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least serve to illustrate certain stages in the growth of Historical Romance。
With the exclusion of Mrs。 Radcliffe; Mrs。 Marsh; Mrs。 Gore; Lady
Blessington; Lady Fullerton; Mrs。 Bray; and Mrs。 Child; few will; I
imagine; find fault; but writers like Miss Tucker (A。 L。 O。 E。) and Miss
Emily Holt still find so many readers in juvenile quarters; that it has
required a certain amount of courage to place them also on my Index
Expurgatorius! Turning once again to writers of the sterner sex; I have
ruled out C。 R。 Maturin; G。 W。 M。 Reynolds; and Pierce Egan; Junr。; and
(quitting the 〃sensational〃 for the 〃mildly entertaining〃) out of the Rev。 J。
M。 Neale's many historical tales I have selected only one〃Theodora
Phranza;〃 which; besides being well written; has the merit of dealing with
a somewhat neglected period。 Stories possessing a background of
History are to be found in 〃Tales from Blackwood;〃 as also in 〃Wilson's
Tales of the Borders;〃 but their extremely slight character seemed scarcely
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to justify insertion; while not even the high literary position attained by
him on other grounds reconciled me to either of Allan Cunningham's
novels〃Sir Michael Scott〃 and 〃Paul Jones。〃
Of the Foreign novelists appearing in my list; several have been
already named; but Marchese D'Azeglio; F。 D。 Guerrazzi; Cesare Cantu;
〃W。 Alexis〃 (G。 Haring); H。 Laube; Louise Mulbach (Klara M。 Mundt);
Nicolas Josika; Viktor Rydberg; Hendrik Conscience; Xavier B。 Saintine;
Amedee Achard; and 〃Erckmann…Chatrian〃 here call for notice as not
ing under strictly Contemporary classification。 I would forestall the
criticism that two writers have been passed over whose fame is greater
than any of those just mentioned; viz。: 〃Stendhal〃 (Henri Beyle) and
Alphonse Daudet。 Beyle's 〃La Chartreuse de Parme;〃 though containing
the oft…praised account of Waterloo; is far more Psychological than
Historical; and Daudet's 〃Robert Helmont;〃 while it depicts (under Diary
form) certain aspects of the Franco…German War; has hardly any plot
running through it。 As the Waterloo and Franco…German War periods
were amply illustrated in numerous other novels of more assured
suitability; I had the less hesitation in deciding against the two works just
named。 In the selections from Foreign Historical Fiction nothing more
has been attempted than to include the leading examples; most of these; it
will be found; have been translated into English。
Before leaving the subject of older writers; it may be mentioned that
not a few of the works chosen to represent them are; at the moment; out of
print。 To anyone objecting that something ought to have been done to
indicate this in each separate case; I would urge that the 〃out of print〃 line
can never be drawn with precision in view of constant reprints as well as
of further extinctions。
Perhaps this introduction may be most fitly concluded by something in
the nature of apology for Historical Romance itself。 Not only has fault
been found with the deficiencies of unskilled authors in that department;
but the question has been asked by one or two critics of standingWhat
right has the Historical Novel to exist at all? More often than not; it is
pointed out; the Romancist gives us a mass of inaccuracies; which; while
they mislead the ignorant (i。e。; the majority?); are an unpardonable offence
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to the historically…minded reader。 Moreover; the writer of such Fiction;
though he be a Thackeray or a Scott; cannot surmount barriers which are
not merely hard to scale; but absolutely impassable。 The spirit of a
period is like the selfhood of a human beingsomething that cannot be
handed on; try as we may; it is impossible for us to breathe the atmosphere
of a bygone time; since all those thousand… and…one details which went to
the building up of both individual and general experience; can never be
reproduced。 We consider (say) the Eighteenth Century from the purely
Historical standpoint; and; while we do so; are under no delusion as to our
limitations; we know that a few of the leading personages and events have
been brought before us in a more or less disjointed fashion; and are
perfectly aware that there is room for much discrepancy between the
pictures so presented to us (be it with immense skill) and the actual facts
as they took place in such and such a year。 But; goes on the objector; in
the case of a Historical Romance we allow ourselves to be hoodwinked;
for; under the influence of a pseudo… historic security; we seem to watch
the real sequence of events in so far as these affect the characters in whom
we are interested。 How we seem to live in those early years of the
Eighteenth Century; as we follow Henry Esmond from point to point; and
yet; in truth; we are breathing not the atmosphere of Addison and Steele;
but the atmosphere created by the brilliant Nineteenth Century Novelist;
partly out of his erudite conception of a former period; and partly out of
the emotions and