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Awkward Age, The
PREFACE
Henry James
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       PREFACE
       I recall with perfect ease the idea in which "The Awkward Age" had its
       origin, but re-perusal gives me pause in respect to naming it. This
       composition, as it stands, makes, to my vision--and will have made
       perhaps still more to that of its readers--so considerable a mass beside
       the germ sunk in it and still possibly distinguishable, that I am half-
       moved to leave my small secret undivulged. I shall encounter, I think,
       in the course of this copious commentary, no better example, and none on
       behalf of which I shall venture to invite more interest, of the quite
       incalculable tendency of a mere grain of subject-matter to expand and
       develop and cover the ground when conditions happen to favour it. I say
       all, surely, when I speak of the thing as planned, in perfect good
       faith, for brevity, for levity, for simplicity, for jocosity, in fine,
       and for an accommodating irony. I invoked, for my protection, the spirit
       of the lightest comedy, but "The Awkward Age" was to belong, in the
       event, to a group of productions, here re-introduced, which have in
       common, to their author's eyes, the endearing sign that they asserted in
       each case an unforeseen principle of growth. They were projected as
       small things, yet had finally to be provided for as comparative
       monsters. That is my own title for them, though I should perhaps resent
       it if applied by another critic--above all in the case of the piece
       before us, the careful measure of which I have just freshly taken. The
       result of this consideration has been in the first place to render sharp
       for me again the interest of the whole process thus illustrated, and in
       the second quite to place me on unexpectedly good terms with the work
       itself. As I scan my list I encounter none the "history" of which
       embodies a greater number of curious truths--or of truths at least by
       which I find contemplation more enlivened. The thing done and dismissed
       has ever, at the best, for the ambitious workman, a trick of looking
       dead, if not buried, so that he almost throbs with ecstasy when, on an
       anxious review, the flush of life reappears. It is verily on recognising
       that flush on a whole side of "The Awkward Age" that I brand it all, but
       ever so tenderly, as monstrous--which is but my way of noting the
       QUANTITY of finish it stows away. Since I speak so undauntedly, when
       need is, of the value of composition, I shall not beat about the bush to
       claim for these pages the maximum of that advantage. If such a feat be
       possible in this field as really taking a lesson from one's own
       adventure I feel I have now not failed of it--to so much more
       demonstration of my profit than I can hope to carry through do I find
       myself urged. Thus it is that, still with a remnant of self-respect, or
       at least of sanity, one may turn to complacency, one may linger with
       pride. Let my pride provoke a frown till I justify it; which--though
       with more matters to be noted here than I have room for I shall
       accordingly proceed to do.
       Yet I must first make a brave face, no doubt, and present in its native
       humility my scant but quite ponderable germ. The seed sprouted in that
       vast nursery of sharp appeals and concrete images which calls itself,
       for blest convenience, London; it fell even into the order of the minor
       "social phenomena" with which, as fruit for the observer, that
       mightiest of the trees of suggestion bristles. It was not, no doubt, a
       fine purple peach, but it might pass for a round ripe plum, the note one
       had inevitably had to take of the difference made in certain friendly
       houses and for certain flourishing mothers by the sometimes dreaded,
       often delayed, but never fully arrested coming to the forefront of some
       vague slip of a daughter. For such mild revolutions as these not, to
       one's imagination, to remain mild one had had, I dare say, to be
       infinitely addicted to "noticing"; under the rule of that secret vice or
       that unfair advantage, at any rate, the "sitting downstairs," from a
       given date, of the merciless maiden previously perched aloft could
       easily be felt as a crisis. This crisis, and the sense for it in those
       whom it most concerns, has to confess itself courageously the prime
       propulsive force of "The Awkward Age." Such a matter might well make a
       scant show for a "thick book," and no thick book, but just a quite
       charmingly thin one, was in fact originally dreamt of. For its proposed
       scale the little idea seemed happy--happy, that is, above all in having
       come very straight; but its proposed scale was the limit of a small
       square canvas. One had been present again and again at the exhibition I
       refer to--which is what I mean by the "coming straight" of this
       particular London impression; yet one was (and through fallibilities
       that after all had their sweetness, so that one would on the whole
       rather have kept them than parted with them) still capable of so false a
       measurement. When I think indeed of those of my many false measurements
       that have resulted, after much anguish, in decent symmetries, I find the
       whole case, I profess, a theme for the philosopher. The little ideas one
       wouldn't have treated save for the design of keeping them small, the
       developed situations that one would never with malice prepense have
       undertaken, the long stories that had thoroughly meant to be short, the
       short subjects that had underhandedly plotted to be long, the hypocrisy
       of modest beginnings, the audacity of misplaced middles, the triumph of
       intentions never entertained--with these patches, as I look about, I see
       my experience paved: an experience to which nothing is wanting save, I
       confess, some grasp of its final lesson.
       This lesson would, if operative, surely provide some law for the
       recognition, the determination in advance, of the just limits and the
       just extent of the situation, ANY situation, that appeals, and that yet,
       by the presumable, the helpful law of situations, must have its reserves
       as well as its promises. The storyteller considers it because it
       promises, and undertakes it, often, just because also making out, as he
       believes, where the promise conveniently drops. The promise, for
       instance, of the case I have just named, the case of the account to be
       taken, in a circle of free talk, of a new and innocent, a wholly
       unacclimatised presence, as to which such accommodations have never had
       to come up, might well have appeared as limited as it was lively; and if
       these pages were not before us to register my illusion I should never
       have made a braver claim for it. They themselves admonish me, however,
       in fifty interesting ways, and they especially emphasise that truth of
       the vanity of the a priori test of what an idee-mere may have to give.
       The truth is that what a happy thought has to give depends immensely on
       the general turn of the mind capable of it, and on the fact that its
       loyal entertainer, cultivating fondly its possible relations and
       extensions, the bright efflorescence latent in it, but having to take
       other things in their order too, is terribly at the mercy of his mind.
       That organ has only to exhale, in its degree, a fostering tropic air in
       order to produce complications almost beyond reckoning. The trap laid
       for his superficial convenience resides in the fact that, though the
       relations of a human figure or a social occurrence are what make such
       objects interesting, they also make them, to the same tune, difficult to
       isolate, to surround with the sharp black line, to frame in the square,
       the circle, the charming oval, that helps any arrangement of objects to
       become a picture. The storyteller has but to have been condemned by
       nature to a liberally amused and beguiled, a richly sophisticated, view
       of relations and a fine inquisitive speculative sense for them, to find
       himself at moments flounder in a deep warm jungle. These are the moments
       at which he recalls ruefully that the great merit of such and such a
       small case, the merit for his particular advised use, had been precisely
       in the smallness.
       I may say at once that this had seemed to me, under the first flush of
       recognition, the good mark for the pretty notion of the "free circle"
       put about by having, of a sudden, an ingenuous mind and a pair of limpid
       searching eyes to count with. Half the attraction was in the current
       actuality of the thing: repeatedly, right and left, as I have said, one
       had seen such a drama constituted, and always to the effect of proposing
       to the interested view one of those questions that are of the essence of
       drama: what will happen, who suffer, who not suffer, what turn be
       determined, what crisis created, what issue found? There had of course
       to be, as a basis, the free circle, but this was material of that
       admirable order with which the good London never leaves its true lover
       and believer long unprovided. One could count them on one's fingers (an
       abundant allowance), the liberal firesides beyond the wide glow of
       which, in a comparative dimness, female adolescence hovered and waited.
       The wide glow was bright, was favourable to "real" talk, to play of
       mind, to an explicit interest in life, a due demonstration of the
       interest by persons I qualified to feel it: all of which meant
       frankness and ease, the perfection, almost, as it were, of
       intercourse, and a tone as far as possible removed from that of the
       nursery and the schoolroom--as far as possible removed even, no doubt,
       in its appealing "modernity," from that of supposedly privileged scenes
       of conversation twenty years ago. The charm was, with a hundred other
       things, in the freedom--the freedom menaced by the inevitable irruption
       of the ingenuous mind; whereby, if the freedom should be sacrificed,
       what would truly BECOME of the charm? The charm might be figured as dear
       to members of the circle consciously contributing to it, but it was none
       the less true that some sacrifice in some quarter would have to be made,
       and what meditator worth his salt could fail to hold his breath while
       waiting on the event? The ingenuous mind might, it was true, be
       suppressed altogether, the general disconcertment averted either by some
       master-stroke of diplomacy or some rude simplification; yet these were
       ugly matters, and in the examples before one's eyes nothing ugly,
       nothing harsh or crude, had flourished. A girl might be married off the
       day after her irruption, or better still the day before it, to remove
       her from the sphere of the play of mind; but these were exactly not
       crudities, and even then, at the worst, an interval had to be bridged.
       "The Awkward Age" is precisely a study of one of these curtailed or
       extended periods of tension and apprehension, an account of the manner
       in which the resented interference with ancient liberties came to be in
       a particular instance dealt with.
       I note once again that I had not escaped seeing it actually and
       traceably dealt with--(I admit) a good deal of friendly suspense; also
       with the nature and degree of the "sacrifice" left very much to one's
       appreciation. In circles highly civilised the great things, the real
       things, the hard, the cruel and even the tender things, the true
       elements of any tension and true facts of any crisis, have ever, for the
       outsider's, for the critic's use, to be translated into terms--terms in
       the distinguished name of which, terms for the right employment of
       which, more than one situation of the type I glance at had struck me as
       all irresistibly appealing. There appeared in fact at moments no end to
       the things they said, the suggestions into which they flowered; one of
       these latter in especial arriving at the highest intensity. Putting
       vividly before one the perfect system on which the awkward age is
       handled in most other European societies, it threw again into relief the
       inveterate English trick of the so morally well-meant and so
       intellectually helpless compromise. We live notoriously, as I suppose
       every age lives, in an "epoch of transition"; but it may still be said
       of the French for instance, I assume, that their social scheme
       absolutely provides against awkwardness. That is it would be, by this
       scheme, so infinitely awkward, so awkward beyond any patching-up, for
       the hovering female young to be conceived as present at "good" talk,
       that their presence is, theoretically at least, not permitted till their
       youth has been promptly corrected by marriage--in which case they have
       ceased to be merely young. The better the talk prevailing in any circle,
       accordingly, the more organised, the more complete, the element of
       precaution and exclusion. Talk--giving the term a wide application--is
       one thing, and a proper inexperience another; and it has never occurred
       to a logical people that the interest of the greater, the general, need
       be sacrificed to that of the less, the particular. Such sacrifices
       strike them as gratuitous and barbarous, as cruel above all to the
       social intelligence; also as perfectly preventable by wise arrangement.
       Nothing comes home more, on the other hand, to the observer of English
       manners than the very moderate degree in which wise arrangement, in the
       French sense of a scientific economy, has ever been invoked; a fact
       indeed largely explaining the great interest of their incoherence, their
       heterogeneity, their wild abundance. The French, all analytically, have
       conceived of fifty different proprieties, meeting fifty different cases,
       whereas the English mind, less intensely at work, has never conceived
       but of one--the grand propriety, for every case, it should in fairness
       be said, of just being English. As practice, however, has always to be a
       looser thing than theory, so no application of that rigour has been
       possible in the London world without a thousand departures from the grim
       ideal.
       The American theory, if I may "drag it in," would be, I think, that talk
       should never become "better" than the female young, either actually or
       constructively present, are minded to allow it. THAT system involves as
       little compromise as the French; it has been absolutely simple, and the
       beauty of its success shines out in every record of our conditions of
       intercourse--premising always our "basic" assumption that the female
       young read the newspapers. The English theory may be in itself almost as
       simple, but different and much more complex forces have ruled the
       application of it; so much does the goodness of talk depend on what
       there may be to talk about. There are more things in London, I think,
       than anywhere in the world; hence the charm of the dramatic struggle
       reflected in my book, the struggle somehow to fit propriety into a
       smooth general case which is really all the while bristling and
       crumbling into fierce particular ones. The circle surrounding Mrs.
       Brookenham, in my pages, is of course nothing if not a particular, even
       a "peculiar" one--and its rather vain effort (the vanity, the real
       inexpertness, being precisely part of my tale) is toward the courage of
       that condition. It has cropped up in a social order where individual
       appreciations of propriety have not been formally allowed for, in spite
       of their having very often quite rudely and violently and insolently,
       rather of course than insidiously, flourished; so that as the matter
       stands, rightly or wrongly, Nanda's retarded, but eventually none the
       less real, incorporation means virtually Nanda's exposure. It means
       this, that is, and many things beside--means them for Nanda herself
       and, with a various intensity, for the other participants in the action;
       but what it particularly means, surely, is the failure of successful
       arrangement and the very moral, sharply pointed, of the fruits of
       compromise. It is compromise that has suffered her to be in question at
       all, and that has condemned the freedom of the circle to be self-
       conscious, compunctious, on the whole much more timid than brave--the
       consequent muddle, if the term be not too gross, representing meanwhile
       a great inconvenience for life, but, as I found myself feeling, an
       immense promise, a much greater one than on the "foreign" showing, for
       the painted picture of life. Beyond which let me add that here
       immediately is a prime specimen of the way in which the obscurer, the
       lurking relations of a motive apparently simple, always in wait for
       their spring, may by seizing their chance for it send simplicity flying.
       Poor Nanda's little case, and her mother's, and Mr. Longdon's and
       Vanderbank's and Mitchy's, to say nothing of that of the others, has
       only to catch a reflected light from over the Channel in order to double
       at once its appeal to the imagination. (I am considering all these
       matters, I need scarce say, only as they are concerned with that
       faculty. With a relation NOT imaginative to his material the storyteller
       has nothing whatever to do.)
       It exactly happened moreover that my own material here was to profit in
       a particular way by that extension of view. My idea was to be treated
       with light irony--it would be light and ironical or it would be nothing;
       so that I asked myself, naturally, what might be the least solemn form
       to give it, among recognised and familiar forms. The question thus at
       once arose: What form so familiar, so recognised among alert readers, as
       that in which the ingenious and inexhaustible, the charming philosophic
       "Gyp" casts most of her social studies? Gyp had long struck me as
       mistress, in her levity, of one of the happiest of forms--the only
       objection to my use of which was a certain extraordinary benightedness
       on the part of the Anglo-Saxon reader. One had noted this reader as
       perverse and inconsequent in respect to the absorption of "dialogue"
       --observed the "public for fiction" consume it, in certain connexions, on
       the scale and with the smack of lips that mark the consumption of bread-
       and-jam by a children's school-feast, consume it even at the theatre, so
       far as our theatre ever vouchsafes it, and yet as flagrantly reject it
       when served, so to speak, au naturel. One had seen good solid slices of
       fiction, well endued, one might surely have thought, with this easiest
       of lubrications, deplored by editor and publisher as positively not, for
       the general gullet as known to THEM, made adequately "slick."
       "'Dialogue,' always 'dialogue'!" I had seemed from far back to hear them
       mostly cry: "We can't have too much of it, we can't have enough of it,
       and no excess of it, in the form of no matter what savourless dilution,
       or what boneless dispersion, ever began to injure a book so much as even
       the very scantest claim put in for form and substance." This wisdom had
       always been in one's ears; but it had at the same time been equally in
       one's eyes that really constructive dialogue, dialogue organic and
       dramatic, speaking for itself, representing and embodying substance and
       form, is among us an uncanny and abhorrent thing, not to be dealt with
       on any terms. A comedy or a tragedy may run for a thousand nights
       without prompting twenty persons in London or in New York to desire that
       view of its text which is so desired in Paris, as soon as a play begins
       to loom at all large, that the number of copies of the printed piece in
       circulation far exceeds at last the number of performances. But as with
       the printed piece our own public, infatuated as it may be with the
       theatre, refuses all commerce--though indeed this can't but be, without
       cynicism, very much through the infirmity the piece, IF printed, would
       reveal--so the same horror seems to attach to any typographic hint of
       the proscribed playbook or any insidious plea for it. The immense oddity
       resides in the almost exclusively typographic order of the offence. An
       English, an American Gyp would typographically offend, and that would be
       the end of her. THERE gloomed at me my warning, as well as shone at me
       my provocation, in respect to the example of this delightful writer. I
       might emulate her, since I presumptuously would, but dishonour would
       await me if, proposing to treat the different faces of my subject in the
       most completely instituted colloquial form, I should evoke the figure
       and affirm the presence of participants by the repeated and prefixed
       name rather than by the recurrent and affixed "said he" and "said she."
       All I have space to go into here--much as the funny fact I refer to
       might seem to invite us to dance hand in hand round it--is that I was at
       any rate duly admonished, that I took my measures accordingly, and that
       the manner in which I took them has lived again for me ever so
       arrestingly, so amusingly, on re-examination of the book.
       But that I did, positively and seriously--ah so seriously!--emulate the
       levity of Gyp and, by the same token, of that hardiest of flowers
       fostered in her school, M. Henri Lavedan, is a contribution to the
       history of "The Awkward Age" that I shall obviously have had to brace
       myself in order to make. Vivid enough to me the expression of face of
       any kindest of critics, even, moved to declare that he would never in
       the least have suspected it. Let me say at once, in extenuation of the
       too respectful distance at which I may thus have appeared to follow my
       model, that my first care HAD to be the covering of my tracks--lest I
       truly should be caught in the act of arranging, of organising dialogue
       to "speak for itself." What I now see to have happened is that I
       organised and arranged but too well--too well, I mean, for any betrayal
       of the Gyp taint, however faded and feeble. The trouble appears to have
       been that while I on the one hand exorcised the baleful association, I
       succeeded in rousing on nobody's part a sense of any other association
       whatever, or of my having cast myself into any conceivable or calculable
       form. My private inspiration had been in the Gyp plan (artfully
       dissimulated, for dear life, and applied with the very subtlest
       consistency, but none the less kept in secret view); yet I was to fail
       to make out in the event that the book succeeded in producing the
       impression of ANY plan on any person. No hint of that sort of success,
       or of any critical perception at all in relation to the business, has
       ever come my way; in spite of which when I speak, as just above, of what
       was to "happen" under the law of my ingenious labour, I fairly lose
       myself in the vision of a hundred bright phenomena. Some of these
       incidents I must treat myself to naming, for they are among the best I
       shall have on any occasion to retail. But I must first give the measure
       of the degree in which they were mere matters of the study. This
       composition had originally appeared in "Harper's Weekly" during the
       autumn of 1898 and the first weeks of the winter, and the volume
       containing it was published that spring. I had meanwhile been absent
       from England, and it was not till my return, some time later, that I had
       from my publisher any news of our venture. But the news then met at a
       stroke all my curiosity: "I'm sorry to say the book has done nothing to
       speak of; I've never in all my experience seen one treated with more
       general and complete disrespect." There was thus to be nothing left me
       for fond subsequent reference--of which I doubtless give even now so
       adequate an illustration--save the rich reward of the singular interest
       attaching to the very intimacies of the effort.
       It comes back to me, the whole "job," as wonderfully amusing and
       delightfully difficult from the first; since amusement deeply abides, I
       think, in any artistic attempt the basis and groundwork of which are
       conscious of a particular firmness. On that hard fine floor the element
       of execution feels it may more or less confidently DANCE; in which case
       puzzling questions, sharp obstacles, dangers of detail, may come up for
       it by the dozen without breaking its heart or shaking its nerve. It is
       the difficulty produced by the loose foundation or the vague scheme that
       breaks the heart--when a luckless fatuity has over-persuaded an author
       of the "saving" virtue of treatment. Being "treated" is never, in a
       workable idea, a mere passive condition, and I hold no subject ever
       susceptible of help that isn't, like the embarrassed man of our
       proverbial wisdom, first of all able to help itself. I was thus to have
       here an envious glimpse, in carrying my design through, of that artistic
       rage and that artistic felicity which I have ever supposed to be
       intensest and highest, the confidence of the dramatist strong in the
       sense of his postulate. The dramatist has verily to BUILD, is committed
       to architecture, to construction at any cost; to driving in deep his
       vertical supports and laying across and firmly fixing his horizontal,
       his resting pieces--at the risk of no matter what vibration from the tap
       of his master-hammer. This makes the active value of his basis immense,
       enabling him, with his flanks protected, to advance undistractedly, even
       if not at all carelessly, into the comparative fairy-land of the mere
       minor anxiety. In other words his scheme HOLDS, and as he feels this in
       spite of noted strains and under repeated tests, so he keeps his face to
       the day. I rejoiced, by that same token, to feel MY scheme hold, and
       even a little ruefully watched it give me much more than I had ventured
       to hope. For I promptly found my conceived arrangement of my material
       open the door wide to ingenuity. I remember that in sketching my project
       for the conductors of the periodical I have named I drew on a sheet of
       paper--and possibly with an effect of the cabalistic, it now comes over
       me, that even anxious amplification may have but vainly attenuated--the
       neat figure of a circle consisting of a number of small rounds disposed
       at equal distance about a central object. The central object was my
       situation, my subject in itself, to which the thing would owe its title,
       and the small rounds represented so many distinct lamps, as I liked to
       call them, the function of each of which would be to light with all due
       intensity one of its aspects. I had divided it, didn't they see? into
       aspects--uncanny as the little term might sound (though not for a moment
       did I suggest we should use it for the public), and by that sign we
       would conquer.
       They "saw," all genially and generously--for I must add that I had made,
       to the best of my recollection, no morbid scruple of not blabbing about
       Gyp and her strange incitement. I the more boldly held my tongue over
       this that the more I, by my intelligence, lived in my arrangement and
       moved about in it, the more I sank into satisfaction. It was clearly to
       work to a charm and, during this process--by calling at every step for
       an exquisite management--"to haunt, to startle and waylay." Each of my
       "lamps" would be the light of a single "social occasion" in the history
       and intercourse of the characters concerned, and would bring out to the
       full the latent colour of the scene in question and cause it to
       illustrate, to the last drop, its bearing on my theme. I revelled in
       this notion of the Occasion as a thing by itself, really and completely
       a scenic thing, and could scarce name it, while crouching amid the thick
       arcana of my plan, with a large enough O. The beauty of the conception
       was in this approximation of the respective divisions of my form to the
       successive Acts of a Play--as to which it was more than ever a case for
       charmed capitals. The divine distinction of the act of a play--and a
       greater than any other it easily succeeds in arriving at--was, I
       reasoned, in its special, its guarded objectivity. This objectivity,
       in turn, when achieving its ideal, came from the imposed absence of that
       "going behind," to compass explanations and amplifications, to drag out
       odds and ends from the "mere" storyteller's great property-shop of aids
       to illusion: a resource under denial of which it was equally perplexing
       and delightful, for a change, to proceed. Everything, for that matter,
       becomes interesting from the moment it has closely to consider, for full
       effect positively to bestride, the law of its kind. "Kinds" are the very
       life of literature, and truth and strength come from the complete
       recognition of them, from abounding to the utmost in their respective
       senses and sinking deep into their consistency. I myself have scarcely
       to plead the cause of "going behind," which is right and beautiful and
       fruitful in its place and order; but as the confusion of kinds is the
       inelegance of letters and the stultification of values, so to renounce
       that line utterly and do something quite different instead may become in
       another connexion the true course and the vehicle of effect. Something
       in the very nature, in the fine rigour, of this special sacrifice (which
       is capable of affecting the form-lover, I think, as really more of a
       projected form than any other) lends it moreover a coercive charm; a
       charm that grows in proportion as the appeal to it tests and stretches
       and strains it, puts it powerfully to the touch. To make the presented
       occasion tell all its story itself, remain shut up in its own presence
       and yet on that patch of staked-out ground become thoroughly interesting
       and remain thoroughly clear, is a process not remarkable, no doubt, so
       long as a very light weight is laid on it, but difficult enough to
       challenge and inspire great adroitness so soon as the elements to be
       dealt with begin at all to "size up."
       The disdainers of the contemporary drama deny, obviously, with all
       promptness, that the matter to be expressed by its means--richly and
       successfully expressed that is--CAN loom with any largeness; since from
       the moment it does one of the conditions breaks down. The process simply
       collapses under pressure, they contend, proves its weakness as quickly
       as the office laid on it ceases to be simple. "Remember," they say to
       the dramatist, "that you have to be, supremely, three things: you have
       to be true to your form, you have to be interesting, you have to be
       clear. You have in other words to prove yourself adequate to taking a
       heavy weight. But we defy you really to conform to your conditions with
       any but a light one. Make the thing you have to convey, make the picture
       you have to paint, at all rich and complex, and you cease to be clear.
       Remain clear--and with the clearness required by the infantine
       intelligence of any public consenting to see a play--and what becomes
       of the 'importance' of your subject? If it's important by any other
       critical measure than the little foot-rule the 'produced' piece has to
       conform to, it is predestined to be a muddle. When it has escaped being
       a muddle the note it has succeeded in striking at the furthest will be
       recognised as one of those that are called high but by the courtesy, by
       the intellectual provinciality, of theatrical criticism, which, as we
       can see for ourselves any morning, is--well, an abyss even deeper than
       the theatre itself. Don't attempt to crush us with Dumas and Ibsen, for
       such values are from any informed and enlightened point of view, that is
       measured by other high values, literary, critical, philosophic, of the
       most moderate order. Ibsen and Dumas are precisely cases of men, men in
       their degree, in their poor theatrical straight-jacket, speculative, who
       have HAD to renounce the finer thing for the coarser, the thick, in
       short, for the thin and the curious for the self-evident. What earthly
       intellectual distinction, what 'prestige' of achievement, would have
       attached to the substance of such things as 'Denise,' as 'Monsieur
       Alphonse,' as 'Francillon' (and we take the Dumas of the supposedly
       subtler period) in any other form? What virtues of the same order would
       have attached to 'The Pillars of Society,' to 'An Enemy of the People,'
       to 'Ghosts,' to 'Rosmersholm' (or taking also Ibsen's 'subtler period')
       to 'John Gabriel Borkmann,' to 'The Master-Builder'? Ibsen is in fact
       wonderfully a case in point, since from the moment he's clear, from the
       moment he's 'amusing,' it's on the footing of a thesis as simple and
       superficial as that of 'A Doll's House'--while from the moment he's by
       apparent intention comprehensive and searching it's on the footing of an
       effect as confused and obscure as 'The Wild Duck.' From which you easily
       see ALL the conditions can't be met. The dramatist has to choose but
       those he's most capable of, and by that choice he's known."
       So the objector concludes, and never surely without great profit from
       his having been "drawn." His apparent triumph--if it be even apparent--
       still leaves, it will be noted, convenient cover for retort in the
       riddled face of the opposite stronghold. The last word in these cases is
       for nobody who can't pretend to an ABSOLUTE test. The terms here used,
       obviously, are matters of appreciation, and there is no short cut to
       proof (luckily for us all round) either that "Monsieur Alphonse"
       develops itself on the highest plane of irony or that "Ghosts"
       simplifies almost to excruciation. If "John Gabriel Borkmann" is but a
       pennyworth of effect as to a character we can imagine much more amply
       presented, and if "Hedda Gabler" makes an appeal enfeebled by remarkable
       vagueness, there is by the nature of the case no catching the convinced,
       or call him the deluded, spectator or reader in the act of a mistake. He
       is to be caught at the worst in the act of attention, of the very
       greatest attention, and that is all, as a precious preliminary at least,
       that the playwright asks of him, besides being all the very divinest
       poet can get. I remember rejoicing as much to remark this, after getting
       launched in "The Awkward Age," as if I were in fact constructing a play
       --just as I may doubtless appear now not less anxious to keep the
       philosophy of the dramatist's course before me than if I belonged to his
       order. I felt, certainly, the support he feels, I participated in his
       technical amusement, I tasted to the full the bitter-sweetness of his
       draught--the beauty and the difficulty (to harp again on that string) of
       escaping poverty EVEN THOUGH the references in one's action can only be,
       with intensity, to each other, to things exactly on the same plane of
       exhibition with themselves. Exhibition may mean in a "story" twenty
       different ways, fifty excursions, alternatives, excrescences, and the
       novel, as largely practised in English, is the perfect paradise of the
       loose end. The play consents to the logic of but one way, mathematically
       right, and with the loose end as gross an impertinence on its surface,
       and as grave a dishonour, as the dangle of a snippet of silk or wool on
       the right side of a tapestry. We are shut up wholly to cross-relations,
       relations all within the action itself; no part of which is related to
       anything but some other part--save of course by the relation of the
       total to life. And, after invoking the protection of Gyp, I saw the
       point of my game all in the problem of keeping these conditioned
       relations crystalline at the same time that I should, in emulation of
       life, consent to their being numerous and fine and characteristic of the
       London world (as the London world was in this quarter and that to be
       deciphered). All of which was to make in the event for complications.
       I see now of course how far, with my complications, I got away from Gyp;
       but I see to-day so much else too that this particular deflexion from
       simplicity makes scarce a figure among the others after having once
       served its purpose, I mean, of lighting my original imitative innocence.
       For I recognise in especial, with a waking vibration of that interest in
       which, as I say, the plan of the book is embalmed for me, that my
       subject was probably condemned in advance to appreciable, or more
       exactly perhaps to almost preposterously appreciative, over-treatment.
       It places itself for me thus in a group of small productions exhibiting
       this perversity, representations of conceived cases in which my process
       has been to pump the case gaspingly dry, dry not only of superfluous
       moisture, but absolutely (for I have encountered the charge) of
       breathable air. I may note, in fine, that coming back to the pages
       before us with a strong impression of their recording, to my shame, that
       disaster, even to the extent of its disqualifying them for decent
       reappearance, I have found the adventure taking, to my relief, quite
       another turn, and have lost myself in the wonder of what "over-
       treatment" may, in the detail of its desperate ingenuity, consist of.
       The revived interest I speak of has been therefore that of following
       critically, from page to page, even as the red Indian tracks in the
       forest the pale-face, the footsteps of the systematic loyalty I was able
       to achieve. The amusement of this constatation is, as I have hinted, in
       the detail of the matter, and the detail is so dense, the texture of the
       figured and smoothed tapestry so loose, that the genius of Gyp herself,
       muse of general looseness, would certainly, once warned, have uttered
       the first disavowal of my homage. But what has occurred meanwhile is
       that this high consistency has itself, so to speak, constituted an
       exhibition, and that an important artistic truth has seemed to me
       thereby lighted. We brushed against that truth just now in our glance at
       the denial of expansibility to any idea the mould of the "stage-play"
       may hope to express without cracking and bursting--and we bear in mind
       at the same time that the picture of Nanda Brookenham's situation,
       though perhaps seeming to a careless eye so to wander and sprawl, yet
       presents itself on absolutely scenic lines, and that each of these
       scenes in itself, and each as related to each and to all of its
       companions, abides without a moment's deflexion by the principle of the
       stage-play. In doing this then it does more--it helps us ever so happily
       to see the grave distinction between substance and form in a really
       wrought work of art signally break down. I hold it impossible to say,
       before "The Awkward Age," where one of these elements ends and the other
       begins: I have been unable at least myself, on re-examination, to mark
       any such joint or seam, to see the two DISCHARGED offices as separate.
       They are separate before the fact, but the sacrament of execution
       indissolubly marries them, and the marriage, like any other marriage,
       has only to be a "true" one for the scandal of a breach not to show. The
       thing "done," artistically, is a fusion, or it has not BEEN done--in
       which case of course the artist may be, and all deservedly, pelted with
       any fragment of his botch the critic shall choose to pick up. But his
       ground once conquered, in this particular field, he knows nothing of
       fragments and may say in all security: "Detach one if you can. You can
       analyse in YOUR way, oh yes--to relate, to report, to explain; but you
       can't disintegrate my synthesis; you can't resolve the elements of my
       whole into different responsible agents or find your way at all (for
       your own fell purpose). My mixture has only to be perfect literally to
       bewilder you--you are lost in the tangle of the forest. Prove this
       value, this effect, in the air of the whole result, to be of my subject,
       and that other value, other effect, to be of my treatment, prove that I
       haven't so shaken them together as the conjurer I profess to be MUST
       consummately shake, and I consent but to parade as before a booth at the
       fair." The exemplary closeness of "The Awkward Age" even affects me, on
       re-perusal, I confess, as treasure quite instinctively and foreseeingly
       laid up against my present opportunity for these remarks. I have been
       positively struck by the quantity of meaning and the number of
       intentions, the extent of GROUND FOR INTEREST, as I may call it, that I
       have succeeded in working scenically, yet without loss of sharpness,
       clearness or "atmosphere," into each of my illuminating occasions--
       where, at certain junctures, the due preservation of all these values
       took, in the familiar phrase, a good deal of doing.
       I should have liked just here to re-examine with the reader some of the
       positively most artful passages I have in mind--such as the hour of Mr.
       Longdon's beautiful and, as it were, mystic attempt at a compact with
       Vanderbank, late at night, in the billiard-room of the country-house at
       which they are staying; such as the other nocturnal passage, under Mr.
       Longdon's roof, between Vanderbank and Mitchy, where the conduct of so
       much fine meaning, so many flares of the exhibitory torch through the
       labyrinth of mere immediate appearances, mere familiar allusions, is
       successfully and safely effected; such as the whole array of the terms
       of presentation that are made to serve, all systematically, yet without
       a gap anywhere, for the presentation, throughout, of a Mitchy "subtle"
       no less than concrete and concrete no less than deprived of that
       officious explanation which we know as "going behind"; such as, briefly,
       the general service of co-ordination and vivification rendered, on lines
       of ferocious, of really quite heroic compression, by the picture of the
       assembled group at Mrs. Grendon's, where the "cross-references" of the
       action are as thick as the green leaves of a garden, but none the less,
       as they have scenically to be, counted and disposed, weighted with
       responsibility. Were I minded to use in this connexion a "loud" word--
       and the critic in general hates loud words as a man of taste may hate
       loud colours--I should speak of the composition of the chapters entitled
       "Tishy Grendon," with all the pieces of the game on the table together
       and each unconfusedly and contributively placed, as triumphantly
       scientific. I must properly remind myself, rather, that the better
       lesson of my retrospect would seem to be really a supreme revision of
       the question of what it may be for a subject to suffer, to call it
       suffering, by over-treatment. Bowed down so long by the inference that
       its product had in this case proved such a betrayal, my artistic
       conscience meets the relief of having to recognise truly here no traces
       of suffering. The thing carries itself to my maturer and gratified sense
       as with every symptom of soundness, an insolence of health and joy. And
       from this precisely I deduce my moral; which is to the effect that,
       since our only way, in general, of knowing that we have had too much of
       anything is by FEELING that too much: so, by the same token, when we
       don't feel the excess (and I am contending, mind, that in "The Awkward
       Age" the multiplicity yields to the order) how do we know that the
       measure not recorded, the notch not reached, does represent adequacy or
       satiety? The mere feeling helps us for certain degrees of congestion,
       but for exact science, that is for the criticism of "fine" art, we want
       the notation. The notation, however, is what we lack, and the verdict of
       the mere feeling is liable to fluctuate. In other words an imputed
       defect is never, at the worst, disengageable, or other than matter for
       appreciation--to come back to my claim for that felicity of the
       dramatist's case that his synthetic "whole" IS his form, the only one we
       have to do with. I like to profit in his company by the fact that if our
       art has certainly, for the impression it produces, to defer to the rise
       and fall, in the critical temperature, of the telltale mercury, it still
       hasn't to reckon with the engraved thermometer-face.
       HENRY JAMES.
        
       THE AWKWARD AGE
       Content of PREFACE [Henry James' novel: The Awkward Age]
       _
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PREFACE
BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA
   BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA - CHAPTER I
   BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA - CHAPTER II
   BOOK FIRST - LADY JULIA - CHAPTER III
BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER I
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER II
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER III
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER V
   BOOK SECOND - LITTLE AGGIE - CHAPTER VI
BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON
   BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON - CHAPTER I
   BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON - CHAPTER II
   BOOK THIRD - MR. LONGDON - CHAPTER III
BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE
   BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE - CHAPTER I
   BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE - CHAPTER II
   BOOK FOURTH - MR. CASHMORE - CHAPTER III
BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER I
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER II
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER III
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK FIFTH - THE DUCHESS - CHAPTER V
BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK
   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER I
   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER II
   BOOK SIXTH - MRS. BROOK - CHAPTER III
BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY
   BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY - CHAPTER I
   BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY - CHAPTER II
   BOOK SEVENTH - MITCHY - CHAPTER III
BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER I
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER II
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER III
   BOOK EIGHTH - TISHY GRENDON - CHAPTER IV
BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER I
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER II
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER III
   BOOK NINTH - VANDERBANK - CHAPTER IV
BOOK TENTH - NANDA
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER I
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER II
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER III
   BOOK TENTH - NANDA - CHAPTER IV