PREFACE.
“GEORGE ELIOT’S” ANALYSIS OF MOTIVES.
I. CARLYLE’S LIFE OF STERLING.
II. WOMAN IN FRANCE: MADAME DE SABLÉ.
III. EVANGELICAL TEACHING: DR. CUMMING.
IV. GERMAN WIT: HENRY HEINE.
V. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF GERMAN LIFE.
VI. SILLY NOVELS BY LADY NOVELISTS.
VII. WORLDLINESS AND OTHER-WORLDLINESS: THE POET YOUNG.
VIII. THE INFLUENCE OF RATIONALISM.
IX. THE GRAMMAR OF ORNAMENT.
X. ADDRESS TO WORKING MEN, BY FELIX HOLT.
“GEORGE ELIOT’S” ANALYSIS OF MOTIVES.
George
Eliot is the greatest of the novelists in the delineation of feeling
and the analysis of motives. In “uncovering certain human
lots, and seeing how they are woven and interwoven,” some
marvellous work has been done by this master in the two arts of
rhetoric and fiction.If
you say the telling of a story is her forte, you put her below Wilkie
Collins or Mrs. Oliphant; if you say her object is to give a picture
of English society, she is surpassed by Bulwer and Trollope; if she
be called a satirist of society, Thackeray is her superior; if she
intends to illustrate the absurdity of behavior, she is eclipsed by
Dickens; but if the analysis of human motives be her forte and art,
she stands first, and it is very doubtful whether any artist in
fiction is entitled to stand second. She reaches clear in and
touches the most secret and the most delicate spring of human
action. She has done this so well, so apart from the doing of
everything else, and so, in spite of doing some other things
indifferently, that she works on a line quite her own, and quite
alone, as a creative artist in fiction. Others have done this
incidentally and occasionally, as Charlotte Brontë and Walter Scott,
but George Eliot does it elaborately, with laborious painstaking,
with purpose aforethought. Scott said of Richardson: “In his
survey of the heart he left neither head, bay, nor inlet behind him
until he had traced its soundings, and laid it down in his chart with
all its minute sinuosities, its depths and its shallows.”This
is too much to say of Richardson, but it is not too much to say of
George Eliot. She has sounded depths and explored sinuosities
of the human heart which were utterly unknown to the author of
“Clarissa Harlowe.” It is like looking into the translucent
brook—you see the wriggling tad, the darting minnow, the leisurely
trout, the motionless pike, while in the bays and inlets you see the
infusoria and animalculæ as well.George
Eliot belongs to and is the greatest of the school of artists in
fiction who write fiction as a means to an end, instead of as an
end. And, while she certainly is not a story-teller of the
first order, considered simply as a story-teller, her novels are a
striking illustration of the power of fiction as a means to an end.
They remind us, as few other stories do, of the fact that however
inferior the story may be considered simply as a story, it is
indispensable to the delineation of character. No other form of
composition, no discourse, or essay, or series of independent
sketches, however successful, could succeed in bringing out character
equal to the novel. Herein is at once the justification of the
power of fiction. “He spake a parable,” with an “end”
in view which could not be so expeditiously attained by any other
form of address.A
story of the first-class, with the story as end in itself, and a
story of the first class told as a means to an end, has never been,
and it is not likely ever will be, found together. The novel
with a purpose is fatal to the novel written simply to excite by a
plot, or divert by pictures of scenery, or entertain as a mere
panorama of social life. So intense is George Eliot’s desire
to dissect the human heart and discover its motives, that plot,
diction, situations, and even consistency in the vocabulary of the
characters, are all made subservient to it. With her it is not
so much that the characters do thus and so, but why they do thus and
so. Dickens portrays the behavior, George Eliot dissects the
motive of the behavior. Here comes the human creature, says
Dickens, now let us see how he will behave. Here comes the
human creature, says George Eliot, now let us see why he behaves.
“Suppose,”
she says, “suppose we turn from outside estimates of a man, to
wonder with keener interest what is the report of his own
consciousness about his doings, with what hindrances he is carrying
on his daily labors, and with what spirit he wrestles against
universal pressure, which may one day be too heavy for him and bring
his heart to a final pause.” The outside estimate is the work
of Dickens and Thackeray, the inside estimate is the work of George
Eliot.Observe
in the opening pages of the great novel of “Middlemarch” how soon
we pass from the outside dress to the inside reasons for it, from the
costume to the motives which control it and color it. It was
“only to close observers that Celia’s dress differed from her
sister’s,” and had “a shade of coquetry in its arrangements.”
Dorothea’s “plain dressing was due to mixed conditions, in most
of which her sister shared.” They were both influenced by
“the pride of being ladies,” of belonging to a stock not exactly
aristocratic, but unquestionably “good.” The very quotation
of the word good is significant and suggestive. There were “no
parcel-tying forefathers” in the Brooke pedigree. A Puritan
forefather, “who served under Cromwell, but afterward conformed and
managed to come out of all political troubles as the proprietor of a
respectable family estate,” had a hand in Dorothea’s “plain”
wardrobe. “She could not reconcile the anxieties of a
spiritual life involving eternal consequences with a keen interest in
gimp and artificial protrusions of drapery,” but Celia “had that
common-sense which is able to accept momentous doctrines without any
eccentric agitation.” Both were examples of “reversion.”
Then, as an instance of heredity working itself out in character “in
Mr. Brooke, the hereditary strain of Puritan energy was clearly in
abeyance, but in his niece Dorothea it glowed alike through faults
and virtues.”Could
anything be more natural than for a woman with this passion for, and
skill in, “unravelling certain human lots,” to lay herself out
upon the human lot of woman, with all her “passionate patience of
genius?” One would say this was inevitable. And, for a
delineation of what that lot of woman really is, as made for her,
there is nothing in all literature equal to what we find in
“Middlemarch,” “Romola,” “Daniel Deronda,” and “Janet’s
Repentance.” “She was a woman, and could not make her own
lot.” Never before, indeed, was so much got out of the word
“lot.” Never was that little word so hard worked, or well
worked. “We women,” says Gwendolen Harleth, “must stay
where we grow, or where the gardeners like to transplant us. We
are brought up like the flowers, to look as pretty as we can, and be
dull without complaining. That is my notion about the plants,
and that is the reason why some of them have got poisonous.”
To appreciate the work that George Eliot has done you must read her
with the determination of finding out the reason why Gwendolen
Harleth “became poisonous,” and Dorothea, with all her brains and
“plans,” a failure; why “the many Theresas find for themselves
no epic life, only a life of mistakes, the offspring of a certain
spiritual grandeur ill-matched with the meanness of opportunity.”
You must search these marvellous studies in motives for the key to
the blunders of “the blundering lives” of woman which “some
have felt are due to the inconvenient indefiniteness with which the
Supreme power has fashioned the natures of women.” But as
there is not “one level of feminine incompetence as strict as the
ability to count three and no more, the social lot of woman cannot be
treated with scientific certitude.” It is treated with a
dissective delineation in the women of George Eliot unequalled in the
pages of fiction.And
then woman’s lot, as respects her “social promotion” in
matrimony, so much sought, and so necessary for her to seek, even in
spite of her conscience, and at the expense of her happiness—the
unravelling of that lot would also come very natural to this expert
unraveller. And never have we had the causes of woman’s
“blunders” in match-making, and man’s blunders in love-making,
told with such analytic acumen, or with such pathetic and sarcastic
eloquence. It is not far from the question of woman’s social
lot to the question of questions of human life, the question which
has so tremendous an influence upon the fortunes of mankind and
womankind, the question which it is so easy for one party to “pop”
and so difficult for the other party to answer intelligently or
sagaciously.Why
does the young man fall in love with the young woman who is most
unfit for him of all the young women of his acquaintance, and why
does the young woman accept the young man, or the old man, who is
better adapted to making her life unendurable than any other man of
her circle of acquaintances? Why does the stalwart Adam Bede
fall in love with Hetty Sorrel, “who had nothing more than her
beauty to recommend her?” The delineator of his motives
“respects him none the less.” She thinks that “the deep
love he had for that sweet, rounded, dark-eyed Hetty, of whose inward
self he was really very ignorant, came out of the very strength of
his nature, and not out of any inconsistent weakness. Is it any
weakness, pray, to be wrought upon by exquisite music? To feel
its wondrous harmonies searching the subtlest windings of your soul,
the delicate fibres of life which no memory can penetrate, and
binding together your whole being, past and present, in one
unspeakable vibration? If not, then neither is it a weakness to
be so wrought upon by the exquisite curves of a woman’s cheek, and
neck, and arms; by the liquid depth of her beseeching eyes, or the
sweet girlish pout of her lips. For the beauty of a lovely
woman is like music—what can one say more?” And so “the
noblest nature is often blinded to the character of the woman’s
soul that beauty clothes.” Hence “the tragedy of human life
is likely to continue for a long time to come, in spite of mental
philosophers who are ready with the best receipts for avoiding all
mistakes of the kind.”How
simple the motive of the Rev. Edward Casaubon in popping the question
to Dorothea Brooke, bow complex her motives in answering the
question! He wanted an amanuensis to “love, honor, and obey”
him. She wanted a husband who would be “a sort of father, and
could teach you even Hebrew if you wished it.” The
matrimonial motives are worked to draw out the character of Dorothea,
and nowhere does the method of George Eliot show to greater advantage
than in probing the motives of this fine, strong, conscientious,
blundering young woman, whose voice “was like the voice of a soul
that once lived in an Æolian harp.” She had a theoretic cast
of mind. She was “enamored of intensity and greatness, and
rash in embracing what seemed to her to have those aspects.”
The awful divine had those aspects, and she embraced him.
“Certainly such elements in the character of a marriageable girl
tended to interfere with her lot, and hinder it from being decided,
according to custom, by good looks, vanity, and merely canine
affection.” That’s a George Eliot stroke. If the
reader does not see from that what she is driving at he may as well
abandon all hope of ever appreciating her great forte and art.
Dorothea’s goodness and sincerity did not save her from the worst
blunder that a woman can make, while her conscientiousness only made
it inevitable. “With all her eagerness to know the truths of
life she retained very childlike ideas about marriage.” A
little of the goose as well as the child in her conscientious
simplicity, perhaps. She “felt sure she would have accepted
the judicious Hooker if she had been born in time to save him from
that wretched mistake he made in matrimony, or John Milton, when his
blindness had come on, or any other great man whose odd habits it
would be glorious piety to endure.”True
to life, our author furnishes the “great man,” and the “odd
habits,” and the miserable years of “glorious” endurance.
“Dorothea looked deep into the ungauged reservoir of Mr. Casaubon’s
mind, seeing reflected there every quality she herself brought.”
They exchanged experiences—he his desire to have an amanuensis, and
she hers, to be one. He told her in the billy-cooing of their
courtship that “his notes made a formidable range of volumes, but
the crowning task would be to condense these voluminous, still
accumulating results, and bring them, like the earlier vintage of
Hippocratic books, to fit a little shelf.” Dorothea was
altogether captivated by the wide embrace of this conception.
Here was something beyond the shallows of ladies’ school
literature. Here was a modern Augustine who united the glories
of doctor and saint. Dorothea said to herself: “His feeling,
his experience, what a lake compared to my little pool!” The
little pool runs into the great reservoir.Will
you take this reservoir to be your husband, and will you promise to
be unto him a fetcher of slippers, a dotter of I’s and crosser of
T’s and a copier and condenser of manuscripts; until death doth you
part? I will.They
spend their honeymoon in Rome, and on page 211 of Vol. I. we find
poor Dorothea “alone in her apartments, sobbing bitterly, with such
an abandonment to this relief of an oppressed heart as a woman
habitually controlled by pride will sometimes allow herself when she
feels securely alone.” What was she crying about? “She
thought her feeling of desolation was the fault of her own spiritual
poverty.” A characteristic George Eliot probe. Why does
not Dorothea give the real reason for her desolateness? Because
she does not know what the real reason is—conscience makes
blunderers of us all. “How was it that in the weeks since
their marriage Dorothea had not distinctly observed, but felt, with a
stifling depression, that the large vistas and wide fresh air which
she had dreamed of finding in her husband’s mind were replaced by
anterooms and winding passages which seemed to lead no whither?
I suppose it was because in courtship everything is regarded as
provisional and preliminary, and the smallest sample of virtue or
accomplishment is taken to guarantee delightful stores which the
broad leisure of marriage will reveal. But, the door-sill of
marriage once crossed, expectation is concentrated on the present.
Having once embarked on your marital voyage, you may become aware
that you make no way, and that the sea is not within sight—that in
fact you are exploring an inclosed basin.” So the ungauged
reservoir turns out to be an inclosed basin, but Dorothea was
prevented by her social lot, and perverse goodness, and puritanical
“reversion,” from foreseeing that. She might have been
saved from her gloomy marital voyage “if she could have fed her
affection with those childlike caresses which are the bent of every
sweet woman who has begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her
bald doll, creating a happy soul within that woodenness from the
wealth of her own love.” Then, perhaps, Ladislaw would have
been her first husband instead of her second, as he certainly was her
first and only love. Such are the chances and mischances in the
lottery of matrimony.Equally
admirable is the diagnosis of Gwendolen Harleth’s motives in
“drifting toward the tremendous decision,” and finally landing in
it. “We became poor, and I was tempted.” Marriage
came to her as it comes to many, as a temptation, and like the
deadening drug or the maddening bowl, to keep off the demon of
remorse or the cloud of sorrow, like the forgery or the robbery to
save from want. “The brilliant position she had longed for,
the imagined freedom she would create for herself in marriage”—these
“had come to her hunger like food, with the taint of sacrilege upon
it,” which she “snatched with terror.” Grandcourt
“fulfilled his side of the bargain by giving her the rank and
luxuries she coveted.” Matrimony as a bargain never had and
never will have but one result. “She had a root of conscience
in her, and the process of purgatory had begun for her on earth.”
Without the root of conscience it would have been purgatory all the
same. So much for resorting to marriage for deliverance from
poverty or old maidhood. Better be an old maid than an old
fool. But how are we to be guaranteed against “one of those
convulsive motiveless actions by which wretched men and women leap
from a temporary sorrow into a lifelong misery?” Rosamond
Lydgate says, “Marriage stays with us like a murder.” Yes,
if she could only have found that out before instead of after her own
marriage!But
“what greater thing,” exclaims our novelist, “is there for two
human souls than to feel that they are joined for life, to strengthen
each other in all labor, to minister to each other in all pain, to be
one with each other in silent, unspeakable memories at the last
parting?”While
a large proportion of her work in the analysis of motives is confined
to woman, she has done nothing more skilful or memorable than the
“unravelling” of Bulstrode’s mental processes by which he
“explained the gratification of his desires into satisfactory
agreement with his beliefs.” If there were no Dorothea in
“Middlemarch” the character of Bulstrode would give that novel a
place by itself among the masterpieces of fiction. The
Bulstrode wound was never probed in fiction with more scientific
precision. The pious villain finally finds himself so near
discovery that he becomes conscientious. “His equivocation
now turns venomously upon him with the full-grown fang of a
discovered lie.” The past came back to make the present
unendurable. “The terror of being judged sharpens the
memory.” Once more “he saw himself the banker’s clerk, as
clever in figures as he was fluent in speech, and fond of theological
definition. He had striking experience in conviction and sense
of pardon; spoke in prayer-meeting and on religious platforms.
That was the time he would have chosen now to awake in and find the
rest of dream. He remembered his first moments of shrinking.
They were private and were filled with arguments—some of these
taking the form of prayer.”Private
prayer—but “is private prayer necessarily candid? Does it
necessarily go to the roots of action? Private prayer is
inaudible speech, and speech is representative. Who can
represent himself just as he is, even in his own reflections?”Bulstrode’s
course up to the time of his being suspected “had, he thought, been
sanctioned by remarkable providences, appearing to point the way for
him to be the agent in making the best use of a large property.”
Providence would have him use for the glory of God the money he had
stolen. “Could it be for God’s service that this fortune
should go to” its rightful owners, when its rightful owners were “a
young woman and her husband who were given up to the lightest
pursuits, and might scatter it abroad in triviality—people who
seemed to lie outside the path of remarkable providences?”Bulstrode
felt at times “that his action was unrighteous, but how could he go
back? He had mental exercises calling himself naught, laid hold
on redemption and went on in his course of instrumentality.”
He was “carrying on two distinct lives”—a religious one and a
wicked one. “His religious activity could not be incompatible
with his wicked business as soon as he had argued himself into not
feeling it incompatible.”
“The
spiritual kind of rescue was a genuine need with him. There may
be coarse hypocrites, who consciously affect beliefs and emotions for
the sake of gulling the world, but Bulstrode was not one of them.
He was simply a man whose desires had been stronger than his
theoretic beliefs, and who had gradually explained the gratification
of his desires into satisfactory agreement with those beliefs.”And
now Providence seemed to be taking sides against him. “A
threatening Providence—in other words, a public exposure—urged
him to a kind of propitiation which was not a doctrinal transaction.
The divine tribunal had changed its aspect to him.
Self-prostration was no longer enough. He must bring
restitution in his hand. By what sacrifice could he stay the
rod? He believed that if he did something right God would stay
the rod, and save him from the consequences of his wrong-doing.”
His religion was “the religion of personal fear,” which “remains
nearly at the level of the savage.” The exposure comes, and
the explosion. Society shudders with hypocritical horror,
especially in the presence of poor Mrs. Bulstrode, who “should have
some hint given her, that if she knew the truth she would have less
complacency in her bonnet.” Society when it is very candid,
and very conscientious, and very scrupulous, cannot “allow a wife
to remain ignorant long that the town holds a bad opinion of her
husband.” The photograph of the Middlemarch gossips sitting
upon the case of Mrs. Bulstrode is taken accurately. Equally
accurate, and far more impressive, is the narrative of circumstantial
evidence gathering against the innocent Lydgate and the guilty
Bulstrode—circumstances that will sometimes weave into one tableau
of public odium the purest and the blackest characters. From
this tableau you may turn to that one in “Adam Bede,” and see how
circumstances are made to crush the weak woman and clear the wicked
man. And then you can go to “Romola,” or indeed to almost
any of these novels, and see how wrong-doing may come of an indulged
infirmity of purpose, that unconscious weakness and conscious
wickedness may bring about the same disastrous results, and that
repentance has no more effect in averting or altering the
consequences in one case than the other. Tito’s ruin comes of
a feeble, Felix Holt’s victory of an unconquerable, will.
Nothing is more characteristic of George Eliot than her tracking of
Tito through all the motives and counter motives from which he
acted. “Because he tried to slip away from everything that
was unpleasant, and cared for nothing so much as his own safety, he
came at last to commit such deeds as make a man infamous.” So
poor Romola tells her son, as a warning, and adds: “If you make it
the rule of your life to escape from what is disagreeable, calamity
may come just the same, and it would be calamity falling on a base
mind, which is the one form of sorrow that has no balm in it.”Out
of this passion for the analysis of motives comes the strong
character, slightly gnarled and knotted by natural circumstances, as
trees that are twisted and misshapen by storms and floods—or
characters gnarled by some interior force working in conjunction with
or in opposition to outward circumstances. She draws no
monstrosities, or monsters, thus avoiding on the one side romance and
on the other burlesque. She keeps to life—the life that fails
from “the meanness of opportunity,” or is “dispersed among
hindrances” or “wrestles” unavailingly “with universal
pressure.”Why
had Mr. Gilfil in those late years of his beneficent life “more of
the knots and ruggedness of poor human nature than there lay any
clear hint of it in the open-eyed, loving” young Maynard?
Because “it is with men as with trees: if you lop off their finest
branches into which they were pouring their young life-juice, the
wounds will be healed over with some rough boss, some odd
excrescence, and what might have been a grand tree, expanding into
liberal shade, is but a whimsical, misshapen trunk. Many an
irritating fault, many an unlovely oddity, has come of a hard sorrow
which has crushed and maimed the nature just when it was expanding
into plenteous beauty; and the trivial, erring life, which we visit
with our harsh blame, may be but as the unsteady motion of a man
whose best limb is withered. The dear old Vicar had been
sketched out by nature as a noble tree. The heart of him was
sound, the grain was of the finest, and in the gray-haired man, with
his slipshod talk and caustic tongue, there was the main trunk of the
same brave, faithful, tender nature that had poured out the finest,
freshest forces of its life-current in a first and only love.”Her
style is influenced by her purpose—may be said, indeed, to be
created by it. The excellences and the blemishes of the diction
come of the end sought to be attained by it. Its subtleties and
obscurities were equally inevitable. Analytical thinking takes
on an analytical phraseology. It is a striking instance of a
mental habit creating a vocabulary. The method of thought
produces the form of rhetoric. Some of the sentences are mental
landscapes. The meaning seems to be in motion on the page.
It is elusive from its very subtlety. It is more our analyst
than her character of Rufus Lyon, who “would fain find language
subtle enough to follow the utmost intricacies of the soul’s
pathways.” Mrs. Transome’s “lancet-edged epigrams” are
dull in comparison with her own. She uses them with startling
success in dissecting motive and analyzing feeling. They
deserve as great renown as “Nélaton’s probe.”For
example: “Examine your words well, and you will find that even when
you have no motive to be false, it is a very hard thing to say the
exact truth, especially about your own feelings—much harder than to
say something fine about them which is not the exact truth.”
That ought to make such a revelation of the religious diary-keeper to
himself as to make him ashamed of himself. And this will fit in
here: “Our consciences are not of the same pattern, an inner
deliverance of fixed laws—they are the voice of sensibilities as
various as our memories;” and this: “Every strong feeling makes
to itself a conscience of its own—has its own piety.”Who
can say that the joints of his armor are not open to this thrust?
“The lapse of time during which a given event has not happened is
in the logic of habit, constantly alleged as a reason why the event
should never happen, even when the lapse of time is precisely the
added condition which makes the event imminent. A man will tell
you that he worked in a mine for forty years unhurt by an accident as
a reason why he should apprehend no danger, though the roof is
beginning to sink.” Silas Marner lost his money through his
“sense of security,” which “more frequently springs from habit
than conviction.” He went unrobbed for fifteen years, which
supplied the only needed condition for his being robbed now. A
compensation for stupidity: “If we had a keen vision and feeling of
all ordinary human life, it would be like hearing the grass grow and
the squirrel’s heart beat, and we should die of that roar that lies
on the other side of silence. As it is, the quickest of us walk
about well wadded with stupidity.” Who does not at once
recognize “that mixture of pushing forward and being pushed
forward” as “the brief history of most human beings?” Who
has not seen “advancement hindered by impetuous candor?” or
“private grudges christened by the name of public zeal?” or “a
church built with an exuberance of faith and a deficiency of funds?”
or a man “who would march determinedly along the road he thought
best, but who was easily convinced which was best?” or a preacher
“whose oratory was like a Belgian railway horn, which shows
praiseworthy intentions inadequately fulfilled?”There
is something chemical about such an analysis as this of Rosamond:
“Every nerve and muscle was adjusted to the consciousness that she
was being looked at. She was by nature an actress of parts that
entered into her physique. She even acted her own character,
and so well that she did not know it to be precisely her own!”
Nor is the exactness of this any less cruel: “We may handle extreme
opinions with impunity, while our furniture and our dinner-giving
link us to the established order.” Why not own that “the
emptiness of all things is never so striking to us as when we fail in
them?” Is it not better to avoid “following great reformers
beyond the threshold of their own homes?” Does not “our
moral sense learn the manners of good society?”The
lancet works impartially, because the hand that holds it is the hand
of a conscientious artist. She will endure the severest test
you can apply to an artist in fiction. She does not betray any
religious bias in her novels, which is all the more remarkable now
that we find it in these essays. Nor is it at all remarkable
that this bias is so very easily discovered in the novels by those
who have found it in her essays! Whatever opinions she may have
expressed in her critical reviews, she is not the Evangelical, or the
Puritan, or the Jew, or the Methodist, or the Dissenting Minister, or
the Churchman, any more than she is the Radical, the Liberal, or the
Tory, who talks in the pages of her fiction.Every
side has its say, every prejudice its voice, and every prejudice and
side and vagary even has the philosophical reason given for it, and
the charitable explanation applied to it. She analyzes the
religious motives without obtrusive criticism or acrid cynicism or
nauseous cant—whether of the orthodox or heretical form.The
art of fiction has nothing more elevated, or more touching, or fairer
to every variety of religious experience, than the delineation of the
motives that actuated Dinah Morris the Methodist preacher, Deronda
the Jew, Dorothea the Puritan, Adam and Seth Bede, and Janet
Dempster.Who
can object to this? “Religious ideas have the fate of
melodies, which, once set afloat in the world, are taken up by all
sorts of instruments, some of them woefully coarse, feeble, or out of
tune, until people are in danger of crying out that the melody itself
is detestable.” Is it not one of the “mixed results of
revivals” that “some gain a religious vocabulary rather than a
religious experience?” Is there a descendant of the Puritans
who will not relish the fair play of this? “They might give
the name of piety to much that was only Puritanic egoism; they might
call many things sin that were not sin, but they had at least the
feeling that sin was to be avoided and resisted, and color-blindness,
which may mistake drab for scarlet, is better than total blindness,
which sees no distinction of color at all.” Is not Adam Bede
justified in saying that “to hear some preachers you’d think a
man must be doing nothing all his life but shutting his eyes and
looking at what’s going on in the inside of him,” or that “the
doctrines are like finding names for your feelings so that you can
talk of them when you’ve never known them?” Read all she
has said before you object to anything she has said. Then see
whether you will find fault with her for delineating the motives of
those with whom “great illusions” are mistaken for “great
faith;” of those “whose celestial intimacies do not improve their
domestic manners,” however “holy” they may claim to be; of
those who “contrive to conciliate the consciousness of filthy rags
with the best damask;” of those “whose imitative piety and native
worldliness is equally sincere;” of those who “think the
invisible powers will be soothed by a bland parenthesis here and
there, coming from a man of property”—parenthetical recognition
of the Almighty! May not “religious scruples be like spilled
needles, making one afraid of treading or sitting down, or even
eating?”But
if this is a great mind fascinated with the insoluble enigma of human
motives, it is a mind profoundly in sympathy with those who are
puzzling hopelessly over the riddle or are struggling hopelessly in
its toils. She is “on a level and in the press with them as
they struggle their way along the stony road through the crowd of
unloving fellow-men.” She says “the only true knowledge of
our fellows is that which enables us to feel with them, which gives
us a finer ear for the heart-pulses that are beating under the mere
clothes of circumstance and opinion.” No artist in fiction
ever had a finer ear or a more human sympathy for the straggler who
“pushes manfully on” and “falls at last,” leaving “the
crowd to close over the space he has left.” Her extraordinary
skill in disclosing “the peculiar combination of outward with
inward facts which constitute a man’s critical actions,” only
makes her the more charitable in judging them. “Until we know
what this combination has been, or will be, it will be better not to
think ourselves wise about” the character that results.
“There is a terrible coercion in our deeds which may first turn the
honest man into a deceiver, and then reconcile him to the change.
And for this reason the second wrong presents itself to him in the
guise of the only practicable right.” There is nothing of the
spirit of “served him right,” or “just what she deserved,” or
“they ought to have known better,” in George Eliot. That is
not in her line. The opposite of that is exactly in her line.
This is characteristic of her: “In this world there are so many of
these common, coarse people, who have no picturesque or sentimental
wretchedness! And it is so needful we should remember their
existence, else we may happen to leave them quite out of our religion
and philosophy, and frame lofty theories which only fit a world of
extremes.” She does not leave them out. Her books are
full of them, and of a Christly charity and plea for them. Who
can ever forget little Tiny, “hidden and uncared for as the pulse
of anguish in the breast of the bird that has fluttered down to its
nest with the long-sought food, and has found the nest torn and
empty?” There is nothing in fiction to surpass in pathos the
picture of the death of Mrs. Amos Barton. George Eliot’s
fellow-feeling comes of the habit she ascribes to Daniel Deronda,
“the habit of thinking herself imaginatively into the experience of
others.” That is the reason why her novels come home so
pitilessly to those who have had a deep experience of human life.
These are the men and women whom she fascinates and alienates.
I know strong men and brave women who are afraid of her books, and
say so. It is because of her realness, her unrelenting fidelity
to human nature and human life. It is because the analysis is
so delicate, subtle, and far-in. Hence the atmosphere of
sadness that pervades her pages. It was unavoidable. To
see only the behavior, as Dickens did, amuses us; to study only the
motive at the root of the behavior, as George Eliot does, saddens
us. The humor of Mrs. Poyser and the wit of Mrs. Transome only
deepen the pathos by relieving it. There is hardly a sarcasm in
these books but has its pensive undertone.It
is all in the key of “Ye Banks and Braes o’ Bonnie Doon,” and
that would be an appropriate key for a requiem over the grave of
George Eliot.All
her writings are now before the world, and are accessible to all.
They have taken their place, and will keep their place, high among
the writings of those of our age who have made that age illustrious
in the history of the English tongue.