I believe that ‘The Pomp of
the Lavilettes’ has elements which justify consideration.
Its original appearance was, however, not made under
wholly favourable conditions. It is the only book
of mine which I ever sold outright. This was
in 1896. Mr. Lamson, of Messrs. Lamson & Wolffe,
energetic and enterprising young publishers of Boston,
came to see me at Atlantic City (I was on a visit
to the United States at the time), and made a gallant
offer for the English, American and colonial book and
serial rights. I felt that some day I could get
the book back under my control if I so desired, while
the chances of the book making an immediate phenomenal
sale were not great. There is something in the
nature of a story which determines its popularity.
I knew that ’The Seats of the Mighty’
and ‘The Right of Way’ would have a great
sale, and after they were written I said as much to
my publishers. There was the element of general
appeal in the narratives and the characters. Without
detracting from the character-drawing, the characters,
or the story in ‘The Pomp of the Lavilettes’,
I was convinced that the book would not make the universal
appeal. Yet I should have written the story, even
if it had been destined only to have a hundred readers.
It had to be written. I wanted to write what
was in me, and that invasion of a little secluded
French-Canadian society by a ne’er-do-well of
the over-sea aristocracy had a psychological interest,
which I could not resist. I thought it ought
to be worked out and recorded, and particularly as
the time chosen 1837 marked
a large collision between the British and the French
interests in French Canada, or rather of French political
interests and the narrow administrative prejudices
and nepotism of the British executive in Quebec.
It is a satisfaction to include this
book in a definitive edition of my works, for I think
that, so far as it goes, it is truthfully characteristic
of French life in Canada, that its pictures are faithful,
and that the character-drawing represents a closer
observation than any of the previous works, slight
as the volume is. It holds the same relation
to ‘The Right of Way’ that ‘The Trail
of the Sword’ holds to ‘The Seats of the
Mighty’, that ‘A Ladder of Swords’
holds to ’The Battle of the Strong’, that
‘Donovan Pasha’ holds to ‘The Weavers’.
Instinctively, and, as I believe, naturally, I gave
to each ambitious, and so far as conception
goes to each important novel of mine, an
avant coureur. ’The Trail of the Sword,
A Ladder of Swords, Donovan Pasha and The Pomp of
the Lavilettes’, are all very short novels, not
exceeding in any case sixty thousand words, while the
novels dealing in a larger way with the same material the
same people and environment, with the same mise-en-scene,
were each of them at least one hundred and forty thousand
words in length, or over two and a half times as long.
I do not say that this is a system which I devised;
but it was, from the first, the method I pursued instinctively;
on the basis that dealing with a smaller subject with
what one might call a genre picture first, I should
get well into my field, and acquire greater familiarity
with my material than I should have if I attempted
the larger work at once.
This is not to say that the smaller
work was immature. On the contrary, I believe
that at least these shorter works are quite mature
in their treatment and in their workmanship and design.
Naturally, however, they made less demand on all one’s
resources, they were narrower in scope and less complicated,
than the longer works, like ‘The Seats of the
Mighty’, which made heavier call upon the capacities
of one’s art. The only occasion on which
I have not preceded a very long novel of life in a
new field, by a very short one, is in the writing
of ‘The Judgment House’. For this
book, however, it might be said, that all the last
twenty years was a preparation, since the scenes were
scenes in which I had lived and moved, and in a sense
played a part; while the ten South African chapters
of the book placed in the time of the Natal campaign
needed no pioneer narrative to increase familiarity
with the material, the circumstances and the country
itself. I knew it all from study on the spot.
From The ‘Pomp of the Lavilettes’,
with which might be associated ‘The Lane That
Had no Turning’, to ‘The Right of Way’,
was a natural progression; it was the emergence of
a big subject which must be treated in a large bold
way, if it was to succeed. It succeeded to a degree
which could not fail to gratify any one who would rather
have a wide audience than a contracted one, who believes
that to be popular is not necessarily to be contemptible as
the ancient Pistol put it, “base, common and
popular.”