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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Age of Johnson
>
Sterne, and the Novel of His Times
> Her best qualities as surviving in her later stories
Spontaneity a leading characteristic of these Novels; Proof of this in the
Diary
of Mme. dArblay
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume X. The Age of Johnson.
III.
Sterne, and the Novel of His Times
.
§ 14. Her best qualities as surviving in her later stories.
It is an injustice that her last two books,
Camilla
in particular, should have been allowed utterly to drop out. The old brilliance is, doubtless, largely gone. But the more solid qualities remain almost untouched. There is the old keenness of observation, the old narrative genius, the old power of contriving ingenious and, in the main, natural situations. The secondary figures are certainly less laughable, but that, as Macaulay hints, is largely because they are less freakish and more human; because their humour is often next door to pathos and the laughter they call out, to tears. This is true even of
The Wanderer,
when we can once forget the grotesque openingthe writer can think of no better machinery for introducing her heroine, a beautiful English girl, than the make-up of a negressand the woeful touches of grandiloquencethe heroine is described as a female Robinson Crusoewhich the authoress of
Evelina
would have been the first to laugh out of court. Such lapses, however, give no fair impression of the book; and, with the best will in the world, Macaulay has made them bulk for more than they are worth. Strike out a few paragraphs, and
The Wanderer
is not written in jargonany more than, with the exception of a few pages, the language of
Cecilia
is Johnsonese.
46
To the end Miss Burney remains what she was at the begining: a keen observer, a great character-monger, a supreme story-teller, the first writer to see that the ordinary embarrassments of a girls life would bear to be taken for the main theme of a novel. To her we owe not only
Evelina, Cecilia
and
Camilla,
but also
Mansfield Park
and
The Absentee.
When Macaulay ended his estimate of Miss Burney with these words, he said better than he knew. He was thinking of her as the first of a long line of woman novelists. He forgot that the innovation applied not only to her sex, but to her theme.
47
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Spontaneity a leading characteristic of these Novels; Proof of this in the
Diary
of Mme. dArblay
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