Classic Audiobook Collection - The Writing of Fiction by Edith Wharton ~ Full Audiobook [self help]
Episode Date: March 9, 2024The Writing of Fiction by Edith Wharton audiobook. Genre: self help In The Writing of Fiction, acclaimed novelist Edith Wharton turns from the page to the workshop, offering a clear-eyed guide to how... stories are built and why certain novels endure. Drawn from her lectures and steeped in a lifetime of practice, Wharton walks aspiring writers and serious readers through the essential architecture of fiction: the seed of a situation, the shaping of plot, the creation of character, and the disciplined choices that give a narrative its force. She examines viewpoint and narrative distance, the timing of revelation, the use of scene versus summary, and the often invisible work of selection and omission that makes a story feel inevitable rather than accidental. Along the way, Wharton brings in examples from classic literature not as name-dropping, but as case studies that reveal craft decisions at work on the sentence and on the structure. The result is both practical and bracing: an invitation to treat imagination as only the beginning, and to embrace form, restraint, and purposeful design as the real engines of compelling fiction. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:24:24) Chapter 02 (00:48:40) Chapter 03 (01:15:42) Chapter 04 (01:59:11) Chapter 05 (02:28:10) Chapter 06 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The writing of fiction by Edith Wharton, Chapter 1, in general, Part 1, to treat of the practice of fiction
is to deal with the newest, most fluid and least formulated of the arts. The exploration of origins
is always fascinating, but the attempt to relate the modern novel to the tale of Joseph and his
brethren is of purely historic interest. Modern fiction really began when the action of the
novel was transferred from the street to the soul, and this step was probably first taken when
Madame de la Fayette, in the 17th century, wrote a little story called La Prancest de Cleaves,
a story of hopeless love and mute renunciation in which the stately tenor of the lives
depicted issuedly ruffled by the exultations and agonies succeeding each other below the surface.
The next advance was made when the protagonists of this new inner drama were transformed
from conventionalized puppets, the hero, the heroine, the villain, the heavy father and so
on, into breathing and recognizable human beings. Here again a French novelist,
the Abbe Prevo, led the way with Monon Lesco, but his drawing of character seems summary and
schematic when his people are compared with the first great figure in modern fiction, the appalling
Navu de Rimo. It was not till long after Diderot's death that the author of so many brilliant
tales peopled with 18th century puppets was found, in the creation of that one-sorted,
cynical and desolately human figure, to have anticipated not only Balzac but Dostoevsky.
But even from Monon Lesko and the Navu de Rameau, even from Lassos,
DeFoe, Fielding, Smallett, Richardson, and Scott. Modern fiction is differentiated by the great
dividing geniuses of Balzac and Stendal. Save for that one amazing accident of Dieterose,
Balzac was the first not only to see his people, physically and morally, in their habit as they
lived, with all their personal hobbies and infirmities, and make the reader see them, but to
draw his dramatic action as much from the relation of his characters to their houses,
streets, towns, professions, inherited habits and opinions, as from their fortuitous contacts with
each other. Balzac himself ascribed the priority in this kind of realism to Scott, from whom the
younger novelist avowedly derived his chief inspiration. But, as Balzac observed, Scott, so keen and
direct in surveying the rest of his field of vision, became conventional and hypocritical when he
touched on love and women. In deference to the wave of prudery which overswept England after the
vulgar excesses of the Hanoverian court he substituted sentimentality for passion, and reduced his
heroines to keepsake insipidities, whereas in the firm surface of Balzac's realism there is hardly a flaw,
and as women, the young as well as the old, are living people, as much compact of human contradictions
and torn with human passions as his misers, his financiers, his priests or as doctors.
Stendal, though as indifferent as any 18th century writer to atmosphere and local color,
is intensely modern and realistic in the individualizing of his characters, who were never types,
to the extent even of some of Balzac's, but always sharply differentiated and particular human beings.
More distinctively still does he represent the new fiction by his insight into the springs of social
action. No modern novelist has ever gone nearer than Racine did in his tragedies to the sources
of personal, of individual feeling, and some of the French novelists of the 18th century are still
unsurpassed, saved by Racine, in the last refinements of individual soul analysis. What was new in both
Balzac and Stendal was the fact of their viewing each character first of all as a product of particular
material and social conditions, as being thus or thus because of the calling he pursued or the
house he lived in, Balzac, or the society he wanted to get into, Stendall, or the acre of ground
he coveted, or the powerful or fashionable personage he aped or envied, both Balzac and
stand all. These novelists, with the solitary exception of Defoe, when he wrote Mal Flanders,
are the first to seem continuously aware that the bounds of a personality are not reproducible
by a sharp black line, but that each of us flows imperceptibly into adjacent people and things.
The characterization of all the novelists who preceded these two masters seems, in comparison,
incomplete or immature. Even Richardson's seem so, in the most penetrating pages of Clarissa Harlow,
even Gouda's in that uncannily modern novel, the elective affinities because, in the case of these
writers, the people so elaborately dissect that are hung in the void, unvisualized and unconditioned,
or almost, by the special outward circumstances of their lives. They are subtly analyzed abstractions
of humanity, to whom only such things happen as might happen to almost anyone in any walk of life,
the inevitable eternal human happenings. Since Balzac and Stendal, fiction has reached out in many new
directions, and made all sorts of experiments, but it has never ceased to cultivate the ground
they cleared for it, or gone back to the realm of abstractions. It is still, however, an art in the
making, fluent and dirigible, and combining a past full enough for the deduction of certain
general principles with a future rich and untried possibilities. Art 2. On the threshold of any
theory of art its exponent is sure to be asked, on what first assumption does your theory rest?
And in fiction, as in every other art, the only answer says,
seems to be that any theory must begin by assuming the need of selection. It seems curious that
even now, and perhaps more than ever, one should have to explain and defend what is no more than
the rule underlying the most artless verbal statement. No matter how restricted an incident one is
trying to give an account of, it cannot but be fringed with details more and more remotely relevant,
and beyond that with an outer mass of irrelevant facts which may crowd on the narrator simply because
of some accidental propinquity in time or space. To choose between all this material,
is the first step toward coherent expression. A generation ago this was so generally taken for granted
that to state it would have seemed pedantic. In everyday intercourse the principle survives in the
injunction to stick to the point, but the novelist who applies, or owns up to applying,
this rule to his art, is nowadays accused of being absorbed in technique to the exclusion of
the supposedly contrary element of human interest. Even now, the charge would hardly be worth
taking up had it not lately helped to refurbish the old trick of the early French real
that group of brilliant writers who invented the once famous tranche de V, the exact photographic
reproduction of a situation or an episode, with all its sounds, smells, aspects realistically
rendered, but with its deeper relevance and its suggestions of a larger hole either unconsciously
missed or purposely left out. Now that half a century has elapsed, one sees that those among this
group of writers who survive are still readable in spite of their constricting theory, or in
proportion as they forgot about it once they closed with their subject. Such are, Mopasson,
who packed into his brief masterpieces so deep as psychological significance and so sure a sense of
larger relations. Zola, whose slices became the stuff of great romantic allegories in which
the forces of nature and industry are the huge cloudy protagonists, as in a pilgrim's progress
of man's material activities. And the Goncour, whose French instinct for psychological analysis
always made them seize on the more significant morsel of the famous slices. As for the pupils,
the mere conscientious suppliers of the system, they have all blown away with the theory,
after a briefer popularity than writers of equal talent might have enjoyed had they not thus narrow
their scope. An instance in proof is Fado's Fanny, one of the few psychological novels of that
generation, and a slight enough adventure in soul-searching compared with the great Madame Bovary,
which it was supposed at the time to surpass, but still readable enough to have kept the author's
name alive, while most of his minor contemporaries are buried under the unappetizing debris of their
slices. It seemed necessary to revert to the slice of life because it has lately reappeared,
marked by certain unimportant differences, and relabeled the stream of consciousness, and,
curiously enough, without its new exponents appearing aware that they are not also its originators.
This time the theory seems to have sprung up first in England and America, but it has already
spread to certain of the younger French novelists, who are just now, confusedly if admiringly,
rather over-conscious of recent tendencies in English and American fiction. The stream of consciousness
method differs from the slice of life in noting mental as well as visual reactions, but resembles
it in setting them down just as they come, with a deliberate disregard of their relevance in the
particular case, or rather with the assumption that their very unsorted abundance constitutes
in itself the author's subject. This attempt to note down every half-aware stirring of
thought and sensation, the automatic reactions to every passing impression, is not as new as its
present exponents appear to think. It has been used by most of the greatest novelists, not as an
end in itself, but as it happened to serve their general design, as when their object was to
portray a mind in one of those moments of acute mental stress when it records with meaningless
precision a series of disconnected impressions. The value of such effects in making vivid a tidal
rush of emotion has never been unknown since fiction became psychological, and novel
novelists grew aware of the intensity with which, at such times, irrelevant trifles impinge upon
the brain, but they have never been deluded by the idea that the subconscious, that Mrs. Harris
of the psychologists, could in itself furnish the materials for their art. All the greatest of
them, from Balzac and Thackeray onward, have made use of the stammerings and murmurings
of the half-conscious mind whenever, but only when, such a state of mental flux fitted into
the whole picture of the person portrayed. Their observation showed them that in the world of normal men
life is conducted, at least in its decisive moments, on fairly coherent and selective lines,
and that only thus can the great fundamental affairs of bread getting in home and tribe organizing
be carried on. Drama, situation, is made out of the conflicts thus produced between social order
and individual appetites, and the art of rendering life in fiction can never, in the last analysis,
be anything, or need to be anything, but the disengaging of crucial moments from the welter of
existence. These moments need not involve action in the sense of external events, they seldom have,
since the scene of conflict was shifted from incident to character. But there must be something
that makes them crucial, some recognizable relation to a familiar social or moral standard,
some explicit awareness of the eternal struggle between man's contending impulses, if the tales embodying
them are to fix the attention and hold the memory. Part 3. The Distrust of Technique and the Fear of
being unoriginal, both symptoms of a certain lack of creative abundance, are in truth leading to
pure anarchy and fiction, and one is almost tempted to say that in certain schools' formlessness
is now regarded as the first condition of form. Not long ago I heard a man of letters declare
that Dostoevsky was superior to Tolstoy because his mind was more chaotic, and he could
therefore render more truthfully the chaos of the Russian mind in general, though how chaos can
be apprehended and defined by a mind immersed in it, the speaker did not make clear. The assertive
of course, was the result of confusing imaginative emotivity with its objective rendering.
What the speaker meant was that the novelist who would create a given group of people or portray
special social conditions must be able to identify himself with them, which is rather a long way
of saying that an artist must have imagination. The chief difference between the merely sympathetic
and the creative imagination is that the latter is two-sided, and combines with the power of
penetrating into other minds that of standing far enough aloof from them to see beyond, and
relate them to the whole stuff of life out of which they but partially emerge. Such an all-round
view can be obtained only by mounting to a height, and that height, in art, is proportioned to the
artist's power of detaching one part of his imagination from the particular problem in which the rest
is steeped. One of the causes of the confusion of judgment on this point is no doubt the perilous
affinity between the art of fiction and the material it works in. It has been so often said that
all art is representation, that giving back in conscious form of the shapeless raw material of
experience, that one would willingly avoid insisting on such a truism. But while there is no art of
which the saying is truer than a fiction, there is none in respect of which there is more danger
of the axioms being misinterpreted. The attempt to give back any fragment of life in painting or
sculpture or music presupposes transposition, stylization. To represent in words is far more difficult,
because the relation is so close between model and artist. The novelist works and the very material
out of which the object he is trying to render is made. He must use, to express soul, the signs which
soul uses to express itself. It is relatively easy to separate the artistic vision of an object
from its complex and tangled actuality if one has to re-see it in paint or marble or bronze.
It is infinitely difficult to render a human mind when one is employing the very word dust with which
thought is formulated. Still, the transposition does take places surely, if not as obviously,
in a novel as in a statue. If it did not, the writing of fiction could never be classed among
works of art, products of conscious ordering and selecting, and there would consequently be
nothing to say about it, since there seems to be no way of estimating aesthetically anything
to which no standard of choice can be applied. Another unsettling element in modern art is that
common symptom of immaturity, the dread of doing what has been done before, for though one of the
instincts of youth is imitation, another, equally imperious, is that of fiercely guarding against
it. In this respect, the novelist of the present day is in danger of being caught in a vicious
circle, for the insatiable demand for quick production tends to keep him in a state of perpetual
immaturity, and the ready acceptance of his wares encourages him to think that no time need
be wasted in studying the past history of his art, or in speculating on its principles. This
This conviction strengthens the belief that the so-called quality of originality may be impaired
by too long brooding on one's theme and two close a commerce with the past, but the whole
history of that past, in every domain of art, disproves this by what survives, and shows
that every subject, to yield and to retain its full flavor, should be long carried in the mind,
brooded upon, and fed with all the impressions and emotions which nourish its creator.
True originality consists not in a new manner but in a new vision.
That new, that personal, vision is attained only by looking long enough at the object represented
to make it the writer's own, and the mind which would bring this secret germ to fruition must
be able to nourish it with an accumulated wealth of knowledge and experience. To know any one thing
one must not only know something of a great many others, but also, as Matthew Arnold long since
pointed out, a great deal more of one's immediate subject than any partial presentation of it
visibly includes, and Mr. Kipling's what should they know of England who only England know?
might be taken as the symbolic watchword of the creative artist. One is sometimes tempted to think
that the generation which has invented the fiction course is getting the fiction it deserves. At any rate,
it is fostering in its young writers the conviction that art is neither long nor arduous,
and perhaps blinding them to the fact that notoriety and mediocrity are often interchangeable terms.
But though the trade wind in fiction undoubtedly drives many beginners along the line of least resistance,
and holds them there, it is far from being the sole cause of the present quest for,
shortcuts in art. There are writers indifferent to popular success, and even contemptuous of it,
who sincerely believe that this line marks the path of the true vocation. Many people assume
that the artist receives, at the outset of his career, the mysterious sealed orders known as
inspiration, and is only to let that sovereign impulse carry him where it will. Inspiration does
indeed come at the outset to every creator, but it comes most often as an infant, helpless,
fumbling, inarticulate, to be taught and guided, and the beginner, during this time of training
his gift, is as likely to misuse it as a young parent to make mistakes in teaching his first child.
There is no doubt that in this day of general speeding up, the inspirational theory is seductive
even to those who care nothing for easy triumphs. No writer, especially at the beginning of
his career, can help being influenced by the quality of the audience that awaits him, and the
young novelist may ask of what use or experience in meditation, when his readers are so
incapable of giving him either. The answer is that he will never do his best till he ceases altogether
to think of his readers, and his editor and his publisher, and begins to write, not for himself,
but for that other self with whom the creative artist is always in mysterious correspondence,
and who, happily, has an objective existence somewhere, and will someday receive the message sent to
him, though the sender may never know it. As to experience, intellectual and moral,
the creative imagination can make a little go a long way, provided it
remains long enough in the mind and is sufficiently brooded upon. One good heartbreak will
furnish the poet with many songs, and the novelist with a considerable number of novels.
But they must have hearts that can break. Even to the writer least concerned with popularity
it is difficult, at first, to defend his personality. Study and meditation contain their
own perils. Counselors intervene with contradictory advice and instances. In such cases these
counselors are most often other people's novels, the great novels of the past, which haunt the
beginner like a passion, and the works of his contemporaries, which pull in this way and that
with two persuasive hands. His impulse, at first, will be either to shun them, to his own impoverishment,
or to let his dawning individuality be lost in theirs, but gradually he will come to see that he
must learn to listen to them, take all they can give, absorb it into himself, and then turn to
his own task with a fixed resolve to see life only through his own eyes. Even then another difficulty
remains, the mysterious discrepancy which sometimes exists between a novelist vision of life
and his particular kind of talent. Not infrequently an innate tendency to see things in large
masses is combined with the technical inability to render them otherwise than separately,
meticulously, on a small scale. Perhaps more failures than one is aware of our due to this
particular lack of proportion between the powers of vision and expression. At any
rate, it is the cause of some painful struggles and arid dissatisfactions, and the only remedy is
resolutely to abandon the larger for the smaller field, to narrow one's vision to one's pencil,
and do the small thing closely and deeply rather than the big thing loosely and superficially.
Of 20 subjects that tempt the imagination, subjects one sees one's self-doing, oh so wonderfully,
if only one were Mary Mae or Mopasson, or Conrad or Mr. Kipling, probably but one is fit for
the hand of the limited person one happens to be, and to learn to renounce the others as a first
step toward doing that particular one well. Part four, these considerations have led straight to the
great, the central, matter of subject, and inextricably interwoven with it are the subsidiary
points of form and style, both of which ought, as it were, to spring naturally out of the
particular theme chosen for representation. Form might perhaps, for present purposes, be defined as
the order, in time and importance, in which the incidents of the narrative are grouped,
and style is the way in which they are presented, not only in the narrower sense of language,
but also, and rather, as they are grasped and colored by their medium, the narrator's mind,
and given back in his words. It is the quality of the medium which gives these incidents their
quality, style, in this sense, is the most personal ingredient in the combination of things out of
which any work of art is made. Words are the exterior symbols of thought, and it is only by their
exact views that the writer can keep on his subject the close and patient hold which fishes the
murex up, and steeps his creation in unfading colors. Style in this definition is discipline,
and the self-consecration it demands, and the bearing it has on the whole of the artist's effort,
have been admirably summed up by Marcel Proust in that searching chapter of a lombra de
jeune fie and flora where he analyzes the art of fiction in the person of the great novelist
Bergen. The severity of his taste, his unwillingness to write anything of which he could not say,
in his favorite phrase,
Seidue, harmonious, delicious, this determination,
which had caused him to spend so many seemingly fruitless years
in the precious carving of trifles,
was in reality the secret of his strength,
for habit makes the style of the writer as it makes the character of the man,
and the author who has several times contented himself
with expressing his thought in an approximately pleasing way
has once and for all set a boundary to his talent,
and will never pass beyond.
These definitions of form and style being established,
and the preliminary need of the harmony between an author's talent and his argument being assumed,
one is next faced by the profounder problem of the inherent fitness of any given subject
as material for the imagination. It has been often said that subject in itself is all important,
and at least as often that it is of no importance whatever. Definition is again necessary before
the truth can be extracted from these contradictions. Subject, obviously, is what the story is
about, but whatever the central episode or situation chosen by the novelist, his tale will be about
only just so much of it as he reacts to. A gold mine is worth nothing unless the owner has the
machinery for extracting the ore, and each subject must be considered first in itself, and next
in relation to the novelist's power of extracting from it what it contains. There are subjects
trivial in appearance, and subjects trivial to the core, and the novelist ought to be able to
discern at a glance between the two, and know in which case it is worth Walda said about sinking
a shaft. But the novelist may make mistakes. He is exposed to the temptation of the false
good subject, and learns only by prolonged experience to resist surface attractions, and probe
his story to the depths before he begins to tell it. There is still another way in which subject
must be tested. Any subject considered in itself must first of all respond in some way to that
mysterious need of a judgment on life of which the most detached human intellect, provided it be a
normal one, cannot, apparently, writ itself. Whether the moral be present in the guise of the
hero rescuing the heroine from the villain at the point of the revolver, or whether it lurk in the
quiet irony of such a scene as Pendennis's visit to the Grey Friars Chapel, and is hearing
the choir singing I have been young, and now I'm old, yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken,
nor his seed begging their bread, at the very moment when he discovers the bent head of Colonel
Nukum among the pauper gentleman. In one form or another there must be some sort of rational
response to the readers' unconscious but insist an inner question. What am I being told this story
for? What judgment on life does it contain for me? There seems to be no escape from this
obligation except into a pathological world where the action, taking place between Piappi of
abnormal psychology, and not keeping time with our normal human rhythms, becomes an idiot's tale,
signifying nothing. In vain has it been attempted to set up a watertight, completely.
between art and morality. All the great novelists whose books have been used to point the
argument have invariably declared themselves on the other side, not only by the inner significance
of their work, but also, in some cases, by the most explicit statements. Floubert, for instance,
so often cited as the example of the writer viewing his themes in a purely scientific or
a moral light, has disproved the claim by providing the other camp with that perfect formula,
plus La Pense A. Bell, plus La phrase S. Sonor not the metaphor, not the picture, but the thought.
A good subject, then, must contain in itself something that sheds a light on our moral experience.
If it is incapable of this expansion, this vital radiation, it remains, however show you a surface
it presents, a mere irrelevant happening, a meaningless scrap of fact torn out of its context.
Nor is it more than a half-truth to say that the imagination which probes deep enough can find this
germ in any happening, however insignificant. The converse is true enough, the limited imagination
reduces a great theme to its own measure. But the wide creative vision, though no fragment of
human experience can appear wholly empty to it, yet seeks by instinct those subjects in which
some phase of our common plight stands forth dramatically and typically, subjects which,
in themselves, are a kind of summary or foreshortening of life's dispersed and inconclusive
occurrences.
End of Section 1. Section 2 of the writing of fiction by Edith Wharton. This Libre Vox recording is in the
public domain, read by William Jones, Bonita Springs, Florida. The Writing of Fiction by Edith
Wharton. Chapter 2, telling a short story, part 1, like the modern novel. The modern short story
seems to have originated, or at least received its present stamp, in France. English writers,
in this line, were slower in attaining the point to which the French and Russians first carried
the art. Since then the short story has developed, and reached out in fresh directions,
in the hands of such novelists as Mr. Hardy, only occasionally at his best in this form,
of Stevenson, James, and Conrad, all three almost unfailingly excellent in it, of Mr.
Kipling, past master of the Condi, and Sir Arthur Quiller Couch, whose delightful early volumes,
knots and crosses and I saw three ships, are less known than they deserve to be. These writers
had long been preceded by Scott and wandering Willie's tale and other short stories, by Poe,
the sporadic and unaccountable, and by Hawthorne, but almost all the best tales of Scott,
Hawthorne, and Poe belong to that peculiar category of the Erie which lies outside of the
classic tradition. When the novel of manners comes to be dealt with, classification in order of time
will have to be reversed, and in order of merit will be less easy, for even against Balzac,
Tolstoy, and Turgenev the genius of the great English observers, from Richardson and Jane Austen
to Thackeray and Dickens, will weigh heavily in the balance. With regard to the short story,
however, and especially to that compactest form of it, the short short story or Conti,
its first specimens are undoubtedly of continental production, but happily for English letters
the generation who took over and adapted the formula were nursed on the Githi
and principle that those who remain imprisoned in the false notion of their own originality will
always fall short of what they might have accomplished. The sense of form, already defined as the
order, in time and importance, in which the narrated incidents are grouped, is, in all the arts,
specifically of the classic, the Latin tradition. A thousand years of form, in the widest disciplinary
sense, of its observance, its application, its tacit acceptance as the first condition of artistic
expression, have cleared the ground, for the French writer of fiction, of many superfluous encumbrances.
As the soil of France is of all soils the most weeded, tilled, and ductal, so the field of art,
wherever French culture extends, is the most worked over and the most prepared for whatever
seed is to be sown in it. But when the great Russians, who owed a French culture much more than
is generally conceded, took over that neat thing, the French Nouvelle, they gave it the additional
dimension it most often lacked. In any russians,
really good subject one has only to probe deep enough to come to tears, and the Russians almost
always dig to that depth. The result has been to give to the short story, as French and Russian
art have combined to shape it. Great closeness of texture with profundity of form. Instead of a loose
web spread over the surface of life they have made it, at its best, a shaft driven straight into
the heart of human experience. Part two, though the critic no longer feels that need of classifying
and subclassifying the genres which so preoccupied the contemporaries of Wordsworth,
there are, in all the arts, certain local products that seem to necessitate a parenthesis.
Such, in fiction, is the use of the supernatural.
It seems to have come from mysterious Germanic and Armenian forests, from lands of long
twilights and wailing winds, and it certainly did not pass through French or even Russian hands
to reach us.
Sorcercerers and magic are of the South, the Mediterranean, the witch of Theokritus
Brut a brew fit for her sister hags of the Scottish heath, but the spectral apparition walks only
in the pages of English and Germanic fiction. It has done so, to great effect, in some of the most
original of our great English short stories, from Scots wandering Willie and Poe's awful hallucinations
to Lafanoos' watcher, and from the Thrawn Janet of Stevenson to the turn of the screw of
Henry James, last great master of the Eerie in English. All these tales, in which the effect
sought is completely achieved, are models of the subtlest artifice. It is not enough to believe in
ghosts, or even to have seen one, to be able to write a good ghost story. The greater the improbability
to be overcome the more studied must be the approach, the more perfectly maintain the air of
naturalness, the easy assumption that things are always likely to happen in that way. One of the
chief obligations, in a short story, is to give the reader an immediate sense of security. Every phrase
should be a signpost, and never, unless intentionally, a misleading one, the reader must feel
that he can trust to their guidance. His confidence once gained, he may be lured on to the most
incredible adventures, as the Arabian Nights are there to show. A wise critic once said,
you may ask your reader to believe anything you can make him relieve. It is never the genii
who are unreal, but only their unconvinced historian's description of them. The least touch
of irrelevance, the least chill of inattention, will instantly undo the spell, and it will take
as long to weave again as to get Humpty Dumpty back on his wall. The moment the reader loses
faith in the author's sureness of foot the chasm of improbability gapes. Improbability in itself,
then, is never a danger, but the appearance of improbability is, unless, indeed, the tale be
based on what, in my first chapter, I called pathological conditions, conditions of body or mind
outside the field of normal experience. But this term, of course, does not apply to states of mind
inherited from an earlier phase of race culture, such as the belief in ghosts. No one with a spark of
imagination ever objected to a good ghost story as improbable though Mrs. Burbeau, who doubtless
lacked the spark, is said to have condemned the ancient mariner on this ground. Most of us
retain the more or less shadowy memory of ancestral terrors, and airy tongues that syllable men's
names. We cannot believe a priori in the probability of the actions of Madman, or neurasthenics,
because their reasoning processes escape most of us, or can it best be imagined only as belonging
to abnormal and exceptional people, but everybody knows a good ghost when he reads about him.
When the reader's confidence is gained the next rule of the game is to avoid distracting and
splintering up his attention. Many a would-be tale of horror becomes innocuous through
the very multiplication and variety of its horrors. Above all, if they are
multiplied they should be cumulative and not dispersed. But the fewer the better, once the preliminary
horror posited, it is the harping on the same string, the same nerve, that does the trick.
Quiet iteration is far more racking than diversified assaults. The expected is more frightful than the
unforeseen. The play of Emperor Jones is a striking instance of the power of simplification
and repetition to excite in an audience a corresponding state of tension. By sheer voodoo practice it
shows how voodoo acts. In the turn of the screw which stands alone among tales of the supernatural
in maintaining the ghostliness of its ghosts not only through a dozen pages but through close on
200, the economy of horror is carried to its last degree. What is the reader made to expect? Always,
all through the book, that somewhere in that hushed house of doom the poor little governess will
come on one of the two figures of evil with whom she is fighting for the souls of her charges.
It will be either Peter Quint or the horror of horrors, Miss Jessel, no diversion from this one
dread is ever attempted or expected. It is true that the tale is strongly held together by its
profound, its appalling moral significance, but most readers will admit that, long before they are
conscious of this, fear, simple shivering animal fear, has them by the throat, which, after all,
is what writers of ghost stories are after. Part 3. It is sometimes said that a good subject for a short
story should always be capable of being expanded into a novel. The principle may be defendable
in special cases, but it is certainly a misleading one on which to build any general theory.
Every subject, in the novelist sense of the term, must necessarily contain within itself
its own dimensions. And one of the fiction writer's essential gifts is that of discerning
whether the subject which presents itself to him, asking for incarnation, is suited to the
proportions of a short story or of a novel. If it appears to be adapted to both the
chances are that it is inadequate to either. It would be as great a mistake, however, to try to
to base a hard and fast theory on the denial of the rule is on its assertion.
Instances of short stories made out of subjects that could have been expanded into a novel,
and that our pet typical short stories and not mere stunted novels, will occur to every one.
General rules in art are useful chiefly as a lamp in a mine, or a handrail down a black
stairway. They are necessary for the sake of the guidance they give, but it is a mistake, one
they are formulated, to be too much in awe of them. There are at least two reasons why a subject
should find expression in novel form rather than as a tale, but neither is based on the number
of what may be conveniently called incidents, or external happenings, which the narrative contains.
There are novels of action which might be condensed into short stories without the loss
of their distinguishing qualities. The marks of the subject requiring a longer development are,
first, the gradual unfolding of the inner life of its characters, and secondly the need of producing
in the reader's mind the sense of the lapse of time. Outward events of the most varied and exciting
nature may without loss of probability be crowded into a few hours, but moral dramas usually have
their roots deep in the soul, their rise far back in time, and the sudden a seeming clash in which
they culminate should be led up to step by step if it is to explain and justify itself. There are cases,
indeed, when the short story may make use of the moral drama at its culmination. If the incident
dealt with B1 which a single retrospective flash sufficiently lights up, it is qualified for use
as a short story, but if the subject be so complex, and its successive phase is so interesting,
as to justify elaboration, the lapse of time must necessarily be suggested, and the novel form
becomes appropriate. The effect of compactness and spontaneity sought in the short story is
attained mainly by the observance of two unities, the old traditional one of time, and that other,
more modern and complex, which requires that any rapidly enacted episode shall be seen
through only one pair of eyes. It is fairly obvious that nothing is more retarding than the
marking of a time interval long enough to suggest modification in the personages of the tale or
in their circumstances. The use of such an interval inevitably turns the short story into a long
tale unduly compressed, the bald scenario of a novel. In the third chapter, where an attempt will
be made to examine the technique of the novel, it will be needful to explore that central mystery,
of which Tolstoy was perhaps the one complete master, the art of creating in the reader's mind
this sense of passing time. Meanwhile, it may be pointed out that a third, and intermediate,
form of tale, the long short story, is available for any subject two spreading for conciseness
yet too slight in texture to be stretched into a novel. The other unity, that a vision,
will also be dealt with in considering the novel, in respect of which it becomes a matter much
more complicated. Henry James, almost the only novelist who has formulated his ideas about
his art, was the first to lay down the principle, though it had long, if intermittently,
been observed by the masters of fiction. It may have occurred to other novelists presumably it has,
to ask themselves, as they sat down to write, who saw this thing I'm going to tell about?
By whom do I mean that it shall be reported? It seems as though such a question must proceed
any study of the subject chosen, since the subject is conditioned by the answer, but no critic
appears to have propounded it, and it was left to Henry James to do so in one of those
entangled prefaces to the definitive addition from which the technical axioms ought
some day to be piously detached. It is clear that exactly the same thing never happens to any two
people, and that each witness of a given incident will report it differently. Should some celestial
taskmaster set the same theme to Jane Austen and George Meredith, the bewildered reader would
probably have some difficulty in discovering the common denominator. Henry James, in pointing this out,
also made the corollary suggestion that the mind chosen by the author to mirror his given case should
be so situated, and so constituted, as to take the widest possible view of it. One thing more is
needful for the ultimate effect of probability, and that is, never to let the character who serves
as reflector record anything not naturally within his register. It should be the storytellers
first care to choose this reflecting mind deliberately, as one would choose a building site,
or decide upon the orientation of one's house, and when this is done, to live inside the
mind chosen, trying to feel, see and react exactly as the latter would, no more, no less,
and, above all, no otherwise. Only thus,
can the writer avoid attributing incongruities of thought and metaphor to his chosen interpreter.
Part 4. It remains to try to see what constitutes, in any permanent sense, the underlying
norm of the good short story, a curious distinction between the successful tale and the successful
novel at once presents itself. It is safe to say, since the surest way of measuring achievement in
art is by survival, that the test of the novel is that its people should be alive. No subject in itself,
however fruitful, appears to be able to keep a novel alive, only the characters in it can. Of the short
story the same cannot be said. Some of the greatest short stories owe their vitality entirely to the
dramatic rendering of a situation. Undoubtedly, the characters engaged must be a little more than
puppets, but apparently, also, they may be a little less than individual human beings. In this respect
the short story, rather than the novel, might be called the direct descendant of the old epic or ballad,
of those earlier forms of fiction in all of which action was the chief affair, and the characters,
if they did not remain mere puppets, seldom or never became more than types, such as the people,
for instance, in Moliere. The reason of the difference is obvious. Type, general character,
may be set forth in a few strokes, but the progression, the unfolding of personality,
of which the reader instinctively feels the need if the actors in the tale are to retain their
individuality for him through a succession of changing circumstances, this slow but continuous growth
requires space, and therefore belongs by definition to a larger, a symphonic plan. The chief technical
difference between the short story and the novel may therefore be summed up by saying that
situation is the main concern of the short story, character of the novel, and it follows that the
effect produced by the short story depends almost entirely on its form, or presentation. Even more,
yes, and much more, than in the construction of the novel, the impression of vividness, of presentness,
in the affair narrated, has to be sought, and made sure of beforehand, by that careful
artifice which is the real carelessness of art. The short story writer must not only know from
what angle to present his anecdote if it is to give out all its fires, but must understand
just why that particular angle and no other is the right one. He must therefore have turned his
subject over and over, walked around it, so to speak, and applied to it those laws of
perspective which Paolo Uchello called so beautiful, before it can be offered to the reader as a
natural unembellished fragment of experience, detached like a ripe fruit from the tree.
The moment the writer begins to grope in the tangle of his material, to hesitate between one
and another of the points that any actual hap-carotting must sup U.I sue to the power of
I-i disorderly abundance. The reader feels a corresponding hesitancy, and the illusion of reality
vanishes. The non-observance of the optics of the printed page results in the same failure to make
the subject carry as the non-observance of the optics of the stage in presenting a play.
By all means let the writer of short stories reduce the technical trick to its minimum,
as the cleverest actresses put on the least paint, but let him always bear in mind that the
surviving minimum is the only bridge between the reader's imagination and his.
Part 5. Nietzsche said that it took genius to make an end, that is, to give the touch of inevitableness
to the conclusion of any work of art. In the art of fiction this is peculiarly true of the novel,
that slowly built-up monument in which every stone has its particular weight and thrust
to carry in of which the foundations must be laid with a view to the proportions of the highest
tower. Of the short story, on the contrary, it might be said that the writer's first care
should be to know how to make a beginning. That an inadequate or unreal ending diminishes the
short tail in value as much as the novel need hardly be added, since it is proved with depressing
regularity by the Machine Made magazine story to which one or the other of half a dozen standardized
endings is automatically adjusted at the 4,500th word of whatsoever has been narrated. Obviously,
as every subject contains its own dimensions, so is its conclusion ab-a-o-o, and the failure to
end a tale in accordance with its own deepest sense must deprive it of meaning. Nonetheless,
the short story writer's first concern, once he has mastered his subject, is to study what
musicians call the attack. The rule that the first page of a novel ought to contain the germ of the
hole is even more applicable to the short story, because in the latter case the trajectory is so
short that flash and sound nearly coincide. Benvenuto Chalini relates in his autobiography that one
day, as a child, while he sat by the hearth with his father, they both saw a salamander in the
fire. Even then the sight must have been unusual, for the father instantly boxed his son's
E? R. S. so that he should never forget what he had seen. This anecdote might serve as an
epithem for the writer of short stories. If his first stroke be vivid and telling the reader's
attention will be instantly one. The hell, said the Duchess as she lit her cigar with which
an eaten boy is said to have begun a tale for a school magazine, in days when Duchess's less
commonly smoked and swore, would undoubtedly have carried his narrative to posterity if what
followed had been at the same level. This leads to another point. It is useless to buy. It is useless to
box your readers ear unless you have a salamander to show him. If the heart of your little
blaze is not animated by a living, moving something no shouting and shaking will fix the
anecdote in your reader's memory. The salamander stands for that fundamental significance that
made the story worth telling. The arrest of attention by a vivid opening should be something
more than a trick. It should mean that the narrator has so brooded on this subject that it has
become as indeed, so made over and synthesized within him that, as a great draftsman gives the essentials of
a face or landscape in a half a dozen strokes, the narrator can situate his tale in an opening
passage which shall be a clue to all the detail eliminated. The clue given, the writer has only to
follow. But his grasp must be firm, he must never for an instant forget what he wants to tell,
or why it seem. Worth telling. And this intensity of hold-on-MS subject presupposes,
before the telling of even a short story, a good deal of thinking over. Just because the limits of
the form selected prevent his producing the semblance of reality by elaborating his characters,
is the short story writer the more bound to make real the adventure in itself. A well-known French
confectioner in New York was once asked why his chocolate, good as it was, was not equal to that
made in Paris. He replied, because, on account of the expense, we cannot work it over as many times as
the French confectioner can. Other homely analogies confirm the lesson. The seemingly simplest sauces are those that have been
most cunningly combined and then most completely blend, the simplest-looking dresses those that
require most study to design. The precious instinctive selection is distilled by that long patience
which, if it be not genius, must be one of genius's chief reliances in communicating itself.
On this point repetition and insistence are excusable, the short of the story, the more
stripped of detail and cleared for action, the more it depends for its effect not only on
the choice of what is kept when the superfluous has been jettisoned, but on the order
in which these essentials are set forth.
Part 6, nothing but deep familiarity with his subject will protect the short story writer
from another danger, that of contending himself with a mere sketch of the episode selected.
The temptation to do so is all the greater because some critics, in their resentment of the
dance and the prolix, have tended to overestimate the tenuous and the tight.
Mary May's tales are often cited as models of the Conti, but they are rather the breathless
summaries of longer tales than the bold for shortening of an episode from which
all the significance it has to give has been adroitly extracted. It is easy to be brief and
sharply outlined if one does away with one or more dimensions. The real achievement,
as certain tales of Flaubert's and Turgeneves, of Stevenson's and of Mopasson show,
is to suggest a limitable air within a narrow space. The stories of the German romantic,
Heinrich von Kleist, have likewise been praised for an extreme economy of material,
but they should rather be held up as an awful warning against waste, for in their ingenious dovetailing
of improbable incidents, the only economy practiced is that of leaving out all that would have enriched
the subject, visually or emotionally.
One, indeed, the Marquis Doe. Thrift is carried so far that the characters are known merely
by their initials, has in it the making of a good novel, not unlike Gooda's elective affinities,
but reduced to the limits of a short story it offers a mere skeleton of its subject.
The phrase economy of material suggests another danger to which the novelist and the writer of short
stories are equally exposed. Such economy is, in both cases, nearly always to be advised in the
multiplication of accidental happenings, minor episodes, surprises and contraris. Most beginners
crowd into their work twice as much material of this sort as it needs. The reluctance to look
deeply enough into a subject leads to the indolent habit of decorating its surface. I was once
asked to read a manuscript on the eternal theme of a lover's quarrel. The quarreling pair made up,
and the reasons for dispute and reconciliation were clearly inherent in their characters and
situation. But the author, being new at the trade, felt obliged to cast about for an additional,
a fortuitous, pretext for their reunion, so he sent them for a drive, made the horses run away,
and caused the young man to save the young lady's life. This is a crude example of a frequent
fault. Again and again the novelist passes by the real meaning of a situation simply for lack of
letting it reveal all its potentialities instead of dashing this way and that in quest of fresh
effects. If, when once drawn to a subject, he would let it grow slowly in his mind instead of
hunting about for arbitrary combinations of circumstance, his tail would have the warm scent and
flavor of a fruit ripened in the sun instead of the insipidity of one forced in a hot house.
There is a sense in which the writing of fiction may be compared to the administering of a fortune.
Economy and expenditure must each bear a part in it, but they should never degenerate into
parsimony or waste. True economy consists in the drawing out of one's subject of every drop of
significance it can give, true expenditure in devoting time, meditation and patient labor to the
process of extraction and representation. It all comes back to a question of expense, expense of time,
of patience, of study, of thought, of letting hundreds of stray experiences accumulate and group
themselves in the memory, till suddenly one of the number emerges and throws its sharp light on the
subject which solicits you. It has been often, and inaccurately, said that the mind of a
creative artist is a mirror, and the work of art the reflection of life in it. The mirror,
indeed, is the artist's mind, with all his experiences reflected in it. But the work of art,
from the smallest to the greatest, should be something projected, not reflected, something on
which his mirrored experiences, at the right conjunction of the stars, are to be turned for
its full illumination.
End of Section 2.
Section 3 of the writing of fiction by Edith Wharton.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain, read by William Jones, Bonita Springs, Florida.
The Writing of Fiction by Edith Wharton.
Chapter 3, Constructing a novel.
Part 1.
For convenience of division it may be said that the novel of psychology was Baum in France,
the novel of manners in England, and that out of their union in the glorious brain of Balzac
sprang that strange chameleon creature, the modern novel, which changes its shape and color with
every subject on which it rests. In the general muster the novel of manners will be found to have
played the most important part, and here English influences preponderate. If innate aptitude
were enough for the producing of a work of art, the flowering of the English novel of manners
in the late 18th and early 19th centuries might have surpassed in quality, and intrinsic
importance, that of all other schools. Ballzac's debt to Scott has already been touched on,
that of the earlier French fiction to Richardson and Stern is a commonplace in the history of the novel.
But the true orientation of English fiction was away from the fine-drawn analysis of Richardson,
the desultory humors of Stern, in the direction of an ample and powerful novel of manners.
Small at and Fielding brought fresh air and noise, the rough and tumble of the street,
the ribaldry of the tavern, into the ceremonious drawing-rooms depicted by Richardson and later by Miss Bernie.
The great, the distinguishing gift of the English novelist was a wholly simplicity combined
with an observation at once keen and indulgent. Good humor was the atmosphere and irony the
flavor of this great school of observers, from Fielding to George Elliott. Till the day of Jane Austen
it had been possible to treat without apology of the mixed affair of living, but Jane Austen's
delicate genius flourished on the very edge of a tidal wave of prudery. Already Scott was averting
his eyes from facts on which the maiden novelist in her rectory parlor had looked
unperturbed, when Thackeray and Dickens rose in their might the chains were forged and the statues draped.
In the melancholy preface to Pendennis Thackeray puts the case bitterly and forcibly, since the author of
Tom Jones was buried, no writer of fiction among us has been permitted to depict to his utmost power
a man, and the stunted conclusion of a tale so largely begun testifies to the benumbing effect
of the new restrictions. The novels of Charlotte Bronte, which now seem in some respect so romantically
unreal, were denounced for sensuality and immorality, and for a time English fiction was in danger of
dwindling to the pale parables of Miss Moolock and Miss Young. But for this reaction against truth,
this sudden fear of touching on any of the real issues of the human comedy and tragedy,
Thackeray's natural endowment would have placed him with the very greatest, Trollope might
conceivably have been a lesser Jane Austen, and George Eliot, perhaps born with the richest
gifts of any English novelist since Thackeray, might have poured out her treasures of wit and irony
and tenderness without continually pausing to denounce and exhort. But the artist depends on
atmosphere for the proper development of his gift, and all these novelists were cramped by the
hazard of a social convention from which their continental contemporaries had the good
fortune to escape. The artist of other races has always been not only permitted but enjoined to
see life whole, and it is this, far more than any superiority of genius, that lifts Balzac,
Stendal and Tolstoy so high above even Thackeray when the universal values are to be appraised.
The great continental novelists are all the avowed debtors of their English predecessors.
They took the English novel of manners in its amplitude, its merriment and pathos,
and in their hands the thing became a trumpet.
In one respect the English novelists are still supreme, and that is in the diffusion of good
humor, good manners one might almost say, which envelops their comedy and tragedy.
Much that is savage and acrimonious in the French, dolorous and overwrought in the Russians,
is strained away through this fine English bonhemi, leaving a clear, bright draft, not very
intoxicating or even stimulating, but refreshing and full of a lasting saver.
Nor does this prevalent good humor hinder the full expression of tragedy.
It helps rather to extract the final bitterness from certain scenes in Pendennis and Vanity Fair,
in Middle March and the Chronicles of Barsiture.
The last years of Lydgate, the last hour of Mrs. Proudy, seemed the more terrible for being
muffled in a secure and decent atmosphere of fair play and plum pudding. Since then all the
restraints of prudery which hampered the English novelists of the 19th century have come down
with a crash, and the now that it can be told school, as someone has wittily named it,
has rushed to the opposite excess of dirt for dirt's sake, from which no real work of art
has ever sprung. Such a reaction was inevitable. No one who remembers that but
Butler's great novel, the Wop of All Flesh, remained unpublished for over 20 years because it
dealt soberly but sincerely with the chief springs of human conduct can wonder that laborious
monuments of schoolboy pornography are now mistaken for works of genius by a public ignorant
of rabelais and unaware of Apuleus. The balance will write itself with the habit of freedom.
The new novelists will learn that it is even more necessary to see life steadily than to
recount it whole, and by that time a more thoughtful public may be ripe for the enjoyment of a
riper art. Art 2. Most novels, for convenient survey, may be grouped under one or the other of
three types, manners, character, PR psychology, and adventure. These designations may be thought
to describe the different methods sufficiently, but as a typical example of each,
Vanity Fair for the first, Madame Bovary for the second, and, for the third, Rob Roy or the Master
of Ballantre, might be named. This grouping must be further stretched to include his subdivisions
what might be called the farcical novel of manners, the romance and the philosophical romance,
and immediately Pickwick for the first, Harry Richmond. La Chartreuse de Parm or Lorne Na Dune for the
second, and Wilhelm Meister or Marius the Epicurean for the third category, suggests themselves to the
reader. Lastly, in the zone of the unclassifiable float such enchanting hybrids as John Engelsand.
Lavinro, and that great Swiss novel, Der Grein Heinrich, in which fantasy, romance and the homeliest
realities are so inimitably mingled. It will be noticed that in the last two groups, of romance
pure or hybrid, but one French novel has been cited. The French genius, which made romanticism
its own, after borrowing it from England, has seldom touched even the hem of romance. Tristan and
Asoot in their long line of descendants come from Brosselian, not from the line to France. Before going
farther it should be added that, in a study of the modern novel, the last named of the three
principal groups, the novel of adventure, is the least important because the least modern.
That this implies any depreciation of the type in itself will not for a moment be admitted by a
writer whose memory rings with the joyous clatter of Dumas the elder, Herman Melville,
Captain Marriott and Stevenson. But their gallant yarns might have been sung to the minstrel's
heart before Roland and his peers, and told in Babylonian bazaars to Joseph and his brethren.
The tale of adventure is essentially the parent stock of all subsequent varieties of the novel.
and its modern tellers have introduced few innovations in what was already a perfect formula,
created in the dawn of time B, the world-old appeal, tell us another story. All attempts at classification
may seem to belong to school examinations and textbooks, and to reduce the matter to the level
of the famous examination paper which, in reference to words worth so cuckoo, shall I call thee
bird, or but a wandering voice, instructed the student to state alternative preferred, with reasons for
your choice. In a sense, classification is always arbitrary and belittling, yet to the novelist's mind
such distinctions represent organic realities. It does not much matter under what heading a schoolgirl
is taught to class vanity fair, but from the creator's point of view classification means the
choice of a manner and of an angle of vision, and it mattered greatly that Thackeray knew just how he
meant to envisage his subject, which might have been dealt with merely as the tale of an
adventurous, or merely as the romance of an honest couple, or merely as an historical novel,
and is all of these, and how much more besides, is, indeed, all that its title promises.
The very fact that so many subjects contain the elements of two or three different types of
novel makes it one of the novelists first cares to decide which method he means to use.
Balzac, for instance, gives us in Lapeer Gourieux and in Eugenie Grande two different ways of
dealing with subjects that contain, after all,
much the same elements, in the one, englobbing his tragic father in a vast social panorama,
in the other projecting his miser, who should have given the tale its name, in huge mouieresque relief
against the narrow background of a sleepy provincial town peopled by three or four carefully
subordinated characters. There is another kind of hybrid novel, but in which the manner rather
than the matter may be so characterized, the novel written almost entirely in dialogue,
after the style, say, of Jip's successful tales. It is open to discussion whether any particular
class of subjects calls for this treatment. Henry James thought so, and the oddly contrived
awkward age was a convinced attempt on his part to write a little thing in the manner of Jip,
a resemblance which few readers would have perceived had he not pointed it out.
Strangely enough, he was persuaded that certain subjects not falling into the stage categories
require nevertheless to be chattered rather than narrated, and, more strange,
strangely still, that the awkward age, that delicate and subtle case, all half-lights and shades,
all innuendos, gradations and transitions, was typically made for such treatment.
His hypersensitiveness to any comment on his own work made it difficult to discuss the question
with him, but his greatest admirers will probably feel that the awkward age lost more than it
gained by being powdered into dialogue, and that, had it been treated as a novel instead of a kind
of hybrid play, the obligation of straight narrative might have compelled him to face an elucid
the central problem instead of suffering it to lose itself in a tangle of talk. At any rate, such an
instance will probably not do much to convince either novelists or their readers of the advantage of
the talk novel. As a matter of fact, the mode of presentation to the reader, that central
difficulty of the whole affair must always be determined by the nature of the subject, and the
subject which instantly calls for dialogue seems is instantly to range itself among those demanding
for their full setting forth the special artifices of the theatre.
The immense superiority of the novel for any subject in which situation is not paramount is just that freedom, that ease in passing from one form of presentation to another, and that possibility of explaining and elucidating by the way, which the narrative permits.
Convention is the first necessity of all art, but there seems no reason for adding the shackles of another form to those imposed by one's own.
Narrative, with all its suppleness and variety, its range from great orchestral effects to the frail vibration of a single string, should
furnish the substance of the novel, dialogue, that precious adjunct, should never be more than an
adjunct, and one to be used as skillfully and sparingly as the drop of condiment which flavors a whole
dish. The use of dialogue in fiction seems to be one of the few things about which a fairly
definite rule may be laid down. It should be reserved for the culminating moments, and regarded
as the spray into which the great wave of narrative breaks in curving toward the watcher on the
shore. This lifting and scattering of the wave, the coruscation of the spray, even the mere
material sight of the page broken into short, uneven paragraphs, all help to reinforce the
contrast between such climaxes and the smooth effaced gliding of the narrative intervals,
and the contrast enhances that sense of the passage of time for the producing of which the writer
has to depend on his intervening narration. Thus the sparing use of dialogue not only serves to
emphasize the crises of the tale but to give it as a whole a greater effect of continuance.
development. Another argument against the substitution of dialogue for narrative is the wastefulness and
roundaboutness of the method. The greater effect of animation, of presentness, produced by its
excessive views will not help the reader through more than half the book, whatever its subject,
after that he will perceive that he is to be made to pay before the end for his two facile passage
through the earlier chapters. The reason is inherent in the method. When, in real life,
two or more people are talking together, all that is understood.
between them is left out of their talk, but when the novelist uses conversation as a means
not only of accentuating but of carrying on his tail, his characters have to tell each other
many things that each already knows the other knows. To avoid the resulting shock of improbability,
their dialogue must be so diluted with irrelevant touches of realistic commonplace,
with what might be described as bi-talk, that, as in the least good of Trollope's tales,
It rambles on for page after page before the reader, resignedly marking time, arrives, bewildered and weary, at a point to which one paragraph of narrative could have carried him.
Part 3. In writing of the short story I may have seemed to dwell too much on the need of considering every detail in its plan and development.
Yet the short story is an improvisation, the temporary shelter of a flitting fancy, compared to the four square and deeply founded monument which the novel ought to be.
It is not only that the scale is different, it is because of the reasons for its being so.
If the typical short story be the foreshortening of a dramatic climax connecting two or more
lives, the typical novel usually deals with the gradual unfolding of a succession of events
divided by intervals of time, and in which many people, in addition to the principal characters,
play more or less subordinate parts. No need now to take in sail and clear the decks,
the novelist must carry as much canvas and as many passengers as his subject requires and his seamanship permits.
Still, the novel theme is distinguished from that suited to the short story not so much by the number of characters presented as by the space required to mark the lapse of time or to permit the minute analysis of successive states of feeling.
The latter distinction, it should be added, holds good even when the states of feeling are all contained in one bosom, and crowded into a short period, as they are in the Kreutzer sonata.
No one would think of classing the Kreutzer Sonata, or Ivan Elyich, or Adolf, among short stories,
and such instances prove the difficulty of laying down a hard and fast distinction between the forms.
The final difference lies deeper. A novel may be all about one person, and about no more than a few
hours in that person's life, and yet not be reducible to the limits of a short story without
losing all significance and interest. It depends on the character of the subject chosen. Since the novel
about one person has been touched on, it may be well, before going farther, to devote a short
parenthesis to its autobiographical or subjective variety. In the study of novel technique one might
almost set aside the few masterpieces in this class, such as the Princess de Cleaves.
Adolf and Dominique, as not novels at all, any more than Moussay's confession Don and Fondon
do see pound clay as a novel. They are, in fact, all fragments of autobiography by writers of
genius, and the autobiographical gift does not seem very closely related to that of fiction.
In the case of the authors mentioned, none but Madame de la Faye yet ever published another novel,
and her other attempts were without interest. In all the arts abundance seems to be one of the
surest signs of vocation. It exists on the lowest scale, and, in the art of fiction, belongs as
much to the producer of railway novels as to Balzac, Thackeray or Tolstoy, yet it almost always marks
the great creative artist.
Whatever a man has it in him to do really well he usually keeps on doing with an indestructible persistency.
There is another sign which sets apart the born novelist from the authors of self-confessions in novel form, that is, the absence of the objective faculty in the latter.
The subjective writer lacks the power of getting far enough away from his story to view it as a whole and related to its setting.
His minor characters remain the mere satellites of the principal personage, himself, and disappear when not lit up by their central luminary.
Such books are sometimes masterpieces, but if by the term art of fiction be understood the creation
of imaginary characters and the invention of their imaginary experiences, and there seems no
more convenient definition, then the autobiographical tale is not strictly a novel, since no objectively
creative effort has gone to its making. It does not follow that born novelists never write
autobiographical novels. Instances to the contrary will occur to every one and none more obvious
than that of the Kreutzer Sonata. There is a gulf between
such a book and Adolf. Tolstoy's tale, though almost aboutly the study of his own tortured soul,
is as objective as Othello. The magic transposition has taken place. In reading the story we do not
feel ourselves to be in a resuscitated real world, a sort of two-soumuseum of wax figures
with actual clothes on, but in that other world which is the image of life transposed in the brain
of the artist, a world wherein the creative breath has made all things new. If one happened to begin
one's acquaintance with Tolstoy by reading the Kreuzer Sonata 1 would not need to be told that it was the
creation of a brain working objectively, a brain which had produced, or was likely to produce,
other novels of a wholly different kind, whereas of such books as Dominique or Adolf, were one
to light on them as unpreparedly, one would say, this is not the invention of a novelist,
but the self-analysis of a man of genius. There is one famous book which might be described as the
link between the real novel and the autobiography and novel disguise. This is Goudas Verder.
Here a youth of genius, as yet unpracticed in the art of fiction, has related, under the
thinnest of concealments, the story of his own unhappy love. The tale is intensely subjective.
The hero is never once seen from the outside. The minor figures are hardly drawn out of the
limbo of the unrealized, yet how instantly the difference between Verder and Adolf declares itself.
The latter tale is completely self-contained, it never suggests in the right of the power or the desire to project a race of imaginary characters.
Ferdr does. Every page thrills with the dawning gift of creation. The lover has not been too much absorbed in his own anguish to turn its light on things external to him.
The young Gouda who has noted Charlotte's way of cutting the bread and butter for her little brothers and sisters, and set down the bourgeois humors and the sylvan charm of the ball in the forest, is already a novelist.
Part 4. The question of form, already defined as the order, in time and importance, in which the
incidents of the narrative are grouped, is, for obvious reasons, harder to deal with in the
novel than in the short story, and most difficult in the novel of manners, with its more crowded
stage, and its continual interweaving of individual with social analysis. V. the English novelists
of the early 19th century were still farther enslaved by the purely artificial necessity of
the double plot. Two parallel series.
series of adventures, in which two separate groups of people were concerned, sometimes with
hardly a link between the two, and always without any deep organic connection, were served
up in alternating sections. Throughout the novels of Dickens, George Elliott, Trollope and
the majority of their contemporaries, this tedious and senseless convention persists,
checking the progress of each series of events and distracting the reader's attention.
The artificial trick of keeping two stories going like a juggler's ball is entirely different from the
attempt to follow the interwoven movements of typical social groups, as Thackeray did in Vanity Fair
and the Newcoms, Balzac in Lapeer-Gorio. In these cases the separate groups, either families or
larger units, in a sense impersonate the protagonists of the tale, and their fates are as closely
interwoven as those of the two or three persons on the narrow stage of a tale like Silas Marner.
The double plot has long since vanished, and the plot itself, in the sense of an elaborate
puzzle into which a given number of characters have to be arbitrarily fitted, has gone with it to the
lumber room of discarded conventions. But traces of the parallel story linger in the need often
felt by young writers of crowding their scene with supernumeraries. The temptation is specially great
in composing the novel of manners. If one is undertaking to depict a section of life,
how avoid a crowded stage? The answer is, by choosing as principal characters figures so typical
that each connotes a whole section of the social background. It is the unnecessary characters who do the
crowding, who confuse the reader by uselessly dispersing his attention, but even the number of
subordinate yet necessary characters may be greatly reduced by making the principal figures so typical
that they adambrate most of the others. The traditions of the theater frangays used to require that
the number of objects on the stage, chairs, tables, even to a glass of water on a table,
should be limited to the actual requirements of the drama, the chairs must all be sat in,
the table carry some object necessary to the action, the glass of water or decanter of wine
be a part of the drama. The stage realism introduced from England a generation ago submerged
these scenic landmarks under a flood of irrelevant upholstery, but as guides in the labyrinth of
composition they are still standing, as necessary to the novelist as to the playwright.
In both cases a far profounder effect is produced by the penetrating study of a few
characters than by the multiplying of half-drawn figures. Neither novelist nor playwright should ever
venture on creating a character without first following it out to the end of the projected tail and
being sure that the latter will be the poorer for its absence. Characters whose tasks have not been
provided for them in advance are likely to present as embarrassing problems as other types of
the unemployed. In the number of characters introduced, as much as in the scenic details given,
Relevance is the first, the arch, necessity. And characters in scenic detail are in fact one to the
novelist who has fully assimilated his material. The moon enchanted hollow of Wilming, wherein Sandra
Bologna is as much the landscape of Amelia's soul as of a corner of England. It was one of
of George Meredith's distinguishing merits that he always made his art as a landscape painter
contribute to the interpretation of his tale, so that such scenes as that of Wilming Weir,
the sunrise from the top of Monte Matarone in the opening chapter of Vittoria, and the delicious
wallflower-colored picture of the farmhouse in Harry Richmond, are all necessary parts of the
novels in which they figure, and above all are seen as the people to whom they happen would have
seen them. This leads to another important principle. The impression produced by a landscape,
a street or a house should always, to the novelist, be an event in the history of a soul,
and the use of the descriptive passage, and its style, should be determined by the fact that it must
depict only what the intelligence concerned would have noticed, and always in terms within
the register of that intelligence. Two instances, illustrating respectively the observance and
the neglect of this rule, may be cited from the novels of Mr. Hardy, the first, that memorable
evocation of Egdon Heath by night, as Eustacia v. looks forth on it from Rainborough, the other,
the painfully detailed description, in all its geological and
agricultural details, of the Wessex veil through which another of Mr. Hardy's heroines,
unseeing, wretched, and incapable at any time of noting such particularities as it has amused
her creator to set down, flies blindly to her doom. Art 5. The two central difficulties of the
novel, both of which may at first appear purely technical, are still to be considered.
They have to do with the choice of the point from which the subject is to be seen,
and with the attempt to produce on the reader the effect of the passage of time. Both may appear
purely technical, but even were it possible to draw a definite line between the technique of a work
of art and its informing spirit, the points in question go too deep to be so clasped. They are rooted in the
subject, and, as always, in the last issue, the subject itself must determine and limit their office.
It was remarked in the chapter on the short story that the same experience never happens to any two
people, and that the storyteller's first care, after the choice of a subject, is to decide to which
of his characters the episode in question happened, since it could not have happened in that
particular way to more than one. Applied to the novel this may seem a hard saying, since the
longer passage of time and more crowded field of action presuppose, on the part of the visualizing
character, a state of omniscience and omnipresence likely to shake the reader's sense of probability.
The difficulty is most often met by shifting the point of vision from one character.
character to another, in such a way as to comprehend the whole history and yet preserve the unity
of impression. In the interest of this unity it is best to shift as seldom as possible, and
let the tail work itself out from not more than two, or at most three, angles of vision, choosing
as reflecting consciousness as persons either in close mental and moral relation to each other,
or discerning enough to estimate each other's parts in the drama, so that the latter, even
viewed from different angles, always presents itself to the reader as a whole. The choice
of such reflectors is not easy, still more arduous is the task of determining at what point
each is to be turned on the scene. The only possible rule seems to be that when things happen
which the first reflector cannot, with any show of probability, be aware of, or is incapable
of reacting to, even if aware, then another, an adjoining, consciousness is required to take up
the tail. Thus dryly stated, the formula may seem pedantic and arbitrary, but it will be found to act of
itself in the hands of the novelist who is so let his subject ripen in his mind that the
characters are as close to him as his own flesh. To the novelist who lives among his creations
in this continuous intimacy they should pour out their tail almost as if to a passive
spectator. The problem of the coordinating consciousness has visibly disturbed many novelists,
and the different solutions attempted are full of interest and instruction. Each is of course
but another convention, and no convention is in itself objectionable, but become so only when
wrongly used, as dirt, according to the happy definition, is only matter in the wrong place.
Verisimilitude is the truth of art, and any convention which hinders the illusion is obviously
in the wrong place. Few hinder it more than the slovenly habit of some novelists of tumbling in
and out of their character's minds, and then suddenly drawing back to scrutinize them from the
outside as the avowed showman holding his puppet strings. All the greatest modern novelists have
felt this, and sought, though often half unconsciously, to find a way.
out of the difficulty. The most interesting experiments made in this respect have been those of James
and Conrad, to both of whom though in ways how different, the novel was always by definition
a work of art, and therefore worthy of the creator's utmost effort. James sought the effect
of verisimilitude by rigorously confining every detail of his, picture to the range, and also to
the capacity of the I fixed on it. End of Section 3.
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Read by William Jones, Benita Springs, Florida.
The Writing of Fiction
By Edith Wharton.
Chapter 4 Constructing a Novel, Part 2
In the Cage is a curiously perfect example
of the experiment on a small scale,
only one very restricted field of vision being permitted.
In his, Annie James's, longer and more eventful novels
where the transition from one consciousness to another becomes necessary,
he contrived it with such unfailing ingenuity
that the reader's visual range was continuously enlarged
by the substitution of a second consciousness
whenever the boundaries of the first were exceeded.
The Wings of the Dove gives an interesting example of these transitions.
In the Golden Bowl, still unsatisfied, still in the pursuit of an impossible perfection,
he felt he must introduce a sort of coordinating consciousness detached from,
but including, the character's principally concerned,
The same attempt to rest dramatic forms to the uses of the novel
that caused the awkward age to be written in dialogue
seems to have suggested the creation of Colonel and Mrs. Essinom
as a sort of Greek chorus to the tragedy of the Golden Bowl.
This insufferable, an incredible couple,
spent their days in espionage and delation
and their evenings in exchanging the reports of their eavesdropping
with a minuteness and precision worthy of Scotland Yard.
The utter improbability of such conduct on the part of a dull-witted and frivolous couple
in the rush of London society shows that the author created them
for the sole purpose of revealing details which he could not otherwise communicate
without lapsing into the character of the mid-Victorian novelist,
chatting with his readers of My Heroin
in the manner of Thackeray and Dickens.
Convention, for convention, and both are bad,
James's is perhaps even more unsettling to the reader's confidence
than the old-fashioned intrusion of the author among his puppets.
Both ought to be avoided, and may be, as other,
other great novels are there to prove.
Conrad's preoccupation was the same,
but he sought to self it in another way
by creating what someone has aptly called a
hall of mirrors,
a series of reflecting consciousnesses,
all belonging to people
who are outside of the story,
but accidentally drawn into its current,
and not, like the Assynhams,
forced into it for the sole purpose
of acting as spies,
and eavesdroppers.
The method did not originate with Conrad.
In that most perfectly composed of all short stories,
La Grande Bretéch,
Balzac shows what depth, mystery, and verisimilitude
may be given to a tale
by causing it to be reflected infractions
in the midst of a series of accidental participants
or mere lookers-on.
The relator of the tale, casually detained in a provincial town, is struck by the ruinous
appearance of one of its handsomest houses.
He makes his way into the deserted garden and is at once called on by a solicitor who
informs him that, according to the will of the lately deceased owner, no one is to be
permitted on the premises till fifty years after her death.
The visitor, whose curiosity is naturally excited,
next learns from the landlady of his inn that,
though she has never known the exact facts of the tragedy,
she knows there has been one,
and that a person whom she suspects of having played a part in it
is actually lodged under her roof.
From the landlady, the narrator carries his inquiries
to the maidservant of the inn,
who had been in the service of the dead lady,
and who confides to him the dreadful scenes
of which she was a hopeless,
and hoarse-struck witness.
And, grouping these fragments in his own more comprehending mind,
he finally gives them to the reader in the ghastly completeness.
Even George Meredith,
whose floods of impromposed by any concern,
as to the composition of his novels,
was now and then visibly perplexed by the question
of how to pass from the mind of one character to another
without too violent a jolt to the reader.
In one instance, in one of those big scenes,
which, as George Eliot said,
write themselves,
he attempted, probably on the spur of the moment,
a solution which proved admirably successful
for that particular occasion.
in the memorable talk in the course of which the inarticulate rhoda fleming and her tongue-tied suitor finally discovered themselves to each other
the novelist to show how tongue-tied both were and yet convey the motion beneath the halting monosiles hit on the device of putting in parentheses after each phrase what the speaker was actually thinking it is one of the great pages of the plot
yet even in the enchantment of first reading it one is aware of admiring a mere acrobatic feat a sort of breathless chaise qua which could not have been kept up for another page without straining the reader's patience and his sense of likelihood
meredith was a genius and his instinct for effect made him at a crucial moment stumble upon his successful trick but because he was a genius he did not prolong or repeat it
the reason why such sudden changes from one mind to another are fatiguing and disillusioning was summed up though for a different purpose in a vivid phrase of george
it is in the chapter of middle march which records the talk between dorothea and chelis brook after the latter's first meeting with the austere and pompous mr casubon
whom her elder sister so unaccountably admires the frivolous assilia is profoundly disappointed she finds mr casubon very ugly dorothea at this time haughtily
Let's drop that he reminds her of the portraits of Locke.
Celia, has Locke those two white moles with hairs on them?
Dorothea.
Oh, I dare say, when people of a certain sort looked at him.
That answer sums up the whole dilemma.
Before beginning his tale, the novelist must decide whether it is to be seen
through eyes given to noting white moles,
or to discovering the visionary butterfly alet on faces so disfigured.
Cannot have it both ways, and still hope to persuade his reader.
The other difficulty is that of communicating the effect of the gradual passage of time
in such a way that the modifying and maturing of the characters
shall seem not an arbitrary slight of hand,
but the natural result of growth in age and experience.
This is the great mystery of the art of fiction.
The secret seems incommunicable.
One can only conjecture that it has to do
with the novelist's own deep belief in his characters
and what he is telling about them.
He knows that this and that befell them,
and that in the interval between this and that the months and years have continued their slow task of erosion or accretion,
and he conveys this knowledge by some subterranean process as hard to seize in action as the growth of a planet.
A study of the great novelists, and especially of Balzac, Thackeray, and Tolstoy, will show that such changes are suggested,
are revived at in the inconspicuous transitional pages of narrative that lead from climax to climax one of the means by which the effect is produced is certainly that of not faring to go slowly
to keep down the tone of the narrative to be as colourless and quiet as life often is in the intervals between its high moments another difficulty connected with this one is that if he is
so firm a hold on the main lines of one's characters that they merge solidified and yet themselves from ripening or disintegrating years
to a total story had this gift to a supreme degree whenever in the dense forest of war and peace a character reappears often after an interval so long that the ear has almost lost the sound to which he rhymes he is at one
once recognized as the same, profoundly the same, yet scored by new lines of suffering and
experience.
Natasha, grown into the fat, lovingly Mayor de Famali of the last chapters, is incredibly
like, and yet different to the Phantom of Delight, who first captivated Prince Andrew,
and the prince himself, in those incomparable pages devoted to his long illness,
where when watches the very process of dematerialization,
the detachment from earthly things happening as naturally as the fall of a leaf
is the same restless and unhappy man
who appears with his pathetic, irritating little wife at the evening party of the first chapter.
Becky Sharp, Arthur Pendinus, Dorothea, Casabon, Lydgate, Charles Bavari,
with what sure impatient touches their growth and decline are set forth?
And how mysteriously, yet unmistakably,
as they reappear after each interval,
the sense is conveyed that there has been an interval,
not in moral experience only, but in the actual lapse of the seasons.
the producing of this impression is indeed the central mystery of the art to its making go patience meditation concentration concentration all the quiet habits of mind now so little practice so seldom inculcated
and to these must be added the final imponderable genius without which the rest of its useless and which conversely would be unusable
the rest.
Part 6.
The Evening Party, with which War in Peace begins, is one of the most triumphant examples
in fiction of the difficult art of situating the chief actors in the opening chapter of what
is to be an exceptionally crowded novel.
No reader is likely to forget or to confuse the one with the other, these successive
arrivals that dull and trivial St. Petersburg reception, Toysoi with one mighty sweet,
gathered up all his principal characters, and sets them before us in action.
Very different, though so notable an achievement in its way, is the first chapter of
the Kiramaksov brothers. In English or German translated for the current French translation
inexplicably omits it.
In this chapter,
Dostoyovsky has hung a gallery
of portraits against a blank wall.
He describes all the members
of the Keremarsal family,
one after the other,
with merciless precision
and infernal insight.
But there they remain hanging,
or standing.
The reader is told all about them,
but is not allowed to surprise them in action.
The story about them
and begins afterward, whereas in war and peace, the first paragraph reads to the thick of the
tale, and every phrase, every gesture carries it on with that slow yet sweeping movement
of which Tolstoy alone was capable. Many thickly-pe-people novels begin more gradually,
like Vanity Fair, for example, and introduces their characters in carefully ordered
succession. The process is obviously simpler, and in certain cases as effective.
The morning stroll of Monsieur and Madame Renovre, their little boys, in the first chapter of
Le Rouge de Noir, sounds a note sufficiently portentous, and so does Major Penn Dennis's
solitary breakfasts. In a general way, there is much to be said for a quiet opening to a long
and crowded novel, though the novelist might prefer to be able to fling all his characters
on the boards at once, with told stories real prodigality.
There is no fixed rule about this, or about any other method, each in the art of fiction
to justify itself as only to succeed. But to succeed, the method must first of all suit
the subject must find its account as best it can with the difficulties peculiar to each situation.
The question, where to begin, is the next to confront the novelist, and the art of seizing on the right
moment is even more important than that of being able to present a large number of characters
at the outset. Here again, no general rule can be laid down. One subject may require,
required to be treated from the center, in the fashion, dear to Henry James, with its opening
in the heart of the action, and retrospective this is radiating away from it in all sides,
while others, of which Henry Esamon is one of the most beautiful examples, would lose all
the bloom were they not allowed to ripen, almost imperceptibly, under the reader's absorbed
contemplation.
Balzac, in his preface to
Les Chartreuse de Pyrma,
almost the only public recognition of
Stendal's genius during the latter's
lifetime, reproves the author
for beginning the book before its real beginning.
Balzac knew well enough
what the world would have lost had that
opening picture of Waterloo been left out,
but he insists that it is no part
of this story Stendhal had set out to tell, and sums up with the illuminating phrase,
Monsieur Baille has chosen a subject, the Waterloo episode, which is real in nature,
but not in art. That is, being out of place in that particular work of art,
that loses its reality as art remains merely a masterly study of a corner of a battlefield.
The greatest the world was to know till to tell told stories,
but no part of the composition as told stories always were.
Part 7.
The length of a novel, more surely even than of any of its other qualities,
needs to be determined by the subject.
The novelist should not concern himself beforehand,
with abstract question of length,
should not decide in advance whether he is going to write a long or short novel,
but in the act of composition he must never cease to bear in mind
that one should always be able to say of a novel,
it might have been longer, never, it need not have been so long.
Length naturally is not so much a matter of pages
as of the mass and quality of what they contain.
it is obvious that a mediocre book is always too long and that a great one usually seems too short but beyond this question of quality and weightiness lies the more closely relevant one of the development
which this or that subject requires the amount of sale it will carry the great novelists have always felt this and within an incher to have cut
their cloths accordingly. Mr. A. C. Bradley, in his book on Shakespeare's tragedies,
threw a new and striking light on the question of length. In analyzing Macbeth,
which is so much shorter than Shakespeare's other tragedies, that previous commentators had
always assumed the text to be incomplete, he puts the following question. If the text is
incomplete. At what points are they supposed Lacunae to be found? Does anyone on first reading
Macbeth feel it is to be too short, or even notice that it is appreciably less long
than the other tragedies? And if not, is it not probable that we have virtually the whole
play before us, and that Shakespeare knew he had made it as long as the subject warranted,
and the nerves of his audience could stand whether or not the argument be thought convincing in a given case it is an admirable example of the spirit in which works of art should be judged and of the only system of weights and measures applicable to them
tolstoy gave to ivan ilich just enough development to make a parable of universal application out of the story of an insignificant man's death
a little more and he would have dropped into the fussy and meticulous and smothered his meaning under unnecessary detail mou passant was another writer who had an unerring sense for the amount of sale his subjects should carry
and his work contains no better proof of it than the tale of evet that harrowing little record of one of the ways in which the bloom may be brushed from a butterfly henry james in the turn of the screw showed the same perfect sense of proportion
he had ventured to explain into a short novel the kind of tale usually imposed on the imagination of a single flash of horror
but his instinct told him that to go farther was impossible the posthumous fragment the sense of the past shows that he was again experimenting with the supernatural as a subject for a long novel and in this instance one feels that he was about to risk overburdening
his thing.
When I read Monsieur Mertonick's book on the
which had just made a flight into fame as high as that of the insect it celebrates,
I was first dazzled, then oppressed, by the number and the choice of his adjectives
and analogies.
Every touch was effective, every comparison striking, but when I assimilated them all
and made out of them the ideal bee, that animal had,
had become a winged elephant.
The lesson was salutary for a novelist.
The great writers of fiction, Balzac, Tolstoy, Thackeray,
George Eliot, how one has to return to them,
all had a sense for the proportion of the subjects
and knew that the great argument requires space.
There are few things more exquisite in minor English words
than Ben Johnson's epitaph on solitil pevey.
but paradise lost needs more room and the fact that it does is one of the elements of its greatness the point is to know at the start if one has on hand a soliteal pevy theme or a paradise lost one
in no novelist was this instinct more unerring than in the impeccable jane austin never is there any danger of finding any of her characters out of proportion
were rattling around in their setting.
The same may be said of Tolstoy at the opposite end of the scale.
His epic gift, the power of immediately establishing the right proportion
between his characters and the scope of their adventure,
seems never to have failed him.
War and Peace and Flaubert's Educations Sonsometat are two of the longest modern novels.
Flaubert, too, was endowed with the rare instinct of scale, but there are moments when even his most ardent admirers feel that Leducation sentimental is too long for its carrying power,
whereas in the very first pages of war and peace, Tolstoy manages to establish the right relation between subject and length.
But there is another difference between the great novel and the merely long one.
Even the longest and most seemingly desultory novel of such writers as Balzac, Flaubert, and Tolstoy
follow a prescribed orbit.
They are true to the eternal effort of art to complete what in life seems incoherent and fragmentary.
This sense of the great theme sweeping around on its allotage.
track in the most ancient heavens, is communicated on the first page of such novels as
War and Peace and La Caution Sentimental. It is the lack of this instinct of form that marks the other
kind of long novel as merely long. Monsieur Romain-Roulant's Jean-Christophe might be cited
as a case in point.
In a succession of volumes,
planned at the outset
as parts of a great whole,
he tells a series
of consecutive soul adventures,
none without interest,
but with such hint of scale
as there is in the first volume
seems to warrant no more
than that one,
and the reader feels that if there are
more, there is no reason why
there should not be any number.
This impression is produced not by the lack of a plan,
but of that subtler kind of composition,
which, inspired by the sense of form and deducing the length of a book
from the importance of its argument,
creates figures proportional to their setting,
and launches them with a sure hand on their destined path.
The question of the length of a novel naturally leads to the considering of its end,
but of this there is little to be said that has not already been implied by the way since no conclusion can be right which is not latent in the first page
about no part of a novel should there be a clear sense of inevitability than about its end any hesitation any failure to gather up all the threads shows that the author has not let his subject mature in
his mind. A novelist who does not know when his story is finished, but goes on stringing episode
to episode after it is over, not only weakens the effect of the conclusion, but robs of
significance all that has gone before. But if the form of the end is inevitably determined by
the subject, its style, using the term in the sense already defined, to describe the way in which
the episodes of the narrative are grasped and colored by the author's mind, necessarily depends
on his sense of selection. At every stage in the progress of his tale, the novelist must rely
on what may be called the illuminating incident to reveal and emphasize the intermeeting
of each situation. They are also the most personal element in any narrative, the author's
most direct contribution, and nothing gives such immediate proof of the quality of his imagination,
and therefore of the richness of his temperament, as his choice of such episodes.
Lucien de Rume deemper, in Les Lillusions Perdues, writing drinking songs to pay for the
funeral of his mistress, who lies dying in the next room, Henry is,
watching Beatrix come down the stairs in her scarlet stockings with silver clocks.
Stephen Guest suddenly dazzled by the curve of Maggie Tulliver's arm as she lifts at
to pick a flower for him in the conservatory.
Arabella flinging the oval across the hedge at Jude.
Emma, losing her temper with Miss Bates at the picnic,
the midnight arrival of Harry Richmond's father in the first chapter of,
of that glorious tale, all these scenes shed a circle of light far beyond the incident recorded.
At the conclusion of a novel, the illuminating incident need only send its ray backward,
but it should send a long enough shaft to meet the light cast forward from the first page,
as in that poignant passage at the end of L'Education Saint-Amal,
where Madame Aronaut comes back to see Frederick Moreau after long years of separation.
He put her endless questions about herself and her husband.
She told him that, in order to economize and pay their debts,
they had settled down in a lost corner of a Britannan name.
Aronaut almost always ailing seemed like an old man.
Their daughter was married at Bordeaux.
Their son was in the colonial army,
yet. We'll suck in him. She lifted her head, but at last I see you again, I'm happy.
She asks him to take her for a walk and wanders with him through the Paris streets.
She is the only woman he has ever loved, and he knows that now the intervening years have vanished
and they walk on, absorbed in each other, hearing nothing as if they were walking in the country
on a bed of dead leaves.
Then they return to the young man's rooms,
and Madame Arnaud sitting down takes off her hat.
The lamp, placed on a console, lit up her white hair.
The sight was like a blow on his chest.
He tries to keep a pretense of sentimentalizing,
but she watched the clock,
and he continued to walk up and down smoking.
Neither could find any.
anything to say to the other.
In all separations there comes a moment
when the beloved is no longer with us.
This is all,
but every page that has gone before
is lit up by the tragic gleam of Madame Arnaud's white hair.
The same note is sounded in the chapter of the Golden Bowl,
where the deeply, the doubly betrayed Maggie,
walking up and down in the summer evening on the terrace of Fons,
looks in at the window of the smoking room,
where her father, her husband, and her stepmother,
who is her husband's mistress,
are playing bridge together,
unconscious of her scrutiny.
As she looks, she knows that she has them at her mercy,
and that they all, even her father, know it.
And in the same instant the sight of them
tells her that, to feel about them in any way of the immediate, inevitable, assuaging ways,
the ways usually open to innocent, outraged, and generosity betrayed would have been to give them
up, and that giving them up was marvelously not to be thought of.
The illuminating incident is not only the proof of the novelist's imaginative sensibility,
it is also the best means of giving presentness, immediacy, to his tale.
Four more than on dialogue does the effect of immediacy depend upon the apt use of the illuminating
incident, and the more threads of significance are gathered up into each one,
the more pages of explanatory narrative are spared to the writer and the reader.
There is a matchless instance of this in Les Rouge and Lenoir.
The young Julian Sorrel, the tutor of the Raynauld children, believes a love affair with their mother
to be the best way of advancing his ambitions, and decides to test his audacity by taking Madame
Reynolds' hand as they sit in the garden in the summer dusk.
He has a long struggle with his natural timidity,
and her commanding grace before he can make even this shy advance.
And that struggle tells, in half a page, more of his fatuities and meanness,
and the boyish simplicity still underlying them, and more too of the poor, proud woman at his side,
than a whole chapter of analysis and retrospection.
The power to seize his characters in their habit as they live,
is always the surest proof of a novelist's mastery.
But the choice of the illuminating incident,
though so much is not all,
as the French say there is the manner.
In Stendhal's plain and straightforward report of the scene,
in the garden every word every stroke tells,
and this question of manner,
of the particular manner,
adapted to each scene,
brings one to another point
at which the novelist's vigilance must never flag.
As every tale contains its own dimension,
so it implies its own manner,
the particular shade and style
most fitted to convey its full meaning.
Most novelists who have a certain number of volumes to their credit,
and have sought, as the subject required to vary their manner,
have been taken to tasks alike by readers and reviewers,
and either accused of attempting to pass off earlier works on a confiding public or pitied for a too evident decline in power.
Any change disturbs the intellectual indolence of the average reader,
and nothing, for instance, has done more to deprive Stevenson of his proper rank among English novelists
than his deplorable habit of not conceiving a boy's tale in the same spirit
as a romantic novel or a burlesque detective story of not even confining himself to fiction but attempting travels criticism and versed and doing them all so well that there must obviously be something wrong with it
the very critics who extol the versatility of the artist of the renaissance rebuked the same quality in their own contemporaries and their eagerness to stake out each novelist's
territory, and to confine him to it for life, recalls the story of the verger in an English cathedral,
who, finding a stranger kneeling in the sacred edifice between services, tapped him on the
shoulder with the indulgent admonition.
Sorry, sir, but we can't have any praying here at this hour.
This habit of the reader of wanting each author to give only what he has given before exercises the same
subtly suggestive influence as all other popular demands.
It is one of the most insidious temptations to the young artist
to go on doing what he already knows how to do,
and knows he will be praised for doing.
But the mere fact that so many people want him to write in a certain way
ought to fill him with the distress of that way.
It would be a good thing for letters if the perilous appeal of popularity
or oftener met in the spirit of the New England shopkeeper,
who, finding a certain pin-knife in great demand,
did not stock that kind the following year,
because, as he said, too many people came bothering him about it.
Part 8
Goethe declared that only the tree of life was green,
and that all theories were gray,
and he also congratulated himself on never having thought about things.
But if he never thought about thinking, he did think a great deal about his art, and some of the axioms he lay down for its practice go deeper than those of the professed philosophers.
The art of fiction, as now practice, is a recent one, and the arts in their earliest stages are seldom theorized on by those engaged in creating them.
but as soon as they began to take shape their practitioners,
or at least those of the number who happen to think as well as to create,
perforce began to ask themselves questions.
Some may not have Gert's gift for formulating the answers,
even to themselves,
but those answers will eventually be discoverable
in an added firmness of construction
and appropriateness of expression.
other writers do consciously lay down rules, and in the search for new forms and more complex
effects may even become the slaves of their two fascinating theories. These are the true
pioneers who are never destined to see their own work fulfill, but build intellectual
houses for the next generation to live in. Henry James was of the small minority,
As he became more and more preoccupied with the architecture of the novel,
he unconsciously subordinated all else to his ever-fresh complexities of design,
so that his last books are magnificent projects for future masterpieces,
rather than living creations.
Such an admission may seem to reinforce the argument against theorizing about one's art,
but there are few Jameses and fewer Gertes in any generation,
nor is there ever much danger in urging mankind to follow a council of perfection.
In the case of most novelists, such thought as they spare to the art, its range and limitations,
far from sterilizing their talent will stimulate it by giving them a sure command of their means,
and will perhaps temper their eagerness for the popular recognition by showing them
that the only reward worth having is in the quality of the work done.
The foregoing considerations on the writing of fiction may seem to some dry and dogmatic,
to others needlessly complicated.
Still others may feel that in the quest for an intelligible working theory,
the gist of the matter has been missed.
No doubt there is some truth in all these objections.
there would be, even had the subject been far more fully and inadequately treated.
It would appear that in the course of such inquiries,
the gist of the matter always does escape,
just as one thinks to cast A-Net over it,
a clap of the wings, and it is laughing down,
one from the topmost bow of the tree of the while.
Is all seeking vain, then?
Is it useless to try for a clear view of the meaning and method of one's art?
Surely not.
If no art can be quite pent up in the rules deduced from it,
neither can it fully realize itself unless those who practice it
attempt to take its measure and reason out its processes.
It is true that the gist of the matter always escapes,
since it nests, the elusive, bright-winged thing,
in the mysterious fourth-dimensional world,
which is the author's inmost sanctuary,
and on the threshold of which inquiry perforce must halt,
but though that world is inaccessible,
the creations emanating from it reveals something of its laws and processes.
Here another parenthesis must be open to point out once more
that though this world, the artist builds about him,
in the act of creation, reaches us, moves us,
through its resemblance to the life we know.
Yet in the artist's consciousness, its essence, the core of it, is other.
All worthless fiction and ineffective reviewing
are based on the forgetting of this fact.
To the artist, his world is as solidly real,
as the world of experience, or even more so, but in a way entirely different.
It is the world to and from which he passes without any sense of effort,
but always with an uninterrupted awareness of the passing.
In this world are forgotten and borne the creatures of his imagination,
more living to him than his own flesh and blood,
but whom he never thinks of as living in the reader's simplifying,
sense. Unless he keeps his hold on this dual character of their being, visionary to him and to the
reader real, he will be the slave of his characters and not their masters. When I say their master,
I do not mean that they are his marionettes and dangle from his strings. Once projected by his
fancy, they are living beings who live their own lives. But their work.
world is the one consciously imposed on them by their creator.
Only by means of this objectivity of the artist can his characters live in art.
I have never been much to move.
By the story of the tears Dickens is supposed to have shed over the death of a little nail.
That is, if they were real material tears, and not distilled from the milk of paradise.
The business of the artist is to make.
weak weep, and not to weep, to make laugh, and not to laugh, and unless tears and laughter
and flesh and blood are transmuted by him into the substance that art works in, they are nothing
to his purpose or to ours.
Yet to say this, though it seems to be the last word, it is not all.
The novelist, to whom this magic world is not open, has not even touched the borders of the art,
and to its familiars the power of expressions may seem innate.
But it is not so.
The creatures of that fourth-dimensional world are born as helpless as a human animal,
and each time the artist passes from dream to execution,
he will need to find the rules and formulas on the threshold.
End of Section 4.
Section 5 of the Writing of Fiction by Edith Wharton.
This is a Libervox recording.
All Librevox recordings are in the public domain.
Read by William Jones, Benita Springs, Florida.
The Writing of Fiction by Edith Wharton, Chapter 4, Character and Situation in the novel.
Part 1. Definitions, however difficult and inadequate, are the necessary tools of criticism.
To begin, therefore, one may distinguish the novel of situation from that of character and manners
by saying that, in the first, the persons imagined by the author almost always spring out of a vision
of the situation and are inevitably conditioned by it, whatever the genius of their creator.
whereas in the larger, freer form, that of character and manners, or either of the two,
the author's characters are first born, then mysteriously proceed to work out their own destinies.
Let it, at any rate, be understood that this rough distinction shall serve in the following pages
to mark the difference between the two ways of presenting the subject,
since most subjects then themselves do being treated from either point of view.
It is not easy to find, among great novels written in English,
examples of novels of pure situation.
That is, in which the situation is what the book is remembered by.
Perhaps the scarlet letter might be signed as one of the few obvious examples.
In tests of the Duberville's, which one is tempted to name also,
the study of character is so interwoven with the drama as to raise the story
for all its obvious shortcomings,
to the level of those supreme novels
which escape classification.
For if one remembers Tess's strategy,
still more vividly does one remember Tess herself.
In continental literature,
several famous books at once present themselves
in the Situation Group.
One of the earliest, as it is the most famous,
is Gerta's elective affinities,
where a great and terrible drama involves characters of which the creator has not managed quite
to sever the marionette's strings.
Who indeed remembers those vague initial creatures whom the author himself forgot to pull out of their limbo
and his eagerness to mature and polish their ingenious misfortunes.
Tolstoy's The Kreutzer Sonata is another book which lives only by force of situation,
sustained, of course, by the profound analysis of a universal passion.
No one remembers who the people in the Kreutza Sonata were,
or for that matter, they look like, or what sort of house they lived in.
But the very roots of human jealousy are laid bare in the picture of the vague,
undifferentiated husband, a puppet who comes to life only in function of his one ferocious passion.
Balzac alone, perhaps, managed to make of his novels of situation, such as Caesar Pirateau,
or the Curre de Tours, such relentless and penetrating character studies that their protagonists
and the difficulties which beset them leap together to the memory whenever the tales are named.
But this fusion of categories is the prerogative of the few, of those who know how to write
all kinds of novels, and who chose each time the best situated to the subject in hand.
Novels preeminently of character, and in which situation, dramatically viewed, is reduced to the
minimum, are far easier to find. Jane Austen has given the norm the ideal of this type,
of her tales that might almost be said that the reader sometimes forgets what happens to her characters,
his haunting remembrance of their foibles and oddities, their little daily round of preoccupations
and pleasures.
They are speaking portraits.
Following one with their eyes is that uncanny, lifelike way that good portraits have,
rather than passionate, disordered people, dragging one impetuously into the tangle of their
tragedy, as one is dragged by the characters of Stendall, Thackeray, and Ballsack.
not that jane austin's characters do not follow their predestined orbit they evolve as real people do but so softly noiselessly that to follow the development of their history is as quiet a business as watching
a sense of her limitations as certain as her sense of her power must have kept her unconsciously or not from trying to thrust these little people into great actions and made her
choose the quiet setting, which enabled her to round out her portraits as imperceptibly as the
sun models a fruit. Emma is perhaps the most perfect example in English fiction of a novel,
in which character shapes events quietly, but irresistibly as a stream nibbles away at its banks.
next to Emma, one might place in this category the masterpiece of a very different kind,
the egoist of Meredith.
In this book, thought by means so alien to Miss Austin's delicate procedure, that one balks
at the comparison, the fantastic novelist, whose antics too often make one forget his insight,
discarding most of his fatiguing follies, gives a rich and deletious.
deliberate study of a real human being. But he does not quite achieve Jane Austen's success.
His Willoughby patern is typical before he is individual, while every character in Emma is both,
and in degrees always perfectly proportioned. Still, the two books are preeminent achievements
in the field of pure character drawing,
and when must turn to the greatest continental novelists
to Balzac, again as always,
to Stendahl, Flaubert, Dostkoyevsky,
Turganeo, Marcel Proust,
and perhaps to the very occasional best of Trollope
to match with such searching and elaborate studies.
But among the continental novelists,
with few exceptions,
the delineation of character is
inextricabyev,
combined with the study of manners, as, for instance, in the novels of Tolstoy, of Bolzac and of Flaubert.
Turgenev, and Dimitri Rudin, gave the somewhat rare example of a novel made almost entirely
out of the portrayal of a single character, as, at the opposite extreme, Samuel Butler's
way of all flesh, for all its brilliant character drawing, is essentially the portrait of a family
and a social group, one of the most distinctive novels of manners it is possible to find.
Such preliminary suggestions, cursory as they are, may help better than mere definitions
to keep in mind the differing types of novel in which either character or situation weighs down
the scales.
Part 2
The novel, in the hands of English-speaking writers, has always tended, as a
it rose in value to turn the pictures of character and manners, however much blended with dramatic
episodes, or tangled in what used to be vaguely known as a plot. The plot, in the traditional
sense of the term, consisted of some clash of events or less often of character, but it was an
arbitrarily imposed and rather spaciously built framework, inside of which the people concerned
had room to develop their idiosyncrasies and be themselves,
except in the crucial moments when they became the puppets of the plot.
The real novel of situation,
a compactor and above all more inevitable affair, did not,
at least on English soil, take shape until plot
in the old-fashioned sense of a coil of outward happenings
was giving way to the discovery that real drama is soul drama.
The novel of situation indeed has never really acclimatized itself in English-speaking countries,
whereas in France it seems to have grown naturally from the psychological novel of the 17th and 18th centuries,
wherein the conflict of characters tended from the first to simplify the drawing of character
and to turn the protagonists into embodiments of a particular passion rather than of a particular person.
From this danger, the English novelist has usually been guarded by an inexhaustible interest in personality,
and a fancy for loitering, by the way.
The plots of Scott, Thackeray, Dickens, George Eliot, and their successors are almost detachable at well.
So arbitrarily are they imposed upon.
upon the novel of character, which was slowly but steadily developing within their lax support,
and which became, as the 19th century advanced, the typical form of English fiction.
The novel of situation is a different matter.
The situation, instead of being imposed from the outside, is the kernel of the tale
and its only reason for being. It ceases the characters in its steely grip
and jujitsu's them into the required attitude with a relentlessness against which only genius can prevail.
In every form of novel, it is noticeable that the central characters tend to be the least real.
This seems to be partly explained by the fact that these characters, survival of the old hero and heroine,
whose business it was not to be real, but to be sublime, are still, though often a
without the authors being aware of it, the standard bears of his convictions, or the expression
of his secret inclinations. They are his in the sense of Tendington do and say what he would do,
or imagines he would do, in given circumstances, and being more projections of his own
personality, they lack the substance and relief of the minor characters whom he views
cruelly and objectively in all their human weakness and in consequence.
But there remains another reason, less often recognized, for the unreality of novel heroes
and heroines, a reason especially applicable to the leading figures in the novel of
situation. It is that the story is about them and forced them into the shape which its
events impose, while the subordinate characters, moving at ease in the interstices of the tale,
and free to go about their business in the illogical human fashion, remained real to the
writer and readers. This fact, exemplified in all novels, becomes most vivid in the novel
of situation, where the characters tend to turn into laocoon's and lie in the merciless coils of
their adventure. This is the extreme point of the difference between the novel of situation
and of characters, and the cause of the common habit of regarding them as alternative methods
of fiction. Part 3. The thoughtful critic who would be rid of the cheap formulas of fiction
reviewing, and reach some clear and deeper expression of the sense and limitations of the art,
is sure to resent the glib definition of the novel of situation and the novel of character or manners
as necessarily antithetical and mutually exclusive.
The thoughtful critic will be right, and the thoughtful novelist will share his view.
What sense is there in such arbitrary divisions, such opposings of one manner to another,
when almost all the greatest novels are
there, in their versatility and their abundance, to show the glorious possibility of welding
both types of fiction into a single masterpiece.
In what category, for instance, should Erecarina be placed?
Undoubtedly, in that of novels of character and manners. Yet if one sums up the tale in
its rapidity and its vehemous, what situation did Dumont feel
ever devised for his
theater of situation,
half so poignant or so dramatic,
as that which Tolstoy
manages to keep
conspicuously afloat
on the wide-tossing expanse
of the Russian social scene.
In Vanity Fair, again,
so preeminently a novel of manners,
a novel of character,
with what dramatic intensity
the situation between Becky,
Rodon, and Lord
stain stand out from the rich populous pages and gathers up into itself all their diffuse significance.
The answer is evident. Above a certain height of creative capacity, the different methods,
the seemingly conflicting points of view, are merged into the artist's comprehensive vision,
and the situations inherent in his subject detach themselves in strong relief from the fullest background
without disturbing the general composition.
But though this is true,
it is true only of the greatest novelists.
Those who, as Matthew Arnold said of Shakespeare,
do not abide our question, but are free.
In them, vast vision is united
to equivalent powers of coordination.
But more often, the novelist,
who has the creative vision,
lacks the capacity for coordinating and rendering
his subject, or at least is unable, in the same creation, to give an equal part to the development
of character and to the clash of situation. Owing to the lack of that supreme equipment,
which always arises above classification, most of the novelists have tended to let their work
fall into one of the two categories of situation or character, thus fortifying the theory of
the superficial critics that life in fiction must be presented either as conflict or as character.
The so-called novel of character, even in less than the most powerful hands, does not, of course,
precludes situation in the sense of a dramatic clash. But the novelists develops his tale through a
succession of episodes, all in some way illustrative of the
the manners or the characters out of which this situation is eventually to spring.
He lingers on the way, is not afraid of by-paths, and enriches his scene with subordinate
pictures, as a medieval miniaturist encloses his chief subject in a border of beautiful
ornament and delicate vignettes.
Whereas the novel of situation is, by definition, one in which the problem to be worked
out in a particular human conscience or the clash between conflicting worlds, is the novelist's chief,
if not his only thing, and everything not directly illuminative of it must be left out as
irrelevant. This does not mean that in the latter type of tale, as for instance in Tess of the
Drupervilles, the episode, Touch of Color or Character is Forbidden. Modern novelist of
situations does not seem likely to return to the monochrome starkness of Adolfi or La Princese de Cleave.
He uses every scrap of color, every picturesque byproduct of his subject which that subject yields.
But he avoids adding to it a single touch, however decoratively tempting, which is not part of the design.
If the two methods are thus contrasted, the novel of character and manners may seem superior
in richness, variety, and play of light and shade. This does not prove that it is necessarily capable
of a greater total effect than the other. Yet so far, the greatest novels have undoubtedly
dealt with the character and manners rather than with mere situation. The inference of the
Inference is indeed almost irresistible, that the farther the novel is removed in treatment
from theatrical modes of expression, the more nearly it attains its purpose as a freer art,
appealing to those more subtle imaginative requirements which the stage can never completely satisfy.
When the novelist has been possessed by a situation and sees his characters hurrying to its culmination,
he must have unusual keenness of vision and sureness of hand to fix their lineaments and detain them on their way long enough for the reader to recognize them as real human beings.
In the novel of Pure Situation, it is doubtful if this has ever been done with more art than in the wrong box,
where Stevenson launched on his roaring torrent of farce
a group of real people alive and individual
who keep their reality and individuality till the end.
The tears of laughter that the box provokes generally
blind the reader to its subtle character drawing.
But save for the people in Gil Bloss
and their memorable figures of Chico and Gorin Flo,
in the Dumas cycle headed by the Dame de Moserot,
it would be hard in any tale of action
to find characters as vivid and individual
as those which rally through this glorious farce.
The tendency of this situation to take hold of the novelist imagination
and to impose its own tempo on his tale
can be resisted only by richness and solidity of temperament.
The writer must have a range wide enough to include, within the march of unalterable law,
all the inconsequences of human desire, ambition, cruelty, weakness, and sublimity.
He must, above all, bear in mind at each step that his business is not to ask what this
situation would be likely to make of his characters, but what his characters, being what
they are, could make of this situation.
This question, which is the tuning fork of truth, never needs to be more insistently,
applied than in writing the dialogue, which usually marks the culminating scenes in fiction.
The moment the novelist finds that his characters are talking not as they naturally would,
but as a situation requires, are visibly lending him a helping hand,
and the more rapid elucidation of his drama.
The moment he hears him say anything
which the stress of the predicament
would not naturally bring to their lips,
his effect has been produced at the expense of reality,
and he will find them turning to sawdust in his hands.
Some novelists, conscious of the danger
and not sufficiently skilled to meet it,
have tried to turn it by interlarding
these crucial dialogues with irrelevant small talk
in the hope of thus producing a greater air of reality.
But this is to fall again into the trap of what Balzac called
a reality in nature, which is not one in art.
The object of dialogue is to gather up the loose strands
of passion and emotion running through a tale
and the attempt to entangle these threads in desultory,
chatter about the weather or the,
village, Pump proves only that the narrator has not known how to do the necessary work of
selection. All of the novelist's art is brought into play by such tests. His characters must
talk as they would in reality, and yet everything not relevant to his tale must be eliminated.
A secret of success lies in his instinct of selection. These difficulties are not a reason for
condemning the novel of situation as an inferior, or at least not as noteworthy form of the art?
Inferior to the larger form, the novel of character and manners, it probably is, if only in
the matter of scale, but certainly also worthwhile, since it is the natural vehicle of certain
creative minds. As long as there are novelists whose inventive faculty presents them first
with the form, and only afterward with the substance of the tales they want to tell,
the novel's situation will fill a purpose,
but it is precisely this type of mind which needs to be warned against the dangers of the form.
When the problem comes to the novelist before he sees the characters engaged in it,
he must be all the more deliberate in dealing with it,
must let it lie in his mind till it brings forth of itself,
the kind of people who would naturally be involved in that particular plight.
The novelist's permanent problem is that of making his people at once typical and individual,
universal and particular, and in adopting the form of the novel of situation,
he perpetually runs the risk of upsetting that nice balance of attributes,
unless he persists in thinking of his human beings first and of their predicament,
only as the outcome of what they are.
Part 4.
The predicament.
The situation must still be borne in mind
if the novelist approaches his task in another way
and sees his tale as situation illustrating character instead of the reverse.
Even the novel of character and manners can never be without situation,
that is, without some sort of climax caused by the contingent.
forces engaged. The conflict, the shock of forces, is latent in every attempt to detach a
fragment of human experience and transpose it in terms of art, that is, of completion.
The seeming alternative is to fall back on the stream of consciousness, which is simply
the slice of life, of the 80s renamed, but that method, this has already been pointed out,
contains its own condemnation, since every attempt to employ it of necessity involves selection,
and selection in the long run must eventually lead to the transposition, the stylization,
of the subject. Let it be assumed, then, that a predicament there must be, whether worked out in
one soul, or created by the shock of opposing purposes. The larger the canvas of the novel,
supposing novelist's powers to be in scale with his theme, the larger will be the scale of the
predicament. In the great novel of manners in which Balzac, Thackeray, and Trollstoy were preeminent,
the conflict engages not only individuals, but social groups, and the individual applied is usually
the product, one of the many products, of the social conflict. There is a sense in which situation is
the core of every tale, and as truly present in the quiet pages of Eugenie Gonde or
Lély d'en de la Vallis, as in the tense tragedy of the return of the native, the epic
clash of war and peace, or the dense social turmoil of vanity fair.
But the main advantage of the novelist, to whom his subject first presents itself in terms
of character, either individual or social, is that he can quietly watch his people or his group
going about their business and let the form of his tale grow out of what they are, out of their
idiosyncrasies, their humors, and their prejudices, instead of fitting a situation onto them
before he really knows them, either personally or collectively. It is manifest that every method of
fiction has its dangers, and that the study of character pursued to excess may tend to submerge
the action necessarily to illustrate that character. In the inevitable reaction against the
arbitrary plot, many novelists have gone too far in the other direction, either swapping themselves
in tedious stream of consciousness, or else another frequent error, giving an exaggerated importance
to trivial incidents when the tale is concerned with trivial lives.
There is a sense in which nothing which receives the touch of art is trivial,
but to raise to this height the incident insignificant in itself must illustrate some general
law and turn on some deep movement of the soul. If the novelist wants to hang his drama
on a button, let it at least be one of leers. All things hold to
in the practice of any art, and character and manners, and the climaxes springing out of them,
cannot in the art of fiction be dealt with separately without diminution to the subject.
It is a matter for the novelist's genius to combine all of these ingredients in their due proportion.
And then we shall have Emma, or the egoist, if character is to be given the first place,
Le Pierre Gourriot or Madame Bouvare, if the drama is to be blunt with it,
and war and peace, verity fair, la Cotseillon, sentimental,
if all the points of view and all the methods are to be harmonized
in the achievement of a great picture,
wherein the individual, the group, and their social background,
have each a perfectly apportioned share in the composition.
Quote,
Four great walls in the New Jerusalem
meted on each side by the angels read,
close quote. Yes, but to cover such spaces adequately,
happens to the greatest artists only once or twice in their career.
End of Section 5.
Section 6 of the writing of fiction by Edith Wharton.
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Read by William Jones, Benita Springs, Florida.
The Writing of Fiction by Edith Wharton,
Chapter 5, Section 6, Marcel Proust.
Part 1.
The difficulty of speaking at all adequately of Marcel Proust
has grown with the number of volumes of
a la reche de ton perdu and also with the lapse of time since the first were published
the cycle moreover is still incomplete though now we know that its conclusion will appear and the critic who ventures to see a definite intention in the dense and branching pages already published does so at his peril
and on the faith of that sense of intercontinuity communicating from the outset by all the greatest novels from the rambling and extravagant gil bias to the compact and thrifty emma
the death of marcelle proust premature the one was yet did not happen till his dying hand had put the last words to the last page of his vast narrative
Last words, but unhappily, not the last touches.
The appearance of La Prisonier confirms the report circulated after his death
that the volumes, when published, were left without those innumerable enriching strokes
which gave their golden ripeness to the others.
But whether or not these final chapters, written in illness and clouded,
as one perceives from la prisioneer by physical weakness and deep mental distress fulfill the promise of that unity to which all the strands of the elaborate fabric seemed to tend
the first volume by which the author's greatness will perhaps finally be measured make it clear that he himself felt the need of such unity and would have submitted his restless genius to it if illness had not disintegrated his powers
on this inference the critic will probably have to rest and it is enough to justify treating the fragment before as already potentially a whole
more serious for the critic is the obstacle caused by the long lapse of years since duchot duchy shwan led off the astounding procession
since then the conception of the art of fiction as it had taken shape during the previous half-century has been unsettled by a series of experiments each one too promptly heralded as the final and only way of novel writing
The critics who have handed down the successive ultimatta have apparently decided that no interest,
even archaeological, attaches any longer to the standards and the vocabulary of their predecessors.
And this full-cell rejection of past principles has led to a confusion in terms which makes communication difficult
and conclusions ambiguous.
An unexpected result of the contradictory clamor has been to transfer Proust, who, ten or twelve years ago,
an almost unintelligible innovator, back to his rightful place in the great line of classical tradition.
If, therefore, the attempt to form a judgment of his art has become doubly arduous,
it has also become doubly interesting.
for Proust, almost alone of his kind,
is apparently still regarded as the great novelist
by the innovators, and yet is already far enough off
to make it clear that he was himself
that far more substantial thing in the world of art,
a renovator.
With a general knowledge of letters extending
far beyond the usual limits of French culture,
he combined a vision peculiarly
of his own, and he was thus exceptionally fitted to take the next step forward in a developing art
without disowning its past, or wasting the inherited wealth of experience. It is as much
the lack of general culture as of original vision, which makes so many of the younger novelists
in Europe as in America, attached undue importance to trifling innovations.
Original vision is never much afraid of using accepted forms,
and only the cultivated intelligence escapes the danger of regarding as intrinsically new
what may be a mere superficial change, or the reversion to a discarded trick of technique.
The more one reads of Proust, the more one sees that his strength is the strength of tradition.
All his newest and most arresting effects have been.
been arrived at through the old way of selection and design. In the construction of these vast,
leisurely, and purposeful compositions, nothing is really wasted or brought in at random.
If at first Proust seemed so revolutionary, it was probably because of his desulatory manner
and parenthetical syntax, and chiefly because of the shifting of emphasis resulting from his
extremely personal sense of values. The points on which Proust lays the greatest stress are often
those inmost tremors, waverings, and contradictions which the conventions of fiction have hitherto
subordinated to more generalized truth and more rapid effects. Proust bends over them with
unwaryed attention. No one else has carried so far the analysis of
half-conscious states of mind, obscure associations of thought, and gelatinous fluctuations of mood.
But long and closely as he dwells on them, he never loses himself in the submarine jungle,
in which his lantern groats.
Though he arrives at his object in so roundabout away, that object is always to report the
consciousness, purposive conduct of his characters.
In this respect, he is distinctly to be classed among those whom the jargon of the recent philosophy
has labeled behaviorists, because they believe that the proper study of mankind is man's
conscious and purpose of behavior rather than its dim unfathomable sources.
Proust is in truth the aware and eager inheritor of two great formulas, that of Racine,
in his psychology, that of Saint-Simon in its anecdotic and discursive illustration.
In both respects, he is deliberately traditional.
Part two. Fashions in the arts come and go,
and it is of little interest to try to analyze the work of any artist
who does not give one the sense of being in some sort above them.
In the art of one's contemporaries, it is not always easy to say what produces that sense,
and perhaps the best way of trying to find out is to apply a familiar touchstone.
Out of all the flux of judgments and theories which have darkened counsel in respect of novel writing,
one stable fact seems always to emerge.
The quality, the greatest novelists have always had in common,
of making their people live.
To ask why this matters more than anything else
would lead one into the obscure maces of aesthetic.
But the fact is generally enough admitted to serve as a ground for discussion.
Not all the other graces and virtues combined
seem to have in them that aseptic magic.
Vibacity, virtuosity, and abundance of episodes
skill in presenting them. What power of survival have these, compared with the sight of the doddering
Baron Hewlett, climbing his stairs to a senile trist, to Beatrix Esmond, descending hers in
silver clocks and red-heeled shoes?
Monsieur Eucerant, in his literary history of the English people, says of Shakespeare,
that he was
a grand disputé de
a great lifegiver.
It is the very
epithet one needs for Proust.
His gallery of living figures
is immense,
almost past reckoning.
So far, in that ever-growing throne,
it is only the failures
that one can count.
And Proust's power of evocation
extends from the background
and middle distance,
where some mysterious law
of optics seems to make it relatively easy for the novelist to animate his puppets,
to that searching center front, where his principal characters,
so scrutinized, explained, re-explained, pulled about, taken apart, and put together again,
resist in their tough vitality his perpetual nervous manipulation,
and keep carelessly on their predestined way.
swan himself subjected to so merciless an examination swan as to whose haberdashery hats boots gloves taste in pictures books and women we are informed with an impartial abundance is never more alive than when in that terrible scene of the fifth volume he quietly tells the duchess de germanta that he cannot promise to go to italy
the following spring with her and the duke because he happens to be dying equally vivid are the invalid aunt and in the pale twilight of her provincial bedroom
and a servant francois who waits on her and at her death passes as a matter of course to the rest of the family amazing composite picture of all the faults and virtues of the old-fashioned french maid-servant
and then there is the hero's grandmother who fills the pages with a subdued yet tingling vitality from the moment when we first see her dashing out for one of her lonely walks in the rain to that other day
far on in the tale when fiercely and doggedly nursed by francois she dies in an equal loneliness there is the marquis de saint-lub
impetuous, selfish and sentimental, with his artless veneration for the latest thing in culture,
his snobbishness in the bohemian world, his simplicity and good breeding in his own,
the Jewish actress, his mistress, who despises him because he is a mere man of the world,
and not one of her own crew of aesthetic charlatans. The great, the object, the abominable and
magnificent Monsieur de Charlouce, and the shy, scornful Duchess de Germantes,
with her quickness of wit and obtuseness of heart, her consuming worldliness and her
sincere belief that nothing bores her so much as the world, the poor Duchess, mistress of all
the social arts, yet utterly nonplussed and furious, because Swan's announcement that he is dying
is made as she is getting into her carriage to go to a big dinner,
and nothing in her code teaches her how to behave to a friend tactless enough
to blurt out such news as such a moment.
Ah, how they all live and abound each in his own or her own sense,
and how each time they reappear,
sometimes after disconcertingly long eclipses,
they take up their individual rhythm unerringly as the performers in some great orchestra.
The sense that through all his desolatoriness, Proust always knows whether his people are tending,
and which of their words, gestures, and thoughts are worth recording.
His ease in threading his way through their crowded ranks
fills the reader from the first with the feeling of security,
which only the great artist inspire.
Certain novels, beginning in very quietly, carelessly, almost,
yet convey in the opening page the same feeling of impending fatality
as the first bars of the fifth symphony.
Destiny is knocking at the gate.
The next knock may not come for a long time,
but the reader knows that it will come,
as surely as Tolstoy's Ivan Iliitch knew,
that the mysterious little intermittent pain which used to disappear for days would come back oftener and more insistently till it destroyed monsieur
there are many ways of conveying this sense of the footfall of destiny and nothing shows the quality of the novelist's imagination more clearly than the incidents he singles out to illuminate the course of events and the inner workings of his own
people's souls.
When Imaging, setting forth to meet her adored posthumous,
at Milford Haven, asked her servant Pisaniel,
who has been ordered by the jealous posthumus,
to murder her on the way,
how many score of miles may we well ride
twixt hour and hour?
And getting the man's anguished answer,
One score twixt son and son, madam,
is enough for you.
And too much, too.
She exclaims why,
one that row two one's execution, man,
could never go so slow.
Or when Gretchen,
opening her candid soul to Faust,
tells them how she mothered her little sister from the cradle.
My mother was so ill,
I brought the poor little creature up on milk and water.
The cradle stood by my bed.
she could hardly stir without my waking.
I had to feed her, take her into the bed with me,
walk the floor with her all night,
and be early the next morning at the wash-tub.
But I loved her so that I was glad to do it.
When a swift touch of genuine darts,
such rays on the path to come,
one is almost tempted to exclaim,
there is nothing in mere situation.
The whole of the novelist's art
lies in the particular way in which he brings the given conjuncture home to the imagination.
Proust had an incredible sureness of touch in shedding this prophetic ray on his characters.
And again and again he finds the poignant word, the significant gesture,
as when, in that matchless first chapter, Combra, of Dukot-Sha-Swan,
he depicts the suspense of the lonely little boy,
the narrator, who, having been hurried off to bed without a good-night kiss,
because Monsieur Juan is coming to dine,
persuades the reluctant Francois to carry to his mother a little note
in which he implores her to come up and see him about something very important.
So far the episode is like many in which the modern novelist
as analyzed specifically since Sinister Street the inarticulate tragedies of childhood.
But for Proust's such an episode, in addition to its own significance, has a deeper
illuminative use.
I thought to myself, he goes on,
House One should have left at my anguish if he had read my letter, and guessed its real object,
which was, of course, to get his mother's good-night kiss.
But on the contrary, as I learned later, for years an anguish of the same kind was the torture of
swan's own life. That anguish which consists of knowing that the being one loves is in some
gay sense, liu de plazir, where one is not, where there is no hope of one's being. That anguish,
it was through the passion of love that he experienced it, that passion to which it is
in some sort predestined to which it peculiarly and specifically pertains.
And then when Francoise has been persuaded to take the child's letter
and his mother, engaged with her guest, does not come, but says currently,
there is no answer.
Alas, the narrator continues, Swan also had that experience,
and learned that the good intention of a third,
third person, are powerless to move a woman who is irritated at feeling herself pursued
in scenes of enjoyment by someone whom she does not love.
And suddenly, by one touch in the first pages of that quiet opening chapter,
in which a little boy's drowsy memories reconstitute in old friends' visit to his parents,
a light is flashed on the central theme of the book.
The hopeless, incurable passion of a sensitive man for a stupid, uncomprehending woman.
The footfall of destiny has echoed through that dull provincial garden,
her touch has fallen on the shoulder of the idle man of fashion, and in an instant,
and by the most natural transitions, the quiet picture of family life falls into its place
in the greater design of the book.
Proust's pages abound in such anticipatory flashes,
each one of which would make the fortune of a lesser novelist.
A peculiar duality of vision enabled him to lose himself in each episode,
as it enrolled itself before him,
as in this delicious desultory picture of Swan's visit to his old friends,
and all the while to keep his hand on the main threads of the design,
so that no slightest incident contributing to that design ever escapes monsieur.
This degree of saturation in one subject can be achieved
only through something like the slow ripening process of nature.
Tyndall said of the great speculative minds,
there is in the human intellect a power of expansion,
I might almost call it a power of creation,
which is brought into play by the simple brooding upon facts.
And he might have added that this brooding is one of the most distinctive attributes of genius.
It is perhaps as near an approach as can be made to the definition of genius.
Nothing can be further from the mechanical ingenuities of plot weaving,
then this faculty of penetrating into a chosen subject and bringing to light its inherent property.
neither haste to have done nor fear lest the reader shall miss his emphasis ever affects the leisurely movement of Proust's narrative, or causes him to give unnaturally relief to the passages intended to serve as signposts.
A tiny blaze here and there on the bark of one of the trees in his forest suffices to show the way, and the explorer who has not enough woodcraft to decide.
discover these signs had best abstain from the adventure.
Part 3. It was one of the distinctive characters of Proust's genius
that he combined with his great sweep of vision and exquisite delicacy of touch,
a solicitous passion for detail.
Many of his pages recall those medieval manuscripts for the roving fancy of the scribe
has framed some solemn gospel or epistle.
in episodes drawn from the life of towns and fields,
or the pagan ex-revagances of the bestiary.
Jane Austen never surpassed in conciseness of irony
some of the conversations between Marcel's maiden aunts,
or the description of Madame de Chambrere and Madame de Francfort,
listening to music,
and one must turn to Cranford for such microscopic studies
of provincial life as that of the bed-ridden aunt Madame Octav,
who is always going to get up the next day,
and meanwhile lies beside her bottle of Vichy,
prayer book bursting with pious images,
and listens to Francois's report of what is going on in the street,
down which Madame Grubil, just before a thunderstorm,
is seen walking without her umbrella,
in a new silk dress she has made at Chatan's.
Don.
But just as the reader is sinking delectably into the featherbed of the small town,
Proust snatches him up in Eagle's talents and swings him over the darkest abyss of passion
and intrigue, showing him in the slow tortures of swan's love for Odette and of Saint-Loup
for Rochelle, the last depths and evolutions of moral anguish, or setting the frivolous career,
of the two great Germantes ladies, the Duchess, and the Princess,
on a stage faster than any since Balzac's,
and packed with a human comedy as multifarious.
This changing but never confusing throng
is composed of most of the noticeable types of society
which still keeps its aristocratic framework.
The old nobility of the Fowburg,
with their satellites, rich and huge,
and cultivated Jews, such as Swan and Bloch, celebrated painters, novelists, actresses,
diplomatists, lawyers, doctors, academicians, men of fashion and vice, de-classes grand duchesses,
intriguing vulgarians, dowdy great ladies, and all the other figures, composing the most
various curious and restless of modern societies. Without visible effort,
Proust's art marshals these throngs, and then turns serenely aside to put the last tender touches to his description of the hawthorns at Combray,
or the lovely episode of Marcel's first visit to Rachel, where the young man walks up and down under the blossoming pear trees, while Saint-True goes to fetch his mistress.
Every reader enamored of the art must brood in amazements over the way in which Proust maintains the back.
balance between these two manners, the broad and the minute.
His endowment as a novelist, his range of presentation combined with mastery of his instruments,
has probably never been surpassed.
Fascinating, as it is, to the professionals to dwell on this amazing virtuosity,
yet the lover of Proust soon comes to feel that his rarest quality lies beyond and above it,
lies in the power to reveal by a single illusion, a word, an image, those depths of soul
beyond the soul's own guessing. The man who could write of the death of Marcell's grandmother,
a few hours ago her beautiful hair just beginning to turn gray seemed less old than herself.
Now, on the contrary, it placed the crown of age on a face grown young again, and from which
the wrinkles, the contractions, the heaviness, the tension, the flexibility called by suffering,
had all disappeared. As in the far-off time, when her parents had chosen her bridegroom for her,
the features of her face were delicately traced in lines of purity and submission. The cheeks
shone with chaste hopes, with a dream of bliss, even with an innocent gaiety that the years,
one by one, had slowly destroyed.
Life in leaving her had taken with it the disillusionment of life.
A smile seemed to rest upon my grandmother's lips.
On that funeral head, death, like the medieval sculptor,
had laid her down in the guise of a young girl.
The man who could find words in which to express the inexpressible emotion
with which one comes suddenly,
in some apparently unknown landscape upon a scene long known to the soul,
like the mysterious group of trees encountered by Marcel in the course of a drive with Madame de Villeperries,
the man could touch with so sure and compassion a hand on the central mysteries of love and death
deserves at such moments to be ranked with Tolstoy,
when he describes the death of Prince Andrew
with Shakespeare when he makes Lear say
Pray you, undo this button.
Part four.
Hitherto I have only praised.
In writing of a great creative artist
and especially of one whose work is over,
it is always better worthwhile
to dwell on the beauties than to hunt down the blemishes.
For their qualities outright the defects, the latter lose much of their importance.
Even when, as sometimes in Proust's case, they are defects in the moral sensibility,
that tuning-fork, of the novelist's art.
It is vain to deny or to try to explain away this particular blemish deficiency,
it should be rather called in Proust work.
unadottably there are blind spots in his books as there are in balzacques in stendalls in flavers but prousts blind spots are peculiarly disconcerting because they are intermittent
one cannot dismiss the matter by saying that a whole category of human emotions is invisible to him since at certain times his vision is acutest at the precise angle where the blindness had previously occurred
a well-known english critic confusing the scenes in which proust's moral sense has failed him with those foremost numerous in which he deliberately portrays the viler aspects of the human medley
suggest that timorous readers might find unmingled enjoyment in the perusal of a la recher de tautieu by the simple experience of thinking away monsieur de scherarder de tautieu by the simple experience of thinking away monsieur de scherarder
as who should propose thinking away false staff from the place in which he figures it would in fact be almost as difficult to dismiss monsieur de charluse with an i know thee not old man as false staff and quite as unnecessary
it is not by daring to do in the round a mean or corrupt character ennago a lord stane or philip bridal or a valerie
that ennopheles diminishes the value of his work on the contrary he increases it only when the vileness and the cruelty escape him when he fails to see the blackness of the shadow they project and thus unconsciously flattens his model
does he correspondingly impoverished the picture.
And this, Proust too often did, but never end drawing Monsieur de Charleuze, whose ignomene
was always as vividly present to him as the Agos or Ghaneril's to their creator.
There is one deplorable page where the hero and narrator, with whose hyper-sensitiveness
a hundred copious and exquisite passages have acquainted us, describes with complacency,
how he has deliberately hidden himself to spy on an unedifying scene.
This episode, and several others marked by the same abrupt lap of sensibility,
might be thought away, with all the less detriment that, at such moments,
Proust's characters invariably lose their prud.
Probableness and began to stumble through their parts, like good actors vainly trying to galvanize a poor play.
All through his work there are pages literally trembling with emotion, but whenever the moral sensibility fails, the tremor, the vibration ceases.
When he is unaware of the meanness of an act committed by one of his characters, that character loses by so much of its lifeliveness,
and reversing pygmalion's gesture,
the author turns living beings back to stone.
But what are those lapses in a book
where countless pages throb with passionate pity
and look at one with human eyes?
The same man, who thus offends at one moment
at the next as one by the heartstrings?
In a scene such as that were the hero,
hearing his grandmother speak for the first time,
over the telephone is startled into thoughts of death and separation by the altered sound of a familiar voice or that in which st louis comes to paris on twenty-four hours leave and his adoring mother first exults at the thought that he is going to spend his evening with her
then bitterly divines that he is not and finally trembles lest by betraying her disappointment she shall have spoiled his selfish
pleasures. And it is almost always, at the very moment when the reader thinks,
Oh, if he only doesn't fail me now, that he floods his squalid scene with the magic of
an inexhaustible poetry, so that one could cry out, like Sigmund, when the gala blows
open the door of the hut, no one went, someone came. It is the spring.
Monsieur Benjamin Cremont, whose article on Proust is the most
thoughtful study of his work yet published, has come upon the obstacle of Proust's lapses
of sensibility, and tried, but not very successfully, to turn it.
According to this critic, Proust satire is never based on a moral ideal, but is always
merely complementary to his psychological analysis. The only occasion, M. Tremot continues,
where Proust incidentally speaks of a moral ideal is in the description of the death of Bergold.
He then cites the beautiful passage in question,
Everything happens in our lives,
as though we had entered upon them with a burden of obligations contracted in an anterior existence.
There is nothing in our earthly condition to make us feel that we are under an obligation to be good,
to be morally sensitive, even to be polite, nor to the artist to begin over again 20 times
in a passage which will probably be admired only when his body has been devoured by worms.
All these obligations, which have no sanction in our present life, seem to belong to a different
world, a world founded on goodness, on moral scruple, on sacrifice, a world entirely different
from this one, a world whence we come when we are born on earth, perhaps to return there and live
once more under the rule of the unknown laws which we have obeyed here, because we carried
their principles within ourselves, without knowing who decreed that they should be, those laws
to which every deep, intellectual labor draws us near, and which are invisible only, and not always
to fools.
It is difficult to see how so elaborate a profession of faith in a moral ideal can be brushed aside as
incidental.
The passage quoted would rather seem to be the key to proofs full attitude, to its weakness as to its
strength.
For it will be noticed that, among the mysterious obligations brought with us, from that
other entirely different world, he omits one, the old stoical quality of courage.
That quality, moral or physical, seems never to have been recognized by him as one of the
main springs of human action. He could conceive of human beings as good, as pitiful, as self-sacrificing,
as gatted by the most delicate moral scruples, but never, apparently, as brave.
either by instinct or through conscious effort.
Fear ruled this moral world, fear of death, fear of love, fear of responsibility, fear of sickness, fear of drafts, fear of fear.
It formed the inexorable horizon of his universe and the hard delimination of his artist's temperament.
In saying so, one touches on the narrow margin between the man's genius and his physical dissonance.
disabilities. And at this point, criticism must draw back, or linger only in reverent admiration
of the great work achieved, the vast register covered in spite of that limitation, in conflict
with those disabilities. Nietzsche's great saying, everything worthwhile is accomplished
notwithstanding. Trust him. One might serve as the epitaph of
Proust.
End of Section 6.
End of the writing of fiction by Edith Wharton.
