Truthfulness is as essential in literature
as it is in conduct, in fiction as it is in the report
of an actual occurrence. Falsehood vitiates a
poem, a painting, exactly as it does a life. Truthfulness
is a quality like simplicity. Simplicity in literature
is mainly a matter of clear vision and lucid expression,
however complex the subject-matter may be; exactly
as in life, simplicity does not so much depend upon
external conditions as upon the spirit in which one
lives. It may be more difficult to maintain simplicity
of living with a great fortune than in poverty, but
simplicity of spirit that is, superiority
of soul to circumstance is possible in
any condition. Unfortunately the common expression
that a certain person has wealth is not so true as
it would be to say that wealth has him. The life
of one with great possessions and corresponding responsibilities
may be full of complexity; the subject of literary
art may be exceedingly complex; but we do not set complexity
over against simplicity. For simplicity is a quality
essential to true life as it is to literature of the
first class; it is opposed to parade, to artificiality,
to obscurity.
The quality of truthfulness is not
so easily defined. It also is a matter of spirit
and intuition. We have no difficulty in applying
the rules of common morality to certain functions
of writers for the public, for instance, the duties
of the newspaper reporter, or the newspaper correspondent,
or the narrator of any event in life the relation of
which owes its value to its being absolutely true.
The same may be said of hoaxes, literary or scientific,
however clear they may be. The person indulging
in them not only discredits his office in the eyes
of the public, but he injures his own moral fibre,
and he contracts such a habit of unveracity that he
never can hope for genuine literary success. For
there never was yet any genuine success in letters
without integrity. The clever hoax is no better
than the trick of imitation, that is, conscious imitation
of another, which has unveracity to one’s self
at the bottom of it. Burlesque is not the highest
order of intellectual performance, but it is legitimate,
and if cleverly done it may be both useful and amusing,
but it is not to be confounded with forgery, that is,
with a composition which the author attempts to pass
off as the production of somebody else. The forgery
may be amazingly smart, and be even popular, and get
the author, when he is discovered, notoriety, but
it is pretty certain that with his ingrained lack
of integrity he will never accomplish any original
work of value, and he will be always personally suspected.
There is nothing so dangerous to a young writer as
to begin with hoaxing; or to begin with the invention,
either as reporter or correspondent, of statements
put forward as facts, which are untrue. This sort
of facility and smartness may get a writer employment,
unfortunately for him and the public, but there is
no satisfaction in it to one who desires an honorable
career. It is easy to recall the names of brilliant
men whose fine talents have been eaten away by this
habit of unveracity. This habit is the greatest
danger of the newspaper press of the United States.
It is easy to define this sort of
untruthfulness, and to study the moral deterioration
it works in personal character, and in the quality
of literary work. It was illustrated in the forgeries
of the marvelous boy Chatterton. The talent he
expended in deception might have made him an enviable
reputation, the deception vitiated whatever
good there was in his work. Fraud in literature
is no better than fraud in archaeology, Chatterton
deserves no more credit than Shapiro who forged the
Moabite pottery with its inscriptions. The reporter
who invents an incident, or heightens the horror of
a calamity by fictions is in the case of Shapiro.
The habit of this sort of invention is certain to destroy
the writer’s quality, and if he attempts a legitimate
work of the imagination, he will carry the same unveracity
into that. The quality of truthfulness cannot
be juggled with. Akin to this is the trick which
has put under proper suspicion some very clever writers
of our day, and cost them all public confidence in
whatever they do, the trick of posing for
what they are not. We do not mean only that the
reader does not believe their stories of personal
adventure, and regards them personally as “frauds,”
but that this quality of deception vitiates all their
work, as seen from a literary point of view.
We mean that the writer who hoaxes the public, by
inventions which he publishes as facts, or in regard
to his own personality, not only will lose the confidence
of the public but he will lose the power of doing
genuine work, even in the field of fiction. Good
work is always characterized by integrity.
These illustrations help us to understand
what is meant by literary integrity. For the
deception in the case of the correspondent who invents
“news” is of the same quality as the lack
of sincerity in a poem or in a prose fiction; there
is a moral and probably a mental defect in both.
The story of Robinson Crusoe is a very good illustration
of veracity in fiction. It is effective because
it has the simple air of truth; it is an illusion
that satisfies; it is possible; it is good art:
but it has no moral deception in it. In fact,
looked at as literature, we can see that it is sincere
and wholesome.
What is this quality of truthfulness
which we all recognize when it exists in fiction?
There is much fiction, and some of it, for various
reasons, that we like and find interesting which is
nevertheless insincere if not artificial. We
see that the writer has not been honest with himself
or with us in his views of human life. There may
be just as much lying in novels as anywhere else.
The novelist who offers us what he declares to be
a figment of his own brain may be just as untrue as
the reporter who sets forth a figment of his own brain
which he declares to be a real occurrence. That
is, just as much faithfulness to life is required
of the novelist as of the reporter, and in a much higher
degree. The novelist must not only tell the truth
about life as he sees it, material and spiritual,
but he must be faithful to his own conceptions.
If fortunately he has genius enough to create a character
that has reality to himself and to others, he must
be faithful to that character. He must have conscience
about it, and not misrepresent it, any more than he
would misrepresent the sayings and doings of a person
in real life. Of course if his own conception
is not clear, he will be as unjust as in writing about
a person in real life whose character he knew only
by rumor. The novelist may be mistaken about
his own creations and in his views of life, but if
he have truthfulness in himself, sincerity will show
in his work.
Truthfulness is a quality that needs
to be as strongly insisted on in literature as simplicity.
But when we carry the matter a step further, we see
that there cannot be truthfulness about life without
knowledge. The world is full of novels, and their
number daily increases, written without any sense
of responsibility, and with very little experience,
which are full of false views of human nature and of
society. We can almost always tell in a fiction
when the writer passes the boundary of his own experience
and observation he becomes unreal, which
is another name for untruthful. And there is
an absence of sincerity in such work. There seems
to be a prevailing impression that any one can write
a story. But it scarcely need be said that literature
is an art, like painting and music, and that one may
have knowledge of life and perfect sincerity, and
yet be unable to produce a good, truthful piece of
literature, or to compose a piece of music, or to
paint a picture.
Truthfulness is in no way opposed
to invention or to the exercise of the imagination.
When we say that the writer needs experience, we do
not mean to intimate that his invention of character
or plot should be literally limited to a person he
has known, or to an incident that has occurred, but
that they should be true to his experience. The
writer may create an ideally perfect character, or
an ideally bad character, and he may try him by a
set of circumstances and events never before combined,
and this creation may be so romantic as to go beyond
the experience of any reader, that is to say, wholly
imaginary (like a composed landscape which has no
counterpart in any one view of a natural landscape),
and yet it may be so consistent in itself, so true
to an idea or an aspiration or a hope, that it will
have the element of truthfulness and subserve a very
high purpose. It may actually be truer to our
sense of verity to life than an array of undeniable,
naked facts set down without art and without imagination.
The difficulty of telling the truth
in literature is about as great as it is in real life.
We know how nearly impossible it is for one person
to convey to another a correct impression of a third
person. He may describe the features, the manner,
mention certain traits and sayings, all literally
true, but absolutely misleading as to the total impression.
And this is the reason why extreme, unrelieved realism
is apt to give a false impression of persons and scenes.
One can hardly help having a whimsical notion occasionally,
seeing the miscarriages even in our own attempts at
truthfulness, that it absolutely exists only in the
imagination.
In a piece of fiction, especially
romantic fiction, an author is absolutely free to
be truthful, and he will be if he has personal and
literary integrity. He moves freely amid his own
creations and conceptions, and is not subject to the
peril of the writer who admittedly uses facts, but
uses them so clumsily or with so little conscience,
so out of their real relations, as to convey a false
impression and an untrue view of life. This quality
of truthfulness is equally evident in “The Three
Guardsmen” and in “Midsummer Night’s
Dream.” Dumas is as conscientious about
his world of adventure as Shakespeare is in his semi-supernatural
region. If Shakespeare did not respect the laws
of his imaginary country, and the creatures of his
fancy, if Dumas were not true to the characters he
conceived, and the achievements possible to them,
such works would fall into confusion. A recent
story called “The Refugees” set out with
a certain promise of veracity, although the reader
understood of course that it was to be a purely romantic
invention. But very soon the author recklessly
violated his own conception, and when he got his “real”
characters upon an iceberg, the fantastic position
became ludicrous without being funny, and the performances
of the same characters in the wilderness of the New
World showed such lack of knowledge in the writer
that the story became an insult to the intelligence
of the reader. Whereas such a romance as that
of “The Ms. Found in a Copper Cylinder,”
although it is humanly impossible and visibly a figment
of the imagination, is satisfactory to the reader
because the author is true to his conception, and it
is interesting as a curious allegorical and humorous
illustration of the ruinous character in human affairs
of extreme unselfishness. There is the same sort
of truthfulness in Hawthorne’s allegory of “The
Celestial Railway,” in Froude’s “On
a Siding at a Railway Station,” and in Bunyan’s
“Pilgrim’s Progress.”
The habit of lying carried into fiction
vitiates the best work, and perhaps it is easier to
avoid it in pure romance than in the so-called novels
of “every-day life.” And this is probably
the reason why so many of the novels of “real
life” are so much more offensively untruthful
to us than the wildest romances. In the former
the author could perhaps “prove” every
incident he narrates, and produce living every character
he has attempted to describe. But the effect
is that of a lie, either because he is not a master
of his art, or because he has no literary conscience.
He is like an artist who is more anxious to produce
a meretricious effect than he is to be true to himself
or to nature. An author who creates a character
assumes a great responsibility, and if he has not
integrity or knowledge enough to respect his own creation,
no one else will respect it, and, worse than this,
he will tell a falsehood to hosts of undiscriminating
readers.