T
HE
first
point to be observed
in the consideration of "Charles O'Malley" is the great
popularity
of the work. We believe that in this respect it has surpassed even the
inimitable compositions of Mr. Dickens. At all events it has met with a
most extensive sale; and, although the graver journals have avoided its
discussion, the ephemeral press has been nearly if not quite unanimous
in its praise. To be sure, the commendation, although unqualified,
cannot
be said to have abounded in specification, or to have been, in any
regard,
of a satisfactory character to one seeking precise ideas on the topic
of
the book's particular merit. It appears to us, in fact, that the
cabalistical
words "fun" "rollicking" and "devil-may-care," if indeed words they be,
have been made to stand in good stead of all critical comment in the
case
of the work now under review. We first saw these dexterous expressions
in a fly-leaf of
[page 448:] "Opinions of the
Press"
appended to the renowned "Harry Lorrequer" by his publisher in Dublin.
Thence transmitted, with complacent echo, from critic to critic,
through
daily, weekly and monthly journals without number, they have come at
length
to form a pendant and a portion of our author's celebrity -- have come
to be regarded as sufficient response to the few ignoramuses who,
obstinate
as ignorant, and fool-hardy as obstinate, venture to propound a
question
or two about the true claims of "Harry Lorrequer" or the justice of the
pretensions of "Charles O'Malley."
We shall not insult our readers by
supposing any one of
them unaware of the fact, that a book may be even exceedingly
popular without
any legitimate literary merit. This
fact
can be proven by numerous examples which, now and here, it will be
unnecessary
and perhaps indecorous to mention. The dogma, then, is absurdly false,
that the popularity of a work is
primâ facie
evidence
of its excellence in some respects; that is to say, the dogma is false
if we confine the meaning of excellence (as here of course it must be
confined)
to excellence in a literary sense. The truth is, that the popularity of
a book is
primâ facie evidence of just the converse
of the proposition -- it is evidence of the book's
demerit,
inasmuch as it shows a "stooping to conquer" -- inasmuch as it shows
that
the author has dealt largely, if not altogether, in matters which are
susceptible
of appreciation by the mass of mankind -- by uneducated thought, by
uncultivated
taste, by unrefined and unguided passion. So long as the world retains
its present point of civilization, so long will it be almost an axiom
that
no extensively
popular book, in the right appli-cation of
the term, can be a work of high merit,
as regards those
particulars
of the work which are popular. A book may be readily sold, may be
universally
read, for the sake of some half or two-thirds of its matter, which half
or two-thirds may be susceptible of popular appreciation, while the
one-half
or one-third remaining may be the delight of the high-est intellect and
genius, and absolute
caviare to the rabble. And just as
Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci,
so will the writer of fiction, who looks most sagaciously to his
own
interest, combine all votes by intermingling with his loftier
efforts
such amount of less ethereal matter as will give general currency to
his
composition. And here we shall be pardoned for quoting some
[page
449:] observations of the English artist, H. Howard.
Speaking
of
imitation, he says:
The pleasure which results
from it, even
when employed upon the most ordinary materials, will always render that
property of our art the most attractive with the majority, because it
may
be enjoyed with the least mental exertion. All men are in
some degree judges of it. The cobbler in his own line may criticise
Apelles;
and popular opinions are never to be wholly disregarded concerning that
which is addressed to the public -- who, to a certain extent, are
generally
right; although as the language of the refined can never be
intelligible
to the uneducated, so the higher styles of art can never be acceptable
to the multitude. In proportion as a work rises in the scale of
intellect,
it must necessarily become limited in the number of its admirers. For
this
reason the judicious artist, even in his loftiest efforts, will
endeavor
to introduce some of those qualities which are interesting to all, as a
passport for those of a more intellectual character.
And these remarks upon painting -- remarks which are
mere truisms in themselves -- embody nearly the whole
rationale
of the topic now under discussion. It may be added, however, that
the
skill with which the author addresses the lower taste of the
populace,
is often a source of pleasure, because of admiration, to a taste higher
and more refined, and may be made a point of comment and of
commendation
by the critic.
In our review, last month, of
"Barnaby Rudge," we
were prevented, through want of space, from showing how Mr. Dickens had
so well succeeded in uniting all suffrages. What we have just said,
however,
will suffice upon this point. While he has appealed, in innumerable
regards,
to the most exalted intellect, he has meanwhile invariably touched a
certain
string whose vibrations are omni-prevalent. We allude to his powers
of
imitation -- that species of imitation to which Mr. Howard has
reference
-- the
faithful depicting of what is called still-life,
and
particularly of
character in humble condition. It is his
close
observation and imitation of nature here which have rendered him
popular,
while his higher qualities, with the ingenuity evinced in addressing
the
general taste, have secured him the good word of the informed and
intellectual.
But this is an important point upon
which we desire
to be distinctly understood. We wish here to record our positive
dissent
(be that dissent worth what it may) from a very usual opinion -- the
opinion
that Mr. Dickens has done justice to his own genius -- that any man
ever
failed to do grievous wrong to his own genius -- in appealing to the
popular
judgment
at all. As a matter
[page 450:]
of
pecuniary policy alone, is any such appeal defensible. But we speak, of
course, in relation to fame -- in regard to that
---- spur which the true spirit doth raise
To scorn delight and live laborious days.
That a perfume should be found by any "true spirit"
in the incense of mere popular applause, is, to our own apprehension at
least, a thing inconceivable, inappreciable, -- a paradox which gives
the
lie unto itself -- a mystery more profound than the well of Democritus.
Mr. Dickens has no more business with the rabble than a seraph with
a
chapeau de bras. What's Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba? What is he
to
Jacques Bonhomme
* or Jacques Bonhomme to him?
The higher genius is a
rare
gift and divine. [[Greek text:]] xxx xxx xxx xxx xx xxxx xxx [[:Greek
text]]
-- not to all men Apollo shows himself;
he is
alone
great
who beholds him.
† And his
greatness has its
office
God-assigned. But that office is not a low communion with low, or even
with ordinary intellect. The holy -- the electric spark of genius is
the
medium of intercourse between the noble and more noble mind. For lesser
purposes there are humbler agents. There are puppets enough, able
enough,
willing enough, to perform in literature the little things to which we
have had reference. For one Fouqué there are fifty
Molières.
For one Angelo there are five hundred Jan Steens. For one Dickens there
are five million Smolletts, Fieldings, Marryatts, Arthurs, Cocktons,
Bogtons
and Frogtons.
It is, in brief, the duty of all whom
circumstances
have led into criticism -- it is, at least, a duty from which
we individually shall never shrink -- to uphold the true dignity of
genius, to combat its degradation, to plead for the exercise of its
powers
in those bright fields which are its legitimate and peculiar province,
and which for it alone lie gloriously outspread.
But to return to "Charles O'Malley,"
and its popularity.
We have endeavored to show that this latter must not be considered in
any
degree as the measure of its merit, but should rather be understood as
indicating a deficiency in this respect, when we bear in mind, as we
should
do, the highest aims of intellect in fiction.
[page 451:]
A slight examination of the work, (for in truth it is worth no more,)
will
sustain us in what we have said. The plot is exceedingly meagre.
Charles
O'Malley, the hero, is a young orphan Irishman, living in Galway
county,
Ireland, in the house of his uncle, Godfrey, to whose sadly encumbered
estates the youth is heir apparent and presumptive. He becomes
enamoured,
while on a visit to a neighbor, of Miss Lucy Dashwood, and finds a
rival
in a Captain Hammersley. Some words carelessly spoken by Lucy, inspire
him with a desire for military renown. After sojourning, therefore, for
a brief period, at Dublin University, he obtains a commission and
proceeds
to the Peninsula, with the British army under Wellington. Here he
distinguishes
himself; is promoted; and meets frequently with Miss Dashwood, whom
obstinately,
and in spite of the lady's own acknowledgment of love for himself, he
supposes
in love with Hammersley. Upon the storming of Ciudad Rodrigo he returns
home; finds his uncle, of course,
just dead; and sells his
commission to disencumber the estate. Presently Napoleon escapes from
Elba,
and our hero, obtaining a staff appointment under Picton, returns to
the
Peninsula, is present at Waterloo, (where Hammersley is killed) saves
the
life of Lucy's father, for the second time, as he has already twice
saved
that of Lucy herself; is rewarded by the hand of the latter; and,
making
his way back to O'Malley Castle, "lives happily all the rest of his
days."
In and about this plot (if such it
may be called)
there are more absurdities than we have patience to enumerate. The
author,
or narrator, for example, is supposed to be Harry Lorrequer as far as
the
end of the preface, which by the way, is one of the best portions of
the
book. O'Malley then tells his own story. But the publishing office of
the
"Dublin University Magazine" (in which the narrative originally
appeared)
having been burned down, there ensues a sad confusion of identity
between
O'Malley and Lorrequer, so that it is difficult, for the nonce, to say
which is which. In the want of copy consequent upon the disaster,
James,
the novelist, comes in to the relief of Lorrequer, or perhaps of
O'Malley,
with one of the flattest and most irrelevant of love-tales. Meantime,
in
the story proper are repetitions without end. We have already said that
the hero
saves the life of his mistress twice, and of her father
twice.
But not content with
[page 452:] this, he has
two
mistresses, and
saves the life of both, at different periods, in
precisely
the same manner -- that is to say, by causing his horse, in each
instance,
to perform a Munchausen side-leap, at the moment when a spring forward
would have impelled him upon his beloved. And then we have one
unending,
undeviating succession of junketings, in which "devilled kidneys" are
never
by any accident found wanting. The unction and pertinacity with which
the
author discusses what he chooses to denominate "devilled kidneys" are
indeed
edifying, to say no more. The truth is, that drinking wine, telling
anecdotes,
and devouring "devilled kidneys" may be considered as the sum total, as
the
thesis of the book. Never in the whole course of his
eventful
life, does Mr. O'Malley get "two or three assembled together" without
seducing
them forthwith to a table, and placing before them a dozen of wine and
a dish of "devilled kidneys." This accomplished, the parties begin what
seems to be the business of the author's existence -- the narration of
unusually
broad tales -- like those of the Southdown
mutton.
And here, in fact, we have the
plan of that whole work of
which the "United Service Gazette" has been pleased to vow it "would
rather
be the author than of all the `Pickwicks' and `Nicklebys' in the world"
-- a sentiment which we really blush to say has been echoed by many
respectable
members of our own press. The general plot or narrative is a mere
thread
upon which after-dinner anecdotes, some good, some bad, some ut-terly
worthless,
and
not one truly original, are strung with about as much
method, and about half as much dexterity, as we see ragged urchins
employ
in stringing the kernels of nuts.
It would, indeed, be difficult to
convey to one who
has not examined this production for himself, any idea of the
exceedingly
rough, clumsy, and inartistical manner in which even this bald
conception
is carried out. The stories are absolutely dragged in by the ears. So
far
from finding them result naturally or plausibly from the conversation
of
the interlocutors, even the blindest reader may perceive the author's
struggling
and blundering effort to introduce them. It is rendered quite evident
that
they were originally "on hand," and that "O'Malley" has been concocted
for their introduction. Among other
niaïseries we observe
the
silly trick of whetting appetite by delay. The conversation over the
[page
453:] "kidneys" is brought, for example, to such a pass that
one of the speakers is called upon for a story, which he forthwith
declines
for any reason, or for none. At a subsequent "broil" he is again
pressed,
and again refuses, and it is not until the reader's patience is fairly
exhausted, and he has consigned both the story and its author to Hades,
that the gentleman in question is prevailed upon to discourse. The only
conceivable result of this
fanfarronade is the ruin of the tale
when told, through exaggerating anticipation respecting it.
The anecdotes thus narrated being the
staple of the
book, and the awkward manner of their interlocution having been pointed
out, it but remains to be seen what the anecdotes are, in themselves,
and
what is the merit of their narration. And here, let it not be supposed
that we have any design to deprive the devil of his due. There are
several
very excellent anecdotes in "Charles O'Malley" very cleverly and
pungently
told. Many of the scenes in which Monsoon figures are rich less,
however,
from the scenes themselves than from the piquant, but by no means
original
character of Monsoon -- a drunken, maudlin, dishonest old Major, given
to communicativeness and mock morality over his cups, and not over
careful
in detailing adventures which tell against himself. One or two of the
college
pictures are unquestionably good -- but might have been better. In
general,
the reader is made to feel that fine subjects have fallen into
unskilful
hands. By way of instancing this assertion, and at the same time of
conveying
an idea of the tone and character of the stories, we will quote one of
the shortest, and assuredly one of the best.
"Ah, by-the-by, how's
the Major?"
"Charmingly: only a
little bit in a
scrape just now. Sir Arthur -- Lord Wellington, I mean -- had him up
for
his fellows being caught pillaging, and gave him a devil of a rowing a
few days ago.
" 'Very disorderly
corps yours, Major
O'Shaugnessy,' said the general; `more men up for punishment than any
regiment
in the service.'
"Shaugh muttered
something, but his
voice was lost in a loud cock-a-doo-doo-doo, that some bold chanticleer
set up at the moment.
" 'If the officers do
their duty Major
O'Shaugnessy, these acts of insubordination do not occur.'
"Cock-a-doo-doo-doo,
was the reply.
Some of the staff found it hard not to laugh; but the general went on --
" 'If, therefore, the
practice does
not cease, I'll draft the men into West India regiments.'
"
'Cock-a-doo-doo-doo!' [page
454:]
" 'And if any
articles pillaged from
the inhabitants are detected in the quarters, or about the persons of
the
troops -- '
" 'Cock-a-doo-doo-
doo!' screamed
louder here than ever.
" 'Damn that cock --
where is it?'
"There was a general
look around on
all sides, which seemed in vain; when a tremendous repetition of the
cry
resounded from O'Shaughnessy's coat-pocket: thus detecting the valiant
Major himself in the very practice of his corps. There was no standing
this: every one burst out into a peal of laughter; and Lord Wellington
himself could not resist, but turned away, muttering to himself as he
went
-- `Damned robbers every man of them,' while a final war-note from the
Major's pocket closed the interview."
Now this is an anecdote at which
every one will laugh;
but its effect might have been vastly heightened by putting a few words
of grave morality and reprobation of the conduct of his troops, into
the
mouth of O'Shaughnessy, upon whose character they would have told well.
The cock, in interrupting the thread of his discourse, would thus have
afforded an excellent context. We have scarcely a reader, moreover, who
will fail to perceive the want of
tact shown in dwelling upon
the
mirth which the anecdote occasioned. The error here
is precisely
like that of a man's laughing at his own spoken jokes. Our author is
uniformly
guilty of this mistake. He has an absurd fashion, also, of informing
the
reader, at the conclusion of each of his anecdotes, that, however good
the anecdote might be, he (the reader) cannot enjoy it to the full
extent
in default of the
manner in which it was orally narrated.
He has no business to say anything of this kind. It is his duty to
convey
the manner not less than the matter of his narratives.
But we may say of these latter that,
in general,
they have the air of being
remembered rather than
invented.
No man who has seen much of the rough life of the camp will fail to
recognize
among them many very old acquaintances. Some of them are as ancient as
the hills, and have been, time out of mind, the common property of the
bivouac. They have been narrated orally all the world over. The chief
merit
of the writer is, that he has been the first to collect and to print
them.
It is observable, in fact, that the second volume of the work is very
far
inferior to the first. The author seems to have exhausted his whole
hoarded
store in the beginning. His conclusion is barren indeed, and but for
the
historical details (for which he has no claim to merit) would be
especially
prosy and dull.
Now the true invention never exhausts itself.
It is mere cant and ignorance to talk of the possibility of
[page
455:] the really imaginative man's "writing himself out."
His
soul but derives nourishment from the streams that flow therefrom. As
well
prate about the aridity of the eternal ocean [[Greek text:]] xxx xxx
xxx
[[:Greek text]]. So long as the universe of thought shall furnish
matter
for novel combinations, so long will the spirit of true genius be
original,
be exhaustless -- be itself.
A few cursory observations. The book is
filled to overflowing
with songs of very doubtful excellence, the most of which are put into
the mouth of one Micky Free, an amusing Irish servant of O'Malley's,
and
are given as his impromptu effusions. The subject of the improvisos is
always the matter in hand at the moment of composition. The author
evidently
prides himself upon his poetical powers, about which the less we say
the
better; but if anything were wanting to assure us of his absurd
ignorance
and inappreciation of Art, we should find the fullest assurance in the
mode in which these doggrel verses are introduced.
The occasional sentiment with which
the volumes are
interspersed there is an absolute necessity for skipping.
Can anybody tell us what is meant by
the affectationof
the word
L'envoy which is made the heading of twoprefaces?
That portion of the account of the
battle of Waterloo
which gives O'Malley's experiences while a prisoner, and in close
juxta-position
to Napoleon, bears evident traces of having been translated, and very
literally
too, from a French manuscript.
The English of the work is sometimes
even amusing.
We have continually, for example,
eat, the present,
for
ate, the perfect -- see page 17. At page 16, we have this
delightful
sentence -- "Captain Hammersley, however,
never took
further
notice of me, but continued to recount, for the amusement of those
about, several excellent stories of his military career, which I
confess
were heard with every
test of delight by all save me." At
page 357 we have some sage talk about "the entire of the army;" and at
page 368, the accomplished O'Malley speaks of "
drawing a last
look
upon his sweetheart." These things arrest our attention as we open the
book at random. It abounds in them, and in vulgarisms even much worse
than
they.
But why speak of vulgarisms of
language? There is
a disgusting vulgarism of thought which pervades and contaminates this
whole production, and from which a delicate or lofty mind will
[page
456:] shrink as from a pestilence. Not the least repulsive
manifestation
of this leprosy is to be found in the author's blind and grovelling
worship
of mere rank. Of the Prince Regent, that filthy compound of all that is
bestial that lazar-house of all moral corruption -- he scruples not to
speak in terms of the grossest adulation -- sneering at Edmund Burke in
the same villanous breath in which he extols the talents, the graces
and
the virtues of George the Fourth! That any man, to-day, can be
found
so degraded in heart as to style this reprobate, "one who, in every
feeling
of his nature, and in every feature of his deportment was every inch a
prince" -- is matter for grave reflection and sorrowful debate. The
American,
at least, who shall peruse the concluding pages of the book now under
review,
and not turn in disgust from the base sycophancy which infects them, is
unworthy of his country and his name. But the truth is, that a gross
and
contracted soul renders itself unquestionably manifest in almost every
line of the composition.
And this --
this is
the
work,
in respect to which its author, aping the airs of intellect, prates
about
his "haggard cheek," his "sunken eye," his "aching and tired head," his
"nights of toil" and (Good Heavens!) his "days of
thought!"
That the thing is popular we grant -- while that we cannot deny the
fact,
we grieve. But the career of true taste is onward -- and now more
vigorously
onward than ever -- and the period, perhaps, is not hopelessly distant,
when, in decrying the mere balderdash of such matters as "Charles
O'Malley,"
we shall do less violence to the feelings and judgment even of the
populace,
than, we much fear, has been done to-day.