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Lang, Andrew, 1844-1912

"Adventures Among Books"

These he had to join together, somehow, and
between his "Orient Pearls at Random Strung" there is occasionally "too
much string," as Dickens once said on another opportunity. Hawthorne's
method is revealed in his published note-books. In these he jotted the
germ of an idea, the first notion of a singular, perhaps supernatural
moral situation. Many of these he never used at all, on others he would
dream, and dream, till the persons in the situations became characters,
and the thing was evolved into a story. Thus he may have invented such a
problem as this: "The effect of a great, sudden sin on a simple and
joyous nature," and thence came all the substance of "The Marble Faun"
("Transformation"). The original and germinal idea would naturally
divide itself into another, as the protozoa reproduce themselves. Another
idea was the effect of nearness to the great crime on a pure and spotless
nature: hence the character of Hilda. In the preface to "The Scarlet
Letter," Hawthorne shows us how he tried, by reflection and dream, to
warm the vague persons of the first mere notion or hint into such life as
characters in romance inherit. While he was in the Civil Service of his
country, in the Custom House at Salem, he could not do this; he needed
freedom. He was dismissed by political opponents from office, and
instantly he was himself again, and wrote his most popular and, perhaps,
his best book.


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