A Book of Prefaces
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Оглавление
H. L. Mencken. A Book of Prefaces
A Book of Prefaces
Table of Contents
PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION
I. JOSEPH CONRAD
§ 1
§ 2
§ 3
§ 4
§ 5
§ 6
§ 7
FOOTNOTES:
II. THEODORE DREISER
§ 1
§ 2
§ 3
§ 4
§ 5
§ 6
§ 7
FOOTNOTES:
III. JAMES HUNEKER
§ 1
§ 2
§ 3
§ 4
§ 5
§ 6
§ 7
§ 8
FOOTNOTES:
IV. PURITANISM AS A LITERARY FORCE
§ 1
§ 2
§ 3
§ 4
§ 5
§ 6
FOOTNOTES:
Отрывок из книги
H. L. Mencken
e-artnow, 2021
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Conrad's first novel, "Almayer's Folly," was printed in 1895. He tells us in "A Personal Record" that it took him seven years to write it—seven years of pertinacious effort, of trial and error, of learning how to write. He was, at this time thirty-eight years old. Seventeen years before, landing in England to fit himself for the British merchant service, he had made his first acquaintance with the English language. The interval had been spent almost continuously at sea—in the Eastern islands, along the China coast, on the Congo and in the South Atlantic. That he hesitated between French and English is a story often told, but he himself is authority for the statement that it is more symbolical than true. Flaubert, in those days, was his idol, as we know, but the speech of his daily business won, and English literature reaped the greatest of all its usufructs from English sea power. To this day there are marks of his origins in his style. His periods, more than once, have an inept and foreign smack. In fishing for the right phrase one sometimes feels that he finds a French phrase, or even a Polish phrase, and that it loses something by being done into English.
This benign whooping, however, failed to awaken the enthusiasm of the mass of novel-readers and brought but meagre orders from the circulating libraries. "Typhoon" came upon the heels of "Youth," but still the sales of the Conrad books continued small and the author remained in very uncomfortable circumstances. Even after four or five years he was still so poor that he was glad to accept a modest pension from the British Civil List. This official recognition of his genius, when it came at last, seems to have impressed the public, characteristically enough, far more than his books themselves had done, and the foundations were thus laid for that wider recognition of his genius which now prevails. But getting him on his legs was slow work, and such friends as Hueffer, Clifford and Galsworthy had to do a lot of arduous log-rolling. Even after the splash made by "Youth" his publishing arrangements seem to have remained somewhat insecure. His first eleven books show six different imprints; it was not until his twelfth that he settled down to a publisher. His American editions tell an even stranger story. The first six of them were brought out by six different publishers; the first eight by no less than seven. But today he has a regular American publisher at last, and in England a complete edition of his works is in progress.
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