The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(1907–21).
Volume XIII. The Victorian Age, Part One.
XIV. George Meredith, Samuel Butler, George Gissing.
§ 19. The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft.
A third
of these imaginative liberations Gissing found in his lifelong admiration
of Dickens. His
monograph
established a claim for Dickens as a representative of “national life and
sentiment”;
it disposed
finally of the heresy that Dickens’s characters were merely types or caricatures
devoid
of basis in observation; it brought into relief his skill in the presentation
of various types
of women;
and it accorded due praise to his style, discriminating in it the salutary
element
which
is drawn from the eighteenth century. The book is more than a criticism
of Dickens; it is
a manual
of the art of fiction, which brings to bear upon a mass of problems raised
by his work
a ripe
judgment formed by practice, reading and reflection. One further imaginative
solace
Gissing
found in the solitary retreat outlined in The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft;
a
retreat
freed from the menace of poverty, from the exactions of acquaintanceship,
filled with
the atmosphere
of books and of quiet comfort; even in prosperity, Gissing preferred the
rô of
social
outlaw. In form, The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft lies somewhere between
the
journal
intime and the diary, reflection and observation being expanded to the
length of brief
essays,
and “turned to the mood of the sky and the procession of the year”; memories
of the
bitter
past, or of vanishing phases of English custom and scenery; thoughts stirred
by some
phrase
of famous authorship, or by the anticipations of mortality, or by things
which he
resented,
such as industrialism, compulsion of the individual, talk of war: all are
mingled and
unified
by the style and tone which echo “the old melodious weeping of the poets.”
The book
is not
autobiographical, though it seems to be the expression of a personality
almost as
intimately
realised as the autobiographical form presupposes. Gissing wrote of it
that it was
“much
more an aspiration than a memory.”
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