Letters from New York, Part III [pp. 308-312]

Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 15, Issue 5

1849.3 * Letters from New York. 309 and expanded into a noble maturity. Many writers had sprung up-some like flowers, some like trees, some like fungi. A literary man was no rara avis in terris. Mr. Cooper had seemingly forgotten this: he thought he should find things, in all respects, precisely as he had left them. He fully believed that Mr. Irving and himself were the only living American authors of any note whatsoever. He was undeceived quickly and forcibly. His presence excited little or no observation. Not a being turned to look at him, as he walked, consciously celebrated, up Broadway. No digit was pointed in his direction. Few, except his old friends, came to pay their respects or "see the elephant." He was not "dined" or " partied" more than any respectable gentleman would have been under the circumstances. Scarcely was he lionized at all. He found himself' one of many." Instead of receiving such neglect coolly, Mr. Cooper scolded, and took upon himself the duties of an offended and unappreciated Mentor. Among other matters which he had failed to note was the advance in power of our newspaper press. It was small enough when he first went to Europe. It had, moreover, always lauded him, even while he was gone (except on one occasion, when he attributed a severe criticism on the "Bravo" to the envy of the king of the French) "to the top of his bent." What must have been his surprise, his indignation, his scorn, upon finding that the newspapers dared to animadvert upon the line of conduct he thought fit to pursue-upon his severe comments on his na tive country, his invectives, his sarcasms, his ridi cule, his unconcealed contempt? Instead of meet ing the editors with their own weapons, in a fight which he had wantonly commenced, on a field of his own choosing (for he began in the news papers) he fled to the Sanctuary of the Law! in stituted numerous " civil suits" for libel, procured indictments from Grand Juries, and did his "lit tle best" to annoy and worry the press into si lence. He failed lamentably. The press, even to this day, continues its strictures on his books, and proclaims "the truth with boldness." For myself, I write utterly without prejudice. I would praise Mr. Cooper's "new work," as the pub lishers say, as readily as another man's; but no fears of so irate an author would deter me from "scoring" him, when he merits such an applica tion. I hesitate not to pronounce "The Sea Lions" a very stupid novel, tedious, dismal; loose in its style, ill-constructed, poorly begun, feebly continued, and lamely ended; and, being an "in dependent American," I beg leave to observe to the illustrious author in the words of Patrick Henry, "if that is a libel, sir, make the most of it!' Do not, Mr. Editor, esteem me in a fault-finding mood, when I tell you that I am disappointed in another book "just out." Mr. Melville's "Mardi" is likewise a failure. The attempt was considerable; the labor of production must have been great, since every page fairly reeks with "the smoke of the lamp." I read "Typee" with very great pleasure, and was among the first to set forth its extraordinary beauties, not readily appreciated by the public. I also liked "Omoo," though wisely and not "too well." "Mardi" is the superlative third in descending degrees. " Typee" good; "Omoo" less good; " Mardi" least good. Let me quote the latter's preface. It is brief-and in this praiseworthy-almost "as the posy of a ring." Le voici. "Not long ago, having published two narratives of voyages in the Pacific, which, in many quarters, were received with incredulity, the thought occurred to me of indeed writing a romance of Polynesian adventure, and publishing it as such: to see whether the fiction might not possiblybe received for a verity; in some degree the reverse of my former experience. This thought was the germ of other,, which have resulted in Mardi." The above clumsily expressed paragraph means, I presume, that as Mr. Melville's facts have been mistaken for fictions, he wishes to see if his fictions will be mistaken for facts. On this point he may set his mind entirely at rest. Although it is by no means a good way to make people receive the false for the true, by forewarning them of your design, there can be no reader so intensely verdant, as not to discern the grossness and utter improbabilities of the fabrications in "Mardi." There is, moreover, a continual straining after effect, an effort constantly at fine writing, a sacrifice of natural ease to artificial witticism. To borrow an expression from the stable, Mr. Melville "feels his oats." He has been overfed with praise. He has a reputation to lose, and he must write up to it. He is "somebody." When he, unconscious of his fine genius, created "Ty pee," he was nobody, on Fame's record. His very name had a doubtful, romantic sound. It was thought to be a mere "nom de plume." But it was real, whatever was "Typee," and so it be came "'great in mouths of wisest censure." What a pity! For we might have had more such delightful books as Typee! Mr. Irving's "Book of the Hudson" is cool and pleasant summer reading. Its style is very like the flow of a river "at its own sweet will." Let me commend the charming volume to all travellers. I have not read Mr. Willis's "Rural Letters and other Records of Thought at Leisure," ex cept in some of those parts of which the whole Letters from New York. 309 1849.] 3

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Letters from New York, Part III [pp. 308-312]
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Benjamin, Park
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Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 15, Issue 5

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