If We Can Suppose Any People To
Have An Intimate Acquaintance With The Best Literary Efforts Of
Other Countries, We Should Hardly Be Correct In Saying That Such A
People Had No Literary History Of Their Own Because It Had Itself
Produced Nothing In Literature.
And, with reference to those
countries which have been most fertile in the production of good
books, I doubt whether their literary histories should not have more
to tell of those ages in which much has been read than of those in
which much has been written.
The United States have been by no means barren in the production of
literature. The truth is so far from this that their literary
triumphs are perhaps those which of all their triumphs are the most
honorable to them, and which, considering their position as a young
nation, are the most permanently satisfactory. But though they have
done much in writing, they have done much more in reading. As
producers they are more than respectable, but as consumers they are
the most conspicuous people on the earth. It is impossible to speak
of the subject of literature in America without thinking of the
readers rather than of the writers. In this matter their position
is different from that of any other great people, seeing that they
share the advantages of our language. An American will perhaps
consider himself to be as little like an Englishman as he is like a
Frenchman. But he reads Shakspeare through the medium of his own
vernacular, and has to undergo the penance of a foreign tongue
before he can understand Moliere. He separates himself from England
in politics and perhaps in affection; but he cannot separate himself
from England in mental culture. It may be suggested that an
Englishman has the same advantages as regards America; and it is
true that he is obtaining much of such advantage. Irving, Prescott,
and Longfellow are the same to England as though she herself had
produced them. But the balance of advantage must be greatly in
favor of America. We gave her the work of four hundred years, and
received back in return the work of fifty.
And of this advantage the Americans have not been slow to avail
themselves. As consumers of literature they are certainly the most
conspicuous people on the earth. Where an English publisher
contents himself with thousands of copies, an American publisher
deals with ten thousand. The sale of a new book, which in numbers
would amount to a considerable success with us, would with them be a
lamentable failure. This of course is accounted for, as regards the
author and the publisher, by the difference of price at which the
book is produced. One thousand in England will give perhaps as good
a return as the ten thousand in America. But as regards the readers
there can be no such equalization: the thousand copies cannot spread
themselves as do the ten thousand. The one book at a guinea cannot
multiply itself, let Mr. Mudie do what he will, as do the ten books
at a dollar.
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