Dorothy Johnston, a valued reader (and a very fine writer) has asked me whether I plan to talk much about the Romantic poets in my new book. A Critical History of the English Short Story. With the exception of Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," which I take to be a classic short story, and Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads, I do not plan to forage in the exquisite gardens of the Romantic poets, although I have taught them many times. However, I do talk a bit about origins of the short story in the Romantic period, and include a draft here about that connection. Thanks, Dorothy, for the conversation.
From the very beginnings of short story criticism, literary historians
have attempted to account for the common judgment that the short story began in
America in the early nineteenth century by distinguishing short fiction of this
period from that written previously in England and Europe. For example, in
l90l, in the first extended formal discussion of the form after Poe, American
critic Brander Matthews attributed the difference to a new sense of
"compression, originality, ingenuity, and fantasy." The following
year, critic Bliss Perry denied this distinction, arguing that the tales of Boccaccio and Chaucer
exhibit the same characteristics. Instead, Perry claimed, the nineteenth century
short story is distinguished from earlier stories by the "attitude"
of the story writer toward his material. A few years later, H. S. Canby made
this emphasis on the attitude of the teller more specific. In the nineteenth century
short story, argued Canby, there is a more vivid "realization for the
reader of that which moved the author to write, be it incident, be it emotion,
be it situation.... Thus the art of the short story becomes as much an art of
tone as of incident."
Because tone rather than plot or character has frequently been
cited as a distinguishing characteristic of short fiction, perhaps this feature
signifies the best place to more clearly establish what is uniquely new in
short fiction in the early nineteenth century. One source of the focus on tone
in early short fiction can be found in the eighteenth-century personal essay,
which added a sophisticated reflective voice to the exemplum, the basic form of
short narrative previously predominant. In
the early nineteenth century, this personalized voice was further
combined with the new romantic interest in folktale and legend. For example, in
America, although Washington Irving took his "story" from folklore, it
was his "voice" that set his sketches apart from the Germanic models
he used for "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy
Hollow." In an 1824 letter to Henry
Brevort, Irving said, "I consider a story merely as a frame on which to
stretch my materials. It is the play of thought, and sentiment and language;
the weaving of characters, lightly yet expressively delineated; the familiar
and faithful exhibition of scenes in common life; and the half concealed vein
of humour that is often playing through the whole--these are among what I aim at."
It is obvious that Diedrich
Knickerbocker, the voice of Irving's two most famous tales, is more like the eighteenth-century voice of the Spectator's English squire Roger de
Coverly than he is like the anonymous storyteller of folk tale and ballad. The
basic difference is that whereas in the folk tale the personality of the teller
is backgrounded, the "town talker"
depends on his own personal impression of that which he narrates. If Irving's Sketchbook,
especially the "Sleepy Hollow" and "Rip Van Winkle"
stories, mark a new departure for short fiction, that innovation lies in the uniting
of folklore story with the individualized teller and thus, while maintaining
interest in the story, adding a subjective interest. Another well-known example
of this combination of the spooky tale
with the sophisticated teller is Gogol's
"The Overcoat," an often-cited candidate for the honor of
originating the short story in the
nineteenth century in Europe.
For the folklore teller, it is the story that is important, not
the characters as individuals nor the personality of the teller. With Chaucer
and Boccaccio (where of course we have dramatized and individualized tellers,
even very famous ones in Chaucer), although the tales may reveal something
about the personalities of the tellers, either as to their type or as to their
social milieu generally, the tellers do not significantly take part in the
story itself, nor do they reveal in any engaged way how they feel about either
the stories they are telling or the characters in them. It is only after the romantic shift that the
feeling of the teller gives importance to the action of the tale.
Although neither Bliss Perry nor H. S. Canby specify what the
change in attitude in the teller or the new emphasis on tone means for the
short story, it might be suggested that it marks a loss of "faith" in
the supernatural content of the story once held by the old folk teller and the
consequent adoption of a new ironic view by the sophisticated teller. However,
this new sophisticated attitude is also marked, as is suggested by Boris Ejxenbaum
in his famous 1918 essay on Gogol's "The Overcoat," by a nostalgia
for what has been lost. The secularizing of the supernatural in the short story
in the nineteenth century means that the drama of the clash between the sacred
and the profane no longer takes place in the cosmos or in the lives of the saints,
but rather in the psyches of individuals, as Hawthorne and Poe's stories so
amply show.
This secularizing and internalizing of the sacred is a basic
Romantic view, outlined by M. H. Abrams as "natural supernaturalism. However,
the implications of this shift, although discussed by Abrams, Robert Langbaum,
and others in terms of the poetry of the period, have never been explored in short
fiction, for short fiction's relationship to Romanticism has itself seldom been
examined.
The only extended discussion of the romantic element in the short
story is Mary Rohrberger's book on Hawthorne and the modern short story. By
citing from Hawthorne's prefaces as well as from the comments of various contemporary
short story writers, Rohrberger argues that both Hawthorne and modern short story
writers share the romantic notion of a reality that lies beyond the extensional,
everyday world with which the novel has always been traditionally
concerned. Consequently, the form shares
characteristics with the romance in being symbolic and romantic. "The
short story derives from the romantic tradition," argues Rohrberger.
"The metaphysical view that there is more to the world than that which can
be apprehended through the senses provides the rationale for the short story
which is a vehicle for the author's probing of the nature of the real. As in the metaphysical view, reality lies
beyond the ordinary world of appearances, so in the short story, meaning lies
beneath the surface of the narrative.
Although Rohr Berger is
surely right in claiming that the short story is closer to the romance form
than to the novel in its basically symbolic nature, she treats the form as
though it were identical to the romance, failing to consider either the new
emphasis on tone in short fiction in the nineteenth century or the unavoidable
influence of the "objective" and "realistic" conventions of
fiction pioneered in the novel during the eighteenth century. The short story
cannot be considered a "new" form in the nineteenth century if it is
simply a resurgence of the old romance. What must be examined is the result of
the combination of the symbolic romance form with the new emphasis on the
teller and the new focus on the "real," as opposed to the "ideal."
Only then can we understand how reality can be shown to lie beneath the
ordinary world of appearances even as the details of the story focus on the
external world.
I would like to suggest
three basic implications of this shift that influence the short story form
throughout the nineteenth century. First of all, the shift of emphasis from the
sacred as a transcendent realm to taking it to be a human projection places a
new focus not only on the imagination as the source of the sacred, but on the
theme of the imaginative construction of reality itself. Consequently, short
fiction of the nineteenth century often presents a situation that is ambiguously
both real and imaginative. Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" is the
classic example. Second, the supernatural figures of the old romance story,
which were formerly taken to be symbolic of transcendent values, are
transformed into projective fictions of either the teller or the central character.
Melville's Bartleby is such a seemingly supernatural yet ultimately metaphoric projective
figure. Third, the teller, even though he
still focuses on the formerly supernatural subject matter of the old
romance and folk tale, does so without belief in the supernatural or
transcendent. The result is that he often is transformed into an ironic voice.
As Boris Ejxenbaum has shown, Gogol's "Overcoat" is an experiment
with this combination or folk tale and ironic voice.
One way to approach the short story's romantic nature is to examine
the question of when and where the short story form thrives and blossoms--the
kind of social situation and cultural milieu wherein the short story seems more
relevant to the concerns of a society than the novel. For example, George Lukacs
has suggested that the short fiction form appears in either a phase of "a
Not Yet" (Nochnicht) or in a phase
of the "No Longer" (Nichtmehr).
Boccaccio's tales appear in an era before the modern bourgeois novel,
before there was a totality of human
relations and behavior as interpreted by bourgeois society.
Lukacs says that fiction
withdraws from the novel into the short form when "the social basis, the
social milieu of the novel disappears, and the central figure must hold his own
against a pure natural occurrence. Lukacs might have added that this natural
rather than social conflict does not come from the outside only. The inward turning
of fiction begins in the romantic period and reaches such heights in the later
nineteenth century that the internalized,
secularized, and projective romance form vies with the novel form for predominance.
The modern return to this mode began with the Romantic period when character "revelation"
rather than character "evolution" became most important and when the
notion of epiphany replaced socially established value as the source of
meaning. When external values are lost, then the short fiction form seems most
appropriate to the milieu. The short story has always been an antisocial form,
either in its adherence to mythic relationships or in its adoption of
secularized psychological replacements for the lost myth.
The short narrative form in the modern world, regardless of what
sophistication it has received at the hands of contemporary artists, remains
close to the presocial modes with which It began. In a Kenyon Review Symposium several years
ago, writers from all over the world testified to this fact. For example, Erih Kos of Yugoslavia said that
since his country has only recently emerged from a peasant economy, it also has
only recently emerged from the period of myths. The short story is a popular
form in Yugoslavia, says Kos, because the people are "still under the
influence of myths, whose magical lights give fateful significance to all
everyday happenings, even apparently insignificant ones."
Because the short story does not deal with unified social values,
the form seems to thrive best in societies where there is fragmentation of
values and people. This fragmentation has often been cited as one reason why
the short story became quickly popular in early nineteenth century America. In
1924, Katherine Fullerton Gerould said that American short story writers dealt
with peculiar atmospheres and special moods, for America has no centralized
civilization. "The short story does not need a complex and traditional
background so badly as the novel does," argued Gerould.
Wendell Harris and Lionel
Stevenson have suggested somewhat the same reason for the predominance of the
novel in English literature. Stevenson points out that as soon as a culture
becomes more complex, brief narratives expand or "agglomerate" and
thus cause the short story to lose its identity. The fragmentation of sensibility
did not set in in England until about 1880 at which time the short story came
to the fore as the best medium for presenting this fragmentation. Wendell
Harris also reminds us that the nineties in England were known as the golden
age of the short story and notes how with the fragmentation of sensibility,
perspective or "angle of vision "becomes most important in fiction,
especially in the short story in which, instead of a world to enter as in the
novel, the form presents a vignette to contemplate.
Harris has also noted that from Fielding to Hardy, fiction was
defined in England as "a presentation of life in latitudinal or
longitudinal completeness." This concept of narrative paralleled man's
intellectual concern with society; thus
the short story was thought to be insignificant in England until late in the
nineteenth century when the appropriate vision for it arrived. The
"essence of the short story" says Harris, "is to isolate, to portray
the individual person, or moment, or scene in isolation detached from the great
continuum at once social and historical,
on which it had been the business of the English novel, and the great concern
of nineteenth century essayists, to insist." As Frank O'Connor has noted,
whereas the novel can adhere to the
classical concept of a civilized society, "the short story, remains, by
its very nature remote from the community
romantic, individualistic, and intransigent."
In the most generalized sense, then, the basic development of
short narrative, from its origins in mythic accounts up through the beginning
of the nineteenth century, can be summarized in the following way: Beginning
with the first major shift from the old romance story of the middle ages when
Boccaccio secularized the tale form and made a human comedy out of a previously
divine one, continuing on up through the eighteenth century, the history of the
form is one of a developing movement away from the metaphoric parable toward
the realistic in which, although the "end" of the story was still to
focus on a moral purpose, the "means" of the story was to appeal to verisimilitude
and reason and to depend on the involvement and attitude of the individual
teller.
With Horace Walpole's experimental combining of the romance story
with novelistic characters in "The Castle of Otranto," we see a self-conscious effort to return to the old metaphoric
romance form while using the methods of verisimilitude of the novel. The result
was that gothic fiction became projective, dealing not with external values,
but with subjective values, with dream material and psychologized reality. Mrs.
Barbauld's experiment with the gothic fragment "Sir Bertrand" further
emphasized the projective origins of short fiction by detaching character and
event from any semblance of social framework and presenting story as the
embodiment of dream. With the gothic writers and the romantic poets of the
early part of the nineteenth century, we see a shift away from a concept of language
as referential and the art work as
imitative to a view of language as constitutive and the art work as creative.
The Romantics demythologized the old tales and ballads, divesting them
of their external values and remythologized them by internalizing those values
and self-consciously projecting them outwards. The Romantics wished to preserve
the old religious values of the romance and ballad forms without their
religious dogma and mythological trappings. By perceiving the origin of the old
story mode to be within basic psychic processes, they secularized the myth by
radically foregrounding the subjective and projective nature of story.
This effort to return to the old religious perception of the world
discarded by the eighteenth century was spearheaded by Wordsworth and Coleridge
in the Lyrical Ballads. The ballad story, which had previously existed
seemingly in vacuo as received story without the influence of the teller, now
became infused with the subjectivity of the poet and projected onto the world
as a new mythus. Value existed in the world outside, but as the Romantics never
forgot, only because it existed first within the imagination of the artist. This
basically romantic view infused the epoch- making Lyrical Ballads and underlies an important distinction between the
romantic lyric and eighteenth century poetry before it.
The Romantics' fascination with medievalism and folk material sprang from their realization of the basic religious or spiritual source of both the old romance and the folk ballad. Their return to the old ballads was part of their effort to recapture the primal religious experience without received dogma. This is indeed the focus in Wordsworth's "Preface to the Lyrical Ballads" and in Coleridge's discussion of his and Wordsworth's dual tasks in The Biographia Literaria. As Robert Langbaum has argued, the uniting of the old ballad material with the lyric voice of a single individual perceiver in a concrete situation gave rise to the romantic lyric. The positioning of a real speaker in a concrete situation encountering a particular phenomenon which his own subjectivity transforms from the profane into the sacred is the key to the Romantic breakthrough.
The Romantics' fascination with medievalism and folk material sprang from their realization of the basic religious or spiritual source of both the old romance and the folk ballad. Their return to the old ballads was part of their effort to recapture the primal religious experience without received dogma. This is indeed the focus in Wordsworth's "Preface to the Lyrical Ballads" and in Coleridge's discussion of his and Wordsworth's dual tasks in The Biographia Literaria. As Robert Langbaum has argued, the uniting of the old ballad material with the lyric voice of a single individual perceiver in a concrete situation gave rise to the romantic lyric. The positioning of a real speaker in a concrete situation encountering a particular phenomenon which his own subjectivity transforms from the profane into the sacred is the key to the Romantic breakthrough.
As Coleridge says, his own
task was to focus on the supernatural, "yet so as to transfer from our
inward nature a human interest and a semblance of truth sufficient to procure for
these shadows of imagination that willing suspension of disbelief for the
moment, which constitutes poetic faith."
Wordsworth, on the other hand, was to choose subjects from ordinary life
and "excite a feeling analogous to the supernatural by awakening the
mind's attention from the lethargy of custom and directing it to the loveliness
and wonders of the world before us." Clear examples of this dual project
are Coleridge's lyrical story, "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" and
Wordsworth's lyrical story, "Resolution and Independence." In the Lyrical
Ballads, the ballad or "story" element, the hard outlines of the
event, are subsumed by the lyrical element, which is foregrounded. However, in
America, for Hawthorne and Poe, it is the story element that is foregrounded.
The lyrical element is primarily
reflected by the personal voice of the teller.
Consequently, while America is usually given the credit for
originating the short story, it is clear that the basic impulse for the form
began in England with the Romantic poets. Because the new subjective narrative
impulse was fulfilled by Romantic poetry and fiction in England was identified
with the realistic impulse of the novel, the short story did not develop in
England during the Romantic period. However, this is not to say that one cannot
find examples in short narrative during the period of the conventions which
later dominate the short story.
In next week's post, I will discuss three well known and often cited
short narratives from the early nineteenth century in England to point out how
they make use of, although perhaps not with the same facility as stories in
America and on the Continent, the same devices and assumptions that underlie
the more accepted beginnings of the form with Poe and Gogol. I choose Lamb's "Dream Children"
because of its focus on the tension between reality and imagination; John
Polidori's "The Vampyre," because of the projective nature of its
character configuration; and Sir Walter Scott's "Wandering Willie's
Tale" because of the relationship between its narrator and the traditional
ballad story. I will provide footnote documentation at the end of Part II of this discussion.
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