THE NOVEL AND THE COMMON SCHOOL
By Charles Dudley Warner
There has been a great improvement
in the physical condition of the people of the United
States within two generations. This is more noticeable
in the West than in the East, but it is marked everywhere;
and the foreign traveler who once detected a race
deterioration, which he attributed to a dry and stimulating
atmosphere and to a feverish anxiety, which was evident
in all classes, for a rapid change of condition, finds
very little now to sustain his theory. Although
the restless energy continues, the mixed race in America
has certainly changed physically for the better.
Speaking generally, the contours of face and form are
more rounded. The change is most marked in regions
once noted for leanness, angularity, and sallowness
of complexion, but throughout the country the types
of physical manhood are more numerous; and if women
of rare and exceptional beauty are not more numerous,
no doubt the average of comeliness and beauty has
been raised. Thus far, the increase of beauty
due to better development has not been at the expense
of delicacy of complexion and of line, as it has been
in some European countries. Physical well-being
is almost entirely a matter of nutrition. Something
is due in our case to the accumulation of money, to
the decrease in an increasing number of our population
of the daily anxiety about food and clothes, to more
leisure; but abundant and better-prepared food is the
direct agency in our physical change. Good food
is not only more abundant and more widely distributed
than it was two generations ago, but it is to be had
in immeasurably greater variety. No other people
existing, or that ever did exist, could command such
a variety of edible products for daily consumption
as the mass of the American people habitually use today.
In consequence they have the opportunity of being
better nourished than any other people ever were.
If they are not better nourished, it is because their
food is badly prepared. Whenever we find, either
in New England or in the South, a community ill-favored,
dyspeptic, lean, and faded in complexion, we may be
perfectly sure that its cooking is bad, and that it
is too ignorant of the laws of health to procure that
variety of food which is so easily obtainable.
People who still diet on sodden pie and the products
of the frying-pan of the pioneer, and then, in order
to promote digestion, attempt to imitate the patient
cow by masticating some elastic and fragrant gum,
are doing very little to bring in that universal physical
health or beauty which is the natural heritage of our
opportunity.
Now, what is the relation of our intellectual
development to this physical improvement? It
will be said that the general intelligence is raised,
that the habit of reading is much more widespread,
and that the increase of books, periodicals, and newspapers
shows a greater mental activity than existed formerly.
It will also be said that the opportunity for education
was never before so nearly universal. If it is
not yet true everywhere that all children must go
to school, it is true that all may go to school free
of cost. Without doubt, also, great advance has
been made in American scholarship, in specialized
learning and investigation; that is to say, the proportion
of scholars of the first rank in literature and in
science is much larger to the population than a generation
ago.
But what is the relation of our general
intellectual life to popular education? Or, in
other words, what effect is popular education having
upon the general intellectual habit and taste?
There are two ways of testing this. One is by
observing whether the mass of minds is better trained
and disciplined than formerly, less liable to delusions,
better able to detect fallacies, more logical, and
less likely to be led away by novelties in speculation,
or by theories that are unsupported by historic evidence
or that are contradicted by a knowledge of human nature.
If we were tempted to pursue this test, we should
be forced to note the seeming anomaly of a scientific
age peculiarly credulous; the ease with which any
charlatan finds followers; the common readiness to
fall in with any theory of progress which appeals
to the sympathies, and to accept the wildest notions
of social reorganization. We should be obliged
to note also, among scientific men themselves, a disposition
to come to conclusions on inadequate evidence a
disposition usually due to one-sided education which
lacks metaphysical training and the philosophic habit.
Multitudes of fairly intelligent people are afloat
without any base-line of thought to which they can
refer new suggestions; just as many politicians are
floundering about for want of an apprehension of the
Constitution of the United States and of the historic
development of society. An honest acceptance
of the law of gravitation would banish many popular
delusions; a comprehension that something cannot be
made out of nothing would dispose of others; and the
application of the ordinary principles of evidence,
such as men require to establish a title to property,
would end most of the remaining. How far is our
popular education, which we have now enjoyed for two
full generations, responsible for this state of mind?
If it has not encouraged it, has it done much to correct
it?
The other test of popular education
is in the kind of reading sought and enjoyed by the
majority of the American people. As the greater
part of this reading is admitted to be fiction, we
have before us the relation of the novel to the common
school. As the common school is our universal
method of education, and the novels most in demand
are those least worthy to be read, we may consider
this subject in two aspects: the encouragement,
by neglect or by teaching, of the taste that demands
this kind of fiction, and the tendency of the novel
to become what this taste demands.
Before considering the common school,
however, we have to notice a phenomenon in letters namely,
the evolution of the modern newspaper as a vehicle
for general reading-matter. Not content with giving
the news, or even with creating news and increasing
its sensational character, it grasps at the wider
field of supplying reading material for the million,
usurping the place of books and to a large extent of
periodicals. The effect of this new departure
in journalism is beginning to attract attention.
An increasing number of people read nothing except
the newspapers. Consequently, they get little
except scraps and bits; no subject is considered thoroughly
or exhaustively; and they are furnished with not much
more than the small change for superficial conversation.
The habit of excessive newspaper reading, in which
a great variety of topics is inadequately treated,
has a curious effect on the mind. It becomes
demoralized, gradually loses the power of concentration
or of continuous thought, and even loses the inclination
to read the long articles which the newspaper prints.
The eye catches a thousand things, but is detained
by no one. Variety, which in limitations is wholesome
in literary as well as in physical diet, creates dyspepsia
when it is excessive, and when the literary viands
are badly cooked and badly served the evil is increased.
The mind loses the power of discrimination, the taste
is lowered, and the appetite becomes diseased.
The effect of this scrappy, desultory reading is bad
enough when the hashed compound selected is tolerably
good. It becomes a very serious matter when the
reading itself is vapid, frivolous, or bad. The
responsibility of selecting the mental food for millions
of people is serious. When, in the last century,
in England, the Society for the Diffusion of Useful
Information, which accomplished so much good, was organized,
this responsibility was felt, and competent hands
prepared the popular books and pamphlets that were
cheap in price and widely diffused. Now, it happens
that a hundred thousand people, perhaps a million in
some cases, surrender the right of the all-important
selection of the food for their minds to some unknown
and irresponsible person whose business it is to choose
the miscellaneous reading-matter for a particular newspaper.
His or her taste may be good, or it may be immature
and vicious; it may be used simply to create a sensation;
and yet the million of readers get nothing except
what this one person chooses they shall read.
It is an astonishing abdication of individual preference.
Day after day, Sunday after Sunday, they read only
what this unknown person selects for them. Instead
of going to the library and cultivating their own tastes,
and pursuing some subject that will increase their
mental vigor and add to their permanent stock of thought,
they fritter away their time upon a hash of literature
chopped up for them by a person possibly very unfit
even to make good hash. The mere statement of
this surrender of one’s judgment of what shall
be his intellectual life is alarming.
But the modern newspaper is no doubt
a natural evolution in our social life. As everything
has a cause, it would be worth while to inquire whether
the encyclopædic newspaper is in response to a demand,
to a taste created by our common schools. Or,
to put the question in another form, does the system
of education in our common schools give the pupils
a taste for good literature or much power of discrimination?
Do they come out of school with the habit of continuous
reading, of reading books, or only of picking up scraps
in the newspapers, as they might snatch a hasty meal
at a lunch-counter? What, in short, do the schools
contribute to the creation of a taste for good literature?
Great anxiety is felt in many quarters
about the modern novel. It is feared that it
will not be realistic enough, that it will be too
realistic, that it will be insincere as to the common
aspects of life, that it will not sufficiently idealize
life to keep itself within the limits of true art.
But while the critics are busy saying what the novel
should be, and attacking or defending the fiction of
the previous age, the novel obeys pretty well the
laws of its era, and in many ways, especially in the
variety of its development, represents the time.
Regarded simply as a work of art, it may be said that
the novel should be an expression of the genius of
its writer conscientiously applied to a study of the
facts of life and of human nature, with little reference
to the audience. Perhaps the great works of art
that have endured have been so composed. We may
say, for example, that “Don Quixote” had
to create its sympathetic audience. But, on the
other hand, works of art worthy the name are sometimes
produced to suit a demand and to please a taste already
created. A great deal of what passes for literature
in these days is in this category of supply to suit
the demand, and perhaps it can be said of this generation
more fitly than of any other that the novel seeks
to hit the popular taste; having become a means of
livelihood, it must sell in order to be profitable
to the producer, and in order to sell it must be what
the reading public want. The demand and sale are
widely taken as the criterion of excellence, or they
are at least sufficient encouragement of further work
on the line of the success. This criterion is
accepted by the publisher, whose business it is to
supply a demand. The conscientious publisher
asks two questions: Is the book good? and Will
it sell? The publisher without a conscience asks
only one question: Will the book sell? The
reflex influence of this upon authors is immediately
felt.
The novel, mediocre, banal, merely
sensational, and worthless for any purpose of intellectual
stimulus or elevation of the ideal, is thus encouraged
in this age as it never was before. The making
of novels has become a process of manufacture.
Usually, after the fashion of the silk-weavers of
Lyons, they are made for the central establishment
on individual looms at home; but if demand for the
sort of goods furnished at present continues, there
is no reason why they should not be produced, even
more cheaply than they are now, in great factories,
where there can be division of labor and economy of
talent. The shoal of English novels conscientiously
reviewed every seventh day in the London weeklies would
preserve their present character and gain in firmness
of texture if they were made by machinery. One
has only to mark what sort of novels reach the largest
sale and are most called for in the circulating libraries,
to gauge pretty accurately the public taste, and to
measure the influence of this taste upon modern production.
With the exception of the novel now and then which
touches some religious problem or some socialistic
speculation or uneasiness, or is a special freak of
sensationalism, the novels which suit the greatest
number of readers are those which move in a plane
of absolute mediocrity, and have the slightest claim
to be considered works of art. They represent
the chromo stage of development.
They must be cheap. The almost
universal habit of reading is a mark of this age nowhere
else so conspicuous as in America; and considering
the training of this comparatively new reading public,
it is natural that it should insist upon cheapness
of material, and that it should require quality less
than quantity. It is a note of our general intellectual
development that cheapness in literature is almost
as much insisted on by the rich as by the poor.
The taste for a good book has not kept pace with the
taste for a good dinner, and multitudes who have commendable
judgment about the table would think it a piece of
extravagance to pay as much for a book as for a dinner,
and would be ashamed to smoke a cigar that cost less
than a novel. Indeed, we seem to be as yet far
away from the appreciation of the truth that what
we put into the mind is as important to our well-being
as what we put into the stomach.
No doubt there are more people capable
of appreciating a good book, and there are more good
books read, in this age, than in any previous, though
the ratio of good judges to the number who read is
less; but we are considering the vast mass of the
reading public and its tastes. I say its tastes,
and probably this is not unfair, although this traveling,
restless, reading public meekly takes, as in the case
of the reading selected in the newspapers, what is
most persistently thrust upon its attention by the
great news agencies, which find it most profitable
to deal in that which is cheap and ephemeral.
The houses which publish books of merit are at a disadvantage
with the distributing agencies.
Criticism which condemns the common-school
system as a nurse of superficiality, mediocrity, and
conceit does not need serious attention, any more
than does the criticism that the universal opportunity
of individual welfare offered by a republic fails
to make a perfect government. But this is not
saying that the common school does all that it can
do, and that its results answer to the theories about
it. It must be partly due to the want of proper
training in the public schools that there are so few
readers of discrimination, and that the general taste,
judged by the sort of books now read, is so mediocre.
Most of the public schools teach reading, or have
taught it, so poorly that the scholars who come from
them cannot read easily; hence they must have spice,
and blood, and vice to stimulate them, just as a man
who has lost taste peppers his food. We need
not agree with those who say that there is no merit
whatever in the mere ability to read; nor, on the other
hand, can we join those who say that the art of reading
will pretty surely encourage a taste for the nobler
kind of reading, and that the habit of reading trash
will by-and-by lead the reader to better things.
As a matter of experience, the reader of the namby-pamby
does not acquire an appetite for anything more virile,
and the reader of the sensational requires constantly
more highly flavored viands. Nor is it reasonable
to expect good taste to be recovered by an indulgence
in bad taste.
What, then, does the common school
usually do for literary taste? Generally there
is no thought about it. It is not in the minds
of the majority of teachers, even if they possess
it themselves. The business is to teach the pupils
to read; how they shall use the art of reading is
little considered. If we examine the reading-books
from the lowest grade to the highest, we shall find
that their object is to teach words, not literature.
The lower-grade books are commonly inane (I will not
say childish, for that is a libel on the open minds
of children) beyond description. There is an
impression that advanced readers have improved much
in quality within a few years, and doubtless some of
them do contain specimens of better literature than
their predecessors. But they are on the old plan,
which must be radically modified or entirely cast aside,
and doubtless will be when the new method is comprehended,
and teachers are well enough furnished to cut loose
from the machine. We may say that to learn how
to read, and not what to read, is confessedly the object
of these books; but even this object is not attained.
There is an endeavor to teach how to call the words
of a reading-book, but not to teach how to read; for
reading involves, certainly for the older scholars,
the combination of known words to form new ideas.
This is lacking. The taste for good literature
is not developed; the habit of continuous pursuit of
a subject, with comprehension of its relations, is
not acquired; and no conception is gained of the entirety
of literature or its importance to human life.
Consequently, there is no power of judgment or faculty
of discrimination.
Now, this radical defect can be easily
remedied if the school authorities only clearly apprehend
one truth, and that is that the minds of children
of tender age can be as readily interested and permanently
interested in good literature as in the dreary feebleness
of the juvenile reader. The mind of the ordinary
child should not be judged by the mind that produces
stuff of this sort: “Little Jimmy had a
little white pig.” “Did the little
pig know Jimmy?” “Yes, the little pig knew
Jimmy, and would come when he called.”
“How did little Jimmy know his pig from the other
little pigs?” “By the twist in his tail.”
("Children,” asks the teacher, “what is
the meaning of ’twist’?”) “Jimmy
liked to stride the little pig’s back.”
“Would the little pig let him?” “Yes,
when he was absorbed eating his dinner.” ("Children,
what is the meaning of ’absorbed’?”)
And so on.
This intellectual exercise is, perhaps,
read to children who have not got far enough in “word-building”
to read themselves about little Jimmy and his absorbed
pig. It may be continued, together with word-learning,
until the children are able to say (is it reading?)
the entire volume of this precious stuff. To
what end? The children are only languidly interested;
their minds are not awakened; the imagination is not
appealed to; they have learned nothing, except probably
some new words, which are learned as signs. Often
children have only one book even of this sort, at which
they are kept until they learn it through by heart,
and they have been heard to “read” it
with the book bottom side up or shut! All these
books cultivate inattention and intellectual vacancy.
They are the best of them only
reading exercises; and reading is not perceived to
have any sort of value. The child is not taught
to think, and not a step is taken in informing him
of his relation to the world about him. His education
is not begun.
Now it happens that children go on
with this sort of reading and the ordinary text-books
through the grades of the district school into the
high school, and come to the ages of seventeen and
eighteen without the least conception of literature,
or of art, or of the continuity of the relations of
history; are ignorant of the great names which illuminate
the ages; have never heard of Socrates, or of Phidias,
or of Titian; do not know whether Franklin was an
Englishman or an American; would be puzzled to say
whether it was Ben Franklin or Ben Jonson who invented
lightning think it was Ben Somebody; cannot
tell whether they lived before or after Christ, and
indeed never have thought that anything happened before
the time of Christ; do not know who was on the throne
of Spain when Columbus discovered America and
so on. These are not imagined instances.
The children referred to are in good circumstances
and have had fairly intelligent associations, but
their education has been intrusted to the schools.
They know nothing except their text-books, and they
know these simply for the purpose of examination.
Such pupils come to the age of eighteen with not only
no taste for the best reading, for the reading of
books, but without the ability to be interested even
in fiction of the first class, because it is full
of allusions that convey nothing to their minds.
The stories they read, if they read at all the
novels, so called, that they have been brought up on are
the diluted and feeble fictions that flood the country,
and that scarcely rise above the intellectual level
of Jimmy and the absorbed pig.
It has been demonstrated by experiment
that it is as easy to begin with good literature as
with the sort of reading described. It makes little
difference where the beginning is made. Any good
book, any real book, is an open door into the wide
field of literature; that is to say, of history that
is to say, of interest in the entire human race.
Read to children of tender years, the same day, the
story of Jimmy and a Greek myth, or an episode from
the “Odyssey,” or any genuine bit of human
nature and life; and ask the children next day which
they wish to hear again. Almost all of them will
call for the repetition of the real thing, the verity
of which they recognize, and which has appealed to
their imaginations. But this is not all.
If the subject is a Greek myth, they speedily come
to comprehend its meaning, and by the aid of the teacher
to trace its development elsewhere, to understand
its historic significance, to have the mind filled
with images of beauty, and wonder. Is it the
Homeric story of Nausicaa? What a picture!
How speedily Greek history opens to the mind!
How readily the children acquire knowledge of the
great historic names, and see how their deeds and their
thoughts are related to our deeds and our thoughts!
It is as easy to know about Socrates as about Franklin
and General Grant. Having the mind open to other
times and to the significance of great men in history,
how much more clearly they comprehend Franklin and
Grant and Lincoln! Nor is this all. The
young mind is open to noble thoughts, to high conceptions;
it follows by association easily along the historic
and literary line; and not only do great names and
fine pieces of literature become familiar, but the
meaning of the continual life in the world begins to
be apprehended. This is not at all a fancy sketch.
The writer has seen the whole assembly of pupils in
a school of six hundred, of all the eight grades,
intelligently interested in a talk which contained
classical and literary allusions that would have been
incomprehensible to an ordinary school brought up
on the ordinary readers and text-books.
But the reading need not be confined
to the classics nor to the master-pieces of literature.
Natural history generally the most fascinating
of subjects can be taught; interest in flowers
and trees and birds and the habits of animals can
be awakened by reading the essays of literary men
on these topics as they never can be by the dry text-books.
The point I wish to make is that real literature for
the young, literature which is almost absolutely neglected
in the public schools, except in a scrappy way as
a reading exercise, is the best open door to the development
of the mind and to knowledge of all sorts. The
unfolding of a Greek myth leads directly to art, to
love of beauty, to knowledge of history, to an understanding
of ourselves. But whatever the beginning is,
whether a classic myth, a Homeric epic, a play of Sophocles,
the story of the life and death of Socrates, a mediaeval
legend, or any genuine piece of literature from the
time of Virgil down to our own, it may not so much
matter (except that it is better to begin with the
ancients in order to gain a proper perspective) whatever
the beginning is, it should be the best literature.
The best is not too good for the youngest child.
Simplicity, which commonly characterizes greatness,
is of course essential. But never was a greater
mistake made than in thinking that a youthful mind
needs watering with the slops ordinarily fed to it.
Even children in the kindergarten are eager for Whittier’s
“Barefoot Boy” and Longfellow’s
“Hiawatha.” It requires, I repeat,
little more pains to create a good taste in reading
than a bad taste.
It would seem that in the complete
organization of the public schools all education of
the pupil is turned over to them as it was not formerly,
and it is possible that in the stress of text-book
education there is no time for reading at home.
The competent teachers contend not merely with the
difficulty of the lack of books and the deficiencies
of those in use, but with the more serious difficulty
of the erroneous ideas of the function of text-books.
They will cease to be a commercial commodity of so
much value as now when teachers teach. If it
is true that there is no time for reading at home,
we can account for the deplorable lack of taste in
the great mass of the reading public educated at the
common schools; and we can see exactly what the remedy
should be namely, the teaching of the literature
at the beginning of school life, and following it up
broadly and intelligently during the whole school
period. It will not crowd out anything else,
because it underlies everything. After many years
of perversion and neglect, to take up the study of
literature in a comprehensive text-book, as if it
were to be learned like arithmetic, is
a ludicrous proceeding. This, is not teaching
literature nor giving the scholar a love of good reading.
It is merely stuffing the mind with names and dates,
which are not seen to have any relation to present
life, and which speedily fade out of the mind.
The love of literature is not to be attained in this
way, nor in any way except by reading the best literature.
The notion that literature can be
taken up as a branch of education, and learned at
the proper time and when studies permit, is one of
the most farcical in our scheme of education.
It is only matched in absurdity by the other current
idea, that literature is something separate and apart
from general knowledge. Here is the whole body
of accumulated thought and experience of all the ages,
which indeed forms our present life and explains it,
existing partly in tradition and training, but more
largely in books; and most teachers think, and most
pupils are led to believe, that this most important
former of the mind, maker of character, and guide
to action can be acquired in a certain number of lessons
out of a textbook! Because this is so, young
men and young women come up to college almost absolutely
ignorant of the history of their race and of the ideas
that have made our civilization. Some of them
have never read a book, except the text-books on the
specialties in which they have prepared themselves
for examination. We have a saying concerning people
whose minds appear to be made up of dry, isolated facts,
that they have no atmosphere. Well, literature
is the atmosphere. In it we live, and move, and
have our being, intellectually. The first lesson
read to, or read by, the child should begin to put
him in relation with the world and the thought of
the world. This cannot be done except by the living
teacher. No text-book, no one reading-book or
series of reading-books, will do it. If the teacher
is only the text-book orally delivered, the teacher
is an uninspired machine. We must revise our notions
of the function of the teacher for the beginners.
The teacher is to present evidence of truth, beauty,
art. Where will he or she find it? Why, in
experimental science, if you please, in history, but,
in short, in good literature, using the word in its
broadest sense. The object in selecting reading
for children is to make it impossible for them to see
any evidence except the best. That is the teacher’s
business, and how few understand their business!
How few are educated! In the best literature
we find truth about the world, about human nature;
and hence, if children read that, they read what their
experience will verify. I am told that publishers
are largely at fault for the quality of the reading
used in schools that schools would gladly
receive the good literature if they could get it.
But I do not know, in this case, how much the demand
has to do with the supply. I am certain, however,
that educated teachers would use only the best means
for forming the minds and enlightening the understanding
of their pupils. It must be kept in mind that
reading, silent reading done by the scholar, is not
learning signs and calling words; it is getting thought.
If children are to get thought, they should be served
with the best that which will not only be
true, but appeal so naturally to their minds that
they will prefer it to all meaner stuff. If it
is true that children cannot acquire this taste at
home and it is true for the vast majority
of American children then it must be given
in the public schools. To give it is not to interrupt
the acquisition of other knowledge; it is literally
to open the door to all knowledge.
When this truth is recognized in the
common schools, and literature is given its proper
place, not only for the development of the mind, but
as the most easily-opened door to history, art, science,
general intelligence, we shall see the taste of the
reading public in the United States undergo a mighty
change: It will not care for the fiction it likes
at present, and which does little more than enfeeble
its powers; and then there can be no doubt that fiction
will rise to supply the demand for something better.
When the trash does not sell, the trash will not be
produced, and those who are only capable of supplying
the present demand will perhaps find a more useful
occupation. It will be again evident that literature
is not a trade, but an art requiring peculiar powers
and patient training. When people know how to
read, authors will need to know how to write.
In all other pursuits we carefully
study the relation of supply to demand. Why not
in literature? Formerly, when readers were comparatively
few, and were of a class that had leisure and the opportunity
of cultivating the taste, books were generally written
for this class, and aimed at its real or supposed
capacities. If the age was coarse in speech or
specially affected in manner, the books followed the
lead given by the demand; but, coarse or affected,
they had the quality of art demanded by the best existing
cultivation. Naturally, when the art of reading
is acquired by the great mass of the people, whose
taste has not been cultivated, the supply for this
increased demand will, more or less, follow the level
of its intelligence. After our civil war there
was a patriotic desire to commemorate the heroic sacrifices
of our soldiers in monuments, and the deeds of our
great captains in statues. This noble desire
was not usually accompanied by artistic discrimination,
and the land is filled with monuments and statues
which express the gratitude of the people. The
coming age may wish to replace them by images and
structures which will express gratitude and patriotism
in a higher because more artistic form. In the
matter of art the development is distinctly reflex.
The exhibition of works of genius will slowly instruct
and elevate the popular taste, and in time the cultivated
popular taste will reject mediocrity and demand better
things. Only a little while ago few people in
the United States knew how to draw, and only a few
could tell good drawing from bad. To realize
the change that has taken place, we have only to recall
the illustrations in books, magazines, and comic newspapers
of less than a quarter of a century ago. Foreign
travel, foreign study, and the importation of works
of art (still blindly restricted by the American Congress)
were the lessons that began to work a change.
Now, in all our large towns, and even in hundreds of
villages, there are well-established art schools;
in the greater cities, unions and associations, under
the guidance of skillful artists, where five or six
hundred young men and women are diligently, day and
night, learning the rudiments of art. The result
is already apparent. Excellent drawing is seen
in illustrations for books and magazines, in the satirical
and comic publications, even in the advertisements
and theatrical posters. At our present rate of
progress, the drawings in all our amusing weeklies
will soon be as good as those in the ‘Fliegende
Blatter.’ The change is marvelous; and
the popular taste has so improved that it would not
be profitable to go back to the ill-drawn illustrations
of twenty years ago. But as to fiction, even
if the writers of it were all trained in it as an
art, it is not so easy to lift the public taste to
their artistic level. The best supply in this
case will only very slowly affect the quality of the
demand. When the poor novel sells vastly better
than the good novel, the poor will be produced to
supply the demand, the general taste will be still
further lowered, and the power of discrimination fade
out more and more. What is true of the novel
is true of all other literature. Taste for it
must be cultivated in childhood. The common schools
must do for literature what the art schools are doing
for art. Not every one can become an artist,
not every one can become a writer though
this is contrary to general opinion; but knowledge
to distinguish good drawing from bad can be acquired
by most people, and there are probably few minds that
cannot, by right methods applied early, be led to prefer
good literature, and to have an enjoyment in it in
proportion to its sincerity, naturalness, verity,
and truth to life.
It is, perhaps, too much to say that
all the American novel needs for its development is
an audience, but it is safe to say that an audience
would greatly assist it. Evidence is on all sides
of a fresh, new, wonderful artistic development in
America in drawing, painting, sculpture, in instrumental
music and singing, and in literature. The promise
of this is not only in the climate, the free republican
opportunity, the mixed races blending the traditions
and aptitudes of so many civilizations, but it is
in a certain temperament which we already recognize
as American. It is an artistic tendency.
This was first most noticeable in American women, to
whom the art of dress seemed to come by nature, and
the art of being agreeable to be easily acquired.
Already writers have arisen who illustrate
this artistic tendency in novels, and especially in
short stories. They have not appeared to owe
their origin to any special literary centre; they have
come forward in the South, the West, the East.
Their writings have to a great degree (considering
our pupilage to the literature of Great Britain, which
is prolonged by the lack of an international copyright)
the stamp of originality, of naturalness, of sincerity,
of an attempt to give the facts of life with a sense
of their artistic value. Their affiliation is
rather with the new literatures of France, of Russia,
of Spain, than with the modern fiction of England.
They have to compete in the market with the uncopyrighted
literature of all other lands, good and bad, especially
bad, which is sold for little more than the cost of
the paper it is printed on, and badly printed at that.
But besides this fact, and owing to a public taste
not cultivated or not corrected in the public schools,
their books do not sell in anything like the quantity
that the inferior, mediocre, other home novels sell.
Indeed, but for the intervention of the magazines,
few of the best writers of novels and short stories
could earn as much as the day laborer earns.
In sixty millions of people, all of whom are, or have
been, in reach of the common school, it must be confessed
that their audience is small.
This relation between the fiction
that is, and that which is to be, and the common school
is not fanciful. The lack in the general reading
public, in the novels read by the greater number of
people, and in the common school is the same the
lack of inspiration and ideality. The common
school does not cultivate the literary sense, the general
public lacks literary discrimination, and the stories
and tales either produced by or addressed to those
who have little ideality simply respond to the demand
of the times.
It is already evident, both in positive
and negative results, both in the schools and the
general public taste, that literature cannot be set
aside in the scheme of education; nay, that it is
of the first importance. The teacher must be
able to inspire the pupil; not only to awaken eagerness
to know, but to kindle the imagination. The value
of the Hindoo or the Greek myth, of the Roman story,
of the mediaeval legend, of the heroic epic, of the
lyric poem, of the classic biography, of any genuine
piece of literature, ancient or modern, is not in
the knowledge of it as we may know the rules of grammar
and arithmetic or the formulas of a science, but in
the enlargement of the mind to a conception of the
life and development of the race, to a study of the
motives of human action, to a comprehension of history;
so that the mind is not simply enriched, but becomes
discriminating, and able to estimate the value of events
and opinions. This office for the mind acquaintance
with literature can alone perform. So that, in
school, literature is not only, as I have said, the
easiest open door to all else desirable, the best literature
is not only the best means of awakening the young
mind, the stimulus most congenial, but it is the best
foundation for broad and generous culture. Indeed,
without its co-ordinating influence the education of
the common school is a thing of shreds and patches.
Besides, the mind aroused to historic consciousness,
kindled in itself by the best that has been said and
done in all ages, is more apt in the pursuit, intelligently,
of any specialty; so that the shortest road to the
practical education so much insisted on in these days
begins in the awakening of the faculties in the manner
described. There is no doubt of the value of manual
training as an aid in giving definiteness, directness,
exactness to the mind, but mere technical training
alone will be barren of those results, in general
discriminating culture, which we hope to see in America.
The common school is a machine of
incalculable value. It is not, however, automatic.
If it is a mere machine, it will do little more to
lift the nation than the mere ability to read will
lift it. It can easily be made to inculcate a
taste for good literature; it can be a powerful influence
in teaching the American people what to read; and upon
a broadened, elevated, discriminating public taste
depends the fate of American art, of American fiction.
It is not an inappropriate corollary
to be drawn from this that an elevated public taste
will bring about a truer estimate of the value of a
genuine literary product. An invention which increases
or cheapens the conveniences or comforts of life may
be a fortune to its originator. A book which
amuses, or consoles, or inspires; which contributes
to the highest intellectual enjoyment of hundreds
of thousands of people; which furnishes substance
for thought or for conversation; which dispels the
cares and lightens the burdens of life; which is a
friend when friends fail, a companion when other intercourse
wearies or is impossible, for a year, for a decade,
for a generation perhaps, in a world which has a proper
sense of values, will bring a like competence to its
author. (1890.)