[David Harum by Edward Noyes Westcott]@TWC D-Link bookDavid Harum INTRODUCTION 1/3
INTRODUCTION. The's as much human nature in some folks as th' is in others, if not more .-- DAVID HARUM. One of the most conspicuous characteristics of our contemporary native fiction is an increasing tendency to subordinate plot or story to the bold and realistic portrayal of some of the types of American life and manners.
And the reason for this is not far to seek.
The extraordinary mixing of races which has been going on here for more than a century has produced an enormously diversified human result; and the products of this "hybridization" have been still further differentiated by an environment that ranges from the Everglades of Florida to the glaciers of Alaska.
The existence of these conditions, and the great literary opportunities which they contain, American writers long ago perceived; and, with a generally true appreciation of artistic values, they have created from them a gallery of brilliant _genre_ pictures which to-day stand for the highest we have yet attained in the art of fiction. Thus it is that we have (to mention but a few) studies of Louisiana and her people by Mr.Cable; of Virginia and Georgia by Thomas Nelson Page and Joel Chandler Harris; of New England by Miss Jewett and Miss Wilkins; of the Middle West by Miss French (Octave Thanet); of the great Northwest by Hamlin Garland; of Canada and the land of the _habitans_ by Gilbert Parker; and finally, though really first in point of time, the Forty-niners and their successors by Bret Harte.
This list might be indefinitely extended, for it is growing daily, but it is long enough as it stands to show that every section of our country has, or soon will have, its own painter and historian, whose works will live and become a permanent part of our literature in just the degree that they are artistically true.
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