Manchester Literary Club
Published: 2012-02
Total Pages: 278
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: GEORGE ELIOT: NOVELIST, ESSAYIST, POET. By Thomas Newbiggino. XTEIEN George Eliot was busy writing in the fifties, sixties, and seventies of last century, she was hailed as one of the greatest novelists that England had produced. The booksellers to-day state that her popularity has waned; that her works are not now selling as readily as they did, and that it is not good business to keep them in stock. Accepting this as fact, we ask: Has there been a declension in the public taste since those earlier days? Or is there something in the works themselves to produce this damping down of popular favour? Both questions, it appears to me, may be answered in the affirmative. But the reasons of the vicissitudes of popular judgment are not readily explainable in a paragraph. George Eliot is not always easy reading. To get the full significance of her writings she has often to be conned more than once. She is not to be read whilst running. This does not suit present-day novel readers, however it may have been with her contemporaries. They like their excitement served up without philosophical garnishings. The bulk of readers?certainly of readers of fiction?now, are more superficial than those of forty or fifty years ago; an anomaly hardly to be expected, and rather surprising, when the vast annual expenditure on educational work is considered. It is the fact nevertheless, and it does not speak well for the educational results of to-day that she should have fallen into disfavour. Again, her metaphysical and psychological disquisitionsare too much for your ordinary reader. If she had been shallower or more superficial she would have been more popular. She is skilled in the deep secrets of the human heart, and is often abstruse when dealing with even ordinary sensations and incide...