I Have Spoken Here Of The Privilege Which An English Author Enjoys
By Reason Of The Ever-Widening Circle Of Readers To Whom He Writes.
I Should Have Said The Writers Of English Literature, Seeing That
The Privilege Is Of Course Shared By The American Writer.
I profess
my belief that in the States an English author has an advantage over
one of that country merely in the fact of his being English, as a
French milliner has undoubtedly an advantage in her nationality, let
her merits or demerits as a milliner be what they may.
I think that
English books are better liked because they are English. But I do
not know that there is any feeling with us either for or against an
author because he is American. I believe that Longfellow stands in
our judgment exactly where he would have stood had he been a tutor
at a college in Oxford instead of a Professor at Cambridge in
Massachusetts. Prescott is read among us as a historian without any
reference as to his nationality, and by many, as I take it, in
absolute ignorance of his nationality. Hawthorne, the novelist, is
quite as well known in England as he is in his own country. But I
do not know that to either of these three is awarded any favor or is
denied any justice because he is an American. Washington Irving
published many of his works in this country, receiving very large
sums for them from Mr. Murray, and I fancy that in dealing with his
publisher he found neither advantage nor disadvantage in his
nationality; that is, of course, advantage or disadvantage as
respected the light in which his works would be regarded.
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