登陆注册
19812600000057

第57章 NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE(1)

Sainte-Beuve says somewhere that it is impossible to speak of "The German Classics." Perhaps he would not have allowed us to talk of the American classics. American literature is too nearly contemporary. Time has not tried it. But, if America possesses a classic author (and I am not denying that she may have several), that author is decidedly Hawthorne. His renown is unimpeached:

his greatness is probably permanent, because he is at once such an original and personal genius, and such a judicious and determined artist.

Hawthorne did not set himself to "compete with life." He did not make the effort--the proverbially tedious effort--to say everything. To his mind, fiction was not a mirror of commonplace persons, and he was not the analyst of the minutest among their ordinary emotions. Nor did he make a moral, or social, or political purpose the end and aim of his art. Moral as many of his pieces naturally are, we cannot call them didactic. He did not expect, nor intend, to better people by them. He drew the Rev.

Arthur Dimmesdale without hoping that his Awful Example would persuade readers to "make a clean breast" of their iniquities and their secrets. It was the moral situation that interested him, not the edifying effect of his picture of that situation upon the minds of novel-readers.

He set himself to write Romance, with a definite idea of what Romance-writing should be; "to dream strange things, and make them look like truth." Nothing can be more remote from the modern system of reporting commonplace things, in the hope that they will read like truth. As all painters must do, according to good traditions, he selected a subject, and then placed it in a deliberately arranged light--not in the full glare of the noonday sun, and in the disturbances of wind, and weather, and cloud.

Moonshine filling a familiar chamber, and ****** it unfamiliar, moonshine mixed with the "faint ruddiness on walls and ceiling" of fire, was the light, or a clear brown twilight was the light by which he chose to work. So he tells us in the preface to "The Scarlet Letter." The room could be filled with the ghosts of old dwellers in it; faint, yet distinct, all the life that had passed through it came back, and spoke with him, and inspired him. He kept his eyes on these figures, tangled in some rare knot of Fate, and of Desire: these he painted, not attending much to the bustle of existence that surrounded them, not permitting superfluous elements to mingle with them, and to distract him.

The method of Hawthorne can be more easily traced than that of most artists as great as himself. Pope's brilliant passages and disconnected trains of thought are explained when we remember that "paper-sparing," as he says, he wrote two, or four, or six couplets on odd, stray bits of casual writing material. These he had to join together, somehow, and between his "Orient Pearls at Random Strung" there is occasionally "too much string," as Dickens once said on another opportunity. Hawthorne's method is revealed in his published note-books. In these he jotted the germ of an idea, the first notion of a singular, perhaps supernatural moral situation.

Many of these he never used at all, on others he would dream, and dream, till the persons in the situations became characters, and the thing was evolved into a story. Thus he may have invented such a problem as this: "The effect of a great, sudden sin on a ****** and joyous nature," and thence came all the substance of "The Marble Faun" ("Transformation"). The original and germinal idea would naturally divide itself into another, as the protozoa reproduce themselves. Another idea was the effect of nearness to the great crime on a pure and spotless nature: hence the character of Hilda. In the preface to "The Scarlet Letter," Hawthorne shows us how he tried, by reflection and dream, to warm the vague persons of the first mere notion or hint into such life as characters in romance inherit. While he was in the Civil Service of his country, in the Custom House at Salem, he could not do this; he needed *******. He was dismissed by political opponents from office, and instantly he was himself again, and wrote his most popular and, perhaps, his best book. The evolution of his work was from the prime notion (which he confessed that he loved best when "strange")to the short story, and thence to the full and rounded novel. All his work was leisurely. All his language was picked, though not with affectation. He did not strive to make a style out of the use of odd words, or of familiar words in odd places. Almost always he looked for "a kind of spiritual medium, seen through which" his romances, like the Old Manse in which he dwelt, "had not quite the aspect of belonging to the material world."The spiritual medium which he liked, he was partly born into, and partly he created it. The child of a race which came from England, robust and Puritanic, he had in his veins the blood of judges--of those judges who burned witches and persecuted Quakers. His fancy is as much influenced by the old fanciful traditions of Providence, of Witchcraft, of haunting Indian magic, as Scott's is influenced by legends of foray and feud, by ballad, and song, and old wives'

同类推荐
  • 寄刘录事

    寄刘录事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 疡科心得集

    疡科心得集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 洞玄灵宝真人修行延年益算法

    洞玄灵宝真人修行延年益算法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大唐旭日

    大唐旭日

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛本行集经

    佛本行集经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 我喜欢玫瑰但我更爱欧石楠

    我喜欢玫瑰但我更爱欧石楠

    暗恋三年,恋爱四年,难道最终必须是梦一场?
  • 仙国皇帝

    仙国皇帝

    由修真者执掌政权的国家称为仙国。一个年轻人带着仙侠版的“北冥神功”、“吸星大法”穿越到仙国林立的修真世界,他可以吸取其他修士的真元,转化成自己的真元从而提升修为。凭借这绝世神功建立了横跨万界的仙国,成为一代仙帝。
  • 人生的圆

    人生的圆

    想了很久,就怕自己会挖坑不填坑…………结果还是手痒想开个坑666666ing。简介:他,看着她长大,据说小的时候还抱过她呢!那么,是否是那个时候就已经注定了自己会栽在她手里吗~她,要美貌……呃……貌似离天仙差得有点远,仅仅只是中等偏上而已;要身材~~她表示离魔鬼身材差得不是一点点(但也不是个胖子)………………总之,就是一个普普通通的女孩子对上了个爸妈口里那个所谓的别人家孩子的那个他
  • 自然,万物最美的姿态

    自然,万物最美的姿态

    本书精选收录了吉尔伯特·怀特、亨利·梭罗、沃尔特·惠特曼、奥尔多·利奥波德等八位自然文学大师清简优美的经典随笔。翻开扉页,八位质朴率性的向导一一现身,带你从波光粼粼的瓦尔登湖,到飞鸟翩翩的沙郡牧场,从仲夏日的加州内华达山,到雷雨夜的大西洋科德角,听松鼠蹿行枝头,看鲑鱼游巡溪底。从喧闹都市回归生灵万物,以日月为友,与天地共饮,用如梦般的难忘旅程,在心底留下一眼宁静恬淡又生机勃勃的自然清泉。
  • 蚁

    青春的校园,是一生难忘的回忆。那些地方,那些人,你可还记得。如果给你一次机会,你是不是会选择再回到从前的快乐日子。纷繁复杂的现实生活,靠着回忆过日子的蚁。
  • 好萌多爱:约爱百分百

    好萌多爱:约爱百分百

    新婚前夜,乾坤倒转。十里红妆,待嫁人枯老骨黄。暮然回首,彼岸陌路。平定天下,爱江山更爱美人。
  • 通玄传

    通玄传

    一个为避祸而逃至深山以狩猎为生的族群,杨善自幼必须练武,在母亲的影响下学习古代圣贤经典,经典思想熏陶之下,意诚心正,圆融超然的思想化入武道。天道至公,族群经历一场兽潮惊变后,族散亲亡,百善孝为先,杨善依古礼给父母守孝!所谓孝悌之至,通于神明,光于四海,无所不通!因执着于孝而进入天人合一之境,与万物游,天道无亲,常与善人,杨善竟于恍兮惚兮中获得一段大道烙印,从此开启一段跌宕起伏的求玄问道之路......
  • 听说我是你捡来的老婆

    听说我是你捡来的老婆

    凌云汐从小被人说是天煞孤星,体内自带煞气,接触的人都有血光之灾,从小被老道士骗走。但是作为“天煞孤星”的她从小在山里野到大。马甲一个又一个。血光之灾没有,不过你要是惹到我,我就把你打到血光之灾。京城某妻管严太子爷,跪在搓衣板上发着微博:我老婆,温柔又可爱,她是我的!是我的!我的!众人:不!不!我们不敢肖想。魔爷和凌爷天生绝配。
  • 侯门贵妻

    侯门贵妻

    一朝穿越,她于众人前发誓发誓,此生宁死不为妾!庶女为妾,天经地义,她却对着乾坤发誓有生之年绝不为妾,惹来众人嘲笑鄙夷,谁知他日却有人八抬大轿以正妻之礼要迎她过门?正妻嫡妻还是家母,家大业大还是高官厚禄?顿时闪瞎了众人眼!情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 龙脉武尊

    龙脉武尊

    天雪大陆上种族无数,人类是天雪大陆真正的主宰,三大家族,资源无数,主宰天雪大陆,雪家巧生双子,灵武与灵聪,灵聪因血脉,龙脉,战体等被封锁,成为废人,家规中不能存在废人,被扁下大陆最底层。在凡界,灵聪拥有骷髅头守护者,相遇莫小鹿,一起上刀山、跳火海,真兄弟之情,巧遇符灵,激活血脉,龙脉,战体等,成为绝世武神,一流天赋,破金丹,爆炼魂魄,站在大陆最顶峰。