The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858 by Various
page 37 of 286 (12%)
page 37 of 286 (12%)
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and not of results produced without him. Nevertheless, results there
are,--admirable, satisfactory results. As first of these may be mentioned American Reform. In depth, in breadth, in vigor, in practical quality, this may challenge comparison with anything of a similar kind elsewhere. This is the direct outburst of a new life, arising and wrestling with the old forms, habitudes, institutions, with whatsoever is imported and traditional, on the one hand, and with the crude or barbarous improvisations of native energy, on the other. It is a force springing out of the summit of the brain, the angel of its noblest sentiment, going forth with no less an aim than to construct a whole new social status from ideas. And the token of its superiority is this, that it builds its new outward life only from the most ancient incorruptible material, out of the eternal granite of Moral Law. Sweeping social _schemes_ prevail in France. But American Reform is not a scheme; it is the service of an _idea_. It is made conservative by that which also makes it radical, by working in the interest of the moral sentiment. The Literature of the New World is also worthy of the New Man. We are quite aware that a large portion of this literature is trash. So was a large part in Shakspeare's, in Cervantes's, in Plato's age and place. But we admit even that the comparison does not hold,--that an especial accusation may be brought against the issues of the press in this country. Wise men should have anticipated this, and, instead of reasoning from the size of our lakes, prairies, and mountains, and demanding epics and philosophies of us before we are fairly out of our primitive woods, the critics should have hastened to say,--A colony must have time to strike root, and to draw up therefrom a new life, before it can arrive at valuable and genuine literary expression. The |
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