[Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature by Margaret Ball]@TWC D-Link book
Sir Walter Scott as a Critic of Literature

CHAPTER III
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He also refers to the question of historical "keening," and concludes that it is possible to have so much accuracy that the public will refuse to be interested, as _Lear_ would hardly be popular on the stage if the hero were represented in the bearskin and paint which a Briton of his time doubtless wore.[216] The motive of the novel is a subject which naturally engages the attention of the novelist-critic.

Romantic fiction, he thinks may have sufficient justification if it acts as an opiate for tired spirits.

A significant antithesis between his point of view in this matter and the more common attitude taken by critics in his time is illustrated by two reviews of Mrs.Shelley's _Frankenstein_, to which we may refer, though the book was later than those included in the _Novelists' Library_.
Scott wrote in _Blackwood's_: "We ...

congratulate our readers upon a novel which excites new reflections and untried sources of emotion."[217] The _Quarterly_ reviewer took the opposite and more conservative attitude and expressed himself thus: "Our taste and our judgment alike revolt at this kind of writing, and the greater the ability with which it may be executed the worse it is--it inculcates no lesson of conduct, manners, or morality; it cannot mend, and will not even amuse its readers, unless their taste has been deplorably vitiated--it fatigues the feelings without interesting the understanding; it gratuitously harasses the heart, and wantonly adds to the store, already too great, of painful sensations."[218] In general Scott minimizes the effect of any moral that may be expressed in the novel, but occasionally he seems inconsistent, when he is talking of sentiments that are peculiarly distasteful to him.[219] But his thesis is that "the direct and obvious moral to be deduced from a fictitious narrative is of much less consequence to the public than the mode in which the story is treated in the course of its details."[220] In the _Life of Fielding_ he says of novels: "The best which can be hoped is that they may sometimes instruct the youthful mind by real pictures of life, and sometimes awaken their better feelings and sympathies by strains of generous sentiment, and tales of fictitious woe.

Beyond this point they are a mere elegance, a luxury contrived for the amusement of polished life." He conceived that his prefaces might be useful to warn readers against any ill effects that might otherwise result from the reading of the accompanying texts; and our comments on the _Lives of the Novelists_ may fitly close with a quotation which shows the writer's attitude toward the novels and his own criticisms upon them.


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