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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51560 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51560)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mentor, Vol. 1, No. 25, American
-Novelists, by Hamilton Wright Mabie
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Mentor, Vol. 1, No. 25, American Novelists
-
-Author: Hamilton Wright Mabie
-
-Release Date: March 26, 2016 [EBook #51560]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MENTOR: AMERICAN NOVELISTS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE MENTOR
-
- “A Wise and Faithful Guide and Friend”
-
- Vol. 1 No. 25
-
-
-
-
-AMERICAN NOVELISTS
-
- HENRY JAMES
- WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS
- THOMAS NELSON PAGE
- JAMES LANE ALLEN
- WINSTON CHURCHILL
- OWEN WISTER
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_By HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE_
-
-
-This group of distinguished novelists may be divided into four
-smaller groups, not only in time, but in selection and treatment of
-subjects. Mr. James and Mr. Howells are now the senior members of
-the literary fraternity in this country, and have not only American
-but European reputations. Only three novelists before them attained
-this distinction. The earliest of these, Cooper, is still read in
-many parts of the world, and in little German villages boys call
-themselves “Cooper Indians,” and play at oldtime savage warfare.
-The author of the “Leatherstocking Tales” wrote the first original
-American novel, and Hawthorne wrote the first American romance. The
-first described the manners and customs of a people whom he knew
-at first hand, but whom Europe knew only by hearsay; the second
-analyzed the motives and described the workings of the Puritan
-spirit, and showed how the consciousness of sin worked itself out
-in the Puritan character. The theme was new, and the manner of
-treating it was both effective and beautiful--and Hawthorne remains
-the most artistic writer this country has produced.
-
-[Illustration: HARRIET BEECHER STOWE]
-
-The next novelist to whom Europe paid attention was Mrs. Stowe.
-“Uncle Tom’s Cabin” was like a great torch held up over a fiercely
-disputed field; it showed men and women living under all conditions
-of slavery, paternal and humane on one hand, and commercial and
-cruel on the other. It made a drama of a political issue, and was
-read with bated breath by a million people. It interested Europe
-because it was a powerful story dealing with a situation that had
-attracted the attention of the whole Western world; it was at once
-translated into several languages, and could be found from London
-to Constantinople.
-
-[Illustration: HOME OF HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. HARTFORD, CONN.]
-
-
-HENRY JAMES
-
-When Mr. James began writing a generation ago there had been no
-American fiction of a high order for twenty years or more, and
-the country had grown rapidly in experience and knowledge. Mr.
-James showed this more cosmopolitan attitude toward the world,
-and his style had a quality which was new in our fiction. It was
-clear in those days; it had great flexibility and capacity for
-conveying fine distinctions and delicate shadings of thought; it
-had a tone of maturity which was lacking in the earlier writers,
-and it was the medium of expression of a thoroughly trained man
-to whom writing was a fine art. The early short stories, of
-which “The Passionate Pilgrim” may serve as an example, arrested
-attention by reason of their insight into character and their fine
-workmanship. There was an air of romance about them; but it was the
-romance of human temperament, not of incident. The early novels
-were not popular in the sense of running into large editions; but
-“The American” found many readers who were quick to appreciate
-its penetrating and searching analysis of character, its sharp
-contrasts of American and European traits, and the refinement of a
-style which is both rich and restrained.
-
-[Illustration: W. D. HOWELLS’ SUMMER HOME AT KITTERY, MAINE; ALSO
-INTERIOR OF LIBRARY]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-All novelists reveal character; but those in whom the dramatic
-instinct is strong show it chiefly in action. Mr. James brings out
-character largely by means of analysis and description, and for
-this reason he is often classed among the psychological novelists.
-In his later years the habit of analysis grew on him to such
-an extent that the movement of his stories was impeded and his
-style became complex and at times obscure. In a time when social
-relations between America and Europe were becoming more intimate,
-Mr. James found a rare opportunity of studying American character
-against a European background, and in the whole range of fiction
-there have been few writers of more acute penetration, of greater
-delicacy of stroke and line in painting character, than he. He
-was one of the small group of American authors to whom the word
-“distinction” may be applied.
-
-
-W. D. HOWELLS
-
-Mr. James was a student of men and women in society, using that
-word in its narrower sense; Mr. Howells, who is also a keen
-observer, has dealt with less sophisticated men and women, and has
-given us American types unmodified by other influences. A man of
-deep sympathy with his fellows and sharing in his heart the sorrow
-and pain of the common lot, a lover of Tolstoi and a professed
-realist, with a strong leaning toward constructive socialism, Mr.
-Howells has kept his fiction free from any kind of preaching. He
-has understood his vocation as an artist, and has not made his
-novels serve his social and political doctrines. Although a man of
-strong convictions, he is a writer whose touch is notably light,
-and whose humor is delightfully unforced and happy.
-
-[Illustration: W. D. HOWELLS IN HIS LIBRARY]
-
-Born in the Central West, Mr. Howells has kept its democracy of
-spirit and reinforced it by familiarity with modern languages and
-literature. In his lighter work he has made studies of the whims
-and foibles of certain feminine types in this country, of such
-fidelity that they have disturbed those who believe that Americans
-should tell the truth about themselves only to themselves, and that
-to take Europe into the national confidence is a kind of petty
-treason. But if Mr. Howells has seemed sometimes to draw American
-women with too light a hand, no one so well as he has conveyed a
-sense of the purity of American women, and the wholesome tone
-of American social life outside the very limited circle of what
-is known as the “Fast Set,”--a group of men and women who are
-representative not of a nation, but of the attitude toward life so
-strikingly defined in “The House of Mirth.” In his graver mood Mr.
-Howells has given us “The Rise of Silas Lapham,” one of the lasting
-achievements of American fiction, and “A Hazard of New Fortunes,”
-both original studies of American life during the age of great
-fortune-making. The charm of Mr. Howells’ art and the refinement of
-his humor have not given him the popularity of the more dramatic
-novelists; but he has made a place of high importance for himself
-in American literature, and in the hearts of a host of readers who
-have discerned in him a singularly pure and lovable nature.
-
-
-THOMAS NELSON PAGE
-
-The aftermath of the war between the States was an idealization of
-the old social order in the South. Mr. Page and Mr. Allen found
-in the tradition and habit of the Old South elements of a romance
-founded on reality. Society in the South before the war received
-its tone from men and women bred in habits of deference and
-courtesy, sensitive to any slight put upon honor, and prodigal of
-hospitality. It had rested on an unstable basis; but it had those
-delightful qualities which came with leisure, easy conditions, and
-the absence of commercial spirit. This vanishing order found in Mr.
-Page’s earliest stories a record true to life and yet enveloped
-in the air of romance. “Marse Chan,” “Unc’ Edinburg,” and “Meh
-Lady” gave the country a thrill of pleasure, so sure was their
-appeal to sentiment, so refreshingly human and unforced, a rich
-and picturesque life of its own, a fresh field for the romance of
-spiritual adventure and social habit.
-
-[Illustration: BIRTHPLACE OF THOMAS NELSON PAGE
-
-_Oakland Plantation, Hanover County, Virginia._]
-
-In these moving tales, told with unobstrusive artistic skill, the
-long-suspended literary tradition of Virginia received an impulse
-which has since given the country a group of stories of original
-quality.
-
-
-JAMES LANE ALLEN
-
-Never did pioneers carry into a new country a finer blending of
-the daring which moves the frontier farther from the old centers,
-and the chivalry of romance for women and idealization of emotion
-and experience, than went into the fertile and beautiful Kentucky
-country in the days which followed Boone’s adventurous career,
-and produced the types of character which appear in James Lane
-Allen’s “The Choir Invisible.” The Blue Grass country found in
-him a lover who was also an artist, and the background of his
-stories is sketched with exquisite skill. “The Kentucky Cardinal,”
-“Aftermath,” and the stories in “Flute and Violin” have not been
-surpassed in beauty of diction in our fiction. If one might venture
-to predict long life for any contemporary writing, he would not
-hesitate to put the short stories of these two Southern writers
-among American classics.
-
-[Illustration: BIRTHPLACE OF JAMES LANE ALLEN, NEAR LEXINGTON, KY.]
-
-Mr. Page and Mr. Allen have written long stories as well; in
-several instances dealing with contemporary life and manners. Mr.
-Allen has kept in the field of character study with increasing
-emphasis on the influence of environment. The title of one of his
-later stories, “The Mettle of the Pasture,” suggests the relation
-of the actors in the drama to the soil on which they live, while
-the lifelike study of the horse-breeder in “The Doctor’s Christmas
-Eve” is a portrait which could not have been drawn outside the
-boundaries of Kentucky. Mr. Page in his later stories has dealt
-with the spread of the commercial spirit, the conditions in which
-women work, political corruption, and social changes.
-
-
-WINSTON CHURCHILL
-
-Mr. Wister and Mr. Churchill have one great interest in
-common,--they are deeply concerned with American character and
-experience. Mr. Churchill has dramatized our history in a series
-of works, beginning with “Richard Carvel” of the Colonial period;
-continued in “The Crossing,” of the period of the first great
-westward emigration through the passes of the Alleghenies; in
-“The Crisis,” a picture of struggles between the old North and the
-old South, between 1861 and 1865, localized in St. Louis; and in
-“Mr. Crewe’s Career,” a study of the “machine” in politics and the
-beginnings of the struggle for popular government which has become
-a national movement. Mr. Churchill draws with a free hand on a
-large canvas, and his works have epic quality, emphasizing large
-and significant movements and defining the place of individuals in
-them, rather than presenting delicately sketched portraits of men
-and women in the narrower range of personal experience.
-
-[Illustration: HARLEKENDEN HOUSE, THE HOME OF WINSTON CHURCHILL IN
-CORNISH, N.H.]
-
-[Illustration: MUSIC ROOM IN HARLEKENDEN HOUSE]
-
-
-OWEN WISTER
-
-Mr. Wister has the gift of picturing real, vital characters, and
-his stories are full of a brilliant and moving life. His people
-are not only alive, but intensely and actively alive. A man bred
-in the best social traditions, a graduate of the oldest American
-university, Mr. Wister was fortunate enough to know the frontier at
-the very moment when the forces of business and the second great
-Western movement were about to destroy it. Most men who wrote about
-the old frontier, either in fiction or in plays, were concerned
-with its melodramatic aspects,--its guns, and shirts, sombreros,
-and bucking broncos. Mr. Wister saw the character behind these
-stage costumes; he recognized the fiber of the men,--their courage,
-their spirit of comradeship, their rough but genuine humor, their
-passion for wide horizons and the freedom of the life of the
-plains. In “The Virginian,” and the short stories from the same
-hand, our fiction has a series of studies of types of character now
-almost extinct, and of a stage of life which has disappeared. When
-“Lady Baltimore” appeared, Mr. Wister had passed from society in
-an elemental stage to a Southern community which has preserved its
-oldtime qualities of refinement of manner, dignity of habit, and
-a hospitality which is the very flower of high breeding and ease
-of condition. And Mr. Wister was as much at home in Charleston as
-on the old frontier; a fact highly significant of the quality and
-fiber of the man. Among American novelists he will hold a place of
-his own by reason of the vitality and artistic skill of his work.
-
-[Illustration: OWEN WISTER’S FAMILY PLACE, IN GERMANTOWN, PA.]
-
-[Illustration: EDITH WHARTON]
-
-Mrs. Wharton’s stories, even more than those of Mr. James, describe
-a social life which has taken its tone largely from an older and
-more conventional society, which has lost its moral simplicity in
-the complexity of an age of highly organized luxury, and which
-has taken on the easy ways of a social life that is entirely
-comfortable in conscience so long as it feels itself secure in
-matters of taste. In art Mrs. Wharton is an expert by intuition
-and practice. The author of “The House of Mirth” is analytical,
-and secures her most striking effects, not by boldly projecting
-her characters on a large canvas, but by uncovering their most
-elusive moods, their obscure motives, the conflict of temperament,
-character, and social traditions.
-
-Such a power of lighting up hidden processes of thought as Mrs.
-Wharton possesses needs the reënforcement of an art which is
-both vigorous and sensitive; and this art is always at Mrs.
-Wharton’s command. She has both precision and delicacy. She can
-draw a character in detachment with such vitality of insight and
-of portraiture that it holds the attention without the aid of
-accessories; or she can sketch a cross-section of society with
-convincing energy of stroke. She is the recorder of a highly
-sophisticated society, more or less relaxed in tone and corrupted
-by luxury.
-
-[Illustration: MARGARET DELAND’S HOME IN BOSTON]
-
-Mrs. Deland’s method is broader and her emotions of wider interest.
-She has painted one portrait which the whole country loves. Dr.
-Lavender has taken his place in the small group of imaginary
-Americans who are as real as historical Americans. He is a type
-dear to Americans, because his nature is sweet without a touch of
-weakness, his vision clear without hardness, his moral perception
-relentlessly keen but never divorced from pity and sympathy, and
-his humor fresh and abounding. And Mrs. Deland has also the gift
-of construction, and has written two or three novels which must be
-counted among our best fiction.
-
-[Illustration: MARGARET DELAND WRITING IN HER LIBRARY.
-
-HER DOG “ROUGH” SITS BY]
-
-No list of contemporary American writers of fiction would be
-complete without the names of F. Hopkinson Smith, John Fox, Jr.,
-Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, and Miss Mary Johnston. Mr. Smith has gained
-skill as a writer steadily as he has gained skill as a painter; and
-in the small group of stories which bear his name two or three are
-likely to be read for a long time to come. “The Fortunes of Oliver
-Horn” shows Mr. Smith’s art at his best, for it is art of the
-heart as well as of the brain and hand. His romance has permanent
-elements of human nature; idealism, loyalty, and love are the soul
-of it.
-
-Mr. Fox, who also finds his characters largely in the South, has
-drawn the picture of the primitive mountain types in the Kentucky
-hills with the charm which comes from great simplicity and from an
-intimate knowledge of the people he describes.
-
-Miss Johnston, who began by writing romances pure and simple, has
-dramatized the story of the Civil War in two able novels, “The Long
-Roll” and “Cease Firing.” It is not easy to characterize these
-stories in a phrase, nor is it necessary. They are written with a
-kind of quiet passion which gives the current sufficient volume to
-carry an enormous amount of history without sacrificing dramatic
-interest.
-
-[Illustration: F. HOPKINSON SMITH]
-
-[Illustration: MARY JOHNSTON]
-
-[Illustration: JOHN FOX, JR.]
-
-[Illustration: DR. S. WEIR MITCHELL]
-
-Dr. Mitchell, like Dr. Holmes, revealed himself in several
-different capacities, as physician, as poet, as essayist, and as
-story writer. His novels are characterized by inventiveness, by
-dexterity, by freshness of feeling. “The Adventures of François” is
-a capital piece of story-telling; while many people regard “Hugh
-Wynne” as the best semi-historical story which has appeared in
-this country. In other novels Dr. Mitchell showed his skill as a
-psychologist.
-
-
-
-
-_SUPPLEMENTARY READING_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A Study of Prose Fiction _Bliss Perry_
-
-Criticism and Fiction _W. D. Howells_
-
-Essays on Modern Novelists _William L. Phelps_
-
-American Prose Masters (Cooper,
-Hawthorne, Emerson, Poe, Lowell and _W. C. Brownell_
-Henry James)
-
-American Poetry and Fiction _C. F. Richardson_
-
-Great American Writers _Trent and Erskine_
-
-Some American Storytellers _Frederick Taber Cooper_
-
-American Short Stories _Charles Baldwin, Editor_
-
-The American Short Story _Elias Lieberman_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-_QUESTIONS ANSWERED_
-
-Subscribers desiring further information concerning this subject
-can obtain it by writing to
-
- _The Mentor Association_
- _381 Fourth Avenue, New York City_
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: HENRY JAMES]
-
-
-
-
- Henry James, a careful and thoughtful writer, is the subject of
- one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American
- Novelists.”
-
-HENRY JAMES
-
-Monograph Number One in The Mentor Reading Course
-
-
-A number of years ago Henry James was at work on a volume of short
-stories. “And when will it be ready?” he was asked.
-
-“Oh, I never know,” he said. “I work by easy stages.”
-
-That sentence gives the keynote to the character of the great
-novelist himself and of his writings. He wrote carefully, easily,
-and neatly.
-
-Born in New York City on April 15, 1843, Henry James spent most of
-his boyhood in Europe. His father was Henry James, the theological
-writer, and from him the novelist derived his idiomatic,
-picturesque English. His brother became Professor William James,
-the psychologist and philosopher, who died in 1910.
-
-Henry James entered Harvard Law School in 1860; but found out soon
-that he cared more for literature than for law. His first short
-story was published in 1865, and many stories and sketches quickly
-followed this.
-
-After 1869 he made his home in England, living in London, or Rye in
-Sussex, for the most part. He was a member of the American Academy
-of Arts and Letters, and in 1911 received the degree of L. H. D.
-from Harvard.
-
-Mr. James dictated all his work to a secretary, and he rewrote
-and polished it from a typewritten copy. With his writing he took
-infinite pains. His sentences are long and involved at times; but
-in spite of this confusing fact his sentences are balanced and
-complete.
-
-His whole life showed the same ordered neatness as his books.
-His library was carefully selected and shelved. His letters were
-always arranged in little piles of the same size. One man tells
-that during a call on the novelist he saw him, when the ash had
-collected on the end of his cigarette, walk the length of his study
-and snip it out of the open window.
-
-Henry James has been called a modern of the moderns as a novelist.
-He described contemporary life. His characters are people of
-the world; but they are subtle and complex. The human element
-predominates.
-
-He is not widely read, because the public finds him hard to read.
-As someone said, “His books need to be translated for the average
-reader.” This is due in part to his use of long and involved
-sentences, and in part to his subject matter.
-
-His career was a happy one. It was long, and was free from serious
-mistakes. His talent and point of view were personal. He had a
-crowd of imitators; but none of these approached the master in
-greatness.
-
-There was one side of the character of Henry James, the man, of
-which few people knew. Never did a man in need come to him whom he
-did not offer to help. Years ago, when James was deriving an income
-of less than $1,500 a year from his writing, a novelist died in
-England. He died in poverty, leaving two little children absolutely
-alone in the world. A friend assisted the children and wrote to
-other literary men asking for help. One literary man, whose income
-was over $200,000, was appealed to in vain. Among those from whom
-aid was asked was Henry James. A check for $250, more than a sixth
-of his whole year’s income, arrived from him by return mail.
-
-Henry James died in London on February 29, 1916.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS]
-
-
-
-
- William Dean Howells, a close student of American character and
- a realist in his writings, is the subject of one of the six
- intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American Novelists.”
-
-WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS
-
-Monograph Number Two in The Mentor Reading Course
-
-
-The “Dean of American Letters”--that is what William Dean Howells
-is called. He is and has been for half a century the literary
-leader of America, and well he deserves the title! James Russell
-Lowell said of him that he “is one of the chief honors of our
-literature.” He has never written a bad sentence, never struck
-a false note. He is the leading representative of the realistic
-school of American fiction.
-
-William Dean Howells might with truth be called a “self-made man
-of letters.” He was born at Martin Ferry, Ohio, on March 1, 1837.
-His father, William Cooper Howells, was a printer and editor, whose
-library was large and well chosen for that time. It was in this
-library that the future novelist picked up most of his education.
-As usual in a small country town, the regular schooling consisted
-only of the “three R’s”; but Howells was an omniverous reader. He
-particularly enjoyed poetry. It is said that even as a small boy
-he wrote verse, setting it into type himself. Whether this was
-ever printed is not known; but surely some space in his father’s
-newspaper must have been found for these productions of his
-juvenile pen.
-
-In 1851 the family fortunes met with disaster, and Howells went to
-work as compositor on the Ohio State Journal at a salary of four
-dollars a week. He soon graduated into journalism, and at the age
-of twenty-two was news editor of the Columbus, Ohio, State Journal.
-
-Howells’ first published work appeared in 1860. The “Poems of Two
-Friends” were written with John J. Piatt. He began to contribute to
-the Atlantic Monthly, then just founded, about this time also. A
-campaign biography of Abraham Lincoln was written by him in 1860.
-For this he was appointed consul at Venice, where he remained until
-1865. There he studied the Italian language and literature, and
-broadened his education considerably.
-
-On his return to the United States he wrote for the New York
-Tribune and the Nation for a time. Then in 1866 he became assistant
-editor of the Atlantic Monthly, becoming editor six years later. He
-was a model magazine editor.
-
-For awhile he contributed to Harper’s Magazine; then he became
-editor of the Cosmopolitan, and in 1900 revived “The Editor’s Easy
-Chair” for Harper’s. He is at present the writer of this department.
-
-Mr. Howells has received many honorary degrees. Harvard and Yale
-have both conferred on him the degree of Master of Arts, while he
-has received the degree of Doctor of Letters from Yale, Oxford,
-Columbia, and Princeton, and the degree of Doctor of Laws from
-Adelbert College. In 1909 he was elected president of the American
-Academy of Arts and Letters. Since 1885 the novelist has lived in
-New York City.
-
-Howells is a great realist and a perfect artist in words. He was
-once asked if he never lost himself in his work and was carried
-away by what he was writing.
-
-“Never,” he answered. “The essence of achievement is to keep
-outside, to be entirely dispassionate, as a sculptor must be,
-molding his clay.”
-
-And indeed of all American writers Howells comes the nearest to
-success in holding the mirror up to Nature.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THOMAS NELSON PAGE]
-
-
-
-
- Thomas Nelson Page, a novelist who writes of the fast vanishing
- old order of the South, is the subject of one of the six
- intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American Novelists.”
-
-THOMAS NELSON PAGE
-
-Monograph Number Three in The Mentor Reading Course
-
-
-Above all things Thomas Nelson Page is a Virginian, by birth, by
-family, and in his writings. Born on the old plantation of Oakland
-in Hanover County, Virginia, he can boast of two grandfathers who
-were governors of the state, one of these, Thomas Nelson, being
-a signer of the Declaration of Independence. It is Virginia and
-Virginians “before the war” and during the reconstruction period
-that he has sought to portray in his books.
-
-Thomas Nelson Page opened his eyes in old Virginia on April 23,
-1853. He was a rather precocious boy. Many a beating did he
-receive at school for stealing time from his lessons to write
-short stories on his slate for the amusement of his companions.
-He entered Washington and Lee University when he was only sixteen
-years old. He remained there three years, and then after spending a
-little time in Kentucky decided to enter the law department of the
-University of Virginia in 1873. He finished the work there in about
-half the time usually required, and began practising in Richmond,
-where he remained until 1893.
-
-Page had always felt the charm of times gone by. He tried to
-follow the law faithfully; but more and more strongly came the
-call to picture artistically “a civilization which, once having
-sweetened the South, has since well nigh perished from the earth.”
-He yearned for the old plantation life,--the stately mansions of
-his forefathers, the grandeur to which those men and women of other
-days attained, and the overgrown fence rows and fields of his own
-country home.
-
-Finally he decided to write. “Marse Chan” was published in 1884,
-and won the author immediate recognition. People of both the North
-and South were enthusiastic about it. The author himself tells how
-he came to write this tale:
-
-“Just then a friend showed me a letter which had been written by
-a young girl to her sweetheart in a Georgia regiment, telling him
-that she had discovered that she loved him, after all, and that if
-he would get a furlough and come home she would marry him; that
-she had loved him ever since they had gone to school together in
-the little schoolhouse in the woods. Then, as if she feared such a
-temptation might be too strong for him, she added a postscript in
-these words: ‘Don’t come without a furlough; for if you don’t come
-honorably I won’t marry you.’ This letter had been taken from the
-pocket of a private dead on the battlefield of one of the battles
-around Richmond, and, as the date was only a week before the battle
-occurred, its pathos struck me very much. I remember I said ‘The
-poor fellow got his furlough through a bullet.’ The idea remained
-with me, and I went to my office one morning and began to write
-‘Marse Chan,’ which was finished in about a week.”
-
-“In Ole Virginia,” a collection of three stories of negro life
-and character, was published in 1887. This is perhaps his most
-characteristic work. Many stories, essays, and poems followed.
-
-Uncle Billy in Page’s story “Meh Lady” is a distinct creation.
-At the wedding of his mistress and the Union captain in the old,
-dismantled home, the minister asks, “Who giveth this woman to be
-married to this man?” His lady is without a relative, and Uncle
-Billy sees that it is up to him. But he doesn’t want to take the
-responsibility; so stepping forward he answers solemnly, “Gord.”
-
-Thomas Nelson Page is never sectional in his writing. Everything
-that he writes tends to bring about better feeling between the
-North and the South.
-
-He is now ambassador to Rome, appointed by President Wilson.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: JAMES LANE ALLEN]
-
-
-
-
- James Lane Allen, a romanticist of Kentucky, is the subject of
- one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American
- Novelists.”
-
-JAMES LANE ALLEN
-
-Monograph Number Four in The Mentor Reading Course
-
-
-A historical novelist worthy to rank with Nathaniel Hawthorne,
-James Lane Allen has been called. Both have given us pictures of
-the lives of our forefathers; but, while Hawthorne has shown us
-New England, Allen draws the Blue Grass region of Kentucky and its
-people.
-
-It may be due to the fact that James Lane Allen was a seventh child
-that he has achieved such remarkable success in literature. He was
-born in Fayette County, near Lexington, Kentucky, in 1849, the
-youngest child of Richard and Helen Allen. He can number among his
-paternal ancestors some of the first settlers of Virginia. One of
-these ancestors, Richard Allen, moved to Kentucky, where he lived
-the easy, hospitable life of a gentleman farmer on his large estate.
-
-Mr. Allen’s mother was a descendant of the Pennsylvania
-Scotch-Irish and the Brooks family of Virginia. A native of
-Mississippi, she was a lover of nature and literature. She inspired
-in her son a love for reading old romances, poetry, and history.
-
-Although Allen was only twelve years old when the storm of Civil
-War broke over our country, he was old enough to realize its
-horrors and the suffering that it brought to the people of the
-South. Just before the beginning of the war his father lost his
-fortune; so the formal education that Allen received was small;
-but under his mother’s guidance he pursued his studies at home.
-Long walks in the fields and forests about his home gave him a keen
-insight into nature.
-
-He was graduated from Transylvania University at Lexington,
-Kentucky, in 1872, and three years later received a degree of A. M.
-from there. A little before this his father died, and James had to
-begin teaching in order to meet expenses. He spent a year as master
-in a country school, walking six miles to and from the school every
-day.
-
-For two years he taught in Missouri and then came back to Kentucky
-as a private tutor. He was called to his alma mater to teach, and
-two years later Bethany College, in West Virginia, offered him the
-chair of Latin and higher English.
-
-He planned to go to Germany for a time; but gave this up when the
-idea of becoming a doctor of medicine attracted him. This was when
-he was doing graduate work at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. But his
-love of literature led him to take up writing, and in 1884 he
-moved to New York. He arrived there unknown and with no letters of
-introduction; but “he took up his abode in a garret and started
-out in a very humble way.” He sent letters to the New York Evening
-Post, poems to Harper’s and the Atlantic Monthly, and essays to
-the Critic and the Forum. A criticism of Henry James’ “Portrait of
-a Lady” first attracted attention to the young author, and soon
-there was a strong demand for his sketches of Kentucky life. “The
-Blue Grass Region of Kentucky” was the title given to the collected
-volume of these sketches.
-
-Mr. Allen then moved to Cincinnati; but later moved again to
-Washington, believing that the capital of the country would be
-the future home of literature and art in America. In Washington,
-however, he found too much social and official distraction; so he
-returned to New York.
-
-“The Kentucky Cardinal,” published in 1895, is one of Mr. Allen’s
-best books. It is a sort of pastoral poem in prose, showing the
-struggle between Nature and Love. “The Choir Invisible” shows the
-noble love of a married woman for a man who is not her husband.
-
-James Lane Allen is best known as a writer of fiction; but he
-has also published many critical articles and much verse. He is
-recognized as one of the most poetic and dramatic of American
-novelists.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: WINSTON CHURCHILL]
-
-
-
-
- Winston Churchill, a master of the historical novel, is the
- subject of one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating
- “American Novelists.”
-
-WINSTON CHURCHILL
-
-Monograph Number Five in The Mentor Reading Course
-
-
-Although he graduated from Annapolis in 1894, Winston Churchill
-never served in the navy. Instead, immediately after completing
-his studies he began writing. He had found out that he could write
-when he was still at Annapolis, and decided that fiction rather
-than the navy was his line of work. For this the young graduate had
-fine equipment. Annapolis gave him self-reliance and determination.
-Those graduates of the Naval Academy who have not gone into the
-navy have usually been successful in whatever they have done. This
-is particularly true in the case of Churchill. Well educated, at
-the same time he is full of the joy of life itself, and likes all
-sorts of outdoor sports. He is a favorite everywhere.
-
-Winston Churchill was born in St. Louis, Missouri, on November 10,
-1871, and spent the first sixteen years of his life there. From a
-school in St. Louis he went to Annapolis. There he became strongly
-interested in American history and problems, and made up his mind
-to devote his life and energies to these. In the brief intervals
-between studies and drills he gathered much of the material that he
-afterward used in his novels.
-
-While at Annapolis he stood among the first five or six in his
-class. He also reorganized the crew and was captain for a year.
-He likewise played a good game of football. Fencing, tennis, and
-horseback riding are his favorite sports.
-
-For awhile after graduation he worked on the Army and Navy Journal,
-and then joined the staff of the Cosmopolitan Magazine. During this
-time he wrote a great deal; but did not attempt to publish these
-first experiments in fiction.
-
-He married in 1895 and moved not long afterward to his home at
-Cornish, New Hampshire. Churchill was very fortunate. He did not
-have to earn a living by doing hackwork, and could take plenty of
-time with anything that he wrote.
-
-It is said that genius is the capacity for taking great pains.
-Winston Churchill surely illustrates this adage. Hard work,
-determination, and a keen sense of values made him the successful
-novelist that he is. He was ambitious to write the very best he
-knew how. Once, when living in St. Louis, he hired an office and
-went down to it as regularly as any other man of business. His
-writing was business, and was treated as such.
-
-He rewrote “Richard Carvel” at least five times. He worked from
-breakfast until one o’clock, after lunch for two or three hours,
-and after dinner often far into the night. This, the first of
-three of Winston Churchill’s novels dealing with American history,
-became the most popular book in the United States. “The Crisis,”
-the second of these historical novels, appeared a few years after
-“Richard Carvel,” and in 1904 “The Crossing,” the last of the
-trilogy, was published. The background for “The Crisis” was the
-Civil War, and “The Crossing” dealt with the great western movement
-across the country.
-
-Churchill has served in the New Hampshire legislature, and also
-ran for the governorship of that state. “Coniston” was a direct
-outgrowth of his political associations. The novel is a story of
-politics, with a charming love story running through it.
-
-Winston Churchill is still a young man, and there is every reason
-to believe that his best and biggest work is still to come.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: OWEN WISTER]
-
-
-
-
- Owen Wister, a drawer of real, vital characters, is the subject
- of one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating
- “American Novelists.”
-
-OWEN WISTER
-
-Monograph Number Six in The Mentor Reading Course
-
-
-It is remarkable how many successful writers get into literature
-by accident. Very few novelists begin by taking up writing as a
-profession: most of them drift into it from other fields. Owen
-Wister was no exception to this. He settled down in Philadelphia to
-practise law; but the call of the pen was too strong for him. He
-was thirty-one years old before he began to write.
-
-Owen Wister is a grandson of Frances Anne Kemble, better known as
-Fannie Kemble, the famous actress. He was born on July 14, 1860,
-in Philadelphia. When he was ten years old he was taken to Europe,
-where he remained three years. On his return to this country he
-entered St. Paul’s School, Concord, whence he went to Harvard,
-graduating in 1882. He took highest honors in music.
-
-At Harvard he showed that he could write when he produced a
-libretto, “Dido and Æneas,” for one of the Hasty Pudding Club
-entertainments. When there he also edited one of the college
-papers, and in his junior year wrote a poem on Beethoven, which was
-published in the Atlantic Monthly.
-
-With the intention of becoming a music critic Wister went abroad
-once more. He began the study of composition under Liszt in Paris.
-In 1883 he changed his plans and returned to America. His health
-was bad; so he went hunting in Wyoming and Arizona.
-
-He found not only new strength, but a new world. The stirring
-atmosphere of the West woke in him a desire to write about it;
-but he did nothing at this time. He returned east and entered the
-Harvard Law School. He graduated in 1888, and a year later was
-admitted to the bar in Philadelphia.
-
-But the West had great attraction for him. In the next ten years he
-made fifteen trips there. He soon saw that law was not his career.
-
-In 1891 a series of studies and stories of the West by Wister
-started in Harper’s Magazine. These were later gathered together in
-a volume called “Red Men and White.” All the characters in these
-sketches were true to life; the Indian was the Indian of fact, and
-the cowboy was the cowboy of reality.
-
-When Wister first began to write a fellow-townsman and critic of
-him said, “Owen Wister has written some creditable stories; but so,
-to be sure, have many others. His real strength lies in musical
-criticism.” This opinion hardly holds good today.
-
-“The Virginian” is the best thing that Wister has done. It is
-absolutely realistic. This is a quality of all this author’s work,
-as is shown by an anecdote he himself tells:
-
-“Once a cowpuncher listened patiently while I read him a
-manuscript. It concerned an event on an Indian reservation. ‘Was
-that the Crow reservation?’ he inquired at the finish. I told him
-that it was no real reservation and no real event; and his face
-expressed displeasure. ‘Why,’ he demanded, ‘do you waste your time
-writing what never happened, when you know so many things that did
-happen?’”
-
-So well was the story told that the cowboy had believed he was
-listening to facts.
-
-“Lady Baltimore” was another successful novel of Wister’s, and
-besides he has written several interesting biographies, the best of
-which is “The Seven ages of Washington.”
-
-Wister is not only a writer. He has actively fought for decent
-government in Philadelphia. At one election he ran for city
-councilman of his ward, knowing that his fight was hopeless. He is
-an American through and through, and in his books he portrays the
-best things in the life of our country.
-
-
- PREPARED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF OF THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION
- ILLUSTRATION FOR THE MENTOR, No. 25
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-
-The printing error “Univeristy” was changed to “University” on page
-18 (law department of the University of Virginia). Other uncommon
-spellings were retained.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mentor, Vol. 1, No. 25, American
-Novelists, by Hamilton Wright Mabie
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mentor, Vol. 1, No. 25, American
-Novelists, by Hamilton Wright Mabie
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-Title: The Mentor, Vol. 1, No. 25, American Novelists
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-Author: Hamilton Wright Mabie
-
-Release Date: March 26, 2016 [EBook #51560]
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MENTOR: AMERICAN NOVELISTS ***
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-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-<h1><span class="smcap gesperrt">The Mentor</span></h1>
-
-<p class="center smaller">“A Wise and Faithful Guide and Friend”</p>
-
-<hr class="full" style="margin-bottom: 10px;" />
-
-<table style="margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0;" >
- <tr><td>Vol. 1</td><td class="tdr">No. 25</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="full" style="margin-top: 10px;" />
-
-<p class="large center gesperrt"><b>AMERICAN NOVELISTS</b></p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td><br />HENRY JAMES<br /><br />WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS<br /><br />THOMAS NELSON PAGE</td>
- <td style="width: 100px;"><img class="center" src="images/img1.jpg" width="100" height="138" alt="man" /></td>
- <td class="tdr"><br />JAMES LANE ALLEN<br /><br />WINSTON CHURCHILL<br /><br />OWEN WISTER</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center"><i>By HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">This group of distinguished novelists may be divided into four
-smaller groups, not only in time, but in selection and treatment of
-subjects. Mr. James and Mr. Howells are now the senior members of
-the literary fraternity in this country, and have not only American
-but European reputations. Only three novelists before them attained
-this distinction. The earliest of these, Cooper, is still read in
-many parts of the world, and in little German villages boys call
-themselves “Cooper Indians,” and play at oldtime savage warfare.
-The author of the “Leatherstocking Tales” wrote the first original
-American novel, and Hawthorne wrote the first American romance. The
-first described the manners and customs of a people whom he knew
-at first hand, but whom Europe knew only by hearsay; the second
-analyzed the motives and described the workings of the Puritan
-spirit, and showed how the consciousness of sin worked itself out
-in the Puritan character. The theme was new, and the manner of
-treating it was both effective and beautiful&mdash;and Hawthorne remains
-the most artistic writer this country has produced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img2.jpg" width="200" height="329" alt="Harriet Beacher Stowe" />
- <div><p class="smaller center">HARRIET BEECHER STOWE</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The next novelist to whom Europe paid attention was Mrs. Stowe.
-“Uncle Tom’s Cabin” was like a great torch held up over a fiercely
-disputed field; it showed men and women living under all conditions
-of slavery, paternal and humane on one hand, and commercial and
-cruel on the other. It made a drama of a political issue, and was
-read with bated breath by a million people. It interested Europe
-because it was a powerful story dealing with a situation that had
-attracted the attention of the whole Western world; it was at once
-translated into several languages, and could be found from London
-to Constantinople.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img3.jpg" width="600" height="260" alt="Home of Harriet Beacher Stowe" />
- <div><p class="smaller center">HOME OF HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. HARTFORD, CONN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="HENRYJAMES" id="HENRYJAMES"></a>HENRY JAMES</h2>
-
-<p>When Mr. James began writing a generation ago there had been no
-American fiction of a high order for twenty years or more, and
-the country had grown rapidly in experience and knowledge. Mr.
-James showed this more cosmopolitan attitude toward the world,
-and his style had a quality which was new in our fiction. It was
-clear in those days; it had great flexibility and capacity for
-conveying fine distinctions and delicate shadings of thought; it
-had a tone of maturity which was lacking in the earlier writers,
-and it was the medium of expression of a thoroughly trained man
-to whom writing was a fine art. The early<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span> short stories, of
-which “The Passionate Pilgrim” may serve as an example, arrested
-attention by reason of their insight into character and their fine
-workmanship. There was an air of romance about them; but it was the
-romance of human temperament, not of incident. The early novels
-were not popular in the sense of running into large editions; but
-“The American” found many readers who were quick to appreciate
-its penetrating and searching analysis of character, its sharp
-contrasts of American and European traits, and the refinement of a
-style which is both rich and restrained.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img4.jpg" width="600" height="227" alt="Home of W. D. Howells" />
- <div><p class="smaller center"> W. D. HOWELLS’ SUMMER HOME AT KITTERY, MAINE; ALSO INTERIOR OF LIBRARY</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img5.jpg" width="500" height="407" alt="Interior of Library" />
-</div>
-
-<p>All novelists reveal character; but those in whom the dramatic
-instinct is strong show it chiefly in action. Mr. James brings out
-character largely by means of analysis and description, and for
-this reason he is often classed among the psychological novelists.
-In his later years the habit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span> of analysis grew on him to such
-an extent that the movement of his stories was impeded and his
-style became complex and at times obscure. In a time when social
-relations between America and Europe were becoming more intimate,
-Mr. James found a rare opportunity of studying American character
-against a European background, and in the whole range of fiction
-there have been few writers of more acute penetration, of greater
-delicacy of stroke and line in painting character, than he. He
-was one of the small group of American authors to whom the word
-“distinction” may be applied.</p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="HOWELLS" id="HOWELLS"></a>W. D. HOWELLS</h2>
-
-<p>Mr. James was a student of men and women in society, using that
-word in its narrower sense; Mr. Howells, who is also a keen
-observer, has dealt with less sophisticated men and women, and has
-given us American types unmodified by other influences. A man of
-deep sympathy with his fellows and sharing in his heart the sorrow
-and pain of the common lot, a lover of Tolstoi and a professed
-realist, with a strong leaning toward constructive socialism, Mr.
-Howells has kept his fiction free from any kind of preaching. He
-has understood his vocation as an artist, and has not made his
-novels serve his social and political doctrines. Although a man of
-strong convictions, he is a writer whose touch is notably light,
-and whose humor is delightfully unforced and happy.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img6.jpg" width="600" height="446" alt="W. D. HOWELLS IN HIS LIBRARY" />
- <div><p class="smaller center">W. D. HOWELLS IN HIS LIBRARY</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Born in the Central West, Mr. Howells has kept its democracy of
-spirit and reinforced it by familiarity with modern languages and
-literature. In his lighter work he has made studies of the whims
-and foibles of certain feminine types in this country, of such
-fidelity that they have disturbed those who believe that Americans
-should tell the truth about themselves only to themselves, and that
-to take Europe into the national confidence is a kind of petty
-treason. But if Mr. Howells has seemed sometimes to draw American
-women with too light a hand, no one so well as he has conveyed a
-sense of the purity of American women, and the wholesome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span> tone
-of American social life outside the very limited circle of what
-is known as the “Fast Set,”&mdash;a group of men and women who are
-representative not of a nation, but of the attitude toward life so
-strikingly defined in “The House of Mirth.” In his graver mood Mr.
-Howells has given us “The Rise of Silas Lapham,” one of the lasting
-achievements of American fiction, and “A Hazard of New Fortunes,”
-both original studies of American life during the age of great
-fortune-making. The charm of Mr. Howells’ art and the refinement of
-his humor have not given him the popularity of the more dramatic
-novelists; but he has made a place of high importance for himself
-in American literature, and in the hearts of a host of readers who
-have discerned in him a singularly pure and lovable nature.</p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="TNPAGE" id="TNPAGE"></a>THOMAS NELSON PAGE</h2>
-
-<p>The aftermath of the war between the States was an idealization of
-the old social order in the South. Mr. Page and Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span> Allen found
-in the tradition and habit of the Old South elements of a romance
-founded on reality. Society in the South before the war received
-its tone from men and women bred in habits of deference and
-courtesy, sensitive to any slight put upon honor, and prodigal of
-hospitality. It had rested on an unstable basis; but it had those
-delightful qualities which came with leisure, easy conditions, and
-the absence of commercial spirit. This vanishing order found in Mr.
-Page’s earliest stories a record true to life and yet enveloped
-in the air of romance. “Marse Chan,” “Unc’ Edinburg,” and “Meh
-Lady” gave the country a thrill of pleasure, so sure was their
-appeal to sentiment, so refreshingly human and unforced, a rich
-and picturesque life of its own, a fresh field for the romance of
-spiritual adventure and social habit.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img7.jpg" width="550" height="450" alt="BIRTHPLACE OF THOMAS NELSON PAGE" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">BIRTHPLACE OF THOMAS NELSON PAGE</p>
- <p class="smaller center"><i>Oakland Plantation, Hanover County, Virginia.</i></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In these moving tales, told with unobstrusive artistic skill, the
-long-suspended literary tradition of Virginia received an impulse
-which has since given the country a group of stories of original
-quality.</p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="ALLEN" id="ALLEN"></a>JAMES LANE ALLEN</h2>
-
-<p>Never did pioneers carry into a new country a finer blending of
-the daring which moves the frontier farther from the old centers,
-and the chivalry of romance for women and idealization of emotion
-and experience,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span> than went into the fertile and beautiful Kentucky
-country in the days which followed Boone’s adventurous career,
-and produced the types of character which appear in James Lane
-Allen’s “The Choir Invisible.” The Blue Grass country found in
-him a lover who was also an artist, and the background of his
-stories is sketched with exquisite skill. “The Kentucky Cardinal,”
-“Aftermath,” and the stories in “Flute and Violin” have not been
-surpassed in beauty of diction in our fiction. If one might venture
-to predict long life for any contemporary writing, he would not
-hesitate to put the short stories of these two Southern writers
-among American classics.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img8.jpg" width="580" height="428" alt="BIRTHPLACE OF JAMES LANE ALLEN" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">BIRTHPLACE OF JAMES LANE ALLEN, NEAR LEXINGTON, KY.</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Page and Mr. Allen have written long stories as well; in
-several instances dealing with contemporary life and manners. Mr.
-Allen has kept in the field of character study with increasing
-emphasis on the influence of environment. The title of one of his
-later stories, “The Mettle of the Pasture,” suggests the relation
-of the actors in the drama to the soil on which they live, while
-the lifelike study of the horse-breeder in “The Doctor’s Christmas
-Eve” is a portrait which could not have been drawn outside the
-boundaries of Kentucky. Mr. Page in his later stories has dealt
-with the spread of the commercial spirit, the conditions in which
-women work, political corruption, and social changes.</p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHURCHILL" id="CHURCHILL"></a>WINSTON CHURCHILL</h2>
-
-<p>Mr. Wister and Mr. Churchill have one great interest in
-common,&mdash;they are deeply concerned with American character and
-experience. Mr. Churchill has dramatized our history in a series
-of works, beginning with “Richard Carvel” of the Colonial period;
-continued in “The Crossing,” of the period of the first great
-westward emigration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span> through the passes of the Alleghenies; in
-“The Crisis,” a picture of struggles between the old North and the
-old South, between 1861 and 1865, localized in St. Louis; and in
-“Mr. Crewe’s Career,” a study of the “machine” in politics and the
-beginnings of the struggle for popular government which has become
-a national movement. Mr. Churchill draws with a free hand on a
-large canvas, and his works have epic quality, emphasizing large
-and significant movements and defining the place of individuals in
-them, rather than presenting delicately sketched portraits of men
-and women in the narrower range of personal experience.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img9.jpg" width="600" height="325" alt="HARLEKENDEN HOUSE" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">HARLEKENDEN HOUSE, THE HOME OF WINSTON CHURCHILL IN CORNISH, N.H.</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img10.jpg" width="600" height="480" alt="MUSIC ROOM IN HARLEKENDEN HOUSE" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">MUSIC ROOM IN HARLEKENDEN HOUSE</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="WISTER" id="WISTER"></a>OWEN WISTER</h2>
-
-<p>Mr. Wister has the gift of picturing real, vital characters, and
-his stories are full of a brilliant and moving life. His people
-are not only alive, but intensely and actively alive. A man bred
-in the best social traditions, a graduate of the oldest American
-university, Mr. Wister was fortunate enough to know the frontier at
-the very moment when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span> the forces of business and the second great
-Western movement were about to destroy it. Most men who wrote about
-the old frontier, either in fiction or in plays, were concerned
-with its melodramatic aspects,&mdash;its guns, and shirts, sombreros,
-and bucking broncos. Mr. Wister saw the character behind these
-stage costumes; he recognized the fiber of the men,&mdash;their courage,
-their spirit of comradeship, their rough but genuine humor, their
-passion for wide horizons and the freedom of the life of the
-plains. In “The Virginian,” and the short stories from the same
-hand, our fiction has a series of studies of types of character now
-almost extinct, and of a stage of life which has disappeared. When
-“Lady Baltimore” appeared, Mr. Wister had passed from society in
-an elemental stage to a Southern community which has preserved its
-oldtime qualities of refinement of manner, dignity of habit, and
-a hospitality which is the very flower of high breeding and ease
-of condition. And Mr. Wister was as much at home in Charleston as
-on the old frontier; a fact highly significant of the quality and
-fiber of the man. Among American novelists he will hold a place of
-his own by reason of the vitality and artistic skill of his work.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img11.jpg" width="580" height="408" alt="OWEN WISTER’S FAMILY PLACE" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">OWEN WISTER’S FAMILY PLACE, IN GERMANTOWN, PA.</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 180px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img12.jpg" width="180" height="409" alt="EDITH WHARTON" />
- <div><p class="smaller center">EDITH WHARTON</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Mrs. Wharton’s stories, even more than those of Mr. James, describe
-a social life which has taken its tone largely from an older and
-more conventional society, which has lost its moral simplicity in
-the complexity of an age of highly organized luxury, and which
-has taken on the easy ways of a social life that is entirely
-comfortable in conscience so long as it feels itself secure in
-matters of taste. In art Mrs. Wharton is an expert by intuition
-and practice. The author of “The House of Mirth” is analytical,
-and secures her most striking effects, not by boldly projecting
-her characters on a large canvas, but by uncovering their most
-elusive moods, their obscure motives, the conflict of temperament,
-character, and social traditions.</p>
-
-<p>Such a power of lighting up hidden processes of thought as Mrs.
-Wharton possesses needs the reënforcement of an art which is
-both vigorous and sensitive; and this art is always at Mrs.
-Wharton’s command.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> She has both precision and delicacy. She can
-draw a character in detachment with such vitality of insight and
-of portraiture that it holds the attention without the aid of
-accessories; or she can sketch a cross-section of society with
-convincing energy of stroke. She is the recorder of a highly
-sophisticated society, more or less relaxed in tone and corrupted
-by luxury.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 170px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img13.jpg" width="170" height="476" alt="MARGARET DELAND’S HOME" />
- <div><p class="smaller center">MARGARET DELAND’S HOME IN BOSTON</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mrs. Deland’s method is broader and her emotions of wider interest.
-She has painted one portrait which the whole country loves. Dr.
-Lavender has taken his place in the small group of imaginary
-Americans who are as real as historical Americans. He is a type
-dear to Americans, because his nature is sweet without a touch of
-weakness, his vision clear without hardness, his moral perception
-relentlessly keen but never divorced from pity and sympathy, and
-his humor fresh and abounding. And Mrs. Deland has also the gift
-of construction, and has written two or three novels which must be
-counted among our best fiction.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/img14.jpg" width="400" height="317" alt="MARGARET DELAND" />
- <div><p class="smaller center">MARGARET DELAND WRITING IN HER LIBRARY.</p></div>
- <div><p class="smaller center">HER DOG “ROUGH” SITS BY</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>No list of contemporary American writers of fiction would be
-complete without the names of F. Hopkinson Smith, John Fox, Jr.,
-Dr. S.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span> Weir Mitchell, and Miss Mary Johnston. Mr. Smith has gained
-skill as a writer steadily as he has gained skill as a painter; and
-in the small group of stories which bear his name two or three are
-likely to be read for a long time to come. “The Fortunes of Oliver
-Horn” shows Mr. Smith’s art at his best, for it is art of the
-heart as well as of the brain and hand. His romance has permanent
-elements of human nature; idealism, loyalty, and love are the soul
-of it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Mr. Fox, who also finds his characters largely in the South, has
-drawn the picture of the primitive mountain types in the Kentucky
-hills with the charm which comes from great simplicity and from an
-intimate knowledge of the people he describes.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Johnston, who began by writing romances pure and simple, has
-dramatized the story of the Civil War in two able novels, “The Long
-Roll” and “Cease Firing.” It is not easy to characterize these
-stories in a phrase, nor is it necessary. They are written with a
-kind of quiet passion which gives the current sufficient volume to
-carry an enormous amount of history without sacrificing dramatic
-interest.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
- <img src="images/img15.jpg" width="600" height="301" alt="authors" />
-</div>
-
-<p style="clear: both;">Dr. Mitchell, like Dr. Holmes, revealed himself in several
-different capacities, as physician, as poet, as essayist, and as
-story writer. His novels are characterized by inventiveness, by
-dexterity, by freshness of feeling. “The Adventures of François” is
-a capital piece of story-telling; while many people regard “Hugh
-Wynne” as the best semi-historical story which has appeared in
-this country. In other novels Dr. Mitchell showed his skill as a
-psychologist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="boxed">
-
-
-<h2><a name="SUPPLEMENTARY_READING" id="SUPPLEMENTARY_READING"></a><i>SUPPLEMENTARY READING</i></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50px;">
- <img src="images/book50.jpg" width="50" height="49" alt="book" />
-</div>
-
-
-<table>
-<tr><td style="width: 65%;">A Study of Prose Fiction</td><td><i>Bliss Perry</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Criticism and Fiction</td><td><i>W. D. Howells</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Essays on Modern Novelists</td><td> <i>William L. Phelps</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging">American Prose Masters (Cooper, Hawthorne, Emerson, Poe, Lowell and Henry James)</td><td><i>W. C. Brownell</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>American Poetry and Fiction</td><td><i>C. F. Richardson</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Great American Writers</td><td><i>Trent and Erskine</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Some American Storytellers</td><td><i>Frederick Taber Cooper</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>American Short Stories</td><td><i>Charles Baldwin, Editor</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The American Short Story</td><td><i>Elias Lieberman</i></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50px;">
- <img src="images/book20.jpg" width="20" height="19" alt="books" />
- <img src="images/book20.jpg" width="20" height="19" alt="books" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>QUESTIONS ANSWERED</i></p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Subscribers desiring further information concerning this subject
-can obtain it by writing to</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><b><i>The Mentor Association</i></b></p>
-<p class="center smaller"><b><i>381 Fourth Avenue, New York City</i></b></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/plate1.jpg" width="400" height="560" alt="HENRY JAMES" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">HENRY JAMES</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/h.jpg" width="80" height="78" alt="H" />
-
-<p class="dropcap hanging"><span class="uppercase">Henry James</span>, a careful and thoughtful writer, is the subject of
-one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American
-Novelists.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="clear center p4"><b>HENRY JAMES</b></p>
-
-<p class="smaller center"><b>Monograph Number One in The Mentor Reading Course</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap p2">A number of years ago Henry James was at work on a volume of short
-stories. “And when will it be ready?” he was asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I never know,” he said. “I work by easy stages.”</p>
-
-<p>That sentence gives the keynote to the character of the great
-novelist himself and of his writings. He wrote carefully, easily,
-and neatly.</p>
-
-<p>Born in New York City on April 15, 1843, Henry James spent most of
-his boyhood in Europe. His father was Henry James, the theological
-writer, and from him the novelist derived his idiomatic,
-picturesque English. His brother became Professor William James,
-the psychologist and philosopher, who died in 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Henry James entered Harvard Law School in 1860; but found out soon
-that he cared more for literature than for law. His first short
-story was published in 1865, and many stories and sketches quickly
-followed this.</p>
-
-<p>After 1869 he made his home in England, living in London, or Rye in
-Sussex, for the most part. He was a member of the American Academy
-of Arts and Letters, and in 1911 received the degree of L. H. D.
-from Harvard.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. James dictated all his work to a secretary, and he rewrote
-and polished it from a typewritten copy. With his writing he took
-infinite pains. His sentences are long and involved at times; but
-in spite of this confusing fact his sentences are balanced and
-complete.</p>
-
-<p>His whole life showed the same ordered neatness as his books.
-His library was carefully selected and shelved. His letters were
-always arranged in little piles of the same size. One man tells
-that during a call on the novelist he saw him, when the ash had
-collected on the end of his cigarette, walk the length of his study
-and snip it out of the open window.</p>
-
-<p>Henry James has been called a modern of the moderns as a novelist.
-He described contemporary life. His characters are people of
-the world; but they are subtle and complex. The human element
-predominates.</p>
-
-<p>He is not widely read, because the public finds him hard to read.
-As someone said, “His books need to be translated for the average
-reader.” This is due in part to his use of long and involved
-sentences, and in part to his subject matter.</p>
-
-<p>His career was a happy one. It was long, and was free from serious
-mistakes. His talent and point of view were personal. He had a
-crowd of imitators; but none of these approached the master in
-greatness.</p>
-
-<p>There was one side of the character of Henry James, the man, of
-which few people knew. Never did a man in need come to him whom he
-did not offer to help. Years ago, when James was deriving an income
-of less than $1,500 a year from his writing, a novelist died in
-England. He died in poverty, leaving two little children absolutely
-alone in the world. A friend assisted the children and wrote to
-other literary men asking for help. One literary man, whose income
-was over $200,000, was appealed to in vain. Among those from whom
-aid was asked was Henry James. A check for $250, more than a sixth
-of his whole year’s income, arrived from him by return mail.</p>
-
-<p>Henry James died in London on February 29, 1916.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/plate2.jpg" width="400" height="563" alt="WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot hanging">
-
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/w.jpg" width="80" height="79" alt="W" />
-
-<p class="dropcap hanging"><span class="uppercase">William Dean Howells</span>, a close student of American character and
-a realist in his writings, is the subject of one of the six
-intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American Novelists.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="clear center p4"><b>WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS</b></p>
-
-<p class="smaller center"><b>Monograph Number Two in The Mentor Reading Course</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap p2">The “Dean of American Letters”&mdash;that is what William Dean Howells
-is called. He is and has been for half a century the literary
-leader of America, and well he deserves the title! James Russell
-Lowell said of him that he “is one of the chief honors of our
-literature.” He has never written a bad sentence, never struck
-a false note. He is the leading representative of the realistic
-school of American fiction.</p>
-
-<p>William Dean Howells might with truth be called a “self-made man
-of letters.” He was born at Martin Ferry, Ohio, on March 1, 1837.
-His father, William Cooper Howells, was a printer and editor, whose
-library was large and well chosen for that time. It was in this
-library that the future novelist picked up most of his education.
-As usual in a small country town, the regular schooling consisted
-only of the “three R’s”; but Howells was an omniverous reader. He
-particularly enjoyed poetry. It is said that even as a small boy
-he wrote verse, setting it into type himself. Whether this was
-ever printed is not known; but surely some space in his father’s
-newspaper must have been found for these productions of his
-juvenile pen.</p>
-
-<p>In 1851 the family fortunes met with disaster, and Howells went to
-work as compositor on the Ohio State Journal at a salary of four
-dollars a week. He soon graduated into journalism, and at the age
-of twenty-two was news editor of the Columbus, Ohio, State Journal.</p>
-
-<p>Howells’ first published work appeared in 1860. The “Poems of Two
-Friends” were written with John J. Piatt. He began to contribute to
-the Atlantic Monthly, then just founded, about this time also. A
-campaign biography of Abraham Lincoln was written by him in 1860.
-For this he was appointed consul at Venice, where he remained until
-1865. There he studied the Italian language and literature, and
-broadened his education considerably.</p>
-
-<p>On his return to the United States he wrote for the New York
-Tribune and the Nation for a time. Then in 1866 he became assistant
-editor of the Atlantic Monthly, becoming editor six years later. He
-was a model magazine editor.</p>
-
-<p>For awhile he contributed to Harper’s Magazine; then he became
-editor of the Cosmopolitan, and in 1900 revived “The Editor’s Easy
-Chair” for Harper’s. He is at present the writer of this department.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Howells has received many honorary degrees. Harvard and Yale
-have both conferred on him the degree of Master of Arts, while he
-has received the degree of Doctor of Letters from Yale, Oxford,
-Columbia, and Princeton, and the degree of Doctor of Laws from
-Adelbert College. In 1909 he was elected president of the American
-Academy of Arts and Letters. Since 1885 the novelist has lived in
-New York City.</p>
-
-<p>Howells is a great realist and a perfect artist in words. He was
-once asked if he never lost himself in his work and was carried
-away by what he was writing.</p>
-
-<p>“Never,” he answered. “The essence of achievement is to keep
-outside, to be entirely dispassionate, as a sculptor must be,
-molding his clay.”</p>
-
-<p>And indeed of all American writers Howells comes the nearest to
-success in holding the mirror up to Nature.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/plate3.jpg" width="400" height="562" alt="THOMAS NELSON PAGE" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">THOMAS NELSON PAGE</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot hanging">
-
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/t.jpg" width="80" height="78" alt="T" />
-
-<p class="dropcap hanging"><span class="uppercase">Thomas Nelson Page</span>, a novelist who writes of the fast vanishing
-old order of the South, is the subject of one of the six
-intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American Novelists.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="clear center p4"><b>THOMAS NELSON PAGE</b></p>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><b>Monograph Number Three in The Mentor Reading Course</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap p2">Above all things Thomas Nelson Page is a Virginian, by birth, by
-family, and in his writings. Born on the old plantation of Oakland
-in Hanover County, Virginia, he can boast of two grandfathers who
-were governors of the state, one of these, Thomas Nelson, being
-a signer of the Declaration of Independence. It is Virginia and
-Virginians “before the war” and during the reconstruction period
-that he has sought to portray in his books.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Nelson Page opened his eyes in old Virginia on April 23,
-1853. He was a rather precocious boy. Many a beating did he
-receive at school for stealing time from his lessons to write
-short stories on his slate for the amusement of his companions.
-He entered Washington and Lee University when he was only sixteen
-years old. He remained there three years, and then after spending a
-little time in Kentucky decided to enter the <a name="Err1" id="Err1"></a>law department of the
-University of Virginia in 1873. He finished the work there in about
-half the time usually required, and began practising in Richmond,
-where he remained until 1893.</p>
-
-<p>Page had always felt the charm of times gone by. He tried to
-follow the law faithfully; but more and more strongly came the
-call to picture artistically “a civilization which, once having
-sweetened the South, has since well nigh perished from the earth.”
-He yearned for the old plantation life,&mdash;the stately mansions of
-his forefathers, the grandeur to which those men and women of other
-days attained, and the overgrown fence rows and fields of his own
-country home.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he decided to write. “Marse Chan” was published in 1884,
-and won the author immediate recognition. People of both the North
-and South were enthusiastic about it. The author himself tells how
-he came to write this tale:</p>
-
-<p>“Just then a friend showed me a letter which had been written by
-a young girl to her sweetheart in a Georgia regiment, telling him
-that she had discovered that she loved him, after all, and that if
-he would get a furlough and come home she would marry him; that
-she had loved him ever since they had gone to school together in
-the little schoolhouse in the woods. Then, as if she feared such a
-temptation might be too strong for him, she added a postscript in
-these words: ‘Don’t come without a furlough; for if you don’t come
-honorably I won’t marry you.’ This letter had been taken from the
-pocket of a private dead on the battlefield of one of the battles
-around Richmond, and, as the date was only a week before the battle
-occurred, its pathos struck me very much. I remember I said ‘The
-poor fellow got his furlough through a bullet.’ The idea remained
-with me, and I went to my office one morning and began to write
-‘Marse Chan,’ which was finished in about a week.”</p>
-
-<p>“In Ole Virginia,” a collection of three stories of negro life
-and character, was published in 1887. This is perhaps his most
-characteristic work. Many stories, essays, and poems followed.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Billy in Page’s story “Meh Lady” is a distinct creation.
-At the wedding of his mistress and the Union captain in the old,
-dismantled home, the minister asks, “Who giveth this woman to be
-married to this man?” His lady is without a relative, and Uncle
-Billy sees that it is up to him. But he doesn’t want to take the
-responsibility; so stepping forward he answers solemnly, “Gord.”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Nelson Page is never sectional in his writing. Everything
-that he writes tends to bring about better feeling between the
-North and the South.</p>
-
-<p>He is now ambassador to Rome, appointed by President Wilson.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/plate4.jpg" width="400" height="561" alt="JAMES LANE ALLEN" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">JAMES LANE ALLEN</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot hanging">
-
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/j.jpg" width="80" height="78" alt="J" />
-
-<p class="dropcap hanging"><span class="uppercase">James Lane Allen</span>, a romanticist of Kentucky, is the subject of
-one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating “American
-Novelists.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="clear center p4"><b>JAMES LANE ALLEN</b></p>
-
-<p class="smaller center"><b>Monograph Number Four in The Mentor Reading Course</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap p2">A historical novelist worthy to rank with Nathaniel Hawthorne,
-James Lane Allen has been called. Both have given us pictures of
-the lives of our forefathers; but, while Hawthorne has shown us
-New England, Allen draws the Blue Grass region of Kentucky and its
-people.</p>
-
-<p>It may be due to the fact that James Lane Allen was a seventh child
-that he has achieved such remarkable success in literature. He was
-born in Fayette County, near Lexington, Kentucky, in 1849, the
-youngest child of Richard and Helen Allen. He can number among his
-paternal ancestors some of the first settlers of Virginia. One of
-these ancestors, Richard Allen, moved to Kentucky, where he lived
-the easy, hospitable life of a gentleman farmer on his large estate.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Allen’s mother was a descendant of the Pennsylvania
-Scotch-Irish and the Brooks family of Virginia. A native of
-Mississippi, she was a lover of nature and literature. She inspired
-in her son a love for reading old romances, poetry, and history.</p>
-
-<p>Although Allen was only twelve years old when the storm of Civil
-War broke over our country, he was old enough to realize its
-horrors and the suffering that it brought to the people of the
-South. Just before the beginning of the war his father lost his
-fortune; so the formal education that Allen received was small;
-but under his mother’s guidance he pursued his studies at home.
-Long walks in the fields and forests about his home gave him a keen
-insight into nature.</p>
-
-<p>He was graduated from Transylvania University at Lexington,
-Kentucky, in 1872, and three years later received a degree of A. M.
-from there. A little before this his father died, and James had to
-begin teaching in order to meet expenses. He spent a year as master
-in a country school, walking six miles to and from the school every
-day.</p>
-
-<p>For two years he taught in Missouri and then came back to Kentucky
-as a private tutor. He was called to his alma mater to teach, and
-two years later Bethany College, in West Virginia, offered him the
-chair of Latin and higher English.</p>
-
-<p>He planned to go to Germany for a time; but gave this up when the
-idea of becoming a doctor of medicine attracted him. This was when
-he was doing graduate work at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. But his
-love of literature led him to take up writing, and in 1884 he
-moved to New York. He arrived there unknown and with no letters of
-introduction; but “he took up his abode in a garret and started
-out in a very humble way.” He sent letters to the New York Evening
-Post, poems to Harper’s and the Atlantic Monthly, and essays to
-the Critic and the Forum. A criticism of Henry James’ “Portrait of
-a Lady” first attracted attention to the young author, and soon
-there was a strong demand for his sketches of Kentucky life. “The
-Blue Grass Region of Kentucky” was the title given to the collected
-volume of these sketches.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Allen then moved to Cincinnati; but later moved again to
-Washington, believing that the capital of the country would be
-the future home of literature and art in America. In Washington,
-however, he found too much social and official distraction; so he
-returned to New York.</p>
-
-<p>“The Kentucky Cardinal,” published in 1895, is one of Mr. Allen’s
-best books. It is a sort of pastoral poem in prose, showing the
-struggle between Nature and Love. “The Choir Invisible” shows the
-noble love of a married woman for a man who is not her husband.</p>
-
-<p>James Lane Allen is best known as a writer of fiction; but he
-has also published many critical articles and much verse. He is
-recognized as one of the most poetic and dramatic of American
-novelists.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/plate5.jpg" width="400" height="563" alt="WINSTON CHURCHILL" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">WINSTON CHURCHILL</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot hanging">
-
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/w.jpg" width="80" height="79" alt="W" />
-
-<p class="dropcap hanging"><span class="uppercase">Winston Churchill</span>, a master of the historical novel, is the
-subject of one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating
-“American Novelists.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="clear center p4"><b>WINSTON CHURCHILL</b></p>
-
-<p class="smaller center"><b>Monograph Number Five in The Mentor Reading Course</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap p2">Although he graduated from Annapolis in 1894, Winston Churchill
-never served in the navy. Instead, immediately after completing
-his studies he began writing. He had found out that he could write
-when he was still at Annapolis, and decided that fiction rather
-than the navy was his line of work. For this the young graduate had
-fine equipment. Annapolis gave him self-reliance and determination.
-Those graduates of the Naval Academy who have not gone into the
-navy have usually been successful in whatever they have done. This
-is particularly true in the case of Churchill. Well educated, at
-the same time he is full of the joy of life itself, and likes all
-sorts of outdoor sports. He is a favorite everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>Winston Churchill was born in St. Louis, Missouri, on November 10,
-1871, and spent the first sixteen years of his life there. From a
-school in St. Louis he went to Annapolis. There he became strongly
-interested in American history and problems, and made up his mind
-to devote his life and energies to these. In the brief intervals
-between studies and drills he gathered much of the material that he
-afterward used in his novels.</p>
-
-<p>While at Annapolis he stood among the first five or six in his
-class. He also reorganized the crew and was captain for a year.
-He likewise played a good game of football. Fencing, tennis, and
-horseback riding are his favorite sports.</p>
-
-<p>For awhile after graduation he worked on the Army and Navy Journal,
-and then joined the staff of the Cosmopolitan Magazine. During this
-time he wrote a great deal; but did not attempt to publish these
-first experiments in fiction.</p>
-
-<p>He married in 1895 and moved not long afterward to his home at
-Cornish, New Hampshire. Churchill was very fortunate. He did not
-have to earn a living by doing hackwork, and could take plenty of
-time with anything that he wrote.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that genius is the capacity for taking great pains.
-Winston Churchill surely illustrates this adage. Hard work,
-determination, and a keen sense of values made him the successful
-novelist that he is. He was ambitious to write the very best he
-knew how. Once, when living in St. Louis, he hired an office and
-went down to it as regularly as any other man of business. His
-writing was business, and was treated as such.</p>
-
-<p>He rewrote “Richard Carvel” at least five times. He worked from
-breakfast until one o’clock, after lunch for two or three hours,
-and after dinner often far into the night. This, the first of
-three of Winston Churchill’s novels dealing with American history,
-became the most popular book in the United States. “The Crisis,”
-the second of these historical novels, appeared a few years after
-“Richard Carvel,” and in 1904 “The Crossing,” the last of the
-trilogy, was published. The background for “The Crisis” was the
-Civil War, and “The Crossing” dealt with the great western movement
-across the country.</p>
-
-<p>Churchill has served in the New Hampshire legislature, and also
-ran for the governorship of that state. “Coniston” was a direct
-outgrowth of his political associations. The novel is a story of
-politics, with a charming love story running through it.</p>
-
-<p>Winston Churchill is still a young man, and there is every reason
-to believe that his best and biggest work is still to come.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
- <img class="center" src="images/plate6.jpg" width="400" height="565" alt="OWEN WISTER" />
- <div>
- <p class="smaller center">OWEN WISTER</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot hanging">
-
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/o.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt="O" />
-
-<p class="dropcap hanging"><span class="uppercase">Owen Wister</span>, a drawer of real, vital characters, is the subject
-of one of the six intaglio-gravure pictures illustrating
-“American Novelists.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="clear center p4"><b>OWEN WISTER</b></p>
-
-<p class="smaller center"><b>Monograph Number Six in The Mentor Reading Course</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap p2">It is remarkable how many successful writers get into literature
-by accident. Very few novelists begin by taking up writing as a
-profession: most of them drift into it from other fields. Owen
-Wister was no exception to this. He settled down in Philadelphia to
-practise law; but the call of the pen was too strong for him. He
-was thirty-one years old before he began to write.</p>
-
-<p>Owen Wister is a grandson of Frances Anne Kemble, better known as
-Fannie Kemble, the famous actress. He was born on July 14, 1860,
-in Philadelphia. When he was ten years old he was taken to Europe,
-where he remained three years. On his return to this country he
-entered St. Paul’s School, Concord, whence he went to Harvard,
-graduating in 1882. He took highest honors in music.</p>
-
-<p>At Harvard he showed that he could write when he produced a
-libretto, “Dido and Æneas,” for one of the Hasty Pudding Club
-entertainments. When there he also edited one of the college
-papers, and in his junior year wrote a poem on Beethoven, which was
-published in the Atlantic Monthly.</p>
-
-<p>With the intention of becoming a music critic Wister went abroad
-once more. He began the study of composition under Liszt in Paris.
-In 1883 he changed his plans and returned to America. His health
-was bad; so he went hunting in Wyoming and Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>He found not only new strength, but a new world. The stirring
-atmosphere of the West woke in him a desire to write about it;
-but he did nothing at this time. He returned east and entered the
-Harvard Law School. He graduated in 1888, and a year later was
-admitted to the bar in Philadelphia.</p>
-
-<p>But the West had great attraction for him. In the next ten years he
-made fifteen trips there. He soon saw that law was not his career.</p>
-
-<p>In 1891 a series of studies and stories of the West by Wister
-started in Harper’s Magazine. These were later gathered together in
-a volume called “Red Men and White.” All the characters in these
-sketches were true to life; the Indian was the Indian of fact, and
-the cowboy was the cowboy of reality.</p>
-
-<p>When Wister first began to write a fellow-townsman and critic of
-him said, “Owen Wister has written some creditable stories; but so,
-to be sure, have many others. His real strength lies in musical
-criticism.” This opinion hardly holds good today.</p>
-
-<p>“The Virginian” is the best thing that Wister has done. It is
-absolutely realistic. This is a quality of all this author’s work,
-as is shown by an anecdote he himself tells:</p>
-
-<p>“Once a cowpuncher listened patiently while I read him a
-manuscript. It concerned an event on an Indian reservation. ‘Was
-that the Crow reservation?’ he inquired at the finish. I told him
-that it was no real reservation and no real event; and his face
-expressed displeasure. ‘Why,’ he demanded, ‘do you waste your time
-writing what never happened, when you know so many things that did
-happen?’”</p>
-
-<p>So well was the story told that the cowboy had believed he was
-listening to facts.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Baltimore” was another successful novel of Wister’s, and
-besides he has written several interesting biographies, the best of
-which is “The Seven ages of Washington.”</p>
-
-<p>Wister is not only a writer. He has actively fought for decent
-government in Philadelphia. At one election he ran for city
-councilman of his ward, knowing that his fight was hopeless. He is
-an American through and through, and in his books he portrays the
-best things in the life of our country.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center smaller">
-<b>PREPARED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF OF THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION</b><br />
-<b>ILLUSTRATION FOR THE MENTOR, No. 25</b>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<h2><a name="Transcribers_Notes" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes:</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The printing error “Univeristy” was changed to “University” on page
-18 (<a href="#Err1">law department of the University of Virginia</a>). Other uncommon
-spellings were retained.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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