Through the Magic Door eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about Through the Magic Door.

Through the Magic Door eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about Through the Magic Door.

Among the minor excellences of “Richard Feverel”—­excuse the prolixity of an enthusiast—­are the scattered aphorisms which are worthy of a place among our British proverbs.  What could be more exquisite than this, “Who rises from prayer a better man his prayer is answered”; or this, “Expediency is man’s wisdom.  Doing right is God’s”; or, “All great thoughts come from the heart”?  Good are the words “The coward amongst us is he who sneers at the failings of humanity,” and a healthy optimism rings in the phrase “There is for the mind but one grasp of happiness; from that uppermost pinnacle of wisdom whence we see that this world is well designed.”  In more playful mood is “Woman is the last thing which will be civilized by man.”  Let us hurry away abruptly, for he who starts quotation from “Richard Feverel” is lost.

He has, as you see, a goodly line of his brothers beside him.  There are the Italian ones, “Sandra Belloni,” and “Vittoria”; there is “Rhoda Fleming,” which carried Stevenson off his critical feet; “Beauchamp’s Career,” too, dealing with obsolete politics.  No great writer should spend himself upon a temporary theme.  It is like the beauty who is painted in some passing fashion of gown.  She tends to become obsolete along with her frame.  Here also is the dainty “Diana,” the egoist with immortal Willoughby Pattern, eternal type of masculine selfishness, and “Harry Richmond,” the first chapters of which are, in my opinion, among the finest pieces of narrative prose in the language.  That great mind would have worked in any form which his age had favoured.  He is a novelist by accident.  As an Elizabethan he would have been a great dramatist; under Queen Anne a great essayist.  But whatever medium he worked in, he must equally have thrown the image of a great brain and a great soul.

VIII.

We have left our eighteenth-century novelists—­Fielding, Richardson, and Smollett—­safely behind us, with all their solidity and their audacity, their sincerity, and their coarseness of fibre.  They have brought us, as you perceive, to the end of the shelf.  What, not wearied?  Ready for yet another?  Let us run down this next row, then, and I will tell you a few things which may be of interest, though they will be dull enough if you have not been born with that love of books in your heart which is among the choicest gifts of the gods.  If that is wanting, then one might as well play music to the deaf, or walk round the Academy with the colour-blind, as appeal to the book-sense of an unfortunate who has it not.

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Project Gutenberg
Through the Magic Door from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.