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<title>Yellow Nineties 2.0</title>
<title>The Savoy</title>
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<editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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<editor>Symons, Arthur</editor>
<author>O'Sullivan, Vincent</author>
<title level="j">The Savoy</title>
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<publisher>L. Smythers</publisher>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>January 1896</date>
            <biblScope>O'Sullivan, Vincent. "On The Kind of Fiction Called Morbid." <emph rend="italic">The Savoy</emph>, vol. 2 April 1896, pp. 167-170. <emph rend="italic">Savoy Digital Edition</emph>,
                        edited by Christopher Keep and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2018-2020. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/savoyv2-osullivan-fiction/</biblScope>
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<body>
<div n="SAVOYV2_39pr" type="fiction">
<head>
<title level="a"><emph rend="bold"><emph rend="indent3">ON THE KIND OF FICTION 
               CALLED MORBID </emph></emph></title>
</head>

<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>THIS is a poison-bad world for the romancer, this Anglo- <lb/>
            Saxon world,&#8221; wrote Robert Louis Stevenson to Mr. Sidney <lb/>
            Colvin : and if a popular writer with an obvious style, after <lb/>
            his years of experience, came to this conclusion, we risk <lb/>
            little in asserting that the same conclusion has been reached <lb/>
            by many another writer whose style is not obvious, and <lb/>
            who is not so popular. &#160;Amongst these, the man who would be always intro- <lb/>
            ducing the thin presence of Death is, without doubt, the most reviled ; we will <lb/>
            have nothing of a fellow who comes to our feasts with a skull. &#160;And though <lb/>
            we all agree that <foreign xml:lang="la"><emph rend="italic">Memento homo quia pulvis es</emph></foreign> is a fine and wise saying, yet, <lb/>
            i' faith ! we are content to leave it at that ; and we clap the rogue who recalls <lb/>
            it in the stocks. Nay ! Ash Wednesday would have been long ago rubbed <lb/>
            out of the calendar, save that we are careful not to understand the full <lb/>
            significance of it ; just as we are careful not to understand the full significance <lb/>
            of Good Friday. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>The smiling gentleman who hails us in the street does not like to think <lb/>
            that one day he must be dead ; archbishops are supposed not to like a dwell- <lb/>
            ing on that ; and a certain parson of easy life, whose business it is to preach <lb/>
            mortality, when invited by a plain writer to fall into a better acquaintance <lb/>
            with the cold guide who shall lead him to the Eternal Hills, flies into a <lb/>
            passion, calls my plain writer (of all things in the world !) <emph rend="italic">immoral</emph>, and sits <lb/>
            down, raging, to write insolent letters to the papers. &#160;But (you will ask), do <lb/>
            not these people give a man the credit of his courage in facing what they dare <lb/>
            not face ? &#160;Well, no. &#160;For when a man has done the day&#8217;s appointed labour, <lb/>
            he stirs the fire, sinks into his armchair, and lo ! in a trice he spurns the <lb/>
            hearth and is off swinging the sword and aiding somewhat sulky damsels with <lb/>
            De Marsac ; or, if he is of a cold habit of body, he wanders in lanes where the <lb/>
            clover breathes, and John and Joan while away the white-winged hours <lb/>
            a-wooing. Or again, he hies to the ball, and watches the tenderness with <lb/>
            which my lord and the farmer's daughter take the floor. &#160;If, then, to this man <lb/>
<fw type="runningHead">
<fw type="pageNumLeft">168</fw> &#160;&#160;&#160;<fw type="head">THE SAVOY</fw>
</fw>
            
            a person of wry visage and hearse-like airs comes offering a sombre story&#x2014; <lb/>
            why, up he leaps, grasps the intrusive fellow by the shoulders, and lands him <lb/>
            in the street. &#160;No ; it is certain that abnormal nerves are not understood or <lb/>
            thought proper in the suburban villa : and they are not tolerated by the Press, <lb/>
            which is almost the same thing. &#160;Even editors, those cocks that show how <lb/>
            the popular wind blows, if they have no kicks, have few ha&#8217;pence for the <lb/>
            writer of stories which are not sops to our pleasure. &#160;The thought of death is <lb/>
            not pleasant ! &#160;(folk may be imagined to exclaim) ; to escape that we laugh at <lb/>
            sorry farces and the works of Mr. Mark Twain ; and yet, here is a zany <lb/>
            with a hatful of dun thoughts formed to make one meditate on one's tomb for <lb/>
            a week ! <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Still, for him, poor devil ! life is not all (as they say) beer and skittles. <lb/>
            With an impatience of facility, he sets to work sedulously on a branch of art <lb/>
            which he is pleased to consider difficult ; it cannot be pleasant work, since it <lb/>
            progresses with shudders and cold sweats ; it cannot be easy, since it is <lb/>
            acknowledged to be no easy thing to turn the blood from men's faces. &#160;He is <lb/>
            even charmed by the fancy that he is driving his pen to a very high measure. <lb/>
            He may (by chance) be right ; he is possibly wrong ; but I am glad to say I <lb/>
            have yet to hear that Banquo&#8217;s ghost at the feast, and C&#xe6;sar's ghost in the <lb/>
            tent, are deemed infamous, or (as the cant goes) immoral. &#160;And, talking of <lb/>
            Shakespeare, has it ever occurred to you how the critics would waggle their <lb/>
            heads at &#8220;Romeo and Juliet,&#8221; if it were presented to-day as a new piece by <lb/>
            William Shakespeare, Esq.? <lb/></p>
<p><emph rend="note">
<emph rend="indent5"/>&#8220;As in a vault, an ancient receptacle, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>Where, for these many hundred years, the bones <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>Of all my buried ancestors are pack&#8217;d ; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>Where bloody Tybalt, yet but green in earth, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>Lies festering in his shroud ; where, as they say, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>At some hours in the night spirits resort ;&#x2014; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>Alack ! alack ! is it not like, that I, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>So early waking,&#x2014;what with loathsome smells, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>And shrieks like mandrakes&#8217; torn out of the earth, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>That living mortals, hearing them, run mad ;&#x2014; <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>O, if I wake, shall I not be distraught, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>Environed with all these hideous fears ? <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>And madly play with my forefathers&#8217; joints ? <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>And pluck the mangled Tybalt from his shroud ? <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>And, in this rage, with some great kinsman&#8217;s bone, <lb/>
<emph rend="indent5"/>As with a club, dash out my desperate brains ?&#8221; <lb/></emph></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Methinks I see the words : &#8220;exotic,&#8221; &#8220;morbid,&#8221; &#8220;unhealthy,&#8221; ready- <lb/>
            made for that ! Ah ! how, then, can my modern writer expect to be suffered, <lb/>
<fw type="runningHead">
<fw type="head2">ON THE KIND OF FICTION CALLED MORBID</fw>;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;169
            </fw>
            
            any more than we suffer an undertaker to send out cards setting forth the <lb/>
            excellence of his wares. &#160;When he takes to the road, he must know that he is <lb/>
            in for a weary and footsore journey : comely persons, in beautiful garments, <lb/>
            with eyes full of invitation look down from bordering windows and jeer at his <lb/>
            sober parade ; he sees cool, shaded by-lanes which are never for him ; others <lb/>
            pass him on the road singing blithe, gamesome songs, and he is left to loiter. <lb/>
            And be sure he travels in glum company : the stiff-featured dead, with their <lb/>
            thin hands and strange smile, fall into step with him and tell him their dream- <lb/>
            like tales. &#160;The poor dead, whom we all forget so soon on this sunny earth ! <lb/>
            I think they tell him that they have a kindness for those who perform the <lb/>
            last offices for them : the dead villager for the barber and the crone, the dead <lb/>
            peer for the undertakers who come by night to Belgrave Square. &#160;Perhaps it <lb/>
            is from fear of the ghosts who attend the march, that the writers of aweful <lb/>
            stories are few and far between, up and down the world. &#160;And when we meet <lb/>
            with such a one, whose head is humming like a top from the gray talk of his <lb/>
            fellow-passengers, should we not thank (rather than stone) him for his sense of <lb/>
            the decency of things, which prevents him from going tearing mad and <lb/>
            holding the highway with a gun ? &#160;I will wager that the recognition of this is <lb/>
            all he asks of reward from the &#8220;poison-bad world for the romancer,&#8221; for <lb/>
            sticking with iron courage to the graveside, and refusing to engage in work <lb/>
            less resolute, and more easy. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>Yes, more easy ; for it <emph rend="italic">is</emph> more easy&#x2014;if more degrading&#x2014;to write a <lb/>
            certain kind of novel. &#160;To take a fanciful instance, it is more easy to write the <lb/>
            history of Miss Perfect : how, upon the death of her parents, she comes to <lb/>
            reside in the village, and lives there mildly and sedately ; and how one day, <lb/>
            in the course of her walk abroad, she is noticed by the squire&#8217;s lady, who <lb/>
            straightway transports her to the Hall. &#160;And, of course, she soon becomes <lb/>
            mighty well with the family, and the squire&#8217;s son becomes enamoured of her. <lb/>
            Then the clouds must gather : and a villain lord comes on the scene to <lb/>
            bombard her virtue with clumsy artillery. &#160;Finding after months that her <lb/>
            virtue dwells in an impregnable citadel, he turns to, and jibes and goads the <lb/>
            young squire to the fighting point. &#160;And, presto ! there they are, hard at it <lb/>
            with bare steel, on the Norman beach, of a drizzling morning ; and the squire <lb/>
            is just pressing hot upon my lord, when&#x2014;it's hey ! for the old love, and ho ! <lb/>
            for the new&#x2014;out rushes my Miss Perfect to our great amazement, and falls <lb/>
            between the swords down on the stinging sands, in the sight of the toiling sea. <lb/>
            Now I maintain, that a novel woven of these meagre threads, and set out in <lb/>
            three volumes and a brave binding, would put up a good front at Mudie&#8217;s ; <lb/></p>

<fw type="runningHead">
<fw type="pageNumLeft">170</fw> &#160;&#160;&#160;<fw type="head">THE SAVOY</fw>
</fw>

<p>            
            would become, it too, after a while, morality packed in a box. &#160;For nowa- <lb/>
            days we seem to nourish our morals with the thinnest milk and water, with a <lb/>
            good dose of sugar added, and not a suspicion of lemon at all. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent"/>You will note that the letter- writer says, the &#8220;<emph rend="italic">Anglo-Saxon</emph> world&#8221;&#x2014; <lb/>
            Great Britain, say ! and the United States ; and it is well to keep in mind <lb/>
            this distinction. &#160;In France, for example, people appear eager to watch how <lb/>
            art triumphs over any matter. &#160;&#8220;Charles Baudelaire,&#8221; says Hamerton, &#8220;had <lb/>
            the poetical organization with all its worst inconveniences ;&#8221; but one incon- <lb/>
            venience he had not&#x2014;the inconvenience of a timid public not interested in <lb/>
            form, and with a profound hatred of the unusual : a public from which <lb/>
            Edgar Poe, Beddoes, and Francis Saltus (to name but three) suffered&#x2014;how <lb/>
            poignantly ! &#160;Let us cling by all means to our George Meredith, our Henry <lb/>
            James&#x2014;our Miss Rhoda Broughton, if you will ; but then let us try, if we <lb/>
            cannot be towards others, unlike these, if not encouraging, at the least not <lb/>
            actively hostile and harassing, when they go out in the black night to follow <lb/>
            their own sullen will-o&#8217;-the-wisps. <lb/></p>
<p>
<emph rend="indent7"/><ref target="#VOS"/>VINCENT O'SULLIVAN <lb/>.
         </p>
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