[The English Novel by George Saintsbury]@TWC D-Link bookThe English Novel CHAPTER I 3/45
It is no part of our business to survey, in any detail, the not very numerous but distinctly interesting compositions which range in point of authorship from Longus and Heliodorus, probably at the meeting of the fourth and fifth centuries, to Eustathius in the twelfth.
At one time indeed, when we may return to them a little, we shall find them exercising direct and powerful influence on modern European fiction, and so both directly and indirectly on English: but that is a time a good way removed from the actual beginning of our journey.
Still, _Apollonius of Tyre_, which is probably the oldest piece of English prose fiction that we have, is beyond all doubt derived ultimately from a Greek original of this very class: and the class itself is an immense advance, in the novel direction, upon anything that we have before.
It is on the one hand essentially a "romance of adventure," and on the other essentially a "love-story"-- in senses to which we find little in classical literature to correspond in the one case and still less in the other.
Instead of being, like _Lucius_ and the _Golden Ass_, a tissue of stories essentially unconnected and little more than framed by the main tale, it is, though it may have a few episodes, an example of at least romantic unity throughout, with definite hero and definite heroine, the prominence and importance of the latter being specially noteworthy.
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