Van Wyck Brooks
published three related works of literary history over the span of about a
decade (while he was publishing other works as well). The
World of Washington Irving depicted U.S. literary culture, and some
history, in the first 20 years or so of the 19th century. The Flowering of New England
1815-1865 showed the seeds that were being planted for a national
literary culture, although it was still largely a regional phenomenon. New England Indian Summer
1865-1915 concerned the lingering influence of New England on national literary
culture, but a major shift was underway.
We are more than
familiar with the writers and poets who emerged from New England during the 19th
century described in these books, because they became part of the American
literary canon. Irving. Ralph Waldo Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorne. Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow. Emily Dickinson. Henry David Thoreau. Henry and William
James. And many more.
But the geographical
center of the country was shifting, and the literary cultural center was
shifting at the same time. As the United States expanded westward, its writers
and poets followed.
T
his is the
world described by Brooks in The
Times of Melville and Whitman (1947). It is the world of pre-Civil War
San Francisco, which drew writers like Bret Harte and Mark Twain. This is the
world of Herman Melville, whose Typee:
A Peek at Polynesian Life captivated readers across the country and
well beyond to Europe, years before he wrote Moby
Dick. This is the world of Walt Whitman, whose Leaves
of Grass transformed American poetry forever.
Mark Twain |
Twain, Melville,
Whitman: America’s writer, the Great American Novel, America’s poet. Between
them, they created what became known as an American literature.
Herman Melville |
Brooks particularly
highlights the role of Twain. “Mark Twain, with his fathomless naivety prepared
the ground, as Whitman did, for a new and unique American art of letters,” he
writes, “in a negative way with The Innocents Abroad, in a positive way with
the Western writings in which he contributed to establish and foster this art.”
Those “Western writings” included Roughing
It, Life
on the Mississippi, The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and Huckleberry
Finn.
But the new national
culture still had its New England influence. Melville was influenced by
Nathaniel Hawthorne (and also by Shakespeare, especially in Moby Dick, Brooks says). And Whitman’s
poetry, as heavily influenced by his political work, his newspaper work, and
the growth of trade and industry as it was, was also influenced and promoted by
Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Walt Whitman |
Literary culture
broke out of the essential regionalism of New England and simultaneously become
more geographically western and national.
Brooks wrote a
time when there was still a sense of national consciousness among the
political, literary, cultural, and business elites. Six decades later, that
sense is largely gone. In academia, the idea of a literary canon is considered
quaint and rather prehistoric, and would likely result in protests by students
and professors alike.
But to read a
work like The Times of Melville and Whitman from today’s vantage point is to
see how much has been lost. And we are the poorer for it.
Related:
Walt Whitman Built Free Verse and Freedom
into His Poetry –
Investors Business Daily.
Walt Whitman in Brooklyn – Newspapers and
“Leaves of Grass” –
Tweetspeak Poetry.
Top illustration: The great comic scene
of the buffalo climbing the tree in Twain’s Roughing It.
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