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a psychological counter-current in recent fiction-第1部分
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A Psychological Counter…Current in Recent Fiction
by William Dean Howells
It is consoling as often as dismaying to find in what seems a
cataclysmal tide of a certain direction a strong drift to the
opposite quarter。 It is so divinable; if not so perceptible;
that its presence may usually be recognized as a beginning of the
turn in every tide which is sure; sooner or later; to come。 In
reform; it is the menace of reaction; in reaction; it is the
promise of reform; we may take heart as we must lose heart from
it。 A few years ago; when a movement which carried fiction to
the highest place in literature was apparently of such onward
and upward sweep that there could be no return or descent; there
was a counter…current in it which stayed it at last; and pulled
it back to that lamentable level where fiction is now sunk; and
the word 〃novel〃 is again the synonym of all that is morally
false and mentally despicable。 Yet that this; too; is partly
apparent; I think can be shown from some phases of actual
fiction which happen to be its very latest phases; and which are
of a significance as hopeful as it is interesting。 Quite as
surely as romanticism lurked at the heart of realism; something
that we may call 〃psychologism〃 has been present in the
romanticism of the last four or five years; and has now begun to
evolve itself in examples which it is the pleasure as well as the
duty of criticism to deal with。
I。
No one in his day has done more to popularize the romanticism;
now decadent; than Mr。 Gilbert Parker; and he made way for it at
its worst just because he was so much better than it was at its
worst; because he was a poet of undeniable quality; and because
he could bring to its intellectual squalor the graces and the
powers which charm; though they could not avail to save it from
final contempt。 He saves himself in his latest novel; because;
though still so largely romanticistic; its prevalent effect is
psychologistic; which is the finer analogue of realistic; and
which gave realism whatever was vital in it; as now it gives
romanticism whatever will survive it。 In 〃The Right of Way〃 Mr。
Parker is not in a world where mere determinism rules; where
there is nothing but the happening of things; and where this one
or that one is important or unimportant according as things are
happening to him or not; but has in himself no claim upon the
reader's attention。 Once more the novel begins to rise to its
higher function; and to teach that men are somehow masters of
their fate。 His Charley Steele is; indeed; as unpromising
material for the experiment; in certain ways; as could well be
chosen。 One of the few memorable things that Bulwer said; who
said so many quotable things; was that pure intellectuality is
the devil; and on his plane Charley Steele comes near being pure
intellectual。 He apprehends all things from the mind; and does
the effects even of goodness from the pride of mental strength。
Add to these conditions of his personality that pathologically he
is from time to time a drunkard; with always the danger of
remaining a drunkard; and you have a figure of which so much may
be despaired that it might almost be called hopeless。 I confess
that in the beginning this brilliant; pitiless lawyer; this
consciencelessly powerful advocate; at once mocker and poseur;
all but failed to interest me。 A little of him and his monocle
went such a great way with me that I thought I had enough of him
by the end of the trial; where he gets off a man charged with
murder; and then cruelly snubs the homicide in his gratitude; and
I do not quite know how I kept on to the point where Steele in
his drunkenness first dazzles and then insults the gang of
drunken lumbermen; and begins his second life in the river where
they have thrown him; and where his former client finds him。
From that point I could not forsake him to the end; though I
found myself more than once in the world where things happen of
themselves and do not happen from the temperaments of its
inhabitants。 In a better and wiser world; the homicide would not
perhaps be at hand so opportunely to save the life of the
advocate who had saved his; but one consents to this; as one
consents to a great deal besides in the story; which is
imaginably the survival of a former method。 The artist's affair
is to report the appearance; the effect; and in the real world;
the appearance; the effect; is that of law and not of miracle。
Nature employs the miracle so very sparingly that most of us go
through life without seeing one; and some of us contract such a
prejudice against miracles that when they are performed for us we
suspect a trick。 When I suffered from this suspicion in 〃The
Right of Way〃 I was the more vexed because I felt that I was in
the hands of a connoisseur of character who had no need of
miracles。
I have liked Mr。 Parker's treatment of French…Canadian life; as
far as I have known it; and in this novel it is one of the
principal pleasures for me。 He may not have his habitant; his
seigneur or his cure down cold; but he makes me believe that he
has; and I can ask no more than that of him。 In like manner; he
makes the ambient; physical as well as social; sensible around
me: the cold rivers; the hard; clear skies; the snowy woods and
fields; the little frozen villages of Canada。 In this book;
which is historical of the present rather than the past; he gives
one a realizing sense of the Canadians; not only in the country
but in the city; at least so far as they affect each other
psychologically in society; and makes one feel their interesting
temperamental difference from Americans。 His Montrealers are
still Englishmen in their strenuous individuality; but in the
frank expression of character; of eccentricity; Charley Steele is
like a type of lawyer in our West; of an epoch when people were
not yet content to witness ideals of themselves; but when they
wished to be their poetry rather than to read it。 In his second
life he has the charm for the imagination that a disembodied
spirit might have; if it could be made known to us in the
circumstances of another world。 He has; indeed; made almost as
clean a break with his past as if he had really been drowned in
the river。 When; after the term of oblivion; in which he knows
nothing of his past self; he is restored to his identity by a
famous surgeon too opportunely out of Paris; on a visit to his
brother; the cure; the problem is how he shall expiate the errors
of his past; work out his redemption in his new life; and the
author solves it for him by appointing him to a life of unselfish
labor; illumined by actions of positive beneficence。 It is
something like the solution which Goethe imagines for Faust; and
perhaps no other is imaginable。 In contriving it; Mr。 Parker
indulges the weaker brethren with an abundance of accident and a
luxury of catastrophe; whi
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