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Essay(s) by Thomas De Quincey
On Novels (Written In A Lady's Album)
Thomas De Quincey
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       A false ridicule has settled upon Novels, and upon Young Ladies as the readers of novels. Love, we are told authoritatively, has not that importance in the actual practice of life--nor that extensive influence upon human affairs--which novel-writers postulate, and which the interest of novels presumes. Something to this effect has been said by an eminent writer; and the law is generally laid down upon these principles by cynical old men, and envious blue-stockings who have outlived their personal attractions. The sentiment however is false even for the present condition of society; and it will become continually _more_ false as society improves. For what is the great commanding event, the one sole revolution, in a woman's life? Marriage. Viewing her course from the cradle to the grave in the light of a drama, I am entitled to say that her wedding-day is its catastrophe--or, in technical language, its _peripeteia_: whatever else is important to her in succeeding years has its origin in that event. So much for _that_ sex. For the other, it is admitted that Love is not, in the same exclusive sense, the governing principle under which their lives move: but what then are the concurrent forces, which sometimes happen to cooeperate with that agency--but more frequently disturb it? They are two; Ambition, and Avarice. Now for the vast majority of men--Ambition, or the passion for personal distinction, has too narrow a stage of action, its grounds of hope are too fugitive and unsteady, to furnish any durable or domineering influence upon the course of life. Avarice again is so repulsive to the native nobility of the human heart, that it rarely obtains the dignity of a passion: great energy of character is requisite to form a consistent and accomplished miser: and of the mass of men it may be said--that, if the beneficence of nature has in some measure raised them _above_ avarice by the necessity of those social instincts which she has impressed upon their hearts, in some measure also they sink _below_ it by their deficiencies in that austerity of self-denial and that savage strength of will which are indispensable qualifications for the _role_ of heroic miser. A perfect miser in fact is a great man, and therefore a very rare one. Take away then the two forces of Ambition and Avarice,--what remains even to the male sex as a capital and overruling influence in life, except the much nobler force of Love? History confirms this view: the self-devotions and the voluntary martyrdoms of all other passions collectively have been few by comparison with those which have been offered at the altar of Love. If society should ever make any great advance, and man as a species grow conspicuously nobler, Love also will grow nobler; and a passion, which at present is possible in any elevated form for one perhaps in a hundred, will then be coextensive with the human heart.
       On this view of the grandeur which belongs to the passion of Sexual Love in the economy of life, as it is and as it may be, Novels have an all-sufficient justification; and Novel-readers are obeying a higher and more philosophic impulse than they are aware of. They seek an imaginary world where the harsh hindrances, which in the real one too often fret and disturb the 'course of true love,' may be forced to bend to the claims of justice and the pleadings of the heart. In company with the agitations and the dread suspense--the anguish and the tears, which so often wait upon the uncertainties of earthly love, they demand at the hands of the Novelist a final event corresponding to the natural award of celestial wisdom and benignity. What they are striving after, in short, is--to realize an ideal; and to reproduce the actual world under more harmonious arrangements. This is the secret craving of the reader; and Novels are shaped to meet it. With what success, is a separate and independent question: the execution cannot prejudice the estimate of their aim and essential purpose.
       Fair and unknown Owner of this Album, whom perhaps I have never seen--whom perhaps I never _shall_ see, pardon me for wasting two pages of your elegant manual upon this semi-metaphysical disquisition. Let the subject plead my excuse. And believe that I am, Fair Incognita!
       Your faithful servant,
       THOMAS DE QUINCEY.
       _Professor Wilson's--Glocester Place, Edinburgh._
       _Friday night, December 3, 1830._
       [The end]
       Thomas De Quincey's essay: On Novels (Written In A Lady's Album)
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'Let Him Come Down From The Cross'
'What Is Truth?' The Jesting Pilate Said--A False Gloss
Abstract Of Swedenborgianism
Alexander Pope
Anecdotes--Juvenal
Anglo-German Dictionaries
Anna Louisa
The Anti-Papal Movement
The Antigone Of Sophocles, As Represented On The Edinburgh Stage
The Assassination Of Caesar
A Brief Appraisal Of The Greek Literature In Its Foremost Pretensions
Casuistry
The Casuistry Of Duelling
Charlemagne
Charles Lamb
Christianity As The Result Of Pre-Established Harmony
Chrysomania; Or, The Gold-Frenzy In Its Present Stage
Cicero
Coleridge And Opium-Eating
Contrast Of Greek And Persian Feeling In Certain Aspects
Conversation And S. T. Coleridge
Criticism On Some Of Coleridge's Criticisms Of Wordsworth
Daniel O'connell
The Daughter Of Lebanon
David's Numbering Of The People--The Politics Of The Situation
De Quincey's Portrait
Defence Of The English Peerage
Dinner, Real And Reputed
Dispersion Of The Jews, And Josephus's Enmity To Christianity
Dryden's Hexastich
Education, And Case Of Appeal
English Dictionaries
The English In China
The English In India
The English Mail-Coach; Or, The Glory Of Motion
Falsification Of English History
Flight Of A Tartar Tribe
France Past And France Present
The German Language, And Philosophy Of Kant
Goethe
Great Forgers: Chatterton And Walpole, And 'Junius'
Greece Under The Romans
How To Write English
Increased Possibilities Of Sympathy In The Present Age
Is The Human Race On The Down Grade?
The Jewish Scriptures Could Have Been Written In No Modern Era
The Jews As A Separate People
Joan Of Arc
Judas Iscariot
The Lake Dialect
The Last Days Of Immanuel Kant
The Last Will And Testament.--The House Of Weeping
Letter In Reply To Hazlitt Concerning The Malthusian Doctrine Of Population
Lord Carlisle On Pope
The Loveliest Sight For Woman's Eyes
The Marquess Wellesley
Measure Of Value
Memorial Chronology
The Messianic Idea Romanized
Milton
Milton Versus Southey And Landor
Modern Greece
Modern Superstition
Moral Effects Of Revolutions
Mr. Finlay's History Of Greece
Murder As A Fine Art
National Manners And False Judgment Of Them
Omitted Passages And Variations
Omitted Passages And Varied Readings
On Christianity, As An Organ Of Political Movement
On Hume's Argument Against Miracles
On Miracles
On Murder, Considered As One Of The Fine Arts
On Novels (Written In A Lady's Album)
On Pagan Sacrifices
On Suicide
On The Knocking At The Gate, In Macbeth
On The Mythus
On The Supposed Scriptural Expression For Eternity
On War
The Orphan Heiress
Oxford
The Pagan Oracles
A Peripatetic Philosopher
Pope And Didactic Poetry
Pope's Retort Upon Addison
Prefigurations Of Remote Events
The Principle Of Evil
Pronunciation
Protestantism
The Revolution Of Greece
Rome's Recruits And England's Recruits
Schiller
Schlosser's Literary History Of The Eighteenth Century
Secession From The Church Of Scotland
Second Paper On Murder
The Services Of Mr. Ricardo To The Science Of Political Economy
Shakespeare
Shakspeare And Wordsworth
Shakspere's Text.--Suetonius Unravelled
Sketch Of Professor Wilson
Some Thoughts On Biography
The Sphinx's Riddle
Storms In English History: A Glance At The Reign Of Henry VIII
Superficial Knowledge
Suspiria De Profundis
System Of The Heavens As Revealed By Lord Rosse's Telescopes
Temperance Movement
The Templars' Dialogues
Theory And Practice
Three Memorable Murders
Toilette Of The Hebrew Lady
The True Relations Of The Bible To Merely Human Science
The Vision Of Sudden Death
Walking Stewart
What Scaliger Says About The Epistle To Jude
Why The Pagans Could Not Invest Their Gods With Any Iota Of Grandeur
Wordsworth And Southey: Affinities And Differences