows them from an earlier date and could not easily be changed, and it may serve to recall to an elder generation than this the time when their author was breaking so many lances in the great, forgotten war between Realism and Romanticism that the floor of the "Editor's Study" in Harper's Magazine was strewn with the embattled splinters. The "Editor's Study" is now quite another place, but he who originally imagined it in 1886, and abode12 in it until 1892, made it at once the scene of such constant offence that he had no time, if he had the temper, for defence. The great Zola, or call him the immense Zola, was the prime mover in the attack upon the masters of the Romanticistic school; but he lived to own that he had fought a losing fight, and there are some proofs that he was right. The Realists, who were undoubtedly13 the masters of fiction in their passing generation, and who prevailed not only in France, but in Russia, in Scandinavia, in Spain, in Portugal, were overborne in all Anglo-Saxon countries by the innumerable hosts of Romanticism, who to this day possess the land; though still, whenever a young novelist does work instantly recognizable for its truth and beauty among us, he is seen and felt to have wrought14 in the spirit of Realism. Not even yet, however, does the average critic recognize this, and such lesson as the "Editor's Study" assumed to teach remains here in all its essentials for his improvement.
Month after month for the six years in which the "Editor's Study" continued in the keeping of its first occupant, its lesson was more or less stormily delivered, to the exclusion15, for the greater part, of other prophecy, but it has not been found well to keep the tempestuous16 manner along with the fulminant matter in this volume. When the author came to revise the material, he found sins against taste which his zeal17 for righteousness could not suffice to atone18 for. He did not hesitate to omit the proofs of these, and so far to make himself not only a precept19, but an example in criticism. He hopes that in other and slighter things he has bettered his own instruction, and that in form and in fact the book is altogether less crude and less rude than the papers from which it has here been a second time evolved.
The papers, as they appeared from month to month, were not the product of those unities20 of time and place which were the happy conditioning of 'My Literary Passions.' They could not have been written in quite so many places as times, but they enjoyed a comparable variety of origin. Beginning in Boston, they were continued in a Boston suburb, on the shores of Lake George, in a Western New York health resort, in Buffalo21, in Nahant; once, twice, and thrice in New York, with reversions to Boston, and summer excursions to the hills and waters of New England, until it seemed that their author had at last said his say, and he voluntarily lapsed22 into silence with the applause of friends and enemies alike.
The papers had made him more of the last than of the first, but not as still appears to him with greater reason. At moments his deliverances seemed to stir people of different minds to fury in two continents, so far as they were English-speaking, and on the coasts of the seven seas; and some of these came back at him with such violent personalities23 as it is his satisfaction to remember that he never indulged in his attacks upon their theories of criticism and fiction. His opinions were always impersonal24; and now as their manner rather than their make has been slightly tempered, it may surprise the belated reader to learn that it was the belief of one English critic that their author had "placed himself beyond the pale of decency25" by them. It ought to be less surprising that, since these dreadful words were written of him, more than one magnanimous Englishman has penitently26 expressed to the author the feeling that he was not so far wrong in his overboldly hazarded convictions. The penitence27 of his countrymen is still waiting expression, but it may come to that when they have recurred28 to the evidences of his offence in their present shape.
KITTERY POINT, MAINE, July, 1909.
点击收听单词发音
1 serially | |
adv.连续地,连续刊载地 | |
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2 conjectured | |
推测,猜测,猜想( conjecture的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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3 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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4 remains | |
n.剩余物,残留物;遗体,遗迹 | |
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5 bibliographer | |
书志学家,书目提要编著人 | |
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6 eked | |
v.(靠节省用量)使…的供应持久( eke的过去式和过去分词 );节约使用;竭力维持生计;勉强度日 | |
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7 appreciably | |
adv.相当大地 | |
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8 posterity | |
n.后裔,子孙,后代 | |
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9 polemic | |
n.争论,论战 | |
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10 conformity | |
n.一致,遵从,顺从 | |
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11 misnomer | |
n.误称 | |
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12 abode | |
n.住处,住所 | |
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13 undoubtedly | |
adv.确实地,无疑地 | |
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14 wrought | |
v.引起;以…原料制作;运转;adj.制造的 | |
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15 exclusion | |
n.拒绝,排除,排斥,远足,远途旅行 | |
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16 tempestuous | |
adj.狂暴的 | |
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17 zeal | |
n.热心,热情,热忱 | |
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18 atone | |
v.赎罪,补偿 | |
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19 precept | |
n.戒律;格言 | |
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20 unities | |
n.统一体( unity的名词复数 );(艺术等) 完整;(文学、戏剧) (情节、时间和地点的)统一性;团结一致 | |
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21 buffalo | |
n.(北美)野牛;(亚洲)水牛 | |
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22 lapsed | |
adj.流失的,堕落的v.退步( lapse的过去式和过去分词 );陷入;倒退;丧失 | |
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23 personalities | |
n. 诽谤,(对某人容貌、性格等所进行的)人身攻击; 人身攻击;人格, 个性, 名人( personality的名词复数 ) | |
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24 impersonal | |
adj.无个人感情的,与个人无关的,非人称的 | |
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25 decency | |
n.体面,得体,合宜,正派,庄重 | |
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26 penitently | |
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27 penitence | |
n.忏悔,赎罪;悔过 | |
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28 recurred | |
再发生,复发( recur的过去式和过去分词 ); 治愈 | |
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