Thomas Parker is a longtime reader and frequent commenter on this blog. On Monday’s post he recalled a passage he thought may have been the work of George Saintsbury. Unable to track it down for attribution, he quoted from uncertain memory: “Nothing pains me more than the contempt with which people treat second-rate writers -- as if there were room in life for only the first-rate.”
Dave Lull tells me the
writer in question may have been not Saintsbury but a comparably situated critic
in French literature, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, who has little standing in literary circles today, at least in the
English-speaking world. Dave identified this sentence, though not the source,
as Saint-Beuve’s: “Nothing is more painful to me than the disdain with which
people treat second-rate authors, as if there were room only for the
first-raters.”
Clive James devotes a chapter to Saint-Beuve in Cultural Amnesia (2007). Dave quotes James, in
part: “The student should be slow to join in the denigration. Sainte-Beuve
really was the greatest literary critic of his time, even though he sometimes
gave too much praise to mediocrity, and not enough to genius.” I would distinguish
“second-rate” status from “mediocrity,” though James continues: “Sainte-Beuve
certainly had a gift for slighting the gifted while rabbiting on endlessly in
praise of mediocrities.”
No writer is minor while
we are paying attention to his work, enjoying it, admiring it, sharing it with
other readers. Every serious reader agrees that Swift and Tolstoy are major
writers – “first-rate” – whom we are obligated to read if we wish to be fully
literate. That’s easy. But what about their contemporaries; say, Matthew Prior and
Nikolai Leskov? Who would wish to miss the latter’s novella “Lady Macbeth of
the Mtsensk District”? “Second-rate” is better than “thirteenth-rate,” and even thirteenth may be worth pursuing.
In her life of Siegfried
Sassoon, Journey from the Trenches, Jean Moorcroft Wilson says Sassoon
shared with his friend Edmund Blunden an interest in “the neglected by-ways, a taste which reflected their literary interests as a whole.
Though both had a proper respect for the major writers of the past, it was the
minor figures who intrigued them.”
“Minor,” I suspect, is not
a qualitative term, precisely. It ought to be used carefully, with discretion and due
respect. After all there’s a class of writers judged unimportant by the usual
standards, by the usual people – minor (such a patronizing word), un-engagé,
witty rather than weighty, blithely indifferent to literary fashion and
significance. The English seem to specialize in this species. Think of Sydney
Smith, Walter Savage Landor, Maurice Baring, Saki, Walter de la Mare, Lord
Berners and Henry “Chips” Channon. The unlikely alpha male of the bunch, the
major English minor writer is, of course, Max Beerbohm. Among his friends was
another, the New Jersey-born British essayist and critic Logan Pearsall Smith, a
writer whose resistance to pigeon-holing and portentousness defines him. All of
these writers are entertaining, sometimes even wise. I would read any of them
before I would the latest, much-heralded tour de force.
Thank you, Mr. Lull! Now I can just write the damn quote in my commonplace book and get on with my life. I'll give myself partial credit for remembering as much of it as I did, and even a point or two for knowing it was one of those "S" Frenchmen.
ReplyDeleteI would be more confident of this attribution if I had found a source in Sainte-Beuve’s writings. Each quotation I ran across was unaccompanied by a reference to any of his writings.
DeleteNothing is more painful to me than the disdain with which people my age (73, same as our host) treat modern authors, as if God intended our generation to have the last word.
ReplyDeleteFrom Olivia Manning's The Great Fortune (Book 1 in the Balkan Trilogy): Clarence listened to all this with an occasional murmur, then picked up the book she had been reading. It was one of the D. H. Lawrence novels on which Guy was lecturing that term.
ReplyDelete“Kangaroo,” he read out scornfully. “These modern novelists! Why is it that not one of them is really good enough? This stuff, for instance ...”
“I wouldn’t call Lawrence a modern novelist.”
“You know what I mean.” Clarence flipped impatiently through the pages. “All these dark gods, this phallic stuff, this - this fascism! I can’t stand it.” He threw down the book and stared accusingly at her.
She took the book up. “Supposing you skip the guff, as you call it! Supposing you read what is left, simply as writing.” She read aloud one of the passages Guy had marked. It was the description of the sunset over Manly Beach: “The long green rollers of the Pacific’, ‘the star-white foam’, ‘the dusk-green sea glimmered over with smoky rose’.
Clarence groaned through it, appalled at what was being imposed on him. “I know!” he said, in agony, when she stopped. “All that colour stuff- it’s just so many words strung together. Anyone could do it.”
Harriet re-read the passage through to herself. For some reason, it did not seem so vivid and exciting as it had done before Clarence condemned it. She was inclined to blame him for that. She turned on him: “Have you ever tried to write? Do you know how difficult it is?”
Well, yes. Clarence admitted he had once wanted to be a writer. He did know it was difficult. He had given up trying because, after all, what was the point in being a second-rate writer? If one could not be a great writer - a Tolstoy, a Flaubert, a Stendhal - what was the point in being a writer at all?
Disconcerted, Harriet said lamely: “If everyone felt like that, there wouldn’t be much to read.”