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+ The American novel to-day | Project Gutenberg
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78461 ***</div>
+
+<h1>
+THE AMERICAN NOVEL<br>
+TO-DAY
+</h1>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="larger"><i>A Social and Psychological Study</i></span><br>
+<br>
+<span class="xlarge"><span class="allsmcap">BY</span> RÉGIS MICHAUD</span><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+BOSTON ~ 1928<br>
+LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
+</p>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<p class="center smaller">
+<i>Copyright, 1928</i>,<br>
+<span class="smcap">By Little, Brown, and Company</span><br>
+<br>
+<i>All rights reserved</i><br>
+<br>
+Published January, 1928<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<span class="smcap">Printed in the United States of America</span>
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="front">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_v">v</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="ACKNOWLEDGMENT">
+ ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The author wishes to express his indebtedness to
+the publishers who have so kindly granted him permission
+to reprint extended quotations from novels
+used in the chapters of this book. These include
+Robert M. McBride &amp; Company, publishers of
+“Jurgen,” “Figures of Earth,” “Domnei” and “The
+Cream of the Jest” by James Branch Cabell; Houghton
+Mifflin Company, publishers of “My Antonia” by
+Willa Cather; Boni &amp; Liveright, publishers of “An
+American Tragedy,” “A Hoosier Holiday,” “The
+Genius,” “Sister Carrie,” “The Financier” and “Hey
+Rub-a-Dub-Dub” by Theodore Dreiser and “Dark
+Laughter” by Sherwood Anderson; The Viking Press,
+publishers of “Marching Men,” “The Triumph of the
+Egg,” “A Story Teller’s Story,” “Windy McPherson’s
+Son” and “Many Marriages” by Sherwood Anderson;
+and D. Appleton &amp; Company, publishers of “Miss
+Lulu Bett” by Zona Gale.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="front">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p_vi"></a><a id="p_vii"></a>vii</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FOREWORD">
+ FOREWORD
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>This book grew out of a series of lectures given by
+the author at the Sorbonne during the year 1926.
+These lectures were later published in a volume which
+was awarded the Montyon prize by the French Academy.
+The author’s first task is to apologize to the
+American reader for his audacity in attempting to transcribe
+it into English, and to seek his indulgence by
+reminding him that this is “an essay from a French
+pen,” to quote our former ambassador, M. Jusserand.
+It is only fair that the writer should warn his readers
+that the field of his investigation has been limited. His
+purpose was not to write a complete history of the
+American novel, although the principal masters of
+modern fiction have been included in the book; nor
+was it his intention that this should be purely a piece of
+literary criticism.</p>
+
+<p>No one can open an American novel without being
+impressed by the earnestness and the unanimity which
+the authors display in discussing moral and social questions.
+Their books constitute a vast satire of present-day
+American civilization, a defense of the rights of
+man against the pressure of obsolete ideals and traditions.
+From this standpoint, they constitute a homologous
+group while each retains his full measure of
+originality.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_viii">viii</span></p>
+
+<p>Realism is not a new factor in American fiction.
+From Edward Eggleston to Theodore Dreiser, the
+American novel has tended more and more to become a
+precise account of American society. However, realism
+has never been as prevalent and as outspoken as it is
+to-day. As the United States increased in number and
+in population, the conflict between the ideals of the
+individual and those of the mass became more and more
+acute. Meanwhile the progress of experimental psychology
+afforded the American novelist a new means of
+explaining and revealing the motives of the individual.</p>
+
+<p>In my book I have made reference to psychoanalysis
+in particular. Current literary criticism cannot afford
+to ignore Doctor Freud. Some masters of American literature,
+such as Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
+Henry James, Margaret Fuller and Amy Lowell have
+lately been subjected to a successful psychoanalysis.
+The new psychology permits a more exact diagnosis of
+several important phases of our consciousness which
+have their origin in the deepest recesses of our soul, and
+which, though not literary in themselves, are often manifest
+in literature. Freudian psychology is the natural
+ally of the sociologist. It shifts the largest part of the
+responsibility for many of the moral diseases and idiosyncrasies
+of the individual upon social institutions.
+By presenting Puritanism as a form of moral inhibition
+it throws a new light upon it.</p>
+
+<p>Moral and psychological duplicity have been the
+subjects of several European investigations before the
+ascendancy of Doctor Freud. One of the most suggestive
+was presented in a book called “Le Bovarysme”
+by the French philosopher, Jules de Gaultier. He chose
+Flaubert’s Madame Bovary as being the most typical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_ix">ix</span>case of romantic inhibition. He showed that after
+all romanticism was nothing but a psychological disease
+and the attempt of an individual under social pressure
+to appear in a double light in his own eyes. A more
+pathetic example can scarcely be conceived than that of
+Flaubert’s heroine, Emma Bovary, and her attempt to
+lead an imaginary life as a compensation for her monotonous
+environment. It is obvious from a perusal of
+American novels of to-day that Emma Bovary has
+many brothers and sisters in this country. A normal
+society cannot exist without normal people and the
+latter cannot be imagined without a certain amount of
+personal freedom and felicity. Standardization, the
+tyranny of public opinion and morals, the leveling of
+the exceptional to the mass ideal, petty persecutions,
+blue laws, Comstockery and so forth, had a part to play
+in Emma Bovary’s slow but sure moral and spiritual
+starvation, and in her ultimate suicide. Social welfare
+rests on a harmonious balance of give and take between
+the upper and lower classes. An excess of freedom
+produces anarchy; an excess of tyranny, inhibitions,
+despair and crime. No life is worth living wherein
+action is not a sister to dreams to some extent, to use
+Baudelaire’s saying. The plight of Flaubert’s heroine
+and that of Carol Kennicott in “Main Street” are
+different aspects of the same social and moral disease—undue
+moral repression.</p>
+
+<p>The author of this book is not a pessimist and he is
+well aware that there are many American virtues;
+frankness, cordiality, buoyancy, a love of life and a
+love of action, a craving for change, the exaltation of
+youth, pure and triumphant, and the dynamism of
+national life,—these are qualities which the Old World
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_x">x</span>might envy the New. But an outside observer might
+also have the right to point to the reverse side of these
+qualities. What has become of ethical and intellectual
+standards in the United States, a country so unmistakably
+prosperous and happy from a material point
+of view? What is the present condition of culture
+which exists behind the display of luxury and comfort?
+How has America fared in the conflict of quality <i>versus</i>
+quantity which has swept the world?</p>
+
+<p>One thing strikes the European in these United
+States of to-day; it is the contrast between the general
+prosperity and the individual discontent. The average
+American, taken out of his natural surroundings, appears
+like one who is sacrificed by being harnessed to some huge
+task whose importance he cannot grasp with reference to
+his personal satisfaction. He has helped to build a colossal
+structure, but what has he succeeded in achieving
+for his own gratification? Has he not sacrificed his best
+personal interests to the general welfare? The average
+American is an optimist superficially, but many
+disappointments lie buried in his heart. There seems
+to be some ungratified longing in his life; neither
+Puritan asceticism nor material prosperity can satisfy
+the new generation in America. The newcomers
+declare themselves discontented; they have become
+frankly pessimistic. A proud and wealthy nation, the
+proudest and wealthiest of all, the most eager and the
+most successful in conquering the means of material
+welfare, America does not seem to know how to make
+her children happy. They are in revolt, they are
+questioning the ideals and institutions of their fathers.
+In poetry, in drama, in the pulpit and in the press,
+pessimism and criticism prevail. Only recently the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_xi">xi</span>élite of the American intelligentsia declared that the
+civilization of the United States had been a failure.</p>
+
+<p>What of all that? The author is not dismayed by
+these complaints. He holds that art in its largest sense
+has always had pessimism as its base and exaltation
+as its apogee. <i>Durch Leiden Freude!</i> the great Beethoven
+proclaimed. Better to have the blues of a
+Chatterton, an Edgar Allan Poe, a Francis Thompson,
+than to have the banal optimism of a Babbitt after a
+good meal. The present pessimism of the younger
+generation in America is a good omen and an indication
+of a better future. Young America is looking forward
+to more thrilling spiritual adventures and it certainly
+will not be deceived in its high expectations.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ RÉGIS MICHAUD
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="front">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p_xii"></a><a id="p_xiii"></a>xiii</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+</div>
+<table>
+ <tr><td></td><td class="tdl">Foreword</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_vii">vii</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">I</td><td class="tdl">The Case Against the Puritans</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_3">3</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">II</td><td class="tdl">How Nathaniel Hawthorne Exorcised Hester Prynne</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_25">25</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">III</td><td class="tdl">Henry James, Edith Wharton, William Dean Howells and American Society on Parade</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_47">47</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IV</td><td class="tdl">Theodore Dreiser as a Bio-Chemist</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_71">71</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">V</td><td class="tdl">Theodore Dreiser and the American Tragedy</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_102">102</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VI</td><td class="tdl">Sinclair Lewis and the Average Man</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_128">128</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VII</td><td class="tdl">Sherwood Anderson or When the Dreamer Awakes</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_154">154</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">VIII</td><td class="tdl">Sherwood Anderson on This Side of Freud</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_181">181</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IX</td><td class="tdl">James Branch Cabell and the Escape to Poictesme</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_200">200</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">X</td><td class="tdl">James Branch Cabell on the High Place</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_221">221</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XI</td><td class="tdl">Reinforcements: Willa Cather, Zona Gale, Floyd Dell, Joseph Hergesheimer, Waldo Frank</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_238">238</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">XII</td><td class="tdl">Ulysses’ Companions: Robert McAlmon, Ben Hecht, William Carlos Williams</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_257">257</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td class="tdl">Index</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#p_285">285</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_1">1</span></p>
+<p class="center xlarge">
+THE AMERICAN NOVEL TO-DAY
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="front">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p_2"></a><a id="p_3"></a>3</span></p>
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">
+ CHAPTER I
+ <br>
+ <i>The Case Against the Puritans</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The last fifteen years have seen a complete revolution
+in old American literary ideals. There has been a
+new efflorescence of poetry known as the “new poetry”
+movement. On the stage, after the attempts of William
+Vaughn Moody to renew the American drama, by
+fusing together realism and symbolism, Eugene O’Neill
+appeared and showed originality in his lyric dramatizations.
+In criticism, talents of the first order were
+revealed. The din of battles, the eagerness of controversies
+bear witness to the existence of an intensive,
+intellectual life in the United States to-day. Romanticism
+<i>versus</i> classicism, progress <i>versus</i> tradition, or, to
+speak the language of the country, radicalism <i>versus</i>
+conservatism, waged a strenuous battle for their respective
+ideals. Messrs. Mencken, Van Doren, Rosenfeld,
+Van Wyck Brooks, Frank Harris, on the left wing, Paul
+Elmer More, the late Stuart P. Sherman, Irving
+Babbitt, W. C. Brownell, on the right, have made a
+sport of intellectual polemics and appreciation. American
+criticism is not content with gliding on the surface
+of authors or problems. It goes straight to moral problems
+and shows a keen intuition of technics.</p>
+
+<p>This spiritual effervescence is well worth our attention.
+The literary nonconformist is a type not yet
+extinct in America. A revival of the protestant spirit
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_4">4</span>and of critical examination has taken place in American
+literature. More faith and conviction have been spent
+in literary production than in the pulpit of the churches.
+The late Randolph Bourne was a typical example of the
+American literary radical, and Mr. Henry Mencken
+continues the tradition among us.</p>
+
+<p>Even from the literary point of view, the American
+novel in the nineteenth century envied the rest of the
+world nothing. It produced excellent models of all
+kinds. The novel of adventure, the novel of manners
+have been stamped by Cooper and Hawthorne with the
+authentic seal of genius. More recently, Henry James
+showed himself a master of the psychological novel
+and an unparalleled artist. The vogue in America and
+abroad of the American “movies” could not be explained
+without the writings of Jack London. The short story,
+since Edgar Poe, had been a product copyrighted in
+America, while American humorists had won a worldwide
+reputation.</p>
+
+<p>When all is told, if we make an inventory of the literary
+production in the world, as compared with that of
+the United States, in prose and verse, since, let us say,
+the advent of Baudelaire in France, we see that America,
+a so-called utilitarian country, has set, in more
+than one way, modern literary standards, with Poe,
+Whitman, Henry James. Meanwhile, in the realm of
+thought, American philosophy and psychology exerted
+a capital influence abroad. (A recent novel by M.
+Paul Bourget&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> still takes for granted all the doctrines
+professed by William James in his “Handbook of
+Psychology.”)</p>
+
+<p>Let this be said in way of prelude, to make the readers
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_5">5</span>of this volume well aware of the fact that the author
+does not accept without reserve all the criticisms
+hurled against American literature by modern American
+critics. The fertility and originality of American literature,
+in a country without literary traditions or institutions,
+are facts beyond all doubt. They fill one with
+optimism regarding the intellectual future of this great
+nation.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, criticism is unleashed in the United States nowadays
+and it spares nothing. If the French are critical
+by birth, one would say, judging from the mass of evidence,
+that the modern American was born fussy. In a
+country where the standards of life change overnight,
+critical revaluations in literature are fatal. The
+American Hall of Fame could not escape the law of
+perpetual transformation. Until recently, the United
+States was the last country in the world which continued
+to take for granted the optimism of the eighteenth-century
+encyclopedists. Americans have not yet lost
+their faith in automatic progress. Despite the “fundamentalists”
+they have evolution in their blood. May I
+suggest, on the threshold of this book, that a European
+observer may be better located, ideally speaking, to
+render American literature full justice than even native
+critics? He has less illusions and also less prejudices.
+He views the literary revolution in the recent years in
+America as a result of the moral and social advance.</p>
+
+<p>In the last twenty years a new class of writers has invaded
+American literature. The spirit of the pioneers
+never died in America. The young writers wanted to
+conquer new fields in an entirely new way. Their
+originality was a challenge to the old order. More than
+any other country since the War, literary America has
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_6">6</span>struggled to find a new heaven and a new earth. Modern
+writers are conscientiously and deliberately insurgents.
+They turn a cold shoulder to traditions. In
+fact, they belong, socially, to a new class. Few of them
+are well-to-do bourgeois educated in expensive colleges
+and depending for their writing upon leisure and
+incomes. American literature is no longer the monopoly
+of gentlemen and scholars. The great majority
+of American writers to-day are self-made men, born
+from the people, without any blue blood and entirely
+democratic in their lives if not in their ideals. Most of
+them wear the chevrons not of the universities but of
+journalism. A great many, and the most noted among
+them, were reporters before becoming authors. This
+throws not a little light on their literary achievements.
+Most of them adhere to no church. The American
+literary “Who’s Who” includes indiscriminately all
+creeds, Protestants, Catholics, Jews, and free thinkers.
+American literature has shunned respectability. It
+jumped from the right to the left and even to the extreme
+left. From aristocratic or bourgeois it became
+revolutionary and proletarian.</p>
+
+<p>Even the geographical positions were altered.
+American literature had, up to the most recent years,
+been largely manufactured in the eastern States, a
+country conservative by tradition. As opportunities
+for adventure became rare in the East, Boston, Philadelphia
+and even New York ceased to be literary Meccas.
+The new literature developed in the Middle West.
+This fact is not without its historical significance.</p>
+
+<p>It marked a return of the American mind to the
+natural line of American migration, from frontier to
+frontier, across the continent. The writers took the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_7">7</span>path of the missionaries, the pioneers and the captains
+of industry, the path of the covered wagon.</p>
+
+<p>This was a challenge to the ideals of their predecessors.
+Classic American writers leaned more on the East
+than on the West, more on Europe than on their own
+country. Their literary taste and ideals, if not always
+their programme, were European, or if you prefer, Victorian.
+The new literature is strictly indigenous. It
+is crude and in many ways primitive. It is no longer
+manufactured in drawing-rooms or in studios, but in
+immediate contact with life. The great American novel
+of the nineteenth century was exotic and retrospective.
+It was sentimental and romantic. Its ethical and social
+background was traditional. Sentimentality and romance,
+the search after the picturesque, have gone by
+the boards. They have passed to the “movies” or to the
+popular magazines, the latter almost as backward to-day
+as they used to be fifty years ago and as harmless.
+The novel of adventure has been extinct, as a
+<i>genre littéraire</i> in America, since the death of Jack
+London. Even the social novel has suffered a radical
+change. It is no longer written from the outside, from
+the point of view of society, as in the days of Frank
+Norris or Upton Sinclair. It is now written from the
+inside, from the point of view of the individual. It
+is more psychological than social. In fact, while the
+American novel became more realistic, it also began to
+be beset by moral problems. It ceased to be an epic to
+become a satire. From this point of view, however, despite
+their cynicism, the new masters of American fiction
+show themselves true to the old ideal. Their books
+are fraught with idealism, with the spirit of reform
+and amelioration. Even when they fight Puritanism,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_8">8</span>the American literary insurgents show themselves more
+puritanic than the Puritans. They are haunted by
+the dream of a better world and of a better humanity.</p>
+
+<p>The fact that the new literature in America is contemporary
+with the wave of pessimism which has
+marked the last twenty years is not a mere coincidence.
+The two events stand very much together in a relation
+of effect to cause. Pessimism in the United States
+to-day has not yet affected the external aspects of American
+life. It has not made the average American less
+buoyant and confident. The sunny side of American
+life is still there. And yet, it cannot be denied that
+the age of jazz is more gloomy than the age of Roosevelt.
+There is a great deal of dissatisfaction in America
+to-day. The restless trend of life, the mad pursuit of
+material ease, the desertion of the home, the speed
+mania, the get-rich-quick impulse, are no longer the
+privilege of the grown-up. The contagion of material
+welfare and luxury has reached the young. It has lured
+them and led them astray. Educators, clergymen,
+sociologists, and, unfortunately too, criminologists, are
+much worried by the spread of the new paganism, and the
+growth of juvenile delinquency. American homes and
+colleges are swamped to-day with precocious supermen
+and superwomen eager to live their lives, as the saying
+is, without knowing how, except by aping their elders,
+by procuring expensive motor cars and jewels, or by
+securing for themselves road-house privileges. Juvenile
+criminality is on the increase. There is an epidemic of
+suicide among the young and the standards of morality
+are not much higher among the mature at large. No
+wonder that the American élite should be clamoring for
+a revaluation of standards.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_9">9</span></p>
+
+<p>How can they win their fight? They are a handful
+in a mass of more than one hundred million people, led,
+the vast majority of them, by mob psychology and the
+tyranny of public opinion. This certainly is a pathetic
+and vexing problem. For a European observer the
+fight in the United States to-day is not so much that of
+good and evil, right and wrong. The economic and material
+standards of the average American are much higher
+than those in the Old World. The fight in America to-day
+is, at the bottom, that of the élite against the masses,
+the fight of quality <i>versus</i> quantity. This problem lies
+far beyond the power of statistics. It cannot be coped
+with by economists or sociologists. It falls within the
+pale of the moralist, the mystic and the philosopher.
+A big nation, like a big army, cannot exist without a discipline
+and a strict subordination of the masses to their
+leaders. How can this be possible without setting
+limits to the rights of individual development? This
+problem is complicated in America by that of standards.
+How are the demands of the masses going to be gratified
+without a leveling down of the standards? Is not
+material comfort the most obvious and most accessible
+value for the greater number? And what has intellectual
+growth to do with material welfare?</p>
+
+<p>A type of civilization is not easily changed. Only a
+Chinese general or a Nietzschean philosopher would
+dare to solve the problem of the masses by applying
+the remedy suggested, a long time ago, by the benign
+R. W. Emerson:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Earth crowded, cries “Too many men.”</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">My counsel is kill nine in ten.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>More than ten millions have been killed, within
+the last ten years, in Christian warfare, and <i>quality</i>
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_10">10</span>does not seem to have won yet over quantity. The
+polemics around the War have not solved but intensified
+the feud between the American élite and the masses.
+Immediately after the armistice of 1918, American
+radicals undertook a revaluation of war responsibilities.
+The American intelligentsia had never put
+its heart into the struggle. Conscientious objectors
+swarmed on all sides. The present economic, political
+and intellectual chaos through the world is largely the
+work of American nonconformists. They spared nothing
+to reverse the guilts, to confuse the origin and
+the issues of the war. The result of their efforts was
+an immense disarray of the world’s conscience. The
+actual misunderstandings about debts and reparations,
+the aloofness of the United States and their retirement
+within a narrow and obsolete Monroeism, the Americano-phobia
+abroad can be credited mostly to the
+exertions of American radicals. After they had lost
+their temper with Europe they began their intellectual
+civil war at home. Their target-practicing became
+suicidal. The glories of the American Hall of Fame
+were lampooned in broad daylight. American institutions
+and ideals were challenged. There was an orgy
+of self-exterminating criticism. While radical newspapers
+and magazines wasted much ink to blacken the
+lamb and to bleach the wolf, in international relations,
+critics at home, like Mr. Mencken, turned their ire
+against their own country. The “Magnalia Christi
+Americana” of Cotton Mather became the “Americana”
+of the <i>American Mercury</i>. In Mr. Mencken’s
+amusing magazine American glories and reputations
+were mowed down like daisies on a lawn. The
+churches, the colleges, the Federal Government were
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_11">11</span>dealt with, at first hand and without much respect, and
+then appeared the indictment of American civilization
+as a whole by the thirty intellectuals. The confidence
+of the world in the United States and of the United States
+in themselves must still be very great, if one judges by
+the quick and informal dismissal into oblivion of this
+bulky indictment.</p>
+
+<p>As a result of all this, there seem to be two United
+States to-day warring with each other. On the one hand
+we still have the “Land of God,” a nation just as proud
+of itself to-day as it was in the best days of the Roosevelt
+administration. And then there are the discontented
+and self-criticizing United States, a land where
+every article of the old creed is contradicted by self-disparaging
+critics. Between the two, on a sort of
+No Man’s Land, wander not a few erratic souls in
+quest of an ideal. The late Henry Adams was their
+model.</p>
+
+<p>The upheaval against optimism and conformity is
+pretty general to-day among the thinking classes in the
+United States. Protests, inquiries and criticisms
+appear on all sides. If we believe them, American citizens
+have been cheated of their rights to happiness as
+promised in the American Constitution. But the fight
+among them is not so much with the American Constitution
+and the Bill of Rights, as with the official scapegoat,
+Puritanism.</p>
+
+<p>As a collective and national state of mind, Puritanism
+can be traced far back in American traditions and literature.
+Before indicting it, we must not fail to see its
+good points, and it had many. Far from being in itself
+adverse to all æsthetics, as its American critics would
+have us believe, Puritanism was in the past a literary
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_12">12</span>incentive of the first order. Its tragic conception of life
+is much more artistic than the dull optimism of the
+masses. No art is possible without pessimism. Art in
+its essence is a challenge to life. Puritanism was the
+only moral and religious system, outside Catholicism,
+which invented a mythology and a symbolism in the
+modern times. It inspired the immortal epic of Milton.
+It gave their quaint flavor even to Jonathan Edwards’
+sermons and the “Magnalia” of Cotton Mather. No
+true road to salvation can ignore the pits of human
+wickedness. The fantastic elements in Hawthorne and
+Poe were largely borrowed from the demonology of the
+Puritan divines. Puritanism believed in the devil.
+It was a tremendous source of religious emotions. It
+fed the sense of the supernatural which is to-day practically
+extinct in the American churches. It favored
+the growth of mysticism and of the poetic faculties. It
+enhanced the love of solitude. It shunned comfort and
+emphasized the military and rugged aspects of life. It
+was friendly to nature and not adverse to the call of the
+wild. It pondered over the ominous problems of life,
+death, grace and responsibility. It inclined toward
+simple life, intimacy with the humble and familiar
+aspects of life. This Puritan type of mind has been
+illustrated by some of the most intellectual leaders of
+America, Emerson, Thoreau, Emily Dickinson, William
+Vaughn Moody, Robert Frost, Robinson. Puritanism
+was a synonym for restraint, poverty, abnegation, depth
+of conscience and thought, qualities sorely needed in
+our present state of civilization. We owe to it the
+sense of the Infinite in the humblest objects and
+amidst the most trivial circumstances of our life,
+what Maeterlinck called, after Emerson, the sense of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_13">13</span>“the familiar sublime.” And let us not forget those
+forms of inhibited irony which gave birth to American
+humor.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, it is true, the toll levied by Puritanism
+on human happiness has been ominous. For the
+average mind it meant intellectual consumption and
+asphyxiation. Puritan asceticism was an enemy of
+everything beautiful. Puritan institutions, the Puritan
+spirit of prohibition and constraint, have been justly
+denounced by modern critics as the chief obstacle to a
+rational and acceptable conception of life. Puritanism
+showed an admirable knowledge of the truest sides of
+existence and of its responsibilities, but it did not see
+all its sides. It perceived only and denounced flesh and
+the devil. It was suspicious of all the happy instincts
+and denied some essential human cravings.</p>
+
+<p>Hence the present revolt against it. The critics of
+Puritanism in America to-day are legion. The anti-Puritan
+spirit forms the substratum of contemporary
+American literature. It is only fair to Theodore
+Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson, Sinclair Lewis, James
+Branch Cabell and others to try to show, in way of
+preamble, that their plea against Puritan hypocrisy is
+supported by most of the up-to-date critics who handle
+a pen in the United States to-day. To review them all
+would be a long task. I shall deal only in this chapter
+with the most noted, like Messrs. Waldo Frank, Henry
+Mencken, Theodore Dreiser and a few others.</p>
+
+<p>Waldo Frank (in “Our America”) views Puritanism
+as a sort of moral and mystic utilitarianism based on the
+repression of natural instincts. As a religious and a
+practical expansionist (the one is not to be separated
+from the other), the Puritan sacrificed moral growth
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_14">14</span>to physical hegemony. To conquer the continent and
+intensify his energies he surrounded himself on all sides
+with restraints. Neurosis was the result, but the Puritan
+charged it to the account of the Prince of Darkness
+and the invisible powers. He wanted to reach salvation
+by a short cut and did not hesitate to do violence to
+human nature. When they attack Puritanism the new
+insurgents do not aim at windmills. They see it as a
+practical influence still at work in American society
+to-day. It gives them the key to American behavior.
+According to them, the average American is a victim of
+puritanic repressions since childhood. The system of
+American education is hostile to what modern psychologists
+call “wish-fulfillment.” The American is active,
+expansive, a progressionist and a doer in regard to
+matter. He shows a virile conscience in his conduct
+toward the physical universe. On the contrary, in
+regard to spiritual life, he dodges the facts and shrinks
+within himself. His physical courage is undeniable, but
+he is mentally and morally a coward. Read an American
+novel, attend a play or a “movie.” All begins well.
+Human problems are not ignored but, at the end, Puritan
+cowardice interferes to twist the facts and hide
+them in an enforced “happy ending.” The American
+is a wonderful mechanical engineer. When he cannot
+subdue reality by machinery, he resorts to plots and
+schemes of his own. He tries to gamble and speculate.
+Hence American ideology. When he has confused the
+issues the American gives it up and he passes his problems
+to his church, his lodge, his newspaper, or, preferably,
+to his wife, not to forget the mind reader and the
+palmist. Optimism at all costs is a necessity for the
+business man as well as for the pioneer. Expansion
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_15">15</span>lives on assumptions, on foregone conclusions and hopes
+supported by haphazard calculation.</p>
+
+<p>According to Waldo Frank, Puritanism was tantamount
+to a religious decadence. It was essentially
+irreligious. Not the meek in spirit but the shrewd and
+the valiant were the elect of Puritanism. From the
+very beginnings of colonization in America, Puritan
+idealism and commercial imperialism went hand in
+hand. The decadence began at the epoch of the Reformation.
+While all Europe was advancing along
+intellectual, artistic and literary paths, the Puritan
+bartered his soul for earthly possessions. Spiritual
+energies turned material. Physical exertions for power
+paralyzed higher aspirations. The individual as such
+no longer counted. Expansion was all and the building
+of an empire. Even the notion of a personal God disappeared.
+The <i>genius loci</i> replaced Providence. <i>Magnalia
+Christi</i> became <i>Magnalia Christi Americana</i>.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>That one of the most fervent forms of mysticism
+should have decayed into being only a craving for
+material prosperity is the paradox and the curse of Puritanism.
+America, we are told, is teeming to-day with
+all the riches of this earth. From the top of a mountain
+the Tempter would be proud to show it to Him who said
+that His kingdom did not belong to this world. From
+the heights of the ideal, however, America looks like a
+desert. Let her confess her sins, her emptiness, her
+impurities. Let America repent and convert herself!
+Let her find a way to salvation by giving up the Puritan
+ideals! Thus speaks the new Zarathustra with an
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_16">16</span>intensity of conviction and a zeal which betrays the
+prophet and the idealist. Such an indictment takes us
+very far away from the days of optimism, from Emerson,
+Whitman, William James and Theodore Roosevelt.
+American idealism was buried in the grave of the Transcendentalists.
+As for American energy it floundered in
+the quagmire described by Theodore Dreiser in “An
+American Tragedy.”</p>
+
+<p>After Waldo Frank let us hear Mr. Henry Mencken,
+than whom no better expert for smashing the Puritan
+can be found (in “Puritanism as a Literary Force”).
+According to him, except in the course of brief escapades,
+the average American translates all values and
+even beauty in terms of right and wrong. He is at the
+bottom a policeman and a judge, a fanatic of the law.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>Americans do not hesitate to sacrifice beauty and
+passion to respectability. If an American writer dared
+to follow the example of either Zola or Balzac in their
+descriptions of American society, they would be sent
+to the penitentiary for life. One of the most active
+forces at work to keep up American civilization is a
+belief in the universal presence of sin and the need of
+inquisition to uphold the moral code. Readers familiar
+with Mr. Mencken’s writings will remember with what
+fertility of imagination and keenness of wit he illustrated
+his views on the subject. The richer the Puritan became
+the more tyrannical he showed himself. His wealth
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_17">17</span>made him intolerant and oppressive. Now that he was
+assured of his salvation, he turned his energies to convert
+the world outside by campaigns, crusades and so forth.
+He tried to make the world safe for righteousness and
+morality by compulsion, prohibitions and blue laws.</p>
+
+<p>As a disciple of Zola and Balzac, and an extreme
+realist in his descriptions of American society, Theodore
+Dreiser has not yet been jailed for life, so far as we know.
+However, he enjoyed enough scraps with the censor to
+have personal reasons for venting his feelings concerning
+the Puritan. The author of “Sister Carrie” is not
+a professional humorist, and yet he can hardly control
+himself when he contemplates the American scene
+as ordained by Puritanism. I quote freely from his
+essay on “Life, Art in America,” in “Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub.”
+Theodore Dreiser cannot refrain from chuckling,
+he tells us, when he sees more than one hundred
+millions of his countrymen loaded with a wealth which
+passes the imagination of the most enthusiastic miser
+and unable to count among themselves a sculptor, a
+poet, a singer, a novelist, an actor, a musician of the
+first rank. For two centuries America enjoyed an
+amazing prosperity. Her land is stuffed with mines,
+with oil and coal. It is full of beautiful mountains, of
+large valleys and rivers. There are facilities of all sorts
+for trade and for travel. And yet, with all her prosperity,
+America hardly counts an artist or a thinker of
+mark. Where are we to find, leaving aside Emerson
+and William James,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> the American Spencer, Nietzsche,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_18">18</span>Schopenhauer, or Kant? Has America any historian to
+compare with Macaulay, Grote or Gibbon? Has she any
+novelist like Maupassant or Flaubert? Where is the
+American equivalent of Crooks, Roentgen, Pasteur? Is
+there an American critic with the depth and forcibleness
+of Taine, Sainte-Beuve or the De Goncourts? Has
+America a playwright like Ibsen, Tchekhov, Shaw,
+Hauptmann or Brieux? Where are her Coquelins, Sonnenthals,
+Forbes-Robertsons and Bernhardts? America
+has produced only one poet since Whitman, Edgar Lee
+Masters. American painting can marshal Whistler,
+Inness and Sargent, but two out of the three migrated
+abroad. America has plenty of inventors, some of
+them remarkable, but this has nothing to do with art
+and the freeing of the mind.</p>
+
+<p>Such is Theodore Dreiser’s arraignment of American
+culture. Puritanism thwarted intellectual energies.
+It is its fault if this country of wonderful technicians
+remained in a state of childhood in regard to higher
+mental achievements. On one hand the American
+grasps the physical world with the might of a Titan,
+on the other he revels in platitudes about brotherly
+love, purity, virtue, truth, etc., and under the cover of
+these platitudes he unleashes the Comstocks against
+independent writers.</p>
+
+<p>There are some professional psychologists among the
+critics of Puritanism to-day. In a recent book entitled
+“The American Mind in Action” two of them&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> made a
+methodical study of puritanic inhibitions. They selected,
+to illustrate their case, personalities such as
+Emerson, Lincoln, Mark Twain, Andrew Carnegie,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_19">19</span>Comstock, Barnum, Franklin, Longfellow and Margaret
+Fuller.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>According to these authors the Puritan repression of
+natural instincts is a danger and a failure. It breeds
+hypocrisy and poisons the soul. Puritanism is responsible
+for most of the mental tortures which have been
+dramatized by American novelists in particular. The
+scientific name for these tortures is “floating anxiety”
+or “soul-fear.” They explain the transformation of
+Puritanism into imperialistic expansion. Everything is
+good for the Puritan if it takes him away from himself,
+from his fears, and his remorses. Hence his worship for
+action, for prosperity and success at all cost. American
+energy, viewed from this angle, is nothing but a substitute
+for scruples. If we believe this theory, the darings
+of the modern business man, his pluck, his boasting
+spirit of enterprise are only means to get rid of fright.
+A business man’s courage resembles that of the “Chocolate
+Soldier” in Bernard Shaw’s comedy. It is a
+derivative of fear, a <i>flight</i> straight ahead toward the
+enemy, because there is no hope left behind. The
+American continent was conquered by religious misanthropists
+who vented their bad feelings by starting an
+onslaught on the Indians and other inferior races. The
+wrath of Miles Standish when he finds himself rebuked
+by Priscilla in his courtship and his subsequent offensive
+on the Redskin explains this point of view.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> How different
+America would be if the Virginian Cavalier had
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_20">20</span>won over the Puritan! But the contrary happened.
+Natural conditions and economic forces made Puritanism
+the sole form of national ethics in the United States.
+So much the worse! This state of blind repression and
+of anxious insecurity have made Puritanism the only
+form of thinking in America. Notwithstanding the
+diversion of affairs or the relaxation of sports, travel
+and amusement, soul-fear cannot be eschewed.</p>
+
+<p>The American worries about health, hygiene. He
+worries about success. These are signs that the spiritual
+life is absent. Angry with himself, and with others,
+the disillusioned Puritan becomes a raider and an inquisitor.
+He wants to prohibit to others that happiness
+which is denied to him. He fears his own fear; he
+distrusts his emotions. He is afraid to surrender to
+nature which he regards as corrupt. And yet, without
+emotions there is no art or literature possible. An
+example of the Puritan inhibition, and of its effects on
+art, is Whistler painting, with all his soul, the portrait
+of his mother and calling it informally “Arrangement
+in black and white” for fear that he would betray his
+inner feelings. False pride, <i>amour-propre</i> and bluff are
+the ransoms for Puritanism.</p>
+
+<p>Another American complex, if we believe our critics,
+is the “mother complex,” the American complex <i>par
+excellence</i>. The sublimation of instincts in the American
+woman produced the so-called “motherly feeling.”
+It triumphs in American magazines and in the “movies.”
+The sentimental appeal to the motherly feeling is the
+surest and shortest way to arouse the emotions of the
+American crowds.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_21">21</span></p>
+
+<p>American idealism is largely manufactured by
+women. It is to women that the average American owes
+his ideals and ethical or literary standards. It is woman
+who inspires, supervises and censors art and literature
+in the United States; it is she who makes them aseptic,
+consumptive and tawdry.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>In business the American is a real “he-man” but,
+when he must face moral issues, he surrenders to his
+mate. He tamed the physical universe with machinery
+and became a leader of material civilization. He can
+well solve mechanical problems, but ethics, philosophy
+and gay science are beyond his pale. And this is why
+the typical American to-day is so idealistic, so practical
+too, so inventive and so little of a philosopher and of an
+artist. He is anxious, restless, assured of himself on
+the surface but, in reality, very sensitive to criticism.
+Nobody is more able than he to attain the goal of his
+ambitions and nobody is more unhappy and helpless
+when he has reached it.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_22">22</span></p>
+
+<p>Such is the survey of American ethics and psychology
+made by some of the best-known American critics. In
+this book it is meant to compare their views with those
+of the most noted among American novelists to-day.
+Floating anxiety, soul fear, Freudian complexes and
+inhibitions throw a great deal of light on the contemporary
+novel. The case against the Puritan has
+been pressed by modern American novelists to the
+limit of pathos.</p>
+
+<p>The massive, clumsy, but forcible and convincing
+Theodore Dreiser, the genial and yet embittered Sinclair
+Lewis, the mystic and intuitive Sherwood Anderson,
+the ironic and quixotic James Branch Cabell,
+accompanied by a galaxy of talented writers like Willa
+Cather, Zona Gale, Floyd Dell, Joseph Hergesheimer,
+Waldo Frank,—all of them, since Hawthorne, through
+Henry James, William Dean Howells and Edith Wharton,
+show themselves obsessed by the problems of Puritan
+inhibitions and their influence on human conduct.
+More recently still, a host of younger writers has
+appeared in American fiction, all of them fascinated by
+the question of psychological behavior. The wanderings
+of Ulysses, in James Joyce’s Freudian epic, through
+the mazes of subconsciousness, had many American
+followers. Several of them have been included in this
+volume.</p>
+
+<p>This book has no pretensions at being complete and
+it is not ashamed of being systematic. It deals chiefly
+with those American writers who explored the field of
+psychology and psychoanalysis and it happens to include
+most of the greatest. All writers of American
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_23">23</span>fiction to-day could not be marshaled in line but the
+most famous are here. The author is not a professional
+pessimist, but it is not his fault if the good half-dozen
+of original talents to-day, in American literature, are
+adepts in disillusion. There is no reason to be dismayed
+by this fact. Great art has always been pessimistic;
+the more pessimistic, it seems, the greater. The fact
+that an optimistic country like America has a gloomy
+literature to-day must not be a deterrent. Art, in its
+highest forms, is not a mere imitation of life. It is
+rather a reaction and a protest against it. It lives and
+works in the sphere of aspirations.</p>
+
+<p>The later generation of American writers is bent
+toward introspection and realism. In art these writers
+want truth. Between them and the past there is a gap.
+The time seems past for descriptive and objective literature.
+Subjectivism prevails. Novelists to-day want
+to share the lives of their characters. This new method
+of literary expression has been called in France <i>monologue
+intérieur</i>. The intimacy between reality and
+fiction has never been closer than now. The new
+writers also are revolutionists and iconoclasts. They
+swore allegiance to no master. Among foreign influences
+the Russian seems to be particularly prevalent
+with them. The American novel to-day would not be
+what it is without Dostoievski, Andreiev or Tchekhov.
+Neither does it deny its debt to Balzac, Flaubert, Zola or
+Marcel Proust. D. H. Lawrence and James Joyce also
+sponsored it.</p>
+
+<p>In ethics and sociology the aloofness of the newcomers
+is complete. Psychology, not morals, is their chief interest.
+They are indifferent to rhetorics. The questions
+of style are alien to them. The password nowadays
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_24">24</span>is spontaneous and original expression. Any means
+to this end is style.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now, from Hawthorne to James Branch Cabell
+and others, begin our journey through the field of
+American fiction.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_25">25</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">
+ CHAPTER II
+ <br>
+ <i>How Nathaniel Hawthorne Exorcised Hester Prynne</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>For twenty-five years America has been the classic
+country of experimental psychology. The more vague
+and uncertain metaphysics and ethics became in
+America, the more rigorous, exact and precise became
+psychology. The Americans carried to the field of
+experimental psychology their taste for statistics, formulæ
+and graphs. They set about with a singular
+complacency, measuring and weighing with the dynameter
+that human mind which their idealism had
+pictured, up to that time, as so transcendental and
+intangible. Never was science carried farther. Never
+was the thinking being submitted to such a test, gauged,
+measured, weighed, counted. The results of experimental
+psychology have passed into everyday practices.
+The psychological test and the intelligence test
+are a part of the university program, and count towards
+admission into the professions, the civil service and
+the army. The American universities which are substituting
+psychological tests for entrance examinations
+are becoming more and more numerous.</p>
+
+<p>This development of experimental psychology in
+America is interesting. It explains the obsession which
+the psychological problem has acquired in the eyes of
+contemporary novelists. In America, as in Europe,
+the novel has abandoned ethics for psychology. One
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_26">26</span>could not form a just idea of the American novel of
+to-day without bearing in mind at least the principal
+lines of the development of experimental psychology
+in America since William James.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>James was the great renovator and the pioneer of
+psychological studies in the United States. He was in
+psychology a true realist. Anti-intellectualist through
+both education and temperament, he brought psychology
+from the clouds to the earth; object and subject
+into the world of facts. He eliminated all scholasticism
+from the study of the self. He refused to subject
+the powers of the mind to empirical classifications.
+He conceived the spiritual life as a continuous creation.
+He condemned the division of the mind into autonomous
+faculties. The ego appeared to him to be, not
+a marquetry of powers, but a cluster of energy, one
+living and inseparable force, a current, a river, a
+“stream of consciousness.” Nor does James consent
+to the separation and classification into distinct <i>genres</i>
+of the activities of the mind. Art, mysticism, philosophy,
+science, ethics were in his eyes but aspects, different
+in appearance but in reality identical, of a single force;
+a happy confusion which permitted him, in his fine book
+on “The Varieties of Religious Experience” to bring
+into a new light the mystic phenomena, and which
+suggested to him an original philosophy of religions
+based on a new conception of conscious life. The
+importance which he attached to the subconscious and
+the confidence, carried even to credulity, which he
+accorded to psychical researches are well known.</p>
+
+<p>From James, the contemporary psychologists borrowed
+a theory which had a great success. I mean the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_27">27</span>studies on the dissociation of a personality. The views
+on this subject of the author of the “Treatise on Psychology”
+have their origin in his pragmatism. Desirous
+of assuring to the mind the free and entire use of all its
+powers, James, although a strong and confirmed realist,
+accorded but a representative and symbolic character
+to spiritual events. They were epiphenomenal, means
+chosen by the conscious activity to reach its ends and
+without other than purely symbolic importance. He
+considered the facts of the conscience not at all the
+equivalent of the facts of reality, but as symbols
+representing much less things themselves than the
+interest we take in them. Nothing can be more
+original than his hierarchy of the “Selves.” His
+mistrust for abstraction had caused him to form a
+very curious theory. He distinguished three orders
+of Self; the material Self which he reduced to the
+sensations of our body, of our clothes and of our
+surroundings; the social Self; and the spiritual Self.
+According to him, every individual possesses several
+social Selves; in fact, there are as many as there
+are groups which recognize them. Each one of these
+Selves acts in its group like an independent personality.
+Each has its own fashion of acting and reacting.
+In the same individual the different Selves
+may oppose each other, according to the social groups
+in which they develop.</p>
+
+<p>There we have the starting point of a theory which
+is now well known and which Pirandello, James Joyce
+and Marcel Proust have illustrated in literature. It
+has its origin in this principle: that, in order to persevere
+in their being, individuals disguise themselves
+and present to the exterior world surrogate creations
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_28">28</span>of their ego. Inspired by these doctrines, modern
+psychology has modified its consecrated terminology.
+It has recently replaced the word “character,” a classic
+and moralizing term, by a newer stamp—that of
+“personality picture.” It gives of the Self an interpretation
+no longer moral but æsthetic. According to
+this theory, the events of our inner life are fictions that
+we play on ourselves and on others. Each one of us
+chooses a personality, a character—or better, a
+travesty, a representation—and we pass our life in
+furthering and defending it. According to the surroundings
+and the different groups through which we
+pass, and in accordance with the necessities of the
+moment, we modify this personal portrait, deforming
+or attenuating it if we are weak, strengthening and
+enriching it if we are strong. The normal individual
+paints his personal portrait to suit the background of
+the external world; the neurotic, on the contrary,
+attributes to his fiction an intrinsic value independent
+of experience. In any case, we are essentially actors,
+mimics and parodists.</p>
+
+<p>This Self of which we take possession is a veritable
+psychic creation. It is a character which we spend our
+life in designing. It is our personal portrait signed by
+our self, “a personality picture.” According to a
+modern psychologist—Doctor Martin—every one of
+us is an artist and spends his life in drawing an original
+portrait of himself. Our actions write our autobiography
+which is, of course, a fiction. But this fiction is
+necessary. The success or failure of our lives depends
+on the way we draw our imaginary portrait. In other
+words, they depend on how we succeed in making our
+existence a work of art.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_29">29</span></p>
+
+<p>Before approaching psychoanalysis, I shall say a
+word about a new school of experimental psychology
+which is arousing interest at present in America. It
+cannot be neglected because of the light which it throws
+on the contemporary novel. It is called Behaviorism—the
+science of action or conduct. This system is based
+on the theory of stimulants and reactions or response.
+It takes back to empiricism and to psychophysics
+(mind-and-body relationship). It makes a clear sweep
+of our mental life, conscious or subconscious, and consents
+to know the Self only through its relations and
+reactions to the exterior world. Behaviorism appears
+in the form of a vast inquest, a sort of referendum on
+the possible motives of human actions. It replaces
+the interior observation of classical psychology and the
+Freudian divination by a peculiar Socratic-like examination,
+a tight network of questions which claim to
+capture in their meshes the secrets of the Self. Here
+are a few examples of this method of investigation.
+They resemble strongly a catechism,—what we call in
+college slang a “quiz.”</p>
+
+<p>This is the questionnaire proposed to diagnose the
+general emotional aptitude of a subject.</p>
+
+<p>Does the subject manifest a normal amount of
+curiosity? Has he initiative? What are his particular
+inclinations and hobbies? What is the history of his
+sexual initiations; of his liaisons, etc? Are his emotional
+reactions well balanced?</p>
+
+<p>To diagnose the disposition towards activity, the
+questionnaire is modified as follows. Is the individual
+lazy or industrious? Is he loquacious? Is he given
+to frequent laughter and to loud conversation? Are
+his movements effectual or awkward?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_30">30</span></p>
+
+<p>For social fitness the following questions are asked:</p>
+
+<p>How many intimate friends has the individual?
+What is the history of his family relations? How
+easily does he form friendships? How much loyalty
+has he? How much tact? Is his society sought by
+others?</p>
+
+<p>This is the method of behavioristic investigation.
+It appears very summary. Its critics accuse it, not
+without reason, of letting escape, through the gaps in
+its questions, that which is most worth knowing. Do
+not the answers to the questions of the behavioristic
+catechism consider already discovered the secret which
+one expects to obtain from them, so that all this display
+of questions is only a <i>petitio principii</i>?</p>
+
+<p>The attempt of behaviorism to construct our personality
+from without and to wring from us, by our
+acts, the secret of our thoughts is, however, interesting.
+It will help us to understand better the psychological
+realism and the reporting methods of Theodore Dreiser,
+for example. We shall bear it in mind for that reason.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I come now to psychoanalysis which is decidedly
+more attractive. Psychoanalysis bases its investigations
+and its definitions on the duplicity and hypocrisy
+inherent in individual and social life. It shows us a
+psychic world of several degrees; at the top and at
+the surface, the conscious universe: underneath, a
+sort of semi-darkness—the preconscious; still lower,
+the unconscious. Between these spheres the psychoanalyst
+pictures a moving, a passing, a continuous rising
+and descending of expression and repression, of desires
+and inhibitions. Between each compartment he places
+antechambers, thresholds, turnstiles, wickets, censors, a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_31">31</span>perfect clearing house, a central station for the receiving
+and sorting of the events of our mental life. There
+seems to exist a fore-established harmony between
+such a representation of conscious facts and Puritanism;
+a harmony which has not escaped the critics of
+psychoanalysis. According to a critic, “The comparative
+vogue (Why <i>comparative</i>? Should not one
+say <i>excessive</i>?) of Freudism in English-speaking countries
+is partly due to Protestant Puritanism. The
+narrow restrictions which Puritan ethics impose upon
+sexual satisfactions and the mystery in which they
+seek to envelop them would prove, in the eyes of the
+English and American psychiatrists, certain hypotheses
+of Freud and the supposed effect of Anglo-Saxon
+inhibitions upon the production of neurosis.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+
+<p>Freud gives us through his doctrine of complexes,
+inhibitions, suppressions and repressions, a striking
+explanation of Puritanism as I tried to describe it in
+the first chapter. He makes us understand very well
+the causes of floating anxiety and soul-fear which
+psychically characterize the Puritan. Suppression and
+censorship are certainly the key to Hawthorne’s
+Puritan portraits which I shall present shortly. The
+important rôle and the analytical descriptions given
+to sexual obsession in such Dreiser novels as “The
+Genius” fit in perfectly with the Freudian therapeutics,
+and the methods of Freud’s divination resemble greatly
+the main phases of the novel as Sherwood Anderson
+conceives it: seclusion, insinuation, confession, day
+dreams, dream symbolism, secret symbolic language,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_32">32</span>all with a basis of pronounced sexual obsession. Fiction
+and psychoanalysis agree perfectly in all this.</p>
+
+<p>We must not forget the disquieting elements of
+Freudism, the manner in which it reintroduces into the
+idea of Self the elementary, primitive, crude and purely
+instinctive constituents. There are, on this point,
+curious affinities between the “call of the wild” as
+understood by Freud and by Jack London, for example.
+The Anglo-Saxon is, despite his Puritanism, nearer
+true nature than the Latin, we are told. He is more
+primitive, more elementary. The psychoanalyst would
+undoubtedly confirm these views and this new manner
+of completing the portrait of the Puritan.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>After this introduction, of which, I hope, the readers
+will feel the pertinence in the following chapters, I
+should like, still from the point of view of psychological
+research and its influence on the American novel of
+to-day, to study certain aspects, which I consider very
+modern, of the novels of Nathaniel Hawthorne. He
+is a great artist and an armed psychologist, an able
+story-teller and, one might say, the detective of the
+Puritan conscience. He is, in many respects, very
+Freudian; what attracts him, from the moment he
+starts writing, is the inmost life, the enigma in the depths
+of the conscience. He feels that the world of appearances
+is false; that, being false, it is tragic; that the
+human being is twofold; that under the outward Self,
+the superimposed Self, is hidden a profounder, timid
+being or, as one says to-day, repressed. Instead of denouncing
+moral duplicity, like Carlyle or Mark Twain,
+Hawthorne transforms it into art. He loves enigmas,
+mysteries, obscurity, secret retreats. He is the explorer
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_33">33</span>of the subterranean world, the Conan Doyle of the
+conscience. In that, Hawthorne is assuredly a compatriot
+of Edgar Allan Poe.</p>
+
+<p>He lived a narrow existence in a monotonous and
+dismal New England town, but one filled with dreams
+and memories. Solitude and disillusion were his daily
+bread. His political ambitions were not fulfilled. He
+secluded himself in Concord, in the unfriendly neighborhood
+of Emerson, another repressed individual like
+himself. Heredity weighed heavily upon him. There
+is no doubt that one must look into his genealogy for
+the secret of his obsessions. All his life, Hawthorne
+was haunted by the idea of crime, by the thought of
+the Inquisition, by dungeons and tortures. Is not the
+crime which, in his “Marble Faun,” Donatello commits
+because of the averted glance of the unfortunate
+Miriam, an unconscious memory of that tragic duel
+suggested, we are told, to his friend Cilley, by an involuntary
+gesture of Hawthorne? Nor could he forget
+that one of his ancestors had been a witch burner.
+All that explains Hawthorne’s complex, the vague
+sense of disquietude and the mental fear which charge
+the atmosphere of his novels.</p>
+
+<p>One must note however, this said, that there is
+much more than a tragic and lugubrious conception of
+existence in Hawthorne’s books. The favorite and
+latent theme of his novels is paganism and the joy of
+living, the love of love, the delight in voluptuousness.
+His characters would willingly abandon themselves
+to it if the Evil One did not prowl so near in the forest,
+and if the deacon, the alderman and the constable did
+not lend a helping hand. It is impossible to be mistaken;
+Hawthorne’s imagination was pagan. The two
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_34">34</span>protagonists of “The Scarlet Letter,” considered his
+most puritanical book, are thoroughly immoral. They
+begin in anguish through the suppression of their desires
+and end in happiness through their abandonment to
+the freed libido. All of “The Marble Faun”—subject,
+characters and descriptions—is a plea for natural
+and instinctive expansion, a pagan plea. Donatello is
+an inspired symbol of this naturalistic conception of life.
+Donatello is the Faun, the beast become man, the man
+of nature, by definition good and happy until the
+awakening of his conscience. Hester Prynne, Miriam
+and Zenobia of “The Blithedale Romance” are seductive
+women, drawn without the slightest touch of
+hypocrisy or hesitation. Hawthorne is very susceptible
+to the qualities of the feminine mind. He has very
+sure, very penetrating, very profound intuitions about
+women, as his portraits of young girls show—like little
+Pearl in “The Scarlet Letter,” Phœbe in “The House of
+Seven Gables,” Hilda in “The Marble Faun,” Priscilla
+in “The Blithedale Romance.” He makes them very
+naïve, very sincere, in order, it would seem, to terrify
+them more by the discovery of evil, the knowledge of
+which is brought to them through the intermediation
+of one of their elders,—mother, sister or friend.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>This man, who aspired so keenly to the joy of living,
+had a conscience profoundly sensitive to evil. It is
+the susceptibility of check, the Puritan repression of
+desire. We have no need to recall with what inflexibility,
+what morbid obstinacy Hawthorne discussed
+the problem of evil. Dostoievski was not more tragically,
+more persistently haunted by the idea of crime
+and punishment than he. “The House of Seven
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_35">35</span>Gables” might just as well have been entitled “The
+House of Crime.” It is composed upon the theme that
+one does not escape a sin committed; that a misdeed
+is fatal in its results; that there is no redemption for
+the sinner. There is only immanent justice, as Emerson
+said, “eternal return”; according to Nietzsche,
+Fate, the authentic incarnation of the Calvinist predestination.
+It is not the act itself which constitutes
+sin, according to Hawthorne; it is the thought, the
+intention, and, as there is not a single human being
+who has not sheltered some criminal thought during
+the course of his life, it follows that we are all criminals.
+That is what Hawthorne repeated to satiety and what
+he wanted to prove in his books. But he went still
+farther, in a direction in which his Puritanism, because
+of its harshness, becomes sheer amorality. We think
+of Nietzsche’s “Beyond Good and Evil” when we read
+the numerous passages in which Hawthorne sustains
+the necessity of evil and consequently of crime. He
+does not hide it, for example, in connection with the
+two leading characters of “The Scarlet Letter.” He
+tells us that Reverend Dimmesdale’s remorse was
+“exquisite” as well as horrible. In “The Marble
+Faun” Donatello must commit a crime before Miriam
+will love him and utter that stupendous cry, “How
+beautiful he is!” Miriam holds that crime has lifted
+her poor Faun to a level superior to innocence; that
+Adam’s sin, repeated by Donatello, has brought his
+posterity to a higher, brighter level of happiness. It
+is remorse, Miriam tells us, which has awakened and
+developed in the Faun a thousand moral and intellectual
+faculties unknown till then. These are some of the
+moral paradoxes of the “Puritan” Hawthorne.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_36">36</span></p>
+
+<p>However interesting he may be as a moralist, he is
+still more so as a psychologist. His moral sense was
+not without effect here. He is one of the few American
+authors whose ethics are supported by the problem of
+evil; he was led to explore the conscience and his diagnoses
+are striking. They are in many respects very
+modern, as I shall try to show from “The Scarlet
+Letter.”</p>
+
+<p>Critics and readers have often mistaken the true
+significance of this book. It is vaunted as a masterpiece
+of story-telling, and a masterpiece it is in its main
+lines, despite some awkwardness in the development of
+the action, and if it is not judged too severely for
+repetitions which mar especially the last part of the
+book. The great mistake would consist in interpreting
+“The Scarlet Letter” as a plea for Puritanism. It is,
+in my opinion, quite the contrary. Very few critics
+have grasped the real viewpoint from which Hawthorne
+conceived the characters of Hester Prynne and Dimmesdale.
+(Excepting D. H. Lawrence, in a chapter of his
+imaginative but penetrating “Studies in Classic American
+Literature.”)&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>I do not wish to introduce Doctor Freud everywhere,
+nor do I want to exaggerate Hawthorne’s immoralism,
+but if there has ever been a piece of literature written
+to prove the dangers of the famous Freudian inhibition
+and to try to cure it, that work is certainly “The
+Scarlet Letter.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_37">37</span></p>
+
+<p>The wealth of psychological intuition in this novel
+is remarkable. It is the most human, the least moralizing
+(I was about to say the most personal of Hawthorne’s
+novels), excepting of course the ending, edifying
+and conventional as could be desired, but which is
+neither better nor worse than all Hawthorne’s endings.
+We will remember the tragic story of Hester Prynne,
+the beautiful Puritan seduced by the Reverend Dimmesdale.
+Hester gave everything to love. She was put
+in the stocks and condemned to wear embroidered on
+her blouse the letter A (adultery), an ignominious
+insignia which her heroic coquetry succeeded in converting
+into a bit of finery. Note well—Hester
+Prynne has no shame, no remorse for her sin. She
+is proud of it. The world has condemned her but she
+does not cease to love, no matter how cowardly Dimmesdale
+behaves. From the beginning to the very end of
+the book, Hester Prynne saw love only. If this is not
+the last word as it would probably be on the screen of
+the “movies,” especially the American “movies,” it
+is not far from being so and is the fault of neither Hester
+Prynne nor Dimmesdale but of Hawthorne himself,
+grown, as often happens with him, too timorous at the
+end of the book. Hawthorne is very canny in attributing
+to the Puritan Hester a rich, a voluptuous and
+almost “oriental” temperament. There does not exist,
+to my knowledge, even in Zola’s famous description
+of the Paradou (in “La Faute de l’abbé Mouret”)
+a more impetuous and eloquent burst of passion than
+the ending of “The Scarlet Letter,” particularly the
+scene in the forest between the spirited Hester and the
+timid Dimmesdale whom she rescues from his hysterical
+inhibitions by her impassioned declarations.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_38">38</span></p>
+
+<p>An example of Hawthorne’s psychological realism,
+still more characteristic than this case of Freudian
+evasion so exactly described, is the method which he
+used to wring from Hester’s lover his secret. Dimmesdale’s
+character is a masterpiece of intuition. He is a
+hypocrite but only through timidity, and in all, a tragic
+and pathetic figure, one of those weak and incomplete
+beings who have not even the courage to lie. Hawthorne
+dealt several times, and very successfully, with
+the study of warped or incompletely developed personalities.
+Clyfford Pyncheon in “The House of
+the Seven Gables,” and Donatello in “The Marble
+Faun,” are examples, and one might add to these the
+young women—so numerous in his novels—emotionally
+distressed in the face of evil. A victim, like
+Hester, of social conventions, but less courageous than
+she, less sure of himself in passion, Dimmesdale lacks
+very little to become the American Tartuffe. But he
+is saved by Hester, who exorcises him at the end, and
+rescues him from repression. The minister’s open
+confession on the pillory is an admirable scene. It has
+its counterpart in “The Marble Faun” in which the
+candid Hilda, unable to bear any longer the secret of
+the crime of which she was an involuntary witness,
+enters a confessional at St. Peter’s and, regardless of
+her Puritan heritage, reveals everything to a priest.
+Dimmesdale’s puritanical confession on the pillory is
+of the same nature. It is an explosion of craving and
+of repressed passion. From the viewpoint of modern
+psychology this scene is natural and scientific.</p>
+
+<p>But the most striking is the fashion in which Hawthorne
+endeavors to surprise Dimmesdale’s secret. For
+that purpose he invented a very curious secondary
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_39">39</span>character, Doctor Chillingworth. He is in many
+respects a melodramatic villain worthy of a serial
+by Eugene Süe. He is Hester Prynne’s deceived
+husband. Once acquainted with Chillingworth, we
+become very indulgent of poor Hester’s sin. More
+than half necromancer, Chillingworth passed a large
+part of his life among the Indians, who taught him
+their magic; that is the fantastic side of his character.
+From the psychological point of view Chillingworth is
+Suppressed Hatred. The readers of “The Scarlet
+Letter” will remember the diabolic plan for vengeance
+formed by the necromancer-doctor who suspects
+Dimmesdale of having been his wife’s lover. Little by
+little he attaches himself to the unfortunate minister
+under the cover of friendship. He tortures him by
+besieging him with insidious questions. During the
+course of these searching examinations, Hawthorne
+shows himself again a very subtle psychologist and a
+precursor and pioneer of psychoanalysis. All the conditions
+in these scenes are so worked out that Dimmesdale’s
+resistance takes on a truly Freudian aspect.
+Dimmesdale will release his secret for no consideration.
+In fact, to the very end, Chillingworth gets no further
+for all his trouble, but the cross-examination to which
+he subjects the Reverend is curious, and Dimmesdale
+has a narrow escape.</p>
+
+<p>Here are, for example, a few remarks made by the
+novelist himself on these examinations:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>A man burdened with a secret should especially avoid
+the intimacy of his physician. If the latter possess
+native sagacity, and a nameless something more, let
+us call it intuition; if he show no intrusive egotism, nor
+disagreeably prominent characteristics of his own; if
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_40">40</span>he have the power, which must be born with him, to
+bring his mind into such affinity with his patient’s
+that this last shall unawares have spoken what he imagines
+himself only to have thought; if such revelations
+be received without tumult, and acknowledged not so
+often by silence, an inarticulate breath, and here and
+there a word, to indicate that all is understood; if to
+these qualifications of a confidant be joined the advantages
+afforded by his recognized character as a physician;
+then, at some inevitable moment, will the soul
+of the sufferer be dissolved, and flow forth in a dark
+but transparent stream, bringing all its mysteries into
+the daylight.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Dimmesdale’s mind had become so familiar to
+Chillingworth that, Hawthorne tells us, his whole
+“stream of consciousness,” as William James would
+say, passed before the physician’s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Chillingworth became, in his researches, a true adept
+of Freud. After having begun the study of Dimmesdale
+objectively, he ended by becoming passionately
+absorbed in his case. Chillingworth experienced a
+veritable fascination, we are told:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>He now dug into the poor clergyman’s heart, like a
+miner searching for gold; or rather like a sexton delving
+into a grave, possibly in quest of a jewel that had been
+buried on the dead man’s bosom, but likely to find nothing
+save mortality and corruption.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It is again as a true disciple of Freud that Chillingworth
+scented in his victim the hidden <i>libido</i>, which he
+calls a “strong animal nature,” inherited from his
+father and mother. Here is another bit of dialogue
+which is very modern in the same way. Chillingworth
+is speaking,</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“He to whom only the outward and physical evil is
+laid open knoweth oftentimes but half the evil which
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_41">41</span>he is called upon to cure. A bodily disease, which we
+look upon as whole and entire within itself, may, after
+all, be but a symptom of some ailment in the spiritual
+part. Your pardon once again, good sir, if my speech
+give the shadow of offence. You, sir, of all men whom
+I have known, are he whose body is the closest conjoined
+and imbued and identified, so to speak, with the
+spirit whereof it is the instrument.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I need ask no further;” said the clergyman,
+somewhat hastily rising from his chair. “You deal
+not, I take it, in medicine for the soul.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Upon which Dimmesdale rebels. He will not unveil
+his soul to the doctor of his body. To the suggestions
+of his enemy he opposes a curious and optimistic philosophy
+concerning the discovery of secret thoughts.
+No power, according to him, excepting the divine power,
+could force a human being to betray his inmost self,
+whether with words, signs of writing or emblems.</p>
+
+<p>On Judgment Day it will be otherwise, but that day
+the reading of the secret thoughts will be expiatory
+and, for that reason, not painful but pleasant. According
+to Dimmesdale, who is fully aware of his condition,
+there are two kinds of repressed individuals, the timid
+ones whose weakness forbids confession, and the moralists,
+the fatalists—we should say the “pragmatists”—who
+consider silence, hypocrisy, as socially more salutary
+than avowal. Dimmesdale, from this point of view, is,
+until his conversion in the forest and at the pillory,
+what we should call to-day a complete simulator.</p>
+
+<p>However Freudian these diagnoses may appear in
+form, they are hardly so intentionally. The treatment
+to which Chillingworth submits his patient is conceived
+to be a torture and not a cure; Chillingworth, an able
+practitioner perhaps, is a very poor psychologist.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_42">42</span>Without in the least suspecting it, he works against his
+own ends. He never suspects that the day when
+Dimmesdale will reveal his secret to him will find him
+not punished but relieved, and in reality cured, according
+to Freud, and that he, Chillingworth, will have lost
+his time and pains as a psychoanalyst. This is exactly
+what happens. Once freed from repression and anxiety,
+Dimmesdale reveals himself to be a new man, a man in
+the full sense of the word for the first time, and now he
+cares neither for his fears nor for Chillingworth who
+has exploited them. The true healer of Dimmesdale
+is not Chillingworth, it is Hester Prynne.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I have already told what admiration I hold for this
+ending of “The Scarlet Letter.” Hawthorne reveals
+himself here to be not only a profound psychologist and
+audacious moralist but a great poet. I want to quote
+at length the scene in the forest where repressions and
+inhibitions are drowned in “a flood of sunshine”:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Hester heaved a long, deep sigh, in which the burden
+of shame and anguish departed from her spirit. O
+exquisite relief! She had not known the weight until
+she felt the freedom! By another impulse she took off
+the formal cap that confined her hair, and down it
+fell upon her shoulders, dark and rich, with at once
+a shadow and a light in its abundance, and imparting
+the charm of softness to her features. There played
+around her mouth and beamed out of her eyes, a radiant
+and tender smile, that seemed gushing from the very
+heart of womanhood. A crimson flush was glowing on
+her cheek, that had been long so pale. Her sex, her
+youth, and the whole richness of her beauty, came back
+from what men call the irrevocable past, and clustered
+themselves, with her maiden hope and a happiness
+before unknown, within the magic circle of this hour.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_43">43</span>And, as if the gloom of the earth and sky had been but
+the effluence of these two mortal hearts, it vanished with
+their sorrow. All at once, as with a sudden smile of
+heaven, forth burst the sunshine, pouring a very flood
+into the obscure forest, gladdening each green leaf,
+transmuting the yellow fallen ones to gold, and gleaming
+adown the gray trunks of the solemn trees. The
+objects that had made a shadow hitherto embodied the
+brightness now. The course of the little brook might
+be traced by its merry gleam afar into the wood’s heart
+of mystery, which had become a mystery of joy.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the sympathy of Nature—that wild,
+heathen Nature of the forest, never subjugated by
+human law, nor illumined by higher truth—with the
+bliss of these two spirits! Love, whether newly born,
+or aroused from a deathlike slumber, must always
+create a sunshine, filling the heart so full of radiance
+that it overflows upon the outward world. Had the
+forest still kept its gloom it would have been bright in
+Hester’s eyes and bright in Arthur Dimmesdale’s.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This liberation of her passion made of Hester a
+different woman.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>She had wandered, without rule or guidance, in a
+moral wilderness; as vast, as intricate and shadowy,
+as the untamed forest, amid the gloom of which they
+were now holding a colloquy that was to decide their
+fate. Her intellect and heart had their home, as it
+were, in desert places, where she roamed as freely as the
+wild Indian in his woods. For years past she had
+looked from this estranged point of view at human institutions,
+and whatever priests or legislators had established;
+criticising all with hardly more reverence than
+the Indian would feel for the clerical band, the judicial
+robe, the pillory, the gallows, the fireside, or the church.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Thus, insists Hawthorne, Hester’s misfortunes liberated
+her. The scarlet letter (that is, if we judge her
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_44">44</span>sin rightly) served her now as a passport with which to
+penetrate into regions where women scarcely dared
+go: “Shame, Despair, Solitude! These had been her
+teachers—stern and wild ones—and they had made
+her strong, but taught her much amiss.”</p>
+
+<p>Dimmesdale, too, reaches the same result. The
+basis of his optimism since Hester rescued him from
+his neuroses is amoral (should one say immoral!) as
+that of the woman he loves:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>His decision once made, a glow of strange enjoyment
+threw its flickering brightness over the trouble of his
+breast. It was the exhilarating effect—upon a prisoner
+just escaped from the dungeon of his own heart—of
+breathing the wild, free atmosphere of an unredeemed,
+unchristianized, lawless region.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>At that moment Dimmesdale’s spirit “rose, as it
+were, with a bound, and attained a nearer prospect of
+the sky, than throughout all the misery which had
+kept him grovelling on the earth.”</p>
+
+<p>It is with good reason that the minister, upon issuing
+from the forest hurled a defy at his former parishioners:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>I am not the man for whom you take me. I left him
+yonder in the forest, withdrawn into a secret dell, by a
+mossy tree trunk and near a melancholy brook! Go,
+seek your minister, and see if his emaciated figure, his
+thin cheek, his white, heavy, pain-wrinkled brow, be
+not flung down there, like a cast-off garment.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The transformation, the conversion of Dimmesdale
+freed from repression, is complete. It overthrows his
+whole philosophy of life. It makes of him an amoralist
+and a Nietzschean. Listen to Hawthorne:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Before Mr. Dimmesdale reached home his inner man
+gave him other evidences of a revolution in the sphere
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_45">45</span>of thought and feeling. In truth, nothing short of a
+total change of dynasty and moral code in that interior
+kingdom was adequate to account for the impulses now
+communicated to the unfortunate and startled minister.
+At every step he was incited to do some strange, wild,
+wicked thing or other, with a sense that it would be at
+once involuntary and intentional, in spite of himself,
+yet growing out of a profounder self than that which
+opposed the impulse.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Such I believe to be the basic meaning of this masterpiece,
+spoiled again, unfortunately, by an edifying
+ending. Hawthorne was one of the novelists best
+acquainted with man’s conscience.</p>
+
+<p>Less fecund than many, he had the wisdom and talent
+to concentrate his genius and thought upon the study
+of a preëminently human problem, that of evil and
+responsibility. Besides the genius of intuition he had
+that of symbolism. This realistic psychologist was a
+marvelous imagist. He himself has given us a striking
+formula of his art. Art, according to him, is the light
+of thought and imagination shining through what he
+called “the opaque substance of days.” Like Emerson,
+he considered wonder as an essential human faculty.
+Intuitive sympathy alone, he believed, could solve the
+mysteries of existence. To come to truth one must
+possess the innocent and naïve insight of a child.</p>
+
+<p>For the purpose of knowing better the external world,
+Hawthorne loved to look at it through the symbols
+which his prolific imagination presented to him. One
+may even find that he carried symbolization to excess.
+Two of his novels, in particular “The House of the
+Seven Gables” and “The Marble Faun,” are, in certain
+regards, veritable allegories. He found everywhere
+affinities between man and things. He gave a soul to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_46">46</span>inanimate objects and made of them a tangible extension
+of our personality. In “The House of the Seven
+Gables,” everything, from the cellar to the garret, even
+the chicken yard and the well, is so imagined as to give
+us the impression of the curse which weighs on the old
+abode. In its antique frame “The Marble Faun” is
+conceived in the same manner. Portraits which are
+alive, human faces which seem to reincarnate pictures
+and statues, the strange resemblance, for instance, between
+Miriam in “The Marble Faun” and the portrait
+of Beatrice Cenci, or the statue of Cleopatra, mirrors in
+whose depth float ghost faces, mysteries of dusk and
+shadow, mysteries of human voices—the symbolism
+of Hawthorne is as rich as that of Edgar Poe and adds
+another charm to his novels.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_47">47</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">
+ CHAPTER III
+ <br>
+ <i>Henry James, Edith Wharton, William Dean Howells
+ and American Society on Parade</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>From Hawthorne to the present time, American fiction
+numbers many masters. Preëminent among them
+stand Henry James, Edith Wharton and William Dean
+Howells. They are a group apart. Their philosophy
+of life and their æsthetics place them in the past more
+than in the present. Each one of them, in his own original
+way, continued the tradition of the novel of intrigue,
+the novel of character and that of manners. Of the
+three, Henry James stands foremost as a psychologist
+and an artist. His career was marked by a progressive
+alienation from his native environment and culminated
+with a complete desertion of America for England.
+James, with Edgar Allan Poe, was the sole example of
+an artistic conscience in American letters. He represented
+in American literature the longing for the European
+background. He confessed that he could not do
+his work outside of aristocratic surroundings. This he
+explicitly avowed in his essay on Hawthorne. He
+deplored the fact that the New England novelist had
+to estrange himself from Europe where he could have
+matured his talent and made it bear fruit.</p>
+
+<p>“The flower of art,” wrote he, “blooms only where
+the soil is deep.... It takes a great deal of history
+to produce a little literature ... it needs a complex
+social machinery to set a writer in motion.” He
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_48">48</span>pleaded extenuating circumstances for what he called
+“the modest” and provincial “nosegay” of Hawthorne:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>It takes so many things ... it takes such an accumulation
+of history and custom, such a complexity of
+manners and types, to form a fund of suggestion for a
+novelist.... The negative side of the spectacle on
+which Hawthorne looked out, in his contemplative
+saunterings and reveries, might, indeed, with a little
+ingenuity, be made almost ludicrous; one might enumerate
+the items of high civilization, as it exists in other
+countries, which are absent from the texture of American
+life, until it should become a wonder to know what
+was left. No State, in the European sense of the word,
+and indeed, barely a specific national name. No sovereign,
+no court, no personal loyalty, no aristocracy, no
+church, no clergy, no army, no diplomatic service, no
+country gentlemen, no palaces, no castles, no manors,
+nor old country-houses, nor parsonages, nor thatched
+cottages, nor ivied ruins; no cathedrals, nor abbeys,
+nor little Norman churches; no great Universities nor
+public schools—no Oxford, nor Eton, nor Harrow; no
+literature, no novels, no museums, no pictures, no political
+society, no sporting class—no Epson nor Ascot!</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>For an English or French imagination there is something
+appalling in this vast emptiness. The American
+is well aware that something remains in his huge country
+to make up for these deficiencies, but when we come to
+the question of knowing what it is that remains—“that
+is his secret, his joke, as one might say.”</p>
+
+<p>American humor, according to James, was born from
+the bareness of the American scene. It bobbed up in
+America for reasons analogous to those which seventeenth-century
+savants assigned to the rising of the
+liquid column in the barometer: “<i>la nature a horreur
+de vide</i>”; nature is afraid of the vacuum and must find
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_49">49</span>some compensations for it. Such was the map of the
+great American desert drawn by Henry James. For
+Walt Whitman, the United States were a cornucopia.
+They were a blank for Henry James. He fled to Great
+Britain to forget the great Valley of Death and the
+call-of-the-wild. To imagine Henry James and Jack
+London as countrymen takes not a little imagination
+indeed.</p>
+
+<p>As a challenge to this unpatriotic programme, let
+the reader remember the sarcasms heaped on European
+aristocracy, traditions and culture by Mark Twain,
+in “Innocents Abroad” and “The Prince and the
+Pauper,” which are contemporary with Henry James’
+productions. Mark Twain voted for American philistinism,
+and American literature to-day has also cast its
+suffrage in favor of the democratic ideals. Puritanism
+was the last form of aristocratic tradition in the United
+States. Henry James’ indictment of his native country
+marked the parting of the ways between the ancient
+and the modern, between tradition and evolution, culture
+and spontaneity. A character in one of his early
+novels solved for us the riddle of James’ exile. He told
+us that Americans are artistically disinherited; that
+they are condemned to be superficial; that they do not
+belong to the magic circle; that the substratum of
+American perceptions is thin, barren, artificial; that, as
+follows, Americans are bound to imperfection. To
+excel in anything they have ten times more things
+to learn than a European. There is a certain deep
+sense which they lack. They have neither taste, tact
+nor strength. How could they have any? Their
+climate is harsh and violent, their past silent, their
+present dizzying, their environment oppressive and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_50">50</span>without charms. There is nothing in America to feed,
+stir and inspire an artist. All aspiring souls become
+exiles.</p>
+
+<p>The pathos of Henry James’ career, the secret of
+his chiaro-oscuro and of his twilight effects can be
+heard ringing in this quotation. He never became
+truly reconciled to his solitude at Rye in Sussex. He
+remained a Puritan at heart. For a Puritan conscience
+every ship across the sea, west or east bound, is still
+and always will be the <i>Mayflower</i>. He began by surveying
+the American scene. His first novels, “The
+Madonna of the Future,” “Roderick Hudson,” “Daisy
+Miller,” were very different in technique from his later
+productions. They were straightforward, obvious and
+simple, with very little psychoanalysis, and few literary
+detours or arabesques. They did not go round and
+round. Still, James had already managed to force his
+favorite point in favor of the American uprooted abroad
+and he had already procured the American virgin a
+passport to European disillusions. As an expert in the
+psychology of women, only Hawthorne had shown an
+equal sense of innuendoes. Had James been a woman,
+he would have made an ideal chaperone. How deftly
+and delicately he took his angels abroad to comfort
+them and guide them in their exile! How he liked to
+use them as what he called a reverberator in his stories!</p>
+
+<p>How he grilled them, coaxed them into a sort of
+psychological trance! There was something mesmeric
+and Palladinian&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_13_13" href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> in his approach to women. In his
+books women are more ghostly than real. Has any one
+of them ever had a real body of her own? They are all
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_51">51</span>so pre-Raphaelite! In place of a body they have a soul.
+Like Fra Angelico’s seraphs they are encumbered with
+wings, “wings of the dove,” a poetic but a most inefficient
+apparel for globe-trotters. James’ heroines could
+not flap their wings in their crude utilitarian country.
+(Imagine one of his angels lost in Dreiser’s “A Hoosier
+Holiday!”) And neither can they adapt themselves
+to the Old World. Their transcendental ethics are so
+out of keeping with real life that it unfits them for
+existence. How pure they are, how idealistic, how
+naïve and shy! Daisy Miller, the representative
+American virgin abroad, is a martyr added by James
+to the Christian calendar. She is the Sainte Blandine
+of American fiction. James brought her into the limelight
+to emphasize the tragic longing of her sisters for
+Europe. She embodied the tragic conflict of Puritan
+conscience and European paganism, the same conflict
+which Hawthorne dramatized in “The Marble Faun.”
+Una, in Hawthorne’s novel, was a foster-sister to Daisy
+in her fear of the flesh and of the devil.</p>
+
+<p>Lured away from their native and more primitive
+environment by art, mysticism and culture, there is not
+enough real red blood in James’ American maidens to
+follow the call to the last. They soon find themselves
+waylaid and they stop midway. Several of them do not
+survive their disillusions. They die of despair before
+reaching the mystic Grail (the “golden bowl”) unless
+they are rescued <i>in extremis</i> by some “ambassadors”
+from the “land of God.” Soul-fear and floating anxiety
+paralyzed their wings. And yet, how ardent and eager
+they are to discover the world in an intimate relation
+to themselves! They take the soul of the adventurers
+and the pioneers to the conquest of intuition. They
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_52">52</span>would fain clasp to their bosom all that is beautiful in
+the world, if their Puritan consciences allowed. The
+art galleries, the romantic landscapes, the ancient
+monuments, the old churches are their familiar hunting
+ground. How they clutch at spiritual adventures!
+Their passion for sentimental expansion, their craving
+for introspection, know no limits. As Milly Theale
+exclaims in “The Wings of the Dove,” they want to be
+<i>abysmal</i>. They want “something to find out,” something
+which calls for “the vigil of searching criticism”
+through many and many hundred pages. There is
+something morbid in this bend toward self-analysis
+and always thinking of one’s self. Henry James even
+took children to that school of unlimited moral curiosity.
+“What Maisie Knew” is a wonderful and almost
+frightful example of instinctive detection of grown-up
+passions by a child.</p>
+
+<p>When all is said, the case of Henry James had much
+to do with psychological duplicity. His novels were
+a first-hand contribution to the study of inhibitions.
+As has been justly remarked, the main object of his
+books was “emotional starvation.” His psychology
+revolved around “the Puritan blindness of the senses
+or the atrophy of emotions.” James himself “wrote
+his fiction under heavy inhibitions, the result both of
+personal shyness and of the peculiar timidity of his
+race and day.” His chief object in writing novels was
+to denounce “the undervitality of Americans.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_14_14" href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_53">53</span></p>
+
+<p>In regard to æsthetics, Henry James won the day for
+the tactics of the new writers. He anticipated Marcel
+Proust in his method of journeying at random, wherever
+it pleased his fancy, through the maze of psychology.
+He substituted what he called <i>appreciation for</i> the
+old-fashioned process of dramatization. He could not
+dramatize and he proved a failure on the stage. He
+preferred to ramble and to meander. Modern fiction,
+thanks to him, cut loose from superficial realism. He
+originated the <i>monologue intérieur</i>. He did not rely on
+episodes to build up a novel. He had enough imagination
+to do without reality. Sharp and keen as he was
+in analysis, he was artistic in a synthetic way. His
+ambition was to display beautifully <i>the whole thing</i>
+before our eyes. He prospected the depth of our
+hearts without ever losing his artistic control and his
+presence of mind. In this respect the distance is
+slight between the disquisitions of “The Wings of the
+Dove,” “The Golden Bowl” or “The Ambassadors,”
+and the modern effusions of either Sherwood Anderson
+or James Joyce. Both are the products of similar
+intellectual and artistic tactics. Immediate data of
+his conscience James projected into the pages of his
+books through an original kaleidoscope. His process
+was oblique and centrifugal. He composed <i>from the
+center outward</i>, in order to give his writings their dreamlike
+effect. At the end of his life he used to rave aloud,
+Hamlet fashion, while dictating his novels. With such
+a method we are not surprised to hear him condemn
+the realistic French writers who followed Flaubert, and
+whom nevertheless he admired greatly, at a time when
+he had not yet been able to make up his mind as to
+whether he could do his work in Paris or in London.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_54">54</span>How could his atavistic Puritanism allow him to swallow
+Flaubert, Maupassant, Zola, Loti, without qualifications?&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_15_15" href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+According to him the French had only “a
+sensuous conscience.”</p>
+
+<p>As an artist, Henry James possessed the American
+taste for prodigality. He liked flourishes. He needed
+a superabundance of materials. If the materials failed
+him, he made up for them with a prodigality of disquisitions
+and arabesques. He could be deep and he
+could also be sophisticated. In several of his novels a
+superfluity of the trimmings hardly compensates for a
+thinness of the substance. His writings were the result
+of what he called <i>saturation</i>. He was creative enough
+to be convinced that art was not and cannot be an
+imitation of reality. He who writes adds something to
+what he writes about. He reproached William Dean
+Howells for sacrificing creative imagination to reality.
+He declared himself unable to observe, even if it were
+possible for him to do so, and at the same time to imagine.
+All perception to him was a vision, something to
+soar above after going round and round it. The transcendentalist
+and the detective, those two chief attitudes
+of the American mind, were innate with him. His father
+was a Swedenborgian and his brother William an adept of
+psychical research. American undervitality redeemed
+itself in Henry James’ novels by a flight into the transcendental
+and the introspective, along a road discovered
+and traveled already by Ralph Waldo Emerson.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Mrs. Wharton specialized in the society novel. The
+author of “The House of Mirth,” “The Fruit of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_55">55</span>Tree,” “The Reef,” “The Age of Innocence” is an
+excellent craftsman. Like Henry James, she draws
+from and caters to the élite. She imported the novel
+of manners to America and gave to it an original turn.
+It would have been impossible for her to write or for us
+to read them as they are without constant reference to
+the aristocratic and cultural background which Henry
+James insisted upon in his novels. She draws portraits
+and studies environments with an objectivity verging
+on indifference and even on cruelty. Her field is
+limited and even narrow but it is her own and she has
+conscientiously explored it. Her writings have a touch
+of cutting and elegant precision. She brings everything
+to the surface. Her Muse is curiosity for curiosity’s
+sake. In studying American high life she used
+about the same process which Paul Bourget applied in
+French fiction to the happy few of the Boulevard Saint
+Germain, that most aristocratic citadel. She preserved
+the fossils of American gentry for posterity.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing telepathic in her delineations. Her
+characters live on the ground floor of consciousness.
+Her novels are as clear and as unmysterious as Fifth
+Avenue on a Sunday morning after church. Contrary
+to Henry James, she dramatizes more than she appreciates.
+She is very deft in constructing a plot. Her
+method is classical and seems somewhat old-fashioned
+to-day. She is a realist in the old sense of the word.
+She praised Marcel Proust recently for knowing the art
+of incidents and the compliment may be returned to
+her. At a time when, in America as in Europe, fiction
+ceased to be rational to become instinctive, and when
+the novelists gave up the plot for introspection, she
+chose to travel the old road. Modern critics point to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_56">56</span>her flimsy psychology. They are shocked by her indifference
+to social or political problems. She sticks to
+high life at an epoch when historical developments take
+us back to primitive and almost paleolithic humanity.
+Fifth Avenue and “The House of Mirth,” with their
+flirts and divorcées, shrink to Lilliputian dimensions in
+comparison with our chaotic world since the War.
+Who cares about mésalliances or unhappy marriages
+when the universe looks like a big city after an earthquake
+or a flood? What do we care to know to-day
+how Mme. de Treymes will reconcile her faith to her
+unfaithful French husband with her longing for her
+American fiancé? In a similar manner the casuistry
+in “The Fruit of the Tree,” or “The Reef” seems
+almost antediluvian.</p>
+
+<p>In “The Custom of the Country,” “The Age of
+Innocence” and her four novelettes on Old New York,
+we cannot so easily dismiss Mrs. Wharton’s satire of
+American life and society at large.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_16_16" href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
+
+<p>Undine Spragg in “The Custom of the Country” is
+an impressive type of American adventuress. She is
+drawn from life and set against a suggestive American
+background. The three successive husbands of Undine
+embody the characteristic aspects of American society
+extremely well. The old, and now decrepit aristocracy,
+is represented by Ralph Marvell, an “undervitalized”
+scion of the New York gentry. Moffat stands for the
+advent of the masses, while Marquis de Chelles voices
+the protest of the Old World against the standards of
+the New. The Spragg family and Moffat would not be
+out of place in a novel by Theodore Dreiser or Sinclair
+Lewis. As a psychologist Mrs. Wharton made a very
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_57">57</span>impressive study of a double personality in Ralph
+Marvell.</p>
+
+<p>“The Age of Innocence” has a much narrower range
+but it cuts deeper into life. The book is a direct
+arraignment of Puritan respectability. Irene Olenska,
+the heroine, married a European husband, like Mme.
+de Treymes, and found him unfaithful. She returned
+to her native land to live, too late. She developed a new
+soul abroad and she found herself totally alienated from
+her native surroundings. Europe made her natural
+and instinctive and American respectability rises up in
+arms against her. America is no longer a place for
+her to grow in. So poor Irene exits and lets the
+Puritans have the right of way.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wharton’s literary method is far from being
+Freudian. To pass from her novels to those of Sherwood
+Anderson is like traveling to a different hemisphere.
+She chose for herself the rule of clearness and
+objectivity at any cost. And yet, she contributed a
+great deal to the exploration of the American conscience.
+She was the first to complain about the spiritual and
+moral indigence of her own characters. People in her
+novels can be divided into two different classes. We
+meet the behaviorists and the Freudians, those whose
+whole life develops on the surface and those whose
+secret actions remain buried in the subconscious. Her
+books are particularly rich in remarks on the sexual
+complex which, according to her, makes women in
+America superior, intellectually and morally, to men.
+She discusses at length the problem of American happiness.
+She indicts behaviorism in practice. She denounces
+the reduction of American ethics to a mere
+science of external actions and reactions. She shows
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_58">58</span>her characters deprived of foresight or consistency in
+conduct. Calculation is their only standard of behavior.
+<i>Libido</i> and <i>ambitio</i>, love and greed, sum up
+their elementary psychology. People in her books live
+without a real moral background. She tells us that
+they ignore the divinities which, under the surface of our
+passions, forge for the dead fatal weapons. Morally
+speaking, they are uprooted. They improvise their
+life. They make a quick response to external <i>stimuli</i>
+and drift on the eddying surface of existence without
+knowing where to cling. Of Lily Bart, the heroine of
+“The House of Mirth,” we are told that she had grown
+without having any tie on earth dearer to her than
+another. She ignored traditions and could draw from
+them neither strength for herself nor tenderness for
+others. The past had not crystallized slowly into the
+very drops of her blood. No image of an ancient house
+full of memories lingered in her eyes. She had no idea
+of another house, of a <i>maison</i> built not by hands but
+by hereditary devotions. She was not aware of the
+fact that only the past could broaden and deepen our
+individual lives by tying them mysteriously to all the
+accumulated human efforts.</p>
+
+<p>She never knew true solidarity, outside of the brief
+and useless flirtations in which she wasted her energies
+in an uneven struggle against her brilliant but flimsy
+surroundings. All the people she knew were like her.
+They resembled some atoms blown away in a frantic
+whirlwind.</p>
+
+<p>After all, the characters in Mrs. Wharton’s novels
+show themselves to be victims of impulse. They react
+quickly but superficially to the challenge of existence.
+They pride themselves on being practical, self-reliant
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_59">59</span>and self-controlled. They may be so in business, but not
+in ethics. To borrow a practical comparison, they are
+not <i>insured</i> on life and no agency which knew them well
+would issue to them an insurance policy. Mrs. Wharton
+agrees with the majority of critics on this point.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Mrs. Wharton’s psychological insight revealed itself
+principally in “The House of Mirth.” Lily Bart
+revives Daisy Miller. She is another instance of
+inhibited and repressed womanhood. Endowed with a
+Freudian soul and a multiple personality, on the surface
+she is only a flirt, the “moth” of Victorian novelists,
+the “salamander” of the American satirists. To-day
+she would appear as a most courted “flapper.” But if
+we read her truly, Lily Bart is much more tragic. She
+is a saint on the wrong track. Hers is a romantic
+soul. All her life she has longed for the knight-errant
+who would rescue her from herself; he never came,
+because she was poor. Despite numerous escapades
+Lily is as pure as her name. Suicide, at the end of her
+short career, is a protection <i>in extremis</i> against the
+world and against herself. It is a desperate means to
+reconcile by destruction her dual person.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wharton has thrown a great deal of new light on
+the American complex regarding the sexes. She made
+a special study of the ill adaptation between man and
+woman in American society. If we believe her, Americans,
+and especially women, are the victims of an environment
+where all the romantic values of life have been
+upset and denied. Moral energies have turned to the
+outside entirely.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Mrs. Wharton goes relentlessly on. She puts
+the responsibility for this lack of balance upon the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_60">60</span>American man and his ignorance of the true values of
+life. Luxury and comfort are the only standards he
+can imagine, and he cannot conceive of any other gifts.
+The American Lancelot comes to his Guinevere with
+jewels, dresses or a motor car, but he ignores the true
+surrender of himself. Women are too deeply intuitive;
+they come too close to nature to be easily deceived by
+that elementary form of chivalry. There is a more
+romantic allurement which their mate cannot offer
+because it cannot be procured with money. Hence the
+divorce between the sexes. Crystallization, proclaimed
+Stendhal-Beyle, is impossible in the United States.
+According to that arch cynic and admirable psychologist,
+attention seems to be entirely turned toward
+external agreements in an attempt to do away with
+practical inconveniences. When the time comes to
+cash in (I beg Henri Beyle’s pardon for this crude
+American neologism) on so much care, so much caution
+and so many reasonable arrangements, “there is not
+enough life left to enjoy it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Summer” and “Ethan Frome” are of a much
+broader human appeal. This time Mrs. Wharton ventures
+into almost technical psychoanalysis. “Summer”
+is one of the most frankly pagan books written
+in America since “The Scarlet Letter.” The gloom in
+the book is of the very same brand as that found in
+Dreiser’s “American Tragedy,” or in Eugene O’Neill’s
+drama. North Dormer, the little rotten New England
+borough, is a dungeon for all aspiring souls. Lawyer
+Royall is a <i>raté</i>, a social failure. Charity Royall, his
+daughter, has gipsy blood in her veins. She is a fawn
+and a worthy sister of Hawthorne’s Donatello (in
+“The Marble Faun”). Natural desires, passions and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_61">61</span>instincts carry everything away in “Summer” as they
+do in the story of Hester Prynne, while Mrs. Wharton
+herself plays the part of Chillingworth, the Freudian
+detective. The hereditary complex cancels the censure.
+Paganism triumphs on Puritan soil once more. The
+sensuous symbolism of the novel adds to its Freudian
+appeal. It is one of the most pathetic cases of dramatized
+inhibition. And so is “Ethan Frome.” This
+suggestive tale is written like a piece of classic literature.
+It is deliberately objective, and yet it is entirely built
+on repression. A jealous woman, two human beings
+instinctively mated and groping toward each other
+through fears and moral anxieties, the surrender of
+their whole being to the commands of the <i>libido</i>, the
+tragic sublimation of their desires and the new climax
+of inhibition at the end for the three participants of the
+drama,—all this gives a Dantesque glamor to “Ethan
+Frome.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_17_17" href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>There was something truly Balzacian in Howells.
+He could tell a story; he was not without ideas of his
+own; his psychology was superficial, but not more so
+than that of the average man or woman whom he
+portrayed. He was an expert conversationalist. His
+novels are spiced with humor and geniality. How
+could such a ferocious moralist hide under such a gentle
+smile? While American writers, like Henry James and
+Jack London, took refuge against the invading dullness
+by a flight into “the golden bowl” or the wilds of
+Alaska, or while they evaded boredom by sarcasms,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_62">62</span>like Mark Twain, Howells courted American democracy
+and accepted it <i>en bloc</i>. He adopted Babbittry. He
+claimed that fiction did not need adventure, romanticism
+or legend, and that Life was enough. He was a
+realist and hugged the commonplace to his bosom.</p>
+
+<p>Howells had excellent intentions which, unfortunately,
+he was unable to fulfill. As a psychologist and a moralist
+he does not come up to Hawthorne’s level. In the
+first place his realism is limited. The same man who
+declared that the artist’s business was to be “a colorless
+medium through which the reader clearly sees the right
+and wrong” confined himself in the description of what
+he called the most smiling aspects of life, <i>i.e.</i>, the most
+American.</p>
+
+<p>He tagged as poison the art and literature which
+flattered the passions, and, in order not to flatter the
+passions, he denied to himself and others the right to
+describe them. He forced upon the reader of his books
+self-appointed ghostly confessors and directors of conscience,—clergymen,
+lawyers, professors, artists. He
+was impassionate but he was not impartial. His ethics
+are abominable. Hawthorne did not ignore the grandeur
+of sin. He found sinners and blackguards interesting
+or made them so. Middle-class morality did not
+seem to him poetic. He carefully kept his saints in
+contact with evil so that they could be more pathetic
+and human. Howells’ Puritanism was of a very different
+brand. It belonged to another period in the
+development of American culture. Puritanism had
+changed since Hawthorne. It had become permeated
+with Emersonian optimism. The worship for respectability
+evinced the strong convictions of former days.
+Hawthorne bowed to the devil. Howells was afraid of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_63">63</span>him. Hawthorne saw the duplicity of man himself.
+Howells needed a rosier view of life, so he divided society
+into two entirely opposite classes. Instead of presenting
+man double within himself, as he is, and of using
+human duplicity as a source of pathos, he put aside the
+elect, entirely and hopelessly good, and, in opposition
+to them, he placed the wicked—the <i>a priori</i> foredoomed
+wicked. This was bad psychology and still
+worse stagecraft.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Howells kept idealism close to the ground, creeping.
+He never soared and his saints were clipped of all wings.
+The elect in his books showed very little inclination for
+leaving their earthly comfort to join Fra Angelico’s
+mystic band in Heaven. Virtue for Howells’ happy
+few was an insurance on life. They made rich marriages.
+They were perfect fathers and mothers, dutiful
+children, model husbands and wives, prosperous and
+respectable business people. Golden mediocrity, if not
+fortune, was the reward of their good behavior. The
+sinners, on the contrary, were branded from birth by
+Howells. They went from bad to worse and were
+denied all redemption and atonement. The “flood of
+sunshine,” as Hawthorne called the scene in the forest
+between Hester Prynne and Dimmesdale, and their
+ecstasy of gratified emotion, must have been a shock to
+Howells when he read “The Scarlet Letter.” From
+the start his philosophy of life vitiated his novels.
+It did hide from him the veritable aspects of existence.
+It limited his psychology and made it almost childish.
+Mr. Firkins, who had the courage to undertake a sentimental
+journey with the Puritan novelist through
+several hundred pages of a bulky biography, measured
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_64">64</span>his limitations as follows. Howells never represented
+adultery. He handled the question of divorce only
+once and with utmost caution. Only once did he dare
+to deal with the troubles of marital life. Only once,
+and very cautiously again, did he approach the problem
+of crime, which Hawthorne discussed so freely, before
+Dostoievski and Theodore Dreiser. Politics, religion,
+science were expurgated from his books in order not to
+disturb the serenity of the good people whom he
+chaperoned in literature.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to read the novels of Howells and not
+to feel the iniquity of his moral system. Puritanism
+made him hit upon disconcerting paradoxes and, in
+particular, upon that of mistaking ethics for bourgeois
+respectability. Virtue in his books is the exclusive
+monopoly of the well-to-do. Morality is an effort on
+their part to secure for themselves the absolute monopoly
+of a “personality picture” without blemish.
+The slightest move to alter their Puritan identity and
+to mar the show which they make before the world is
+denounced by them as a crime. The saints and the
+sinners live carefully apart in his novels, or, if they mix,
+it is only through the good offices of some charity
+monger or preacher of morals. He wraps his saints in
+isinglass as carefully as a prophylactic toothbrush. He
+protects them from all contacts. He tells us frankly
+that the lawlessness of the sinners has no importance,
+but that the sins of a gentleman and of a well-educated
+person fall upon the entire caste and imperil the whole
+social order.</p>
+
+<p>Let us hear these strange morals from the mouth of
+one of Howells’ <i>raisonneurs</i>, lawyer Atherton in “A
+Modern Instance.” Ben Halleck, one of the characters
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_65">65</span>in the book, has committed a crime which the Puritan
+novelist could never forgive him. He loved and coveted
+platonically Marcia Hubbard, when Marcia’s husband
+was still faithful to her. Since then Hubbard (whom
+Howells foredoomed to evil) has become a degenerate
+and met with a tragic end. Marcia is free. Halleck
+still loves her. He can marry her and rescue her at
+last from her wretched existence. She deserves it.
+But Howells forbids it. Between the two lovers he
+raises the shadow of Halleck’s platonic aspirations. If
+he married Marcia, we are told that the world would
+come to its end. Halleck must remain a bachelor and
+abandon poor Marcia to her fate, in order to soothe the
+Puritan conscience of the author. Let us hear lawyer
+Atherton state Ben Halleck’s case:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>If a man like Ben Halleck goes astray it’s calamitous;
+it confounds the human conscience, as Victor Hugo
+says. All that careful nurture in the right since he
+could speak, all that life-long decency of thought and
+act, that noble ideal of unselfishness and respectability
+to others, trampled under foot and spit upon, it’s
+horrible.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We are served after this with reflections upon the
+true nature of good and evil according to the code of
+Puritan respectability:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The natural goodness does not count. The natural
+man is a wild beast, and his natural goodness is the
+amiability of a beast basking in the sun when his stomach
+is full.... No, it’s the implanted goodness that
+saves—the seed of righteousness treasured from
+generation to generation and carefully watched and
+tended by disciplined fathers and mothers in the hearts
+where they have dropped it, it is what we call civilization.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_66">66</span></p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile lawyer Atherton sips a cup of Souchong
+tea sweetened and tempered with Jersey cream which
+William Dean Howells guarantees pure. (With how
+many lumps of sugar, however, he does not say.)
+Atherton’s wife is also a Puritan and yet she finds the
+indictment just. How can one pass judgment upon
+his fellow mortals when he is so snug and comfortable
+at home? Atherton is not taken aback by the rejoinder
+of his wife. The fact, he replies, that there are saints
+and sinners, Athertons and Hubbards, is a piece of
+divine ordinance. I am not sure that Howells ever
+read Voltaire’s “Candide” and still less that he enjoyed
+it, but Atherton speaks exactly like Doctor Pangloss.
+Effects, according to him, always follow causes; sinners
+are responsible for the consequences of their sins;
+we have been foreordained by our parents to go to
+heaven or hell; hell is an euphemism for the hereditary
+disorders in our will; in the long run, even the fate of
+the wicked will prove equitable. Such was the moral
+dungeon in which William Dean Howells imprisoned
+his characters and this is what became of Calvin’s predestination
+after having been blended in the <i>chiaro-oscuro</i>,
+of the Puritan conscience, with Emerson’s compensations
+and scientific heredity.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Howells tried to confine in a prison of the same sort
+the chief character of “The Landlord at Lion’s Head,”
+one of his most interesting novels, and also one of the
+most repulsive for its morals. The hero of the book is
+also a foredoomed sinner. His name is Jeff Durgin.
+Jeff is the son of the innkeeper at Lion’s Head. He is
+not perfect. He is a born teaser and has an irritable
+temper. He likes to play tricks on people. While a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_67">67</span>student at Harvard he remains waterproof to “college
+spirit.” His personality is too strong. He approaches
+society but behaves in it like a bull in a china shop.
+His conduct is not above reproach. He does not show
+himself a perfect gentleman according to Boston
+standards. And yet, when all is told, he is not so bad
+as that. But Howells needed him to teach a moral
+lesson and he gave him the third degree for that. To
+make Jeff atone he invented one of the most virtuous
+villains of his novels, the painter Westover. How
+Howells could fail to detect the hypocrisy of such a
+character is beyond comprehension. Jeff’s crime consisted
+of shaking the branches of a New England apple
+tree loaded with fruits over the head of vindictive and
+priggish Westover. Was it necessary for that to reserve
+a seat in hell for Jeff Durgin? Was there any
+proportion between Jeff’s venial offence and the wrath
+of the virtuous Westover in branding Jeff with this
+terrible indictment: “What you are you will remain
+forever”? Howells seems not to have heeded Westover’s
+hypocrisy when, at the end of the book, he wins
+away by his sermons the girl whom Jeff had loved all his
+life. <i>Summum jus, summa injuria.</i> Such sophisticated
+and twisted notions of right and wrong could enter only
+a diseased conscience.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Had Howells at least succeeded in making his saints
+as interesting as his sinners! But this was not the
+case. His ideals were those of the average and banal
+humanity, of the sentimental middle classes against
+which American literature is now in revolt. Babbitt
+himself would have proved too modern, too genial, too
+“peppy” for Howells. Main Street would be his paradise
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_68">68</span>without Carol Kennicott for a neighbor. Carol
+was much too progressive and natural for “the Supreme
+Court of Appeal of American Literature,” as Mark
+Twain liked to call the author of “The Lady of the
+Aroostook.” Howells’ ideal people were the Laphams
+and the Kentons, the dull couples whose lives were
+wasted in pursuit of commonplace felicity and comfort
+without any higher ambition than to brood under their
+wings (if they had any), sons and daughters as dull as
+they were themselves. Howells’ characters do not
+worry much about subconsciousness. They ran no
+danger of becoming patients of Doctor Freud. They
+were much too “normal” for that. A plunge into
+subconsciousness would have made them unhappy. It
+would have revealed to them the inanity of their ethics
+and the lies of their petty lives. They had better
+ignore it, and follow Colonel Silas Lapham’s advice.
+One day Colonel Lapham had taken the boat to go to
+his country residence. He is a typical American
+bourgeois. According to the legend, when the ostrich
+wants to ignore the storm, she buries her head in the
+sand. Thus did Colonel Lapham bury his head in the
+newspapers. When he was through with the news, he
+felt an immense boredom. But why not observe the
+people around him, and try to find, as a solace, what
+there was in their minds? Here is the Colonel’s
+answer:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Well,” said the Colonel, “I don’t suppose it was
+meant we should know what was in each other’s minds.
+It would take a man out of his own hands. As long
+as he is in his own hands, there is some hopes of his doing
+something with himself; but, if a fellow has been found
+out—even if he has not been found out to be so very
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_69">69</span>bad—it’s pretty much all up with him. <i>No, sir, I
+don’t want to know people through and through.</i>”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Howells was true to his word. He did not want to
+be a true realist. Optimism and respectability made
+him take the side of hypocrisy against truth at any cost.
+To better defend the bourgeois standards he volunteered,
+early in his career, as the sponsor and knight
+in attendance of the <i>jeune fille</i>, as the protector of the
+unamended marital institutions and the irreconcilable
+enemy of divorce. He became in particular the advocate
+of the <i>motherly feeling</i> which modern critics regard
+justly as the American <i>complex par excellence</i>. He
+viewed life as a blind alley, and matrimony as a chamber
+of torture which reminds one of Edgar Poe’s “The Pit
+and the Pendulum.”</p>
+
+<p><i>Lasciate ogni speranza voi ché entrate!</i></p>
+
+<p>What would Howells have said, if he had read the
+chapter on “The Virgin and the Dynamo” in the book
+of Henry Adams’ education? He regarded love as a
+short cut to marriage and marriage as a penitentiary
+for life. How disillusioned a moralist the Puritan
+novelist must have been when he resorted to a <i>reductio
+ad absurdum</i> argument in favor of matrimony, like the
+following:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The silken texture of the marriage tie bears a strain
+of wrong and insult to which no other human relation
+can be subjected without lesion; and sometimes (Howells
+has not counted how often) the strength that knits
+society together might appear to the eye of the faltering
+faith the curse of those immediately bound by it. Two
+people by no means reckless of each other’s rights and
+feelings, but even tender of them for the most part,
+may tear each other’s heart-strings in this sacred bond
+with perfect impunity; though if they were any other
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_70">70</span>two they would not speak or look at each other again
+after the outrages they exchange. It is certainly a
+curious spectacle, <i>and doubtless it ought to convince an
+observer of the divinity of the institution</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It certainly does, and also of the monstrous paradoxes
+to which Puritan rigorism lead Howells. The
+wedding ring, the hoop skirt and the hearse,—such
+was his romantic outlook of life. William Dean
+Howells was anything but a Greek.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_71">71</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">
+ CHAPTER IV
+ <br>
+ <i>Theodore Dreiser as a Bio-Chemist</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Few books have been subjected to more discussion
+and criticism than those of Theodore Dreiser. As a
+novelist, a short-story writer, an essayist and a playwright,
+he never has coaxed his readers. Far from
+this; he has even chosen to tire them out. He impersonates
+a radical and an almost trivial realism. Critics
+in sympathy with his writings ask us to place him in his
+own time, in order that we may understand him. He
+is the historian of a disillusioned America, of an America
+which sits anxious among its heaps of riches, an America
+which has lost the romantic faith in itself. It is a country
+of ever-increasing material comfort and luxury, of
+quick gains and of tremendous affairs, a land where the
+dollar is as rapidly lost as earned. Philanthropy abroad
+and merciless competition at home, “an eye for an eye,
+a tooth for a tooth,” sensational criminal trials, scandals
+and panics,—in brief, the most stupendous utilitarian
+civilization that the world has ever seen, a Babel
+of towers scraping the sky to make it rain more money:
+such is America in Theodore Dreiser’s massive and
+conscientious “The Financier,” “The Titan,” “An
+American Tragedy.” However, it would be a grave
+mistake from the start if we catalogued him among the
+social novelists, in the same class with Frank Norris,
+Upton Sinclair or Jack London. He never tried to
+reform society by his writings.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_72">72</span></p>
+
+<p>His social studies are always viewed from an individual
+angle. He can picture the American scene with the
+matter-of-fact precision of an expert reporter, a reporter
+almost entirely devoid of imagination, but with a love
+for scrutinizing the human heart. He is less interested
+in America at large than in the Americans, and less in
+the Americans than in humanity as such. This gives
+him a large outlook despite his apparent narrowness.
+One of his familiar points is the disintegration of a
+character under the pressure of the environment.
+Even when he stages a social tragedy, as he did in “The
+Financier” and “The Titan,” he locates it within an
+individual conscience.</p>
+
+<p>Let us get at Dreiser’s pedigree by the same biographical
+method which he applies to the characters in
+his books. He was born in a small Indiana town in
+1871. His father was an emigrant from the Rhineland
+who came to America to escape conscription. Though
+a nonconformist in politics, he was a strict adherent of
+Roman Catholicism. He did not make a success of his
+life and may be taken as a prototype of what his son
+calls the “undermen.” He had nothing Nietzschean in
+him. There were thirteen children in the family, and
+Theodore came next to the last, an offspring of that
+mysterious biological evolution with which, as an
+author, he was going to be so much concerned. One of
+his brothers, Paul, had an artistic temperament and was
+not without literary talent. Theodore has drawn his
+portrait in “Twelve Men.” Paul Dreiser, or Dresser,
+was a seductive Bohemian, a sort of Rameau’s nephew,
+several of whose popular songs are still remembered.
+Of his sisters Theodore Dreiser tells us that, like the
+Jennie Gerhardts and Sister Carries of his novels,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_73">73</span>several of them eloped early from home in order to
+escape utter poverty. Theodore himself had to set to
+menial work to make a living at an early age. He took
+up odd jobs and after a hurried flight through college,
+he began as a reporter wandering from city to city,
+from Saint Louis to Chicago and then to Pittsburgh and
+New York. He always felt an instinctive craving for
+living close to everyday life and for observing things
+and people around him with a keen and circumstantiated
+attention, which never excluded a sort of underground
+and subdued pity. Never a sentimentalist,
+Dreiser was however always deeply human. He completed
+his apprenticeship as a writer in the midst of
+an intimate contact with life, collecting the material
+for his books at first hand. While running errands as
+a reporter he would brood over his impressions, in the
+company of a few enthusiastic friends, after feverishly
+reading Balzac and Émile Zola. His friends encouraged
+him to write about people just as he found them around
+him.</p>
+
+<p>In these early days of his career Dreiser applied himself
+to the task of hunting for news with the cunning and
+pluck of a real detective. He had the gift of finding
+romance in everyday existence, and when the time came
+to apply a meaning and a philosophy to what he saw,
+he turned to Herbert Spencer for guidance. In 1900
+appeared “Sister Carrie,” which the censors vetoed
+immediately after its publication. Then appeared in
+slow succession “Jennie Gerhardt,” “The Financier,”
+the first volume of an unfinished trilogy, the second part
+of which was called “The Titan.” In 1915 Dreiser published
+“The Genius” and ten years later “An American
+Tragedy,” the history of a crime recounted in two huge
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_74">74</span>volumes. Let us not forget Dreiser’s short stories,
+“Twelve Men,” “Free and Other Stories,” and
+“Chains.” From an artistic standpoint these are the
+best things that he has ever written. And then we have
+the autobiography of the author, “A Traveller at
+Forty,” and “A Book about Myself,” two self-drawn
+portraits of first importance to the study of Dreiser as
+an artist and as a man. His complete philosophy is to
+be found in “Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub” and also in many
+pages of “A Hoosier Holiday.”</p>
+
+<p>It may well be doubted whether any other modern
+writer has ever succeeded in carrying the doctrine of
+realism as far as Dreiser has. It was a heroic effort on
+his part. He himself tells that, when he began to write,
+it was impossible to write realistic novels in this country.
+Around 1900 idealistic America was nestled too
+snugly in its mid-Victorian sentimentality, not to show
+its teeth at an American Maupassant intent upon depicting
+life as it is. As Dreiser ironically puts it, people
+were not accustomed, in those days, to “calling a spade
+a spade.” They wanted shock absorbers and pillows all
+around them. Their minds as well as their houses were
+all painted pink, and woe to the fanatic who tried to
+besmirch them with drab hues. Theoretically Americans
+pretended to admire Tolstoi, Flaubert, Balzac
+and Maupassant from a safe distance, and yet their
+bookshelves were loaded with the books of the mid-Victorian
+writers bound to match the furniture.
+Dreiser does not deny that the mid-Victorians had
+something to say about life, but they were afraid of
+saying too much. The great English writers of the
+middle nineteenth century were well aware of the vanities
+and lies of human existence, but they had pledged
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_75">75</span>their word of honor to themselves and to the public
+that they would never reveal what they knew. Idealism
+spread a veil over it. The result was that, like
+William Dean Howells, American authors displayed
+existence only in its most smiling aspects of existence.
+This was the safest way not to discourage optimism.
+Christian people could thus be happy. They could
+lead quiet and respectable lives at home, rear their
+children in the fear of God, go to church on Sundays and
+ignore trouble, provided, adds Dreiser, that thieves,
+cheats and dogs gave them permission to do so. In the
+books of the period men appear only as heroes. If
+their daughters met with any mishaps, they were
+charged to some <i>ex professo</i> scapegoats. Otherwise
+things in general look as if our first parents had never
+committed the original sin. It was the duty of the
+writer, the preacher and the politician to confirm people
+in this optimism and to promise them felicity in this
+world and the world hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>As for Dreiser, he was of a different type of mind.
+He called himself an independent. He also was in favor
+of progress but he refused to believe that it could be
+achieved without having a scientific view of things. He
+refused to stand by any creed. He declared that
+Truth, Beauty and Love were only vital lies and capitalized
+nonentities. Did he believe in the ideal or did
+he deny it? One thing he knew, namely, that man and
+the world are a fifty-fifty mixture of good and evil.
+This was the creed of a realist and Dreiser has never
+adhered to any other.</p>
+
+<p>He shows a real enthusiasm for facts. He can distil
+beauty from the most trivial heap of junk. He himself
+has told us many times that he owes his passion for the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_76">76</span>trivial to his experience as a journalist. As a true
+journalist, and as a typical American, he is much more
+interested in the news than in the editorials. This
+explains why there is a complete absence of ethics and
+metaphysics in his books. He rarely comments upon
+the actual achievements of his heroes. The editorial
+rooms of a newspaper, we are told, are an incubator of
+lies where ready-made notions are concocted to be swallowed
+at one gulp. Humanity, progress, character,
+morality, the sanctity of the home, and so forth,—these
+bribes for the fools come out of the editorial rooms.
+A reporter, on the contrary, is only concerned with
+things and people as they are. He does not wear gloves
+to write. He is after what happens and not what
+should happen; not after an ideal but after truth. The
+rule for the reporter is to get at the news and by the
+quickest route. Let him report anything he wants to,
+provided that he can do it faster and better than any of
+his competitors. The public must be served. The
+public clamors for news. They must have it.</p>
+
+<p>When he speaks of the reporter, Dreiser gives up all
+the ethical standards. Truth alone matters. He
+knows that a good reporter shows no scruples. He
+must get at the facts and to do this all means are justified,
+even the trickiest ones.</p>
+
+<p>With all his faults Dreiser prefers journalists to philosophers:
+journalists, according to him, are free of what
+he calls the “moralistic mush.” After having been
+through the journalistic mill for some time they cannot
+be sentimental, and leave to other people the ranting
+about patriotism, justice, truth and the like. They
+know the fanatic for what he is, a man ready to make
+people swallow fairy tales, and to draw personal profits
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_77">77</span>from his hypocrisy. As for the politicians, the journalists
+see them in their true light, selfish intriguers
+who gamble with popular ignorance and passions.
+Even judges stand to him just for what they are, <i>i.e.</i>,
+men lucky enough to secure good positions and careful
+to steer their boat in the wind of public opinion.</p>
+
+<p>Once Dreiser called on an editor and while he was
+waiting he looked about him at the suggestive inscriptions
+which a mysterious hand had written in unmistakable
+characters upon the walls. In true American
+fashion those characters flashed for the members of the
+staff the decalogue of their profession. EXACTITUDE!
+EXACTITUDE! EXACTITUDE! WHO?
+WHAT? WHERE? HOW? THE FACTS! THE
+COLOR! THE FACTS! But Dreiser fails to tell
+us that that day he found the essentials of his literary
+programme. Not imagination, but attention—microscopic
+attention—is his muse. No realistic writer
+has been truer to Locke’s aphorism according to which
+there is nothing in our minds which has not come to
+them through the senses. He owes to journalistic tactics
+not only his literary processes, but most of the content
+of his novels. They are borrowed in a lump from
+what the French call <i>faits divers</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, from the news columns.
+His great social novels, “The Financier” and
+“The Genius,” are dramatized pieces of muck-raking.
+They leave very little, if anything, to the imagination.
+They deal with a then recent scandal involving a Philadelphia
+magnate. Dreiser did not have to invent the
+story. He went to the spot to gather information and,
+as a reporter does, he got his man. To build up his
+Cowperwood, Dreiser did not need to use even one
+tenth of the imagination which Cuvier showed in reconstructing
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_78">78</span>the dynosaur. Dreiser is not a novelist.
+He is an historian. Were it only for his sake, the word
+fiction as applied to a presentation of real life under an
+assumed name and in an anonymous setting, should be
+effaced from the English dictionary. Why invent and
+imagine when reality is teeming with surprise, and
+why buy the “Arabian Nights” when we have the
+daily paper and the last news? Dreiser never had any
+trouble in passing from the composition room to the
+desk of the novelist. He never went far for subjects.
+Let others go to the South Seas, to Alaska, to Europe
+or the East, to find their heroes and heroines. Dreiser
+sets his camera in the middle of the street. And—by
+the way—who is the greatest idealist, the fictitious
+writer who needs castles in Spain for romance, or the
+unflinching and intuitive observer who can perceive an
+epic in the most trivial events of every week day?
+Dreiser does not hunt for romance; he waits for it at
+home. The daily paper brings him more material than
+he wants. He has listed for us some of those thrillers
+that he can buy ready-made for a few cents. Here are
+a few of them, fresh from the printing-press.</p>
+
+<p>I. A young girl is in love with a young man whom her
+father dislikes. The girl and the boy have been drawn
+toward each other by that vital force which acts as a
+<i>deus ex machina</i> in Dreiser’s novels (Dreiser calls <i>bio-chemistry</i>
+what Goethe named <i>elective affinities</i> and
+G. B. Shaw the <i>vital force</i>). Despite the father’s
+opposition the young couple marry in secret. The
+groom’s parent is furious when he hears of it. In a fit
+of drunkenness he kills his son. Only his daughter, by
+telling a lie, can save him at court. <i>What will she do?</i>
+And do we need to go to Shakespeare or Corneille to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_79">79</span>find a thrill? What have capitalized abstractions, like
+Duty, Law, Justice, to do with this blunt, brutal and yet
+highly dramatic alternative?</p>
+
+<p>II. A man is born with a passion for business. If he
+can make a merger of several independent firms, he will
+be able to manufacture and sell to the public, at low
+cost, a product which will make him rich. But, in
+order to do this, he must face either one of the following
+possibilities: (<i>a</i>) He can form a stock company with
+equal rights for all of its members; (<i>b</i>) he can manufacture
+the article without personal profit or loss; (<i>c</i>) he
+can share the risks and profits of the venture with a few
+associates and strangle the competitors; (<i>d</i>) or stand pat.
+Attitudes (<i>b</i>) and (<i>c</i>) are called moral. If, on the contrary,
+the business man decides in favor of (<i>a</i>) or (<i>d</i>) he
+declares war on society. What will an intelligent and
+aggressive personality do and, once more, what have
+capitalized abstractions to do with such a mighty instinct
+when it is confronted by adverse circumstances?</p>
+
+<p>III. A young man has committed a crime. His
+father realizes that the crime of his son is his own
+fault since he failed to give the youth the right sort of
+education. The law expects the father to surrender his
+child, whom he loves with all his heart and for whose
+crime he feels responsible. What will the father do?</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing romantic about all this, declares
+Dreiser. This is not romance, it is truth such as can be
+found at any time in the dailies. Dreiser is satisfied
+with this kind of material. There is more than a fortuitous
+resemblance between story Number II and
+“The Financier.” The last-mentioned episode reads
+very much like “An American Tragedy.” With his
+imagination of facts the novelist has been able to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_80">80</span>unravel in many hundred pages all the possibilities
+contained in a few newspaper headlines. This confession
+about his sources will save many scholars, in
+years to come the trouble they have to face when they
+try to identify Père Grandet or Emma Bovary. Only a
+romantic writer can think of hiding what he borrows
+from life. The true realist, Dreiser or Zola, is not
+ashamed of being caught, his camera in hand. The
+closer the resemblance between the original and the
+copy, the greater the art which produced it.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>As a philosopher, as well as an artist, Dreiser still
+remains a journalist. His novels are no more or no less
+immoral than a newspaper. Why should we grant
+the newspaperman the right to record coolly and without
+comment a crime or a scandal, and yet brand the
+novelist as immoral when he chooses to do the same?
+Dreiser does not comment in his novels; he reports.
+His philosophy is not ready-made; it has not been elaborated
+in a study or in a pulpit. It was born in the
+realm of chance and of current events, from incidents
+and accidents, close to the morgue, the charnel house,
+the brothel, the slum, the hospital, the police station,
+where Dreiser used to report. There wisdom came to
+him as it did to Hamlet in the churchyard. Life is the
+text and our actions are the comments. A loyal and
+sincere seeker of truth, Theodore Dreiser never interposes
+his own personality between his characters and the
+reader. In this respect he is still more objective than
+his master, Balzac. He preaches no sermon. He
+shows things and people as they are. If there is somewhere
+a conscience, it must be in the heart of him or her
+who reads through the book.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_81">81</span></p>
+
+<p>Dreiser is a moralist, but he preaches his morals outside
+of his novels. With one hand he composes his
+massive, clumsy and realistic narratives, deliberately
+objective and amoral. With the other he holds the
+pen of the traveler, the philosopher and the essayist.
+Read, for instance, his admirable essay on “The Inevitable
+Equation.” It is as clear an elucidation of
+the writer’s mind as could be expected. This sort of
+double-dealing with his readers came out of the author’s
+loyalty toward others and himself. A conscientious
+and skilful journalist will not make the mistake of confusing
+the news with the editorial matter. Philosophy
+and facts belong to two different orders. The one is the
+order of the mind, the other that of nature. Better keep
+them apart than to see one giving the lie to the other.</p>
+
+<p><i>Le cœur a ses raisons que la raison ne connait pas.</i></p>
+
+<p>Outside of his novels Theodore Dreiser has often
+shown himself an original thinker, and, even when his
+philosophy has lacked originality, he has made up for it
+by the strength of his convictions. His outlook on life
+is as little cheerful as that of Voltaire in “Candide”
+or Anatole France in “Penguin Island.” The true
+realist, like a true psychologist, is a born pessimist.
+Only the ignorant can be blind to the human tragedy.
+Let us praise Dreiser for seeing the ugly side of life
+without altogether losing faith in it. Experience has
+taught him many a bitter lesson as to the place of man
+in the universe. One cannot be a reporter and still
+sing every day Browning’s famous hymn to optimism:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">The year is at the spring,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The day is at the morn,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">God’s in his heaven;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">All’s right with the world.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_82">82</span></p>
+
+<p>Even a self-satisfied poet, at ease under the beautiful
+Italian sky, can forget himself now and then and
+blaspheme. Not so Theodore Dreiser. This is a sober
+and gloomy portrait of life, such as Lucretius used to
+paint it:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Common dust swept into our atmosphere makes our
+beautiful sunsets and blue sky. Sidereal space, as we
+know it, is said to be one welter of strangely flowing
+streams of rock and dust, a wretched mass made attractive
+only by some vast compulsory coalition into a star.
+Stars clash and blaze, and the whole great complicated
+system seems one erosive, chaffering, bickering effort,
+with here and there a tendency to stillness and petrification.
+This world, as we know it, the human race and
+the accompanying welter of animals and insects, do they
+not, aside from momentary phases of delight and
+beauty, often strike you as dull, aimless, cruel, useless?
+Are not the processes by which they are produced or
+those by which they live (the Chicago slaughter-houses,
+for instance), stark, relentless, brutal, shameful even?—life
+living on life, the preying of one on another, the
+compulsory ageing of all, the hungers, thirsts, destroying
+losses and pains.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_18_18" href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Dreiser’s philosophy may not be very cheerful, but
+it is genuine and far more original than could be expected
+from a writer of fiction. Spencer and Huxley—not
+to forget Nietzsche—robbed Dreiser of his religious
+beliefs and left him in a quandary of philosophical nihilism.
+A summary of his creed may be set forth about as
+follows: There are only facts. The moral and religious
+interpretations of life are erroneous. They fail to cope
+with reality. Dreiser is a self-confessed agnostic. The
+key to the riddles of human destiny will be found, not in
+metaphysics, but in bio-chemistry. Idealism is a lie.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_83">83</span>Dreiser has called himself a man longing for poetry and
+at the same time a materialist ardently enamored with
+life. He doubts, on the other hand—to use his own
+words—whether a human being, no matter how poetic
+of material he may have been, has ever thrown over the
+scenes of this world, material or spiritual, a glance more
+avid and covetous than his own. His challenge to
+idealism rests upon the feeling that there exists a gap
+between reality as it can be observed and its interpretation
+at the hand of the professional philosophers. He
+is ready to adhere to principles and to accept interpretations,
+provided that they be in accord with facts
+as scientifically determined. Meanwhile he sees little
+proportion between the world such as it is, and the
+creeds or systems imagined on its account. Our systems
+of thought belie experience. Ethics contradict
+bio-chemistry. There are people whose particular
+interest seems to be to disfigure things as they are, and
+to present man to himself as being different from what
+he is in reality. This is hypocrisy. Life is not a harmony
+but a struggle. Our existence is a tragic conflict
+of forces, aspirations, passions and energies, all excellent
+in themselves, but perverted by irrational repressions.
+Let us admire Dreiser’s frankness on this point. Man,
+to him, is not a pre-Raphaelite seraph dressed with
+wings, but a being of blood and flesh. Like Whitman
+and Jack London, Dreiser is full of an orgiastic enthusiasm
+for the human body. He cannot help reducing the
+moral to the physical, the soul to the body, and translating
+psychology in terms of bio-chemistry:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In spite of all the so-called laws and prophets, there
+is apparently in Nature no such thing as the right
+to do or the right not to do, if you reach the place
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_84">84</span>where the significance of the social chain in which
+you find yourself is not satisfactory. The murderer
+has under the written law no right to murder anybody.
+It is perfectly plain that he has the right if
+he is willing to pay the penalty, or if he can evade it.
+Conscience, this thing called conscience, to which people
+repeatedly appeal, is, as I have pointed out elsewhere,
+little more than a built-up net of social acceptances
+and agreements in regard to society or the agreed
+state of facts in which we all find ourselves when we
+arrive here; in other words, all the things which we
+wish to do and be, or avoid.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_19_19" href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In this unromantic universe Dreiser moves with admiration
+and delight. At the bottom of his philosophy
+there is a calm and serene—but disenchanted—individualism,
+very much like that which took Nietzsche
+beyond evil and good. Dreiser accepts the struggle for
+survival like a convinced Darwinian. He views life as
+a chaos of blind and amorphous energies roused by mysterious
+and ominous ferments. The game of life is that
+of the great individuals against the masses. Great men
+tending to self-expression and self-expansion find themselves
+blocked by the overwhelming numbers of elementary
+and gregarious humanity. Hence the war
+between society and the élite of supermen. Dreiser’s
+evolutionism, however, does not in the least imply an
+idea of progress. Change there is, eternal change,
+mutation, compensation, and, in the last analysis
+eternal return.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Dreiser’s evolutionism is purely organic and
+static. It is strictly realistic. The fact that a few
+great individuals emerge from the mass does not justify
+higher expectations for the future of mankind. Besides,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_85">85</span>they do not always emerge. Many dynosaurs
+and superhuman giants fail pitifully and are buried
+alive in the mud. Geology and anthropology endorse
+Dreiser’s pessimism on the subject of man’s fight with
+the blind forces of nature.</p>
+
+<p>Life is a struggle, but not necessarily a struggle
+toward the better, as the idealists imagine. Though
+a fairly good Darwinian, Dreiser would fain believe
+in the survival of the fittest. War does not ever
+make for better. It slaughters blindly left and
+right, and the bravest, the most daring and courageous
+are always the first to die, as the World War proved not
+long ago. Dreiser’s supermen are a product of change,
+human machines moved by vices and passions, greed
+and lust. They may win over their fellow mortals, but
+they have to cope with Nature, Nature without an
+Emersonian Oversoul, and all of them surrender finally
+to its blind dictates. The man who wrote “The Titan,”
+“The Financier,” “The Genius” hit the hardest blow to
+American idealism. He might well be nicknamed the
+Homer of the heroes who fail, the Balzac of moral and
+physiological failures. But an artist does not much
+care to know where the world goes; he is chiefly concerned
+with life and motion. Where there is struggle
+there is life and motion and rhythm, and this it is which
+makes the world artistically interesting and attractive,
+and it does this for Dreiser. Even from the utilitarian
+point of view (when it is told), there is compensation in
+the existence of the giants. It would of course be folly
+on our part to try to block the way of the lion and the
+tiger. We had better carefully keep at a safe distance:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>My own guess would be that we, or rather the race,
+are going on to a greater individuality, plus a greater
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_86">86</span>weakness as to its component and clinging atoms, providing
+it does not suffer an endless dark age of mass
+control or total extinction in some form or other. Nietzsche
+appeared preaching individuality, greater individuality
+for everybody who could achieve it, and to a
+certain extent he was right. Greater individuality
+than the world has yet seen will certainly be achieved
+by some.... If to have a Woolworth Building, a
+transcontinental railroad, a Panama Canal, a flying
+machine, to say nothing of literature and art, means
+that we must endure a man who is dull, greedy, vain,
+ridiculous in many ways or even an advocate of every
+conceivable vice in order to twist his brain into some
+strange phantasmagorical tendency, the result of which
+will be some one of these things, there are many who
+would enthusiastically say, “Then let us have him
+along with all his lacks or vices, in order that this other
+may be.”... For my part I am convinced that so-called
+vice or crime and destruction and so-called evil,
+are as fully a part of the universal creative process as
+are all the so-called virtues, and do as much good—providing,
+as they do, for one thing, the religionist
+and the moralist with their reasons for existing. At
+best, ethics and religion are but one face of a shield
+which is essentially irreligious and ethical as to its other
+face, or the first would not exist.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_20_20" href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Imagination has never been Theodore Dreiser’s forte,
+at least, not the kind of imagination which soars beyond
+memory and adds fancy to experience. Yet the essential
+of his philosophy will be found in the first pages of
+“The Financier,” in the disguise of an allegory. He
+tells us how, when still a child, Cowperwood began to
+doubt the story of the origins of mankind as it is told in
+the book of Genesis. The Bible did not give him a
+satisfactory interpretation of human actions, so he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_87">87</span>turned to a fishmonger near his home. The fishmonger
+had tubs full of fish. They gave him his first lesson in
+philosophy. I cannot help quoting the whole anecdote
+as a faithful summary and an illustration of the struggle
+for existence. The battle between the lobster and the
+squid was indeed a natural prelude to introduce the
+readers to the exploits of what is commonly called
+among mortals a “shark,” and Cowperwood is one of
+the first brand:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The lobster lay at the bottom of the clear glass tank
+on the yellow sand, apparently seeing nothing. You
+could not tell in which way his beady, black button
+eyes were looking—but apparently they were never
+off the body of the squid. The latter, pale and waxy in
+texture, looking very much like pork fat or jade, was
+moving about in torpedo fashion; but his movements
+were apparently never out of the eyes of his enemy,
+for by degrees small portions of his body began to disappear,
+snapped off by the relentless claws of his pursuer.
+The latter, as young Cowperwood was one day
+a witness, would leap like a catapult to where the squid
+was apparently idly dreaming, and the squid, very
+alert, would dart away, shooting out at the same time
+a cloud of ink, behind which it would disappear. It
+was not always completely successful, however. Some
+small portions of its body or its tail were frequently
+left in the claws of the monster below. Days passed,
+and, now fascinated by the drama, young Cowperwood
+came daily.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_21_21" href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The size of the squid’s body decreased day after day
+and he wasted all his ink ammunitions. The battle now
+was too uneven to last. One evening, when Frank came
+back to watch it, he saw a crowd around the tub. The
+lobster was still squinting in his corner and close to him
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_88">88</span>lay the squid or, at least the little that was left of him.
+Young Cowperwood felt aggrieved. He had come too
+late to enjoy the most thrilling part of the fight, but he
+did not miss its lesson. Such was life! Lobsters and
+squids fought and finally one was bound to devour the
+other. The lobsters fed on the squids, men fed on the
+lobsters and—who fed on men? For days and weeks,
+says Dreiser, young Cowperwood could think of nothing
+but lobsters and squids. This was a true picture of life
+and of what it had in store for an ambitious young man
+ready to start on his career. It filled him with courage
+and anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>Dreiser will never forget the tub where the lobster
+got the best of the squid, despite its camouflage. There
+at last you had a true lesson in behaviorism and on the
+art of <i>stimuli</i> and responses, an ethics construed out of
+automatic actions. Henceforth human beings in Dreiser’s
+books will be easily divided into two classes, those
+which eat and those which are eaten, the lobsters and
+the squids. Crude and elementary as this classification
+may well seem, it is based upon an honest attempt to
+study life at close quarters.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Such an unsophisticated view of this world did not
+inspire the novelist with much indulgence in dealing
+with his own country. Darwinism made him rather
+harsh with democratic institutions. He is too fond of
+the trivial and the commonplace not to cherish the
+United States. “A Hoosier Holiday” is a faithful
+and, on the whole, an eulogious and sometimes lyrical
+survey of America. This masterpiece of indifference
+to the laws of literary perspective is, taken altogether,
+the most suggestive collection of <i>Reisebilder</i>. Here is
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_89">89</span>the American Middle West photographed from life,
+an easy-going, happy-go-lucky country, half modern,
+half patriarchal with his cornucopias teeming with corn
+and cattle, half savage, half civilized, half awake, half
+vegetative, more remote from Europe than the cannibals
+in Typee’s island. Dreiser, the satirist, the philosopher
+and the artist, keeps a harmonious copy all
+through the book for our delight. “A Hoosier Holiday”
+is a pleasant medley of sketches, cartoons, soliloquies
+and lyrical outbursts. It is the best book which
+Dreiser has written.</p>
+
+<p>It is apparent that America is very dear to the heart
+of Theodore Dreiser, although he does not spare her his
+criticisms. He loves her, pets her and scolds her, as he
+would a child:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear, crude, asinine, illusioned Americans! How
+I love them! And the great fields from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific holding them all, and their dreams! How
+they rise, how they hurry, how they run under the
+sun! Here they are building a viaduct, there a great
+road, yonder plowing fields or sowing grain, their faces
+lit with eternal, futile hope of happiness. You can see
+them religiously tending store, religiously running a
+small-town country hotel, religiously mowing the grass,
+religiously driving shrewd bargains or thinking that
+much praying will carry them to heaven—the dear
+things!—and then among them are the bad men, the
+loafers, the people who chew tobacco and swear and
+go to the cities Saturday nights and “cut up” and
+don’t save their money!</p>
+
+<p>Dear, dear, darling Yankee land—“my country
+’tis”—when I think of you and all your ills and all
+your dreams and all your courage and your faith—I
+could cry over you, wringing my hands.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_22_22" href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_90">90</span></p>
+
+<p>And yet he prefers America to Europe:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>And why? Well, because of a certain indefinable
+something—either of hope or courage or youth or
+vigor or illusion, what you will, but the average American,
+or the average European transplanted to America,
+is a better or at least a more dynamic person than the
+average European at home, even the Frenchman. He
+has more grit, verve, humor, or a lackadaisical slapdash
+method which is at once efficient, self-sustaining, comforting.
+His soul, in spite of all the chains wherewith
+the ruling giants are seeking to fetter him, is free.</p>
+
+<p>As yet, regardless of what is or may be, he does not
+appear to realize that he is not free or that he is in any
+way oppressed. There are no ruling classes, to him.
+He sings, whistles, jests, laughs boisterously; matches
+everybody for cigars, beers, meals; chews tobacco,
+spits freely, smokes, swears, rolls to and fro, cocks his
+hat on one side of his head, and altogether by and large
+is a regular “hell of a feller.” He does not know anything
+about history, or very little, and doesn’t give a
+damn. He doesn’t know anything about art,—but,
+my God, who with the eternal hills and all nature for
+a background cannot live without representative art?
+His food is not extraordinarily good, though plentiful,
+his clothes are made by Stein-Bloch, or Hart, Schaffner
+and Marx, and altogether he is a noisy, blatant,
+contented mess—but, oh, the gay, self-sufficient soul
+of him! No moans! No tears! Into the teeth of
+destiny he marches, whistling “Yankee Doodle” or
+“Turkey in the Straw.” In the parlance of his own
+streets, “Can you beat him?”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_23_23" href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And yet—</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>At other times, viewing the upstanding middle class
+American with his vivid suit, yellow shoes, flaring tie
+and conspicuous money roll, I want to compose an ode
+in praise of the final enfranchisement of the common
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_91">91</span>soul. How much better these millions, I ask you, with
+their derby and fedora hats, their ready-made suits,
+their flaring jewelry, automobiles and a general sense of
+well-being, and even perfection, if you will, than a race
+of slaves or serfs, dominated by grand dukes, barons,
+beperfumed and beribboned counts, daimios, and lords
+and ladies, however cultivated and artistic these may
+appear! True, the latter would act more gracefully,
+but would they be any the more desirable for that,
+actually? I hear a thousand patrician-minded souls
+exclaiming, “Yes, of course,” and I hear a million
+lovers of democracy insisting “No.” Personally, I
+would take a few giants in every field, well curbed, and
+then a great and comfortable mass such as I see about
+me in these restaurants, for instance, well curbed also.
+Then I would let them mix and mingle.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Dreiser’s patriotism is not blind. The future of his
+country fills him with worry and anxiety. Looking
+forward as a philosopher, he looks upon American civilization
+as upon a brilliant phase, though not a final
+one, in the world’s evolution. Bossuet, in his discourse
+on universal history, viewed nations and empires as
+many toys in the hands of a divine Providence. Dreiser
+considers them as the playthings of Chance. A faithful
+believer in the law of change, he has little illusion
+left on the subject of the rights of men, brotherhood,
+freedom. Life is a dream, and this great American
+Commonwealth, whose achievements fill him with pride
+and enthusiasm, may well be also another dream:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Happy, happy people! Yet for the dream’s sake, as
+I told myself at this time, and as against an illimitable
+background of natural chance and craft, I would like
+to see this and the other sections with which it is so
+closely allied, this vast Republic, live on. It is so splendid,
+so tireless. Its people, in spite of their defects and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_92">92</span>limitations, sing so at their tasks. There are dark
+places, but there are splendid points of light, too. One
+is their innocence, complete and enduring; another is
+their faith in ideals and the Republic. A third is their
+optimism and buoyancy of soul, their courage to get up
+in the morning and go up and down the world, whistling
+and singing. Oh, the whistling, singing American, with
+his jest and his sound heart and that light of humorous
+apprehension in his eyes! How wonderful it all is!
+It isn’t English, or French, or German, or Spanish, or
+Russian, or Swedish, or Greek. It’s American, “Good
+Old United States,”—and for that reason I liked this
+region and all these other portions of America that I
+have ever seen. New England is not so kindly, the
+South not so hopeful, the Far West more so, but they
+have something of these characteristics which I have
+been describing.</p>
+
+<p>And for these reasons I would have this tremendous,
+bubbling Republic live on, as a protest perhaps against
+the apparently too unbreakable rule that democracy,
+equality, or the illusion of it, is destined to end in disaster.
+It cannot survive ultimately, I think. In the
+vast, universal sea of motion, where change and decay
+are laws, and individual power is almost always uppermost,
+it must go under—but until then—</p>
+
+<p>We are all such pathetic victims of chance, anyhow.
+We are born, we struggle, we plan, and chance blows
+all our dreams away. If, therefore, one country, one
+State dares to dream the impossible, why cast it down
+before its ultimate hour? Why not dream with it?
+It is so gloriously, so truly a poetic land. We were
+conceived in ecstasy and born in dreams.</p>
+
+<p>And so, were I one of sufficient import to be able to
+speak to my native land, the galaxy of States of which
+it is composed, I would say: Dream on. Believe.
+Perhaps it is unwise, foolish, childlike, but dream anyhow.
+Disillusionment is destined to appear. You may
+vanish as have other great dreams, but even so, what
+a glorious, an imperishable memory!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_93">93</span></p>
+
+<p>“Once,” will say those historians of far distant
+nations of times yet unborn, perchance, “once there
+was a great republic. And its domain lay between a
+sea and a sea—a great continent. In its youth and
+strength it dared assert that men were free and equal,
+endowed with certain inalienable rights. Then came
+the black storms of life—individual passions and
+envies, treasons, stratagems, spoils. The very gods,
+seeing it young, dreamful, of great cheer, were filled
+with envy. They smote and it fell. But, oh, the
+wondrous memory of it! For in those days men were
+free, <i>because they imagined they were free</i>.” Of dreams
+and the memory of them is life compounded.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_24_24" href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This loyal citizen of democratic America is too good
+a Darwinian to believe in equality. He sees the United
+States like the lobster and the squid in the tub, as a
+land of bitter conflicts scarcely concealed by humanitarianism,
+a land where the strongest coaxes the weak in
+order to stifle him more effectively. As a philosopher
+Dreiser shows little respect for the masses, although
+they delight his artistic sense. He has little or no confidence
+in them. If any change for the better happens
+in human conditions, we must attribute it to the supermen,
+who are acting as Providence first for their own
+profit, but also indirectly for that of the greater mass of
+mortals. Great men are the sole palliation offered by
+Nature to the average mediocrity of the human race.
+Dreiser’s partiality for the supermen has gone as far as
+praising as the most wonderful of all books Machiavelli’s
+“The Prince,” that bible of crafty and cynical statesmen.
+He praised Alexander, Caesar, Hannibal and
+Napoleon like another Carlyle. These were men of
+prey, sharks and vultures, but the energy of Nature was
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_94">94</span>seething within them with its most virulent ferments.
+As a masterpiece of bio-chemistry they stand
+out preëminently among the <i>homoculi</i>. Of course the
+fight with the giants and the dwarfs is unequal.
+The masses do not give the supermen their chance.
+Dreiser bemoans that plight. Turning to his country
+he waves to the captains of industry as the true
+reincarnations of Alexander and Bonaparte. During
+a visit to the Vatican galleries he was impressed, he
+tells us, by a striking air of resemblance between certain
+American magnates and the proconsuls or the emperors
+of Rome!</p>
+
+<p>This hero worship explains to us why Theodore
+Dreiser cannot refrain from feeling some admiration
+even for such authentic villains as his Frank Cowperwood.
+Biology and ethics play at the tug-of-war in
+his novels. He cannot accept the criminal, but neither
+can he condemn him without a mixed feeling of aversion
+and awe in the presence of his strength. The call-of-the-wild
+lures him as strongly as it does Jack London.
+He adores sheer force as an athlete does the sight of a
+perfect figure, without any admixture of moral responsibility.
+He adores life as what may be called the muscular
+display of passions. Without greed and lust he gives
+us to understand that there would be no dramatic
+pathos left in existence. So he wrote the epic of appetites
+unleashed. In his novels Society arrayed with
+moral codes, judges, policemen, jails and executioners
+plays the part of the Myrmidons in Homer. The men
+of pluck and daring, the grafters, the forgers, and the
+like, stand out like as many Achilles and Hectors. Passions
+and appetites, even those condemned by the code,
+are the keys to human life. The truest moments of life,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_95">95</span>although they may be the most tragic, are those athrill
+with a great passion. Life is a perpetually self-renovating
+process, the gushing-out of infinite forces hurled
+against all barriers.&#x2060;<a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>This love of life as it is, along with Dreiser’s preference
+for the bio-chemical point of view, must also account
+for the treatment of the sexual problems in his
+books. Dreiser’s apparent cynicism on this point is
+again that of the biologist. To detect the mysteries of
+sex he does not need to turn to Doctor Freud. He
+brings everything to the surface. Like Whitman, he
+sings a pæan to life in all its works. His pagan odes to
+Life need only rhymes to be formal poems. Here is a
+hymn to the Vital Force which betrays the true poet:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Life will not be boxed in boxes. It will not be
+wrapped and tied up with strings and set aside on a shelf
+to await a particular religious or moral use. As yet we
+do not understand life, we do not know what it is,
+what the laws are that govern it. At best we see ourselves
+hobbling along, responding to this dream and
+that lust and unable to compel ourselves to gainsay the
+fires and appetites and desires of our bodies and minds.
+Some of these, in some of us, strangely enough (and
+purely accidentally, of that I am convinced) conform
+to the current needs or beliefs of a given society; and
+if we should be so fortunate as to find ourselves in that
+society, we are by reason of these ideals, favorites,
+statesmen, children of fortune, poets of the race. On
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_96">96</span>the other hand, others of us who do not and cannot
+conform (who are left-over phases of ancient streams,
+perhaps, or portentous striae of new forces coming into
+play) are looked upon as horrific, and to be stabilized,
+or standardized, and brought into the normal systole-diastole
+of things.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_25_25" href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
+
+<p>Those of us endowed with these things in mind and
+blood are truly terrible to the mass—pariahs, failures,
+shams, disgraces. Yet life is no better than its worst
+elements, no worse than its best. Its perfections are
+changing temporalities, illusions of perfection that will
+be something very different to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Again I say, we do not know what life is—not
+nearly enough to set forth a fixed code of any kind,
+religious or otherwise. But we do know that it sings
+and stings, that it has perfections, entrancements,
+shames—each according to his blood flux and its
+chemical character. Life is rich, gorgeous, an opium-eater’s
+dream of something paradisiacal—but it is
+never the thin thing that thin blood and a weak, ill-nourished,
+poorly responding brain would make it,
+and that is where the majority of our religions, morals,
+rules and safeguards come from. From thin, petered-out
+blood, and poor, nervous, non-commanding, weak
+brains.</p>
+
+<p>Life is greater than anything we know.</p>
+
+<p>It is stronger.</p>
+
+<p>It is wilder.</p>
+
+<p>It is more horrible.</p>
+
+<p>It is more beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>We need not stop and think we have found a solution.
+We have not even found a beginning. We do
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_97">97</span>not know. And my patriotic father wanted us all to
+believe in the Catholic Church and the Infallibility of
+the Pope and confession and communion!</p>
+
+<p>Great Pan of the Greeks, and you, Isis of the Egyptians,
+save me! These moderns are all insane!&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_26_26" href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Thus speaks the American Zarathustra.</p>
+
+<p>Theodore Dreiser was not satisfied with lyrical statements
+of his philosophy. “Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub” is
+a direct and almost <i>ex professo</i> comment on the subject
+of life and conduct. Important qualifications of
+his pessimism will be found in particular in an important
+essay of that book, called “The Inevitable Equation.”
+Yes, Dreiser is a moralist; may I say an Emersonian
+moralist? “The Inevitable Equation” recalls to our
+mind Emerson’s famous essay on “Compensation.”
+Crimes, monstrosities, lust and greed, the rascalities of
+Frank Cowperwood or the crimes of Clyde Griffiths do
+not disturb the novelist’s serenity. He does not feel
+the need, like Zola, of calling society to the rescue, or
+like Dostoievski to resort to mysticism to make the
+world better. He remains a positivist. Life is Life.
+<i>C’est la guerre!</i> Call it God, the Oversoul or the Vital
+Force, the ruling energies of Nature are blind and indifferent.
+Never did Nature listen to a course in philosophy.
+What does Dreiser care how the Vital Force will
+call itself? It is enough for him that he can wonder
+daily at its wonderful display. A volcano or a cyclone
+are not moral, but they are impressive and thrilling.
+A world without dangers would not be an interesting
+world. Moreover there is an automatic (or call it, if
+you like, providential) Westinghouse brake somewhere
+in the worst furies of the monster. Nature is a self-regulated
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_98">98</span>energy. It manages alone to keep a balance
+in the midst of its turmoil. The individuals and the
+masses counterbalance each other rather harmoniously
+and this probably explains why the cosmos has not yet
+been wrecked. Saints and poets compensate for the
+greedy and the lusty. Saint Francis of Assisi atones
+for Frank Cowperwood. This belief in compensation,
+or, as Dreiser prefers to say, in equation, is the only
+trace of ethics to be found in his books, but it was
+already Emerson’s ethics.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_27_27" href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pity plays no part in Dreiser’s stories. His outlook
+on life is entirely devoid of that quality. Yet he is less
+cruel in his essays. An unmistakable undercurrent of
+tenderness and indulgence toward mankind is present
+in them. The author of “An American Tragedy” is
+the same one who wrote “Twelve Men,” a most touching,
+human and, yes, a truly Christian book. Optimism
+is not absent either from “A Traveller at Forty”
+and “A Book About Myself.” Outside the reporter’s
+office Theodore Dreiser can be truly human. Then he
+gives up objectivity and he does not mind helping his
+readers solve the riddles of this world. After all, even
+in his gloomiest moments he does not deal with the
+satanic phases of life with more complacency than, for
+instance, Jonathan Edwards used to do. His impartiality
+does not exclude convictions; much to the contrary.
+It is that of a judge who suspends the sentence until the
+criminal has been proven guilty. His indictment is
+then left to the jury, <i>i.e.</i>, to the readers of his books on
+the conscience of whom he relies. Few writers have
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_99">99</span>known like him the somber art of penning us in through
+hundreds or thousands of pages without one single ray
+of hope apparent, and few could operate a guillotine
+with the <i>sang-froid</i> found in the execution of Clyde
+Griffiths. Again, however, Dreiser’s pessimism is not
+without an appeal.</p>
+
+<p>He has suggested in the same essays two solutions of
+the ethical problem. In our fight with Nature there is
+first the alternative of complete surrender, abandonment
+and acceptance. This is the choice of the saints
+and the sages. The other alternative is to fight the
+fight for its own sake, and to challenge the world on its
+own ground. If we refuse to serve Nature we may well
+try to surpass it, and disprove it. Dreiser seems very
+much in favor of those Promethean ethics. The universal
+forces may well overtake us and beat us at the
+game. What of that? If we cannot win, let us, at
+least, know that we tried. Here Dreiser once more
+points out a moral, not of conscience but of science.
+He revives Socrates’ dictum “Know thyself” and the
+world along with you. This may be the best road to
+victory when all is told. Surrounded on all sides by
+superhuman energies let us prove ourselves supermen
+to meet them, and if we are ominously assailed, let us at
+least find out the name of our assailant. If we suffer,
+let us gladly, proudly confess it. As for Theodore
+Dreiser himself, he declares that a nook beside the giant
+Prometheus on the rock would please him more than a
+seat in the orchestra of Fra Angelico’s winged seraphs.
+This ethics does not lack generosity and heroism.</p>
+
+<p>When all is said, Dreiser the philosopher and Dreiser
+the artist go hand in hand. He accepts the world as it
+is. Let it be good or evil, a means toward an end or an
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_100">100</span>end in itself, a providential purpose or such stuff as
+dreams are made of, this huge mystery is in itself
+something worth meditating and writing upon. What
+do evolution, melioration and progress matter? When
+Dreiser returns after twenty years to his native Hoosier
+village he is concerned with only one question. Have
+his countrymen succeeded in enriching their sensuous
+experience and developing their perceptive capacity, or
+shall we admit that since the days of King Solomon,
+or Euripides or Shakespeare man’s faculty to enjoy
+the world has not made any progress? Euripides’
+“Medea,” the “Canticle of Canticles,” “Macbeth,”
+are just as true and beautiful to-day as they were centuries
+ago. Have we moderns found anything superior
+to the sensuous delight which these works of the past
+allow us to enjoy? Can anything beyond be imagined?
+What have time and space to do with the enjoyment of
+life? No mechanical device can accelerate spiritual
+progress. Theodore Dreiser cannot be imposed upon
+by the conquest of the air or of the asphalt. The Big
+Bertha and the asphyxiating gas are not signs to him of
+human supremacy. At present man does not any more
+understand the tremendous forces which he commands
+than he did in his primitive days, although he can conceive
+of still more tremendous energies than those which
+he sees at play around him. Our response to the stimuli
+of Nature has improved very little. There seems to
+be a maximum limit of sensations beyond which we
+cannot pass. Who can quote a writer able to feel more
+keenly than Homer? When Medea speaks in Euripides’
+tragedy, who can speak better than she, and who
+can say that her words are ancient or modern instead
+of being simply and beautifully human?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_101">101</span></p>
+
+<p>In “A Traveller at Forty,” Dreiser devotes several
+interesting pages to the Dutch painters. He recognized
+himself in these unsophisticated artists, who found
+beauty everywhere around them. Nothing, according
+to him, is easier than to soar into metaphysics, sentimentality
+or mysticism. We ought to be grateful to
+those who can love life as it is and make us love it without
+concealing its imperfections.</p>
+
+<p>He praises the Dutch painters for giving us the most
+perfect expression of common and everyday beauty.
+They were not romantic but human. Theodore Dreiser
+envies those unassuming artists who were content to
+paint the arrival of a courier, an evening school, a skating
+party, a dance of rustics, a flock of wild ducks, the
+cows at milking time, a game of backgammon, a woman
+knitting socks, a cat playing with her kittens, etc.
+Still more interesting than the homeliness of the Dutch
+masters was the exquisite finesse of their sensations, the
+marvelous temperament through which even the commonplace
+became idealized.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_28_28" href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
+
+<p><i>Life seen through a temperament</i>,—this is art, according
+to Dreiser, who has not forgotten the lesson of
+Maupassant and Zola. He defines art as <i>an emotional
+and intellectual reflection of intuition through life</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_102">102</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">
+ CHAPTER V
+ <br>
+ <i>Theodore Dreiser and the American Tragedy</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In the preceding chapter I presented the general
+philosophy of Theodore Dreiser. Let us now survey his
+novels in their respective order of publication. The first
+in date was “Sister Carrie” (1900). We are told that
+the author had to curtail a great deal of the material of
+this book—a feat very unfamiliar to him—and this
+very likely explains why his first novel, one of the most
+interesting ever written by him, is the most in keeping
+with the ordinary canon of literary proportions. Every
+reader will remember Sister Carrie’s story. Being a
+poor American girl, she left her family to earn a living
+and started for Chicago with scarcely a penny. On
+the train she met a smart “drummer” of flirtatious
+disposition. Carrie stopped for a while with her relatives,
+but she could not endure the misery very long.
+She looked vainly for congenial work and finally sought
+her drummer again. He rented an apartment for her
+and she became his mistress. She soon tired of him
+and became acquainted with the manager of a bar, a
+middle-aged man with wife and children, who left everything
+for her sake. This man was honestly in love with
+Carrie and devoted to her to the point of committing a
+theft, of which Carrie herself knew nothing. They go
+to Canada and thence to New York, where Carrie’s
+lover proves a failure. The book ends tragically and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_103">103</span>almost cynically by the man committing suicide and
+Carrie going on alone to make a triumphant career
+on the stage. The story, like most of Dreiser’s stories,
+is rather monotonous and bleak. There is in it, however,
+an undercurrent of deep human pathos and an
+admirable sense of human frailty. The author was
+clever enough to make Carrie’s seducer sympathetic.
+The book is well composed. The story is consistent
+throughout, and the plot dramatic from beginning to
+end, which is rarely the case with Dreiser. The
+dialogues are true to life and the environment very
+deftly suggested. Drouet, the “drummer” is a fascinating
+“booster,” a George Babbitt <i>avant la lettre</i>.
+Like most of Dreiser’s characters, he is a well balanced
+mixture of good and evil. (A true villain does not
+exist in Dreiser’s novels, because he does not probably
+exist in reality. His most monstrous characters show
+now and then some good inclination or other. This is
+true psychology.) A bluffer, an adventurer and a good
+fellow at heart, he is drawn from life. Carrie, the
+central character, is much less sympathetic. The
+heartless way in which she gives up the man who has
+sacrificed everything for her is not very chivalrous.
+Once more we see in her case Dreiser’s preference of the
+truly human to the imaginary and the romantic. The
+real pathos of the book rests upon Hurstwood, the
+“traveler at forty” led to his ruin by sex, as was
+Eugene Witla, the hero of “The Genius.” It is Hurstwood
+who fills the dramatic center of the book. He is
+the first specimen of moral disintegration presented by
+Theodore Dreiser.</p>
+
+<p>In this first novel of his the author had not yet
+given himself entirely up to strict objectivity and he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_104">104</span>was kind enough to draw for the reader the moral lesson
+implied in “Sister Carrie”:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Oh, Carrie, Carrie! Oh, blind strivings of the human
+heart! Onward, onward, it saith, and where beauty
+leads, there it follows. Whether it be the tinkle of a
+lone sheep bell o’er some quiet landscape, or the glimmer
+of beauty in sylvan places, or the show of soul in some
+passing eye, the heart knows and makes answer, following.
+It is when the feet weary and hope seems vain
+that the heartaches and the longings arise. Know,
+then, that for you is neither surfeit nor content. In
+your rocking-chair, by your window dreaming, shall
+you long alone. In your rocking-chair, by your window,
+shall you dream such happiness as you may never
+fear.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>“Sister Carrie” is the tragedy of the thwarting of
+human aspirations. It presents Dreiser’s favorite
+philosophy concerning the conflict of society and the
+individual, the opposition of social and individual
+ethics. Our instincts are good of themselves but they
+may prove harmful to society.</p>
+
+<p>“Jennie Gerhardt” was published in 1911. This
+novel follows more closely than the preceding the rigid
+standards of objectivity set by the French realists.
+Again it tells the tale of an abandoned woman, but of
+a woman who does not possess the grit of Sister Carrie.
+Jennie Gerhardt is a purely instinctive woman, and she
+pays dearly for her surrender to the male. Like most
+of the women heroines in Dreiser’s novels, she embodies
+the mysterious cravings of Nature. Poor Jennie is not
+a superwoman, like Carrie, and the survival of the
+fittest does not work in her favor. Like Sister Carrie
+she was born poor, an easy prey to temptation. Her
+first lover died and left her alone with a child. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_105">105</span>became the chambermaid of a wealthy family and surrendered
+to the entreaties of a young member of the
+household. The two lovers were honestly fond of each
+other. The young man would have married Jennie if
+society allowed. But this is not the case and Jennie is
+the first to suggest that her lover give her up. He does
+so against his will, and marries a woman of his own
+caste. Jennie remains alone. Her lover dies, still
+faithful to her, and she keeps his memory all her life.
+That is all. This simple drama is none the less heart-rending
+in its banality. It was told by Dreiser with a
+sort of tragic naïveté like that of Flaubert in “Un
+Cœur Simple.”</p>
+
+<p>“Jennie Gerhardt” is a beautiful and most pathetic
+book. It is cleverly written in a sort of monochromatic
+atmosphere, a <i>grisaille</i> admirably in keeping with the
+portrait in the center. Jennie’s father is, psychologically,
+one of the truest and most human portraits drawn
+by the novelist. Bio-chemistry had not yet blurred his
+critical sense.</p>
+
+<p>In “The Financier” and “The Titan” Dreiser
+widened the scope of his vision to a large extent. They
+both display a <i>tableau de mœurs</i> about a central character.
+These books tax the patience of the reader.
+They are too long, too clumsy, too detailed, and yet
+they reveal an unquestionable master. Cowperwood
+is a magnificent rascal, one whom Balzac would have
+been proud to capture for his gallery of rogues. It is
+Vautrin in a Tuxedo and behind a mahogany desk.
+Cowperwood is a Spencerian animal of authentic
+pedigree, a superb plesiosaurus, a Dreiserian superman
+<i>par excellence</i>. The reader of this book has not
+forgotten how his vocation was revealed to him before
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_106">106</span>the tub where the lobster fought the squid. Cowperwood
+has no conscience. He is ruled by tyrannical
+instincts. He has no more sense of responsibility than a
+cyclone. Indeed, he has so little of it that he quickly
+becomes as monotonous as an automaton performing
+on the stage under the disguise of a real man. He
+was born to harm as the shark is born with teeth.
+From the very first pages of the book until the end, he
+appears as an indomitable energy, let loose on this
+planet. He comes from the same zoo as most of the
+heroes of Jack London. Fate lets him be born in
+Philadelphia and he mistakes the stock exchange in
+that city for the wilds of Alaska or the South Seas. He
+knows of only one law, that of the jungle, and in regard
+to ethics he is a perfect vacuum, the most completely
+amoral person in the whole history of the American
+novel.</p>
+
+<p>“The Financier” starts Frank Cowperwood on his
+adventurous career. He wants to get rich quick and
+by any means. He steals the public chest of his native
+city and, in doing so, comments Dreiser, he shows
+himself neither better nor worse than the majority of
+his political and financial opponents. Unfortunately
+for him, he is caught with his hand in the bag, and
+sentenced to four years in jail. The energy of the man
+shows itself in the course of this episode. Cowperwood’s
+stoicism is worthy of a better cause, and it is, in
+his case, not the product of an excess, but of an entire
+lack of conscience. He personifies the triumph of bio-chemistry.
+We are given to understand that his
+misfortunes are the natural lot of all those who revolt
+against what Nietzsche called the ethics of the herd.
+Of course, when society jailed Cowperwood it acted for
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_107">107</span>its best interests. To cage a tiger is always moral.
+Prisons have been providentially designed to give Cowperwood
+and his like time to think. He is not at all surprised
+to find himself behind the bars. The only thing
+which worries him is to know how he can get out. He
+has lost everything in the fray, but he stands invincible
+on the ruins of his own universe, ready to begin all over
+again without any redemption or expiation, and certainly
+without any conversion. In fact, “The Financier”
+is only the first volume of an unfinished trilogy,
+and several hundred pages in volume number two will
+hardly suffice Dreiser to complete the story of his
+rascalities.</p>
+
+<p>“The Financier” is a powerful book. Dreiser gave
+free rein in it to his passion for collecting statistics, and
+for making an impression on the reader by arranging
+a mosaic of characteristic odds and ends. He piles up
+evidence as a reporter or a coroner, without wanting to
+enliven the testimony by any flare of wit or emotion.
+As a writer, he abjured all rhetoric. If most of the
+time his novels prove indigestible, it is due to the fact
+that he never inserts anything in them which can
+divert one from facts. He writes in a lump, so to
+speak. He serves us a heavy meal without any spices
+or gravy. His style is entirely amorphous. It is
+ponderous and, one might say, elephantine. See how
+Zola succeeded in putting zest and interest into his
+dreariest and most objective narratives; how Flaubert
+and Maupassant added the human and artistic touch
+even to their most matter-of-fact cartoons. EXACTITUDE!
+EXACTITUDE! THE FACTS! THE
+FACTS! HOW? WHY? WHEN? Has not Dreiser as
+an artist been misled by those mechanical suggestions?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_108">108</span></p>
+
+<p>And yet, Frank Cowperwood stands alive before our
+eyes; the whole society of his time can be felt swarming
+around him,—politics, finance, love, art, the
+criminal court, the prison. They are alike, not as they
+would be in Balzac or in Shakespeare, in a great surge
+of lyricism or pathos, but in a sort of vacuum ordered
+for them by the indifference of the author. They are
+painted on the surface of the canvas without any perspective
+and no play of light to animate them. William
+Dean Howells knew better than this.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The second part of the trilogy is called “The Titan,”
+an ironic title since, at the end of the book, Cowperwood
+proves a failure, at least for the time being. We
+find him out of jail and established in Chicago just after
+the big fire. His energies have not abated and his
+financial career begins triumphant. We become involved
+in his minutest rascalities. We learn from him
+how to bribe the politicians, buy franchises, strangle
+all competitors, monopolize public utilities to our own
+selfish advantage. Meanwhile, as an intermission, we
+are lavishly served with the story of Cowperwood’s
+adulteries and liaisons, until his boat is shipwrecked on
+the rock of a municipal election which takes away from
+him the profits of his grafts. Cowperwood is now a
+wounded giant but not a dead one. The novelist still
+foresees for him a brilliant career and like the witches
+he sends him with his blessing to a new destiny:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Rushing like a great comet to the zenith, his path
+a blazing trail, Cowperwood did for the hour illuminate
+the terrors and wonders of individuality. But for him
+also the eternal equation—the pathos of the discovery
+that even giants are but pygmies, and that an ultimate
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_109">109</span>balance must be struck.... And this giant himself,
+rushing on to new struggles and new difficulties in an
+older land, forever suffering the goad of a restless heart—for
+him was no ultimate peace, no real understanding,
+but only hunger and thirst and wonder. Wealth,
+wealth, wealth! A new grasp of a new great problem
+and its eventual solution. Anew the old urgent
+thirst for life, and only its partial quenchment. In
+Dresden one palace for one woman, in Rome a second
+for another. In London a third for his beloved Berenice,
+the lure of beauty ever in his eye. The lives of
+two women wrecked, a score of victims despoiled....
+And he resigned, and yet not—loving, understanding,
+doubting—caught at last by the drug of a personality
+which he could not gainsay.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Cowperwood certainly breaks the record of human
+endurance and obduration as a rascal. There must be
+no break in his career as a buccaneer of finance, and
+neither must there be any conversion. Tolstoi,
+Dostoievski or Zola would not have waited so long to
+restore to Cowperwood at least the semblance of a
+conscience, were it only to relieve the strain on the
+reader. Not so with Theodore Dreiser. None ever
+proved more inexorable.</p>
+
+<p>Bio-chemistry proves to be a more inhuman ethics
+than the ancient <i>Fatum</i> or Calvinistic predestination.
+The secret of our destiny is written in our blood. We
+can resist neither our temperament nor our instincts:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Each according to his temperament—that something
+which he has not made and cannot always subdue,
+and which may not always be subdued by others for
+him. Who plans the steps that lead lives on to splendid
+glories, or twist them into gnarled sacrifices, or make
+of them dark, disdainful, contentious tragedies? The
+soul within? And whence comes it? Of God?</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_110">110</span></p>
+
+<p>A dynosaur, we are told, possesses no more conscience
+than a lobster or a squid:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>That thing <i>conscience</i>, which obsesses and rides some
+people to destruction, did not trouble him (Cowperwood)
+at all. He had no consciousness of what is currently
+known as sin.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_29_29" href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> He never gave a thought to the
+vast palaver concerning evil which is constantly going
+on. There were just two faces to the shield of life—strength
+and weakness. Right and wrong? He did
+not know about those. They were bound up in metaphysical
+abstrusities about which he did not care to
+bother. Good and evil? Those were toys of clerics,
+by which they made money. Morality and immorality?
+He never considered them. But strength and
+weakness—oh yes! If you had strength you could
+protect yourself always and be something. If you were
+weak—pass quickly to the rear and get out of the
+range of the guns. He was strong, and he knew it; and
+somehow he always believed in his star.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This elementary psychology takes us back to that
+familiar gospel which we used to hear from Jack
+London’s sea rovers. It is Nietzsche for beginners.
+The human being would be too easy a riddle to decipher
+if it were actuated only by lust and greed. Man in
+this case would not be more interesting than, let us
+say, a Robot or a Ford motor car. <i>Summum jus,
+summa injuria.</i> Dreiser’s psychology falls short.
+Frank Cowperwood may be curious as an automaton;
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_111">111</span>he is not interesting, even as a rascal, despite his
+amorous adventures. Casanova was an artist in
+philandering. Cowperwood was a machine, or, if you
+prefer, an animal. Love is once more a branch of bio-chemistry
+for Dreiser. It is a blind and purely animal
+impulse. It is good in itself like all impulses:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Whether we will or no, theory or no theory, the large
+basic facts of chemistry and physics remain. Like is
+drawn to like. Changes in temperament bring changes
+in relationship. Dogma may bind some minds; fear,
+others. But there are always those in whom the
+chemistry and physics of life are large, and in whom
+neither dogma nor fear is operative. Society lifts its
+hands in horror; but from age to age the Helens, the
+Messalinas, the Du Barrys, the Pompadours, the
+Maintenons, and the Nell Gwynns flourish and point
+a subtler basis of relationship than we have yet been
+able to square with our lives.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This is outspoken enough and needs no comment.
+In “Man and Superman,” G. B. Shaw also tried to
+sacrifice Don Juan to the Vital Force, but he did it with
+a bit of salt and a few flowers. In the case of Dreiser,
+this cynical outlook is without any irony, poetry or
+appeal. It is very likely erroneous, but much less so
+than Puritan sophisms, and may serve as an antidote
+against the romantic falsifications of sex appeal.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“The Genius,” published in 1915, is the most direct
+and important contribution of the author to the study
+of sex psychology. The reading of this enormous book
+is disappointing. The title is evidently sarcastic, since
+the hero, Eugene Witla, blunders in life from the beginning
+to end. A self-made man, an artist, a business
+man, and above all a self-appointed superman and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_112">112</span>notorious erotomaniac, Eugene is the <i>reductio ad absurdum</i>
+of Dreiser’s theories concerning the irresistible
+impulses of one’s temperament. Eugene has the soul of
+an idealist. He craves for beauty and possesses a fine
+talent. His paintings have made a great impression
+on a French art dealer, M. Charles, and I cannot help
+quoting from the catalogue of his exposition a passage
+which throws a great deal of light on Dreiser’s own
+realism. The following is supposed to be taken from
+a criticism of Eugene Witla’s paintings. Somebody
+had dared to compare Eugene with Millet. This the
+alleged critic cannot admit:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The brutal exaggeration of that painter’s art would
+probably testify to him of his own merit. He is mistaken.
+The great Frenchman was a lover of humanity,
+a reformer in spirit, a master of drawing and composition.
+There was nothing of this cheap desire to startle
+and offend by what he did. If we are to have ash cans
+and engines and broken-down bus-horses thrust down
+our throats as art, Heaven preserve us. We had better
+turn to commonplace photography at once, and be done
+with it. Broken windows, shutters, dirty pavements,
+half frozen ash cart drivers, overdrawn, heavily exaggerated
+figures of policemen, tenement harridans,
+beggars, panhandlers, sandwich-men—of such is Art
+according to Eugene Witla.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Charles, on the contrary, is quite enthusiastic
+about Eugene. He is not afraid of his painting of a</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>great hulking, ungainly negro, a positively animal
+man, with a red flannel shawl around his ears, and his
+arms and legs looking “as though he might have on two
+or three pairs of trousers and as many vests.” What a
+debauch of color! “Raw reds, raw greens, dirty grey
+paving stones—such faces! Why, this thing fairly
+shouted its facts. It seemed to say: ‘I’m dirty, I
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_113">113</span>am commonplace, I am grim, I am shabby, but I am
+life.’ And there was no apologizing for anything in it,
+no glossing anything over. Bang! Smash! Crack!
+came the facts one after another, with a bitter, brutal
+insistence on their so-ness. Why ... he had seen
+somewhere a street that looked like this, and there it
+was—dirty, sad, slovenly, immoral, drunken,—anything,
+everything, but here it was.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Another critic saw beauty through it all. He found
+in Eugene’s works</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>a true sense of the pathetic, a true sense of the dramatic,
+the ability to endow color—not with its photographic
+value ...—but with its higher spiritual significance;
+the ability to indict life with its own grossness ... in
+order that mayhap it may heal itself; the ability to
+see wherein is beauty—even in shame and pathos and
+degradation.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This passage is important in that it shows us the
+author himself trying to draw his own portrait through
+Eugene Witla, remarkably resembling a portrait for
+better or for worse.</p>
+
+<p>To come back to “The Genius,” we follow Eugene
+Witla along his artistic career, as we accompany him to
+Chicago and New York,—and Dreiser gives us very
+deft sketches of these cities. Eugene of course is going
+to fall in love. After a bio-chemical courtship he
+marries Angela, a purely instinctive woman like Jennie
+Gerhardt and the mistresses of Frank Cowperwood.
+He won’t be faithful to her very long. Eugene is a
+born polygamist and pretty soon his sexual excesses will
+jeopardize his career and seriously threaten his health.
+Lust is a serious obstacle to art. Dreiser’s narrative
+becomes disconcerting at this point. We took the
+book so far as a dramatic demonstration of the dangers
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_114">114</span>of sex experience for an artist. We felt ourselves
+brought to a climax when Eugene was going to be shipwrecked
+on the rocks of eroticism. What was he going
+to do between sheer lust and “genius”? The conflict
+promised to be truly dramatic and instructive morally
+and psychologically. Hurstwood in “Sister Carrie”
+had fallen into a similar pitfall and shown Eugene the
+way to perdition. But no, Eugene does not go to the
+dogs. Dreiser is too indifferent to dramatization and
+too honest an artist to bring his books to such a climax.
+“The Genius” is not a sermon. Eugene recovers and
+we find him at the dénouement reading Herbert Spencer
+and Christian Science in the company of his daughter.
+How could the American Comstocks find fault with
+such a moral and happy ending, and how could they miss
+the epical lesson of the book, as literally emphasized
+by the author himself? Eugene Witla made a mistake,
+we are told, when he failed to see the danger which
+eroticism caused his “genius.” Love-making may be a
+spiritual incentive for an artist but it can paralyze his
+physical energies:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>He did not realize ... that he was, aside from his
+art, living a life which might rob talent of its finest
+flavor, discolor the aspect of the world for himself, take
+scope from imagination and hamper effort with nervous
+irritation, and make accomplishment impossible.
+He had no knowledge of the effect of one’s sexual life
+upon one’s work, nor what such a life, when badly
+arranged, can do to a perfect art—how it can distort
+the sense of color, weaken that balanced judgment of
+character which is so essential to a normal interpretation
+of life, make all striving hopeless, take from art
+its most joyous conception, make life itself seem unimportant
+and death a relief.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_115">115</span></p>
+
+<p>This sounds like rather commonplace ethics and not
+worth a thousand pages of demonstration, but it constitutes
+on the part of the author a formal moral commitment.
+It must again be quoted to show that
+Theodore Dreiser is much less amoral than he seems to
+be. The fact that he failed once more in dramatizing
+his point is due to a flaw in his philosophy. The doctrine
+of the <i>inevitable equation</i> is, so to speak, anti-catastrophic,
+and certainly it is anti-dramatic. Where
+there is no place for conscience, remorse and conversion,
+there is no place for climax and anticlimax, and consequently
+none for the drama. Dreiser’s philosophy of
+positivism is responsible for this lack of dynamism
+which mars his books. His art, like his point of view,
+can only be strictly static. Hence the tediousness of
+his novels and particularly that of “The Genius.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>This again largely accounts for the qualities and the
+defects of “An American Tragedy,” Dreiser’s latest
+novel. The title of the book remains enigmatic,—or
+is it too obvious? What has America to do with
+Clyde Griffiths’ murder, and if it has, why not denounce
+it more specifically? This last novel is the story of a
+crime and a criminal strung out into two volumes. It
+was not the first contribution of the author to criminology.
+The problem of crime had already been on his
+mind. He dealt with it in his play called “The Hand
+of the Potter.”</p>
+
+<p>Crime, we might well say, constitutes an integral part
+of Dreiser’s metaphysics. It occurs as a natural episode
+in the history of the individual man asserting his will
+against society. The truth of the aphorism that
+“might is right” cannot be proved without it. Crime
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_116">116</span>and the repressions which accompany it are the fatal
+results of the revolt of temperament against its environment.
+After what we know of Dreiser’s bio-chemical
+convictions, we may easily foresee that his philosophy
+of crime and the criminal will give no part to responsibility.
+The criminal, like the buccaneer of finance, of
+the “genius,” will be a machine set in motion by blind
+and irresistible laws. Dreiser’s determinism eliminates
+free will and along with it the criminal himself. For
+this reason we must not expect the pathetic appeals to
+conscience from him which are found in Victor Hugo,
+Dostoievski and Tolstoi. Crime, according to Dreiser,
+has nothing to do with conscience, since conscience
+does not exist, but it may have something to do with
+science. In his ethical system there is no room for
+pity, expiation and remorse. The days of “The Scarlet
+Letter” are gone. In the light of bio-chemistry a
+criminal has no more or less importance than a rattlesnake,
+a shark or the microbe of cancer. This determinism
+in regard to crime was arraigned forty years ago
+in M. Paul Bourget’s “The Disciple,” and it was cynically
+illustrated by Julien Sorel in Stendhal’s “Le
+rouge et le noir.” Clyde Griffiths, like Robert Greslou
+in “The Disciple,” has placed himself beyond evil and
+good. Let us hear from Theodore Dreiser himself the
+story of Clyde Griffiths. It will save many readers
+the trouble of plodding tediously along in the morass of
+the most instructive and also the most monotonous
+book ever written by the novelist.</p>
+
+<p>Clyde Griffiths is the son of more or less abnormal
+parents. His father and mother are religious fanatics.
+Clyde is ambitious and dreams of a bright future. He
+begins as a bell boy of a hotel in Kansas City. An
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_117">117</span>uncle of his, a wealthy manufacturer, gives him a start.
+He falls in love with the girl Roberta. He has a bio-chemical
+idyll with her. Just at the moment that she
+becomes pregnant he finds a new and more promising
+affinity in the person of a rich heiress. The world is
+his if he marries her. But there is Roberta and her
+trouble. What will Griffiths do with her? He deliberately
+plans to get rid of her. He takes her to a pond
+and drowns her. He is caught, tried, convicted
+and sent to the electric chair. <i>The Inevitable Equation</i>
+acts as mathematically and objectively in his case as a
+guillotine. Bio-chemical predestination leaves no hope
+from the start. The presentation of the case, the
+climax, the anticlimax, and the <i>dénouement</i> follow each
+other as the conclusions of a theorem. Nothing is left
+to chance, providence or imagination. Griffiths acts
+thus and thus, he wants this and this, and he gets what
+he deserves.</p>
+
+<p>Dreiser’s matter-of-fact method of reporting helped
+him to indict Clyde Griffiths as only an expert criminal
+lawyer could do it. His technique in the presentation
+of the case is perfect. It makes us wonder if he did
+not miss his vocation when he bartered the bar for the
+writing desk of a novelist. But the psychology of the
+book is still more interesting than its knowledge of the
+code. “An American Tragedy” is a most original
+attempt to detect the instillation of a criminal thought
+into a man’s brain. Did anybody ever give a more
+exact, penetrating and dramatic account of how the
+idea of crime can invade a mind and gradually anesthetize
+the whole moral system of the criminal? Dreiser
+shows himself an expert and an explorer of the field of
+abnormal psychology by the way he marshals what may
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_118">118</span>be called instinctive logics, the logics of our blood and
+flesh, against rational logic, and by the way he detects
+the obscure sophistications of the inhibited and repressed,
+to find motives which come to their selfish
+ends. Freud and the psychoanalysts are beaten at
+their own game. The scenes of the book which show
+us the plan of the crime brewing in Clyde Griffiths’
+mind are tantamount to magic divination. Those
+pages on the function of the will must be recommended
+to professional psychologists and criminologists. If
+Dreiser’s views on the subject were accepted, our whole
+system of criminal legislation ought to be amended.</p>
+
+<p>The criminal for Dreiser is like God for Renan. He
+is not in the <i>esse</i> but in the <i>fieri</i>. He is not a fact but
+only a possibility. Crime for Dreiser is something
+which cannot be indicted because it cannot be weighed.
+The allegory of Justice as a figure bearing a pair of
+scales is a lie. To define better, Dreiser dissociates.
+His unflinching analysis leaves very little room for fully
+deliberate intention on the part of the criminal. According
+to this new diagnostic of the criminal mind, a
+criminal thought operates like a microbe and it follows
+an homeopathic process. It never becomes obvious,
+clear or exclusive enough to allow the use of the word
+“responsibility” in its current acceptance. Responsibility
+for a crime supposes a conception of the human
+mind and will which bio-chemistry contradicts. Such
+is Theodore Dreiser’s attitude in regard to the problem
+of crime. It is no longer for him, as it was for Hawthorne,
+a question of conscience but of nerves; not a
+problem of psychology but of physiology. He gave a
+most dramatic support to these views in several scenes
+of “An American Tragedy,” and in particular in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_119">119</span>scene of Roberta’s drowning. Was the drowning the
+result of premeditation on the part of Griffiths, or was it
+not purely accidental? Who can tell? His conduct
+as a criminal is a series of gropings through the dark, of
+hesitations, of advance and retreat in the half-voluntary
+direction of an act in way of accomplishment, without
+much self-control and still less deliberate intention.
+Griffiths lives in a kind of pathological <i>aura</i> which dulls
+and poisons one by one his mental powers. There is
+enough of this to puzzle jury and judge. Remember,
+for instance, the episode when Clyde sits in the boat
+with Roberta. We had the impression that he had foreseen
+everything, and yet, when the time comes to act,
+his will power deserts him. The tragedy, none the less,
+develops itself automatically, as if he were out of it,
+were not concerned with it. The boat capsizes.
+Roberta’s head is hit by Griffiths’ camera. She falls
+into the water and he does not make a move to save
+her. He is arrested, tried and condemned. All this
+happens as automatically as the firing of a Winchester
+rifle.</p>
+
+<p>Again in the case of “An American Tragedy” as in
+that of his other novels, it would be unfair to take
+Theodore Dreiser for a cynic. There is a lesson between
+the lines if we know how to read it. What proportion is
+there between man’s deeds and his judgments? What
+is there in common between the dark and mysterious
+moves of our minds and the clumsy machinery devised
+to indict and to punish? Detectives, judges, lawyers,
+laws, jails and executioners. Does not the living mind
+of a criminal make light of all this, and if so, how can
+he be sentenced and electrocuted? I consider the
+scene at the end of the book between Clyde Griffiths,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_120">120</span>the murderer, and Reverend McMillan, his confessor,
+as one of the most dramatic in American literature.
+The priest has called upon the murderer and he wants
+him to make “a clean breast.” Much to his amazement
+he finds himself confronted with doubts. Here is this
+scene worthy of Dostoievski:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The Reverend McMillan, hearing all this—and
+never in his life before having heard or having had
+passed to him so intricate and elusive and strange a
+problem—and because of Clyde’s faith in and regard
+for him, was enormously impressed. And now sitting
+before him quite still and pondering most deeply, sadly
+and even nervously—so serious and important was
+this request for an opinion—something which, as he
+knew, Clyde was counting on to give him earthly and
+spiritual peace. But, none-the-less, the Reverend
+McMillan was himself too puzzled to answer so quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“Up to the time you went in that boat with her,
+Clyde, you had not changed in your mood toward her—your
+intention to—to ...”</p>
+
+<p>The Reverend McMillan’s face was gray and drawn.
+His eyes were sad. He had been listening, as he now
+felt, to a sad and terrible story—an evil and cruel self-torturing
+and destroying story. This young boy—really...!
+His hot, restless heart which plainly
+for the lack of so many things which he, the Reverend
+McMillan, had never wanted for, had rebelled. And
+because of that rebellion had sinned mortally and was
+condemned to die. Indeed his reason was as intensely
+troubled as his heart was moved.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I had not.”</p>
+
+<p>“You were, as you say, angry with yourself for being
+so weak as not to be able to do what you had planned
+to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“In a way it was like that, yes. But then I was
+sorry too, you see. And maybe afraid. I’m not
+exactly sure now. Maybe not, either.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_121">121</span></p>
+
+<p>The Reverend McMillan shook his head. So
+strange! So evasive! So evil! and yet ...</p>
+
+<p>“But at the same time, as you say, you were angry
+with her for having driven you to that point.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where you were compelled to wrestle with so
+terrible a problem?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tst! Tst! Tst! And so you thought of striking her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I did.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you could not.”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Praised be the mercy of God. Yet in the blow
+that you did strike—unintentionally, as you say—there
+was still some anger against her. That was why
+the blow was so—so severe. You did not want her
+to come near you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I didn’t. I think I didn’t, anyhow. I am
+not quite sure. It may be that I wasn’t quite right.
+Anyhow—all worked up, I guess—sick almost. I—I ...”
+In his uniform—his hair cropped so close,
+Clyde sat there, trying honestly now to think how it
+really was (exactly) and greatly troubled by his inability
+to demonstrate to himself even—either his guilt
+or his lack of guilt. Was he—or was he not? And
+the Reverend McMillan—himself intensely strained,
+muttering: “Wide is the gate and broad the way that
+leadeth to destruction.” And yet finally adding:
+“But you did rise to save her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, afterwards, I got up. I meant to catch her
+after she fell back. That was what upset the boat.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you did really want to catch her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. At the moment I guess I did.
+Anyhow I felt sorry, I think.”</p>
+
+<p>“But can you say now truly and positively, as your
+Creator sees you, that you were sorry—or that you
+wanted to save her then?”</p>
+
+<p>“It all happened so quick, you see,” began Clyde
+nervously—hopelessly, almost, “that I’m not just
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_122">122</span>sure. No, I don’t know that I was so sorry. No. I
+really don’t know, you see, now. Sometimes I think
+maybe I was, a little, sometimes not, maybe. But
+after she was gone and I was on shore, I felt sorry—a
+little. But I was sort of glad, too, you know, to be
+free, and yet frightened, too ... You see ...”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know. You were going to that Miss X.
+But out there, when she was in the water ...?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“You did not want to go to her rescue?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tst! Tst! Tst! You felt no sorrow? No shame?
+Then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, shame, maybe. Maybe sorrow, too, a little.
+I knew it was terrible. I felt that it was, of course.
+But still—you see ...”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know. That Miss X. You wanted to get
+away.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—but mostly I was frightened, and I didn’t
+want to help her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes! Yes! Tst! Tst! Tst! If she drowned you
+could go to that Miss X. You thought of that?”
+The Reverend McMillan’s lips were tightly and sadly
+compressed.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“My son! My son! In your heart was murder
+then.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes,” Clyde said reflectively. “I have
+thought since it must have been that way.”</p>
+
+<p>The Reverend McMillan paused and to hearten himself
+for this task began to pray—but silently—and
+to himself: “Our Father who art in Heaven—Hallowed
+be Thy Name. Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will
+be done—on earth as it is in Heaven.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This admirable scene is an excellent example of
+Theodore Dreiser’s realism at his best. There is
+enough of suffused emotion in it to make it human and
+artistically impressive.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_123">123</span></p>
+
+<p>Such is the work of Theodore Dreiser as a novelist.
+He is harsh and pessimistic. He takes away from us
+all our illusions. He makes us pay for truth at any
+cost with what we hold most interesting in ordinary
+fiction—sentiment, pathos, irony—but he does it in
+good faith. And he is quite as often harsh, honest,
+painstaking, vigorous and often mighty. Yes, his
+philosophy is without illusions but it is certainly not
+his fault:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>It is strange, but life is constantly presenting these
+pathetic paradoxes—these astounding blunders which
+temperament and blood moods bring about and reason
+and circumstance and convention condemn. The
+dreams of man are one thing—his capacity to realize
+them another. At either pole are the accidents of
+supreme failure and supreme success—the supreme
+failure of Abelard for instance, the supreme success of
+a Napoleon, enthroned at Paris. But, oh, the endless
+failures for one success.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Balzac at least, in the preface to his “Comédie humaine,”
+did not completely despair of man. Was he
+good or bad, he surely did not know, but he ushered in
+the priest and the physician to make him better, if need
+be. Theodore Dreiser leaves us very little hope of the
+reformation of the fallen angel. He writes:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>It is a question whether the human will, of itself
+alone, ever has cured or ever can cure any human weakness.
+Tendencies are subtle things. They are
+involved in the chemistry of one’s being, and those who
+delve in the mysteries of biology frequently find that
+curious anomaly, a form of minute animal life—chemically
+and physically attracted to its own disaster.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then we learn, to our delight, the beautiful names of
+some of the Cowperwoods, Hurstwoods, Jennie Gerhardts
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_124">124</span>and Eugene Witlas of biology. They are called
+the “paramecium,” “the vorticella,” “the actinobolus”
+and the “halteria grandinella.”</p>
+
+<p>Biological fatalism is, when all is told, the heart of
+Theodore Dreiser’s philosophy and the background of
+his work as an artist. When not suffused with some
+human appeal it opens only a blind alley to an artist.
+As a philosophical creed it even tends to exclude art
+entirely, because it forbids freedom. Art is the product
+of mind at play with the world. Why should the artist
+enjoy a liberty which he denies his characters and what
+is left to beauty in a blind and an absurd universe?
+Let us sum up Dreiser’s decalogue:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="hang">
+<p>1. Our will cannot prevail over our temperament.</p>
+
+<p>2. Instinct is the enemy of reason.</p>
+
+<p>3. The law of our instincts is diametrically opposed to the social
+code.</p>
+
+<p>4. It is through his instincts that man is most completely and most
+dangerously what he really is.</p>
+
+<p>5. Once given a temperament it can never be changed. There is no
+moral progress, no conversion possible from evil to good.</p>
+
+<p>6. Biology controls our body and contradicts social ethics.</p>
+
+<p>7. Consequently our social organization, ethics, politics (and
+why not the whole of our civilization?) are biologically and
+chemically false.</p>
+
+<p>8. All principles and institutions which ignore bio-chemical man
+and which are not deeply rooted in instincts and physiological
+necessities are false.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><i>Also spake Zarathustra!</i> Auguste Comte, before
+Dreiser, had given biology as a required foundation of
+social ethics but he finally felt the necessity to build a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_125">125</span>moral and religious roof upon the house. All the
+hounds of materialism and romanticism unleashed can
+be heard howling in the decalogue of Dreiser. Rousseau
+before him, with Helvetius and <i>tutti quanti</i> among
+the eighteenth-century encyclopedists, had raised before
+him the law of nature against the law of the mind.
+The result, as Thomas Carlyle proved, was the guillotine
+and Armageddon. Are we going to deny all the
+efforts of the saints, the ascetics, the heroes, the philosophers,
+the artists, to undo the patient and painful and
+slow uprising of mankind out of the primitive slime, to
+save Clyde Griffiths from the electric chair and restore
+the Dinoceras? Society may be wrong in forcing golf
+upon mankind for a substitute to the <i>vie dangereuse</i> or
+in finding a reservation for the Apaches in prison, but
+who will seriously complain? Let us bless the good
+Providence who gave us a chance to learn football
+and baseball as a catharsis to soothe and purge our
+temperament. To follow Dreiser’s ethics would be
+very much like courting cosmic suicide, and let us
+wish that the rattlesnake and the shark will last
+not as a rule but as exceptions among us, so that we
+ourselves may also have a chance to express our
+temperament and a chance to survive. All of us can
+safely enjoy the sight of wild beasts at the zoo or in
+the “movies.”</p>
+
+<p>It is hardly necessary to point to the difference
+between Dreiser’s morals and those of the Puritans.
+Puritan ethics, like all ethics, rested upon the preference
+given to the social over the individual motives of action.
+It opposed social and moral man to instinctive man
+and it destroyed the Indian because he was too elementary
+and bio-chemical. It brought about moral
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_126">126</span>improvement by a system of restraints, as all Christian,
+Buddhist and even pagan ethics have done. One may
+well criticize the results of those experiments without
+wishing to annihilate the whole edifice at one stroke.
+It seems as unscientific to give everything to instinct as
+to deny it all. Is not art, in defect of religion, the ideal
+means to harmonize body and mind, the physical and
+the spiritual? Art shows a way out of chaos; it dispels
+the nightmare of Dreiser’s primitive world. Greed
+and lust are not yet, thank God! the only incentives
+left to man to give a meaning to life. There certainly
+exists something better, somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, comparing Dreiser’s pessimistic portraits of
+man as he is realistically to the “most smiling aspects
+of life” in, let us say, William Dean Howells, one cannot
+help finding them at least virile. Truth above all!
+And let us have all the truth. Remember the saying of
+Pascal that <i>qui veut faire l’ange fait la bête</i>. Dreiser’s
+dissociations have at least the courage of truth. He
+wanted to defy the sentimentalists and restore the
+carnal man in his rights. As a hero or as a victim?
+This is not easy to say. Where Eugene Witla and
+Clyde Griffiths flounder, Frank Cowperwood almost
+succeeds. Dreiser’s objectivity leaves us in the lurch
+concerning moral issues. There are still many among
+us who prefer life among the mid-Victorians to that
+among the plesiosauri. Dreiser’s challenge to our
+vital lies is too one-sided. He is not mid-Victorian
+enough. He atones for Howells’ sentimentalism and
+at the same time makes us long for the Kentons and
+the Laphams. Call it cowardice, if you want, or call
+it art. Such a starvation of the best human emotions
+is dangerous for an artist who wants to force a lesson
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_127">127</span>upon his readers. It would indeed prove a mighty
+stroke of the cosmic irony if the realistic novels of such
+an honest seeker after truth as Theodore Dreiser served
+only to win the reader to the side of the sentimental
+writers.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_128">128</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">
+ CHAPTER VI
+ <br>
+ <i>Sinclair Lewis and the Average Man</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In the novels of Sinclair Lewis the Middle West has
+made another contribution to American literature. He
+was born in 1885 in Minnesota. It was in this country
+that he located Gopher Prairie. His father was a
+physician like Kennicott, Carol’s husband in “Main
+Street.” Lewis holds a degree from Yale and did not
+forget academic life in his stories. He too made his
+début in journalism, where he had a chance to learn
+something about the advertising methods which he
+parodies in his books, at first hand. Then he became
+an enthusiastic motorist, traveling through the different
+States of the Union. In one of his first novels,
+“Free Air,” he recounts an automobile romance, lasting
+all the way from New York to Seattle. Many “slices
+of life” graphically reproduced and spiced with delightful
+humor, show already the hand of a master. The
+hero, Milton Daggett, is a typical Lewis character, sympathetic
+and full of an exuberant vitality. Milton
+owns a garage. On his way west he meets a beautiful
+heiress whom he escorts and, of course, finally marries.</p>
+
+<p>“Mantrap,” a more recent novel, is the story of a
+trip through the Canadian wilds. It shows much the
+same dynamism. The author, at that time, had not
+yet sacrificed the pleasure of telling a story to characterization
+and satire. However, he already showed
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_129">129</span>himself a keen observer of men and women, when he
+published “Our Mr. Wrenn” in 1916. The book is
+intensely alive. It revealed Lewis’ talent to mimic
+people and make them talk as if we had overheard them.</p>
+
+<p>The scene is laid in a New York boarding house and
+the book recalls Dickens’ descriptions of the life of the
+bourgeois. Lewis displays the same humor, the same
+pathos and a similar deftness in drawing characters.
+Wrenn is an elder brother of George Babbitt. He is
+good-humored, a trifle sentimental and shows an almost
+morbid craving for friendship. Like Babbitt he was
+born gregarious. He is shy and almost obsequious
+with women. He longs to be loved and to tell some
+one that he loves her, but he does not know how to
+conduct a flirtation. We can very well imagine him
+playing a minor rôle in Flaubert’s “Bouvard and
+Pecuchet,” that epic of commonplace romanticism.
+The scene where Our Mr. Wrenn bids farewell to the
+setting sun reveals an unmistakable touch of Flaubert’s
+sympathetic irony. Wrenn is too ignorant and too
+modest to vent his feelings by trying to imitate the
+effusions of the great romantic writers at twilight. And
+yet he can hardly control himself on a fall evening as
+he sees the sun setting beyond the Manhattan skyscrapers.
+He rarely looks at the sky, and prefers not to,
+because, when he sees it, he takes it for an impossible
+road to Mandalay, and it makes him blue. This
+particular evening, the sunset has made Wrenn sad.
+To comfort himself he goes to a delicatessen store, and
+learns a new recipe for cooking eggs. Never mind the
+setting sun, after all! Wrenn is going to spend the
+evening with his friend Nellie, whom he adores in
+silence and to whom he reads the newspapers! As he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_130">130</span>thinks of it, he forgets the setting sun and he goes home
+hugging against his bosom the little tin of potato salad
+which he bought for his supper—let the chilly autumn
+wind moan around him if it wants.</p>
+
+<p>More optimistic and ironic than Theodore Dreiser,
+Lewis has none the less devoted himself to the satire of
+American society. The feeling of the conflict between
+social and individual ethics, between the state of the
+<i>mores</i> in America and the real needs of the individual
+citizen, inspired his work. “Main Street,” “Babbitt,”
+“Arrowsmith” and “Elmer Gantry” present the same
+plea. Let it not be said that the conflict between what
+the private man would like to do and what the social
+standards permit him to do is not peculiar to the United
+States. Doubtless there is nowhere a civilization without
+a society, and a society without suppression of
+some sort. But, if the criticisms which I have
+attempted to interpret impartially in these studies are
+true, it seems evident that the conflict in question is
+more tragic in America than anywhere else. Of all
+current social systems, that of the United States puts
+the greatest check on the individual as opposed to social
+expansion.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_30_30" href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
+
+<p>Sinclair Lewis is by far the most optimistic of all
+contemporary American novelists, at least in his first
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_131">131</span>novels. And yet the sting of the bee is there, and, the
+more he progresses in his career, the more disillusioned
+he seems to become concerning the things and people
+around him. What sort of United States does he show
+us? First of all, an immense country, prosperous,
+comfortable and self-satisfied on the surface, and in
+which more than one hundred million human beings
+live a sort of vegetative life. This indeed is surprising
+to the traveler from abroad, who visits the American
+shores. He sees optimism and joy all around him.
+Joy is the product of action and the only incentive to
+it. Neither action nor joy are possible without optimism.
+That Puritanism should permit Americans to
+remain gay sounds paradoxical, but Americans are not
+all Puritans and their joviality as a people is indisputable.
+Optimism and contentment are the daily colors
+of American life. Europe is a gloomy country in comparison
+with America. “Smile and be happy!” could
+never be a motto for the Old World. How could the
+average American help being content? To confine
+ourselves to “Babbitt” and “Main Street,” Americans
+in Sinclair Lewis’ novels are happy people. They enjoy
+material comfort, sociability, confidence in what
+the future has in store for them. Anybody who has
+had the privilege of living in America knows well what
+that means. Comfort and material ease first. There
+is in the United States a striking unanimity of contentment.
+In no other country has the average man so
+many practical reasons for believing in material success.
+Success is the rule in America for the average person
+with an average intelligence. Not everybody makes
+a fortune, many vegetate, a great many fail, but,
+materially speaking, the United States is the land
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_132">132</span>of plenty. There are comparatively few paupers.
+Nearly every one is assured of a fair minimum of comfort
+and ease. Large or small, the average American
+has a home, a hearth, a house which is, as a rule, more
+comfortable than the average European dwelling.
+Clean, neat and freshly painted, the American bungalow
+or cottage is not necessarily artistic, but it is agreeable.
+Friendly and yet distant from the neighbors, it
+is the image of its owner. Each house is isolated, and
+yet sufficiently near another to facilitate neighborliness.
+It is surrounded by a lawn carefully and almost
+religiously mowed. Inside, there is a furnace heater,
+one or several bathrooms, electric lighting, an icebox,
+not to forget the phonograph and the radio. And who
+in America has not a garage, were it only for a “Ford”?
+Living is simple, as is the furniture—and in still
+greater degree, the cooking.</p>
+
+<p>When the average American deserts his home—and
+he does it often, on business or pleasure—innumerable
+refuges take care of him. He is never left alone.
+Every good American is affiliated with one or more
+associations. Masonic lodges in particular abound.
+There, he is able to create many contacts. The spirit
+of solidarity, what he calls “service,” is very strong in
+him. In his lodge or his club, the average American
+(let us call him Babbitt with Sinclair Lewis) finds many
+practical advantages. If he wants to borrow, sue
+somebody, or invest money, be advanced in politics,
+he finds there a platform and a market. Even the
+welfare of his family is attended to when he dies. A
+Mystic Shriner, a Rotarian, an Elk, a Kiwanian, an
+Odd Fellow, a Forester, or what not, every average
+American is subject to sudden mobilization for a convention
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_133">133</span>or a parade. He is the prisoner—a happy
+prisoner, we must believe—of his clan. A quiet, and
+even a shy person at home, he is spontaneously transformed
+into a rather frolicsome person among his
+friends. Then he likes noise, demonstrations and
+escapades. He no longer conceals his passion for eccentricities
+of all kinds. The French proverb that <i>le
+ridicule tue</i> does not apply to the average American
+when he parades, several thousand strong, through the
+streets of a big city disguised as a Turk, an admiral
+or a Spanish bullfighter, among the din of brass bands.
+This sociable spirit follows him in business. Nobody
+knows better than he how to make friends with a
+banker, an insurance agent, a broker and the innumerable
+agents and peddlers who continuously besiege him
+to insure him and to improve his well-being. Then, if
+he is in quest of an education for his sons and daughters,
+he can find around him a myriad of educational opportunities,
+universities, colleges, schools, libraries, agencies
+of all sorts. If he must “work his way through college,”
+the simple and democratic character of American life is
+such that he can do so without loss of self-respect.</p>
+
+<p>From the religious point of view, the American scene
+is not less attractive. Spirituality has become so
+attenuated in the United States that the most hard-boiled
+agnostic may go to almost any church. No
+sect, outside the Catholic Church, bothers much about
+the four final ends of man nowadays, and the churches
+are too busy with this world to pay much attention to
+the hereafter. American theology has exorcized the
+devil long ago. Prophylaxy, citizenship and hygiene
+have just about replaced the teaching of the Bible.
+The Church has become an annex to the home, the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_134">134</span>university and the club. It is, first of all, a center of
+social and moral action.</p>
+
+<p>To explain American optimism the material organization
+of life must also be taken into consideration.
+Basing itself on the use of a continually improved
+machinery, this organization is perfect. American
+prowess has adjusted machinery to life. Innumerable
+means of transportation insure the maximum of comfort.
+Machines, large and small, help the American to
+solve the servant problem. Elevators, typewriters,
+telephones, calculating machines, motor cars, steam,
+electric or automatic engines have been invented to
+save human labor and exemplify the axiom that “time
+is money.” The Middle Ages expressed their religious
+faith in the cathedrals. American comfort displays
+itself in the Pullman car and the hotel palace.</p>
+
+<p>In politics the average American has every reason for
+believing that he is the best governed citizen in the
+world. Sovereignty lies entirely in his hands, for better,
+for worse. American politics has its defects and
+even its vices (incompetence, graft, bossism, etc.),
+and yet, when all is told, the system of American government
+appears as the most convenient appliance
+ever invented to answer the direct needs of the governed.
+Taxes are paid and furnish a good revenue.
+Two big parties, and only two, divide the country
+about equally and without serious strife. There are
+cliques, and, perhaps, more than elsewhere, graft. But
+the American voter is an optimist. He looks straight
+before him and fulfills his functions as a citizen with an
+almost sacramental solemnity. There are politically
+discontented people in the United States, and their
+number is increasing, but they are still a small minority.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_135">135</span>In spite of several incidents which cannot be ignored
+(see Upton Sinclair’s novels on strikes, bribes and
+socialistic riots), the United States is the only country
+where socialism has a small chance of succeeding, and
+the only one where it is not yet in power. The reason
+for this is that America is the country where man suffers
+least and where he is least exploited. Labor is
+well paid and it is wisely regulated. Competition is
+free and the distance between capital and labor smaller
+than in other lands.</p>
+
+<p>And yet Babbitt, the representative average
+American, is not happy. Upon his discontent we
+should make a few reservations. First and above all,
+let us remark it, the current pessimism to-day in the
+United States is not a pessimism of the masses but of
+the élite. The case of Sinclair Lewis and the people
+he puts on the stage in his novels is remarkable on this
+point. To make him a pessimist without qualification
+would be inaccurate.</p>
+
+<p>Carol Kennicott represents the average American
+woman, Babbitt the average American man. Both
+of them experience tragic moments, but, all in all,
+they never despair, and return to the fold with, seemingly,
+the approval and blessing of the author. After
+this preamble, I come to the analysis of Sinclair Lewis’
+novels.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Main Street” is the moving picture of a small
+American town and the portrait of a representative
+individual. Gopher Prairie is the typical American
+settlement as there are hundreds of them in the United
+States, east and west. Yet the difference in longitude
+has its importance. As I have already pointed out,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_136">136</span>
+it is in the Middle West that one has a chance to study
+the purest forms of American life to-day. That is due
+to isolation and to the absence of aristocratic or unassimilated
+foreign elements. It is there that Lewis
+studied his typical Americans. Gopher Prairie is a
+little burg of about three thousand souls, not a very
+large field for observation. Carol, the heroine, belongs
+to a good family. She has been well brought up. She
+holds a University degree and marries a doctor. Kennicott
+is an average man and a good soul. He is neither
+very refined nor very cultured, but he is a kind and
+reliable man, courteous, clean and disinterested. He
+is strongly marked psychologically by what Freud
+calls the “mother complex.” He has besides, like
+most Americans, a morbid sense of sociability and an
+unqualified respect for public opinion.</p>
+
+<p>In Kennicott the novelist has shown well the conflict
+of individual initiative with the tyranny of accepted
+standards. Individual initiative in the book is personified
+by his wife, Carol, a semi-pathetic character
+but one whom Lewis was careful enough not to turn
+into a Hedda Gabler. Her main virtue is zeal and
+her pet defect restlessness. She is pretty, even a bit
+coquettish within the bounds of respectability, a
+“womanly woman” rather than a feminist. She knows
+several languages, art and literature, and is not satisfied
+with all that. Like most American women she
+would like to reform society and make the world better,
+let the world will it or not. Of course, Gopher Prairie
+opposes her plans and refuses to be reformed. Carol
+is bitterly disappointed, and so are we. She means so
+well, she is so eager and sincere! And yet, when we
+think it over, we come pretty near to agreeing with
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_137">137</span>Sinclair Lewis that Carol overdoes it, and that a
+reformed Gopher Prairie, with three thousand reformers
+in petticoats, would hardly do to keep the place fit to
+live in. Lewis is certainly not for the commonplace
+Gopherprairians. Is he more decidedly for Carol?
+This is difficult to say, because he made her half a Joan
+of Arc and half a Tartarin in skirts.</p>
+
+<p>Carol stands as a living protest against the morons
+who surround her thick as bats in a cellar. And yet
+when the end comes, she capitulates and reënters
+Philistia willingly. It is difficult to know what to make
+out of her. Flaubert, at least, was consistent in
+“Madame Bovary.” Emma preferred death to capitulation.
+Suicide was for her the only dignified solution
+of her problems. Imagine a Bovary converted to
+the standards of her village with Doctor Rouault for
+her lord, and M. Homais or Abbé Bournisien for her
+company until death! Sinclair Lewis’ attitude towards
+Carol is not clear. One dreams of her and of George
+Babbitt as faithful in their revolt; of a Carol who
+should never return to her commonplace country doctor
+or to the stagnant pools of Gopher Prairie; of a
+Babbitt who should enlist with the I.W.W. and not
+leave the responsibility for a happier future to his son.
+But this would be pessimism and bolshevism <i>à la</i>
+Tolstoi or <i>à la</i> Romain Rolland. This is an impossibility
+in America. So “Main Street” ends as quietly
+and edifyingly as, let us say, “The Awakening of
+Helena Ritchie.”</p>
+
+<p>Carol Kennicott, in any case, incarnates two characteristic
+American traits,—on one hand the craving
+for independence, on the other the almost morbid zeal
+for reform and apostolicism. She is a born missionary.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_138">138</span>When she denounces the pettiness and vulgarity of
+Gopher Prairie, it is doubtless Sinclair Lewis who
+speaks through her. But when she pretends to destroy
+the world and to rebuild it in three days, the novelist
+turns against her as against a Don Quixote in skirts.
+Idealism in America, especially feminine idealism, is too
+easily turned into intolerance and witch burning.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The case of Carol Kennicott recalls to mind that of
+Emma Bovary in Flaubert’s novel, but there is a difference
+due to the fact that Carol was born in America.
+Carol’s life is much less gloomy than Emma’s. Doctor
+Kennicott is a better and more interesting man
+than Emma’s husband. Gopher Prairie, in spite of all
+its shortcomings, is a more cheerful place to live in
+than Mme. Bovary’s Normandy village. Who knows
+whether Emma, had she migrated to the United States,
+would not have ended by getting reconciled to a world
+where the thrills of the movies, the automobile and the
+radio would have cured her of her blues? As a member
+of a women’s club, and a social worker, she might have
+taken a new interest in existence. Carol and Emma
+were, in many respects, twin sisters. Both liked to
+read fiction and to mistake what they read for reality.
+Both were married to commonplace and unromantic
+country doctors. Both liked to build castles in Spain.
+Both shocked the world around them by their adventures
+and escapades. As an artist, it is true, Lewis
+does not come up to Flaubert’s level. Flaubert’s
+style is plastic, something for the eye, as well as for the
+ear, to enjoy. Lewis is almost exclusively oral, but he
+excels Flaubert in making things and people move,
+breathe and speak in a lifelike way.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_139">139</span></p>
+
+<p>There is, according to the novelist, a double legend
+concerning the American small town. The first is sentimental.
+According to it:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The American village remains the sure abode of
+friendship, honesty, and clean, sweet, marriageable girls.
+Therefore all men who succeed in painting in Paris or
+in finance in New York at last become weary of smart
+women, return to their native town, assert that cities
+are vicious, marry their childhood sweethearts and,
+presumably, joyously abide in those towns until death.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_31_31" href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then there is the “roughing it” legend:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The other tradition is that the significant features
+of all villages are whiskers, iron dogs upon lawns, gold
+bricks, checkers, jars of gilded cat-tails, and shrewd
+comic old men who are known as “hicks” and who
+ejaculate “Waal, I swan.” This altogether admirable
+tradition rules the vaudeville stage, factious illustrators,
+and syndicate newspaper humor, but out of actual
+life it passed forty years ago. Carol’s small town thinks
+not in horse-swapping but in cheap motor cars, telephones,
+ready-made clothes, silos, alfalfa, kodaks,
+phonographs, leather-upholstered Morris chairs, bridge
+prizes, oil-stocks, motion-pictures, land-deals, unread
+sets of Mark Twain, and a chaste version of national
+politics.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_32_32" href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In such a town, we are told, for every two contented
+people there are hundreds, especially among the young,
+who are not. That is why the intelligent and the well-to-do
+travel and leave for the big cities from which they
+hope never to return. Even in the West the elder
+people emigrate. They go to California to die.</p>
+
+<p>The reason of these migrations is told by Carol’s
+story. It is the necessity to escape from puritanical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_140">140</span>and provincial boredom. How dull the little town in
+spite of his Morris chairs, his bridge parties and his
+phonographs! Nothing left to imagination; heavy
+speech and heavy manner; free thinking smothered
+under respectability:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>It is an unimaginatively standardized background,
+a sluggishness of speech and manners, a rigid ruling of
+the spirit by the desire to appear respectable. It is
+contentment ... the contentment of the quiet dead,
+who are scornful of the living for their restless walking.
+It is negation canonized as the one positive virtue. It
+is the prohibition of happiness. It is slavery, self-thought
+and self-defended. It is dullness made God.</p>
+
+<p>A savorless people, gulping tasteless food, and sitting
+afterward, coatless and thoughtless, in rocking-chairs
+prickly with inane decorations, listening to mechanical
+music, saying mechanical things about the excellence
+of Ford automobiles, and viewing themselves as the
+greatest race in the world.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Carol Kennicott did not lack critical sense. She
+tried to explain to herself the triumph of mediocrity
+around her. She was frightened by its irresistible contagion.
+She saw the stupendous effects of the melting
+process on the immigrants from Europe who, at that
+time, still flooded the Middle West. How quickly
+they forgot their traditions, their folklore and picturesque
+costumes. Take the Norwegian women of
+Gopher Prairie. How light-heartedly they exchanged
+their red tunics, their pearl necklaces, their black
+chemisettes lined with blue, their green and gray
+aprons, their stiff capes (so well designed to enhance
+their fresh little faces) for icy-white American blouses!
+How quickly their home cooking was replaced by the
+national pork cutlets! Americanized, standardized
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_141">141</span>and commonplace, they lost their identity and charm
+within a generation. Their sons, with ready-made
+clothes and ready-made college talk, soon assumed a
+respectable air. The environment made of these
+picturesque strangers is a banal replica of the world
+around them.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless all small towns are alike, and have always
+been in all countries and climes. Isolation causes that.
+But the worst was that Gopher Prairie wanted to set
+standards of mediocrity for the whole world, or at least
+for one hundred and more million Americans:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>It is a force seeking to dominate the earth, to drain
+the hills and sea of color, to set Dante at boosting
+Gopher Prairie, and to dress the high gods in Klassy
+Kollege Klothes. Sure of itself, it bullies other civilizations,
+as a traveling salesman in a brown derby conquers
+the wisdom of China and tacks advertisements
+of cigarettes over arches for centuries dedicated to the
+sayings of Confucius.</p>
+
+<p>Such a society functions admirably in the large production
+of cheap automobiles, dollar watches, and
+safety razors. But it is not satisfied until the entire
+world also admits that the end of a joyous purpose of
+living is to ride in flivvers, to make advertising-pictures
+of dollar watches, and in the twilight to sit talking, not
+of love and courage, but of the convenience of safety
+razors.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The end of “Main Street” is disappointing. Carol
+Kennicott’s generous plans for the reformation of
+Gopher Prairie failed and she confessed herself helpless.
+She lost all hope in social improvement and bowed to
+accepted standards without renouncing entirely critical
+sense. After all, an intelligent and zealous woman
+can devote herself to many useful tasks, even in a
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_142">142</span>retrograde community. There is the home, the church,
+the bank, the school. If things cannot be changed,
+they can at least be studied. Carol decided to try to
+understand what she could not reform. Her career
+ends in a compromise. She goes “round-about,” like
+Ibsen’s button-molder. It is suicide by sociology.
+This is pathetic when one remembers the romantic
+longings of the heroine of “Main Street.” A poet was
+asleep in her and tried in vain to flap his wings. She
+had a quick imagination and an inborn sense of the
+beautiful, like all romantic characters. When, for
+instance, she presided over the meetings of the Campfire
+girls of Gopher Prairie, she could hardly help wishing
+to change her “personality picture.” Her imagination
+soared and she believed herself among the Indians.
+Those common-looking girls on Main Street became
+transfigured to her eyes, as soon as they had put on
+their Sioux costumes. As Carol looked at them dancing
+and performing the rites of the Redskin she felt
+as if she were one herself.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_33_33" href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
+
+<p>Let him who doubts Carol’s kinship with Emma
+Bovary read the pages of the book where she practices
+landscape gardening at the little station of Gopher
+Prairie and Sinclair Lewis’ comments on her experiment:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>She felt that she was scrubbing a temple deserted by
+the gods and empty even of incense and the sound of
+chanting. Passengers looking from trains saw her as
+a village woman of fading prettiness, incorruptible
+virtue, and no abnormalities; the baggageman heard
+her say, “Oh, yes, I do think it will be a good example
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_143">143</span>for the children”; and all the while she saw herself
+running garlanded through the streets of Babylon.</p>
+
+<p>Planting led her to botanizing. She never got much
+farther than recognizing the tiger lily and the wild
+rose, but she discovered Hugh (her son). “What
+does the buttercup say, mummy?” he cried, his hands
+full of straggly grasses, his cheek gilded with pollen.
+She knelt to embrace him; she affirmed that he made
+life more full; she was altogether reconciled ... for
+an hour.</p>
+
+<p>But she woke at night to hovering death. She crept
+away from the bump of bedding that was Kennicott,
+tiptoed into the bathroom and, by the mirror in the
+door of the medicine-cabinet, examined her pallid face.</p>
+
+<p>Wasn’t she growing visibly older in ratio as Vida grew
+plumper and younger? Wasn’t her nose sharper?
+Wasn’t her neck granulated? She stared and choked.
+She was only thirty. But the five years since her marriage—had
+they not gone by as hastily and stupidly
+as though she had been under ether? Would time not
+slink past till death? She pounded her fist on the cool
+enameled rim of the bathtub and raged mutely against
+the indifference of the gods:</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care! I won’t endure it! They lie so
+..., they tell me I ought to be satisfied with Hugh
+and a good home and planting seven nasturtiums in a
+station garden! I am I! When I die the world will
+be annihilated, as far as I am concerned. I am I!
+I am not content to leave the sea and the ivory towers
+to others. I want them for me! Damn all of them!
+Do they think they can make me believe that a display
+of potatoes at Howland and Gould’s is enough beauty
+and strangeness?”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The last words of this romantic soliloquy show too
+well, alas! by their triviality that Carol is only a Middle
+Western Bovary, but the tone and the pathos of
+the piece are worthy of the best pages in Flaubert.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_144">144</span>Salammbô, praying to the moon on her Carthaginian
+terrace, Emma giving way to her blues in her boudoir,
+would have understood the melancholy Carol dreaming
+of Babylon in a Gopher Prairie garden.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I now turn to “Babbitt.” The author’s literary
+tactics have changed since he wrote “Free Air” and
+“Our Mr. Wrenn.” Plots have now given way almost
+entirely to portraits, anecdotes to characters. Sinclair
+Lewis’ tactics consist in heaping together the
+minutest details which will help him to put a vital
+person before us. His first novels were organic, the
+latter are merely episodic. “Babbitt” is almost plotless.
+It is, at the same time, the picture of a man and
+that of a profession. Babbitt is not a fancy. He is
+the <i>homo americanus par excellence</i>, the representative
+average American. He recalls Molière’s “tradesman
+turned a gentleman.” He makes us think of M. Jourdain
+as an immigrant in America, parvenu, with a
+Packard and an up-to-date house full of the most
+modern appliances. How proud M. Jourdain would
+be to-day of his motor car, his telephone, his bathroom,
+his typewriter and his radio! But M. Jourdain was an
+exception in seventeenth-century France and George
+Babbitt, we are told—though this well may be pure
+calumny—is the rule in twentieth-century America.
+Like Carol Kennicott, Babbitt has a double personality.</p>
+
+<p>First and foremost, he is a very caustic and live person.
+He is married, possessed of children belonging to
+the species <i>enfants terribles</i>. He lives in a rather expensive
+house in Zenith, a city as famous to-day as Tarascon
+or the kingdom of Poictesme. He is very concrete
+and very individualistic. On the other hand, taken
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_145">145</span>as a general type, he may be called <i>Monsieur tout-le-monde</i>.
+He is the man of the crowds. Sinclair Lewis
+has gathered with a stroke of genius, and incarnated
+in him, all the gestures, all the poses, all the hobbies, all
+the colloquialisms of the average American. He likes
+to work and do business on a large scale. He is fond of
+his home, fond of living in it, and fond of leaving it too,
+once in a while. There is a dormant romanticism in
+him, but it is harmless and unheroic. When Tartarin
+de Tarascon had the blues, he went to hunt the lions
+in the suburbs of Algiers. The call-of-the-wild takes
+George Babbitt away for fishing parties into the wilds
+of Maine. He loves his wife, he loves his children, but,
+oftentimes, civilization bores him and he would rather
+love something else. He is a realtor by profession,
+neither more nor less honest than his colleagues. For
+him, as for most of us, “business is simply other people’s
+money,” as the French playwright puts it. And
+George knows how to make money. He has his flirtations
+and perhaps his passions. The imprisonment
+of a friend who killed his wife hit a serious blow at his
+optimism, but his good humor survived. Finally, like
+Carol, he makes an edifying end and returns to the
+fold, wishing for his son a more cheerful world to live in.</p>
+
+<p>Babbitt, as a representative man, is possible only in
+America. His gestures, his foibles, his words and
+phrases, are explained by the country where millions
+of human beings are cut on the same pattern, made in
+series like automobiles or harvesters, because it cannot
+be done otherwise. Quantity <i>versus</i> quality, the
+masses against the individual,—this is the great
+American problem and George Babbitt is the half-sarcastic,
+half-tragic example of it. He is conformism
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_146">146</span>incarnate. The family, the school, the church, the
+thousand and one associations which he must join
+manufacture for him his thoughts, his feelings and his
+speech. They have made him an automaton, leaving
+him very little personality. A democracy of more
+than one million citizens produces Babbitts naturally,
+as apple trees their apples. Babbittry is the inevitable
+ransom of some of the highest American virtues. A
+people ceaselessly active, moving and advancing, needs
+discipline as much as a professional army. Before
+being an individual, Babbitt is a private in Democracy’s
+regiment. He wears a uniform; he performs certain
+duties; he recites from a drill-book. Never mind if
+he left the best of himself behind. Somebody else will
+pick it up for him. The triumph of the greater number
+cannot be insured without the sacrifice of the minority.
+Hence the tragedy of exceptional people in America,
+the agony of Poe, the isolation of Whitman, the ordeal
+of Mark Twain, the exile of Henry James, the sarcasms
+of Henry Adams. Hence the floating anxiety and soul-fear
+of the man in the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>It was advisedly, I believe, that Sinclair Lewis made
+Babbitt a real-estate man, or, as he pompously calls
+him, in Western fashion, a “realtor.” The profession
+is typically American. Since the closing of the frontier
+the staking out of one’s claim to a “lot” has been the
+last romantic adventure left to the pioneer and the conquistador.
+Speculation is ingrained in Americans and
+advertising goes along with it. The widespread use of
+publicity in the United States is interesting, not only
+to the economist but to the psychologist. Advertising
+is second nature with Babbitt. Advertising was born
+in America out of industrial growth, market monopolization,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_147">147</span>the standardization of products, not to forget
+competition. In a democratic country where the market
+is swamped with goods and with manufacturers
+eager to force their products upon the public, the
+megaphone and amplifier methods are the only chances
+of success. But advertising is not only a way of making
+a fortune in America. It is the most popular form
+of American self-assertion. The average American
+has a genius for hyperbole. His country is the land
+of the superlative. Advertising in the United States
+is the safest business method, and everything there
+relies more and more on publicity. The churches, the
+government, the universities, art, literature and even
+philanthropy, can no longer do without it.</p>
+
+<p>The satire of publicity in “Babbitt” was timely.
+Lewis denounced its brutal and tragic aspects. He
+showed it as a dangerous charlatanism, an invasion of
+private life, a violation of free choice, an insult to common
+sense. Unbridled publicity, as it is sometimes
+practised in the United States, presupposes in its victims
+brains which have been dulled to the point of
+apathy. One cannot very well imagine the American
+methods of advertising as exposed in “Babbitt” succeeding
+in a nation as traditionally ironical and free-minded
+as France, for instance, where the average man
+is imbued with the Cartesian spirit and refuses to accept
+as true anything which does not appear evident—even
+if it were offered to him in a gold spoon.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the American surrenders to publicity without
+much ado, with resignation rather than with enthusiasm.
+I do not believe that he is blind to the tricks of
+the advertisers. But he is busy and he uses publicity
+as a convenience. The commercial “ad” is a machine
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_148">148</span>to simplify existence. “Time is money.” It spares
+one the bother of choosing. It leads directly towards
+a goal. It facilitates shopping which Americans,
+especially women, cultivate as one of their favorite outdoor
+sports.</p>
+
+<p>Babbitt is publicity personified, and the most curious
+characters in the book are inveterate publicity maniacs.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Arrowsmith” is a bitter and an almost tragic book.
+It takes up again the case of advertising and its evil
+influence in the higher spheres. In this novel we find
+the same verve, the same satirical genius, the same
+humor of the preceding books. Yet the humor is
+darker and decidedly more pessimistic. There is no
+happy ending and no compromise in “Arrowsmith.”
+The equivocal attitude of the author towards his characters
+has disappeared. Antagonisms are well defined
+and Lewis does not straddle both issues at the same
+time. On one side stand the charlatans, on the other
+the true and disinterested scientists. The contrast
+between them is sharply and tragically emphasized.
+To make it more so, the author brought reinforcements
+to the central characters. Arrowsmith is not alone—like
+Carol or Babbitt. He has an escort of devoted
+friends. Science is represented and defended by two
+or three representative men, the Nietzschean Gottlieb,
+the heroic Sondelius and the mystical Wicket. In the
+enemy’s camp there is Doctor Pickerbaugh and this
+is enough. He is unique as a mountebank.</p>
+
+<p>Sinclair Lewis has satirized medical fakes with as
+much gusto as Molière, that sworn enemy of all quacks.
+The trail was good. The charlatan of drugs and patent
+medicines, the chiropractors and the mind readers
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_149">149</span>swarm in the United States. The medical profession
+is being besieged by counterfeits of all kinds. The
+sentimental campaigns against vivisection, the drives
+against vaccination are parts of the current events in
+America. In “Arrowsmith” Lewis avenged the common
+sense of the American people. Let me summarize
+rapidly the plot of the book.</p>
+
+<p>It tells how young Arrowsmith took up his medical
+studies in a big Western university, how he felt inspired
+by the teaching of his misunderstood master Gottlieb,
+how he married and slowly made his way in the world
+as a country doctor, then of his career in a drug factory
+where he refused to barter his professional honor, how
+he joined a great scientific institute, how he discovered
+antitoxins, how he went to fight an epidemic of plague
+in the West Indies where he lost his wife, how he was
+tempted to market his growing reputation, how he
+married a rich woman and how finally he escaped and
+gave up everything for the sake of disinterested science.
+I have too much respect for the memory of the great
+William James to drag him from his grave among the
+quacks, and yet, if there is a name well fitted to brand
+what the novelist denounces in “Arrowsmith,” it certainly
+is that of “pragmatism.” The truth for which
+Arrowsmith stands heroically to the end, is the truth
+“which does not pay.” “Arrowsmith” is the work
+of an idealist, a plea for science sought for its own sake.
+Such a manifesto does honor to the ideals of the new
+American literature.</p>
+
+<p>As to Sinclair Lewis as an artist, I have already noted
+along the way many of his merits and his defects. He
+lacks consistency and balance in composition. His
+books seem to come not out of a deliberate and well-matured
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_150">150</span>design, but of a blind and fervid vital impulse.
+“Arrowsmith,” like “Elmer Gantry,” is written haphazardly.
+They are not plastic, but show a rare gift
+of verbal effusion. There is a mimic in every word
+which Lewis writes. From this point of view his only
+rival is Dickens. By what name should we call this
+peculiar sense of his which enables him to catch, as by a
+spontaneous contagion, the words such as they are
+spoken, and to reproduce them with the accuracy of a
+vitaphone? The average American in his novels may
+look like an automaton when he thinks or acts, but, in
+speech, he is life itself. Lewis’ facility for verbal
+invention is prodigious. I have no authority to comment
+upon American linguistics. But I have already
+alluded to Mr. Mencken’s book “The American Language.”
+I hope that he will not forget George Babbitt
+and his friends as contributors to the next enlarged
+edition of his volume. Where could we look for a more
+spontaneous and fruitful eloquence? The American
+vernacular in “Babbitt” is as nimble, “snappy,” cheerful
+and nervous as the American himself. Has anybody
+ever more skilfully aped the living dynamism of the
+American language?&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_34_34" href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Elmer Gantry” marks a new progress toward satire
+and a deepening of Lewis’ social pessimism. It is
+still more bitter and more acrimonious than “Arrowsmith.”
+It was not written to please. The author has
+unmasked his batteries at last and thrown himself in
+open sedition against the church. The book is one of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_151">151</span>the mightiest strokes ever hit at hypocrisy since the
+days of “Tartuffe.” Hypocrisy takes a dangerous and
+frankly criminal aspect in “Elmer Gantry,” a Barnum
+of religion. America is not a country of hypocrites.
+Everybody there lives in the open. If hypocrisy exists
+it is not individual but collective. The old-fashioned
+hypocrite in European literature was interesting as an
+exception. He might be called a hypocrite by defect.
+Gantry, on the contrary, is a hypocrite by excess, and,
+one might say, by hyperbole. He is always beyond
+truth, not under it. He is a hypocrite by ambitions and
+anticipation, like Mark Twain’s Colonel Sellers. And
+yet Gantry is even more repugnant than Tartuffe. He
+is a scoundrel, a debauché and a cheat. Sinclair Lewis
+has drawn his portrait at length from the day when he
+entered the ministry as one joins a baseball team, until
+his triumph as an evangelist in his big church at Zenith.
+The scene in the beginning of the book, where he abandons
+the woman whom he has compromised and passes
+her to a rival with a lie, is enough to brand him. Let
+the reader remember also the raid in the red-light districts,
+where Gantry acts as a bully. But the triumph
+of his venom will be found in the final prayer where he
+asks the Lord to make his country as good and moral
+as he! Beware of a humorist! There is a sting behind
+his smiles.</p>
+
+<p>American critics have been unanimous in finding
+“Elmer Gantry” overdone. Tartuffe’s rascality was
+qualified and it remained accidental. He broke into
+M. Orgon’s house, as a thief who steals a watch and then
+retires. Elmer Gantry is a hypocrite in broad daylight
+and triumphant to the end. Such an obduration
+in crime and success in mischief read like impossibilities.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_152">152</span>By unduly stressing the rascality of Gantry, it may
+well be that Lewis intended to kill two birds with one
+stone. “Elmer Gantry” is no less an indictment of a
+hypocrite than a courageous study of the decline of
+religious ideals in America. Religion, as everything
+else, has become automatic. Mysticism has been
+replaced by respectability. The American churches
+failed to raise the people to their high level, and, in order
+to make themselves popular, they brought their ideals
+down to earth. To make up for the absence of the
+really faithful they relied more and more on the larger
+number. They were seized with the spirit of greed
+and material comfort, and betrayed the teachings of
+Him who said that His kingdom was not of this world.
+They courted money and, to keep the congregations,
+they resorted to the advertising methods of the “realtors.”
+A display of riches and material splendor outside,
+and within the walls everything except Christianity.
+Hygiene, sport, eugenics, prophylaxy, domestic
+and political economy, entertainments and very little
+Bible. Churches vied with one another to see which
+could present the most gorgeous façade. Cathedrals
+were erected, cathedrals of stone and not of faith. The
+church became fashionable, a club, a school, a hotel, a
+parlor. Elmer Gantry had no difficulty in investing his
+lust and greed in such a temple. It repaid him well.</p>
+
+<p>Around Gantry, the novelist has marshalled in complete
+array the forces of the Protestant clergy in
+America. We are told that he managed to peep
+through the doors of the temple before he satirized it.
+No wonder the clergy rose in arms against him, and
+there is no doubt that he did not render full justice
+to them. A great many noble souls were not included
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_153">153</span>in the parade. However, in the long run, one sees no
+reasons why “Elmer Gantry” should prove more harmful
+to the clerical profession than “Arrowsmith” to the
+medical one. To expose the faker <i>manu militari</i> now
+and then may prove after all a profitable operation for
+the true servants of the temple.</p>
+
+<p>From a literary point of view, “Elmer Gantry”
+shows the author in the process of broadening his scope,
+while he intensifies the virulence of his attacks. After
+the village idealist, the inhibited realtor; the doctors,
+and then the clergymen. Who next? And yet through
+all these avatars Sinclair Lewis has drawn always the
+same man. Good or bad, he is the same. Babbitt,
+Arrowsmith, Elmer Gantry were born the same day,
+of the same parent. They all share in what seems to
+be, on the part of the novelist, an excess of vitality.
+The large majority of the characters in the American
+novels had been up to then anæmic. Sinclair Lewis’
+characters suffer from high blood pressure. It would
+be a great loss to American literature if he should forget
+art for muck-raking. Let him remember the lesson of
+Balzac and Flaubert. Those great realists never lost
+sight of human passions, but they contrived to hold
+art for its own sake far above the surge of their emotions.
+They believed that, after all, our foibles, our
+defects or vices were much less interesting and important
+than the view which the artist can take of them in
+cold blood.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_154">154</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">
+ CHAPTER VII
+ <br>
+ <i>Sherwood Anderson or When the Dreamer Awakes</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Few American authors, since Whitman, have taken
+literature as seriously or have conceived it as being on
+so high a level of mysticism as Sherwood Anderson.
+I mention Whitman advisedly in connection with
+Anderson. His influence over the younger American
+writers is manifest. Was he not the first to emphasize
+the bio-chemical element, and to find lyrical inspiration
+in it? Dreiser’s hymns to the Vital Force, his
+pæans to physiology, as well as his tragic sense of
+everyday life bear Whitman’s imprint unmistakably.
+Sherwood Anderson owes him still more. Sensualism
+and mysticism blend in his prose as they do in Whitman’s
+poems. In the words of both of them we hear
+simultaneously the whispers of heavenly death and
+the somber droning of the <i>Erdgeist</i>. Both of them
+have given heed to what Emerson called the <i>demonic</i>.
+Both have brought the soul and the body into magic
+and sensuous contact. The poetry of the one and the
+poetic prose of the other seem to come from an embrace
+in which the spiritual and the material still coalesce.
+Modern as they are in many respects, the stamp of
+primitivism is on them. In Anderson’s novels, man,
+like the cosmos in “Leaves of Grass,” has not yet been
+disengaged from that amorphous clay kneaded by the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_155">155</span>gods. He still finds himself in a nebulous state, halfway
+between himself and animal.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_35_35" href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a></p>
+
+<p>“Mid-American Chants” are authentic grafts budding
+from “Leaves of Grass.”</p>
+
+<p>To call Sherwood Anderson an <i>ex professo</i> writer or an
+<i>homme de lettres</i> would be amiss. Fiction and song are
+only an outlet for his spiritual longings. Writing is
+for him a groping toward the Unknown, a mystic ejaculation
+of a mind in quest of itself. His works give
+us a chance to catch the creative spirit in process of
+formation.</p>
+
+<p>Like Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson is a product of the
+Middle West. He was born in Camden, Ohio, in 1872.
+He also is an offspring of the prairie. Taine has long
+been dead and his theory of <i>la race, le milieu, le moment</i>
+is to-day as dead as he. And yet, there is a great
+temptation to revive it to help us link Anderson’s primitivism
+to his environment. In fact, Anderson saved
+us that trouble recently when he published “Tar,”
+an autobiography redolent with the smack of the crude
+land where corn, cattle and people grow together, in
+torrid atmosphere, over the huge plains swept by torrents
+of heat and light. The boy in “Tar” was not
+made out of the common clay, but of the tepid dark
+loam on the shores of the giant Mississippi. Only
+amidst the Russian steppes, or in the valleys of the
+Ganges, could we find to-day as crude and primitive a
+setting for a writer. In this respect “Tar” strikes an
+almost savage note. One would wonder how such wild
+phases of life could appear in a modern country like
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_156">156</span>the United States, if one ignored the fact that geography
+has not kept pace with history in the growth of America.
+The land is still, in many parts, as crude as it was in
+the days of the Indian. The primitivism of Anderson
+and Whitman is still written in the expanse of their
+country, a country as large and as wild to-day, here and
+there, as the African jungle. The real wonder is not
+the resemblance between the American people and
+their surroundings, but the fact that art of any sort can
+grow in such primitive parts.</p>
+
+<p>The autobiographical element plays a large rôle in
+Sherwood Anderson’s books. If there is anybody who
+seems to have taken upon himself the task to prove and
+justify the theories of the psychoanalysts, it is certainly
+he. Day-dreaming, double personality, the comedies
+which the individual plays to himself,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_36_36" href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> the defense and
+enrichment of one’s “personality picture,”—all those
+are the essential themes of his novels. Anderson is the
+Freudian novelist <i>par excellence</i>. Personally, he is an
+uprooted man with a complex heredity. He betrayed
+some of it in Windy McPherson, an assumed portrait
+of his own father (in “Windy McPherson’s Son”).
+Windy is a Don Quixote with a mania for disguising
+himself. He cannot write novels but he lives and
+enacts them. It is difficult to say, in his case, where
+reality ends and fiction begins. A veteran of the Civil
+War, Windy McPherson’s imagination has become
+hypertrophied. He has been shell-shocked and the
+trauma has left him more than half crazy. Windy is
+a village Tartarin, a drunkard, a loafer and a megalomaniac.
+Here is an example of his tragi-comical
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_157">157</span>exploits. One day, his small town has organized a
+commemorative pageant. A trumpeter is in demand.
+Windy McPherson does not hesitate to offer himself.
+For a long time he had been leading fictitious assaults
+in the imaginative narrations of his prowess. The
+Bovaryism in his case is in an acute stage. The thought
+of parading through Main Street astride a fine horse,
+blowing a bugle before the whole assembly, fills him
+with pride. Then the great day arrives. A procession
+is being formed. All are waiting for the signal to start.
+Windy McPherson is there on his charger as trumpeter.
+All of a sudden the most lamentable wheeze issues
+forth from the cavalry trumpet which he wields. How
+far the ideal from the reality! Windy’s son will never
+forget the pitiful venture, nor how he blushed before
+his assembled countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>There is but little filial respect left in Anderson’s
+tales.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_37_37" href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> One of the most tragic episodes in his novels
+is the one in the same book where Sam’s mother is
+about to die of ill treatment and misery. Windy has
+come home drunk, as usual. He is crouching over a
+table, fussing and mumbling. Suddenly Sam gets up.
+He marches toward his father, takes him by the collar
+and throws him out of the room. The scuffle was
+harsh and the boy rushes out for help, thinking that he
+may have killed his father. Unfortunately for all
+concerned, such was not the case. When Sam returns
+with the neighbors, still trembling lest he may have
+strangled his father, he finds Windy comfortably
+settled in a saloon. He could no more die of a blow
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_158">158</span>than of shame, nor could he make a good tragic
+hero.</p>
+
+<p>On his mother’s side there is some Latin blood in
+Sherwood Anderson. He has retained a touching
+memory of his mother, a native of Italy, dark-complexioned,
+imaginative, fiery and herself the daughter of a
+spirited woman. Despite his nostalgia for the Italian
+Renaissance and his admiration for some of the sixteenth-century
+supermen, Anderson shows very little Latinity
+as a thinker and an artist. He is far too nebulous
+for that and refutes Boileau’s aphorism that what is
+clearly conceived must needs be clearly expressed.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of twelve or thirteen, young Anderson
+launched himself upon the discovery of the world. For
+many years he had to earn his bread by the sweat of
+his brow as a mechanic apprentice, a factory hand and
+stable boy; he tramped among “men and horses”
+without much discrimination between them. We find
+him in Chicago, at the age of seventeen, without a
+cent in his pocket. The great metropolis of the Middle
+West was to be his headquarters until he reached literary
+fame. He used it for the background of the stories
+collected under the title “Winesburg, Ohio.”</p>
+
+<p>The modest workman of the Chicago docks and yards
+had a higher ambition than merely a material livelihood.
+We recognize him and his dreams in these
+sons of proletarians who, in his first novels, suddenly
+rise by the strength of their fists to the highest positions
+and marry millionaire heiresses, in order to renounce
+their good fortune suddenly and go in quest of what
+they call Truth. This is the theme of his first two
+books, “Windy McPherson’s Son” and “Marching
+Men.” The heroes of these books are young and ambitious,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_159">159</span>without any faith or any law, but not without
+any ideals. We see in them Anderson himself,
+incapable of distinguishing fact from fiction, dream
+from daily existence, and with a pathetic longing
+toward the Unknown.</p>
+
+<p>In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, he
+enlisted in the American army mobilized against Spain.
+He was careful himself to strip this decision of all heroics
+and to insist upon passing on to posterity for what
+he precisely was, a well-meaning “chocolate soldier.”
+Small, stout, near-sighted and still more absent-minded,
+Sherwood Anderson is modest enough to confess that
+he never seriously thought of conquering Cuba or
+enlisting in the Rough Riders. He was satisfied with
+regaining his health in the open air of the camps and in
+enjoying the big parade of the marching troops, an
+enjoyment which he would have shared with Walt
+Whitman and which has probably inspired in him both
+the idea and the title of “Marching Men.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Anderson came to literary composition slowly, or
+perhaps we should believe him when he says that he
+was never out of it. The boy Giotto began to paint
+while he was still a boy tending his sheep. Sherwood
+Anderson never ceased to dream and to write his
+dreams, and he began to do so very early. He had
+dreamt (and imagined things) for a long while. That,
+he tells us, was always for him the real, the only way to
+live. Before writing his books he had enacted, all
+alone, magnificent and tragic novels in a barn, the
+favorite “hang-out” of his childhood days. Sprawling
+among the warm hay, how many times had he given
+way to dreaming! Listen to the dreamer:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_160">160</span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>To the imaginative man in the modern world something
+becomes, from the first, sharply defined. Life
+splits itself into two sections and, no matter how long
+one may live or where one may live, the two ends continue
+to dangle, fluttering about in the empty air.</p>
+
+<p>To which of the two lives, lived within the one body,
+are you to give yourself? There is, after all, some
+little freedom of choice.</p>
+
+<p>There is the life of fancy. In it one sometimes moved
+with an ordered purpose through ordered days, or at
+least through ordered hours. In the life of fancy there
+is no such thing as good or bad. There are no Puritans
+in that life. The dry sisters of Philistia do not come
+in at the door. They cannot breathe in the life of the
+fancy. The Puritan, the reformer who scolds at the
+Puritans, the dry intellectuals, all who desire to uplift,
+to remake life on some definite plan conceived within
+the human brain, die of a disease of the lungs. They
+would do better to stay in the world of fact to spend
+their energy in catching bootleggers, inventing new
+machines, helping humanity—the best they can—in
+its no doubt laudable ambition to hurl bodies through
+the air at the rate of five hundred miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>In the world of the fancy, life separates itself with
+slow movements and with many graduations into the
+ugly and the beautiful. What is alive is opposed to
+what is dead. Is the air of the room in which we live
+sweet to the nostrils or is it poisoned with weariness?
+In the end it must become one thing or the other.</p>
+
+<p>All morality then becomes a purely æsthetic matter.
+What is beautiful must bring æsthetic joy; what is
+ugly must bring æsthetic sadness and suffering.</p>
+
+<p>Or one may become, as so many younger Americans
+do, a mere smart-aleck, without humbleness before the
+possibilities of life, one sure of himself—and thus one
+may remain to the end, blind, deaf and dumb, feeling
+and seeing nothing. Many of our intellectuals find
+this is the more comfortable road to travel.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_161">161</span></p>
+
+<p>In the world of fancy, you must understand, no man
+is ugly. Man is ugly in fact only. Ah, there is the
+difficulty!&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_38_38" href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The whole Anderson shows himself in these remarks.
+With what glee he lived in dreamland! Was not he
+himself that shy and frightened youth whom he describes
+as stalking through the streets of his native village
+with his eyes downcast as if he lived in another
+world? In a world deliberately made ugly by utilitarianism,
+among people who think of nothing but of
+getting rich quick, Anderson cast his lot with the proletarians.
+The only beings for whom he shows any
+tender feelings are the small craftsmen—now a vanishing
+caste—who used to be possessed with a sensuous
+passion for fine surfaces and beautiful materials. Without
+this craving for work beautifully done he sees no
+possible civilization. Alas! the sense of beauty is
+gone. Comfort and speed have replaced refinement
+and art:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Speed, hurried workmanship, cheap automobiles
+for cheap men, cheap chairs in cheap houses, city apartment
+houses with shining bathroom floors, the Ford,
+the Twentieth Century Limited, the World War, the
+jazz, the movies.</p>
+
+<p>The modern American youth is going forth to walk
+at evening in the midst of these. New and more terrible
+nerve tension, speed. Something vibrant in the
+air about us all.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>How is it possible to preserve a sense of the beautiful
+in a world such as this? We might still find a new
+interest in life by learning how to feel the beautiful
+finish of a perfect surface, a sensation which used to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_162">162</span>bring an æsthetic emotion to the tip of the craftsman’s
+fingers. Why not heed John Ruskin’s and William
+Morris’ advice and, through the superficial amusements
+of our modern civilization, revive for the arts and crafts
+a passion, since they have been the foundation of
+civilization?</p>
+
+<p>To love, to feel, to dream! That is the question.
+How joyfully Anderson surrenders himself to fancy!</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>And what a world that fanciful one—how grotesque,
+how strange, how teeming with strange life! Could
+one ever bring order into that world?...</p>
+
+<p>There are so many people in that land of whom I
+should like to tell you. I should like to take you with
+me through the gate into the land, let you wander there
+with me. There are people there with whom I should
+like you to talk. There is the old woman accompanied
+by the gigantic dogs who died alone in a wood on a winter
+day,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_39_39" href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> the stout man with the gray eyes and with the
+pack on his back, who stands talking to the beautiful
+woman as she sits in her carriage, the little dark woman
+with the boyish husband who lives in a small frame
+house by a dusty road far out, in the country.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Such was the world to which his imagination gave
+life, a fictitious world, of course, but in which art,
+allied to sympathetic intuition is rendered beautiful
+enough to make one wish that it were real. <i>Kennst
+du das Land...?</i> And how can we call a writer
+with this trend of mind a realist? For him only that is
+real which has been first imagined.</p>
+
+<p>In his attic the future author of “Dark Laughter”
+does not only evoke familiar faces. He opens up wide
+the gates of fantasy. Soon the walls of the barn vanish
+and a pageant passes before his eyes:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_163">163</span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>A narrow beam of yellow light against the satin surface
+of purplish gray wood, wood become soft of texture,
+touched with these delicate shades of color. The light
+from above falls straight down the face of a great heavy
+beam of the wood. Or is it marble rather than wood,
+marble touched also by the delicate hand of time?
+I am perhaps dead in my grave. No, it cannot be a
+grave. Would it not be wonderful if I had died and
+been buried in a marble sepulchre, say on the summit
+of a high hill above a city in which live many beautiful
+men and women? It is a grand notion and I entertain
+it for a time. What have I done to be buried so splendidly?
+Well, never mind that. I have always been
+one who wanted a great deal of love, admiration and
+respect from others without having to go to all the
+trouble of deserving it. I am buried magnificently in
+a marble sepulchre cut into the side of a large hill,
+near the top. On a certain day my body was brought
+hither with great pomp. Music played, women and
+children wept and strong men bowed their heads. Now
+on feast days young men and women come up the hillside
+of my burial place. It must be through the opening
+the yellow light comes. The young men who come
+up the hillside are wishing they could be like me, and
+the young and beautiful women are all wishing I were
+still alive and that I might be their lover.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And lo! the dream extended. What had this king
+of yore done to deserve so much honor? Had he come
+to the rescue of a beleaguered city? Had he slain the
+dragon of Saint George, rid the country of monstrous
+snakes, or found the millennium? Imagination soared
+afield and the little barn, in the small Middle West
+town, was magically transfigured. Let the dreamer
+take us along in his flight with him. We are now in
+Chartres with the Virgin so dear to the heart of sceptical
+Henry Adams. But this must be an illusion. He
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_164">164</span>who dreams is an American and there are no cathedrals
+in his land. There are no ancient monuments there
+except the walls of some Grand Canyon or the towers
+erected by American finance on the promontories of
+Manhattan:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>I cannot be in the cathedral at Chartres or buried
+splendidly in a marble sepulchre on a hillside above a
+magnificent city.... It cannot be I am in the presence
+of the Virgin. Americans do not believe in either
+Virgins or Venuses. Americans believe in themselves.
+There is no need of gods now, but if the need arises
+Americans will manufacture many millions of them, all
+alike. They will label them “Keep Smiling” or
+“Safety First,” and go on their way, and as for the
+woman, the Virgin, she is the enemy of our race. Her
+purpose is not our purpose. Away with her!</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Whereupon the dreamer awoke. We know now
+Sherwood Anderson’s <i>faculté maitresse</i>, imagination,
+and the familiar form which it takes in his books, <i>i.e.</i>,
+evocation through dreams. His characters are so
+deeply absorbed in dreaming that the author himself
+never quite succeeds in waking them from their hypnotic
+trance.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>If we are to believe the confessions of his autobiography,
+Anderson was led to become a writer by a
+tyrannical impulse. He felt a physical craving for
+dotting the white surface of a sheet of paper with ink
+or pencil. Like that friend of his who was so fond of
+cigars that he took a trunkful of them to Havana, he
+pleads guilty to not being able to go to a distant city
+without taking his stationery along with him. The
+sight of a ream of white paper thrills him to the tips
+of his fingers. It calls for something to be put on it.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_165">165</span>The average man crosses the street and sees houses and
+people, a child at a window, a woman with a babe in
+her arms, a drowsy workman passing by. He wonders
+what is the matter with these people. Lo! the white
+page is there and the writer will photograph the whole
+thing for him. “You don’t know, but <i>I</i> know!” exclaims
+the writer. “Just wait a minute and I shall tell
+you. I have felt it. Now I no longer exist by myself.
+I only live in these other people.” Then he rushes to
+his rooms; he lights the lamp and behold! the pageant
+passes. Words are to the writer what colors are to the
+artist. They each have a color and a taste. They
+are tangible.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_40_40" href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+
+<p>It seems to him that words are something that even
+his fingers can touch “as one touches the cheeks of a
+child.” Here are the white sheets of paper taunting
+the author to write. But like a true lover he wants to
+postpone his pleasure. He must wait a day or two to
+take up the challenge daringly, baldly. His worship
+of the white sheet is such that he excuses the manufacturers
+of writing paper from his general excommunication
+of capitalists. Not only does he grant them
+economic privileges, but he goes as far as to put them
+among the saints on the calendar:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Makers of paper, I exclude you from all the curses
+I have heaped upon manufacturers when I have walked
+in the street breathing coal dust and smoke. I have
+heard your industry kills fish in rivers. Let them be
+killed. Fishermen are, in any event, noisy, lying
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_166">166</span>brutes. Last night I dreamed I had been made Pope
+and that I issued a bill, excommunicating all owners
+of factories, consigning them to burn everlastingly in
+hell, but ah, I left you out of my curses, you busy
+makers of paper. Those who made paper at a low price
+and in vast quantities somewhere up in the forests of
+Canada, I sainted. There was one man—I invented
+him—named Saint John P. Belger, who furnished
+paper to indigent writers of prose free of charge. For
+virtue I put him, in my dream, almost on a level with
+Saint Francis of Assisi.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Such was the physical side of Sherwood Anderson’s
+literary calling. The son of an artisan, brought up
+among craftsmen, a craftsman himself, he went in for
+writing as others do for book-binding, engraving, or
+gilding, out of sheer love for the beautiful materials to
+be handled and whose lure he could not resist. He confesses
+to being unable to remember a period in his life
+when he did not have a hankering for scrawling something
+in black and white. When he was in business,
+buying and selling did not interest him as such. He
+spent his days in writing “ads” which were profitable
+to his patrons. But as soon as he was at home, the
+magic spell of the white sheets returned and he could
+not resist any longer.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_41_41" href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
+
+<p>Fiction seems to be nearer to fact in the United States
+than anywhere else in the world. America is the land
+of possibilities. The life of Sherwood Anderson, self-made
+man, laborer, tramp, novelist and poet, reads
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_167">167</span>like a true novel. It recalls to our mind Jack London’s
+“Martin Eden.” Like Eden, Anderson attained literary
+fame by the sweat of his brow and not without an
+athletic display of muscles. America has never spoiled
+her writers. Murger’s “Vie de Bohême” tells of no
+hardships comparable to those which a Theodore
+Dreiser or Sherwood Anderson (not to mention Edgar
+Allan Poe and Walt Whitman) had to go through
+before they rose to fame. Thanks to this harsh apprenticeship,
+Anderson himself has learned to be indifferent
+to comfort. He can write, he tells us, anywhere, and
+at any time, in a factory room, on a tree stump on the
+highway, in a railroad station, in the lobby of a hotel
+and be perfectly unconscious of what is going on around
+him. He composed parts of “Poor White” in a dingy
+saloon in Mobile, while next to him three drunken
+sailors were discussing the divinity of Christ. He
+wrote the story of Elsie Leander (included in “The
+Triumph of the Egg”) in the station at Detroit. And
+that day, he tells us that of course he missed the train.</p>
+
+<p>His inborn absent-mindedness could not make him
+a very prosperous business man, and yet he stuck to
+manufacturing paint for more than ten years. The
+way in which he quit his job is characteristic of the
+man. One day, he tells us, he was in his office dictating
+letters. Suddenly, and quite unconsciously, instead
+of proceeding with his dictation, he happened to utter
+automatically the following words: “And then, he
+went into the river bed ..., and then he went into
+the river bed, and then ...” Thereupon Anderson
+got up. His stenographer thought him insane. He
+went out never to return, except on one occasion, when
+he wanted to ascertain what had become of his factory.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_168">168</span>Even that night he had no luck, for the night watchman
+mistook him for a burglar and came very near shooting
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Let us not forget Anderson’s escape. There will be
+many similar flights in his books. The unpardonable
+sin, according to the novelist, is automatism, petrification
+on the surface, routine. He insists on an incessant
+renewal of life, on change and migration as the essential
+condition of moral progress. “Leave all and follow
+me!” says the Voice which all his heroes obey.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>One day Anderson found himself free at last, free to
+seek Truth. His literary début dates from his arrival
+in Chicago in 1910. Since the World Exposition of
+1892, the metropolis of the Middle West had become a
+first-rate artistic and literary center. Anderson found
+friends, advisers and critics there. In contact with
+the young writers, especially Theodore Dreiser, he
+became self-conscious as an artist. I shall not go into
+detail of his works, or what he is pleased to call his
+“scribblings” at this period. He found in Chicago
+materials for verse and prose, and he began to write
+short stories and novels. “Windy McPherson’s Son”
+appeared in 1916, not without some misfortunes of its
+own. The critics were unfair to the book. According
+to the author himself it was full of reminiscences of
+Dreiser, Upton Sinclair, Jack London and Zola. But
+the real Sherwood Anderson was there too. It was
+invaluable as a piece of autobiography. It tells the
+pathetic story of an ill-born youth who is forced to
+inhibit the best part of himself. A deep and, at times,
+lyrical feeling for human miseries pervaded the novel.
+It heralded the advent of an American Dostoievski.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_169">169</span></p>
+
+<p>The sad idyll of Sam and Mary Underwood, the
+gloomy atmosphere and the semi-consciousness through
+which the protagonists of this book move and seek
+themselves, foreshadow his novels of a later date. At
+the end of the story, Sam McPherson withdraws himself
+from the world, he becomes converted and makes
+up his mind to seek Truth and not earthly ambitions.
+Sam was born of poor parents and had to rise painfully
+by his own means.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_42_42" href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
+
+<p>He tore himself away from his early environment.
+He got into the good graces of a wealthy manufacturer
+in Chicago. Upon getting rich, he married his employer’s
+daughter. The plot is developed through episodes
+which would seem incredible had we not read similar
+ones in Upton Sinclair and Theodore Dreiser. Sam
+begins as a superman, <i>à la</i> Frank Cowperwood, which
+means that all the roads to success seem fair ones to
+him. He is at first a conscienceless “bounder,” to use
+Anderson’s own phraseology. He does not believe in
+the sweet and Christian ethics of failure. Then suddenly,
+at the end, he drops everything to become a
+socialist. Up to this point this story reads very much
+like a book by Upton Sinclair. But Anderson is more
+of a mystic than of a socialist. He does not much trust
+the proletariat helping moral progress. Sam is converted.
+He redeems himself, not by following the path
+of social justice but that of Love and Pity. The book
+is particularly interesting from the angle of psychoanalysis.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_170">170</span>It discusses a case of the dissociation and
+reunification of the self, a problem which was soon to become
+an obsession with the author. The whole story
+is based upon Sam McPherson’s efforts to disentangle
+his true “personality picture” from his adventures.
+Later on Anderson refuses to help his characters
+out of the depths of the subconscious. He lets them
+flounder in the darkness of their conscience. But he
+had not reached that stage yet, at the time of which
+I am now speaking. Then he did not neglect to answer
+the S.O.S. of his characters in distress. Here is the
+portrait of Sam McPherson as a representative American:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Sam McPherson is a living American. He is a rich
+man, but his money, that he spent so many years and
+so much of his energy acquiring, does not mean much
+to him. What is true of him is true of more wealthy
+Americans than is commonly believed. Something
+has happened to him that has happened to the others
+also, to how many of the others? Men of courage, with
+strong bodies and quick brains, men who have come of
+a strong race, have taken up what they had thought
+to be the banner of life and carried it forward. Growing
+weary, they have stopped in a road that climbs
+a long hill and have leaned the banner against a tree.
+Tight brains have loosened a little. Strong convictions
+have become weak. Old gods are dying.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>It is only when you are torn from your mooring and
+drift like a rudderless ship that I am able to come near
+you.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>The banner has been carried forward by a strong,
+daring man, filled with determination.</p>
+
+<p>What is inscribed on it?</p>
+
+<p>It would perhaps be dangerous to inquire too closely.
+We Americans have believed that life must have point
+and purpose. We have called ourselves Christians
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_171">171</span>but the sweet Christian philosophy of failure has been
+unknown among us. To say of one of us that he has
+failed, is to take life and courage away. For so long
+we have to push blindly forward. Roads had to be
+cut through our forests, great towns must be built.
+What in Europe has been slowly building itself out of
+the fibre of the generations we must build now, in a
+lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>In our father’s day, at night in the forests of Michigan,
+Ohio, Kentucky, and on the wide prairies, wolves
+howled. There was fear in our fathers and mothers,
+pushing their way forward, making the new land.
+When the land was conquered fear remained, the fear
+of failure. Deep in our American souls the wolves
+still howl.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Sam McPherson represents the two states of the
+American conscience, the Christian and the primitive.
+Half of his life was spent like that of Theodore Dreiser’s
+realistic heroes. He succeeded practically; that is,
+he failed morally and spiritually. Finally the angel
+in him got the best of the beast. He found salvation
+in humility and renouncement, like another Saint
+Francis. The mystic longings of Sherwood Anderson
+have left an unmistakable imprint on this early work.
+He was not content to draw his characters in unconsciousness.
+He counselled them, comforted them, and
+acted to them as a good Samaritan.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Marching Men,” an epic in three parts, is also a fine
+book, although sociology and mysticism are blended in
+it to the point of confusion. It reads very much like
+Zola’s “Germinal.” The hero of the book, Beaut
+McGregor, is the son of a Pennsylvania miner, who was
+buried alive in a mine. The book is full of these soberly
+drawn and semi-allegorical portraits in which the author
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_172">172</span>excels: the oculist, the hunchback, the violin maker,
+the philosophical barber, the poor milliner. Robert
+Frost alone can be a match to Anderson in this kind of
+telepathic sketches. Beaut McGregor is searching for
+the imponderable values of life, yet he finds drunkenness,
+sex and hunger as the sole incentives of most
+men’s existence.</p>
+
+<p>Anderson’s imagination is pessimistic. He sees the
+world in black and white. He is quite veracious in
+saying that there is something Russian in him. His
+artistic sense and his philanthropic Christian heart connive
+to comprehend the most pathetic aspects of life
+with sympathy. He has cast his lot with the proletarian,
+the poor, the desperate, the lonely, in the sooty
+suburbs of the big cities or the twilight of some village.
+He is pessimistic, but his pessimism is religious and
+moral. Man does not live by bread alone but by whatever
+word issues from the mouth of God. Anderson
+is a disciple of Tolstoi. The social problem, as he conceives
+it, is a moral problem. Social anarchy is but a
+sign of the chaos within us. We may, through true
+insight, arrive at the source of our troubles:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In the heart of all men lies sleeping the love of order.
+How to achieve order out of our strange jumble of
+forms, out of democracies and monarchies, dreams and
+endeavors, is the riddle of the Universe; and the thing
+that in the artist is called the passion for form, and for
+which he also will laugh in the face of death, is in all
+men. By grasping that fact, Caesar, Alexander,
+Napoleon and our own Grant have made heroes of the
+dullest clods that walk, and not a man of all the thousands
+who marched with Sherman to the sea, but lived
+the rest of his life with a something sweeter, braver
+and finer, sleeping in his soul than will ever be produced
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_173">173</span>by the reformer scolding of brotherhood from a soapbox.
+The long march, the burning of the throat and
+the stinging of the dust in the nostrils, the touch of
+shoulder against shoulder, the quick bond of a common,
+unquestioned, instinctive passion that bursts in
+the orgasm of battle, the forgetting of words and the
+doing of the thing, be it winning battles or destroying
+ugliness, the passionate massing of men for accomplishment—these
+are the signs, if they ever awake in our
+land, by which you may know you have come to the
+days of the making of men.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Anderson is not dazzled by the sumptuous façade of
+American prosperity. He sees the reverse of the stage
+setting, the slums, the mines, the factories, the jails and
+the asylums. Listen to Beaut McGregor, the hero of
+“Marching Men,” as he stands on the hills above the
+dark valleys where the sordid cottages of the miners are
+nested:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The long, black valley, with its dense shroud of smoke
+that rose and fell and formed itself into fantastic shapes
+in the moonlight, the poor little houses clinging to the
+hillside, the occasional cry of a woman being beaten by
+a drunken husband, the glare of the coke fires and the
+rumble of coal cars being pushed along the railroad
+tracks, all of these made a grim and rather inspiring
+impression on the young man’s mind, so that although
+he hated the mines and the miners, he sometimes
+paused in his night-wanderings and stood with his
+great shoulders lifted, breathing deeply, and feeling
+things he had no words in him to express.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Sherwood Anderson entertains no illusions regarding
+our much vaunted modern civilization. He sees the
+modern man in a state of disintegration and moral
+collapse, due to greed and lust. The surface gives an
+illusion of grandeur, but there is a bog underlying the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_174">174</span>structure. To prove his point, the writer bids us accompany
+him in a walk around Chicago. We are supposed
+to escort a well-meaning American business man
+through the city. He is a well-balanced and kindly
+person, inclined to take a rosy view of life. Let us
+follow him in his walk. In front of a house a man is
+seen mowing the lawn. There is something pleasant
+in the screech of the lawn-mower. A little farther up
+the street the wanderer peeps through a window and
+perceives pictures hanging on a wall. A woman in
+white plays the piano. How sweet and quiet life is!
+The wanderer lights a cigar. Everything seems so
+beautiful and fresh, and, lo! by the light of a street
+lamp he sees a man staggering against the wall. Never
+mind! The wanderer has enjoyed a good dinner at the
+hotel. He remains optimistic. Drunkards are prodigal
+sons. Wine and song are incentives to work. Let
+us pass on! The wanderer can have no grudge against
+his time and country. Let the I.W.W. howl, if they
+want. All of a sudden two men come out of a saloon
+and palaver on the curb. Now one of them jumps
+and, with a rapid thrust forward of his whole body,
+knocks his friend down in the gutter. Sinister and
+smoky buildings all around look like accomplices. At
+the end of the street an enormous crane erects its snout
+against the sky. The wanderer has thrown away his
+cigar. Somebody walks in front of him and raises his
+fist to heaven. He notices with a start the movement
+of the man’s lips, his large and ugly face in the glare
+of the street lamp. But he keeps on going, and hurries
+among pawnshops, saloons and what not. He has
+a nightmare.... He sees a burglar looking over
+the walls of a garden where children are at play,—the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_175">175</span>wanderer’s own garden and own children. It is getting
+late. A suspicious looking woman comes down a stair,
+with bleached face. A police wagon rattles by. A
+child kicks dirty newspapers along the street. His
+piercing voice dominates the din of the street-cars and
+the siren of the police patrol. The wanderer hastens
+to board a car to return to his hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Life, after all, is not as rosy as he thought. His good
+humor has disappeared. He is irritated at having
+wasted a fine evening. He is no longer so content with
+his affairs, as he goes to bed with the din of the city still
+in his ears. He sees the head of a red man bending
+toward him in his sleep.... This is the way Sherwood
+Anderson tells his apologues and dramatizes what
+he calls the failure of American life.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the novel Beaut McGregor has become
+a famous and militant lawyer. His mother, Nance, is
+dead and he himself has buried her upon the hill. The
+description of Nance’s funeral is truly epic and
+resembles the strike in Zola’s “Germinal.” “Marching
+Men” ends on a sharp turn. Beaut McGregor
+courted two women, one poor and the other rich. He
+marries a shy, self-effacing milliner, to commemorate,
+perhaps, in his own fashion, the wedding of the Saint
+of Assisi with the Lady Poverty.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Anderson will not write such books again. The psychoanalyst
+will soon win over the mystic, but we know
+him pretty well now, from these first books, as a sensual
+and a mystic lover of Truth, as the detective of our
+hidden thoughts and of double hearts, as a man enamoured
+chiefly with dreams. There are several scenes in
+“Marching Men” characteristic of Sherwood Anderson
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_176">176</span>at his best as an artist. He belongs among the novelists
+of the proletariat, nearer Dostoievski and Tolstoi
+than Victor Hugo or Émile Zola, because of his mysticism.
+I select the narrative of the death of Beaut
+McGregor’s mother, Nance, as an example of his
+talent to blend the here below with the far beyond.
+Nance dies of utter misery on a fine evening. She kept
+a little bakery. Since the death of her husband in the
+mine, she lived in complete seclusion, respected and
+feared by the miners:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In the middle of the night the conviction came to
+her that she would die. Death seemed moving about
+in the room and waiting for her. In the street two
+drunken men stood talking, their voices concerned
+with their own human affairs coming in through the
+window and making life seem very near and dear to the
+dying woman. “I’ve been everywhere,” said one
+of the men. “I’ve been in towns and cities I don’t
+even remember the names of. You ask Alex Fielder
+who keeps a saloon in Denver. Ask him if Gus Lamont
+has been there.”</p>
+
+<p>The other man laughed. “You’ve been in Jake’s
+drinking too much beer,” he jeered.</p>
+
+<p>Nance heard the two men stumble off down the
+street, the traveller protesting against the unbelief of
+his friend. It seemed to her that life with all of its
+color, sound and meaning was running away from her
+presence. The exhaust of the engine over at the mine
+rang in her ears. She thought of the mine as a great
+monster lying asleep below the ground, its huge nose
+stuck into the air, its mouth open to eat men. In the
+darkness of the room her coat, flung over the back of a
+chair, took the shape and outline of a face, huge and
+grotesque, staring silently past her into the sky.</p>
+
+<p>Nance McGregor gasped and struggled for breath.
+She clutched the bedclothes with her hands and fought
+grimly and silently. She did not think of the place to
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_177">177</span>which she might go after death. She was trying hard
+not to go there. It had been her habit of life to fight,
+not to dream dreams.</p>
+
+<p>Nance thought of her father, drunk and throwing
+his money about, in the old days before her marriage,
+of the walks she, as a young girl, had taken with her
+lover on Sunday afternoons, and of the times when they
+had gone together to sit on the hillside overlooking the
+farming country. As in a vision, the dying woman saw
+the broad fertile land spread out before her, and blamed
+herself that she had not done more toward helping her
+man in the fulfillment of the plans she and he had made
+to go there and live. Then she thought of the night
+when her boy came, and of how, when they went to
+bring her man from the mine, they found him apparently
+dead under the fallen timbers so that she thought
+life and death had visited her hand in hand in one night.</p>
+
+<p>Nance sat stiffly up in bed. She thought she heard
+the sound of heavy feet on the stairs. “That will be
+Beaut coming up from the shop,” she muttered, and
+fell back upon the pillow, dead.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Sherwood Anderson does not dwell on surfaces. His
+characters come out of the Unconscious. They move
+deep into a region where words can scarcely penetrate.
+As an instance of his understatements, I quote another
+scene from “Marching Men.” Beaut McGregor has
+climbed the hill to dream alone. He likes to go to the
+high places to pray. Three women come to him.
+Beaut has gotten over his timidity and consents to sit
+down with one of them, who is looked upon as a
+coquette. Here is a suggestive bit of Andersonian
+dialogue with little said and much understood:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>On the eminence Beaut and the tall woman sat and
+looked down into the valley. “I wonder why we
+don’t go there, mother and I,” he said. “When I
+see it I’m filled with the notion. I think I want to be
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_178">178</span>a farmer and work in the fields. Instead of that,
+mother and I sit and plan of the city. I’m going to be
+a lawyer. That’s all we talk about. Then I come up
+here and it seems as though this is the place for me.”</p>
+
+<p>The tall woman laughed. “I can see you coming
+home at night from the fields,” she said. “It might
+be to that white house there with the windmill. You
+would be a big man and would have dust in your red
+hair and perhaps a red beard growing on your chin.
+And a woman with a baby in her arms would come out
+of the kitchen door to stand leaning on the fence waiting
+for you. When you came up she would put her arm
+around your neck and kiss you on the lips. The beard
+would tickle her cheek. Your mouth is so big.”</p>
+
+<p>A strange new feeling shot through Beaut. He wondered
+why she had said that, and wanted to take hold
+of her hand and kiss her then and there. He got up
+and looked at the sun going down behind the hill far
+away at the other end of the valley. “We’d better
+be getting along back,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The woman remained seated on the log. “Sit
+down,” she said, “I’ll tell you something—something
+it’s good for you to hear. You’re so big and red you
+tempt a girl to bother you. First, though, you tell me
+why you go along the street looking into the gutter when
+I stand in the stairway in the evening.”</p>
+
+<p>Beaut sat down again upon the log, and thought of
+what the black-haired boy had told him of her. “Then
+it was true—what he said about you?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No! No!” she cried, jumping up in her turn and
+beginning to pin on her hat. “Let’s be going.”</p>
+
+<p>Beaut sat stolidly on the log. “What’s the use
+bothering each other,” he said. “Let’s sit here until
+the sun goes down. We can get home before dark.”</p>
+
+<p>They sat down and she began talking, boasting of
+herself as he had boasted of his father.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m too old for that boy,” she said; “I’m older
+than you by a good many years. I know what boys
+talk about and what they say about women. I do
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_179">179</span>pretty well. I don’t have anyone to talk to except
+father, and he sits all evening reading a paper and
+going to sleep in his chair. If I let boys come and sit
+with me in the evening or stand talking with me in the
+stairway it’s because I’m lonesome. There isn’t a
+man in town I’d marry—not one.”</p>
+
+<p>The speech sounded discordant and harsh to Beaut.
+He wished his father were there rubbing his hands
+together and muttering rather than this pale woman
+who stirred him up and then talked harshly like the
+women at the back doors in Coal Creek. He thought
+again, as he had thought before, that he preferred the
+black-faced miners, drunk and silent, to their pale,
+talkative wives. On an impulse he told her that, saying
+it crudely, so that it hurt.</p>
+
+<p>Their companionship was spoiled. They got up and
+began to climb the hill, going toward home. Again
+she put her hand to her side, and again he wished to
+put his hand at her back and push her up the hill.
+Instead he walked beside her in silence, again hating
+the town.</p>
+
+<p>Halfway down the hill the tall woman stopped by
+the roadside. Darkness was coming on and the glow
+of the coke ovens lighted the sky. “One living up
+here and never going down there might think it rather
+grand and big,” he said. Again the hatred came.
+“They might think the men who lived down there
+knew something instead of being just a lot of cattle.”</p>
+
+<p>A smile came into the face of the tall woman and a
+gentler look stole into her eyes. “We get at one
+another,” she said, “we can’t let one another alone.
+I wish we hadn’t quarrelled. We might be friends if
+we tried. You have got something in you. You
+attract women. I’ve heard others say that. Your
+father was that way. Most of the women here would
+rather have been the wife of Cracked McGregor, ugly
+as he was, than to have stayed with their own husbands.
+I heard my mother say that to father when he lay quarrelling
+in bed at night and I lay listening.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_180">180</span></p>
+
+<p>The boy was overcome with the thought of a woman
+talking to him so frankly. He looked at her and said
+what was in his mind. “I don’t like the women,” he
+said, “but I liked you, seeing you standing in the stairway
+and thinking you had been doing as you pleased.
+I thought maybe you amounted to something. I
+don’t know why you should be bothered by what I
+think. I don’t know why any woman should be bothered
+by what any man thinks. I should think you
+would go right on doing what you want to do, like
+mother and me about my being a lawyer.”</p>
+
+<p>He sat on a log beside the road near where he had met
+her and watched her go down the hill.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m quite a fellow to have talked to her all afternoon
+like that,” he thought, and pride in his growing
+manhood crept over him.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_181">181</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ <br>
+ <i>Sherwood Anderson on This Side of Freud</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“Poor White,” published in 1920, marked a new
+turn in Sherwood Anderson’s career and the transition
+toward a new style. It is now characterized by the
+obsession of the subconscious and the study of morbid
+psychology. “Poor White” tells once more the story
+of a proletarian youth struggling against adverse surroundings.
+Like “Marching Men” this novel is autobiographical
+to a large extent. With Hugh McVey, the
+poor white, the experiments which Anderson’s previous
+books had described start all over again. Uprooted
+and revolving against his native environment, he too
+seeks to find an impossible felicity in the gratification
+of his passions. Hugh McVey has grown, like wild
+grass, on the shores of the Mississippi once haunted by
+the ghost of Huckleberry Finn, in days when boys were
+more addicted to “roughing it” than to brooding over
+their secret thoughts. The huge river inspires Hugh
+with a longing for a life of abundance and ease. Like
+all the characters in Anderson’s novels, he is the victim
+of inhibitions. He vegetates in the sultry atmosphere
+of his small town. Automatism and routine are ready
+to swallow him up. Luckily, he was born a craftsman
+and he is saved by work. He is intelligent and wilful,
+and turns out to be an inventor. A fortuitous circumstance
+takes him beyond his narrow horizon. One
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_182">182</span>day, he sees people busy planting cabbages by hand.
+Why not build and patent a cabbage-setting machine?
+Hugh carries out his plans successfully and he soon
+finds himself at the head of a prosperous stock company;
+but he is dissatisfied. He has not fulfilled his
+spiritual longings. He denounces machinery and commercialism.
+He arraigns socialism because it cannot
+exist without them. He sees salvation only in self-reliance
+and in sincerity to oneself and to others. He
+thinks and acts, in fact, like a man who has read and
+appropriated to himself R. W. Emerson’s essays.
+Hugh marries a frigid woman who deserts him. At
+the end of the book we find him alone on the road to
+Truth. All in all, “Poor White” is painfully composed
+and rather badly written. Its value resides in
+the Freudian sketches aside from the main plot, and
+in the analysis of the pathological forms of sensibility.</p>
+
+<p>It did not greatly increase the novelist’s reputation.
+The previous year he had published his famous collection
+of short stories, “Winesburg, Ohio.” This is a
+first-rate psychological document. Anderson has now
+definitely given up sociology to become a psychologist
+and a specialist in the study of dual personalities.
+“Winesburg, Ohio,” is entirely in harmony with the
+most recent contributions of American literature to
+psychoanalysis. It is as rich and original in intuition
+as the books of Robert Frost, Edgar Lee Masters and
+Eugene O’Neill. Winesburg is a sort of Main Street,
+not in breadth but in depth. Each one of these stories
+is a masterpiece of dramatized insight. They stage
+the tragedy of moral failure. The real drama is not
+enacted in the open but in the gloom of what the author
+names “the well,” deep under the surface of existence.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_183">183</span>It is the tragedy of evasion. The scene is the provincial
+United States of half a century ago, somewhere in
+and around Chicago. The novelist ascribes the neurasthenia
+of his characters, their errantry and their inconsistency
+in thought and action to the shock of too
+sudden a transition from the old order to the new.
+Mystic Anderson once more denounces our times as
+the most materialistic in the history of the world, as
+an epoch where wars are fought without patriotism,
+when men substitute their vague ethics to the worship
+of the living God, when the will-to-power replaces the
+will-to-serve, when beauty has been almost entirely
+forgotten in the terrible race for money. But the
+stories of “Winesburg, Ohio” cannot be limited to the
+American scene. Their appeal is broadly human and
+universal. Admirable as studies of morbid psychology,
+they are still more so as dramatizations of our secret
+thoughts. Within their limited bounds they contain
+the most suggestive portraits.</p>
+
+<p>The eccentrics, the maniacs, the daydreamers and
+the half-insane whom, up to now, have been relegated
+to the background of Anderson’s books, occupy the
+center of the stage. The novelist has most skilfully
+succeeded in grouping the different anecdotes and in
+giving to all his people a family air of resemblance.
+He has individualized the morbid states of sensibility,
+with something akin to genius. His psychology is
+utterly pessimistic, as every true psychology must be.
+It is based on the observation of distortions and abortions
+caused by moral restraint. Anderson introduces
+us to human beings condemned to intellectual and
+moral decrepitude. The surrounding mediocrity has
+atrophied their moral life, without killing their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_184">184</span>elementary instincts. All these half-insane and these
+maniacs are dual personalities for themselves and for
+others. Winesburg is the city of hypocrites, or, as we
+prefer to call them to-day, the city of the inhibited.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_43_43" href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
+
+<p>As we watch this parade of lunatics of both sexes, we
+cannot think of a stranger Cabinet of Doctor Caligari.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_44_44" href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
+
+<p>Anderson’s rogues’ gallery shelters the most fantastic
+medley of moral outcasts, the libidinous, the perverse,
+the sly, the morbid. All of them suffer particularly
+from soul-fear and floating anxiety, as described by
+the experimental psychologists. These abnormalities
+are caused chiefly by an erotic obsession. As their
+energy is no longer able to express itself in acts, it loses
+itself in nightmares and incoherent actions. This
+explains the verbal <i>psittacism</i> upon which Anderson
+has made some curious remarks. Let us enter this
+Musée Grevin of the psychologically abnormal.</p>
+
+<p>Here is a man whose hands are incessantly shaken by
+a suspicious automatism. He is fond of caressing children.
+One day he is accused of having taken advantage
+of one of them and he is expelled from the village.
+Here is an hysterical woman who married an old doctor.
+The doctor has a mania for stuffing his pockets with
+slips of paper on which he has written maxims which
+he forces everybody to read. Here comes a professional
+simulator who has lived a thousand imaginary
+lives. He wants to make us believe that he is Christ
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_185">185</span>and that he has been made to die upon a cross. This
+rich landowner lost his mind from brooding over the
+Bible. One day he went into the woods to kill his
+grandson, as Abraham did to Isaac. Another Winesburgher,
+a woman, was seized with an erotic fit which
+made her run out into the streets all naked on a rainy
+day. Let us not forget the hypocritical minister who
+had seen a naked woman through a crack in the window
+of his church. The wretched man had forgotten prayer
+and could no longer expel the temptation from his mind.
+He became half insane and was about to end up badly.
+But one day he again saw the naked woman praying
+in her room and he conceived a new and happier idea
+of life. Never has the human mind been subjected to
+more crucial dissections and been denounced as such a
+mad and dangerous machine.</p>
+
+<p>There is a moral attached to these tales. Anderson’s
+philosophy, as well as his mysticism, centers upon
+what may be called the problem of deliverance. It is
+based upon a tragic feeling of the complexities of the
+human self, on the necessity and difficulty of extracting
+from the subconscious labyrinth our real personality.
+It slumbers, deep within us, buried under formalism.
+A city filled with millions of living people can be, in
+reality, a necropolis for the dead.</p>
+
+<p>And quite truly, from the spiritual and moral point
+of view, the live are dead in Winesburg. No matter
+if they do go about their daily tasks, if they play at
+being born, at marrying, at having children, at making
+money, at voting, at going to church, at talking of the
+weather or the approaching elections. This is not life.
+Spiritually and morally, the Winesburghers are as dead
+as the corpses whose epitaphs Edgar Lee Masters
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_186">186</span>collected in the “Spoon River Anthology.” At most,
+Sherwood Anderson accords to the inhabitants of
+Winesburg a larval existence, a life of sleepwalkers and
+daydreamers. Of the various selves which William
+James classified in his treatise on psychology, and which
+he called the <i>material</i>, the <i>social</i> and the <i>spiritual</i> selves,
+the living dead of Winesburg possess only the most
+elementary, <i>i.e.</i>, the material. Their social and their
+spiritual selves are illusory. Instead of actions they
+know only manias; instead of ambitions, velleities;
+instead of achievements, dreams. Let the professional
+psychiatrist read these tales. He will find in them all
+the forms of psychic degeneracy. The embryonic and
+larval life of Winesburg defies even the slow-motion
+process of photographic reproduction. Still life and
+twilight sleep prevail here as the characteristic phases
+of existence.</p>
+
+<p>How strange a paradox that the land of the <i>strenuous
+life</i> should shelter such moral mummies.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_45_45" href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> In “Winesburg,
+Ohio,” Sherwood Anderson closed without
+hope the gates of the mystic evasion through which
+the characters of his early novels used to escape.
+“Abandon hope, all ye who enter here!” Dante’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_187">187</span>Inferno is an Eden compared to this American abode of
+unescapable gloom.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In almost every case the great issue of suppressed
+sensibilities in Anderson’s stories is eroticism. This is
+the central pivot of the lives of his larvæ. The male
+wants to be rich quick. He has not time to love; he
+simply flirts. The female, on the contrary, is like
+Phaedra, the wife of Theseus, in Racine’s tragedy,
+<i>toute entière à sa proie attachée</i>, all intent upon securing
+the gratification of her instinctive impulses. Man
+makes up for his erotic disillusions by irony, work or
+drink.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_46_46" href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> Woman simply surrenders to the <i>libido</i>. Inhibitions
+and repressions make an agony of her life.
+Anderson suggests that she come out of the “well”
+for the sake of health, happiness and moral progress.
+Surrendering to nature and not asceticism is the cure of
+morbidity. He sides with Hawthorne on this point,
+and he proves it in one of the best tales of “Winesburg,
+Ohio.” We see the Reverend Hartman released from
+the nightmares of his cell by facing life as it is and discovering
+that religion and beauty can very well go
+together. Evasion, it is true, is not within the reach of
+every one in Anderson’s books. It is reserved to the
+elect. Many try to lift the lid of the “well” and are
+drowned. The most pathetic case of evasion is that
+of Elsie in “The Triumph of The Egg.” The story is
+called “The New Englander.” Elsie is an uprooted
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_188">188</span>girl from the East. She dies of moral dearth and
+inhibited desires, somewhere on a lonely farm in the
+Middle West. One day homesickness and longing
+make her run away in the corn-fields with the same
+pagan fury which took Hester Prynne to the primitive
+forest. The scene is literarily beautiful and almost
+technically Freudian:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In the month of August, when it is very hot, the corn
+in Iowa fields grows until the corn stalks resemble young
+trees. The corn-fields become forests. The time for
+the cultivating of the corn has passed and weeds grow
+thick between the corn rows. The men with their giant
+horses have gone away. Over the immense fields
+silence broods.</p>
+
+<p>When the time of the laying-by of the crop came that
+first summer after Elsie’s arrival in the West, her mind,
+partially awakened by the strangeness of the railroad
+trip, awakened again. She did not feel like a staid, thin
+woman with a back like the back of a drill sergeant,
+but like something new and as strange as the new land
+into which she had come to live. For a time she did not
+know what was the matter. In the field the corn had
+grown so high that she could not see into the distance.
+The corn was like a wall and the little bare spot on
+which her father’s house stood was like a house built
+behind the walls of a prison. For a time she was depressed,
+thinking that she had come west into a wide
+open country, only to find herself locked up more closely
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>An impulse came to her. She arose and going down
+three or four steps seated herself almost on a level with
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately she got a sense of release. She could
+not see over the corn but she could see under it. The
+corn had long wide leaves that met over the rows. The
+rows became long tunnels running away into infinity.
+Out of the black ground grew weeds that made a soft
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_189">189</span>carpet of green. From above light sifted down. The
+corn rows were mysteriously beautiful. They were
+warm passageways running out into life. She got up
+from the steps, and, walking timidly to the wire fence
+that separated her from the field, put her hand between
+the wires and took hold of one of the corn stalks. For
+some reason after she had touched the strong young
+stalk and had held it for a moment firmly in her hand,
+she grew afraid. Running quickly back to the step
+she sat down and covered her face with her hands. Her
+body trembled. She tried to imagine herself crawling
+through the fence and wandering along one of the
+passageways. The thought of trying the experiment
+fascinated, but at the same time terrified. She got
+quickly up and went into the house.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But the temptation proved too strong. Elsie could
+not resist the lure of the broad fields:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Elsie ran into the vastness of the corn-fields filled
+with but one desire. She wanted to get out of her life
+and into some new and sweeter life she felt must be hidden
+away somewhere in the fields. After she had run
+a long way she came to a wire fence and crawled over.
+Her hair became unloosened and fell down over her
+shoulders. Her cheeks became flushed and for the
+moment she looked like a young girl. When she
+climbed over the fence she tore a great hole in the front
+of her dress. For a moment her tiny breasts were
+exposed, and then her hand clutched and held nervously
+the sides of the tear. In the distance she could hear
+the voices of the boys and the barking of the dogs. A
+summer storm had been threatening for days, and
+now black clouds had begun to spread themselves over
+the sky. As she ran nervously forward, stopping to
+listen and then running on again, the dry corn blades
+brushed against her shoulders and a fine shower of
+yellow dust from the corn tassels fell on her hair. A
+continued crackling noise accompanied her progress.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_190">190</span>The dust made a golden crown about her head. From
+the sky overhead a low rumbling sound, like the growling
+of giant dogs, came to her ears.</p>
+
+<p>Sharp pains shot through her body. Presently she
+was compelled to stop and sit on the ground. For a
+long time she sat with closed eyes. Her dress became
+soiled. Little insects that live in the ground under the
+corn, came out of their holes and crawled over her legs.</p>
+
+<p>Following some obscure impulse the tired woman
+threw herself on her back and lay still with closed eyes.
+Her fright passed. It was warm and close in the roomlike
+tunnels. The pain in her side went away. She
+opened her eyes and between the wide green corn
+blades could see patches of a black threatening sky.
+She did not want to be alarmed and so closed her eyes
+again. Her thin hand no longer gripped the tear in
+her dress and her little breasts were exposed. They
+expanded and contracted in spasmodic jerks. She threw
+her hands back over her head and lay still.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Elsie that hours passed as she lay thus,
+quiet and passive under the corn. Deep within her
+there was a feeling that something was about to happen,
+something that would lift her out of herself, that
+would tear her away from her past and the past of her
+people. Her thoughts were not definite. She lay still
+and waited as she had waited for days and months
+by the rock at the back of the orchard on the Vermont
+farm when she was a girl. A deep grumbling noise
+went on in the sky overhead, but the sky and everything
+she had ever known seemed very far away, no part
+of herself....</p>
+
+<p>Elsie followed, creeping on her hands and knees
+like a little animal, and when she had come within sight
+of the fence surrounding the house she sat on the ground
+and put her hands over her face. Something within
+herself was being twisted and whirled about as the tops
+of the corn stalks were now being twisted and whirled
+by the wind. She sat so that she did not look toward
+the house and when she opened her eyes, she could
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_191">191</span>again see along the long, mysterious aisles.... The
+storm that had been threatening broke with a roar.
+Broad sheets of water swept over the corn-fields.
+Sheets of water swept over the woman’s body. The
+storm that had for years been gathering in her also
+broke. Sobs arose out of her throat. She abandoned
+herself to a storm of grief that was only partially grief.
+Tears ran out of her eyes and made little furrows
+through the dust on her face. In the lulls that occasionally
+came in the storm she raised her head and
+heard, through the tangled mass of wet hair that covered
+her ears and above the sound of millions of raindrops
+that alighted on the earthen floor inside the house
+of the corn, the thin voices of her mother and father
+calling to her out of the Leander house.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The tortures of inhibition have rarely been so dramatically
+and scientifically described.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>From now on, the problem of sexual inhibition was
+going to haunt Sherwood Anderson. He was soon to
+devote to it a strange and, for the average reader, a
+most shocking book which we must examine with the
+same candor which the author has shown in writing it.
+It is called “Many Marriages.” In order to be entirely
+just to it, I shall again warn the reader of what I have
+already suggested. Eroticism and mysticism go hand
+in hand for Anderson. Having discovered sexual inhibition
+to be the main cause of social hypocrisy, he
+preaches the gospel of absolute sexual sincerity as a
+<i>sine qua non</i> condition of moral progress. To understand
+the author’s point of view, let us not forget that
+his stories take place in a Puritan country. Let us
+remember Theodore Dreiser’s sayings about the primordial
+importance of the sexual question in a pioneer
+land where the woman remained, for a long time, as
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_192">192</span>the only luxury allowed to men, and the only object
+of art offered to their dreams. “Many Marriages”
+is a confession, a soliloquy, which continues uninterrupted
+for nearly three hundred pages.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_47_47" href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>The hero is a lunatic, an erotomaniac who parades
+naked before a Madonna and a crucifix surrounded by
+burning tapers, in order to better vent his feelings
+about sex, love and marriage to his daughter. His
+name is John Webster. He was born in a small Wisconsin
+town and began as a business man. One day,
+passing in front of his factory, he heard his workingmen
+humming a hymn like this:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">And before I’d be a slave,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">I’d be buried in my grave</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And go home to my father and be saved.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>As has been already hinted, verbal automatism plays
+a large part in the career of Anderson’s characters.
+The song heard by John Webster loosens a new stream
+of consciousness in him. A married man with a grown-up
+daughter, in charge of a business concern, John
+Webster suddenly feels that he has missed his life. He
+immediately leaves everything to follow the call. In
+fact, he had never been happy as a married man or as
+an American citizen. He had never been able to
+express himself freely. Above all, he had lived in complete
+ignorance of his body. Now he has found the
+road to Damascus. Let him be erotically sincere.
+At last, let him know the “house” of his body which
+he has inhabited so long as a stranger, and let him visit
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_193">193</span>what he calls other people’s “houses.” Thereupon his
+mystic lubricity is let loose. The most shocking part
+of the book is that in which the Wisconsin gymnosophist
+gives a demonstration of erotic sincerity to his daughter,
+she herself being hardly dressed. The pages where
+he tells her his misfortunes as a married man and a
+lover are indeed amazing. The like can only be found
+in Andreiev or Gorki. John Webster is insane, but he
+is also sincere and pure, according to the author. More
+than this, he atones in his person for all the inhibited
+inhabitants of Winesburg. This immoral book is after
+all pure and candid from the writer’s point of view. It
+was composed to keep a wager which Sherwood Anderson
+was careful to explain in his preface. John Webster,
+he tells us, may be crazy, as anybody would be who
+tried to act contrary to accepted standards in public.
+At any rate courage is also a virtue, and John is not a
+coward. Doubtless, a man who seeks love as directly
+as he does is abnormal according to present standards,
+but he may be more moral than many of us who refrain
+to follow his tracks only for fear of public opinion.
+Better be a De Sade than a Tartuffe. “Many Marriages”
+is, at the bottom, a plea in favor of individual
+renewal. It is the book of a moralist and of a mystic.
+John Webster is a saint after a fashion. He dares to
+uncover his most secret thoughts before others. The
+problem of correlations between our thoughts and our
+actions has always proved to be of a great interest to
+the author. One of the tales in “The Triumph of The
+Egg” showed a father who was impelled by his longing
+for Truth to reveal his secret life to his daughter, but
+he was a coward and stopped short at the last minute.
+As for the denudation of the body at the moment of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_194">194</span>intensive moral or religious crises, and as a symptom of
+conversion, it is not unknown to hagiographers. Do not
+the Scriptures speak of “shedding the old man?” The
+biography of Saint Francis of Assisi tells a similar story
+with a very different purpose. Nakedness in “Many
+Marriages” is ritual. It is equivalent to the white robe
+which the neophytes of the primitive church used to don.</p>
+
+<p>This is said, not as a plea in favor of John Webster,
+but as an analysis of some of the tortuous and yet well-meaning
+paths which Anderson’s mind likes to travel.
+At any rate, he made no mystery of his intentions or
+of the significance of his book. He tells us that, whilst
+loving Natalie Schwartz, his mistress, John Webster
+never intended to shut himself off from the possibility
+of loving another woman, or many other women. Why
+should not a rich man marry many times? He was
+certain that all the potentialities in wedlock had yet
+been hardly explored. He wanted to be the Christopher
+Columbus of a new continent of inter-human relations.
+In Webster’s mind something had opposed
+itself, up to then, to a broad and human acceptation
+of life. Before loving one had to know and accept himself
+and others. Sexual love is true only when it comes
+as an inspiration, a miracle. Happy are those who
+follow the call. But they are few. For most people
+life is a renunciation of their best self. And that is
+why John Webster left his wife. She had never forgiven
+him his primitive spontaneity and his brusque
+mode of attack at their first meeting. “Leave all and
+follow me,” says the Voice. Love must not be a bond
+but a token of freedom. Such was the meaning of the
+refrain heard by John Webster one day. Let us break
+down the walls and free the prisoners:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_195">195</span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>If one kept the lid off the well of thinking within
+oneself, let the well empty itself, let the mind consciously
+think any thoughts that came to it, accepted
+all thinking, all imaginings, as one accepted the flesh
+of people, animals, birds, trees, plants, one might live
+a hundred or a thousand lives in one life. Then each
+one of us could become “something more than just
+one individual man and woman living one narrow circumscribed
+life.” One could tear down all walls and
+fences and walk in and out many people. One might
+in oneself become a whole town full of people, a city,
+a nation.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This may be a generous dream, and one infinitely
+more attractive than the inhibitions of Winesburg or
+Gopher Prairie, and yet one cannot help seeing in John
+Webster’s gospel only the last challenge of romanticism
+at bay. After Rousseau, Walt Whitman has tried the
+gospel of sexual sincerity at all cost. He had attempted
+to call the universe to him and hold it in his naked arms.
+“I Walt Whitman, a cosmos!” and it all ended in failure.
+Theodore Dreiser in “The Genius” had answered
+John Webster’s queries concerning sexual freedom.
+Sherwood Anderson himself noted somewhere that
+humanism and not pantheism, concentration and not
+expansion, could free and feed human hearts. Webster’s
+mystic orgies have not only ethics but common
+sense against them. But Anderson is a poet. Like
+Whitman he worships Life and the Vital Force. He
+wants us to surrender to all beautiful instincts. Society
+denies us this right, Life itself will build a bridge to
+greater freedom. Life, he proclaims, will empty the
+prisons. It will raise the lid of the “well” where the
+Freudian monsters are asleep, these monsters which
+the Puritan felt groping within himself, and which he
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_196">196</span>carefully and wisely held in chains. Anderson wants
+to free the Hairy Ape and make an angel of him:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>There was a deep well within every man and woman,
+and when Life came in at the door of the house, that
+was the body, it reached down and tore the heavy iron
+lid off the well. Dark hidden things, festering in the
+well, came out and found expression for themselves, and
+the miracle was that, expressed, they became often
+very beautiful. There was a cleansing, a strange sort
+of renewal within the house of the man or woman when
+the god Life had come in.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_48_48" href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Anderson has dedicated himself once more to the
+task of raising the lid of the “well.” In “Dark Laughter”
+it is again the story of a spiritual evasion and the
+return to erotic sincerity. Psychological insight and
+verbal lyricism are beautifully and musically blended
+in this book. In it the author is felt to become more
+and more conscious and to have acquired a greater
+mastery of his instruments of expression. Lyrical outbursts,
+soliloquies and descriptions are brought into
+perfect harmony. The hero of “Dark Laughter,”
+Bruce Dudley, alias John Stockton, is another John
+Webster. He began his career as a reporter, got a good
+position, married and ... ran away. He dropped
+his wife and his job to become a tramp. He began
+anew earning a living by painting carriage wheels in
+company with a comrade similar to those celebrated by
+Walt Whitman. He then becomes a gardener and falls
+in love at first sight with his employer’s wife. It is the
+inspiration, the miracle so much looked for by John
+Webster. So Bruce and Aline wed sincerity and elope....
+But it would be a betrayal of Anderson to reduce
+the plots of his books, especially this one, to such trivial
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_197">197</span>incidents. For him the orchestration is more important
+than the theme. The main charm of “Dark Laughter”
+is its poetry and its music, the curious and clever
+blending of thought, dream, color and song. It is a sort
+of <i>sotto voce</i> monologue with musical interludes. In several
+of Anderson’s books there had already been an undertone
+of music echoing the thoughts of the characters.
+He has perfected the process in “Dark Laughter.”</p>
+
+<p>The scene of the novel is laid upon the shores of the
+Ohio and of the Mississippi. These gigantic American
+waterways, sung to the tune of a Greek hymn by Monsieur
+de Chateaubriand and desecrated in modern times
+by Mark Twain, become musical again through Sherwood
+Anderson’s poetic prose. There is an orchestra of
+Negro minstrels on the shore and on the deck of the
+boat which takes Bruce Dudley to New Orleans. The
+writer looks to Negro music as to the symbol of free
+instinctive expression. The humming of Negro spirituals
+accompanies the soliloquies of Bruce Dudley like
+the tom-tom in “Emperor Jones.” The black man’s
+songs in Anderson’s novels emphasize the return to
+nature. They are the last avatars of romanticism in
+America, the protest of nature against civilization,
+a challenge to social hypocrisy.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_49_49" href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> While the white man
+broods at home over his woes, real or imaginary, the
+black sings naturally in the open and vents his naïve
+soul in hymns and laughter, with an occasional strain of
+melancholy, soothing itself as it is sung. Anderson
+finds in these Negro chanteys what he calls “a way of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_198">198</span>getting at the ultimate truth of things,” which is
+tantamount, almost, to a system of metaphysics.</p>
+
+<p>The pages devoted to New Orleans in “Dark Laughter”
+are among the most original ever written by the
+author. Here is the homecoming of Bruce Dudley in
+the old creole city:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The niggers were something for Bruce to look at,
+think about. So many black men slowly growing
+brown. Then would come the light brown, the velvet-browns,
+Caucasian features. The brown women tending
+up to the job—getting the race lighter and lighter.
+Soft Southern nights, warm dusky nights. Shadows
+flitting at the edge of cotton fields, in dusky roads by
+saw-mill towns. Soft voices laughing, laughing.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oh, ma banjo dog,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oh, ho, ma banjo dog.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">An’ I ain’t go’na give you</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">None of ma jelly roll.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Niggers on the docks, niggers in the city streets, niggers
+laughing. A slow dance always going on....
+Clean ships, dirty tramp ships, half-naked niggers—a
+shadow dance.... They dance south—out of
+doors—white in a pavilion in one field, blacks, browns,
+high browns, velvet-browns in a pavilion in the next
+field—but one ...</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oh, ma banjo dog!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>... Give us a song, Jack—a dance—the gumbo
+drift. Come, the night is hot....</p>
+
+<p>Nigger girls in the streets, nigger women, nigger men.
+There is a brown cat lurking in the shadow of a building.
+“Come, brown puss—come and get your
+cream.” The men who work on the docks in New
+Orleans have slender flanks like running horses, broad
+shoulders, loose, heavy lips hanging down—faces
+like old monkeys sometimes—bodies like young gods—sometimes.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_199">199</span>On Sundays—when they go to church,
+or to a bayou baptizing, the brown girls do sure cut
+loose with the colors—gaudy nigger colors on nigger
+women making the streets flame—deep purples, reds,
+yellows, green like young corn-shoots coming up.
+They sweat. The skin colors brown, golden yellow,
+reddish brown, purple brown. When the sweat runs
+down high brown backs the colors come out and dance
+before the eyes. Flash that up, you silly painters,
+catch it dancing. Song-tones in words, music in words—in
+colors, too. Silly American painters! They
+chase a Gauguin shadow to the South Seas.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I shall not add any comments to this beautifully
+colored piece, recalling, at once, both Gauguin, Matisse
+and Baudelaire, with the addition of a jazz band. The
+man who wrote this is certainly one of the greatest artists
+in words of American literature, if not the greatest
+and the most modern. If young America succeeds in
+creating an art of the New World, as original as that of
+the old one, she will owe it to Sherwood Anderson, as
+to her truest literary pathfinder. He may not be himself
+completely emancipated yet from his native loam.
+He looks very much like a faun fighting to disentangle
+himself from his dual nature, but as a colorist and a
+musician it is difficult to dispute him the first rank.
+Consumptive American fiction owes to him at least real
+flesh and blood. That he is a sensuous mystic can be concluded
+from his very definition of art. He calls art “a
+perfume issuing from the truth of things through the fingers
+of an humble man filled with love.” Baudelaire,
+Rimbaud, Verlaine and Mallarmé, the founders of modern
+æsthetics, would certainly have endorsed this programme
+which gratifies harmoniously both the body and the soul.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_200">200</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">
+ CHAPTER IX
+ <br>
+ <i>James Branch Cabell and the Escape to Poictesme</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Amidst the triumph of realism, James Branch
+Cabell’s romantic works seem at first almost phenomenal
+in contemporary American fiction. They are
+interesting as an attempt to restore the imaginative
+element to the American novel. Although the romantic
+novel has never been extinct in America, there had
+been a very thin line drawn between realism and fiction.
+The growth of the realistic novel had been a natural
+reaction against sentimentalism.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_50_50" href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
+
+<p>As the puritanical tyranny became more strict and
+more imperious, the distinction between the <i>genres</i> was
+lost. Puritanism forbade the painting of life as it is.
+Why should it be any more indulgent to fiction? Based
+on a system of repression, it would seem <i>a priori</i> destined
+to accord well with romanticism, which is of itself
+based on statements contrary to fact and opposed to an
+exact and scientific presentation of life—a presentation
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_201">201</span>full of threats for the victims of scruples, of floating
+anxiety and soul-fear. As I have shown, it is mainly in
+W. D. Howells’ work that this confusion between realism
+and fiction occurred. Howells, and the popular
+novelists after him, so thoroughly confused the issues
+that it became impossible to distinguish between the
+two. The American novelists, unencumbered with
+imaginative powers, and moralists above all, tried to succeed
+in the impossible task of giving to reality the semblance
+of fiction. The result of their efforts is a bastard
+<i>genre</i>, still triumphant to-day in countless magazines
+and in the “movies.” Fictitious realism would be an
+appropriate definition for the greater number of writers
+who pander to public taste in America.</p>
+
+<p>The nearer we come to the present, the more we notice
+the inability of American writers to imitate Hawthorne’s
+admirable realism in psychology. It was
+James Branch Cabell’s ambition to restore romanticism
+to its former rights, by ridding it of exaggerated realism
+on the one hand, and of Puritanism on the other. From
+this point of view his work is most significant. The
+attempt to give to American literature a new romantic
+form of fiction could succeed only if the ground were
+cleared. Cabell’s work presents itself in a double
+aspect; first as a revolt against realism, secondly as an
+anti-Puritan Declaration of Independence.</p>
+
+<p>This effort was doubly heroic and it has been amply
+compensated for by its success. On one hand, it was
+necessary to defend and maintain the rights of imagination
+in a period of overflowing realism, and on the
+other to claim for that very imagination all the rights
+usurped by the realists in a Puritan country. That,
+then, is what the novelist has been able to accomplish.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_202">202</span></p>
+
+<p>James Branch Cabell is of Southern origin. From an
+old local stock, he was born in Richmond, Virginia, in
+1879. He was educated at William and Mary College,
+where he taught Greek and French. Like most contemporary
+American writers, he went through the
+journalistic mill and then began doing literary work.
+He traveled in France, Ireland and England. Like
+Anatole France, he is a genealogist and an antiquarian.
+His taste for legends, for folklore and heraldry, turned
+him into an explorer of archives. He began with short
+stories and poems, followed by two or three novels
+whose scene is laid in his native land. Though his first
+chronologically, these early books have been relegated
+to the background by the author. He took them up
+again and revised them to make them fit into the cycle
+of Dom Manuel and Jurgen, the most recent form of
+epic cycles.</p>
+
+<p>Here is at last an American novelist with a culture
+and a style of his own, a conscious artist and a man of
+letters. Most of the new American fiction writers are
+indifferent to style. They write badly. They are
+often incorrect, trivial and obscure. Their last worry
+is the attainment of the beautiful in writing.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_51_51" href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> Cabell,
+on the contrary, is an adept at artistic writing, the only
+prose writer in American fiction who cultivates style
+for its own sake. That alone would be enough to make
+him original and interesting for the reader who has just
+plodded drearily through the desert of “An American
+Tragedy,” for instance. He was fed on the English
+classics, especially those of the Renaissance. At times
+he is a deft imitator and parodist of Spenser, to whom
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_203">203</span>he owes much of his flowery and savory style, and a
+great admirer of the English writers of the seventeenth
+and eighteenth centuries. He likes to call himself a
+classic, classic in style, though romantic in inspiration.
+But, above all, his chief gift is imagination. At last
+we are given a holiday from Theodore Dreiser’s triviality,
+Sinclair Lewis’ truculence and Anderson’s mystic
+stammering. Cabell’s ideal is harmony, clearness and
+grace. He moves within fiction as if it were a natural
+element and not as in a quarry where he is painfully
+hewing out stones. In an epoch when American writers
+hitched their wagons more and more to matter-of-fact
+subjects, he cut the moorings and gave free play to his
+fancy.</p>
+
+<p>Everything in his books is fictitious, the subject, the
+style, the characters, the costumes and the settings.
+He has invented a new folklore, a new mythology. He
+has discovered unknown countries, the land of Poictesme,
+a fabulous kingdom well devised to puzzle us as
+it is located, on a map of Cabell’s making, halfway
+between reality and dream. As fictitious as Spenser’s,
+Shakespeare’s or Honoré d’Urfé’s cosmography, the land
+of Poictesme, where Dom Manuel and Jurgen deport
+themselves in sadness or glee, is none the less presented to
+us as a real country somewhere in Southern France. Its
+half fictitious, half real boundaries are, on the north,
+England of Arthurian times, on the south, the vague
+Asia Minor of Guy de Lusignan and Melissinda, princess
+of Tripoli. The novelist has been kind enough to
+design for the ignorant a map of Dom Manuel’s domains.
+According to the map, the land of Poictesme stretches
+along the Mediterranean, between Aigues-Mortes and
+Cette. Its physical frontiers are, to the west, the city
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_204">204</span>of Nîmes, and to the east, the town of Castres in Languedoc.
+Let the professional geographer challenge
+James Branch Cabell’s topography if he wants. Poictesme
+includes under fictitious names the foot-hills of
+the Cévennes, where we may recognize the haunts and
+“high places” of Florian de Puysange. The author
+was not content with inventing a new land. He
+crowned a dynasty, which until then was little known to
+historians. He made up a genealogy which I shall not
+follow in all of its ramifications, and which stretches
+from Sorrisonde in Poictesme to Lichfield, Virginia
+(U. S. A.). A genealogist by taste and profession, the
+author has taken visible pleasure in linking together all
+his novels with the chain of a pedigree beginning with
+Dom Manuel the Great and ending with Felix Kennaston.
+In consequence his work presents itself like a
+huge <i>Comédie humaine</i> or a new Rougon-Macquart epic
+issuing forth from an ancestry of mixed French, English
+and American blood, a startling and most romantic
+alliance. History and legend are fused and confused
+in an amazing manner in Cabell’s books. He revived
+medieval chivalry in a modern travesty full of piquant
+anachronisms.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_52_52" href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
+
+<p>It took all the erudition of a modern writer and the
+most refined humor to brew folklore, legend and history
+together, and to embroil geography and history with
+such an irreverent finesse. In the cycle of Dom Manuel
+and Jurgen, the gods of ancient mythology, the saints
+of the Christian calendar, the fairies, the magicians and
+the demons of the Fable, joust pell-mell as in a masquerade.
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_205">205</span>Cabell went even farther. Not content with
+parodying legends he invented new ones to which his
+erudition succeeded in giving all the signs of verisimilitude.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The inhabitants of Poictesme are medieval in garb
+and modern in psychology. They went to school with
+Rabelais, Voltaire and Anatole France. Here is at last
+an American writer who can think freely and who does
+not ignore <i>gaie science</i>. Cabell’s philosophy is as
+attractive and fanciful as the land of Poictesme but
+there is an acumen of truth under his fancy. It is the
+philosophy of a man of imagination who cannot digest
+truth without many bits of salt. It has been propounded
+<i>ex professo</i> in two suggestive books, “Beyond
+Life,” and “Straws and Prayer-books.” Cabell does
+not lead a direct attack against Puritanism, but he uses
+backhand Parthian arrows which are none the less
+deadly. He leaves his visiting card in passing through
+Philistia and the Kingdom of Mother Dunce. He
+speaks freely and little respectfully of Demagogy, and
+makes frequent and transparent allusions to current
+events.</p>
+
+<p>This poet is a satirist. His warfare against Philistinism
+has taken the form of a defense of fiction.</p>
+
+<p>He considers fiction as a semi-divine impulse, or what
+he calls a <i>demi-urge</i>. In the invention of fiction he sees
+the starting point of all human activities. According
+to him, civilization proceeded from this impulse which
+makes us wish to dream and to create a world more
+beautiful, more just, than, or at least different from, the
+one in which we are living. In the name of this romantic
+instinct, he hit simultaneously the Puritans and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_206">206</span>realists, the former because they fear and try to suppress
+fiction and imagination, the latter because they
+limit them and their rights. This is an interesting reaction
+and a timely one. It should be remembered by
+all those among us who feel that realism has almost
+overdone itself and that a revival of imagination would
+best serve the aims of art. Is not the coupling of the
+words <i>realism</i> and <i>fiction</i> a contradiction in terms?
+Cabell suggests that we take the novel back to its heroic
+and adventurous origins. He refuses to believe in
+realism, in the first place because the romantic instinct
+causes men to dislike life as it is, and to dream of it as
+being different in an effort to escape from it. Furthermore,
+according to him, the essential process of realistic
+fiction is in obvious contradiction with facts.</p>
+
+<p>“You assume,” says Cabell to the veritists, “that any
+literature worthy of the name must be faithful to reality
+and reproduce it without any further increment. Yet
+you refuse to life one of its most outstanding characteristics,
+the taste, the deep need of conceiving itself different
+from what it is. Are you being <i>real</i> and scientific
+in grasping and reproducing only physical facts, in a
+world where everything, even the reception of a letter
+or the arrangement of a dinner, is subjective? There
+are no facts without an emotion around them, no circumstances
+without a personal preference expressed on
+their account. What is true of life is still truer of literature.
+Realism in writing cannot exist and never
+existed. Take the most hardened and the most convinced
+of all realists, Gustave Flaubert. His Emma
+Bovary is minutely observed and that is just why she
+is unreal, as unreal as was Flaubert’s perception of the
+outside world. The realists assume the task of presenting
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_207">207</span>to us, in a so-called objective and detached manner
+the incidents of life as seen from the intellectual angle,
+but there are no such incidents. Realism as a literary
+method is unreal. Whilst trying to present our contemporaries
+as they are, it is far from resembling real
+life. Life is more charitable than the realists. It
+presents things and people to us as we wish that they
+might be. Fiction is faithful to life because it does not
+accept it as it is. It looks upon it with grave misgivings,
+as an extremely commonplace and worthless event.
+Beauty can only be attained by an elimination of the
+trivial. Life is such a bore! Imagination alone can
+give a value to the world. The solution of the problem
+of life is not understanding, but escape, and the more
+romantic the escape the better. Not to live, but to
+dream, is the question. Fiction is the only source of
+those blessed illusions which Ibsen called <i>vital lies</i> and
+which he thought it his duty as a realist to challenge.”</p>
+
+<p>It would be worth while to dwell on this original
+defense of fiction. As I have attempted to show in the
+different chapters of this book, romantic evasion plays
+a primordial part in the American novel to-day. It is
+the natural result of the inhibitions which torture the
+Puritans. Like the characters of Hawthorne, Dreiser,
+Anderson and Sinclair Lewis, those of Cabell are runaways.
+The escape from moral and social tyranny
+forms the chief theme of all his books. They contain a
+long list of evasions. Dom Manuel, count of Poictesme,
+suffered from a fit of self-conceit which caused
+him to spend his time giving life to those figures of earth
+which he made in his own image. But, little by little,
+an obscure instinct took him away from his selfish occupation.
+He withdrew from his mistresses, his sorcerers,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_208">208</span>his family, and finally tired of the government of his
+country. He gladly mounted the black charger of
+Death and went to see if he could find at last a true
+picture of himself in the water of the Styx. Perion de
+la Forest, Demetrios and Ashaverus, took a similar
+flight in “Domnei.” The three lovers of Melisande
+lost their faith in love and deserted their dame to marry
+Freedom. Florian de Puysange, in “The High Place,”
+obtained the favors of Melior, a fairy, at the peril of his
+life, but he soon declared that all amorous gratifications
+were idle and died disenchanted. The most famous
+evasion, since the days of Latude, was that of Jurgen,
+the pawnbroker turned emperor and pope, and who
+finally evades heaven and hell in order to return to his
+shrew and to his pawnshop. Evasion through passion,
+or evasion through dreams, the one bitter, the other a
+sham but a peace-bringer,—what else is there in life,
+except routine?</p>
+
+<p>In spite of their disillusionments and their romantic
+failures, Cabell’s heroes never repented their waking
+dreams. They would do it all over again, if they could.
+They fail in their search but the thrill was worth the
+trouble of the journey. They hug only ghosts in the
+dark, but they went through the dark, and enjoyed
+the trip.</p>
+
+<p>The author of “Jurgen” connects this craving for
+fiction with a primordial human instinct which he considers
+as being the same force which actuates all life.
+The world in which his people move is not a world for
+the Puritans. Everything in it is sensually refined and
+steeped in voluptuousness. The Jurgens, the Dom
+Manuels and the Florian de Puysanges are little
+troubled with their consciences. Does not Jurgen go so
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_209">209</span>far as to make of conscience an attribute of the damned?
+Cabell opposes to the grim universe of the Puritans the
+land of Courtesy, and what he calls the Utopia of Gallantry.
+This Cabellian country resembles Rabelais’
+Abbey of Thélème whose door flashed with the radiant
+motto “Do just as you please.” In this delectable
+country, we are told:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The wisest may well unbend occasionally, to give
+conscience a half-holiday, and procure a passport to
+this delectable land. True, there are, as always in
+travel, the custom-house regulations to be observed:
+in this realm exist no conscientious scruples, no probity,
+no religion, no pompous notions about altruism, not
+any sacred tie of any sort, and such impedimenta will
+be confiscated at the frontier. We are entering a territory
+wherein ethics and ideals are equally contraband....
+It is a carefree land, where life, untrammeled
+by the restrictions of moral codes, untoward
+weather, limited incomes or apprehension of the police,
+has no legitimate object save the pursuit of progress
+and refinement.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Let us now enter Cocaigne.</p>
+
+<p>The suzerain lord of the estate is the great sire Dom
+Manuel, count of Poictesme. We find him enthroned
+on the threshold of the Cabellian saga, in a book called
+“Figures of Earth.” It is difficult to summarize Cabell’s
+novels. In epic fashion they are composed of a
+long string of episodes and cantos. Before he became the
+lord of Poictesme, Manuel began life as a plain herder of
+pigs. In his leisure moments he used to model little
+clay figures. One day a stranger passed by and admired
+Manuel’s handsome countenance. How could
+such a fine fellow be a pig herder? Let him arise and
+march to adventure. Upon a mountain, guarded by
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_210">210</span>monsters, the magician Miramon Lluagor holds the
+princess Gisele captive. She awaits a Saint George to
+free her and by loving her to inherit the treasures of
+Miramon. So Manuel departs like another Siegfried.
+He climbs the mountain, frees Gisele and ... does not
+marry her. At the foot of the enchanted castle he had
+met the mysterious Niafer who helped him to fight
+Miramon’s enchantments. He marries Niafer instead
+of the beautiful princess. It is not easy to say why, for
+Cabell’s allegories are often obscure, and I leave the
+trouble to pick their precise meaning to scholars. Did
+the author want to suggest that between what Emerson
+called <i>first</i> and <i>second</i> thoughts, between <i>tuitions</i> and
+<i>intuitions</i>, a wise man will “think twice” and choose the
+latter, and so did Manuel? Whatever may be the case,
+Dom Manuel has now started on his crusade.</p>
+
+<p>We follow him in wonderland among the most
+pleasant gambols of the writer’s fancy. After being
+delayed at the foot of the mountain by Miramon’s
+enchantments, they come to the magic castle on the top.
+And then the tale tells how Manuel freed princess
+Gisele; how he gave her up for his good companion
+Niafer; how selfish Manuel surrendered Niafer to the
+rider of the Pale Horse; how he made Figures of Earth;
+how, in order to give them life, he conquered the magician
+Freydis; how he missed Niafer; how he brought
+her back to life with the help of the Head of Misery;
+how he won back the kingdom of Poictesme; how he
+had a daughter named Melisande; how he escaped the
+witchcraft of Alienor and Freydis; and how he finally
+surrendered himself to Grandfather Death who took
+him over to the river Styx on his black charger, that he
+might see his real image in the water.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_211">211</span></p>
+
+<p>The novelist never allows humor and parody to conceal
+his serious purpose. Dom Manuel is a most
+dramatic and suggestive figure, half fictitious, half real.
+He impersonates Cabell’s views on the conflict between
+life and dreams. The last chapters of “Figures of
+Earth” recall some of the most beautiful medieval
+allegories. I quote as an example the scene where
+Grandfather Death calls on Dom Manuel to take him
+away to the subterranean world:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“It is strange,” says Dom Manuel, “to think that
+everything I am seeing was mine a moment since, and
+it is queer too to think of what a famous fellow was this
+Manuel the Redeemer, and of the fine things he did,
+and it is appalling to wonder if all the other applauded
+heroes of mankind are like him. Oh, certainly, Count
+Manuel’s achievements were notable and such as were
+not known anywhere before, and men will talk of them
+for a long while. Yet, looking back—now that this
+famous Count of Poictesme means less to me—why
+I seem to see only the strivings of an ape reft of his tail,
+and grown rusty at climbing, who has reeled blunderingly
+from mystery to mystery, with pathetic makeshifts,
+not understanding anything, greedy in all
+desires, and always honeycombed with poltroonery.
+So in a secret place his youth was put away in exchange
+for a prize that was hardly worth the having; and the
+fine geas which his mother laid upon him was exchanged
+for the common geas of what seems expected.”</p>
+
+<p>“Such notions,” replied Grandfather Death, “are
+entertained by many of you humans in the lightheaded
+time of youth. Then common sense arises like a light,
+formless cloud about your doings, and you half forget
+these notions. Then I bring darkness.”</p>
+
+<p>“In that quiet dark, my friend, it may be I shall
+again become the Manuel whom I remember, and I
+may get back again my own undemonstrable ideas,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_212">212</span>in place of the ideas of other persons, to entertain me
+in that darkness. So let us be going thither.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very willingly,” said Grandfather Death; and he
+started toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Now pardon me,” says Manuel, “but in Poictesme
+the Count of Poictesme goes first in any company.
+It may seem to you an affair of no importance, but
+nowadays I concede the strength as well as the foolishness
+of my accustomed habits, and all my life long I
+have gone first. So do you ride a little way behind me,
+friend, and carry this shroud and napkin, till I have
+need of them.”</p>
+
+<p>Then the Count armed and departed from Storisende,
+riding on the black horse, in gold armor, and carrying
+before him his shield whereon was blazoned the rampant
+and bridled stallion of Poictesme and the motto
+<i>Mundus vult decipi</i>. Behind him was Grandfather
+Death on the white horse, carrying the Count’s grave-clothes
+in a neat bundle. They rode toward the sunset,
+and against the yellow sunset each figure showed
+jet black.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Dom Manuel is dead, but we shall meet his lineage in
+every hero of the cycle. The head of the Poictesme
+dynasty will outlive himself in his descendants. His
+daughter Melicent or Melisande, is the heroine of the
+second part of the saga called “Domnei,” or “the Cult
+of Ladies.” This is the most perfect collection of
+stories ever written by the author. It is once more a
+fairy tale, a very fine legend embellished with ironic
+traits. Rémy de Gourmont would have called it a
+masterpiece of dissociation. The American novelist,
+like Anatole France, has the talent of being at the
+same time ironic and naïve, and of dressing a disillusioned
+wisdom in fairy garb. “Domnei,” like “Figures
+of Earth,” tells of a great love ending in disappointment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_213">213</span></p>
+
+<p>Perion de la Forest is in love with Melisande. Both
+travel to far-away countries in pursuit of adventure and
+they fight many fights in pagan lands. Are these lands
+Byzantine or Saracenic; are we in Constantinople or
+in Palestine; in the Middle Ages or during the Renaissance?
+Who can tell? Perion and Melisande recall
+to mind Geoffroy Rudel and Melissinde in Edmond
+Rostand’s “Princesse Lointaine,” but “Domnei” ends
+in sarcasms and not in romantic embraces. It is the
+story of three men, a Christian, a pagan, and a Jew, all
+in love with the same woman, or rather with the idea
+which they form of her. Each of them voluntarily
+wrecks his chances of happiness as soon as he sees that
+he can attain it. This again seems paradoxical and a
+little confusing. Had not the author decisively taken
+the side of romance against everything else in the world?
+Why should the romantic impulse thus abandon the
+three lovers? And why should Cabell weave these
+beautiful legends just to take pleasure in ruining them
+with his own hands? Doubtless evasion is better than
+repression, but the artificial heavens created by the
+author’s imagination are somewhat too attractive to be
+rejected with such light-heartedness. Yet with what
+zest these heroes of his run away from them! But let
+us return to Melisande and Perion de la Forest. They
+have been made prisoners by the pagan consul Demetrios.
+Perion is free, but Demetrios keeps Melisande.
+She bought Perion’s freedom by giving herself to the
+pagan. She is to be Demetrios’ captive for many long
+years. This Demetrios is not an altogether disagreeable
+pagan. He really loves Melisande who tries her
+best to tame him. But one day he tears himself away
+from her. Through a sudden intuition he feels the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_214">214</span>uselessness of love-making, and goes away. Melisande
+had a third lover, the Jew Ashaverus; he too is caught
+for a while by the allurement of the Eternal Feminine,
+and he too, in the end, is a runaway from love. Perion
+has won over his rivals. After a bloody encounter he
+finds Melisande still faithful to his memory and both
+try to love each other according to courtly etiquette.
+But, alas! how little reality resembles dreams! Perion
+has found Melisande, but the Faraway Princess has
+vanished to make place for the rather commonplace
+woman whom Perion marries, because if you cannot
+have the entire ideal you may just as well be content
+with a few crumbs. “Domnei” preaches the same
+lesson that we find in “Jurgen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Domnei” is a book deep with meaning and very
+artistic in form. The three lovers of Melisande make a
+very dramatic group. The narrative never lags and
+spread through it are such charming bits of fantasy as
+the following, which deals with Melisande’s gardens in
+a singing style, mellow as the sound of a lute:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Indeed the Women’s Garden on this morning lacked
+nothing to delight each sense. Its hedges were of
+flowering jessamine; its walkways were spread with
+new sawdust tinged with crocus and vermilion, and
+with mica beaten into a powder: and the place was
+rich in fruit-bearing trees and welling waters. The
+sun shone, and birds chaunted merrily to the right
+hand and to the left. Dog-headed apes, sacred to the
+moon, were chattering in the trees. There was a
+statue in this place, carved out of black stone, in the
+likeness of a woman, having enamelled eyes and three
+rows of breasts, with the lower part of her body confined
+in a sheath; and upon the glistening pedestal of
+this statue chameleons sunned themselves with distended
+throats. Around about Melicent were nodding
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_215">215</span>armaments of roses and gillyflowers and narcissi and
+amaranths, and many violets and white lilies, and other
+flowers of all kinds and colors.</p>
+
+<p>To Melicent the world seemed very lovely. Here
+was a world created by Eternal Love that people might
+serve love in it not at all unworthily. Here were
+anguishes to be endured, and time and human frailty
+and temporal hardship—all for love to mock at; a
+sea or two for love to sever, a man-made law or so for
+love to override, a shallow wisdom for love to deny,
+in exultance that these ills at most were only corporal
+hindrance. This done, you have earned the right to
+come—come hand-in-hand—to heaven whose liege-lord
+was Eternal Love.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Melicent, who knew that Perion loved her.</p>
+
+<p>She sat on a stone bench. She combed her golden
+hair, not heeding the more coarse gray hairs which
+here and there were apparent nowadays. A peacock
+came, and watched her with bright, hard, small eyes;
+and he craned his glistening neck this way and that
+way, as though he were wondering at this other shining
+and gaily colored creature, who seemed so happy.</p>
+
+<p>She did not dare to think of seeing Perion again.
+Instead, she made because of him a little song, which
+had not any words, so that it is not possible here to retail
+this song.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Melicent, who knew that Perion loved her.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I now come to “Jurgen.” It is Cabell’s great book,
+published in 1919; it was censored almost immediately
+and eagerly sought by book collectors. Jurgen was
+born in Poictesme in the time of Dom Manuel, but the
+scene of the novel is laid in dreamland. It recalls the
+voyages of Saint Brendan and Dante. I shall try my
+best to disentangle the real from the fanciful in the
+book. “Jurgen” is the story of a youth of Poictesme
+by that name. He was full of ambition. Everybody
+predicted for him a career of great deeds and amorous
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_216">216</span>exploits. Instead, Jurgen settled down; he married
+dame Lisa, a matter-of-fact woman, and he opened a
+pawnshop. One day dame Lisa disappeared and as he
+missed his domestic comfort Jurgen made up his mind
+to go after her. He came to a cave on Amneran Heath
+and here the fantastic story begins.</p>
+
+<p>It appears that dame Lisa was a witch, and Jurgen
+suspected the Devil as being her kidnaper. Jurgen
+enters the cave and for several hundred pages we follow
+him in the subterranean world. The author’s imagination
+winds round and round. It is impossible to follow
+it in all its meanderings. Led by the centaur Nessus,
+Jurgen travels in the nether world. He is taken back
+to his heyday and, younger by twenty years, he soon
+forgets dame Lisa to explore the land of the dead on his
+own account. Loved by witches, vampires and queens,
+he marries a Hamadryad and flirts with Helen of Troy.
+From escapade to escapade he finally finds himself in hell,
+where he meets the shadow of his father. He interviews
+Koshchei, the master “who made things as they are.”
+Quiet at last after so many marvelous adventures, he
+comes back to his Penelope, to his slippers and his hearth.</p>
+
+<p>“Jurgen” caused a scandal in America. It reads like
+the sixth book of the “Æneid” adapted by Casanova.
+Eroticism dominates the book, but it is so mingled
+with humor that it is inoffensive. There are lengthy
+digressions, but the interest never flags. Jurgen is a
+most sympathetic rogue. It is hard to see him surrender
+to the commonplace at the end of his long
+journey, like an ordinary Carol Kennicott or a George
+Babbitt. From being emperor and pope he descends
+to a pawnbroker again without much ado. But let us
+judge Jurgen on his faith and not on his works. When
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_217">217</span>he finds dame Lisa he cannot believe that he ever
+dreamed. But dream he did for a very long while and
+he will never forget it. Jurgen had dreamed enough to
+find out that, after all, there was not such great difference
+between dreaming and staying awake. In wonderland
+he met with the same petty passions, cares and
+prejudices which mark this world. Why go so far for so
+little? And yet, romance is better than routine and
+who knows if Jurgen will not start again?</p>
+
+<p>The allegories in “Jurgen” are most suggestive, in
+particular those which deal with Jurgen’s voyage to
+hell. Neither Voltaire nor Anatole France could have
+surpassed Cabell in conveying a moral lesson through a
+piquant anecdote. Jurgen has nothing of the Puritan in
+him. He is as heathenish as Don Juan. He never loses
+his good humor or his temper amidst his thousand and
+one adventures. His wit resembles Figaro’s. The conclusion
+of the book, where Jurgen interviews both Satan
+and Koshchei, is a pert satire on human frailty.</p>
+
+<p>Cabell’s poetic irony displayed itself best in “Jurgen.”
+As a representative man, Jurgen embodies in
+his person both Don Quixote and Sancho Panza. The
+romantic instincts are checked by his robust and plebeian
+common sense, which he cannot help venting amidst
+his most wonderful adventures. A Yankee afoot on
+Mount Parnassus, he may very well be introduced, such
+as he is, in the episode where he launches on his subterranean
+expedition astride the centaur Nessus:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The cave stretched straight forward, and downward,
+and at the far end was a glow of light. Jurgen
+went on and on, and so came presently to a centaur:
+and this surprised him not a little, because Jurgen knew
+that centaurs were imaginary creatures.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_218">218</span></p>
+
+<p>Certainly they were curious to look at: for here
+was the body of a fine bay horse, and rising from its
+shoulders, the sunburnt body of a young fellow who
+regarded Jurgen with grave and not unfriendly eyes.
+The Centaur was lying beside a fire of cedar and juniper
+wood: near him was a platter containing a liquid with
+which he was anointing his hoofs. This stuff, as the
+Centaur rubbed it in with his fingers, turned the appearance
+of his hoofs to gold.</p>
+
+<p>“Hail, friend,” says Jurgen, “if you be the work
+of God.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your protasis is not good Greek,” observed the
+Centaur, “because in Hellas we did not make such
+reservations. Besides, it is not so much my origin as
+my destination which concerns you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, friend, and whither are you going?”</p>
+
+<p>“To the garden between dawn and sunrise, Jurgen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, now, but that is a fine name for a garden!
+and it is a place I would take joy in seeing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Up upon my back, Jurgen, and I will take you
+thither,” says the Centaur, and heaved to his feet.
+Then said the Centaur, when the pawnbroker hesitated:
+“Because, as you must understand, there is
+no other way. For this garden does not exist, and
+never did exist, in what men humorously called real
+life; so that of course only imaginary creatures such
+as I can enter it.”</p>
+
+<p>“That sounds very reasonable,” Jurgen estimated:
+“but as it happens, I am looking for my wife, whom I
+suspect to have been carried off by a devil, poor fellow!”</p>
+
+<p>And Jurgen began to explain to the Centaur what
+had befallen.</p>
+
+<p>The Centaur laughed. “It may be for that reason
+I am here. There is, in any event, only one remedy
+in this matter. Above all devils—and above all gods,
+they tell me, but certainly above all centaurs—is the
+power of Koshchei the Deathless, who made things as
+they are.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not always wholesome,” Jurgen submitted,
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_219">219</span>“to speak of Koshchei. It seems especially undesirable
+in a dark place like this.”</p>
+
+<p>“None the less, I suspect it is to him you must go for
+justice.”</p>
+
+<p>“I would prefer not doing that,” said Jurgen, with
+unaffected candor.</p>
+
+<p>“You have my sympathy: but there is no question
+of preference where Koshchei is concerned. Do you
+think, for example, that I am frowzing in this underground
+place by my own choice? And knew your
+name by accident?”</p>
+
+<p>Jurgen was frightened a little. “Well, well! but it
+is usually the deuce and all, this doing of the manly
+thing. How, then, can I come to Koshchei?”</p>
+
+<p>“Roundabout,” says the Centaur. “There is never
+any other way.”</p>
+
+<p>“And is the road to this garden roundabout?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, very much so, inasmuch as it circumvents both
+destiny and common sense.”</p>
+
+<p>“Needs must, then,” says Jurgen: “at all events,
+I am willing to taste any drink once.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will be chilled, though, traveling as you are.
+For you and I are going a queer way, in search of justice,
+over the grave of a dream and through the malice
+of time. So you had best put on this shirt over your
+other clothing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed it is a fine snug shining garment, with
+curious figures on it. I accept such raiment gladly.
+And whom shall I be thanking for this kindness, now?”</p>
+
+<p>“My name,” said the Centaur, “is Nessus.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, then, friend Nessus, I am at your service.”
+And in a trice Jurgen was on the Centaur’s back, and
+the two of them had somehow come out of the cave,
+and were crossing Amneran Heath. So they passed
+into a wooded place, where the light of sunset yet lingered,
+rather unaccountably. Now the Centaur went
+westward. And now about the pawnbroker’s shoulders
+and upon his breast and over his lean arms glittered
+like a rainbow the many-colored shirt of Nessus.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_220">220</span></p>
+
+<p>James Branch Cabell took a flight into <i>gaie science</i>
+when he wrote “Jurgen.” The world, according to
+him, is shaped by our thoughts. In the course of his
+earthly, infernal and celestial pilgrimage, Jurgen passed
+through several superimposed spheres: first that of
+reality from which he escaped, then that of fancy and
+dreams, where he lingered a long while. This upper
+world is not purely ideal, nor is it entirely fictitious.
+It is still human, too human, as Nietzsche said. It is
+made of the same stuff as our dreams. Above and
+below there are heaven and hell. If I understand “Jurgen”
+aright, neither the one nor the other is entirely
+unreal. Heaven and hell are man-made fictions. Hell
+is the creation of our pride and of our scruples. When
+he meets his father in the burning pit, Jurgen asks the
+demons why they torment the old man. They tell him
+that they cannot help it because he insists on being
+wicked and getting an appropriate punishment for his
+sins. Heaven also is filled with our pride. It is the
+abode of our highest expectations, a tribute of Koshchei
+to our high idea of ourselves. The only real universe
+is that of Koshchei. It is the world of things as they
+are, and Jurgen does not dwell very long in it. He
+needs his earthly comfort, his warm flannels and his
+carefully prepared soup. So he falls back into the world
+of common sense, the only one where the majority of us
+mortals can live, because <i>gaie science</i> is out of the common
+reach. Once more the author seems to deny us
+the right to enter the land of fiction, which, however,
+he shows us as the only interesting one to live in. Let
+us see if the rôle which he assigned to art in his
+general outlook of things cannot help us to clear the
+contradiction.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_221">221</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">
+ CHAPTER X
+ <br>
+ <i>James Branch Cabell on the High Place</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In James Branch Cabell, the genealogist is barely
+hidden by the philosopher. The author of “Jurgen”
+is the only philosophical novelist in the United States
+to-day. At first glance, he even seems somewhat
+un-American. His fanciful characters dwell in a land
+as unreal as themselves, Poictesme, bordering upon the
+Land of Cocaigne and the Abbey of Thélème. (Who,
+previous to Cabell, had ever dared to raise an Abbey of
+Thélème in the land of the Puritans?) It is not easy
+to find the bonds of connection between the writer and
+his surroundings. His work is very close to European
+and to French models, and evidences at the same time
+a great knowledge of booklore as well as of humanity.</p>
+
+<p>It is necessary to have had a long contact with Cabell
+to realize his true significance; at first, he seems to be
+rather fantastic, but, after some frequentation, one
+discovers the deeper meaning of his writings. His
+ambition was to sketch a sort of epic of human desire.
+His characters, under their various masks, are attempts
+to draw and depict men as conceived in utter liberty.
+Dom Manuel, Jurgen, and their succeeding reincarnations,
+are not Puritan inventions. This was not the
+first time that an inspired American had attempted to
+paint a “personality picture” of man as such. A great
+many novelists had essayed it and had wasted their
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_222">222</span>efforts in the task. The Transcendentalists of New
+England ascribed to the typical man every attribute of
+moral perfection. Emerson, in his famous “Representative
+Men,” tried to delineate the ideal man. He
+conceived him as a contemplative sort of person.
+Emerson had sallies of “gay science.” He did not
+accept the world as it is and tried many times to defeat
+reality. He knew man well and was wary of accepting
+him as he was. Long before Nietszche, he imagined the
+superman, whom he called the <i>homo novus</i>, or the
+<i>plus-man</i>. A prudent man, rather shy and inhibited,
+but capable of thinking daringly, Emerson had some of
+Dom Manuel’s and Jurgen’s characteristics. According
+to him, the ideal man was much less the active hero
+than the thinker climbing up the rarefied summits of
+thought and taking his risks with the self-reliance of a
+conquistador. Emerson, like Cabell, was a transcendental
+realist. He would have sympathized with
+Koshchei, the God of Things-as-They-Are. But
+Emerson’s sensibility was atrophied and suppressed.
+To a large extent he conceived the superman in his
+own image, with a large brain and a very small heart.
+On the other hand, he allowed a large place to dreams,
+to the subconscious elements, and to what he called
+demonology. Dreams played a large part in his
+philosophy; if there ever was a daydreamer besides
+Hawthorne or Alcott in the romantic twilight of
+Concord, he was the one. He was not unaware of the
+phenomena of dual personality, trances and ecstasies.
+His philosophy of history and of the heroes was decidedly
+“Bovaryistic.” Upon this point again the
+confidences of his journals are most curious. He
+confessed to having experienced trances of a mystic and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_223">223</span>orgiastic nature; at times he felt as though he were
+being turned into another person. That sort of
+experience was not infrequent in the Emerson family.
+His brother, Charles Emerson, was also under the
+influence of such spells and his aunt, Mary Moody, was
+a visionary and an authentic <i>clairvoyante</i>. The effects
+caused by inhibition seem to have been quite prevalent
+among the Puritan writers of New England. Take the
+life of Margaret Fuller, for instance. Was there ever
+an example of greater suppression—and more heroic
+attempt to evade it? Her desire for expatriation was
+paid for at the sacrifice of her life.</p>
+
+<p>The number of Dom Manuels, of Jurgens, in American
+letters is countless. Thoreau disguised himself as
+an Indian. Whitman went through every possible
+form of cosmic avatar. Edgar Allan Poe was haunted
+by the dead. A Southerner like Cabell, like him
+fanciful and fantastic, but sad, obsessed by the memory
+of a dear, departed one, his whole life was akin to a
+nightmare. A daydreamer and a somnambulist, he too
+lived in Dreamland, on Fairy Island, and in the domain
+of Arnheim. Had Jurgen been more crafty, had Dom
+Manuel been wiser, had Florian de Puysange been less
+of the <i>roué</i>, they would all have felt at home in Edgar
+Allan Poe’s imaginary fatherland. But Poe did not
+care for allegory. He cultivated dreams for their own
+sake. The fusion between object and subject, the real
+and the ideal, life and dreams, was complete in his
+writings. He never woke up.</p>
+
+<p>The nearer we get to Cabell’s “Jurgen,” the more
+we see the transformation and alteration of the “personality
+picture” or the ideal man in America. The
+Civil War came. The great men of the day were
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_224">224</span>politicians and soldiers,—Grant, Lincoln. Then came
+the “dreadful decade” followed by the advent of the
+realist, Theodore Roosevelt, Edison, Carnegie, Wilson
+and now Henry Ford. Some of these idols were to be
+blasted by Mark Twain’s vengeful irony. But Mark
+Twain himself was destined to prove, through his books,
+that the man of dreams was dead. He buried him
+himself without much respect, but not without incidentally
+damning the whole race of man in his posthumous
+book, “The Mysterious Stranger,” which is a
+veritable challenge to life and to the impossibility of
+its ever bearing supermen.</p>
+
+<p>Praise be to the Lord, “Jurgen” was born in 1919, and
+the rights of imagination were restored. Chivalry, the
+troubadours’ <i>gay saber</i> came back to life in America.</p>
+
+<p>The French eighteenth-century <i>conteurs</i>, Voltaire
+and Anatole France to-day had somebody to talk to in
+the United States.</p>
+
+<p>“The High Place” shows unmistakable traces of
+Anatole France’s influence. There are curious affinities
+between M. d’Astarac and Florian de Puysange.
+Saint Hoprig seems to have been taken out bodily from
+the “Revolt of the Angels,” after having drunk a
+dram or so in the company of Jerôme Coignard. At
+last we have an American novelist frankly going back to
+the source of art and free thought.</p>
+
+<p>The ideal man represented by Jurgen and Dom
+Manuel was reincarnated in the person of Florian de
+Puysange. The book which deals with him is less
+loaded with allegory than the previous one, and its
+philosophy is more superficial. In atmosphere and
+tone it is very French, with an eighteenth-century
+tang. It is a masterpiece of Cabellian irony. Anglo-Saxon
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_225">225</span>countries are richer in humorists than in ironists.
+Irony comes with a certain mobility of the mind, a certain
+dilettantism, a display of the ego with which Anglo-Saxons
+are not very familiar. They are a practical and
+realistic race. Socially, and morally speaking, irony is a
+dangerous weapon. Humor is amusing, but, even when
+it is somber, it remains optimistic. It rests on an
+ethical background. Irony comes with skepticism,
+and skepticism is not popular among Anglo-Saxons.
+Add to this the pressure of public opinion and of social
+constraint. From a certain point of view, irony is an
+equivocation and a game ill tolerated by practical and
+respectable people; yet it is irony which is James
+Branch Cabell’s forte. The story of Florian de
+Puysange is a masterpiece on this score.</p>
+
+<p>“The High Place” may be connected with the saga of
+Dom Manuel and Jurgen. Like “Jurgen,” it is again
+the triumph of a dream.</p>
+
+<p>The time is the sunset of the Roi Soleil. The scene
+is still the mystical kingdom of Poictesme, located in the
+forest of Acaire between the Mediterranean and the
+Cévennes. One afternoon the hero of the book, a ten-year-old
+child, fell asleep in a beautiful garden while
+reading the tales of M. Perrault. A vernal breeze was
+blowing in the park. Florian de Puysange had a dream.
+All of Cabell’s novels begin thus with a plunge into
+dreamland. The transition from consciousness to dream
+in his books is operated through various means, usually
+magical. In this case, Florian de Puysange was bewitched
+by a book, and fell asleep in a beautiful garden.
+Florian was a scion of Jurgen’s line. He inherited
+dreaming. In his dream he finds himself taken to a
+“high place.” The dream is that of a beautiful woman
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_226">226</span>asleep in an enchanted garden. Florian at this time
+was only ten years old, but he was to live his whole life in
+anticipation. Jurgen’s dreams had been retrospective.
+Those of Florian de Puysange took place in the future.</p>
+
+<p>He climbed the slopes of a high mountain, atop of
+which the beautiful Melior, guarded by the Saint Hoprig,
+awaited him. Saint Hoprig, who would have done
+honor even to Anatole France, was a rather broad-minded
+saint. Of course he accomplished miracles
+and aided Florian in conquering Melior. Florian
+married the fairy. Let us interpret this as signifying
+that Florian, freed by sleep from the necessities of
+ordinary life, succeeded in marrying the ideal. The
+story of Florian’s allegorical nuptials is in the author’s
+best manner. He goes back in this to the erotic
+symbolism of “Jurgen.” Here is the marriage scene:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Acaire was old and it had been a forest since there
+was a forest anywhere: and all its denizens came now
+to do honor to the champion who had released them
+from their long sleeping. The elves came in their blue
+low-crowned hats; the gnomes, in red woolen clothes;
+and the kobolds, in brown coats that were covered with
+chips and sawdust. The dryads and other tree spirits
+of course went verdantly appareled: and after these
+came fauns with pointed furry ears, and the nixies with
+green teeth and very beautiful waxen hair, and the
+duergar, whose loosely swinging arms touched the
+ground when they walked, and the queer little rakhna,
+who were white and semi-transparent like jelly, and the
+Bush Gods that were in Acaire the oldest living creatures
+and had quite outlived their divinity. From all
+times and all mythologies they came, and they made a
+tremendous to-do over Florian and the might which
+had rescued them from their centuries of sleeping under
+Melusine’s enchantment.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_227">227</span></p>
+
+<p>From the top of the “high place” Florian can see all
+the country around him:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>He saw the forests lying like dark flung-by scarves
+upon the paler green of cleared fields; he saw the rivers
+as narrow shinings. In one place, very far beneath
+them, a thunderstorm was passing like—of all things
+of this blissful day,—a drifting bride’s veil. Florian
+saw it twinkle with a yellow glow, then it was again a
+floating small white veil. And everywhere the lands
+beneath in graduations of vaporous indistinction.
+Poictesme seemed woven of blue smokes and of green
+mists. It afforded no sharp outline anywhere as his
+gazing passed outward toward the horizon. And there
+all melted bafflingly into a pearl-colored sky: the eye
+might not judge where, earth ending, heaven began in
+that bright and placid radiancy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We shall leave it to Doctor Freud to translate these
+Cabellian symbols literally. They are both erotic and
+poetic:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>First Melior and Florian were given an egg and a
+quince pear: he handed her the fruit, which she ate,
+and the seeds of which she spat out; he took from her
+the egg and broke it. Holy Hoprig, who had tendered
+his resignation as the high-priest of Llaw Gyffes, but
+whose successor had not yet been appointed, then asked
+the bridegroom a whispered question.</p>
+
+<p>Florian was astonished, and showed it. But he answered,
+without comment, “Well, let us say nine times.”</p>
+
+<p>Hoprig divided a cake into nine slices, and placed
+these upon the altar. Afterward Hoprig cut the throat
+of a white hen, and put a little of its blood upon the
+feet of Melior and Florian. The trumpets sounded
+then, as King Helmas came forward, and gave Florian
+a small key.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I shall not tell all the romantic events which followed
+the nuptials of Florian de Puysange with the fairy
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_228">228</span>Melior. Florian was a <i>roué</i>. Born during the reign
+of Louis XIV, his imaginary life took place by anticipation
+during the Regency. No sooner was he married
+than he forgot Melior. The only vestige of loyalty
+remaining in him was that due to his caste. In order
+to obtain Melior, he had, like Faust, to give something
+to the Devil and he had promised his first-born child.
+To the Devil, who in this instance was Mr. Jennicot, he
+had also dedicated as a sort of bonus into the bargain,
+the not very valuable soul of Cardinal Dubois, but the
+Cardinal cheated the Devil.</p>
+
+<p>As a compensation the Marquis de Puysange poisoned
+the Duke of Orleans in the course of an orgy most
+dramatically narrated in the book. Florian now started
+on his career. A sort of Don Juan with a Bluebeard
+complex, he got rid of a long string of women, and would
+have disposed of Melior herself had not Saint Hoprig
+protected her. This protection, as Florian soon found
+out, was of so intimate a nature that it allowed him to
+forfeit his promise to the Devil without committing
+perjury.</p>
+
+<p>But all these incidents are merely a pretext. I
+should do injustice to the author by dwelling upon the
+anecdotic side of his book. “The High Place” is
+essentially notable for the philosophic fancy playing
+through the background of incident. The sub-title,
+“a comedy of disenchantement,” tells the moral to be
+drawn from it. Disenchanted by reality, disenchanted
+by dreams, Florian is a typical Cabellian hero. He is
+double within himself. No sooner has he satisfied his
+wishes than he wishes something else. On this point
+he is no exception to the rule of Dom Manuel and
+Jurgen. And yet he had married a fairy, though one
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_229">229</span>who had come down to earth to become his wife and
+was soon to be with child. How could he help being
+tired of her?</p>
+
+<p>At the end of his trail, Florian tried to build a moral
+system based on the conciliation of contrary elements.
+Just as there were two gods in “Jurgen” (Satan and
+Koshchei), there are two in “The High Place.” Melior
+went back to Fairyland whence she had been drawn by
+Florian’s courting. Mr. Jennicot, the Devil, and St.
+Michael give us the key to the whole story, and it is
+rather disconcerting. Florian’s two patrons, the Devil
+and St. Michael, agree unanimously, in way of conclusion,
+that life is worth only what our dreams make of
+it, and that all dreams are rather inane. What then?
+<i>In vino veritas</i>, proclaims the Devil, quoting his Rabelais,
+and the Archangel Michael does not disapprove.
+Finally, Michael and Satan come so close to each
+other that their faces are confused and that they end up
+by becoming one. Let us listen to the Devil as Professor
+of Philosophy:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Such men as he (Florian) continue to dream, and I
+confess such men are dangerous: for they obstinately
+aspire toward a perfectibility that does not exist, they
+will be content with nothing else; and when your master
+and I do not satisfy the desire which is in their
+dreams, they draw their appalling logical conclusions.
+To that humiliation, such as it is, I answer Drink!
+For the Oracle of Babcuc also—that oracle which the
+little curé of Meudon was not alone in misunderstanding—that
+oracle speaks the true wonder word.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The Archangel Michael wants to know what our
+dreams matter to the angels and the demons:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“They matter much to them,” answers Jennicot.
+“Men go enslaved by this dream of beauty: but
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_230">230</span>never yet have they sought to embody it, whether in
+their wives or in their equally droll works of art, without
+imperfect results, without results that were maddening
+to the dreamer. Men are resolved to know that
+which they may wholeheartedly worship. No, they
+are not bent upon emulating what they worship: it
+is rather that holiness also is a dream which allures
+mankind resistlessly.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Whereupon Saint Michael and Mr. Jennicot, in their
+perplexity, go back to their cups. They have a great
+need of shaking off their thoughts. Man’s dreaming is
+for both of them a topic of foremost importance. Are
+not they produced by it? But to judge by dreamers’
+pace in Cabell’s novels, and by the wreckage of dreams
+strewing their path, what does the future have in store
+for archangels and demons? Jennicot and St. Michael
+console themselves by trying to reconcile their antinomies
+<i>inter pocula</i>, among symbolic cups in which,
+according to the author, life and death, reality and
+dreams, evil and wrong, god and devil, all become
+mixed and lose their identity:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Meanwhile he does not drink, he merely dreams,
+this little Florian,” observes M. Jennicot, who seems
+to be the favorite interpreter of the novelist. “He
+dreams of beauty and of holiness fetched back by him
+to an earth which everywhere fell short of his wishes,
+fetched down by him intrepidly from that imagined
+high place where men attain to their insane desires.
+He dreams of aspiring and joy and color and suffering
+and unreason, and of those quaint taboos which you and
+he call sin, as being separate things, not seeing how all
+blends in one vast cup. Nor does he see, as yet, that
+this blending is very beautiful, when properly regarded
+and very holy when approached without human conceit.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_231">231</span></p>
+
+<p>Then the two faces which bent over Florian were
+somehow blended into one face, and Florian knew that
+these two beings had melted into one person, and that
+this person was prodding him very gently.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Whereupon the dreamer awakes. He is still only ten
+years old and he has lived until thirty in his dream.
+Now the dream is gone. His father, the Comte de Puysange,
+wakes him up. But Florian is not yet through
+with dreaming awake, in spite of the author’s final statement
+that henceforward Florian de Puysange settled
+down, and like Jurgen, descended from heaven to earth.</p>
+
+<p>Thus “The High Place” takes on at the end an
+authentic air of a novel Doctor Faustus. But let us
+reach the last part of the cycle, “The Cream of the Jest,”
+“a comedy of evasions.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The principal character of the book, Felix Kennaston,
+is already known to readers of Cabell; he was the
+ironist in one of his early works, “The Eagle’s Shadow.”
+Kennaston had from remote descent authentic blood of
+Dom Manuel and Jurgen in his veins. The book which
+portrays him is a veritable treatise in romantic disguises.
+It harks back to the thesis unfolded by the author in
+“Beyond Life.” Not satisfied with upholding the
+rights of fiction, Cabell now shows us a writer of fiction
+at work. Are we to see Cabell himself in Felix Kennaston?
+They look very much alike. Kennaston too
+is writing an allegorical saga. One day, while walking
+in his garden, he had stepped upon a little shining metal
+disc which plays an important part in the book. (Each
+one of Cabell’s novels has revolved around some
+talisman or charm.)</p>
+
+<p>Felix Kennaston’s imagination gave a life of its own
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_232">232</span>to this piece of metal. It became a magic seal, the
+Sigil of Scoteia, a Key to Dreamland. Whenever light
+touched it, Kennaston fell into a trance and dreamt
+curious dreams. Thanks to this sigil, he spent his whole
+life dreaming and he was not alone in his dreams. Of
+course he too flirted therein with a fairy, La Belle
+Ettare, beautiful, enchanting, wonderfully accomplished,
+and of whom Kennaston’s wife became reasonably
+jealous. The book is a novel of intrigue only
+incidentally. The real subject is the study of Kennaston’s
+mind at work. Behind him we see the author
+pointing an explanatory finger.</p>
+
+<p>Kennaston did not concern himself with fiction for its
+own sake, but because it opened to him the gates of
+the Unknown. It was his road to spiritual adventure.
+He is an authentic daydreamer. He is not unhappy.
+He has every reason for being satisfied with life as it
+is. He is rich, talented, successful as an author, married
+to an attractive woman; yet he is bored. Bovaryism in
+his case is all the more striking because it is gratuitous.
+Life weighs on his shoulders; like all of Cabell’s heroes,
+he needs adventure, a written if not a real one. We
+find the novelist and the adventurer united in his
+person. Kennaston represents two things: first, the
+common run of man dissatisfied with reality and
+instinctively seeking an escape through dreams, and
+then, the taking to fiction, writing for more complete
+evasion. But let us listen to Kennaston’s complaint
+against reality and his plea in favor of dreams. It is
+he speaking through the mouth of the scribe Horvendile,
+his double; we are reminded of the familiar grievances
+of Carol Kennicott, Babbitt and the characters in
+Dreiser, Anderson and Sinclair Lewis:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_233">233</span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>I find my country an inadequate place in which to
+live.... Oh, many persons live there happily
+enough! or, at worst, they seem to find the prizes and
+the applause of my country worth striving for wholeheartedly.
+But there is that in some of us which gets
+no exercise there; and we struggle blindly, with impotent
+yearning, to gain outlet for great powers which
+we know that we possess, even though we do not know
+their names. And so, we dreamers wander at adventure
+to Storisende—oh, and into more perilous realms
+sometimes!—in search of a life that will find employment
+for every faculty we have. For life in my country
+does not engross us utterly. We dreamers waste
+there at loose ends, waste futilely.... Oh, yes! it
+may be that we are not sane; could we be sure of that,
+it would be a comfort. But, as it is, we dreamers only
+know that life in my country does not content us, and
+never can content us. So we struggle, for a tiny dear-bought
+while, into other and fairer-seeming lands in
+search of—we know not what! And after a little,
+we must go back into my country and live there as best
+we may.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This is, in a nutshell, the plight of all the inhibited
+and repressed people with whom we have met in the
+American <i>gesta</i> told by the American novelists of to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the summary of Felix Kennaston’s adventures.
+We understand now the failure of Cabell’s
+heroes to make their escape. So their return to the
+land described by the scribe Horvendile occurs only
+after a long circumnavigation. Disgusted with reality,
+a Kennaston will not capitulate without having
+experienced every possible form of dream. He has no
+illusions about life, as he tells La Belle Ettare, but he is
+anxious to wreak a beautiful vengeance on it. If he
+cannot live as he wants, he will live as he may. Sick of
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_234">234</span>men, he will hobnob in the company of great heroes.
+In a sequence of curious chapters, Kennaston, besides
+holding familiar converse with his fictitious Egeria,
+thanks to his magic seal, takes huge delight in imaginary
+reincarnations. We find him at Whitehall
+chatting with Cromwell, at Vaux-le-Vicomte during a
+fête given by Fouquet, at the Conciergerie where he is
+waiting to be called to the guillotine:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Nightly he went adventuring with Ettare: and they
+saw the cities and manners of many men, to an extent
+undreamed-of by Ithaca’s mundivagant king; and
+among them even those three persons who had most
+potently influenced human life....</p>
+
+<p>For once, in an elongated room with buff-colored
+walls—having scarlet hangings over its windows, and
+seeming larger than it was in reality, because of its
+many mirrors—they foregathered with Napoleon;
+on the evening of his coronation: the emperor of half-Europe
+was fretting over an awkward hitch in the
+day’s ceremony, caused by his sisters’ attempt to avoid
+carrying the Empress Josephine’s train; and he was
+grumbling because the old French families continued to
+ignore him as a parvenu.</p>
+
+<p>In a neglected orchard sun-steeped and made drowsy
+by the murmur of bees, they talked with Shakespeare;
+the playwright, his nerves the worse for the preceding
+night’s potations, was peevishly complaining of the
+meager success of his later comedies, worrying over
+Lord Pembroke’s neglect of him, and trying to concoct
+a masque in the style of fat Ben Jonson, since that was
+evidently what the theater-patronizing public wanted.
+And they were with Pontius Pilate in Jerusalem, on the
+evening of a day when the sky was black and the earth
+had trembled; and Pilate, benevolent and replete with
+supper, was explaining the latest theories concerning
+eclipses and earthquakes to his little boy, and chuckling
+with fond pride in the youngster’s intelligent questions.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_235">235</span></p>
+
+<p>“The Cream of the Jest” is another treatise on day-dreaming
+and absent-mindedness. One day, alas!
+Kennaston’s wife threw in the wastebasket the magic
+disc which was his key to wonderland. That was the
+death blow to his flights into romance and the end of
+his romantic career. His wife, too, died in a mysterious
+manner, probably punished by the fairies for being too
+prosaic. We learn at the end of the book as a sort of
+consolation over the loss of the talisman and an assurance
+as to its origin—a signal revenge of reality upon
+dreams—that the sigil of Scoteia was but the cover of
+a pot of cold cream!</p>
+
+<p>Cabell buries Kennaston without much ceremony
+after calling him down for his evasions. Yet the parting
+word is still in favor of dreams. From the scientific
+point of view Kennaston is not hard to explain. His
+was a case of auto-suggestion, but this explanation does
+not suffice for the novelist. The case of Felix Kennaston
+was not an isolated one. Felix was a representative
+man. He impersonated the conflict between
+fiction and romance: To Kennaston</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>the dream alone could matter—his proud assurance
+that life was not a blind and aimless business, not all
+a hopeless waste and confusion; and that he, this gross,
+weak animal, could be strong and excellent and wise,
+and his existence a pageant of beauty and nobility.
+To prove this dream was based on a delusion would be
+no doubt an enjoyable retaliation for Kennaston’s
+being so unengaging to the eye and so stupid to talk
+to; but it would make the dream no whit less lovely
+or less dear to him—or to the rest of us either.</p>
+
+<p>For it occurred to me that his history was, in essentials,
+the history of our race, thus far. All I advanced
+for or against him, equally, was true of all men that
+ever lived.... For it is in this inadequate flesh that
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_236">236</span>each of us must serve his dream; and so, must fail in
+the dream’s service, and must parody that which he
+holds dearest. To this we seem condemned, being
+what we are. Thus, one and all, we play false to the
+dream, and it evades us, and we dwindle into responsible
+citizens. And yet always thereafter—because
+of many abiding memories—we know, assuredly, that
+the way of flesh is not a futile scurrying through dining
+rooms and offices and shops and parlors, and thronged
+streets and restaurants, “and so to bed” ...</p>
+
+<p>It was in appropriate silence, therefore, that I
+regarded Felix Kennaston as a parable. The man was
+not merely very human; he was humanity. And I
+reflected that it is only by preserving faith in human
+dreams that we may, after all, perhaps some day make
+them come true.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Such is the moral of “The Cream of the Jest,” a
+summarizing of Cabell’s ironistic philosophy. It is
+decidedly Nietszchean. In a Puritan land he conceives
+life as a work of art and sees in Art the highest form of
+life to transcend itself. This he did with fine daring and
+great poetic feeling in a chapter of the same book, “The
+Evolution of a Vestryman.” In pages filled with a
+humor reminiscent of Samuel Butler, Cabell eulogizes
+Chance. In a world of chance encounters, Art alone
+reveals intentions and a goal to the human puppets.
+The author, boldly unfolding his thesis, roundly scores
+the religions. He reproaches them with postponing till
+the morrow what Art promises to us <i>hic et nunc.
+Carpe diem!</i> Cabell’s philosophy assumes an artistic
+epicureanism midway between Anatole France and
+Walter Pater. Then comes a paradoxical apology of
+Christianity, which Cabell forgives for having falsified
+human perspectives because it has increased the
+romantic interest of life. According to him, God did
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_237">237</span>not die to redeem us. Imagine a novelist dying for
+the marionettes he has paraded before our eyes! God
+reincarnated himself and died to <i>express himself</i> and to
+teach us to do as much. What would the Puritans
+think of this new theology?</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I shall stop here with this rapid view of Cabell’s
+mind. I have neglected his early works, although some
+of them were quite significant. Some are even very
+attractive: “The Rivet in Grandfather’s Neck” is the
+touching, beautiful and ironic story of an <i>amour
+d’automne</i> in the romantic background of a Virginia
+estate. Cabell is a very subtle and delicate psychologist
+of the woman’s heart. “The Eagle’s
+Shadow” is a suggestive sentimental “imbroglio.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Cords of Vanity, A Comedy of Cowardice,”
+portrays a modern descendant of Jurgen experiencing
+in real life all the adventures which had occurred to
+Jurgen only in dreams. He flirts with, seduces, and
+abandons half a dozen ladies, victims of his disillusioned
+philosophy of love. This book gave Cabell a chance to
+display a delicious bit of <i>marivaudage</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_238">238</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">
+ CHAPTER XI
+ <br>
+ <i>Reinforcements: Willa Cather, Zona Gale, Floyd Dell,
+ Joseph Hergesheimer, Waldo Frank</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I have been up to this as objective as possible, sparing
+neither praise nor criticism to the present-day American
+novelists. I confess that the path I have followed has
+been rather arduous and not always leading to gardens
+of pleasure. American realism does not provide on the
+road artistic oases like Flaubert’s or Maupassant’s.
+The great Dreiserian desert or the Andersonian jungle
+are hard enough to travel through. The writers whom
+I have studied are more interesting for the subjects
+which they treat than for their style. As artists they
+are imperfect, one might be tempted to say uneducated.
+On the other hand, if I have been at all sedulous in
+depicting them, the reader will be struck with the
+unanimous character of their grievances. All of them
+almost ferociously criticize the social man; all have of
+American life a somewhat tragic opinion. The more
+optimistic among them feign to be ironical. Few show
+either pity or resignation.</p>
+
+<p>It was reserved for the women to soften this realism
+with a grain of human pathos. The novels of Miss
+Willa Cather and Zona Gale in particular are characterized
+by a profound feeling of sympathy towards the
+inhibited people of whom they write. Willa Cather,
+like James Branch Cabell, is from Virginia. As an
+analyst, she can be pitiless when occasion requires and
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_239">239</span>she was so when she wrote “A Lost Lady.” This novel
+once again portrays an American Emma Bovary, buried
+in the grass of a small town. From adventure to adventure,
+from fall to fall, the Lost Lady ends up by marrying
+one of her servants. This book is rich in intuitions.
+Its gloomy atmosphere enhances the feeling of the tragedy
+of suppressed lives and the ensuing moral decadence.
+Disregarding the chronological order, this novel can
+be compared with a more recent work by the same
+author, “The Professor’s House.” It is again the
+story of a recluse. The composition of the book is not
+perfect. Being concerned primarily with faithfully
+representing people and their surroundings, the author
+deprived “The Professor’s House” of almost any plot.
+She appears to have hesitated between telling a story
+and drawing portraits. The book is interrupted in the
+middle by a lengthy digression. But the hero of the
+novel, Professor Saint Pierre, is an attractive figure.</p>
+
+<p>Saint Pierre would feel at home in one of Mr. Edouard
+Estaunié’s books.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_53_53" href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> He is an ardent adept of the
+“secret life.” A very human sort of man, with many
+prepossessing traits, Saint Pierre in his home recalls
+King Lear among his daughters. The professor, who
+is a historian, lives among comfortable surroundings.
+He likes his work and is an enthusiastic student. All
+he needs is the solitude requisite to bring his labors to
+an auspicious end. Unfortunately, he is the slave to
+a shrewish woman, and plays the indulgent father
+to two coquettish daughters, without mentioning the
+sons-in-law who are perfect Philistines. This state of
+affairs is not conducive to serene living in the academic
+groves. This is why the title of this novel is symbolic.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_240">240</span></p>
+
+<p>It is an allusion to the existence of Saint Pierre, living
+in two different houses, just as he is leading two highly
+dissimilar lives. The first house, the real one, is the
+home where he is besieged by practical cares and worries.
+Poor Saint Pierre has a hard time of it, what with
+holding his own with a wife and family who do not
+understand him, and pretending to be a scholar and a
+writer! But there is the other house, the little dream
+house which Saint Pierre rigged up all for himself and
+within whose threshold he becomes his real self. It is
+a haven of dreams. From its windows the distant
+azure of Lake Michigan may be seen. There Saint
+Pierre is happy in solitude. But family demands are
+pitiless. They pursue him in his retreat like a beast
+trapped in the woods. In the end, to loosen this
+stranglehold, Saint Pierre tries to commit suicide,
+casually, as if to give the impression that he did not do
+it on purpose. But he is not even allowed to commit
+suicide. Like most of the inhibited characters of
+American fiction, he capitulates and makes a virtue of
+necessity. His failure is all the more pathetic.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The other novels which have contributed to Miss
+Cather’s reputation are equally based on suppression.
+They include the “Song of the Lark,” “My Antonia,”
+“One of Ours.” The heroine of the “Song of the Lark,”
+Thea Kronburg, is the daughter of a village pastor.
+She grew up alone in an indifferent and commonplace
+atmosphere. She fell in love with her German music
+master, who was the choir leader in the church where
+Thea played the organ on Sundays. Her soul vents
+itself through music, like Corinne or Consuelo. She
+must have art and passion to be happy. Thea’s music
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_241">241</span>teacher is also her professor of philosophy, and this
+philosophy is not puritanical but romantic. How
+small the world! How petty, life in America! There
+is only one thing worth while, and that is aspiration,
+romance. It is that at the bottom of our hearts which
+gives its value to all things,—its redness to the rose,
+its azure to the skies and love to man. Without it
+there is no art. Poor Thea is only too easily converted
+to this creed. Thank goodness, she will not be cheated
+from her happiness! She leaves her village and has a
+magnificent artistic career, but she remains modest
+and sincere in success. Art for Thea is not vanity; it
+is the realization of her dearest and most intimate self,
+the whole-hearted expression of her truest personality.</p>
+
+<p>Not all of the inhibited people portrayed by Miss
+Willa Cather have been as fortunate as Thea Kronburg;
+witness the Lost Lady and Professor Saint Pierre. In
+“My Antonia” the author has gone back to a less
+optimistic theme. She has put into this novel the best
+of her art and of her philosophy. The scene of the
+novel is far-away Nebraska. Antonia is a Czech.
+“My Antonia” is what is called in America an “immigrant”
+novel. Immigration has given to America a
+new exotic background, and a new source of local color.
+In “My Antonia” Willa Cather studies the immigrants
+with her usual sympathy. Antonia is a portrait drawn
+from within. Her self-abnegation is rare. A hard
+worker, devoted to children, betrayed yet ever faithful,
+she is a new edition of Flaubert’s “Simple Heart.”
+She is the incarnation of the motherly feeling. The
+sites of the Far West, the rustic rites of the seasons
+form the background of this canvas painted with the
+simplicity and the forcefulness of a master.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_242">242</span></p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to find in “My Antonia” passages for
+an anthology. Everything in it holds together. The
+tale is unfolded, “not as a thing of which one thinks,
+but as conscience itself,” slowly, in sheer duration.
+“My Antonia” is a little epic, the “Evangeline” of
+the Far West. Here is a description of a Nebraska hamlet.
+It tells a lot as to the nostalgia of its inhabitants.
+It is Jim, the hero of the story, who is speaking:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>In the evening I used to prowl about, hunting for
+diversion. There lay the familiar streets, frozen with
+snow or liquid mud. They led to the houses of good
+people who were putting the babies to bed, or simply
+sitting still before the parlor stove, digesting their
+supper. Black Hawk had two saloons. One of them
+was admitted, even by the church people, to be as
+respectable as a saloon could be. Handsome Anton
+Jelinek, who had rented his homestead and come to
+town, was the proprietor. In his saloon there were
+long tables where the Bohemian and German farmers
+could eat the lunches they brought from home while
+they drank their beer. Jelinek kept rye bread on hand,
+and smoked fish and strong imported cheeses to please
+the foreign palate. I liked to drop into his bar-room
+and listen to the talk. But one day he overtook me on
+the street and clapped me on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Jim,” he said, “I am good friends with you and I
+always like to see you. But you know how the church
+people think about saloons. Your grandpa has always
+treated me fine, and I don’t like to have you come into
+my place, because I know he don’t like it, and it puts
+me in bad with him.”</p>
+
+<p>So I was shut out of that.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Black Hawk is about as dead as Gopher Prairie or
+Winesburg, Ohio. Poor Jim! There are very few
+distractions in this far Western village. There is the
+druggist across his ice-cream and soda counter, the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_243">243</span>tobacconist and the old German who stuffs birds, both
+of them great gossips. The great thrill is going to see
+the night train fly by at the depot. At the telegraph
+office, the idle clerk comforts himself in pinning on the
+wall portraits of actors and actresses which he procured
+with cigarette premiums. Then there is the station
+master who tries to forget the death of his twins by fishing
+and writing letters to obtain a change of residence:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“These,” says Jim, “were the distractions I had to
+choose from. There were no other lights burning
+downtown after nine o’clock. On starlight nights I
+used to pace up and down those long, cold streets, scowling
+at the little, sleeping houses on either side, with
+their storm-windows and covered back porches. They
+were flimsy shelters, most of them poorly built of light
+wood, with spindle porch-posts horribly mutilated by
+the turning-lathe.</p>
+
+<p>“Yet for all their frailness, how much jealousy and
+envy and unhappiness some of them managed to contain!
+The life that went on in them seemed to be
+made up of evasions and negations; shifts to save
+cooking, to save washing and cleaning, devices to propitiate
+the tongue of gossip. This guarded mode of
+existence was like living under a tyranny. People’s
+speech, their voices, their very glances, became furtive
+and repressed. Every individual taste, every natural
+appetite, was bridled by caution. The people asleep
+in those houses, I thought, tried to live like mice in
+their own kitchens; to make no noise, to leave no trace,
+to slip over the surface of things in the dark. The
+growing piles of ashes and cinders in the back yards
+were the only evidence that the wasteful, consuming
+process of life went on at all. On Tuesday nights the
+Owl Club danced; then there was a little stir in the
+streets, and here and there one could see a lighted
+window until midnight. But the next night all was
+dark again.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_244">244</span></p>
+
+<p>Thank God, even at Black Hawk there are a few
+compensations for a refined sensibility. Antonia and
+Jim know how to see through things, and they find
+beauty even in their monotonous surroundings. There
+are the orchard, the hen yard, the stable and the charm
+of the rustic works and days. There is the hay in the
+attic, the favorite nook of Antonia’s brood. And then
+Christmas comes bringing the snow, the spiced cakes
+made in true Bohemian fashion, then spring and the
+budding out of fresh leaves and flowers. Jim is not
+blind to the familiar and simple beauty around him.
+Let us follow him in Antonia’s wild garden:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Alone, I should never have found the garden—except,
+perhaps, for the big yellow pumpkins that lay
+about unprotected by their withering vines—and I
+felt very little interest in it when I got there. I wanted
+to walk straight on through the red grass and over the
+edge of the world, which could not be very far away.
+The light air about me told me that the world ended
+here: only the ground and sun and sky were left, and
+if one went a little farther there would be only sun and
+sky, and one would float off into them, like the tawny
+hawks which sailed over our heads making slow shadows
+on the grass. While grandmother took the pitchfork
+we found standing in one of the rows and dug potatoes,
+while I picked them up out of the soft brown earth and
+put them into the bag, I kept looking up at the hawks
+that were doing what I might so easily do.</p>
+
+<p>When grandmother was ready to go, I said I would
+like to stay up there in the garden awhile.</p>
+
+<p>She peered down at me from under her sunbonnet.
+“Aren’t you afraid of the snakes?”</p>
+
+<p>“A little,” I admitted, “but I’d like to stay anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if you see one, don’t have anything to do with
+him. The big yellow and brown ones won’t hurt you;
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_245">245</span>they’re bull-snakes and help to keep the gophers down.
+Don’t be scared if you see anything look out of that
+hole in the bank over there. That’s a badger hole.
+He’s about as big as a big ’possum, and his face is
+striped, black and white. He takes a chicken once in
+a while, but I won’t let the men harm him. In a new
+country a body feels friendly to the animals. I like
+to have him come out and watch me when I’m at
+work.”</p>
+
+<p>Grandmother swung the bag of potatoes over her
+shoulder and went down the path, leaning forward a
+little. The road followed the windings of the draw;
+when she came to the first bend she waved at me and
+disappeared. I was left alone with this new feeling of
+lightness and content.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The art of Miss Cather shows itself in these sketches
+of nature faithfully and minutely observed, but pervaded
+too with a sympathetic emotion. She herself
+has given us the key of her art, in an article which she
+wrote when “The Professor’s House” was published.
+Her ideal in writing, she tells us, would be to have
+people and things posing before her as they would for
+painters of still life, like Rembrandt or Chardin, omitting
+nothing from the background up to the surface.
+This “still-life” painting is the most correct definition of
+Miss Cather’s art. Her ambition is to treat style as
+secondary in respect to the characters. She wants to
+omit what is only picturesque in order to let people
+tell their own story, without any comment on her part.
+She takes a green vase and a yellow orange and puts
+them side by side on a table. She carefully avoids
+interfering and relies entirely on the objects thus placed
+to produce an artistic effect. Let her make the reader
+<i>see</i> the green vase beside the orange. Nothing else
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_246">246</span>matters. She would like to have the style fused so
+completely with the object that the reader would not
+even suspect the former’s existence. The people for
+whom she writes are those whose chief interest is in the
+vase and the orange as such, and in the way each lends
+it color to the other.</p>
+
+<p>Here is an original programme of static and intimate
+realism based upon a scrupulous reproduction of the
+object, a realism which could not exist without this
+gift of sympathetic intuition (the Germans call it
+<i>Einfühlung</i>) characteristic of Miss Willa Cather. The
+art of an Edmond Jaloux, an Edouard Estaunié or a
+Georges Bernanos would give to a reader familiar with
+French literature a fairly good understanding of her
+talent. <i>Les choses voient</i>, but they see only for those
+who can <i>feel</i> them.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>This wilfully static realism explains at once the
+qualities and faults of Miss Cather’s war novel, “One of
+Ours.” The American critics have not been very benevolent
+towards this book. The first and autobiographical
+part of it is excellent. Faithful to her philosophy of art
+through reminiscence, the author describes the youth
+of a child of the prairies, also a victim of Puritanism.
+Eugene Willer, the hero of “One of Ours,” is one of
+those American youths whose restlessness is increasingly
+preoccupying the moralists and the sociologists. His
+is a soul filled with desire and easily wounded by the
+things which surround him. Miss Cather has told,
+with her usual minute realism, the sad story and tragic
+death of this misunderstood youth. A tender and
+loving boy, Eugene expected too much of life, and was
+hurt in his first encounter with it. He had married
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_247">247</span>a frigid woman, a “crystal cup.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_54_54" href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> His wife slammed
+the door in his face on their wedding night. The unfortunate
+youth had no taste left for life after that. Hear
+him exhaling his dejection in the moonlight, like Salammbô
+on her high terrace, or Carol Kennicott in her
+Gopher Prairie garden. The moon which illuminated
+the romantic enthusiasms of yore is nothing more than
+a mirror for the deceptions of this American René.
+How many agonies has this pale moon of the prairies
+shone upon!</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Inside of living people, too, captives languished.
+Yes, inside of people who talked and worked in the
+broad sun, there were captives dwelling in darkness—never
+seen from birth to death. Into those prisons the
+moon shone, and the prisoners crept to the windows and
+looked out with mournful eyes at the white globe which
+betrayed no secrets and comprehended all.... The
+people whose hearts were set high needed such intercourse—whose
+wish was so beautiful that there were
+no experiences in this world to satisfy it. And these
+children of the moon, with their unappeased longings
+and futile dreams, were a finer race than the children
+of the sun. This conception flooded the boy’s heart
+like a second moonrise, flowed through him indefinite
+and strong, while he lay deathly still for fear of losing it.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Thus lamented the hero of “One of Ours,” a true
+<i>Obermann</i> of the prairie, seeking an ideal and a reason
+for existence.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the war. How tragic is life, and how
+poor in resources is the soul of man if it needs violent
+death to give it a meaning! The American pacifists
+have shunned Miss Cather’s war novel. They have
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_248">248</span>not felt the bitter philosophy which exudes from it.
+Was it her fault if those whom an army leader called
+“the élite of the best men that ever were in America”
+went, in search of exaltation, to dye with their blood
+the slopes of Belleau Wood? When are we going to
+have a Freudian interpretation of the war as a supreme
+and tragic derivative to inhibition?&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_55_55" href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
+
+<p>I shall stop here with the review of Miss Cather’s
+works. All of them stand high as literary achievements.
+She belongs to that small group of novelists
+who honor American letters and who are specialists of
+what may be called “optimistic realism”: Ellen Glasgow,
+Mary Austin, Dorothy Canfield, and Zona Gale,
+of the latter of whom I shall speak now.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Zona Gale was born in Wisconsin. She began with
+journalism and published short stories and novels.
+She is the chronicler of American life in the small towns
+of the Middle West. Her art recalls that of Willa
+Cather. For the critics there are two Zona Gales.
+There is the author of popular tales, such as “The Village
+of Friendship,” “Mother of Men,” “When I Was
+a Little Girl,” “The Neighbors”; but “Birth” and
+“Miss Lulu Bett” are her true masterpieces. “Miss
+Lulu Bett” appeared in 1920 and won the author a wide
+reputation. It had a sensational vogue on the screen.
+It is a classic. But let me begin with “Birth.” Before
+speaking of it I want to recall what I have already
+mentioned of that sensibility peculiar to Americans.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_249">249</span></p>
+
+<p>While the Frenchman, supposedly a domestic person,
+makes little of family life on the stage and in his novels,
+the American idealizes it. The father, the mother and
+the child, those are the corners of his “eternal triangle.”
+Zona Gale has gratified the tastes of that particular
+public. “Birth” is a work of original analysis, a good
+psychological document for the study of certain maladies
+of personality. The novel portrays a curious case
+of sentimental aphasia. The hero of the book is a simple
+sort of soul. He married a woman his superior in
+education. Awkward, <i>gauche</i>, even grotesque, he is at
+bottom the best of men. His heart is paved with good
+intentions, but unfortunately he knows not how to
+disclose them. Pitt—that is his name—acts like a
+man, who knowing two languages, would be incapable
+of translating one into the other. Failing to be able
+to express himself, he buries himself in a sort of psychological
+twilight where he vegetates and suffers in
+silence. Unable to express his sentiments to others,
+he is reduced to acting for his own benefit what was
+meant for them. His life is henceforward but a fiction,
+a novel which would never have been read had not
+Zona Gale played the part of the publisher. Pitt
+would make an excellent Pirandello character. Externally
+but a grotesque clown, inside goodness and delicacy
+incarnate, he seemed to come out of the shadows
+at the birth of his son. Pitt adores his child, but as a
+father he continues to be a victim of Freudian inhibitions.
+He feels every paternal sentiment, but he is
+unable to find the words and gestures which correspond
+to his emotions. Little by little the distance between
+father and child lengthens, and one day poor Pitt
+disappears, misunderstood by his own child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_250">250</span></p>
+
+<p>The book was followed by “Miss Lulu Bett.” Zona
+Gale studied in it again the effects of suppression, but
+with new methods of dramatic simplification. Her style
+is lighter; her portraits are more strikingly pathetic and
+resemblant. Lulu Bett is a scapegoat. A Cinderella at
+home and a slavey, her life is that of an automaton, and
+yet she possesses a romantic heart. We must admire
+the skill with which Zona Gale was able to keep her
+before us halfway between tears and laughter. Every
+reader remembers poor Lulu’s courtship by an adventurer
+who subsequently abandoned her, her devotion to
+the members of the household, her marriage to the village
+music-dealer, all incidents of a trivial nature, but
+sympathetically brought out to reveal the kind-hearted
+Lulu. Zona Gale’s pathos is direct and familiar, almost
+trivial, but pervaded with delicate and deep emotions.</p>
+
+<p>All inhibited people are not necessarily Ophelias or
+Lady Macbeths. There are many nuances to repression.
+Nevertheless, Lulu Bett is a romantic heroine.
+Watch her at the piano. She can play with only one
+finger and she is ignorant of real music, but the village
+piano-dealer visited her, and Lulu, as the saying goes,
+puts herself out.... When words fail, music is the
+natural interpreter of people who understand one
+another, especially if they are lovers. Here is the
+charming description of this timid concerto:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Cornish was displaying his music. “Got up quite
+attractive,” he said—it was his formula of praise for
+his music.</p>
+
+<p>“But we can’t try it over,” Lulu said, “if Di doesn’t
+come.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, say,” said Cornish shyly, “you know I left
+that Album of Old Favorites here. Some of them we
+know by heart.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_251">251</span></p>
+
+<p>Lulu looked. “I’ll tell you something,” she said,
+“there’s some of these I can play with one hand—by
+ear. Maybe——”</p>
+
+<p>“Why sure!” said Cornish.</p>
+
+<p>Lulu sat at the piano. She had on the wool chally,
+long sacred to the nights when she must combine her
+servant’s estate with the quality of being Ina’s sister.
+She wore her coral beads and her cameo cross. In her
+absence she had caught the trick of dressing her hair so
+that it looked even more abundant—but she had not
+dared to try it so until tonight, when Dwight was gone.
+Her long wrist was curved high, her thin hand pressed
+and fingered awkwardly, and at her mistakes her head
+dipped and stove to make all right. Her foot continuously
+touched the loud pedal—the blurred sound
+seemed to accomplish more. So she played “How
+Can I Leave Thee,” and they managed to sing it. So
+she played “Long, Long Ago,” and “Little Nell of
+Narragansett Bay.” Beyond open doors Mrs. Bett
+listened, sang, it may be, with them; for when the
+singers ceased, her voice might be heard still humming
+a loud closing bar.</p>
+
+<p>“Well!” Cornish cried to Lulu; and then, in the
+formal village phrase: “You’re quite a musician.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no!” Lulu disclaimed it. She looked up,
+flushed, smiling. “I’ve never done this in front of
+anybody,” she owned. “I don’t know what Dwight
+and Ina’d say.” She drooped.</p>
+
+<p>They rested, and, miraculously, the air of the place
+had stirred and quickened, as if the crippled, halting
+melody had some power of its own, and poured this
+forth, even thus trampled.</p>
+
+<p>“I guess you could do ’most anything you set your
+hand to,” said Cornish.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no,” Lulu said again.</p>
+
+<p>“Sing and play and cook——”</p>
+
+<p>“But I can’t earn anything. I’d like to earn something.”
+But this she had not meant to say. She
+stopped, rather frightened.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_252">252</span></p>
+
+<p>Then there is the tragi-comical scene of Lulu Bett’s
+marriage, a mock marriage unfortunately. One day
+the brother-in-law of Lulu’s sister arrived from the
+West. He started to court Lulu. To celebrate his
+homecoming the whole household had adjourned to a
+restaurant. There are Lulu, her brother-in-law Dwight,
+who fulfills in the village the functions of dentist and
+justice of the peace, Lulu’s sister, Ina, and Ninian, the
+newcomer. Excited by the dinner, and without being
+apparently aware that he is uttering before competent
+witnesses words that might bind him, Ninian declares
+that he takes Lulu for his lawful wedded wife, and Lulu
+accepts the challenge. She learns soon enough that
+Ninian is a bigamist:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Why not say the wedding service?” asked Ninian.</p>
+
+<p>In the mention of wedlock there was always something
+stimulating to Dwight, something of overwhelming
+humor. He shouted a derisive endorsement of
+this proposal.</p>
+
+<p>“I shouldn’t object,” said Ninian. “Should you,
+Miss Lulu?”</p>
+
+<p>Lulu now burned the slow red of her torture. They
+were all looking at her. She made an anguished effort
+to defend herself.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know it,” she said, “so I can’t say it.”
+Ninian leaned toward her.</p>
+
+<p>“I, Ninian, take thee, Lulu, to be my wedded wife,”
+he pronounced. “That’s the way it goes!”</p>
+
+<p>“Lulu daren’t say it!” cried Dwight. He laughed
+so loudly that those at the near tables turned. And,
+from the fastness of her wifehood and motherhood, Ina
+laughed. Really, it was ridiculous to think of Lulu
+that way....</p>
+
+<p>Ninian laughed too. “Course she don’t dare to
+say it,” he challenged.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_253">253</span></p>
+
+<p>From within Lulu, the strange Lulu, that other
+Lulu who sometimes fought her battles, suddenly spoke
+out:</p>
+
+<p>“I, Lulu, take thee, Ninian, to be my wedded husband.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will?” Ninian cried.</p>
+
+<p>“I will,” she said, laughing tremendously to prove
+that she too could join in, could be as merry as the rest.</p>
+
+<p>“And I will. There, by Jove, now have we entertained
+you, or haven’t we?” Ninian laughed and
+pounded his soft fist on the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, say, honestly!” Ina was shocked. “I don’t
+think you ought to—holy things—what’s the <i>matter</i>,
+Dwightie?”</p>
+
+<p>Dwight Herbert Deacon’s eyes were staring and his
+face was scarlet.</p>
+
+<p>“Say, by George,” he said, “a civil wedding is
+binding in this State.”</p>
+
+<p>“A civil wedding? Oh, well——” Ninian dismissed it.</p>
+
+<p>“But I,” said Dwight, “happen to be a magistrate.”</p>
+
+<p>They looked at one another foolishly. Dwight
+sprang up with the indeterminate idea of inquiring
+something of someone, circled about and returned.
+Ina had taken his chair and sat clasping Lulu’s hand.
+Ninian continued to laugh ...</p>
+
+<p>“I never saw one so offhand,” said Dwight. “But
+what you’ve said is all you have to say according to
+law. And there don’t have to be witnesses ... say!”
+he said, and sat again.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And so it happens that Lulu Bett is married to
+Ninian—not for long for he deserts her right away
+and she comes back to her Cinderella’s duties in her
+sister’s home.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for Lulu, Ninian was but an adventurer.
+How could she possibly miss reading it in that
+man’s eyes? Betrayed and abandoned, she came back
+home to resume her former drudgery. Zona Gale
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_254">254</span>showed some pity for her at the end, a relative sort of
+pity, for she abandoned Lulu Bett to the circumambient
+banality.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I lack the space to go through the entire list of
+American novelists of to-day who have specialized, in
+their rôle of scrupulous realists, in the critique of Puritanism
+and of the repressions which follow upon it.
+Among them I should like to make a special place for
+Floyd Dell, one of the most original writers of to-day,
+author of “Moon Calf,” “The Briary Bush,” and more
+recently “The Runaway.” This last novel depicts a
+pathetic case of evasion. It tells the story of a man who
+goes as far away as China to forget his natal village and
+married life. He comes back after several years transformed
+and unrecognizable, to find himself a complete
+stranger, even to his own daughter. Unfortunately,
+the book ends like a popular “movie.”</p>
+
+<p>Examples of dual personalities are not rare in the
+work of modern American authors outside realism. I
+am thinking especially of the novels of Joseph Hergesheimer
+and Waldo Frank, two notable artists. Hergesheimer
+sticks to the purely romantic novel. He
+presented to us in exotic or historic surroundings seductive
+personalities, half real and half fantastic. The
+author of “Linda Condon,” of “Java Head,” is also
+that of “Cytherea.” This last novel is very Freudian.
+It depicts the explosion of a suppressed and tragic passion.
+The hero of “Cytherea,” an adept of the “secret life,”
+is bewitched by the magical spell of a fetish. He abandons
+his social rank, his wife, and his children, and goes
+to Cuba to seek romantic exaltation. The woman he
+loves is possessed like him of an irresistible desire. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_255">255</span>is a magic doll, a reincarnation of the goddess of Cytherea.
+The couple end sadly in the tropics. She dies,
+and he finds himself alone in the world.</p>
+
+<p>In “Linda Condon,” and particularly in “Java
+Head,” Hergesheimer has dealt with similar topics.
+The hero of “Java Head” is a Puritan let loose. He
+brought back with him to Hawthorne’s old Salem a
+Manchu princess whom he married, thereby greatly
+scandalizing his relatives. The book is full of picturesque
+and tragic contrasts. “Linda Condon,” is a case
+of moral duplicity. Linda, bearing the weight of a
+loaded heredity, is a willful inhibitor. She leads two
+lives. Pure as a lily among roués, she abandons her
+carnal self to her husband, while devoting to a sculptor
+an ideal love wherein her real personality is gratified.</p>
+
+<p>There is a great temptation to include Waldo Frank
+among the Freudians. He is a master of the inner
+monologue. He has powerfully dramatized in “Chalk
+Face” a morbid case of double personality. “Chalk
+Face” is the story of a daydreamer, half insane, somewhat
+reminiscent of George Duhamel’s Salavin. The
+insanity of this person is the result of a divorce between
+his intentions and his will. His free will, lacking
+balance, has gone over to the side of blind instincts
+and unconscious desires. The hero of “Chalk Face”
+runs unconsciously to passionate crime, and finally
+jumps into a lime kiln, in hallucination of his own
+image.</p>
+
+<p>Waldo Frank is not a pure realist. He likes to transpose
+reality into lyrical and musical variations. His
+novel “A Holiday” should be compared with Sherwood
+Anderson’s “Dark Laughter.” There are in it many
+profound intuitions of the Negro soul.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_256">256</span></p>
+
+<p>“City Block” is a mysterious panorama, but yet a
+lyrical one, of a modern city. The tableaux shown to us
+by the author appear through a fantastic and subjective
+atmosphere recalling Edgar Poe. The author of “Our
+America” is one of the most self-conscious artists of
+American literature and a high-class critic, with no
+tender feelings towards the Puritan tradition.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_257">257</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">
+ CHAPTER XII
+ <br>
+ <i>Ulysses’ Companions: Robert McAlmon, Ben Hecht, William Carlos Williams</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The American novelists that I have dealt with so far
+have been veterans of letters, men and women who
+have had a long career. Few of the younger writers
+do not owe them something as regards their conception
+of life and of art. They have imposed upon the new
+generation their realism, their choice of subjects and
+their style. Most of the writers of America borrowed
+their pessimistic philosophy and their direct mode of
+expression from Dreiser and Sherwood Anderson.
+Idealism is quite dead in the American novel of to-day,
+at any rate that traditional idealism based on sentimentality.
+Even the disillusioned realism of the masters
+whose work I have analyzed no longer satisfies the
+young. They have substituted cynicism and utter
+crudity for it. The newcomers have lost all faith, hope
+and charity. The prevalent pessimism of the last fifteen
+years of American literature, particularly noticeable
+in the novel, betrays a profound disturbance of the
+American conscience. It is partly the result of the
+political and social events of the last few years.</p>
+
+<p>When an ideal is shattered, when a faith dies out and
+when the sense of a moral and social discipline is relaxed,
+apprehension, soul-fear and anxiety prevail. This is
+precisely the case in the United States to-day. American
+pessimism is the ransom of Puritanism. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_258">258</span>traditional idealism has failed. The young Americans
+are burning what their fathers adored. Through their
+disenchantment they have sensed the practical incapacities
+of the idealists. They sounded out the transcendental
+vagueness of even as high a moral leader as
+Emerson, and the democratic quixotism of Whitman
+made them smile. They relegated the good Walt
+among those whom they ironically term “Chautauqua
+poets.”</p>
+
+<p>William James had tried to reconcile idealism with
+utilitarianism, the philosophy of the past with that of
+to-day, but he failed in his attempt. Realism in the
+novel is contemporaneous with the advent of a new
+philosophical school hostile to idealism, and it too
+called itself “realism.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_56_56" href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> This school is in direct contradiction
+to the theories of William James. Yet his
+pragmatism was responsible for exasperating the practical
+sense of the younger generation. Their suspicion
+of ideology dates from the time when they noticed,
+upon applying James’ criterion, that it did not “pay.”
+What was the use of accumulating so many transcendental
+vapors if our best energies were to be fed with
+thin air? Doubtless, for those who can see, as Emerson
+said, the whole world is contained in a drop of water,
+and our merest acts are rich in heroic potentialities.
+But that is a personal point of view. The gift of discovering
+the universe in an atom is not a general privilege.
+One must needs be a Pascal, an Emerson or a
+Pasteur. What, in effect, was developing in America
+under the cloak of transcendental idealism (particularly
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_259">259</span>in the second half of the nineteenth century) was
+the most unrestrained sort of materialism and utilitarianism
+the world had ever seen. It would seem that
+this transcendental idealism was but a subterfuge actually
+favoring mercantilism. Other deceptions were to
+follow. The pragmatic imperialism of Roosevelt and
+the mystic imperialism of Woodrow Wilson also failed.
+What then was this idealism which constantly appealed
+to Force and which applied the Scriptures in terms of
+colonial annexations and commercial enterprises? So
+the younger writers cast their lot, not with the tender,
+but with what James called the tough-minded.</p>
+
+<p>The Great War came to the élite of American youth as
+the supreme disillusion. It was much discussed before
+America went in, and it was still more discussed after
+it had been waged and won, when America came out of
+it. No sooner was the armistice signed than a change
+occurred. Polemics, regrets, retractations, revisions, the
+story is too well known to bear repetition. The practical
+difficulties which arose between America and her
+former allies or associates are the tangible result of the
+upsetting of values, and responsibilities perpetrated by
+the intellectuals or, as they are called to-day, the
+“revisionists.” The result was a great moral confusion
+among the young. Yet the social structure had
+not changed. Ever indulgent towards revolutions,
+even to the point of fostering them philosophically in
+her bosom, provided bombs were thrown in foreign
+lands, America itself had not moved. The Government,
+the Church, the University, and the general
+state of ideas and customs remained the same.</p>
+
+<p>This is the paradox of American civilization. The
+individual seems to evolve faster than the nation in
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_260">260</span>the United States. Doubtless, America has become
+more prosperous, materially speaking, but it is precisely
+this purely material philosophy which is a scandal to
+the young; they despair over it. Their country, rutted
+in self-complacency and steeped in the illusions of 1776,
+gives them the impression of an arrested civilization, of a
+multimillionaire who should have retired from business.
+The disenchantment of peace followed that of war, and
+intellectual and literary radicalism was born. Two
+Americans were facing each other with drawn weapons.</p>
+
+<p>This restlessness is quite apparent among the youth
+of the land. They are favored by the well-known
+indulgence and relaxation of discipline at home and
+in the school. In a country without traditions, intellectual
+instability is perforce great, as great as the
+restraint upon the <i>mores</i> is tight. That with which
+the American youth clash, the “enemy,” is a rather
+vague entity. In Europe it would take a concrete
+shape, that of a man, of a creed, or an idea, but in
+America it is something much more impalpable and
+dangerous. It is the general state of public opinion
+and customs, the pretension of imposing upon the
+élite the blind and ready-made ideals of the masses.
+Thwarted desires, restraints, evasions, capitulations of
+the conscience or social revolt,—those are the result
+of standardization, of democratic leveling; they are
+equally the source of the pessimism which pervades
+American letters to-day. That is how it happens that
+the United States, so obviously optimistic as a nation,
+have a literature which is becoming increasingly depressed
+and tragic in tone.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to imagine what a fertile soil such a
+state of mind affords to the development of Freudian
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_261">261</span>microbes, and to what excesses these ardent and suppressed
+energies might go. It is for the criminologist and
+the sociologist to tell that story—a heart-rending one,
+verily. A great increase in criminality, especially among
+the young, the growth of sadistic, erotic and eccentric
+impulses, the disintegration of the family, neurasthenic
+and hysterical explosions, such is the other side of the
+picture and the price which the United States is paying
+for its material prosperity. Innumerable newspapers
+in search of new sensations daily exploit these scandals
+upon which they thrive. The American literature of
+to-day reflects this state of affairs faithfully.</p>
+
+<p>The Frenchman or Continental is quite prepared to
+understand that sort of literature. The United States
+have not had the monopoly of moral anarchy since the
+war. The same wave of emancipation and revolt which
+brought up in France the works of Radiguet, Roger
+Martin du Gard, Morand, Lacretelle, Schlumberger,
+Lucien Fabre and others, has given to America its
+McAlmons, its Ben Hechts, its Floyd Dells, its Waldo
+Franks. The young American is a natural-born rebel.
+He has always been that, or at least since Mark Twain
+wrote “Tom Sawyer” and “Huckleberry Finn.” How
+could he help it? What adolescence is freer than his?
+Where in the world could there be fonder parents and
+less tyrannical teachers? Is not the American coming
+of age from the very time of his early youth? Is not
+playing hookey his favorite diversion? See with what
+zest he goes in for sports, with what joy he plays the
+umpire. And the automobile, and jazz, or giving the
+lie to prohibition, and the thousand and one diversions
+and eccentricities with which he enlivens his existence?
+America is so vast, the call-of-the-wild so forceful!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_262">262</span></p>
+
+<p>Numerous advanced American novelists have made
+themselves the interpreters of suppressed youth. There
+has been great growth in the “novel of adolescence” in
+America, as well as in France, in the last ten years. I
+shall review in this chapter some of the more significant
+ones. I begin with the novels of Robert McAlmon.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. McAlmon is only thirty years old. He was born
+in Kansas, the ninth child of an itinerant pastor. He
+earned his living around the ranches and as a tramp
+and professional hobo, cowboy, reporter, press agent,
+lumberjack, model in New York studios, all of which
+did not prevent him from completing his studies in Los
+Angeles at the University of Southern California. In
+1918 he promoted an aviation magazine. Later, in
+Paris, he founded with William Carlos Williams,
+“Contact,” a printing firm, to which we owe the publication
+(in France, Oh, Land of Liberty!) of some of the
+most daring and original works of the young American
+school. Mr. McAlmon is the author of several volumes
+of poems and short stories.</p>
+
+<p>He is also the author of a novel called “Village.”
+This village is named Wentworth. It recalls Sinclair
+Lewis’ Gopher Prairie and Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg.
+There is the same isolation, the same type of
+shut-in lives, the identical tragic attempts at evasion
+and identical suppression. Here is the panorama of
+Wentworth. It tells a lot as to the nostalgia of its
+inhabitants:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Beyond the outskirts of the village, Wentworth, <i>le
+vent soufflait</i>, if not more boisterously than in the city
+proper, with a sweep uninterrupted by dwelling houses,
+or other obstacles. Already the gloss and dazzle of
+snow, which had fallen but two days ago, was dulled
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_263">263</span>by the dust, which whirlpools and hurricanes of rash,
+rushing winds had swept across the land for over a
+day and a half, after a three-foot fall of snow. In the
+afternoon a lull occurred; now again, at ten o’clock in
+the evening, the gale was up, tearing into the snow and
+throwing it into banks that left between them spaces
+of ground upon which uncovered grey-white snow lay
+scantily. <i>Musique fantastique de la neige</i>, snow-wind
+clamour, shrill shriek of cold, whiteness shattered by a
+highmoaning vermilion calliope wail. Where are the
+grey wolf packs? The herd of bison that thundered
+in catapulting panic across the plains?</p>
+
+<p>Fifty miles away lay the Indian reservation, with its
+degenerating remnants of a once wild and arrogant race.
+No evidence of will or desire remains for the eye to
+observe. Apathy and dull carelessness, without the
+consciousness of indifference, are all that can be discerned.</p>
+
+<p>Few farmers can be coming into the village for the
+next few days. Not till the snow has packed down so
+that horses can plow their way through the covered
+roads; not till need or the daring of more audacious
+souls has caused a few farmers to remake the roadways,
+will many leave their farm homeside fires to come and
+market in Wentworth. Salt pork and potatoes, salt
+pork and sauerkraut, milk and soggy bread, will suffice
+as a diet for German, Polish, Swedish, and unexpected
+farm families in these cold days surely, when
+they have sufficed as their main food always.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, though, there is little doubt that Ike
+Sorensen will attempt to drive his faithful team to
+town from his ranch eight miles out. It’s not to be
+thought that either wind or snow, or cold, or rain, or
+heat, or hurricane, or blizzard, will keep old Ike from
+crusading forth for his weekly drunk-on. He will have
+his hard liquor though the world be crashing to its end.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Such is the background of Mr. McAlmon’s sketches.
+“Village” is hardly a novel. It is a collection of vivid
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_264">264</span>impressions serving to complete our knowledge of the
+tragedies of moral isolation in America. The pictures
+drawn by the author possess neither Sinclair Lewis’
+humor nor Sherwood Anderson’s <i>chiaro-oscuro</i>. They
+are deliberately bare, with a thorough-going objectivity
+and frankness, reminiscent of a pure, undiluted
+Maupassant. I shall not tell in detail the plot of
+“Village.” There is none, to tell the truth. It is
+merely a series of sketches and youthful confessions.
+What Robert McAlmon is telling us with his cruel and
+cold impartiality of his young Americans is very little
+edifying. Snow storms and rains are not the only
+weapons Wentworth uses to fight off the drought. Its
+church spire does not cast its shadow upon saints.
+The youth of Wentworth literally have the devil in
+them. McAlmon is less optimistic than Mark Twain.
+His Tom Sawyers are cynics, with their own good
+reasons. They are stifled by their surroundings, they
+are walled up alive.</p>
+
+<p>John Campbell, one of the characters of the book, is
+but a child. He is being bored to death in the village.
+One day he runs out into the fields, under the pretext
+of catching rabbits. He is brought home bleeding.
+We surmise that he has committed suicide to escape
+paternal corrections and reproof:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>John Campbell went past cornfields late autumn
+crisped. Their leaves rasped and shuddered in the
+wind, and their stalks whined from the frost that kept
+them brittly chilled. A sear chill was within him too,
+a hard rebellion at life, rotted only some portion of his
+heart where the weakness of despair was a warm fluid
+dampening the hardness of his defiance to helplessness.</p>
+
+<p>Alternate waves of rage at, and indifferent understanding
+of, his father, flowed through him. At
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_265">265</span>moments he felt he could almost sympathize with what
+life had made the older man. It was this very sympathy
+that made him feel helpless himself in all of his
+outlook on existence. At angry moments he could
+hatingly see his father’s face within his mind, a face
+with waxen, shiny eyes, insistent with neurotic rage.
+How dared he, having messed up his own life, as he had,
+presume to dictate to anybody else what they should or
+should not do, as though he had discovered a right way,
+and knew always that what his son was doing was
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>But at the ebb of an emotion he would understand
+again. Who could retain temper or patience with the
+continual bickerings of family life, and forever pressing
+economic needs? Often enough John felt himself
+driven wild with the oppression of home life. What
+way was there to smash down all the barriers and have
+a degree of freedom to act, and if the impulses he had
+were sinful, who had made them so? But what was
+he to do? He’d hate farm work; he’d hate office work
+in the city, and despise the people working around him
+for their clerkish acquiescence. What was life about?
+A sickness of it was in his stomach, tiring him to complete
+non-resistance for the time being.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I shall stop here with the diagnosis of this precocious
+pessimism. John Campbell is a representative young
+American. He is only a child, but in his case, despair
+and cynicism have not waited for the years to ripen.
+Alas! John Campbell is hardly a fiction. The readers
+of American dailies could give him many brothers.
+Suicides and juvenile criminality are not rare in the
+United States. Yet, poor little John’s pessimism had
+not yet reached the purely conscious stage. That was
+left to his elders. He had not suffered sufficiently or
+reflected enough upon his distress to play the real
+Hamlet. He died while climbing a fence with a loaded
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_266">266</span>pistol in his hand, and it was never ascertained whether
+his death was accidental or premeditated.</p>
+
+<p>Robert McAlmon also displays for our benefit more
+matured and more self-conscious pessimists who ask
+again, like John Campbell, “What about life?”</p>
+
+<p>Amazement before the mystery of existence, a sentiment
+of general futility, misanthropy spreading from
+the family to the entire social group, desire and hatred
+of women, lack of faith, despair and sarcasm, such is the
+mental attitude of the young people we meet with in
+“Village.” The last pages of the book are particularly
+symptomatic. They recall the kind of talk heard in
+the yards of French Lycées, when “Bel Ami,” “Nana,”
+“Against the Grain,” “Azyade,” and the “Garden of
+Berenice,” first appeared. There was the same tone of
+cursing and irony in Arthur Rimbaud’s “Illuminations.”
+In France doubtless they spoke better and wrote better,
+but not any more sincerely, and at bottom the sentiments
+and the pessimism were identical. Towards
+1890 the young Frenchmen were already <i>fin de siècle</i>.
+In 1926 the young Americans are <i>commencement de
+siècle</i>, and they join forces with the French in doubting
+life and upholding Shakespeare’s dictum about it:
+“a tale told by an idiot and which hath no meaning.”</p>
+
+<p>Here is an example of a conversation between three
+youths of the Middle West who were soon to go through
+the Arc de Triomphe with a gun on their shoulders.
+Miss Willa Cather in “One of Ours,” and Mrs. Wharton
+in “A Son at the Front” had pictured the war as a
+fight of Providence occurring at the psychological
+moment to furnish an ideal to the young and give them
+a chance to let some steam off. These rookies in
+“Village” rather seem to belong in Barbusse’s “Squad.”
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_267">267</span>They are the musketeers of despair, but of an ironical
+despair. The War is here, hurrah for the War! Little
+matter whether it be just or not, as long as it drags us
+out of the tedium of our village! Listen to these backsliding
+heroes exposing their philosophy of the great
+struggle:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“You can stay out if we get in, if you will be that
+yellow-livered. There’ll never be conscription in this
+country.”</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t there? Don’t you ever believe there won’t.
+But even if there weren’t I’d have to go. Not because
+I couldn’t stand the gaff of being called yellow-livered,
+but just because feeling it all about me, and getting fed
+up with life anyway, I’d conclude what to hell, and
+enlist some day, but without at all believing I was going
+to serve any right cause by it, or that if we won that
+there would be a great and gentle democracy throughout
+the world. I’d just go, and kill Germans like the
+rest, because I’d get used to it being done; but if I ever
+stopped to think I would think that maybe some of the
+guys I killed were a hell of a lot more use in the world
+than I, or than fellows around me. But there—well,
+life’s life. Let ’em die. What’s useful anyway?
+Let’s talk of something else. I’m stalled.”</p>
+
+<p>“Say, boy, if you’d use your head on making dollars
+rather than on theories, you’d be better off,” Lloyd
+Scott advised. “I won’t waste my life in pessimism
+anyway.”</p>
+
+<p>“Neither will I; but I will live out my own temperament
+just because I must; and also because it’s more
+interesting than letting a set of social conventions
+which change with every generation and with geographical
+situations, dictate one’s actions. Why limit
+yourself?”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>McAlmon’s soldiers are very fond of their off-color
+vocabulary. Like the youth of to-day they affect the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_268">268</span>use of slang. It is one aspect of their revolt. But
+to go back to our heroes (?), the problem of the World
+War is not the only one which preoccupies them. Their
+conversation takes on a more general turn. It is the
+meaning of life which they question. Peter Reynalds
+and Lloyd Scott, whom I have already quoted, continue
+to exchange their impressions. They compare
+their philosophies of life. “Enough!” says one of
+them. “It is still better to be making money. Skepticism
+never made anyone rich.” “Yes,” says the other,
+“but you have to act according to your temperament.”
+(See Dreiser.) “That is more interesting than letting
+social conventions which change with every generation
+dictate your actions. Why should one limit oneself?”
+Whereupon Lloyd Scott ceases to follow him and wonders
+what the deuce is the matter with him. Peter
+answers this question in a thoroughly skeptical manner.
+Why choose a stand if you are disgusted with every one
+of them beforehand? There is something wrong with
+his will power:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“It’s this. I’ve got to make a living for myself, and
+I’m damned if there’s anything I like doing that pays.
+I tried newspaper work; did sob stories for awhile
+and then couldn’t contemplate existence any more;
+tried office work in a lumber concern and died with the
+boredom of companionship about me. It’s the damned
+unrelated unrest of an Irish temperament, I suppose.
+If the bloody war hadn’t come on I’d have struck for
+Europe to see if living over there wasn’t more gracious;
+aber mein gott. It’s this being an American; neither
+a savage nor a civilized man. A roughneck, who’s a
+little too refined.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Whereupon the Wentworth Hamlet says good-night
+to his friends. Before the war these pessimistic dialogues
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_269">269</span>used to end with a return to the village where
+wine, gambling, practical joking, love-making, and now
+and then a suicide or an escape, proved that there was
+no smoke without fire and that even in America not
+everything was well with the best of possible worlds.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In “The Portrait of a Generation” and “Post-Adolescence,”
+Robert McAlmon has repeated himself.
+He has made himself the spokesman of the pathetic
+nihilism in which young Americans are struggling
+to-day. “The Portrait of a Generation” is a handbook
+of pessimism mitigated with humor and fantasy.
+It is Leopardi disguised as one of Jean Cocteau’s
+<i>parade</i>. Robert McAlmon has learnt the “Gay
+Savoir” at the school of the French Sadists. The
+door of his Inferno might well bear the motto: “Jazz
+here,” just like any American bar in Montmartre or
+Montparnasse. But under this travesty the pessimism
+is nevertheless profound:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Not in Europe or America are we at home, we, that
+ostracized portion of degenerate mankind which lives
+on the continent criticizing our home countries. The
+family of course is a decaying institution. We don’t
+go in for dutifully pretended affections now. What we
+want is an aristocracy of the intelligence. Not the
+hard French face, so disillusioned. Not the wooden
+English visage, prizing rudeness as a social asset....
+Nothing left. There is really nothing left for them or
+for the reckless American flapper-impulsive need to
+keep rushing about space without tradition or direction,
+swirled in the dynamic maelstrom, human steel dust,
+lithe voiced electricity broadcast. The nation mourns
+his honoured death.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then Mr. McAlmon shows us the younger generation
+carried away in the maelstrom of modern dynamism
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_270">270</span>like scraps of steel, like those wireless waves “whose
+voice races nimbly throughout the whole world.”
+“Ah! let America at least weep decently over her own
+demise!”</p>
+
+<p>The novels of youth published by American writers
+in the last few years are quite numerous; I cannot
+review them all. The Parisian house of the “Contact”
+editions whose president is Mr. McAlmon, has specialized
+in realistic novels. It has published the most
+significant confessions of these young writers, and
+among others the books of George Hemingway, John
+Herrman, Emmanuel Carnevali, Gertrude Beasley, etc.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_57_57" href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
+In “My First Thirty Years,” Miss Beasley is hardly
+more reassuring than Robert McAlmon. Her book
+frankly tells the brutal story of a young woman obsessed
+by evil instincts in the midst of her family circle.
+Contact with reality has stripped her of all illusions.
+She curses life and those who have given it to her without
+her consent. She wishes that she had never been
+born. It sounds like the Book of Job. After cursing
+her father and mother, the heroine turns against the
+country of her birth, “America is the land of murderous
+institutions. To be sure they do not kill the body, but
+they leave us, like Frankenstein’s monster, a being without
+a soul.”</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Thirty years ago, I lay in the womb of a woman,
+conceived in a sexual act of rape, being carried during
+the pre-natal period by an unwilling and rebellious
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_271">271</span>mother, finally bursting from the womb only to be tormented
+in a family whose members I despised or pitied,
+and brought into association with people whom I should
+never have chosen. Sometimes I wish that, as I lay
+in the womb, a pink, soft embryo, I had somehow
+thought, breathed or moved and wrought destruction
+to the woman who bore me, and her eight miserable
+children who preceded me, and the four round-faced
+mediocrities who came after me, and her husband, a
+monstrously cruel, Christlike, and handsome man with
+an animal appetite for begetting children.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>A young novelist of the Middle West, Ben Hecht,
+has buried all the illusions of those young people into
+two novels which even Stendhal would not disown.
+In “Humpty-Dumpty” and in “Erik Dorn” realism is
+pushed to the point of melodrama, but we perceive
+behind the veil of cynicism a sadness and a moral confusion
+which are unmistakable. The spiritual bankruptcies
+described by Theodore Dreiser and Sherwood
+Anderson are idyls in comparison with the tableaux
+painted by Ben Hecht. “Humpty-Dumpty” is the
+tragedy of the void. The hero of the book is the catastrophic
+type of dual personality. He is a perverted
+simulator playing his life instead of living it, and playing
+it tragically, at the expense of others. A cruel
+sadist, he tortures people just when he likes them most.
+Humpty-Dumpty, a sinister puppet, is a moral, intellectual
+and social anarchist, as dangerous as a roaming
+tiger, a tiger doubled with a dilettante letting his soul
+(for he has a soul) wander among the flowers of decadent
+literature.</p>
+
+<p>“Erik Dorn” is not less cynical than “Humpty-Dumpty.”
+It is a challenge to society made by a
+nihilist. The hero of this novel goes straight before
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_272">272</span>him in life as he would in the jungle. He believes in
+nothing, not even in himself. He is in love, and likes
+to make others suffer. The approaching war is but a
+pretext to rouse his dormant sadistic impulses. Erik
+Dorn is a Julien Sorel overlooked by the guillotine.
+The novel is the work of a man of great talent who shows
+himself to be—in the last chapters of the book, which
+describe the Communist Revolution in Bavaria—a
+real animator. Here is an example of Erik Dorn’s
+meditations:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>A tawdry pantomime was life, a pouring of blood,
+a grappling with shadows, a digging of graves.
+“Empty, empty,” his intelligence whispered in its
+depths, “a make-believe of lusts. What else? Nothing,
+nothing. Laws, ambitions, conventions—froth
+in an empty glass. Tragedies, comedies—all a swarm
+of nothings. Dreams in the hearts of men—thin
+fever outlines to which they clung in hope. Nothing
+... nothing ...”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Nitchevo! Vacuum! This Chicago Hamlet consoles
+himself by reading Huysmans, Rémy de
+Gourmont, Flaubert, Théophile Gautier and Walter
+Pater. He goes in for literature without believing in it.
+It helps him to take life “against the grain.” “Living
+had made him forget life,” says Ben Hecht. Erik
+Dorn plunged into books to chloroform his passions:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Too much living has driven him from life,” Dorn
+thought, “and killed his lusts. So he sits and reads
+books—the last debauchery: strange, twisted phrases
+like idols, like totem poles, like Polynesian masks. He
+sits contemplating them as he once sat drunkenly
+watching the obscenities of black, white and yellow-bodied
+women. Thus, the mania for the rouge of life,
+for the grimace that lies beyond satiety, passes in him
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_273">273</span>from bestiality to asceticism and esthetics. Yesterday
+a bacchanal of flesh, to-day a bacchanal of words ...
+the posturings of courtezans and the posturings of
+ornate phrases become the same.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The heroine of this discouraging book resembles the
+hero. She too is uncertain, lost, wandering through the
+maelstrom of life. Dorn, according to the American
+critic who wrote the preface&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_58_58" href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> is obviously a rascal, but
+extenuating circumstances may be pleaded. If Dorn is
+a rascal, we are told, that is the fault of Society.
+(America knows its Rousseau well.) Dorn is “déclassé”
+through his own frankness as regards himself
+and his fellow men; his “head is the parasite of his
+heart.” (Should it not be the other way around?)
+Dorn is a sick man. He can no longer react to external
+stimuli.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_59_59" href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> He lives on the margin of life, in a mechanical
+fashion. He is a <i>dissociated</i> being. He has lost all
+conviction and become a sophist. Ideas are his
+amusements. Words fascinate him. Experiences are
+for him but an excuse to displace adjectives. He
+considers doctrines, dogmas and ideals as ridiculous
+efforts to impose upon life, which is ever changing, little
+tags which never vary. The sole reality for him is
+intelligence, and this is how he defines it:</p>
+
+<p>“Intelligence is a faculty which enables man to
+glance at the chaos of ideas—and end up nowhere at
+all.”</p>
+
+<p>Far be it from me to take these paradoxes for truths
+and to mistake reality for those extreme views, <i>ab uno
+disce omnes</i>. One should be wary of placing upon
+Young America the grimacing mask of a Middle
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_274">274</span>Western Faust. However, under all this melodramatic
+claptrap, we perceive the unrest, the moral confusion,
+and the necessity for a rejuvenation, characteristic of
+the younger generation.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Ben Hecht’s efforts to find in æsthetics a derivative
+and an issue for suppressed energies are not isolated
+efforts. On all sides the renaissance of ideas has made
+imperative the need for a revolution in art and in
+literature. Those who have been disillusioned by life
+seek a refuge in art, and bring with them their taste for
+originality and eccentricity at any cost. The new
+American literature quickly acquired a tone that was
+ironic, immoralistic and rebellious. The revolter became
+Bohemian. Those who formerly inhibited now
+turned æsthetes, somewhat later than the French whom
+they believed to be sincerely following. America is
+young and naïve.</p>
+
+<p>The modern American æsthete has been masterfully
+portrayed by one of the best-informed American essayists
+of to-day.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_60_60" href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> Let us examine him as he is destined to
+go down to posterity in the wake of the dandy, the fatal
+man, the “fin de siècle” and the flapper. The American
+æsthete, model 1924, is a child of the twentieth
+century, according to Mr. Boyd. The Yellow Nineties
+had flickered out in the delirium of the Spanish-American
+War when his first gurgles rejoiced the ears
+of his expectant parents. If Musset were more than a
+name to him, a hazy recollection of French literature
+courses, he might adapt a line from the author of <i>La
+Confession d’un Enfant du Siècle</i> and declare: “I
+came too late in a world too old.” The 1924 æsthete
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_275">275</span>studied at Princeton, Yale or Harvard, in the early
+years of the Woodrovian epoch. At this time he was
+still “classical.” Between two escapades he would go
+and worship at the tomb of William and Henry James.
+During his careful education, American literature was
+revealed to him as a pale and obedient provincial cousin,
+whose past contained occasional indiscretions, such as
+Poe and Whitman, about whom the less said the better.
+Then, the 1924 æsthete picked up a taste for Art after
+some party in the red-plush drawing-rooms. He
+severed relations with the rabble who preferred baseball
+and football to poetry. He was herded into the
+intellectual fold, and borrowed his sociology and his
+ethics from the advanced reviews. He discovered
+simultaneously Socialism and French, or pseudo-French,
+literature. Then he floated in the rarefied atmosphere
+of Advanced Thought. Came the War, and with it
+disillusionment. The enthusiasm of the æsthetes was
+not to survive the carping remarks of the critics and the
+pacifistic campaigns. By luck or cunning, the æsthete
+succeeded in getting out of the actual trenches. He
+edited his first paper.... Simultaneously with his
+plunge into arms and letters he made his first venture
+into the refinements of sex, thereby extending his
+French vocabulary and gaining that deep insight into
+the intimate life of France which is still his proudest
+possession.</p>
+
+<p>When militarism was finally overthrown, democracy
+made safe, and a permanent peace established by the
+victorious and united Allies, he was ready to stay on a
+little longer in Paris, and to participate in the joys of
+La Rotonde and Les Deux Magots. There for a brief
+spell he breathed the same air as the Dadaists, met
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_276">276</span>Picasso and Philippe Soupault, and allowed Ezra
+Pound to convince him that the French nation was
+aware of the existence of Jean Cocteau, Paul Morand,
+Jean Giraudoux and Louis Aragon. From those who
+had nothing to say on the subject when Marcel Proust
+published “Du Côté de Chez Swann” in 1913 he now
+learned what a great man the author was, and formed
+those friendships which caused him eventually to join
+in a tribute to Proust by a group of English admirers
+who would have stoned Oscar Wilde had they been old
+enough to do so when it was the right thing to do.</p>
+
+<p>The time was not ripe for his repatriation, and so,
+with the same critical equipment in French as in English,
+but with a still imperfect control of the language as
+a complication, the now complete æsthete returned to
+New York and descended upon Greenwich Village. His
+poems of disenchantment were in the press, his war
+novel was nearly finished.... Both his prose and
+verse were remarkable chiefly for typographical and
+syntactical eccentricities, and a high pressure of unidiomatic,
+misprinted French to the square inch. His
+further contributions (if any) to the art of prose
+narrative have consisted of a breathless phallic symbolism—a
+sex obsession which sees the curves of a
+woman’s body in every object not actually flat, including,
+I need hardly say, the Earth, our great Mother....
+Mr. Boyd is rather malignant, but the portrait
+resembles the original. In the last analysis the æsthete
+may be diagnosed as the literary counterpart of the
+traditional American tourist in Paris. He is glamored
+by the gaudy spectacle of that most provincial of great
+cities. Paris obsesses and holds the American æsthete.
+He has learned all about “cineplastics” from the
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_277">277</span>French æsthetes. The faithful are called upon by a
+French expert to admire the films of William S. Hart
+and Jack Pickford, and some one carefully translates
+the poetic rhapsodies inspired in him by the contemplation
+of their masterpieces. Two souls dwell in the
+breast of the æsthete, and his allegiance is torn between
+the sales manager’s desk ... and the esoteric editorial
+chair where experiments are made with stories which
+discard the old binding of plot and narrative, the substitute
+being the structural framework which appeals to
+us over and above the message of the line.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>This classical portrait of the latter-day American
+æsthete is being modified under our very eyes. He is
+no longer in 1927 what he was in 1924. And of what
+will to-morrow be made? The American æsthete,
+model 1927, is much less bothered with erotica than his
+predecessor, and like the husky child who beats his
+nurse, he is strong enough to shake off the foreign yoke.
+Even in literature alliances have been broken, if we are
+to believe Mr. William Carlos Williams, who published
+(in France naturally and in a <i>de luxe</i> edition) his
+delicious collection of improvisations called “The Great
+American Novel.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_61_61" href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> In the tone of the inner monologue,
+and with a fanatic passion which does not exclude
+humor, Mr. Williams makes a plea of “America for
+Americans” in literature.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Europe is nothing to us. Simply nothing. Their
+music is death to us.</p>
+
+<p>Do not imagine I do not see the necessity of learning
+from Europe—or China, but we will learn what we
+will, and never what they would teach us. America
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_278">278</span>is a mass of pulp, a jelly, a sensitive plant ready to
+take whatever print you want to put on it. We have
+no art, no manners, no intellect—we have nothing.
+We water at the eyes at our own stupidity. We have
+only mass movement like a sea. But we are not a sea.</p>
+
+<p>Europe we must—we have no words. Every word
+we get must be broken off from the European mass.
+Every word we get placed over again by some delicate
+hand. Piece by piece we must loosen what we want.
+What we will have. Will they let it go? Hugh.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But William Carlos Williams has faith in America.
+According to him, the art of to-morrow, American art
+<i>par excellence</i>, will be of the “flamboyant” type.
+America is seeking new openings for her aspirations.
+Is she as much of a Philistine as she is supposed to be?
+The American who lives a model and edifying life
+(three meals a day, breakfast in bed, new paper on the
+walls), that American at times emigrates to the circus
+<i>en masse</i>, as Whitman used to say, to watch men, women
+and animals executing exquisitely impossible tricks.
+What could be more “flamboyant” than the trapeze
+man being projected into the air, and the tiger jumping
+through man-made hoops, or the elephant upholding his
+full weight by balancing his front legs on bottles?
+What could be more “flamboyant” than the painted
+clown, eternal symbol of the human race, laughing in
+order not to cry, and grimacing while making a thousand
+grim jokes with small men all around him accomplishing
+their marvelous feats?</p>
+
+<p>Jazz, the Follies, the flapper in a green and orange
+dress, with her red warpaint on, impossible riots of color
+in a world which abhors gray! And the “movies”!
+They, too, deprived of all color, flaming through the
+imagination of those watching them, a boundless flame
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_279">279</span>of romance, irrepressible humor, luxury, horror and
+great passion. Those human souls which know not
+passion, which are able to create neither romance nor
+splendor nor horror, those infinitely varied phases of
+Beauty, those souls seek outside of themselves what
+they lack—a search often futile, and how disastrous!</p>
+
+<p>But imagination will not capitulate. If it cannot
+express itself through dance or song, then it will try
+protestations and clamors. If it cannot be a great
+flame, it will be a deformity. If not Art, it will be
+Crime. Men, women and children cannot possibly be
+content with a humdrum life. Let imagination embellish
+it, even to the point of exaggeration. Let it give to
+life a touch of splendor and of horror, with infinite
+beauty and depth. To receive all this from the outside
+is not enough. A mere acceptation does not suffice.
+Imagination, to satisfy itself, needs creative energy.
+The “flamboyant” expresses faith in this energy. It
+is a cry of joy, a declaration of richness. It is, at any
+rate, the first principle of all art.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_62_62" href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was not without a purpose that I have quoted in
+the course of these essays these confessions at some
+length. Behind the mask of fantasy their accent is
+poignant at times. Let us remember particularly the
+manner in which William Carlos Williams conceives
+art as a diversion to and a remedy for inhibitions and
+dangerous living. I accept his views readily. I do
+not want to pose as a sociologist or as a prophet, but I
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_280">280</span>venture to say that this æsthetic theory seems to be in
+perfect accord with what the American novelists of
+to-day consider as the needs of human nature. One
+fact is positive, if they have told the truth and if my
+report has been accurate. A civilization, no matter
+how great and prosperous, cannot rest upon the suppression
+of passions and the restraint of human emotions.
+It cannot last without “Gay Science.” A
+system of obstinate prohibitions opens the door to
+neurotic disorders, crime and every form of eccentricity
+and perversion.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the domain of literature and the novel,
+it is fortunate that in following its natural bent Young
+America should have instinctively found this truth.
+It’s an ill wind that blows no good. No matter how
+much of a rebel, of a skeptic, of a dilettante and of a
+cynic Young America has been, it is much more earnest
+than it appears. It is in quest of a new ideal. It does
+not believe in salvation through restraint and puritanical
+resignation. It does not hope any more to find its
+ideal in a system of repressions which is a negation of
+the beautiful and the good in the human soul, nor yet in
+a philosophy, no matter how transcendental, which
+forgets the man or the woman of flesh and blood.
+Neither does it seek its ideal in the goods of this world.
+Young America applies the dictum that man does not
+live by bread alone. It says with Emerson that the
+value of this world is not measured in bales of cotton or
+sacks of dollars. It tries to find its ideal in a more
+felicitous, and in the last analysis, more artistic, conception
+of life. It feels with justice that in art there is
+a profound harmony which seizes us and which expresses
+us in the deepest part of ourselves, a synthesis
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_281">281</span>in which nothing is forgotten, a vast tolerance founded
+upon a sense of real values. This ideal cannot serve for
+the masses, but it can rejuvenate and humanize the
+schemes of the leaders. Young America is making a
+slow, painful march towards this goal. Awkward, and
+often violent in its efforts, it has already been rewarded
+in its quest. It is impossible to doubt it after one
+glance at the great crop of original works in prose and
+verse which it has gathered in the last decade and a half.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I have arrived at the end of my labors. My one
+ambition has been to present to the reader as complete
+and as faithful a panorama of the modern American
+novel as possible. I have not said all, but I do not
+think I have omitted anything essential. There remain
+to be cleared up several points which are closely related
+to my subject. There is the question of influences,
+especially of French influences. I have alluded to
+the panegyric of Balzac by Theodore Dreiser. I could
+have added that of Flaubert, Zola, the Goncourts,
+Huysmans, and especially of Maupassant, who is still
+very popular in America. The American novelists of
+to-day have not failed to acknowledge their debt to the
+French realists, realizing that without them, they would
+not have been what they are. An autonomous and
+autochthonous phenomenon as far as origins and ends
+are concerned, the American novel has gone to France
+to seek lessons in art and in frankness. From Balzac
+to Marcel Proust, the American novelists know their
+French literature thoroughly. The vogue in America
+of the French novelists has only been equalled by the
+Russians, who are better able to play on the mystical
+chords characteristic of the Anglo-Saxon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="p_282">282</span></p>
+
+<p>I have been able to make only rapid allusions to the
+bonds which tie the American novel of to-day to the
+English novel, but what American writer of the twentieth
+century is not conversant with the works of Conrad,
+D. H. Lawrence and James Joyce?</p>
+
+<p>There remains one stiff problem, that of documentation.
+In what measure are we entitled to apply to
+the American novel and to the human types which it
+presents to us the <i>ab uno disce omnes</i>? What is there
+in common between the United States and its customs
+and the novels which describe them? A difficult
+question, harking back to the problem of literature
+conceived as the expression of society, the Taine’s
+problem of the three factors. If I had had the time
+and the courage to front it, I would have attempted to
+solve it by a <i>distinguo</i> reminiscent of Molière. We
+have society and society. The more liberal and varied
+the morals, the less chance apparently for literature and
+manners to correspond. On the other hand, the more
+stereotyped, conventional and automatic the morals,
+the less chance that literature should differ from them.
+And that seems to be the case in the United States, if
+my studies are accurate. There has been such a
+development in the unanimity of thoughts, feelings and
+aspirations, such a standardization in America, that it
+has become impossible for the freest minds to express
+themselves independently of their surroundings. This
+uniformity having become tyrannical, the most liberal
+artists have only been able to shake it off by studying it
+as a phenomenon in itself. To describe it faithfully
+has become for them the best way of denouncing it.
+For my own part, I think that there is a great resemblance
+between what the American novelists have
+<span class="pagenum" id="p_283">283</span>described and the actual facts. Even if that were not
+so, there would remain this amazing unanimity in
+thinking and in realistic observation. Even if Puritanism
+and repression, as Hawthorne, Howells, Henry
+James, Mrs. Wharton, Dreiser, Sinclair Lewis, Anderson,
+Cabell and others describe them, were a fiction,
+there would be, in the universal character of this fiction,
+an evidence of a state of mind capable of impressing a
+psychologist. Allowing that Puritanism is a vice, a
+malady of the mind, an obsession, is it not remarkable
+that we should meet with it among the most notable
+American novelists of yesterday and to-day? How
+could such a general obsession be fictitious and exist
+without corresponding to something which explains
+and justifies it? But I am firmly convinced of the
+great value of the modern American novel from a
+documentary, psychological, moral and social standpoint.
+As one critic expresses it, “just like the American
+skyscrapers, the American novel has sprung from
+the soil, awkward, utilitarian, often amorphous, more
+agreeable to the eye than to the intellect, queer,
+painfully searching for new modes of expression, with
+almost no relation with the site upon which it is growing
+or with what surrounds it.” From the point of view of
+art and ideas, there have never been in American
+literature works so defiant of the accepted laws of
+decorum, perspective and harmony.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="p_284"></a><a id="p_285"></a>285</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">
+ INDEX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<ul class="index">
+ <li class="ifrst">Adams, Henry, <a href="#p_11">11</a>, <a href="#p_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Advertising in America, <a href="#p_146">146</a>, <a href="#p_147">147</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Æsthete, the modern American, <a href="#p_274">274–277</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Age of Innocence, The,” <a href="#p_57">57</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Ambassadors, The,” <a href="#p_53">53</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">America, restlessness in, viii;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">pessimism in, viii, ix, <a href="#p_8">8</a>, <a href="#p_135">135</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">considered an unromantic, <a href="#p_130">130</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sacrifice of the minority in, <a href="#p_146">146</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">advertising in, <a href="#p_146">146–148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the land of the superlative, <a href="#p_147">147</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">crude conditions in parts of, <a href="#p_155">155</a>, <a href="#p_156">156</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the land of the strenuous life, <a href="#p_186">186</a>, <a href="#p_186">186</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conditions in, since the Great War, <a href="#p_259">259–261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the modern novel as representative of conditions in, <a href="#p_282">282</a>, <a href="#p_283">283</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">standardization in, <a href="#p_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American æsthete, the modern, <a href="#p_274">274–277</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American background, the emptiness of, <a href="#p_48">48–50</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American culture, an arraignment of, <a href="#p_17">17</a>, <a href="#p_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American language, <a href="#p_150">150</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American literary ideals, revolution in, <a href="#p_3">3–6</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the new, <a href="#p_7">7</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American literature, recent, pessimism in, viii, ix, <a href="#p_257">257</a>, <a href="#p_260">260</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">spirit of pioneers in, <a href="#p_5">5–7</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>American Mercury</i>, the, <a href="#p_10">10</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“American Tragedy, An,” <a href="#p_79">79</a>, <a href="#p_110">110</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_115">115–122</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">American writers, later generation of, characteristics of, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_24">24</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Americans, optimism and contentment of, <a href="#p_13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">provided with comfort and material ease, <a href="#p_131">131</a>, <a href="#p_132">132</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">outside their homes, <a href="#p_132">132</a>, <a href="#p_133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">their religion, <a href="#p_133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the material organization of their life, <a href="#p_134">134</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in politics, <a href="#p_134">134</a>, <a href="#p_135">135</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Anderson, Sherwood, <a href="#p_22">22</a>, <a href="#p_53">53</a>, <a href="#p_57">57</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Freudism, <a href="#p_31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence of Walt Whitman on, <a href="#p_154">154</a>, <a href="#p_155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his primitivism, <a href="#p_154">154</a>, <a href="#p_155">155</a>, <a href="#p_155">155</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_156">156</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his writing a groping toward the Unknown, <a href="#p_155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his career, <a href="#p_155">155</a>, <a href="#p_158">158</a>, <a href="#p_159">159</a>, <a href="#p_166">166–168</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the Freudian novelist <i>par excellence</i>, <a href="#p_156">156</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Windy McPherson’s Son,” <a href="#p_156">156</a>, <a href="#p_157">157</a>, <a href="#p_168">168–171</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">little filial respect in his tales, <a href="#p_157">157</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">a dreamer, <a href="#p_159">159–161</a>, <a href="#p_175">175</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his feeling for the small craftsmen, <a href="#p_161">161</a>, <a href="#p_162">162</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his world of fancy, <a href="#p_162">162–164</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his itch for writing, <a href="#p_164">164</a>, <a href="#p_166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his sensitiveness to words, <a href="#p_165">165</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">excludes manufacturers of paper from his curses, <a href="#p_165">165</a>, <a href="#p_166">166</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his apprenticeship at writing, <a href="#p_167">167</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his indifference to comfort while writing, <a href="#p_167">167</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Marching Men,” <a href="#p_171">171–180</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as an artist, <a href="#p_176">176</a>, <a href="#p_199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Poor White,” <a href="#p_181">181</a>, <a href="#p_182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Winesburg, Ohio,” <a href="#p_182">182–187</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">suppressed sensibilities in his stories, <a href="#p_187">187</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his description of the tortures of inhibition, <a href="#p_188">188–191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">engaged on problems of sexual inhibition, <a href="#p_191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Many Marriages,” <a href="#p_191">191–196</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Dark Laughter,” <a href="#p_196">196–199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Negro songs in his novels, <a href="#p_197">197</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on New Orleans, <a href="#p_198">198</a>, <a href="#p_199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his definition of art, <a href="#p_199">199</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_286">286</span>Andreiev, <a href="#p_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Arrowsmith,” a satire of medical fakes, <a href="#p_148">148</a>, <a href="#p_149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">summarized, <a href="#p_149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">written haphazardly, <a href="#p_150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the language of, <a href="#p_150">150</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Art, shows a way out of chaos, <a href="#p_126">126</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and muck-raking, <a href="#p_153">153</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Anderson’s definition of, <a href="#p_199">199</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">“flamboyant,” <a href="#p_278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">for art’s sake, <a href="#p_279">279</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the harmony in, <a href="#p_280">280</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Atherton, in “A Modern Instance,” <a href="#p_64">64–66</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Atherton, Gertrude, <a href="#p_247">247</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Austin, Mary, <a href="#p_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Babbitt,” <a href="#p_144">144–148</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Balzac, Honoré de, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_153">153</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beach, Joseph Warren, his “The Outlook for American Prose,” <a href="#p_202">202</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beasley, Gertrude, <a href="#p_270">270</a>, <a href="#p_271">271</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beaut McGregor, in “Marching Men,” <a href="#p_171">171–173</a>, <a href="#p_174">174</a>, <a href="#p_177">177–180</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Behaviorism, <a href="#p_29">29</a>, <a href="#p_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ben Halleck, in “A Modern Instance,” <a href="#p_64">64–66</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bernanos, Georges, <a href="#p_246">246</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bio-chemistry, human psychology in terms of, <a href="#p_78">78</a>, <a href="#p_83">83</a>, <a href="#p_84">84</a>, <a href="#p_95">95</a>, <a href="#p_106">106</a>,
+ <a href="#p_109">109–118</a>, <a href="#p_123">123</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Biological fatalism, <a href="#p_124">124</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Birth,” <a href="#p_248">248</a>, <a href="#p_249">249</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Blithedale Romance, The,” the women in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Book About Myself, A,” <a href="#p_98">98</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bourget, Paul, a novel of, <a href="#p_4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his process, <a href="#p_55">55</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">crime determinism arraigned by, <a href="#p_116">116</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bourne, Randolph, a literary radical, <a href="#p_4">4</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bovarysme. <i>See</i> Emma Bovary.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boyd, Ernest, his “Portraits Real and Imaginary,” <a href="#p_274">274</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bruce Dudley (John Stockton), in “Dark Laughter,” <a href="#p_196">196–199</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Business-man, the American, <a href="#p_21">21</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Cabell, James Branch, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the double aspect of his work, <a href="#p_200">200</a>, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his style, <a href="#p_202">202</a>, <a href="#p_203">203</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his land of Poictesme, <a href="#p_203">203</a>, <a href="#p_204">204</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the inhabitants of his Poictesme, <a href="#p_204">204</a>, <a href="#p_205">205</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his philosophy, <a href="#p_205">205</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his defense of fiction, <a href="#p_205">205–208</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Jurgen,” <a href="#p_208">208</a>, <a href="#p_209">209</a>, <a href="#p_215">215–220</a>, <a href="#p_223">223</a>, <a href="#p_224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Figures of Earth,” <a href="#p_209">209–212</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Domnei,” <a href="#p_212">212–215</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">aimed to sketch an epic of human desire, <a href="#p_221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The High Place,” <a href="#p_224">224–231</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Cream of the Jest,” <a href="#p_231">231–237</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his early works, <a href="#p_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cabinet of Doctor Caligari, moving picture, <a href="#p_184">184</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Call of the Wild,” <a href="#p_32">32</a>, <a href="#p_94">94</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canfield, Dorothy, <a href="#p_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Captive, The,” <a href="#p_21">21</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carnevali, Emmanuel, <a href="#p_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carol Kennicott, in “Main Street,” <a href="#p_136">136–144</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cather, Willa, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">exhibits sympathy for her characters, <a href="#p_238">238</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “A Lost Lady,” <a href="#p_239">239</a>, <a href="#p_240">240</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “My Antonia,” <a href="#p_241">241–245</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her art, <a href="#p_245">245</a>, <a href="#p_246">246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “One of Ours,” <a href="#p_246">246–248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “My Mortal Enemy,” <a href="#p_248">248</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Censorship, <a href="#p_20">20</a>, <a href="#p_21">21</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Chalk Face,” <a href="#p_255">255</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Charlatans, <a href="#p_148">148</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chautauqua poets, <a href="#p_258">258</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chicago, artistic and literary center, <a href="#p_168">168</a>, <a href="#p_174">174</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Chillingworth, Doctor, in “The Scarlet Letter,” <a href="#p_39">39–42</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Churches, in America, <a href="#p_133">133</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">attacked in “Elmer Gantry,” <a href="#p_150">150</a>, <a href="#p_152">152</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“City Block,” <a href="#p_256">256</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Civilization, modern, <a href="#p_173">173–175</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clemenceau, Georges, <a href="#p_95">95</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clerical profession, fakes of, satirized in “Elmer Gantry,” <a href="#p_152">152</a>, <a href="#p_153">153</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clyde Griffith, in “An American Tragedy,” <a href="#p_115">115–122</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Communion of Saints, <a href="#p_98">98</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Comte, Auguste, <a href="#p_124">124</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Conrad, Joseph, <a href="#p_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_287">287</span>Conscience, a theory of, <a href="#p_110">110</a>, <a href="#p_110">110</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_116">116</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Contact,” printing firm, <a href="#p_262">262</a>, <a href="#p_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cooper, James F., wrote the novel of adventure, <a href="#p_4">4</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Cords of Vanity, The,” <a href="#p_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cowperwood, in “The Financier,” <a href="#p_86">86–88</a>, <a href="#p_105">105–111</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Cream of the Jest, The,” <a href="#p_231">231–237</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Crime, in Hawthorne, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in “Elsie Venner,” <a href="#p_110">110</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Dreiser, <a href="#p_115">115–119</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Criminal responsibility, <a href="#p_110">110</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_116">116</a>, <a href="#p_118">118</a>, <a href="#p_119">119</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Criticism, in America, <a href="#p_3">3–5</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Crystal cup,” <a href="#p_247">247</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Curel, François de, <a href="#p_156">156</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Custom of the Country, The,” <a href="#p_56">56</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cynicism, in recent novels, <a href="#p_257">257</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Cytherea,” <a href="#p_254">254</a>, <a href="#p_255">255</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Daisy Miller,” <a href="#p_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Dance before the Mirror,” <a href="#p_156">156</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Dark Laughter,” <a href="#p_196">196–199</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Darwinism, and Theodore Dreiser, <a href="#p_84">84</a>, <a href="#p_85">85</a>, <a href="#p_88">88</a>, <a href="#p_93">93</a>, <a href="#p_95">95</a>
+ <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Day-dreaming, <a href="#p_156">156</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Decadence, <a href="#p_186">186</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Degeneracy, <a href="#p_186">186</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Deliverance, the problem of, <a href="#p_185">185</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dell, Floyd, <a href="#p_22">22</a>, <a href="#p_254">254</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dickens, Charles, <a href="#p_147">147</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dickinson, Emily, a Puritan type of mind, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dimmesdale, in “The Scarlet Letter,” <a href="#p_37">37–45</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dom Manuel, in “Figures of Earth,” <a href="#p_209">209–212</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Domnei,” <a href="#p_212">212–215</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Donatello, in “The Marble Faun,” <a href="#p_38">38</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dostoievski, F. M., <a href="#p_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Double personality, <a href="#p_156">156</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dreiser (or Dresser), Paul, <a href="#p_72">72</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dreiser, Theodore, his arraignment of American culture, <a href="#p_17">17</a>, <a href="#p_18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">absorbed by the problems of Puritan inhibitions, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Freudism, <a href="#p_31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the historian of a disillusioned America, <a href="#p_71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">views social studies from an individual angle, <a href="#p_72">72</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his career, <a href="#p_72">72</a>, <a href="#p_73">73</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his books, <a href="#p_73">73</a>, <a href="#p_74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his realism, <a href="#p_74">74</a>, <a href="#p_75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his enthusiasm for facts, <a href="#p_75">75–77</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the contents of his novels borrowed from the news column, <a href="#p_77">77–80</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his use of term <i>bio-chemistry</i>, <a href="#p_78">78</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">does not comment in his novels, <a href="#p_80">80</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his essays, <a href="#p_81">81</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his philosophy, <a href="#p_81">81–83</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">translates psychology in terms of bio-chemistry, <a href="#p_83">83</a>, <a href="#p_84">84</a>, <a href="#p_95">95</a>, <a href="#p_106">106</a>,
+ <a href="#p_109">109–118</a>, <a href="#p_123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his evolutionism, <a href="#p_84">84</a>, <a href="#p_85">85</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his supermen, <a href="#p_85">85</a>, <a href="#p_93">93–95</a>, <a href="#p_105">105</a>, <a href="#p_111">111</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his blow to American idealism, <a href="#p_85">85</a>, <a href="#p_86">86</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his illustration of the battle of life, <a href="#p_86">86–88</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his love for America, <a href="#p_88">88–93</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “A Hoosier Holiday,” <a href="#p_88">88–93</a>, <a href="#p_95">95–97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his hero worship, <a href="#p_94">94</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his treatment of sexual problems, <a href="#p_95">95</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his Darwinian Philosophy, <a href="#p_95">95</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his hymn to the Vital Force, <a href="#p_95">95–97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his belief in compensation (equation), <a href="#p_97">97</a>, <a href="#p_98">98</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his pessimism and optimism, <a href="#p_98">98</a>, <a href="#p_99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggests two solutions of the ethical problem, <a href="#p_99">99</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on spiritual progress, <a href="#p_100">100</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his liking for the Dutch painters, <a href="#p_101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his definition of art, <a href="#p_101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Sister Carrie,” <a href="#p_102">102–104</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Jennie Gerhardt,” <a href="#p_104">104</a>, <a href="#p_105">105</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Financier,” <a href="#p_105">105–108</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Titan,” <a href="#p_108">108–111</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Genius,” <a href="#p_111">111–115</a>, <a href="#p_195">195</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “An American Tragedy,” <a href="#p_115">115–122</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his theory of criminal responsibility, <a href="#p_116">116–119</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">leaves little hope of reformation for the fallen, <a href="#p_123">123</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his biological fatalism, <a href="#p_124">124</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his decalogue, <a href="#p_124">124</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his ethics, <a href="#p_125">125</a>, <a href="#p_126">126</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">goes too far in starving the human emotions, <a href="#p_126">126</a>, <a href="#p_127">127</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Walt Whitman’s influence on, <a href="#p_154">154</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the primordial importance of the sexual question, <a href="#p_191">191</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_288">288</span>Drunkenness, in recent American fiction, <a href="#p_187">187</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dual personalities, <a href="#p_182">182</a>, <a href="#p_184">184</a>, <a href="#p_254">254</a>, <a href="#p_271">271</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Duhamel, George, <a href="#p_255">255</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dutch painters, the, <a href="#p_101">101</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Eagle’s Shadow, The,” <a href="#p_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Education, American, hostile to “wish-fulfillment,” <a href="#p_14">14</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Edwards, Jonathan, his sermons, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eggleston, Edward, and the Dutch painters, <a href="#p_101">101</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elite and masses, in America, the feud between, <a href="#p_9">9</a>, <a href="#p_10">10</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Elmer Gantry,” <a href="#p_150">150–153</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elsie Leander, in “The Triumph of the Egg,” <a href="#p_167">167</a>, <a href="#p_187">187–191</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Emerson, Charles, <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Emerson, Ralph Waldo, <a href="#p_17">17</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">a Puritan type of mind, <a href="#p_12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his ethics, <a href="#p_98">98</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">tried in “Representative Men” to delineate the ideal man, <a href="#p_222">222</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">a transcendental realist, <a href="#p_222">222</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">made much of dreams in his philosophy, <a href="#p_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Emma Bovary, in “Madame Bovary,” vii, <a href="#p_138">138</a>, <a href="#p_142">142–144</a>, <a href="#p_206">206</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">English novelists, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Erik Dorn,” <a href="#p_271">271–273</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eroticism, the great issue of suppressed sensibilities, <a href="#p_187">187</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and mysticism, <a href="#p_191">191</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Sex problems, Sexual inhibition.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Estaunié, Edouard, <a href="#p_239">239</a>, <a href="#p_246">246</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Ethan Frome,” <a href="#p_60">60</a>, <a href="#p_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ethics, the Puritan, compared with those of Dreiser, <a href="#p_125">125</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">conflict between social and individual, <a href="#p_130">130</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eugene Witla, in “The Genius,” <a href="#p_111">111–114</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Evasions, <a href="#p_207">207</a>, <a href="#p_208">208</a>, <a href="#p_231">231</a>, <a href="#p_254">254</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“False Dawn,” <a href="#p_56">56</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Family life, in American plays and novels, <a href="#p_249">249</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fiction, confusion between, and realism, in Howells’ work, <a href="#p_200">200</a>, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cabell’s defense of, <a href="#p_205">205–207</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the craving for, <a href="#p_208">208</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Novel.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Figures of Earth,” <a href="#p_209">209–212</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Financier, The,” <a href="#p_71">71–73</a>, <a href="#p_77">77</a>, <a href="#p_79">79</a>, <a href="#p_86">86–88</a>, <a href="#p_105">105–108</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Firkins, Mr., <a href="#p_63">63</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Flamboyant,” <a href="#p_278">278</a>, <a href="#p_279">279</a>, <a href="#p_279">279</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Flaubert, Gustave, <a href="#p_23">23</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Madame Bovary,” vi, vii, <a href="#p_137">137</a>, <a href="#p_138">138</a>, <a href="#p_142">142–144</a>, <a href="#p_206">206</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Bouvard and Pecuchet,” <a href="#p_129">129</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">never lost sight of art, <a href="#p_153">153</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his influence on the American Novel, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Floating anxiety,” <a href="#p_19">19</a>, <a href="#p_31">31</a>, <a href="#p_146">146</a>, <a href="#p_184">184</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Florian de Puysange, in “The High Place,” <a href="#p_224">224–231</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frank, Waldo, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Puritanism according to, <a href="#p_13">13–16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dual personality in novels of, <a href="#p_254">254</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">master of the minor dialogue, <a href="#p_255">255</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his novels, <a href="#p_255">255</a>, <a href="#p_256">256</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Free Air,” <a href="#p_128">128</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Free will, <a href="#p_116">116</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">French novel, influence of the, on American novel, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Freud, Doctor, vi.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Freudism, and Puritanism, <a href="#p_31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disquieting elements of, <a href="#p_32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the novels of Anderson, <a href="#p_156">156</a>, <a href="#p_182">182</a>, <a href="#p_188">188</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">a literary rendering to, <a href="#p_184">184</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frost, Robert, a Puritan type of mind, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Fruit of the Tree, The,” <a href="#p_56">56</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Fuller, Margaret, an experience of, <a href="#p_142">142</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">an example of suppression, <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Gale, Zona, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the chronicler of American life in the small towns, <a href="#p_248">248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “Birth,” <a href="#p_248">248</a>, <a href="#p_249">249</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “Miss Lulu Bett,” <a href="#p_250">250–254</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Garland, Hamlin, on the case of realism <i>versus</i> sentimentalism, <a href="#p_200">200</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gaultier, Jules de, his “Le Bovarysme,” vi.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_289">289</span>“Gay Science,” <a href="#p_205">205</a>, <a href="#p_220">220</a>, <a href="#p_280">280</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Genius, The,” <a href="#p_73">73</a>, <a href="#p_77">77</a>, <a href="#p_111">111–115</a>, <a href="#p_195">195</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Glasgow, Ellen, <a href="#p_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Golden Bowl, The,” <a href="#p_53">53</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Goncourts, the, influence of, on the American novel, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gopher Prairie, <a href="#p_135">135–144</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Great American Novel, The,” <a href="#p_277">277</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Great War, the, <a href="#p_259">259</a>, <a href="#p_266">266</a>, <a href="#p_267">267</a>, <a href="#p_275">275</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Hand of the Potter, the,” <a href="#p_115">115</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Happy ending,” the, <a href="#p_14">14</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hawthorne, Nathaniel, wrote the novel of manners, <a href="#p_4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence of Puritanism on, <a href="#p_12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">resemblances to Freudism in, <a href="#p_31">31</a>, <a href="#p_32">32</a>, <a href="#p_36">36–42</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">attracted by problems of the inmost life, <a href="#p_32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his life, <a href="#p_33">33</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his complex explained by his genealogy, <a href="#p_33">33</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the paganism of his imagination, <a href="#p_33">33</a>, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his women, <a href="#p_34">34</a>, <a href="#p_38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his conscience, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">haunted by the idea of crime and punishment, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">moral paradoxes of, <a href="#p_35">35</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as a psychologist, <a href="#p_36">36</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">analysis of his “The Scarlet Letter,” <a href="#p_36">36–45</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his symbolism, <a href="#p_45">45</a>, <a href="#p_46">46</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hecht, Ben, <a href="#p_271">271–274</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Helvetius, <a href="#p_125">125</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hemingway, George, <a href="#p_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hergesheimer, Joseph, <a href="#p_22">22</a>, <a href="#p_254">254</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Herrman, John, <a href="#p_270">270</a>, <a href="#p_270">270</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hester Prynne, in “The Scarlet Letter,” <a href="#p_37">37–45</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub,” <a href="#p_74">74</a>, <a href="#p_97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">quotations from, <a href="#p_82">82–86</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“High Place, The,” <a href="#p_224">224–231</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hilda, in “The Marble Faun,” <a href="#p_34">34</a>, <a href="#p_38">38</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Holiday, A,” <a href="#p_255">255</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Holmes, Oliver Wendell, his “Elsie Venner,” <a href="#p_110">110</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Hoosier Holiday, A,” <a href="#p_74">74</a>, <a href="#p_88">88–93</a>, <a href="#p_95">95–97</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“House of Mirth, The,” <a href="#p_58">58</a>, <a href="#p_59">59</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“House of the Seven Gables, The,” the character of Phœbe in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">sin in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>, <a href="#p_35">35</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the character of Clifford Pyncheon in, <a href="#p_38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">symbolism in, <a href="#p_45">45</a>, <a href="#p_46">46</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Howells, William Dean, <a href="#p_22">22</a>, <a href="#p_54">54</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his realism, <a href="#p_61">61</a>, <a href="#p_62">62</a>, <a href="#p_69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his limitations, <a href="#p_62">62</a>, <a href="#p_64">64</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">divides society into two opposite classes, <a href="#p_63">63</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his moral system, <a href="#p_64">64–67</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “A Modern Instance,” <a href="#p_64">64–66</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Landlord at Lion’s Head,” <a href="#p_66">66</a>, <a href="#p_67">67</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his ideals those of the sentimental middle class, <a href="#p_67">67–70</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Dreiser, <a href="#p_126">126</a>, <a href="#p_127">127</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the descent from, to Sherwood Anderson, <a href="#p_169">169</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">confusion between realism and fiction in, <a href="#p_201">201</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hugh McVey, in “Poor White,” <a href="#p_181">181</a>, <a href="#p_182">182</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Humor, American, <a href="#p_48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and irony, <a href="#p_224">224</a>, <a href="#p_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Humpty-Dumpty,” <a href="#p_271">271</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hurstwood, in “Sister Carrie,” <a href="#p_103">103</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Huysmans, influence of, on the American novel, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Idealism, American, buried in the grave of the Transcendentalists, <a href="#p_16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">is largely manufactured by women, <a href="#p_21">21</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dead in the American novel of to-day, <a href="#p_257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and utilitarianism, <a href="#p_258">258</a>, <a href="#p_259">259</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">transcendental, <a href="#p_258">258</a>, <a href="#p_259">259</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Imagination, the rights of, claimed and defended by Cabell, <a href="#p_200">200</a>, <a href="#p_201">201</a>, <a href="#p_206">206</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the expression of, <a href="#p_279">279</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Imperialism, pragmatic, <a href="#p_259">259</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">mystic, <a href="#p_259">259</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Individual and social ethics, <a href="#p_124">124–127</a>, <a href="#p_130">130</a>, <a href="#p_136">136</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Inevitable Equation, The,” <a href="#p_81">81</a>, <a href="#p_97">97</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Inhibited, city of the, <a href="#p_184">184</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Inhibition, the danger in, vii, <a href="#p_280">280</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the tortures of, described, <a href="#p_191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the problem of sexual, <a href="#p_191">191</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">effects caused by, prevalent among Puritan writers of New England, <a href="#p_223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in novels of Willa Cather, <a href="#p_238">238–248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in novels of Zona Gale, <a href="#p_249">249</a>, <a href="#p_250">250</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in novels of Floyd Dell, <a href="#p_254">254</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_290">290</span>Inness, George, <a href="#p_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Instinct, as opposed to the social code, <a href="#p_124">124–127</a>, <a href="#p_130">130</a>, <a href="#p_136">136</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Intelligence test, the, <a href="#p_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Irene Olenska, in “The Age of Innocence,” <a href="#p_57">57</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Irony and humor, <a href="#p_224">224</a>, <a href="#p_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Jaloux, Edmond, <a href="#p_246">246</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">James, Henry, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">master of the psychological novel, <a href="#p_4">4</a>, <a href="#p_47">47</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">needed the European background, <a href="#p_47">47</a>, <a href="#p_48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his indictment of America, <a href="#p_48">48–50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his first novels, <a href="#p_50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his women, <a href="#p_50">50–52</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his novels a contribution to the study of inhibitions, <a href="#p_52">52</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in æsthetics, <a href="#p_53">53</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">uses <i>appreciation</i>, <a href="#p_53">53</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">invented the <i>monologue intérieur</i>, <a href="#p_53">53</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">composed from the center outward, <a href="#p_53">53</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as an artist, <a href="#p_54">54</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">James, William, <a href="#p_4">4</a>, <a href="#p_17">17</a>, <a href="#p_149">149</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his psychological theories, <a href="#p_26">26</a>, <a href="#p_27">27</a>, <a href="#p_186">186</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his attempt to reconcile idealism with utilitarianism, <a href="#p_258">258</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Java Head,” <a href="#p_254">254</a>, <a href="#p_255">255</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jazz, <a href="#p_197">197</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jeff Durgin, in “The Landlord at Lion’s Head,” <a href="#p_66">66</a>, <a href="#p_67">67</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jennicot, in “The High Place,” <a href="#p_228">228–230</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Jennie Gerhardt,” <a href="#p_73">73</a>, <a href="#p_104">104</a>, <a href="#p_105">105</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">John Webster, in “Many Marriages,” <a href="#p_192">192–196</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Joyce, James, <a href="#p_22">22</a>, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_27">27</a>, <a href="#p_53">53</a>, <a href="#p_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Jurgen,” <a href="#p_208">208</a>, <a href="#p_209">209</a>, <a href="#p_215">215–220</a>, <a href="#p_223">223</a>, <a href="#p_224">224</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Kennaston, in “The Cream of the Jest,” <a href="#p_231">231–237</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kennicott, in “Main Street,” <a href="#p_136">136–144</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Kora in Hell,” <a href="#p_277">277</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Landlord at Lion’s Head, The,” <a href="#p_66">66</a>, <a href="#p_67">67</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lawrence, D. H., <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_36">36</a>, <a href="#p_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lewis, Sinclair, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his career, <a href="#p_128">128</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Free Air,” <a href="#p_128">128</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Mantrap,” <a href="#p_128">128</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Our Mr. Wren,” <a href="#p_129">129</a>, <a href="#p_130">130</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his works inspired by feeling of conflict between social and individual ethics, <a href="#p_130">130</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Main Street,” <a href="#p_135">135–144</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Babbitt,” <a href="#p_144">144–148</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Arrowsmith,” <a href="#p_148">148–150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as an artist, <a href="#p_149">149</a>, <a href="#p_150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his language, <a href="#p_150">150</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Elmer Gantry,” <a href="#p_150">150–153</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lily Bart, in “The House of Mirth,” <a href="#p_58">58</a>, <a href="#p_59">59</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Linda Condon,” <a href="#p_254">254</a>, <a href="#p_255">255</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lodge, Henry Cabot, <a href="#p_186">186</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">London, Jack, and “the movies,” <a href="#p_4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Martin Eden,” <a href="#p_167">167</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">(mentioned, <a href="#p_110">110</a>).</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Lost Lady, A,” <a href="#p_239">239</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Love, as bio-chemistry, <a href="#p_111">111</a>, <a href="#p_113">113</a>, <a href="#p_117">117</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">McAlmon, Robert, his career, <a href="#p_262">262</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “Village,” <a href="#p_262">262–269</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Portrait of a Generation,” <a href="#p_269">269</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Madonna of the Future, The,” <a href="#p_150">150</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Main Street,” <a href="#p_135">135–144</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mallarmé, Stephane, <a href="#p_166">166</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Mantrap,” <a href="#p_128">128</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Many Marriages,” <a href="#p_191">191–196</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Marble Faun, The,” paganism in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the character of Hilda in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>, <a href="#p_38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">amorality in, <a href="#p_35">35</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the character of Donatello in, <a href="#p_38">38</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">symbolism, <a href="#p_45">45</a>, <a href="#p_46">46</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Marching Men,” <a href="#p_158">158</a>, <a href="#p_159">159</a>, <a href="#p_171">171–180</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Marks, Percy, his “The Plastic Age,” <a href="#p_270">270</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Martin, Doctor, psychologist, <a href="#p_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Masses and élite, in America, the feud between, <a href="#p_9">9</a>, <a href="#p_10">10</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Masters, Edgar Lee, <a href="#p_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mather, Cotton, his <i>Magnalia</i>, <a href="#p_10">10</a>, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Maupassant, Guy de, his influence on the American novel, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Medical profession, the fakes of, satirized in “Arrowsmith,” <a href="#p_148">148</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mencken, Henry, a literary radical, <a href="#p_4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his magazine, <a href="#p_10">10</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his arraignment of Puritanism, <a href="#p_16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="p_291">291</span>his “The American Language,” <a href="#p_150">150</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Mid-American Chants,” <a href="#p_155">155</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Middle West, <a href="#p_136">136</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mid-Victorians, the, <a href="#p_74">74</a>, <a href="#p_75">75</a>, <a href="#p_126">126</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Milton, John, Puritanism the inspiration of his epic, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Milton Daggett, in “Free Air,” <a href="#p_128">128</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Miss Lulu Bett,” <a href="#p_250">250–254</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mississippi River, the, <a href="#p_197">197</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Modern Instance, A,” <a href="#p_64">64–66</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Molière, J. B., his M. Jourdain, <a href="#p_144">144</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Monologue intérieur</i>, the, <a href="#p_53">53</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Moody, Mary, Emerson’s aunt, a <i>clairvoyante</i>, <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Moody, William Vaughn, a Puritan type of mind, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Mother complex,” <a href="#p_20">20</a>, <a href="#p_21">21</a>, <a href="#p_21">21</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_69">69</a>, <a href="#p_136">136</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Movies,” <a href="#p_4">4</a>, <a href="#p_14">14</a>, <a href="#p_16">16</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_20">20</a>, <a href="#p_37">37</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">psychoanalysis in, <a href="#p_184">184</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_278">278</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Murger, H., his “Vie de Bohême,” <a href="#p_167">167</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“My Antonia,” <a href="#p_241">241–245</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“My First Thirty Years,” <a href="#p_270">270</a>, <a href="#p_271">271</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“My Mortal Enemy,” <a href="#p_248">248</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Myers, W. L., his “The Later Realism,” <a href="#p_258">258</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mysticism and eroticism, <a href="#p_191">191</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Nance McGregor, in “Marching Men,” <a href="#p_175">175–177</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Negro music, <a href="#p_197">197</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“New Englander, The,” <a href="#p_187">187–191</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">New Orleans, <a href="#p_198">198</a>, <a href="#p_199">199</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“New poetry,” <a href="#p_3">3</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“New Year’s Day,” <a href="#p_61">61</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nonconformists, American, <a href="#p_10">10</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nordau, Max, his “Degeneracy,” <a href="#p_186">186</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Novel, American, of the nineteenth century, <a href="#p_4">4</a>, <a href="#p_7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the recent change in, <a href="#p_7">7</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence of the French novel on, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">influence of the Russian novel on, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the English novelists, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_282">282</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in 1900, <a href="#p_74">74</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">drunkenness in, <a href="#p_187">187</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">cynicism and crudity in, <a href="#p_257">257</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of adolescence, <a href="#p_262">262</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">as a true representative of American conditions, <a href="#p_282">282</a>, <a href="#p_283">283</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">O’Higgins (Harvey) and Reede, their book on “The American Mind in Action,” <a href="#p_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ohio River, the, <a href="#p_197">197</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Old Maid, The,” <a href="#p_61">61</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“One of Ours,” <a href="#p_246">246–248</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">O’Neill, Eugene, his “Desire Under the Elms,” <a href="#p_21">21</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">drunkenness in his plays, <a href="#p_187">187</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">stages a continuous monologue, <a href="#p_192">192</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Our America,” <a href="#p_256">256</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Our Mr. Wren,” <a href="#p_129">129</a>, <a href="#p_130">130</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Painting, the art of, <a href="#p_112">112</a>, <a href="#p_113">113</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Palladino, Eusebia, <a href="#p_50">50</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pearl, in “The Scarlet Letter,” <a href="#p_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Personality, dissociation of, <a href="#p_27">27</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Personality picture,” <a href="#p_28">28</a>, <a href="#p_142">142</a>, <a href="#p_156">156</a>, <a href="#p_170">170</a>, <a href="#p_221">221</a>,
+ <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pessimism, in the United States, viii, ix, <a href="#p_8">8</a>, <a href="#p_135">135</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in recent American literature, viii, ix, <a href="#p_257">257</a>, <a href="#p_260">260</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pirandello, <a href="#p_27">27</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Poe, Edgar Allan, the standard of the short story set by, <a href="#p_4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the influence of Puritanism on, <a href="#p_12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">had an artistic conscience, <a href="#p_47">47</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">haunted by the dead, <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Poictesme, the land of, <a href="#p_203">203–205</a>, <a href="#p_209">209</a>, <a href="#p_215">215</a>, <a href="#p_221">221</a>, <a href="#p_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Policeman, in the “movies,” <a href="#p_16">16</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Poor White,” <a href="#p_167">167</a>, <a href="#p_181">181</a>, <a href="#p_182">182</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Portrait of a Generation, The,” <a href="#p_269">269</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Post-Adolescence,” <a href="#p_269">269</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pragmatism, <a href="#p_27">27</a>, <a href="#p_149">149</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Professor’s House, The,” <a href="#p_239">239</a>, <a href="#p_240">240</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Proust, Marcel, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_27">27</a>, <a href="#p_53">53</a>, <a href="#p_276">276</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Provincialism, <a href="#p_200">200</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Psittacism, <a href="#p_184">184</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Psychoanalysis, vi, <a href="#p_30">30–32</a>, <a href="#p_156">156</a>, <a href="#p_169">169</a>, <a href="#p_170">170</a>, <a href="#p_182">182–187</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Psychology, experimental, study of, in America, <a href="#p_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_292">292</span>Psychology, studies of morbid, <a href="#p_182">182–187</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Publicity in America, <a href="#p_146">146–148</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Puritan ethics, and Dreiser’s, <a href="#p_125">125</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Puritanism, the good points of, <a href="#p_11">11–13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the bad points of, <a href="#p_13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the revolt against, <a href="#p_13">13</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">according to Waldo Frank, <a href="#p_13">13–16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the decadence of, <a href="#p_15">15</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mencken’s arraignment of, <a href="#p_16">16</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">intellectual energies thwarted by, <a href="#p_18">18</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">inhibitions of, <a href="#p_18">18–20</a>, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and psychoanalysis, <a href="#p_31">31</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and James Branch Cabell, <a href="#p_201">201</a>.</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Inhibition.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Radicalism, intellectual and literary, birth of, <a href="#p_260">260</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Radicals, American, <a href="#p_10">10</a>, <a href="#p_11">11</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rascoe, Burton, <a href="#p_273">273</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Realism, of Howells, <a href="#p_61">61</a>, <a href="#p_62">62</a>, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and fiction, confusion between, <a href="#p_200">200</a>, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>versus</i> sentimentalism, <a href="#p_200">200</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">fictitious, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">in psychology, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">revolt against, <a href="#p_201">201</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">banned by Cabell, <a href="#p_206">206</a>, <a href="#p_207">207</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Willa Cather, <a href="#p_246">246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">static, <a href="#p_246">246</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">optimistic, <a href="#p_248">248</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">later, <a href="#p_258">258</a>, <a href="#p_258">258</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_270">270</a>, <a href="#p_271">271</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Reef, The,” <a href="#p_56">56</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Representative men, revaluation of, <a href="#p_19">19</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Responsibility for Crime, <a href="#p_110">110</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_116">116</a>, <a href="#p_118">118</a>, <a href="#p_119">119</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Revisionists,” <a href="#p_259">259</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Revolt against the village,” <a href="#p_200">200</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rimbaud, Arthur, <a href="#p_266">266</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Rivet in Grandfather’s Neck, The,” <a href="#p_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Robinson, a Puritan type of mind, <a href="#p_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Roderick Hudson,” <a href="#p_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Romantic evasion, <a href="#p_207">207</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Romanticism, a psychological disease, vii;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">M. Seillères, study of, <a href="#p_130">130</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Puritanism, <a href="#p_200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">of Cabell, <a href="#p_205">205</a>, <a href="#p_206">206</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rousseau, J. J., <a href="#p_125">125</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Runaway, The,” <a href="#p_254">254</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Russian novelists, their vogue in America, <a href="#p_23">23</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Saint Pierre, <a href="#p_239">239</a>, <a href="#p_240">240</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sargent, John Singer, <a href="#p_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Scarlet Letter, The,” paganism in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the character of Pearl in, <a href="#p_34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">amorality in, <a href="#p_35">35</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the purpose of, <a href="#p_36">36</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">analysis of, <a href="#p_37">37–45</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Seillères, Eugene, his study of romanticism, <a href="#p_130">130</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Self, the, <a href="#p_27">27–29</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">dissociation and reunification of, <a href="#p_170">170</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Selves, three, <a href="#p_127">127</a>, <a href="#p_186">186</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sensibility, analysis of pathological forms of, <a href="#p_182">182–187</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sentimentalism, and the realistic novel, <a href="#p_200">200</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1"><i>versus</i> realism, <a href="#p_200">200</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sex problems, <a href="#p_59">59</a>, <a href="#p_60">60</a>, <a href="#p_95">95</a>, <a href="#p_102">102–105</a>, <a href="#p_111">111–115</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sexual inhibition, the problem of, <a href="#p_191">191</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shaw, G. B., his “Man and Superman,” <a href="#p_111">111</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Silas Lapham, <a href="#p_69">69</a>, <a href="#p_70">70</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sin, in Hawthorne, <a href="#p_34">34</a>, <a href="#p_35">35</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Sister Carrie,” <a href="#p_73">73</a>, <a href="#p_102">102–104</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Social code, and instinct, <a href="#p_124">124–127</a>, <a href="#p_130">130</a>, <a href="#p_136">136</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Socialism, <a href="#p_135">135</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Song of the Lark,” <a href="#p_240">240</a>, <a href="#p_241">241</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Soul-fear,” <a href="#p_19">19</a>, <a href="#p_31">31</a>, <a href="#p_146">146</a>, <a href="#p_184">184</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Spark, The,” <a href="#p_56">56</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Standardization, vii, <a href="#p_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Standards, American, <a href="#p_9">9</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stein, Gertrude, <a href="#p_165">165</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stendhal, his “Le rouge et noir,” <a href="#p_116">116</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Story Teller’s Story, A,” quoted, <a href="#p_160">160</a>, <a href="#p_161">161</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Strenuous life, America the land of, <a href="#p_186">186</a>, <a href="#p_186">186</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Style, of American fiction writers, <a href="#p_202">202</a>, <a href="#p_203">203</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Subconscious, the, <a href="#p_26">26</a>, <a href="#p_181">181</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Suggestive language, the, <a href="#p_165">165</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Summer,” <a href="#p_60">60</a>, <a href="#p_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="p_293">293</span>Superman, the, of Dreiser, <a href="#p_85">85</a>, <a href="#p_93">93–95</a>, <a href="#p_105">105</a>,
+ <a href="#p_111">111</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">imagined by Emerson, <a href="#p_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Suppression. <i>See</i> Inhibition.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Tar,” <a href="#p_155">155</a>, <a href="#p_155">155</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_157">157</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#p_162">162</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tartuffe, <a href="#p_151">151</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tchekhov, A. P., <a href="#p_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thea Kronburg, in “Song of the Lark,” <a href="#p_240">240</a>, <a href="#p_241">241</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Thoreau, Henry David, a Puritan type of mind, <a href="#p_12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">disguises himself, <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Titan, The,” <a href="#p_71">71–73</a>, <a href="#p_108">108–111</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Transcendental idealism, <a href="#p_258">258</a>, <a href="#p_259">259</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Transcendentalists, the, <a href="#p_16">16</a>, <a href="#p_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Traveller at Forty, A,” <a href="#p_98">98</a>, <a href="#p_101">101</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Triumph of the Egg, The,” <a href="#p_167">167</a>, <a href="#p_187">187–191</a>, <a href="#p_193">193</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Twain, Mark, <a href="#p_68">68</a>, <a href="#p_261">261</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">voted for American philistinism, <a href="#p_49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Mississippi and the Ohio, <a href="#p_197">197</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Mysterious Stranger,” <a href="#p_224">224</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Twelve Men,” <a href="#p_72">72</a>, <a href="#p_74">74</a>, <a href="#p_98">98</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Undine Spragg, in “The Custom of the Country,” <a href="#p_56">56</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Utilitarianism, and idealism, <a href="#p_258">258</a>, <a href="#p_259">259</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Vechten, Carl van, <a href="#p_279">279</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vildrac, Charles, his “Paquebot Tenacity,” <a href="#p_21">21</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Village,” <a href="#p_262">262–269</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Wendell, Barrett, <a href="#p_187">187</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wharton, Edith, <a href="#p_22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">specialized in the society novel, <a href="#p_54">54</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her process, <a href="#p_55">55</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">not introspective, <a href="#p_55">55</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">indifferent to social and political problems, <a href="#p_56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her satire of American life and society, <a href="#p_56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “The Custom of the Country,” <a href="#p_56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “The Age of Innocence,” <a href="#p_57">57</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the spiritual and moral indigence of her characters, <a href="#p_57">57–59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her psychological insight, <a href="#p_59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the relation of the sexes, <a href="#p_59">59</a>, <a href="#p_60">60</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her psychoanalysis, <a href="#p_60">60</a>, <a href="#p_61">61</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her “Summer” and “Ethan Frome,” <a href="#p_60">60</a>, <a href="#p_61">61</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">her article on “The Great American Novel,” <a href="#p_200">200</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“What Maisie Knew,” <a href="#p_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Whistler, J. A. M., <a href="#p_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Whitman, Walt, a standard set by, <a href="#p_4">4</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">the United States a cornucopia to, <a href="#p_49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his influence on Dreiser, <a href="#p_154">154</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his influence on Anderson, <a href="#p_154">154</a>, <a href="#p_155">155</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “I Walt Whitman, a Cosmos,” <a href="#p_195">195</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his changes, <a href="#p_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Will, function of the, <a href="#p_118">118</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Williams, William Carlos, one of founders of “Contact,” <a href="#p_262">262</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his “The Great American Novel,” <a href="#p_277">277</a>, <a href="#p_278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his idea of American art of the future, <a href="#p_278">278</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">on imagination, <a href="#p_279">279</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Wilson, Edmund, on Henry James’ typical American virgin, <a href="#p_52">52</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Windy McPherson’s Son,” <a href="#p_156">156–158</a>, <a href="#p_168">168–171</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Winesburg, Ohio,” <a href="#p_158">158</a>, <a href="#p_182">182–187</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Wings of the Dove, The,” <a href="#p_52">52</a>, <a href="#p_53">53</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Wish-fulfillment,” <a href="#p_14">14</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Words, physical characteristics of, <a href="#p_165">165</a>, <a href="#p_166">166</a>, <a href="#p_166">166</a> <i>n.</i></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Young America, in quest of a new ideal, <a href="#p_280">280</a>, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Zola, Émile, <a href="#p_23">23</a>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">essay by James on, <a href="#p_54">54</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">his influence on the American novel, <a href="#p_281">281</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">
+ FOOTNOTES
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">[1]</a> <i>Nos actes nous suivent.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">[2]</a> In this survey of the case against the Puritan the author does not claim
+to adhere to a literal rendering of the views of the different critics. Many
+of the comments and examples are his own.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">[3]</a> A foreigner who goes to the American “movies” would not contradict
+Mr. Mencken on this point. The policeman, as a <i>deus ex machina</i>, to wind
+up a plot and bring in a happy ending, has no rival on the American screen
+except perhaps the young girl, acting as Salvation Nell. A squad of police
+rushing to the scene of a row or of an assault, provided it arrives on the
+psychological moment, is sure to raise the enthusiasm of the audience to the
+limit. Moral rescue by the police is the most popular form of the Aristotelian
+<i>catharsis</i> in America.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_4_4" href="#FNanchor_4_4" class="label">[4]</a> The “leavings aside” of Theodore Dreiser in this indictment are frequent
+enough to call for a fairer balance of the whole account when all is
+told. I refer the reader, for a retort on this point, to the first pages of this
+chapter, where I take the liberty to be much more optimistic concerning
+the intellectual capital of America.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_5_5" href="#FNanchor_5_5" class="label">[5]</a> Messrs. Harvey O’Higgins and Reede.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_6_6" href="#FNanchor_6_6" class="label">[6]</a> A revaluation of most of the great American representative men and
+women has taken place in the United States recently, in the light of <i>ex
+professo</i> Freudism and psychoanalysis. See the books of Crutch on Edgar
+Poe, Van Wyck Brooks on Mark Twain, Anthony on Margaret Fuller,
+Wood on Amy Lowell, etc., etc. This is another aspect of the intellectual
+revolt in America to-day.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_7_7" href="#FNanchor_7_7" class="label">[7]</a> This example is the author’s.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_8_8" href="#FNanchor_8_8" class="label">[8]</a> This mother complex is one of the most difficult American idiosyncrasies
+for the European to understand. The sublimation of instincts in
+America reaches its limits in married life when the wife becomes in familiar
+appellation “mother.” This American complex has no equivalent in the
+Old World.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_9_9" href="#FNanchor_9_9" class="label">[9]</a> The author of this book had a first-hand impression of the power of
+the American woman as a censor when, in a certain city of the West, an
+Association of Christian Mothers interfered to stop the production of Charles
+Vildrac’s “Paquebot Tenacity.” Vildrac’s play, for the un-Puritan critic,
+is a most moral play. It dramatizes the problem of free will. It stages the
+conflict between a strong and a weak man, both of them in the hands of Fate.
+The American “mothers” did not see these moral issues. They were only
+concerned with a dialogue between one of the characters and a maid around
+a bottle of champagne. The suppression in New York City more recently
+of “The Captive,” a Freudian play of the first order, marked another
+triumph for the “motherly complex.” Eugene O’Neill’s Ibsenian drama
+“Desire under the Elms” was interdicted in Los Angeles lately by the same
+“complex.” Meanwhile nude exhibitions which could hardly be tolerated
+even in Montmartre are allowed to proceed along every “gay White Way”
+throughout the United States.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_10_10" href="#FNanchor_10_10" class="label">[10]</a> Is not this a reason, among others, why the American business man
+stays “at his desk” until a late age, when the average European has gone
+into retirement a long time before? Work for the latter is only a makeshift
+in order to enjoy life better. For the American it is life itself.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_11_11" href="#FNanchor_11_11" class="label">[11]</a> J. Laumonnier, “Le Freudisme,” p. 8. Cf. <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 113, an essay on
+comparative psychology of peoples—based on Freudism. The Anglo-Saxons
+are apparently distinguished by a particular aptitude for inhibition
+and repression.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_12_12" href="#FNanchor_12_12" class="label">[12]</a> Since this was written there has been an important revival of Hawthorne
+criticism like the chapter in Mrs. L. L. Hazard’s “The Frontier in
+American Literature,” and the book of Lloyd Morris, “The Rebellious
+Puritan: Portrait of Mr. Hawthorne”; “Nathaniel Hawthorne, A Study in
+Solitude” by Herbert Gorman. These critical studies support very well
+the interpretation of Hawthorne presented in this volume.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_13_13" href="#FNanchor_13_13" class="label">[13]</a> I take the liberty to coin this adjective in memory of Eusebia Palladino,
+the famous medium.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_14_14" href="#FNanchor_14_14" class="label">[14]</a> Edmund Wilson in the <i>New Republic</i>, March 16, 1927. Sarcastic Mr.
+Wilson sums up the spiritual failure and the sentimental starvation of the
+typical American virgin in Henry James’ novels as follows: “She goes on
+eating marrons glacés in a hotel parlor with her father and sister, all her
+life,” a life fortunately short enough to bring to a quick close this original
+form of Dantesque torture.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_15_15" href="#FNanchor_15_15" class="label">[15]</a> And yet Puritanism did not prevent Henry James from writing the
+most sensible and most appreciative essay on Émile Zola in his “Notes
+on Novelists.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_16_16" href="#FNanchor_16_16" class="label">[16]</a> “The Old Maid,” “New Year’s Day,” “The Spark,” “False Dawn.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_17_17" href="#FNanchor_17_17" class="label">[17]</a> “The Old Maid” and “New Year’s Day” by the same author go very
+deep, too, in the analysis of subconscious emotions and their influence on
+moral and social behavior.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_18_18" href="#FNanchor_18_18" class="label">[18]</a> “Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub,” II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_19_19" href="#FNanchor_19_19" class="label">[19]</a> “Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_20_20" href="#FNanchor_20_20" class="label">[20]</a> “Hey Rub-a-Dub-Dub.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_21_21" href="#FNanchor_21_21" class="label">[21]</a> “The Financier.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_22_22" href="#FNanchor_22_22" class="label">[22]</a> “A Hoosier Holiday.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_23_23" href="#FNanchor_23_23" class="label">[23]</a> “A Hoosier Holiday.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_24_24" href="#FNanchor_24_24" class="label">[24]</a> This account of Dreiser’s Darwinian philosophy is being written just
+at the moment when the great French statesman, Georges Clemenceau, in
+the eighty-sixth year of his career, prints his “Au soir de la pensée.” That
+this great man, who knew men and life as very few did, can adhere to a
+philosophical creed literally in accord with that of Theodore Dreiser as
+presented in these pages, may well lead the reader to believe that, after
+all, there must be some truth in Darwinism as a hypothesis to explain the
+essential features of our modern social system.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_25_25" href="#FNanchor_25_25" class="label">[25]</a> A more awkward and clumsy way to express one’s self in writing than
+this passage cannot be easily imagined, and there are, unfortunately, too
+many passages like this one in Dreiser’s books. This pseudo-scientific
+jargon could be endured in Haeckel but it is difficult to be, at the same time,
+a bio-chemist and an artist. This groping through mysticism, science or
+triviality, toward literary expression seems to be the curse of the new
+American writers.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_26_26" href="#FNanchor_26_26" class="label">[26]</a> “A Hoosier Holiday.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_27_27" href="#FNanchor_27_27" class="label">[27]</a> Did not the Catholic Church have something similar to say on the
+subject, with its dogma of the Communion of Saints and the atonement for
+the wicked by the good?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_28_28" href="#FNanchor_28_28" class="label">[28]</a> The lesson of the Dutch masters has been learned very early by American
+realists. Thirty years ago, in his preface to “A Hoosier Schoolmaster,”
+Edward Eggleston attributed his vocation as a novelist to the reading of
+Taine’s book on Dutch painters.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_29_29" href="#FNanchor_29_29" class="label">[29]</a> This theory of conscience can prepare the reader for Dreiser’s views on
+crime and the criminal in “An American Tragedy.” It took bio-chemistry
+a long time to become a substitute for the Puritan doctrine of responsibility
+in the American novel. The first step in this direction after that of Hawthorne
+was taken by Oliver Wendell Holmes in the sixteenth chapter of
+“Elsie Venner.” There, good Dr. Holmes mobilized a college professor to
+demonstrate “the limitations of human responsibilities” from a scientific
+standpoint and present the criminal as a sick person not to be hanged or
+electrocuted, but preached to and cured, if possible, if not pensioned.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_30_30" href="#FNanchor_30_30" class="label">[30]</a> The French philosopher and historian, M. Eugene Seillères, renewed
+entirely the study of romanticism in Europe by viewing it as what he calls
+<i>l’impérialisme mystique</i>, the imperialistic tendency toward individual
+supremacy. If we applied his definition to America, this country would
+stand as essentially unromantic, <i>i.e.</i>, as the one which gives the individual
+the least chance for self-expansion beyond certain set limits. Hence the
+triumph of realism and middle-class standards in American literature. In
+the last fifteen or twenty years, on the other hand, the “revolt against the
+village” may well be interpreted as the sign of a new romantic upheaval
+among us, if we accept Mr. Seillères’ definitions.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_31_31" href="#FNanchor_31_31" class="label">[31]</a> “Main Street.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_32_32" href="#FNanchor_32_32" class="label">[32]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_33_33" href="#FNanchor_33_33" class="label">[33]</a> Margaret Fuller in her “Memoirs” has told similar experiences, as
+when she thought herself to be a whirling dervish and fell inanimate on the
+floor after performing like one of them.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_34_34" href="#FNanchor_34_34" class="label">[34]</a> Let me refer the reader for instance to Jim Blausser’s speech to his
+countrymen assembled to try to “boost” Gopher Prairie, and Doctor
+Pickerbaugh’s orations in “Arrowsmith.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_35_35" href="#FNanchor_35_35" class="label">[35]</a> Let the reader turn to “Tar” in particular for a vivid impression of
+Anderson’s primitivism. Beauty and the Beast fight there at close hand.
+One marvels how a would-be artist could save his soul from disgrace out
+of such a muddy and zoölogical chaos.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_36_36" href="#FNanchor_36_36" class="label">[36]</a> The “dance before the mirror,” as the French playwright François de
+Curel called it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_37_37" href="#FNanchor_37_37" class="label">[37]</a> In fact very little respect of any sort. For the desecration in particular
+of the myth of birth, I refer the reader to the orgiastic chapters in “Tar,”
+contrasting the birth of the little pigs with that of a human being. The
+scene is almost epic in its coarse nakedness.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_38_38" href="#FNanchor_38_38" class="label">[38]</a> “A Story Teller’s Story.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_39_39" href="#FNanchor_39_39" class="label">[39]</a> Anderson has told her story in “Tar.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_40_40" href="#FNanchor_40_40" class="label">[40]</a> A lesson which Anderson, as some of his critics tell, probably learned
+from Gertrude Stein, a virtuoso of the suggestive language to an extreme
+which the disciple has not yet followed, fortunately for us. Miss Stein’s
+story of an American family is a quarry where many curious gravels can
+be found, but no statues.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_41_41" href="#FNanchor_41_41" class="label">[41]</a> Stephane Mallarmé, a pioneer of modern æsthetics, was himself a victim
+of a similar spell. At the end of his career he replaced inspiration by throwing
+haphazard words in black on white. He originated a new process of
+composition in which words produced their effect by sheer magic, like those
+Japanese paper-balls which blossom out into a display of flowers when
+placed in a glass of water.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_42_42" href="#FNanchor_42_42" class="label">[42]</a> Is not this proletarian appeal the main sign of difference between the
+old and the new order of things in American literature? Passing from
+William Dean Howells to Sherwood Anderson is like descending the social
+ladder several rungs. No more well-to-do bourgeois, Laphams or Kentons.
+Now Middle Western literature takes us down to the ground floor and sometimes
+to the basement of democracy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_43_43" href="#FNanchor_43_43" class="label">[43]</a> In French <i>les refoulés</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_44_44" href="#FNanchor_44_44" class="label">[44]</a> This celebrated moving picture from the German studios has lately
+put psychoanalysis on the screen and made it intelligible to the masses.
+“Winesburg, Ohio” is not the only book of its kind which gives a literary
+rendering to Freudism. It is contemporary of and well in keeping with
+Pirandello’s plays, Eugene O’Neill’s drama and the newest French plays
+by Lenormand, Sarment, Cromelynck, and others.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_45_45" href="#FNanchor_45_45" class="label">[45]</a> <i>L’énergie américaine, l’énergie anglo-saxonne</i>, such was for the last half
+a century the slogan of almost all the French travelers to the United States.
+Did not a French consul write, a few years before the War, a book called
+“La supériorité des Anglo-Saxons,” based on the same views? These critics
+knew only the surface of city life in America. They ignored Winesburg
+and, of course, had not read Sherwood Anderson. Decadence or, as Max
+Nordau called it in a sensational book “Degeneracy,” has become a current
+topic in the books of the younger American writers. Most of them could
+be inscribed with George Cabot Lodge’s saying that: “We are a dying race,
+as every race must be of which the men are, as men and not accumulators,
+third rate.” Such a statement certainly calls for a serious qualification
+but it may prove useful as a “damper” against the professional panegyrists
+abroad and the megalomaniacs at home.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_46_46" href="#FNanchor_46_46" class="label">[46]</a> The part played by drunkenness in recent American fiction is appalling.
+In the good old days drinking used to be poetic and it was still Horatian
+in the way the late Barrett Wendell presented it in a famous essay. Since
+prohibition, it has become a narcotic and a dope. The triumph of drunkenness
+as a <i>deus ex machina</i> in modern American literature will be found in
+Eugene O’Neill’s plays, although the fact that we pass our time on his stage
+mostly among sailors, may be taken as an extenuating circumstance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_47_47" href="#FNanchor_47_47" class="label">[47]</a> Eugene O’Neill, in “Emperor Jones,” succeeded in the <i>tour de force</i> of
+staging a continuous monologue, but he was clever enough to use a tom-tom
+for a diversion from beginning to end. We miss this diversion in “Many
+Marriages.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_48_48" href="#FNanchor_48_48" class="label">[48]</a> “Many Marriages,” 217.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_49_49" href="#FNanchor_49_49" class="label">[49]</a> From Rousseau to jazz seems a very long way, and yet does not the
+modern American, so fond of dancing to the tune of a Paul Whiteman
+orchestra, in some gorgeous palace, unconsciously pay homage to the primitive
+instincts so dear to the author of “Dark Laughter”? What a piquant
+contrast, not only in shade but in ideals, that both the black man and the
+Puritan should live within the same frontiers and that the latter should
+borrow from the former one of his favorite forms of self-expression.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_50_50" href="#FNanchor_50_50" class="label">[50]</a> Hamlin Garland, in his “Crumbling Idols” (1894) frankly put the case
+of realism <i>versus</i> sentimentalism before the public. He quoted Mistral and
+the French Felibres, as well as Taine and the critic Veron in support of his
+plea for what he called <i>provincialism</i>. Realism triumphed in American
+fiction until Mrs. Wharton published her article on “The Great American
+Novel” in the <i>Yale Review</i> for July, 1927. She protested against what she
+called the “twelve-mile limit” and the narrow horizons of “the village
+pump.” That the “revolt against the village” will lead to an entire change
+of orientation in present-day American fiction and possibly to a new flight
+“beyond the horizon” in the next few years may soon become an easy and
+necessary prophecy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_51_51" href="#FNanchor_51_51" class="label">[51]</a> Let me refer the reader on this point to “The Outlook for American
+Prose” by Joseph Warren Beach (The University of Chicago Press).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_52_52" href="#FNanchor_52_52" class="label">[52]</a> And needless to say, in an entirely different spirit from the “Connecticut
+Yankee” by Mark Twain, who showed himself a gross Philistine in regard
+to medieval lore.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_53_53" href="#FNanchor_53_53" class="label">[53]</a> Author of “La Vie secrète,” “Les Choses Voient,” etc.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_54_54" href="#FNanchor_54_54" class="label">[54]</a> We owe that expression to Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, a much talented
+novelist and a specialist of women’s psychology in the United States.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_55_55" href="#FNanchor_55_55" class="label">[55]</a> In her latest short novel, “My Mortal Enemy,” Miss Cather has brought
+the tragedy of moral repression to its most crucial point. She tells the
+story of a woman who was looked upon as a rather peevish and vain person
+by those who knew her and who, at the end, frees her truest self in a pathetic
+prayer before going to die alone on a cliff above the sea.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_56_56" href="#FNanchor_56_56" class="label">[56]</a> This “later realism” has been studied through modern English fiction
+by Professor W. L. Myers in his book “The Later Realism” (Chicago University
+Press), a masterpiece of searching criticism.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_57_57" href="#FNanchor_57_57" class="label">[57]</a> In his novel called “What Happens” John Herrman gives us a pitiless
+and depressing document about the habits of college students of both sexes.
+If this be a faithful painting, American youth would then seem to have but
+two ideals—Vice and Alcohol. I leave the full responsibility of this verdict
+to the author. A similar, but more optimistic and moralizing representation,
+will be found in Mr. Percy Marks’ novel, “The Plastic Age,” The Century
+Company, New York.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_58_58" href="#FNanchor_58_58" class="label">[58]</a> Mr. Burton Rascoe.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_59_59" href="#FNanchor_59_59" class="label">[59]</a> See in Chapter II my exposé of “behaviorism.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_60_60" href="#FNanchor_60_60" class="label">[60]</a> Mr. Ernest Boyd in his “Portraits Real and Imaginary.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_61_61" href="#FNanchor_61_61" class="label">[61]</a> To which we should add his amusing “Kora in Hell.”</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_62_62" href="#FNanchor_62_62" class="label">[62]</a> The advent of “flamboyant” will be found in the books of Messrs.
+Carl van Vechten, Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway who take their
+revenge on dullness with firecrackers, bull fights and champagne. Out of the
+gloom of realistic fiction the sun rises beyond the horizon of the “village
+pump” through the pages of “Firecrackers,” “The Great Gatsby,” and
+Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises.” The return to art for art’s sake may
+free the American novel from the shackles of pessimism. Let us hope so.</p></div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78461 ***</div>
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