William Dean Howells ToC
Certainly now in his old age Mr. Howells is selecting
queer titles for his books. A while ago we had that feeble
tale, “The Coast of Bohemia,” and now we have “My
Literary Passions.” “Passions,” literary or otherwise, were
never Mr. Howells’ forte and surely no man could be further
from even the coast of Bohemia.
Apropos of “My Literary Passions” which has so long
strung out in the Ladies’ Home Journal along with those
thrilling articles about how Henry Ward Beecher tied his
necktie and what kind of coffee Mrs. Hall Cain likes, why did
Mr. Howells write it? Doesn’t Mr. Howells know that at one
time or another every one raves over Don Quixote, imitates
Heine, worships Tourgueneff and calls Tolstoi a prophet?
Does Mr. Howells think that no one but he ever had youth
and enthusiasm and aspirations? Doesn’t he know that the
only thing that makes the world worth living in at all is that
once, when we are young, we all have that great love for
books and impersonal things, all reverence and dream? We
have all known the time when Porthos, Athos and d’Artagan
were vastly more real and important to us than the folks who
lived next door. We have all dwelt in that country where Anna
Karenina and the Levins were the only people who mattered
much. We have all known that intoxicating period when we
thought we “understood life,” because we had read Daudet,
Zola and Guy de Maupassant, and like Mr. Howells we all
looked back rather fondly upon the time when we believed
that books were the truth and art was all. After a while books
grow matter of fact like everything else and we always think
enviously of the days when they were new and wonderful and
strange. That’s a part of existence. We lose our first keen relish
for literature just as we lose it for ice-cream and confectionery.
The taste grows older, wiser and more subdued. We
would all wear out of very enthusiasm if it did not. But why
should Mr. Howells tell the world this common experience in
detail as though it were his and his alone. He might as well
write a detailed account of how he had the measles and the
whooping cough. It was all right and proper for Mr. Howells
to like Heine and Hugo, but, in the words of the circus
clown, “We’ve all been there.”
Nebraska State Journal, July 14, 1895
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