Read Portrait of A Novel Online

Authors: MICHAEL GORRA

Portrait of A Novel (42 page)

BOOK: Portrait of A Novel
13.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

28—“
reeling & moaning
”: To William James, 30 October 1869.

28—“
somehow too much
”: To Henry James, Sr., 19 March 1870.

29—“
more strange
” . . . “
painfully?
”: To Mary James, 26 March 1870.

29—“
reach & quality
” . . . “
dead
”: To William James, 29 March 1870.

29—“
the death of
”: Edgar Allen Poe, “The Philosophy of Composition” (1846).

CHAPTER 3: A SUPERSTITIOUS VALUATION

31—“
the more I see
”: To Thomas Sergeant Perry, 18 July 1860.

31—“
is obliged to deal
”: N, 214.

31—“
we can deal
” . . . “
culture
”: To Thomas Sergeant Perry, 20 September 1867.

32—“
Wendell
” . . . “
moonshiny
”: To Charles Eliot Norton, 4 Febuary 1872.

33—“
neatness and coquetry
”: To William James, 22 September 1872.

34—“
rattling big
”: To Elizabeth Boott, 27 January 1875.

35—“
there is no shadow
”: Nathaniel Hawthorne,
The Marble Faun
(1860), preface.

35—“
texture of American life
” . . . “
one may say
”: LC1, 351–52.

35—
critic Robert Weisbuch
: My argument in this chapter is indebted to Robert Weisbuch’s
Atlantic Double-Cross: American Literature and British Influence in the Age of Emerson
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986). See also his “Dickens, Melville, and a Tale of Two Countries” in the
Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel
, ed. Deirdre David (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001).

36—“
It takes a great deal
”: LC1, 320.

36—“
that we very soon
”: LC1, 327.

36—
One classic account
: See “Novel and Romance” in Richard Chase,
The American Novel and Its Tradition
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1957).

36—“
asked but little
”: LC1, 341.

36—“
do New York
”: To Edith Wharton, 17 August 1902.

37—“
not from the sweet
”: In M. A. De Wolfe Howe,
Memories of a Hostess: A Chronicle of Eminent Friendships Drawn Chiefly from the Diaries of Mrs. James T. Fields
(Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1922), p. 120.

38—“
the appearance, the manner
”: To his parents, 16 November 1873.

38—“
could do more work
”: WJL4, 452.

38—“
set of desultory
”: WJL4, 458.

38—“
as a matter
”: WJL1, 230.

40—“
before him, soliciting
”: PNY, 5.

40—“
youth of genius
”: To Grace Norton, 26 September 1870.

40—“
in every day at dusk
”:
The Correspondence of Henry James and Henry Adams
, ed. George Monteiro (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1992), 4.

40—“
unutterably filthy
”: To Theodore Child, 17 February 1880.

41—“
a fraud
” . . . “
people
”:
The Letters of Henry Adams
, ed. J. C. Levenson et al., vol. 2 (Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1982), 392–93.

41—“
not at all crazy
”: To Elizabeth Boott, 22 February 1880, unpublished.

41—“
conspiracy to undervalue them
”: LC1, 435.

42—“
gentlemen’s society
”: CS2, 246.

42—“
high time Harry James
”: Monteiro,
Correspondence of Henry James and Henry Adams,
5.

42—“
big
”: To Henry James, Sr., 30 March 1880.

42—“
the portrait of the character
”: To William Dean Howells, 2 February 1877.

42—“
to which the American
”: To Mary James, 4 May 1877, unpublished.

44—“
open window
”: To Henry James, 30 March 1880.

CHAPTER 4: ALONG THE THAMES

45—“
far-away-from-London
”: To Mary James, 10 January 1881.

46—“
infusion

. . .

as it were
”: To Grace Norton, 28 December 1880.

46—“
going to do

. . .

her own
”: P, 254–55.

46—“
stood there

. . .

her destiny
”: PNY, 9.

47—“
gruel and silence
”: A, 525.

47—“
a view
”: To J. B. Pinker, 14 June 1906.

47—“
a good deal bruised
”: P, 194. See also the entry for Hardwick in Nikolaus Pevsner and Jennifer Sherwood,
The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996).

48—“
no more beautiful
”:
Country Life
, 21 July 1906.

49—
Family tradition
. See the family entry in Burke’s
Peerage and Baronetage
; but note too that the biographies of Grahame himself do not confirm this identification.

50—“
shut out
”: P, 228.

50—“
an uninteresting
”: P, 229.

50—“
conscious observation
”: P, 231.

50—“
looked in at
”: P, 254.

50—“
to pass through
”: P, 251.

51—“
young, happy
”: P, 238.

51—“
in the thick, mild air
”: P, 245.

51—“
always want
” . . . “
choose
”: P, 259.

52—“
Whoso
” . . . “
always may
”: Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Self-Reliance” (1841).

52—“
proof that a woman
”: P, 243.

53—“
I like to be treated
”: P, 288.

53—“
cultivated
”: Quoted in Alan Trachtenberg,
The Incorporation of America
(New York: Hill & Wang, 1982), 153. Parkman’s article, “The Failure of Universal Suffrage,” originally appeared in the
North American Review
(July–August 1878).

54—“
alienated
”: P, 278.

54—“
than one gives up
”: P, 282.

54—“
well-ordered privacy
”: P, 245.

PART TWO: THE MARRIAGE PLOT
CHAPTER 5: HER EMPTY CHAIR

57—“
I have just heard
”: To John W. Cross, 14 May 1880.

58—“
which your wife
”: Ibid.

58—“
aghast at
”: WJL1, 183

59—“
I knew he
” . . . “
the wall
”: To Henry James, Sr., 14 May 1880, unpublished.

60—“
Aren’t you sorry?
”: To Grace Norton, 19 August 1880, unpublished.

60—“
empty chair
”: To Alice James, 30 January 1881.

60—“
thoroughly ill
”: Quoted in Gordon S. Haight,
George Eliot: A Biography
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968), 544.

60—“
a Reticence
”: Quoted in John Rignall, ed.,
The Oxford Reader’s Companion to George Eliot
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 26.

61—“
Johnnie had
”: Gordon S. Haight, ed.,
The George Eliot Letters
, 9 vols. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1954–78), vol. 7 (1878–80), 285.

61—“
I had my turn
”: To William James, 1 May 1878.

61—“
to attend service
”: In Haight,
George Eliot:
A Biography
, 454.

62—“
underlying world
”: To Henry James, Sr., 10 May 1869.

62—“
take them
. . . visitor
”: A, 583–84.

63—“
we of the
. . . comparison
”: A, 573–74.

63—“‘
Middlemarch
. . . whole
”: LC1, 958.

63—“
two suns
”: LC1, 962.

64—“
without loss
. . . monsters
”: LC2, 1107–8.

64—“
deep-breathing economy
”: Ibid.

64—“
sets a limit
”: LC1, 965.

65—“
marriages and rescue

. . .

happy art
”: LC1, 1004.

65—“
aesthetic teaching
”: The statement comes in a letter to the Positivist thinker Frederic Harrison and can be most readily found in George Eliot,
Selected Essays, Poems, and Other Writings
, ed. A. S. Byatt and Nicholas Warren (London: Penguin, 1990), p 248.

65—“
commissioned herself
”: LC1, 965.

66—“
special case
”: LC1, 1003.

66—“
generalizing instinct
”: LC1, 965.

66—“
have less
”: To Grace Norton, 5 March 1873.

66—“
In these frail
”: PNY, 10.

66—“
mind and millinery
”: In George Eliot,
Selected Essays, Poems, and Other Writings
,
140.

66—“
scientific criticism
”: P, 242.

CHAPTER 6: PROPOSALS

68—“
husbands, wives
”: LC1, 48.

69—“
Millions of
”: PNY, 9.

69—“
all-in-all
”: PNY, 11.

69—“
We women
”: George Eliot,
Daniel Deronda
(1876), ch. 13.

69—“
flood and field
”: PNY, 15.

69—“
the centre
”: PNY, 11.

70—“
must not fall
”: P, 201.

70—
Isabel’s resistance to the plot
: My argument in this chapter is indebted to Millicent Bell’s indispensable account of
The Portrait of a Lady
in her
Meaning in Henry James
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1991).

70—“
a woman ought

. . .

completely
”: P, 243–44.

70—“
It’s just like
”: P, 205.

71—“
a most formidable
. . . fear
”: P, 272–73.

71—“
cold and dry
”: PNY, 65.

71—
an alternate line of criticism
: See esp. Nina Baym’s “Revision and Thematic Change in
The Portrait of a Lady
,” which locates the character in her historical moment. (
Modern Fiction Studies
22.2, Summer 1976; repr., in 2nd Norton Critical Edition of the novel, ed. Robert D. Bamberg [New York: W. W. Norton, 1995].)

72—“
May I not
”: P, 293.

73—“
such a thumper
”: P, 300.

73—“
some people
”: P, 304.

73—“
it cost her
”: Ibid.

73—“
I’m afraid
”: P, 301.

73—“
personage
”: P, 295.

73—“
what one liked
”: P, 296.

74—“
Imagine one’s belonging
”: P, 248.

74—“
old-fashioned distinction

. . .

certain way
”: LC1, 54–55.

75—“
psychological reasons
”: LC1, 60.

75—“
few things
”: LC1, 61.

75—“
she could do better
”: P, 296.

BOOK: Portrait of A Novel
13.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Gift by Deb Stover
Sass & Serendipity by Jennifer Ziegler
London Under by Peter Ackroyd
El Cid by José Luis Corral
The Longest Pleasure by Christopher Nicole
After the Kiss by Karen Ranney
Our Hearts Entwined by Lilliana Anderson
Rebound by Ian Barclay
Wet (The Water's Edge #1) by Stacy Kestwick


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024