American books were harshly reviewed in England. Americans were painfully aware of their excessive dependence on English literary models. The search for a native literature became a national obsession. As one American magazine editor wrote, around 1816, "Dependence is a state of degradation fraught with disgrace, and to be dependent on a foreign mind for what we can ourselves produce is to add to the crime of indolence the weakness of stupidity."
Cultural revolutions, unlike military revolutions, cannot be successfully imposed but must grow from the soil of shared experience. Revolutions are expressions of the heart of the people; they grow gradually out of new sensibilities and wealth of experience. It would take 50 years of accumulated history for America to earn its cultural independence and to produce the first great generation of American writers: Washington Irving, James Fenimore Cooper, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Walt Whitman, and Emily Dickinson. America's literary independence was slowed by a lingering identification with England, an excessive imitation of English or classical literary models, and difficult economic and political conditions that hampered publishing.
Revolutionary writers, despite their genuine patriotism, were of necessity self-conscious, and they could never find roots in their American sensibilities. Colonial writers of the revolutionary generation had been born English, had grown to maturity as English citizens, and had cultivated English modes of thought and English fashions in dress and behavior. Their parents and grandparents were English (or European), as were all their friends. Added to this, American awareness of literary fashion still lagged behind the English, and this time lag intensified American imitation. Fifty years after their fame in England, English neoclassic writers such as Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith, and Samuel Johnson were still eagerly imitated in America.
Moreover, the heady challenges of building a new nation attracted talented and educated people to politics, law, and diplomacy. These pursuits brought honor, glory, and financial security. Writing, on the other hand, did not pay. Early American writers, now separated from England, effectively had no modern publishers, no audience, and no adequate legal protection. Editorial assistance, distribution, and publicity were rudimentary.
Until 1825, most American authors paid printers to publish their work. Obviously only the leisured and independently wealthy, like Washington Irving and the New York Knickerbocker group, or the group of Connecticut poets known as the Hartford Wits, could afford to indulge their interest in writing. The exception, Benjamin Franklin, though from a poor family, was a printer by trade and could publish his own work.
Charles Brockden Brown was more typical. The author of several interesting Gothic romances, Brown was the first American author to attempt to live from his writing. But his short life ended in poverty.
The lack of an audience was another problem. The small cultivated audience in America wanted well-known European authors, partly out of the exaggerated respect with which former colonies regarded their previous rulers. This preference for English works was not entirely unreasonable, considering the inferiority of American output, but it worsened the situation by depriving American authors of an audience. Only journalism offered financial remuneration, but the mass audience wanted light, undemanding verse and short topical essays -- not long or experimental work.
The absence of adequate copyright laws was perhaps the clearest cause of literary stagnation. American printers pirating English best-sellers understandably were unwilling to pay an American author for unknown material. The unauthorized reprinting of foreign books was originally seen as a service to the colonies as well as a source of profit for printers like Franklin, who reprinted works of the classics and great European books to educate the American public.
Printers everywhere in America followed his lead. There are notorious examples of pirating. Matthew Carey, an important American publisher, paid a London agent -- a sort of literary spy -- to send copies of unbound pages, or even proofs, to him in fast ships that could sail to America in a month. Carey's men would sail out to meet the incoming ships in the harbor and speed the pirated books into print using typesetters who divided the book into sections and worked in shifts around the clock. Such a pirated English book could be reprinted in a day and placed on the shelves for sale in American bookstores almost as fast as in England.
Because imported authorized editions were more expensive and could not compete with pirated ones, the copyright situation damaged foreign authors such as Sir Walter Scott and Charles Dickens, along with American authors. But at least the foreign authors had already been paid by their original publishers and were already well known. Americans such as James Fenimore Cooper not only failed to receive adequate payment, but they had to suffer seeing their works pirated under their noses. Cooper's first successful book, The Spy (1821), was pirated by four different printers within a month of its appearance.
Ironically, the copyright law of 1790, which allowed pirating, was nationalistic in intent. Drafted by Noah Webster, the great lexicographer who later compiled an American dictionary, the law protected only the work of American authors; it was felt that English writers should look out for themselves.
Bad as the law was, none of the early publishers were willing to have it changed because it proved profitable for them. Piracy starved the first generation of revolutionary American writers; not surprisingly, the generation after them produced even less work of merit. The high point of piracy, in 1815, corresponds with the low point of American writing. Nevertheless, the cheap and plentiful supply of pirated foreign books and classics in the first 50 years of the new country did educate Americans, including the first great writers, who began to make their appearance around 1825.
THE AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT
The 18th-century American
Enlightenment was a movement marked by
an emphasis on rationality rather than tradition, scientific
inquiry instead of unquestioning religious dogma, and
representative government in place of monarchy. Enlightenment
thinkers and writers were devoted to the ideals of justice,
liberty, and equality as the natural rights of man.
Franklin was a second-generation immigrant. His Puritan
father, a chandler (candle-maker), came to Boston, Massachusetts,
from England in 1683. In many ways Franklin's life illustrates
the impact of the Enlightenment on a gifted individual. Self-
educated but well-read in John Locke, Lord Shaftesbury, Joseph
Addison, and other Enlightenment writers, Franklin learned from
them to apply reason to his own life and to break with tradition
-- in particular the old-fashioned Puritan tradition -- when it
threatened to smother his ideals.
While a youth, Franklin taught himself languages, read
widely, and practiced writing for the public. When he moved from
Boston to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Franklin already had the
kind of education associated with the upper classes. He also had
the Puritan capacity for hard, careful work, constant self-
scrutiny, and the desire to better himself. These qualities
steadily propelled him to wealth, respectability, and honor.
Never selfish, Franklin tried to help other ordinary people
become successful by sharing his insights and initiating a
characteristically American genre -- the self-help book.
Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack, begun in 1732 and
published for many years, made Franklin prosperous and well-known
throughout the colonies. In this annual book of useful
encouragement, advice, and factual information, amusing
characters such as old Father Abraham and Poor Richard exhort the
reader in pithy, memorable sayings. In "The Way to Wealth," which
originally appeared in the Almanack, Father Abraham, "a
plain
clean old Man, with white Locks," quotes Poor Richard at length.
"A Word to the Wise is enough," he says. "God helps them that
help themselves." "Early to Bed, and early to rise, makes a Man
healthy, wealthy, and wise." Poor Richard is a psychologist
("Industry pays Debts, while Despair encreaseth them"), and he
always counsels hard work ("Diligence is the Mother of Good
Luck"). Do not be lazy, he advises, for "One To-day is worth two
tomorrow." Sometimes he creates anecdotes to illustrate his
points: "A little Neglect may breed great Mischief....For want of
a Nail the Shoe was lost; for want of a Shoe the Horse was lost;
and for want of a Horse the Rider was lost, being overtaken and
slain by the Enemy, all for want of Care about a Horse-shoe
Nail." Franklin was a genius at compressing a moral point: "What
maintains one Vice, would bring up two Children." "A small leak
will sink a great Ship." "Fools make Feasts, and wise Men eat
them."
Franklin's Autobiography is, in part, another self-help
book. Written to advise his son, it covers only the early years.
The most famous section describes his scientific scheme of self-
improvement. Franklin lists 13 virtues: temperance, silence,
order, resolution, frugality, industry, sincerity, justice,
moderation, cleanliness, tranquility, chastity, and humility. He
elaborates on each with a maxim; for example, the temperance
maxim is "Eat not to Dullness. Drink not to Elevation." A
pragmatic scientist, Franklin put the idea of perfectibility to
the test, using himself as the experimental subject.
To establish good habits, Franklin invented a reusable
calendrical record book in which he worked on one virtue each
week, recording each lapse with a black spot. His theory
prefigures psychological behaviorism, while his systematic method
of notation anticipates modern behavior modification. The project
of self-improvement blends the Enlightenment belief in
perfectibility with the Puritan habit of moral self-scrutiny.
Franklin saw early that writing could best advance his
ideas, and he therefore deliberately perfected his supple prose
style, not as an end in itself but as a tool. "Write with the
learned. Pronounce with the vulgar," he advised. A scientist, he
followed the Royal (scientific) Society's 1667 advice to use "a
close, naked, natural way of speaking; positive expressions,
clear senses, a native easiness, bringing all things as near the
mathematical plainness as they can."
Despite his prosperity and fame, Franklin never lost his
democratic sensibility, and he was an important figure at the
1787 convention at which the U.S. Constitution was drafted. In
his later years, he was president of an antislavery association.
One of his last efforts was to promote universal public
education.
Crè was the earliest European to develop a considered
view of America and the new American character. The first to
exploit the "melting pot" image of America, in a famous passage
he asks:
The passion of Revolutionary
literature is found in
pamphlets, the most popular form of political literature of the
day. Over 2,000 pamphlets were published during the Revolution.
The pamphlets thrilled patriots and threatened loyalists; they
filled the role of drama, as they were often read aloud in public
to excite audiences. American soldiers read them aloud in their
camps; British Loyalists threw them into public bonfires.
Thomas Paine's pamphlet Common Sense sold over 100,000
copies in the first three months of its publication. It is still
rousing today. "The cause of America is in a great measure the
cause of all mankind," Paine wrote, voicing the idea of American
exceptionalism still strong in the United States -- that in some
fundamental sense, since America is a democratic experiment and a
country theoretically open to all immigrants, the fate of America
foreshadows the fate of humanity at large.
Political writings in a democracy had to be clear to appeal
to the voters. And to have informed voters, universal education
was promoted by many of the founding fathers. One indication of
the vigorous, if simple, literary life was the proliferation of
newspapers. More newspapers were read in America during the
Revolution than anywhere else in the world. Immigration also
mandated a simple style. Clarity was vital to a newcomer, for
whom English might be a second language. Thomas Jefferson's
original draft of the Declaration of Independence is clear and
logical, but his committee's modifications made it even simpler.
The Federalist Papers, written in support of the
Constitution, are also lucid, logical arguments, suitable for
debate in a democratic nation.
Unfortunately, "literary"
writing was not as simple and direct as
political writing. When trying to write poetry, most educated
authors stumbled into the pitfall of elegant neoclassicism. The
epic, in particular, exercised a fatal attraction. American
literary patriots felt sure that the great American Revolution
naturally would find expression in the epic -- a long, dramatic
narrative poem in elevated language, celebrating the feats of a
legendary hero.
Many writers tried but none succeeded. Timothy Dwight (1752-
1817), one of the group of writers known as the Hartford Wits, is
an example. Dwight, who eventually became the president of Yale
University, based his epic, The Conquest of Canaan (1785),
on the
Biblical story of Joshua's struggle to enter the Promised Land.
Dwight cast General Washington, commander of the American army
and later the first president of the United States, as Joshua in
his allegory and borrowed the couplet form that Alexander Pope
used to translate Homer. Dwight's epic was as boring as it was
ambitious. English critics demolished it; even Dwight's friends,
such as John Trumbull (1750-1831), remained unenthusiastic. So
much thunder and lightning raged in the melodramatic battle
scenes that Trumbull proposed that the epic be provided with
lightning rods.
Not surprisingly, satirical poetry fared much better than
serious verse. The mock epic genre encouraged American poets to
use their natural voices and did not lure them into a bog of
pretentious and predictable patriotic sentiments and faceless
conventional poetic epithets out of the Greek poet Homer and the
Roman poet Virgil by way of the English poets.
In mock epics like John Trumbull's good-humored M'Fingal
(1776-82), stylized emotions and conventional turns of phrase are
ammunition for good satire, and the bombastic oratory of the
revolution is itself ridiculed. Modeled on the British poet
Samuel Butler's Hudibras, the mock epic derides a Tory,
M'Fingal.
It is often pithy, as when noting of condemned criminals facing
hanging:
M'Fingal went into over 30 editions, was reprinted for a
half-
century, and was appreciated in England as well as America.
Satire appealed to Revolutionary audiences partly because it
contained social comment and criticism, and political topics and
social problems were the main subjects of the day. The first
American comedy to be performed, The Contrast (produced
1787) by
Royall Tyler (1757-1826), humorously contrasts Colonel Manly, an
American officer, with Dimple, who imitates English fashions.
Naturally, Dimple is made to look ridiculous. The play introduces
the first Yankee character, Jonathan.
Another satirical work, the novel Modern Chivalry,
published
by Hugh Henry Brackenridge in installments from 1792 to 1815,
memorably lampoons the excesses of the age. Brackenridge (1748-
1816), a Scottish immigrant raised on the American frontier,
based his huge, picaresque novel on Don Quixote; it describes the
misadventures of Captain Farrago and his stupid, brutal, yet
appealingly human, servant Teague O'Regan.
One poet, Philip Freneau,
incorporated the new stirrings of
European Romanticism and escaped the imitativeness and vague
universality of the Hartford Wits. The key to both his success
and his failure was his passionately democratic spirit combined
with an inflexible temper.
The Hartford Wits, all of them undoubted patriots, reflected
the general cultural conservatism of the educated classes.
Freneau set himself against this holdover of old Tory attitudes,
complaining of "the writings of an aristocratic, speculating
faction at Hartford, in favor of monarchy and titular
distinctions." Although Freneau received a fine education and was
as well acquainted with the classics as any Hartford Wit, he
embraced liberal and democratic causes.
From a Huguenot (radical French Protestant) background,
Freneau fought as a militiaman during the Revolutionary War. In
1780, he was captured and imprisoned in two British ships, where
he almost died before his family managed to get him released. His
poem "The British Prison Ship" is a bitter condemnation of the
cruelties of the British, who wished "to stain the world with
gore." This piece and other revolutionary works, including "Eutaw
Springs," "American Liberty," "A Political Litany," "A Midnight
Consultation," and "George the Third's Soliloquy," brought him
fame as the "Poet of the American Revolution."
Freneau edited a number of journals during his life, always
mindful of the great cause of democracy. When Thomas Jefferson
helped him establish the militant, anti-Federalist National
Gazette in 1791, Freneau became the first powerful, crusading
newspaper editor in America, and the literary predecessor of
William Cullen Bryant, William Lloyd Garrison, and H.L. Mencken.
As a poet and editor, Freneau adhered to his democratic
ideals. His popular poems, published in newspapers for the
average reader, regularly celebrated American subjects. "The
Virtue of Tobacco" concerns the indigenous plant, a mainstay of
the southern economy, while "The Jug of Rum" celebrates the
alcoholic drink of the West Indies, a crucial commodity of early
American trade and a major New World export. Common American
characters lived in "The Pilot of Hatteras," as well as in poems
about quack doctors and bombastic evangelists.
Freneau commanded a natural and colloquial style appropriate
to a genuine democracy, but he could also rise to refined
neoclassic lyricism in often-anthologized works such as "The Wild
Honeysuckle" (1786), which evokes a sweet-smelling native shrub.
Not until the "American Renaissance" that began in the 1820s
would American poetry surpass the heights that Freneau had scaled
40 years earlier.
Additional groundwork for later literary achievement was
laid during the early years. Nationalism inspired publications in
many fields, leading to a new appreciation of things American.
Noah Webster (1758-1843) devised an American Dictionary,
as well
as an important reader and speller for the schools. His
Spelling
Book sold more than 100 million copies over the years.
Updated
Webster's dictionaries are still standard today. The American
Geography, by Jedidiah Morse, another landmark reference
work,
promoted knowledge of the vast and expanding American land
itself. Some of the most interesting if nonliterary writings of
the period are the journals of frontiersmen and explorers such as
Meriwether Lewis (1774-1809) and Zebulon Pike (1779-1813), who
wrote accounts of expeditions across the Louisiana Territory, the
vast portion of the North American continent that Thomas
Jefferson purchased from Napoleon in 1803.
The first important fiction
writers widely recognized today,
Charles Brockden Brown, Washington Irving, and James Fenimore
Cooper, used American subjects, historical perspectives, themes
of change, and nostalgic tones. They wrote in many prose genres,
initiated new forms, and found new ways to make a living through
literature. With them, American literature began to be read and
appreciated in the United States and abroad.
Driven by poverty, Brown hastily penned four haunting novels
in two years: Wieland (1798), Arthur Mervyn (1799),
Ormond
(1799), and Edgar Huntley (1799). In them, he developed
the genre
of American Gothic. The Gothic novel was a popular genre of the
day featuring exotic and wild settings, disturbing psychological
depth, and much suspense. Trappings included ruined castles or
abbeys, ghosts, mysterious secrets, threatening figures, and
solitary maidens who survive by their wits and spiritual
strength. At their best, such novels offer tremendous suspense
and hints of magic, along with profound explorations of the human
soul in extremity. Critics suggest that Brown's Gothic
sensibility expresses deep anxieties about the inadequate social
institutions of the new nation.
Brown used distinctively American settings. A man of ideas,
he dramatized scientific theories, developed a personal theory of
fiction, and championed high literary standards despite personal
poverty. Though flawed, his works are darkly powerful.
Increasingly, he is seen as the precursor of romantic writers
like Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
He expresses subconscious fears that the outwardly optimistic
Enlightenment period drove underground.
The Sketch Book of Geoffrye Crayon (Irving's pseudonym)
contains his two best remembered stories, "Rip Van Winkle" and
"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow." "Sketch" aptly describes Irving's
delicate, elegant, yet seemingly casual style, and "crayon"
suggests his ability as a colorist or creator of rich, nuanced
tones and emotional effects. In the Sketch Book, Irving
transforms the Catskill Mountains along the Hudson River north of
New York City into a fabulous, magical region.
American readers gratefully accepted Irving's imagined
"history" of the Catskills, despite the fact (unknown to them)
that he had adapted his stories from a German source. Irving gave
America something it badly needed in the brash, materialistic
early years: an imaginative way of relating to the new land.
No writer was as successful as Irving at humanizing the
land, endowing it with a name and a face and a set of legends.
The story of "Rip Van Winkle," who slept for 20 years, waking to
find the colonies had become independent, eventually became
folklore. It was adapted for the stage, went into the oral
tradition, and was gradually accepted as authentic American
legend by generations of Americans.
Irving discovered and helped satisfy the raw new nation's
sense of history. His numerous works may be seen as his devoted
attempts to build the new nation's soul by recreating history and
giving it living, breathing, imaginative life. For subjects, he
chose the most dramatic aspects of American history: the
discovery of the New World, the first president and national
hero, and the westward exploration. His earliest work was a
sparkling, satirical History of New York (1809) under the
Dutch,
ostensibly written by Diedrich Knickerbocker (hence the name of
Irving's friends and New York writers of the day, the
"Knickerbocker School").
Personal experience enabled Cooper to write vividly of the
transformation of the wilderness and of other subjects such as
the sea and the clash of peoples from different cultures. The son
of a Quaker family, he grew up on his father's remote estate at
Otsego Lake (now Cooperstown) in central New York State.
Although this area was relatively peaceful during Cooper's
boyhood, it had once been the scene of an Indian massacre. Young
Fenimore Cooper grew up in an almost feudal environment. His
father, Judge Cooper, was a landowner and leader. Cooper saw
frontiersmen and Indians at Otsego Lake as a boy; in later life,
bold white settlers intruded on his land.
Natty Bumppo, Cooper's renowned literary character, embodies
his vision of the frontiersman as a gentleman, a Jeffersonian
"natural aristocrat." Early in 1823, in The Pioneers,
Cooper had
begun to discover Bumppo. Natty is the first famous frontiersman
in American literature and the literary forerunner of countless
cowboy and backwoods heroes. He is the idealized, upright
individualist who is better than the society he protects. Poor
and isolated, yet pure, he is a touchstone for ethical values and
prefigures Herman Melville's Billy Budd and Mark Twain's Huck
Finn.
Based in part on the real life of American pioneer Daniel
Boone -- who was a Quaker like Cooper -- Natty Bumppo, an
outstanding woodsman like Boone, was a peaceful man adopted by an
Indian tribe. Both Boone and the fictional Bumppo loved nature
and freedom. They constantly kept moving west to escape the
oncoming settlers they had guided into the wilderness, and they
became legends in their own lifetimes. Natty is also chaste,
high-minded, and deeply spiritual: He is the Christian knight of
medieval romances transposed to the virgin forest and rocky soil
of America.
The unifying thread of the five novels collectively known as
the Leather-Stocking Tales is the life of Natty Bumppo.
Cooper's
finest achievement, they constitute a vast prose epic with the
North American continent as setting, Indian tribes as characters,
and great wars and westward migration as social background. The
novels bring to life frontier America from 1740 to 1804.
Cooper's novels portray the successive waves of the frontier
settlement: the original wilderness inhabited by Indians; the
arrival of the first whites as scouts, soldiers, traders, and
frontiersmen; the coming of the poor, rough settler families; and
the final arrival of the middle class, bringing the first
professionals -- the judge, the physician, and the banker. Each
incoming wave displaced the earlier: Whites displaced the
Indians, who retreated westward; the "civilized" middle classes
who erected schools, churches, and jails displaced the lower-
class individualistic frontier folk, who moved further west, in
turn displacing the Indians who had preceded them. Cooper evokes
the endless, inevitable wave of settlers, seeing not only the
gains but the losses.
Cooper's novels reveal a deep tension between the lone
individual and society, nature and culture, spirituality and
organized religion. In Cooper, the natural world and the Indian
are fundamentally good -- as is the highly civilized realm
associated with his most cultured characters. Intermediate
characters are often suspect, especially greedy, poor white
settlers who are too uneducated or unrefined to appreciate nature
or culture. Like Rudyard Kipling, E.M. Forster, Herman Melville,
and other sensitive observers of widely varied cultures
interacting with each other, Cooper was a cultural relativist. He
understood that no culture had a monopoly on virtue or
refinement.
Cooper accepted the American condition while Irving did not.
Irving addressed the American setting as a European might have --
by importing and adapting European legends, culture, and history.
Cooper took the process a step farther. He created American
settings and new, distinctively American characters and themes.
He was the first to sound the recurring tragic note in American
fiction.
Although the colonial period
produced several women writers of
note, the revolutionary era did not further the work of women and
minorities, despite the many schools, magazines, newspapers, and
literary clubs that were springing up. Colonial women such as
Anne Bradstreet, Anne Hutchinson, Ann Cotton, and Sarah Kemble
Knight exerted considerable social and literary influence in
spite of primitive conditions and dangers; of the 18 women who
came to America on the ship Mayflower in 1620, only four
survived
the first year. When every able-bodied person counted and
conditions were fluid, innate talent could find expression. But
as cultural institutions became formalized in the new republic,
women and minorities gradually were excluded from them.
Wheatley's poetic themes are religious, and her style, like
that of Philip Freneau, is neoclassical. Among her best-known
poems are "To S.M., a Young African Painter, on Seeing His
Works," a poem of praise and encouragement for another talented
black, and a short poem showing her strong religious sensitivity
filtered through her experience of Christian conversion. This
poem unsettles some contemporary critics -- whites because they
find it conventional, and blacks because the poem does not
protest the immorality of slavery. Yet the work is a sincere
expression; it confronts white racism and asserts spiritual
equality. Indeed, Wheatley was the first to address such issues
confidently in verse, as in "On Being Brought from Africa to
America":
Other Women Writers
Another long-forgotten novelist was Hannah Foster (1758-
1840), whose best-selling novel The Coquette (1797) was
about a
young women torn between virtue and temptation. Rejected by her
sweetheart, a cold man of the church, she is seduced, abandoned,
bears a child, and dies alone.
Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820) published under a man's
name to secure serious attention for her works. Mercy Otis
Warren (1728-1814) was a poet, historian, dramatist, satirist,
and patriot. She held pre-revolutionary gatherings in her home,
attacked the British in her racy plays, and wrote the only
contemporary radical history of the American revolution.
Letters between women such as Mercy Otis Warren and Abigail
Adams, and letters generally, are important documents of the
period. For example, Abigail Adams wrote to her husband, John
Adams (later the second president of the United States), in 1776
urging that women's independence be guaranteed in the future U.S.
constitution.
Benjamin Franklin, whom the Scottish philosopher David Hume
called America's "first great man of letters," embodied the
Enlightenment ideal of humane rationality. Practical yet
idealistic, hard-working and enormously successful, Franklin
recorded his early life in his famous Autobiography.
Writer,
printer, publisher, scientist, philanthropist, and diplomat, he
was the most famous and respected private figure of his time. He
was the first great self-made man in America, a poor democrat
born in an aristocratic age that his fine example helped to
liberalize.
Another Enlightenment figure is Hector St. John de
Crè,
whose Letters from an American Farmer (1782) gave
Europeans a
glowing idea of opportunities for peace, wealth, and pride in
America. Neither an American nor a farmer, but a French
aristocrat who owned a plantation outside New York City before
the Revolution, Crè enthusiastically praised the
colonies
for their industry, tolerance, and growing prosperity in 12
letters that depict America as an agrarian paradise -- a vision
that would inspire Thomas Jefferson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and
many other writers up to the present.
What then is the American, this new man? He is either a
European, or the descendant of a European, hence that
strange mixture of blood, which you will find in no other
country. I could point out to you a family whose grandfather
was an Englishman, whose wife was Dutch, whose son married a
French woman, and whose present four sons have now four
wives of different nations....Here individuals of all
nations are melted into a new race of men, whose labors and
posterity will one day cause changes in the world.
With good opinion of the law.
Already mentioned as the first professional American writer,
Charles Brockden Brown was inspired by the English writers Mrs.
Radcliffe and English William Godwin. (Radcliffe was known for
her terrifying Gothic novels; a novelist and social reformer,
Godwin was the father of Mary Shelley, who wrote
Frankenstein and
married English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley.)
The youngest of 11 children born to a well-to-do New York
merchant family, Washington Irving became a cultural and
diplomatic ambassador to Europe, like Benjamin Franklin and
Nathaniel Hawthorne. Despite his talent, he probably would not
have become a full-time professional writer, given the lack of
financial rewards, if a series of fortuitous incidents had not
thrust writing as a profession upon him. Through friends, he was
able to publish his Sketch Book (1819-1820) simultaneously
in
England and America, obtaining copyrights and payment in both
countries.
James Fenimore Cooper, like Irving, evoked a sense of the past
and gave it a local habitation and a name. In Cooper, though, one
finds the powerful myth of a golden age and the poignance of its
loss. While Irving and other American writers before and after
him scoured Europe in search of its legends, castles, and great
themes, Cooper grasped the essential myth of America: that it was
timeless, like the wilderness. American history was a trespass on
the eternal; European history in America was a reenactment of the
fall in the Garden of Eden. The cyclical realm of nature was
glimpsed only in the act of destroying it: The wilderness
disappeared in front of American eyes, vanishing before the
oncoming pioneers like a mirage. This is Cooper's basic tragic
vision of the ironic destruction of the wilderness, the new Eden
that had attracted the colonists in the first place.
Given the hardships of life in early America, it is ironic
that some of the best poetry of the period was written by an
exceptional slave woman. The first African-American author of
importance in the United States, Phyllis Wheatley was born in
Africa and brought to Boston, Massachusetts, when she was about
seven, where she was purchased by the pious and wealthy tailor
John Wheatley to be a companion for his wife. The Wheatleys
recognized Phillis's remarkable intelligence and, with the help
of their daughter, Mary, Phillis learned to read and write.
Taught my benighted soul to understand
That there's a God, that there's a Savior too;
Once I redemption neither sought nor knew.
Some view our sable race with scornful eye,
"Their colour is a diabolic dye."
Remember, Christians, negroes, black as Cain,
May be refin'd, and join th' angelic train.
A number of accomplished revolutionary-era women writers have
been rediscovered by feminist scholars. Susanna Rowson (c. 1762-
1824) was one of America's first professional novelists. Her
seven novels included the best-selling seduction story
Charlotte
Temple (1791). She treats feminist and abolitionist themes
and
depicts American Indians with respect.
Outline of American Literature:
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