Mr. Howells has written a long series of poems, novels,
sketches, stories, and essays, and has been perhaps
the most continuous worker in the literary art among
American writers. He was born at Martin’s
Perry, Belmont County, Ohio, March 1, 1837, and the
experiences of his early life have been delightfully
told by himself in A Boy’s Town, My
Year in a Log Cabin, and My Literary Passions.
These books, which seem like pastimes in the midst
of Howells’s serious work, are likely to live
long, not only as playful autobiographic records,
but as vivid pictures of life in the middle west in
the middle of the nineteenth century. The boy
lived in a home where frugality was the law of economy,
but where high ideals of noble living were cheerfully
maintained, and the very occupations of the household
tended to stimulate literary activity. He read
voraciously and with an instinctive scent for what
was great and permanent in literature, and in his
father’s printing-office learned to set type,
and soon to make contributions to the local journals.
He went to the state Capitol to report the proceedings
of the legislature, and before he was twenty-two had
become news editor of the State Journal of
Columbus, Ohio.
But at the same time he had given clear intimations
of his literary skill, and had contributed several
poems to the Atlantic Monthly. His introduction
to literature was in the stirring days just before
the war for the Union, and he had a generous enthusiasm
for the great principles which were then at stake.
Yet the political leaven chiefly caused the bread
he was baking to rise, and his native genius was distinctly
for work in creative literature. His contribution
to the political writing of the day, besides his newspaper
work, was a small campaign life of Lincoln; and shortly
after the incoming of the first Republican administration
he received the appointment of consul at Venice.
At Venice he remained from 1861 to 1865, and these
years may fairly be taken as standing for his university
training. He carried with him to Europe some
conversance with French, German, Spanish, and Italian,
and an insatiable thirst for literature in these,
languages. Naturally now he concentrated his
attention on the Italian language and literature, but
after all he was not made for a microscopic or encyclopaedic
scholar, least of all for a pedant. What he was
looking for in literature, though he scarcely so stated
it to himself at the time, was human life, and it
was this first-hand acquaintance he was acquiring with
life in another circumstance that constituted his
real training in literature. To pass from Ohio
straight to Italy, with the merest alighting by the
way in New York and Boston, was to be transported
from one world to another; but he carried with him
a mind which had already become naturalized in the
large world of history and men through the literature
in which he had steeped his mind. No one can
read the record of the books he had revelled in, and
observe the agility with which he was absorbed, successively,
in books of greatly varying character, without perceiving
how wide open were the windows of his mind; and as
the light streamed in from all these heavens, so the
inmate looked out with unaffected interest on the
views spread before him.
Copyrights
A Modern Instance from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.