Auchincloss, Louis. “Harold Frederic.” The Man
Behind the Book: Literary Profiles. Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1996.114-23.
Auchincloss’ chapter entitled "Harold Frederic" is a
psychological analysis that reflects Frederic’s multifarious
thinking and the cultural milieu in which he was writing Seth’s
Brother’s
Wife and The Damnation of Theron Ware. For example,
the portrayal of Father Forbes and the Catholic Church reflects
Frederic’s views of priests and Catholicism. The “crux”
of the novel lies in Theron Ware’s recognition of a “turning
point in his career,” “the sensation of having been
invited to become a citizen of [. . . the] world” of
intellect, culture, and grace to which Father Forbes, Celia
Madden, and Dr.
Ledsmar belong (119-20). Sister Soulsby is “a tough, realistic
but kindly woman who has been through the toughest mills of
life
and emerged as a noisy but effective church fund raiser”
(120). Celia Madden is little more than a separate banking account,
while Levi Gorringe is the voice of the reader in his speech
condemning
Theron Ware as “a man who’s so much meaner than any
other man” (121). Auchincloss describes The Damnation
of Theron Ware as a book, unlike Frederic’s other
novels, in which the author “addresses himself to the
bewilderment and ultimate absurdity of a semi-educated American
would-be idealist
struggling in the arid culture of a northern New York State small
town towards the end of the nineteenth century” (116-17).
He concludes that Theron Ware has learned nothing and continues
to delude himself with fantasies about using “his gift
as a preacher” to become a Senator by the time he is forty
(121).
Becknell, Thomas. “Implication Through Reading The
Damnation of
Theron Ware.” American Literary Realism 24.1
(1991): 63-71.
Becknell’s article is a reader-response essay based on
an extension of Randall Craig’s theory of a “hermeneutical
gap” between “intended and model readers” (63).
Becknell contends that thematic and hermeneutic gaps exist “between
the available authorities (which are discredited), and a valid
authority which Theron lacks” and between the authority
of the reader and the authority of the author (64). Borrowing
a term from Wolfgang Iser’s The Act of Reading,
Becknell argues that the “‘horizon’ against
which we view Theron’s awakening” is a “vast
no-man’s-land between authority and personal judgment”;
as readers, we want Theron Ware to be more than he is (65-66).
This desire is a result of the way we read and our inability to
“embrace all perspectives at once”; thus a problem
of “authority” confronts our judgment (68). The competing
authorities of Father Forbes, Dr. Ledsmar, and Celia Madden cloud
Theron Ware’s judgment. When Madden tells Ware, “We
find that you are a bore,” the “we” she refers
to includes the author (again referring to “author-ity”)
(70). Becknell asserts that we, as readers, forget the authority
of the author because we want to see The Damnation of Theron
Ware as a drama of lost faith and Theron Ware as a victim
of temptation. He claims that readers can be misguided because
they want to read the novel as a romance when they should be keying
in on the signals of realism. Like truth, concludes Becknell,
assumptions about authority begin with absolutes and end in relativity.
Bennett, Bridget. “The Damnation of Theron Ware
or Illumination (1896).” The Damnation of Harold Frederic:
His Lives and Works. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse UP, 1997. 174-97.
Bennett approaches her analysis of Frederic’s novel from
a biographical and cultural perspective. In Chapter 5, she claims
the novel
“is an embodiment of its own message—the difference
between appearance and reality”—because both Theron
Ware and the reader are misled with respect to his “illumination”
(174). Bennett hypothesizes that Frederic expresses empathy for
his main character, the “badly treated” Reverend
Ware, probably because he too felt victimized by life’s
circumstance (175). According to the Harold Frederic Papers in
the Library of Congress, the author originally intended to
kill off
the title character by having him jump off the Brooklyn Bridge
(built in 1883); however, Bennett contends that suicide might
have made Ware appear to be a decadent hero. Death by alcohol
would have been conventional and melodramatic. Thus the unexpected
ending Frederic chose for Ware reflects the author’s pessimism
regarding the Gilded Age and ironically perpetuates the themes
of illumination and damnation. Bennett observes, “Theron
is less illumined, as he believes, than literally blinded by
the
people and ideas that he encounters. It is in this debilitated
state of hysterical blindness that he seems most like a moth
helplessly
circling a source of light that he believes to be the catalyst
of his illumination, singeing himself every time he gets too
close
to it, and inevitably foundering into it” (178). This analysis
reflects Frederic’s disillusionment with the Edenic myth
of America and the corruption and falseness of its political
and
religious leaders—beliefs that are revealed through the
characters in the novel. According to Bennett, “Theron’s
anxiety about how others perceived him, his eagerness to please
and naive belief in his own intellectual and social advances
captured a painfully familiar aspect of American national character”
(186). Bennett notes that similar themes may be found in the
writing of Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry James.
Bramen, Carrie Tirado. “The Americanization of Theron Ware.”
Novel 31.3 (1997): 63-86.
Bramen’s analysis of The Damnation of Theron Ware
situates Frederic’s novel within a cultural and literary
context. She notes in her article that for nearly twenty years
after its publication,
many critics and writers lauded The Damnation of Theron Ware
as the “great American novel,” while others claimed
that it was, in fact, Americanism that Frederic was criticizing.
The Damnation of Theron Ware “can be read as Frederic’s
attempt to prove that he was not just a local colorist [. .
.],
but a ‘national writer.’” Her essay is an exploration
of how Frederic came “to signify a nationalist spirit
of inviolate Americanism” with the publication of a novel
that is clearly ambivalent in its representation of Theron
Ware, an
American who is assimilated by Irish Catholics. Bramen focuses
on the “contrast between Americanism and alienism [read
Protestantism and Catholicism], between the familiar and the
unfamiliar”
to demonstrate the subversive nature of Frederic’s novel.
She offers an extended structural analysis of how Ware crosses
cultural boundaries by simply walking in spaces such as roads,
sidewalks, and the countryside as support for his reverse assimilation
by the Catholics. According to Bramen, relocation to the “West”—a
place where one need not worry about “foreignizing influences”—is
the author’s remedy for countering Theron Ware’s
reverse assimilation. (Note: The above is from WilsonSelect,
an electronic
database that does not include Novel's page numbers.)
Briggs, Austin, Jr. “The Damnation of Theron Ware.” The
Novels of Harold Frederic. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1969.
97-139.
Briggs’ Chapter 5, The Damnation of Theron Ware, examines
the themes of damnation and illumination with respect to the
title character. Briggs notes that both Everett Carter and John
Henry Raleigh argue that Ware is “reformed” at novel’s
end: Carter writes of a fall “‘from innocence into
knowledge,’” and Raleigh perceives a “‘wiser,
if sadder’” Ware, who relocates to Seattle (108).
According to Briggs, however, Ware is neither damned nor reformed
in the course of his tenure in Octavius; in fact, he remains “pretty
much the same old person” (113). Ware’s attitude,
as reflected in his reminiscences about his former congregation
in Tyre, reveals him to be an ambitious social climber and snob
who dreams of “‘ultimate success and distinction’” (120).
In light of Ware’s attitude, and other revelations regarding
his character in the early pages of the novel, “one wonders,” writes
Briggs, “how The Damnation can ever have been taken to
be a novel about the transformation of a good man into a bad
man” (117). The influence of Dr. Ledsmar, Father Forbes,
and Celia Madden often has been judged as the cause of Ware’s
fall; however, Briggs questions such judgments. Instead, he suggests
that Ware’s fall is not a single event but rather a series
of falls in which each new fall is followed by “a new illumination” (121).
The fact that Ware fails to learn anything from his “illuminations,” Briggs
concludes, suggests that Frederic viewed Ware as a “comic,
rather than tragic” figure who is essentially unchanged
at novel’s end (139).
Campbell, Donna M. “Frederic, Norris, and the Fear of Effeminacy.”
Resisting Regionalism: Gender and Naturalism in American Fiction,
1885-1915. Athens, OH: Ohio UP, 1997. 75-108.
Campbell combines feminist theory and genre criticism to analyze
Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron Ware. The opening
paragraphs of the chapter address the ever widening split between
what James Lane Allen describes as the “Masculine”
and “Feminine” principles in literature. Campbell
argues that, alarmed at the growing “feminine ethic in literature,”
naturalists embraced brutish masculinity as an “antidote”
to feminine civilization (75). Campbell identifies “three
different courses of thematic development [that] emerged in naturalistic
fiction: the triumph of the brute, leading to the degeneration
of the individual; the balance of the two opposing forces, leading
to the perfect amalgamation of sensibility and ‘red-blooded’
vigor; and an excess of civilization, leading, ironically enough,
to a degeneration similar to—and in some cases identical
with—that which the emergence of the brute signals”
(77). Campbell believes the title character in The Damnation
of Theron Ware succumbs to this third possibility, becoming
“a brute in taste and outlook” (79). Tracing “Frederic’s
exploration of realism through his character’s progress
from the conventions of sentimental and local color fiction to
the harsh realities of naturalism” (80), Campbell notes
that, as a minister, Theron Ware is a “hybrid female”
(81). Subverting the “opposition between male authority
and female community common in local color” fiction, Frederic
instead focuses on the similarities between the roles of ministers
and women (80-81). Powerless, Ware’s only options, according
to the conventions of sentimental fiction, are to capitulate,
threaten, or dissemble, and his only defenses are fainting, illness,
and weeping—all feminine responses. Ware’s attempt
at illumination results in degeneration when he begins “to
see himself as a victim of impersonal forces [. . . which lead
him] into a self-delusional justification of the naturalistic
brute within” (91).
Carrington, Jr., George C. “Harold Frederic’s Clear
Farcical Vision: The Damnation of Theron Ware.”
American Literary Realism 19.3 (1987): 3-26.
Carrington’s genre analysis of Frederic’s novel
opens with the claim that “Frederic’s America is
farcical; it is a world in which behavior and events are basically
determined
by the need [. . .] for personal stability and security”
(3). Thus, Carrington argues in this article, in Frederic’s
interpretation of Howellsian realism, nearly all the characters
in this farcical
novel are
knaves: “selfish
aggressors” who manipulate “obtuse victims,”
the fools (9). Theron Ware is unique in that his character is
both knave and fool: the “fool-as-knave” tries to
be a manipulator, but is hopelessly foolish, and the “knave-as-fool”
blunders about seemingly helpless, provokes others to help him,
and emerges relatively unharmed, ready to repeat the cycle (3).
Although Carrington examines a number of devices standard to
farce, he identifies hoaxing and acting as central to the development
of the novel. Most of the hoaxing occurs in Ware’s mind:
he deceives himself more effectively than he deceives any of
the
other characters. The external hoaxing takes on the form of acting—characters
playing a role for the purpose of “self-maintenance”
or personal stability (7). Seeing the arrival of Theron Ware
in Octavius as a potential threat to their stability, most of
the
other characters in the novel take immediate and aggressive action
toward Ware in order to maintain their positions. Of these,
Sister
Soulsby is deemed “the most perfect knave in the book”:
she is deceptive, manipulative, and ruthless (18). Carrington
concludes that the question of Theron Ware’s illumination
or damnation is irrelevant because, in the farcical world of
the
novel, nothing significant has changed; and, in the end, it is
the reader—not the characters—who is illumined through
Frederic’s “‘clear human vision’ of
comedy”
(24).
Carter, Everett. Introduction. The Damnation of Theron Ware.
By Harold Frederic. 1896. Cambridge: Belknap P of Harvard UP,
1960. vii-xxiv.
Carter’s oft-cited introduction opens with a biographical
survey of Frederic’s life before it moves on to a cultural
and a moral examination of the trio of Father Forbes, Dr. Ledsmar,
and Celia Madden as “seducers of innocence” (xxi).
Carter claims that Theron Ware falls from innocence into knowledge,
“a fall into the religious and scientific knowledge”
and “the dark knowledge of the flesh” (xxi). Father
Forbes is responsible for Ware’s religious crisis, while
Dr. Ledsmar—a Darwinian atheist—introduces Ware to
the writings of Renan. According to Carter, Celia Madden’s
role in Theron Ware’s damnation is “evil” (x).
The critic’s bibliography is a good source for contemporaneous
reception of the novel: most of the citations are reviews or articles
from the 1890s.
Carter, Everett. “Naturalism and Introspection.” Howells
and the Age of Realism. Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1966. 239-45.
Carter combines biographical and genre criticism in his chapter
that examines Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron
Ware. According to Carter, Frederic “thought of himself
as a realist,” a disciple of William Dean Howells. Howells
preached “a fidelity to the life one knew, an immersion
in one’s own experience, an unswerving loyalty to the truth
and a hatred of the false and sentimental.” Like Howells,
Frederic looked to his own life and region for inspiration. Unlike
Howells, however, Frederic “found his interest going from
the social to the individual, from the inequities in relations
between men to the tormenting self-divisions within man, from
an analysis of the normal and commonplace to a concern with those
hidden recesses of the individual soul where cower lust and fear
and primitive ignorance” (240). Frederic observed “a
society in turmoil” due to social, economic, and scientific
advances, which prompted a “struggle within the individual
[. . .] attended by possibilities of evil as well as possibilities
of good” (241). Theron Ware’s illumination results
in his fall rather than his salvation. Because the characters
of Ware, Father Forbes, and Celia Madden, as well as the scenes
of New York State life, are “drawn from life,” Carter
identifies The Damnation of Theron Ware as a work of “realism” (244-45).
However, because Frederic also sought to explore a “psychological
rather than a social truth” in his portrayal of Father
Forbes, Celia Madden, Dr. Ledsmar, and the Soulsbys, he transforms
the characters into archetypes (245).
Coale, Samuel. “Frederic and Hawthorne: The Romantic Roots
of Naturalism.” American Literature 48.1 (March
1976): 29-45.
Coale’s article is a genre study of The Damnation
of Theron Ware
that examines Frederic’s literary roots—from melodrama
to realism, romanticism to naturalism—with particular
emphasis on Nathaniel Hawthorne as one of Frederic’s “literary
parent[s]” (29). Coale notes that many critics have viewed
Frederic’s best-seller as simply “another example
of emerging American naturalism” (29), a genre that
shared much in common with William Dean Howells’ realism, “although
the overriding tone is determinedly pessimistic, not obdurately
optimistic.” He asserts, however, that “[i]n turning
from the abundant details of character in society to concentrate
upon one soul or two and in bending their visions inward, [.
. . Frederic] approached the psychological and allegorical territory
that had appeared in Hawthorne’s fiction” (30). Coale
offers several examples to support his claim: Theron Ware’s
resemblance to Young Goodman Brown, another “American
innocent”;
the similarities between Damnation’s opening paragraphs
and the forest scenes of Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter;
and the use of light and dark imagery. Even the character of
Sister
Soulsby seems to fit the “Hawthornian mold” in her
correspondence to Westervelt in The Blithedale Romance—clearly
“a representative of the modern manipulative world, not
to be trusted, however practical and useful her tools of the
trade”
(41). In fact, Coale claims, Sister Soulsby may be “the
Devil of the piece.” He concludes that Frederic does not
succeed in fusing romantic and naturalistic elements in this
novel:
the “romantic or Hawthornesque touches can only be self-justifications
on Theron’s part for his actions, as his comments on determinism
must be, and we cannot take them seriously” (43).
Coale, Samuel Chase. “Harold Frederic: Naturalism as Romantic
Snarl.” In Hawthorne’s Shadow: American Romance
from Melville to Mailer. Lexington, KY: UP of Kentucky, 1985.
46-62.
Coale’s chapter on Harold Frederic is a reworking of his
earlier article entitled “Frederic and Hawthorne: The Romantic
Roots of Naturalism,” published in American Literature
48.1 (March 1976): 29-45.
Crisler, Jesse S. “Harold Frederic.” American
Literary Realism 8 (1975): 250-55.
Crisler’s article is a bibliographical review of twelve
dissertations on Harold Frederic and his writing. Charles C.
Walcutt’s “Naturalism in the American Novel” (U
of Michigan, 1938), the first dissertation to address Frederic’s
novels, “views Frederic in connection with other ‘naturalistic’ writers” and,
according to Crisler, is “valuable only as a prologue to
later dissertations.” Paul Haines’ “Harold
Frederic” (New York U, 1945) is the first dissertation
to treat Frederic solely, “sets a worthy precedent in terms
of research, content, technique, and presentation,” and
is the only record for some of Frederic’s manuscripts that
are apparently no longer extant (250). Marvin O. Mitchell’s “A
Study of Romantic Elements in the Fiction of Edgar Watson Howe,
Joseph Kirkland, Hamlin Garland, Harold Frederic, and Frank Norris” (U
of North Carolina, 1953) argues that Frederic’s novels “mix
romantic elements with realistic ones” (251). Robert H.
Woodward’s “Harold Frederic: A Study of His Novels,
Short Stories, and Plays” (U of Indiana, 1957) employs
extensive use of the Harold Frederic Papers, housed in the Library
of Congress, in a critical analysis of Frederic’s works.
Thomas F. O’Donnell’s “The Regional Fiction
of Upstate New York” (Syracuse U, 1957) addresses in one
chapter Frederic’s works set in the U.S.. Charles B. Hands’ “Harold
Frederic: A Critical Study of the American Works” (U of
Notre Dame, 1959) draws upon earlier studies of Frederic in the “first
completely critical treatment of the novelist” (252). Crisler
dismisses Ralph R. Rogers’ “Harold Frederic: His
Development as a Comic Realist” (Columbia U, 1961) because
Rogers concludes that Frederic was a comic realist and appears
to overlook Frederic’s use of irony that “more often
than not transforms apparent comedy into gripping tragedy.” William
J. Holmes’ “A Study of the Novels of Harold Frederic” (U
of Iowa, 1962) supports the argument that Frederic was a realist;
Crisler ranks Holmes’ study with Haines’ as “one
of the best in its field.” Austin E. Briggs’ “The
Novels of Harold Frederic” (Columbia U, 1963) approaches
Frederic’s novels “from a ‘comic’ standpoint
in which realism and romance are always combined.” According
to Crisler, Stanton B. Garner’s “Harold Frederic:
The Major Works” (Brown U, 1963) is “of extreme importance
to Frederic criticism” (253) and “indispensable to
evaluations of Frederic and his work” (254). Fred G. See’s “Metaphoric
and Metonymic Imagery in Nineteenth Century American Fiction:
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Rebecca Harding Davis, and Harold Frederic” (U
of California, Berkeley, 1967) examines Frederic’s novels
within the framework of a late-nineteenth-century movement from
romantic to realistic imagery. Crisler finds little value in
Nancy Siferd’s “Textual Range in the Novels of Harold
Frederic” (Bowling Green, 1970), with the exception of
the chapters in which she investigates character motivation.
Dalton, Dale C. “MacEvoy’s Room.” The Frederic
Herald 3.2 (1969): 5.
Dalton’s note examines MacEvoy’s room as a recurring
structural device significant to Theron Ware’s fall in
The Damnation of Theron Ware. When the Irish-Catholic wheelwright
MacEvoy is fatally wounded falling from an elm tree he was ordered
to trim on the Madden’s property, he is carried to his
house in the outskirts of town. Theron Ware follows the bearers
to MacEvoy’s house, the first house Ware visits upon moving
to Octavius. MacEvoy’s room, described as “‘dark
and ill-smelling,’” might also be called “Theron’s
chamber of death,” observes Dalton, “for it holds
other agents of Theron’s approaching ‘damnation,’” specifically
Celia Madden and Father Forbes. In Chapter 10, when Ware has
just returned from a visit to Forbes’ house, he finds his
own house “‘bare and squalid’” and the
fumes from the kerosene lamp “‘offensive to his nostrils.’” Lying
in his room later that night, Ware can hear Madden playing her
piano and recalls his first image her in MacEvoy’s room.
In Chapter 15, MacEvoy’s room is again recalled: Ware rejects
the Methodist Love-Feast as a “low” ceremony, held
in the basement of the church; yet only three months earlier,
he was mesmerized by the religious rites performed by Forbes
in MacEvoy’s room. “MacEvoy’s fall is prophetic
of Theron’s moral decline and spiritual death,” argues
Dalton, and “MacEvoy’s room is [. . .] the structural
device with which Frederic portrays Theron’s first acceptance
of the new and rejection of the old” (5).
Davies, Horton. “Harold Frederic.” A Mirror of
the Ministry in Modern Novels. New York: Oxford UP, 1959.
71-78.
Davies’ chapter entitled "Harold Frederic," although
largely a summary of The
Damnation of Theron Ware, is also a character study and
a cultural critique of religion and science, examining particularly
the “conflict
between the old faith and the new knowledge.” Comparing
Frederic’s novel to Mrs. Humphrey Ward’s Robert
Elsmere, Davies states that Theron Ware’s “lapse,” unlike
Robert Elsmere’s, “was moral not theological”
(71). Further, “Frederic’s novel gives a much more
sympathetic account of the older generation in religion”
than is found in the novels of his contemporaries Mrs. Humphrey
Ward and William Hale White; it also presents a “sophisticated
treatment of the role of the Catholic enclave in a predominantly
Protestant America” (72). Davies’ reading of the “genuine
Soulsbys” (78) is quite favorable: “The Soulsbys
prove in the end [. . .] to be the best friends of Ware and
his wife”
(76). Davies concludes, “This novel, then, is not so much
a study of the agonizing problem of correlating traditional
faith
with the new scientific and historical knowledge; it is chiefly
a study of the disintegration of a minister through succumbing
to vanity, in the form of intellectual ambition” (78).
Donaldson, Scott. Introduction. The Damnation of Theron Ware.
By Harold Frederic. 1896. New York: Penguin, 1986. vii-xxx.
Donaldson’s introduction to The Damnation of Theron
Ware combines biographical and genre criticism with a brief character
study. Part I is a biography of Harold Frederic: journalist,
novelist, bon vivant, and polygamist. Part II opens with Donaldson’s
acknowledgment that Frederic’s literary reputation generally
rests upon a single novel, The Damnation of Theron Ware, a situation
he regrets as unfortunate because Seth’s Brother’s
Wife (1890), In the Valley (1890), and The
Market-Place (1899) “represent
major achievements” as well (xii). Donaldson states that
Frederic’s novels “resist pigeonholing as works of
realism, naturalism, or romance” and further asserts that
Damnation “reveals traces of all three approaches” (xvi).
Parts III, IV, and V explore the character development of Theron
Ware, as well as of Father Forbes, Dr. Ledsmar, Celia Madden,
and Sister Soulsby. The novel is described as a “subtle
study of moral disintegration” (xviii), in which Ware “abandons
his faith and seems at the end to have learned almost nothing
from his ordeal” (xix).
Donaldson, Scott. “The Seduction of Theron Ware.”
Nineteenth-Century Fiction 29 (1975): 441-52.
Donaldson’s article is a psychological analysis of the
causes of Theron Ware’s downfall. While Donaldson acknowledges
that most critics point to the trio of Father Forbes, Dr. Ledsmar,
and Celia Madden as the force behind Ware’s destruction,
he asserts “the true villain of the piece” is Sister
Soulsby, “who plays Mephistopheles” to Ware’s
“Faust” (441-42). Donaldson points to characteristics
of Sister Soulsby—her “deceptive appearance, commanding
manner, and duplicitous methods of operation”—to
support his judgment (442). Sister Soulsby is a master confidence
artist
who employs performance, flattery, and scripture quoted out-of-context
to further her scheming manipulation of both Theron Ware and
his
congregation. After Sister Soulsby absolves Ware of any guilt
for his participation in her scheme to cheat Levi Gorringe
at
the trustees’ meeting, he embraces her philosophy of pragmatism
and vows to emulate her example; however, Donaldson concludes,
“Theron Ware simply is not cut out for the role of deceiver”
(451).
Dooley, Patrick K. “Fakes and Good Frauds: Pragmatic Religion
in The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American
Literary Realism 15.1 (1982): 74-85.
Dooley approaches his analysis of Frederic’s novel from
a cultural and philosophical perspective. In this article, he
defines pragmatism
as “a technical and sophisticated epistemological position
designed to settle the perennial questions of the nature and
meaning
of Truth” (74). For William James, the “truth of
religion and religious belief is its beneficial consequences
and valuable
effects” (75). Dooley contends that The Damnation of
Theron Ware “is a remarkable cultural document and
an illuminating philosophical critique,” in which the
author illustrates the nature of the difficulties of James’ “tender-minded”
pragmatism and “the effects, beneficial and otherwise,
of believing a lie” (74-76). According to Dooley, “Frederic
stresses two facts: religious experiences are manufactured,
and
second, one does not have to be pious to produce religious experiences”
(79). In fact, none of the central religious characters in this
novel—Theron Ware, Father Forbes, and the Soulsbys—really
believes in God, and all are, or aspire to be, “good
frauds”
(81). The essay traces the events leading to and following Ware’s
counter-conversion. Dooley examines Father Forbes’ and
Sister Soulsby’s pragmatic claims that truth is always
relative. This perspective is illustrated in Father Forbes’ attitude
toward the Catholic church and its secular function and in
Sister
Soulsby’s revelation about performance. Dooley concludes
that Frederic does not resolve the question of whether or not
a pragmatic account of religion—believing a lie if its
effects are beneficial—is a satisfactory philosophy. Frederic
leaves that for the reader to decide.
Eggers, Paul. “By Whose Authority? Point of View in the
First Chapter of Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of
Theron Ware.” Style 31.1 (1997): 81-95.
Eggers’ article combines reader-response and structural
criticism in an examination of Chapter 1 of The Damnation
of Theron Ware. Eggers argues that other critics who have
examined authority in this novel (Oehlschlaeger and Becknell)
have begun in Chapter 2, where the narrative focus and main characters
are established. He contends, however, “that the first chapter
both initiates and encapsulates the novel’s exploration
of authority through a perplexing usage of shifting points of
view.” Identification of these shifting points of view alternates
between clarity and ambiguity, not only implicating readers in
“‘unauthoritative’ readings” of the text
but also focusing on the “book’s concern with authority.”
The opening three paragraphs are traditional omniscient narration,
but one word in the third paragraph, “nay,” suggests
an “internal debate” that should give careful readers
pause. The narrator changes for paragraphs four through six to
an unnamed “observer.” The point of view appears to
shift again in paragraphs ten and eleven to the “venerable
Fathers” of the Methodist clergy. Their “sincerity”
is called into question if the judgments rendered are not the
implied author’s (as reported by the omniscient narrator).
Point of view clearly shifts back to the omniscient narrator in
paragraphs twelve through fifteen, influencing the reader’s
perceptions of Theron and Alice Ware in later paragraphs in contrast
to the proud Tecumseh congregation. Eggers’ analysis continues
along this line, scrutinizing each paragraph in turn. When Ware
is finally introduced to the reader, it is through the “objective”
tone of a limited-omniscient narrator who has just replaced the
“vitriolic tone of the parishioner-controlled narrative.”
Since the reader is predisposed to be sympathetic toward the seemingly
stoic and pious Reverend Ware, this impression influences the
reader well into the book. As Eggers demonstrates, “both
text and reader are rendered ‘unauthoritative’ through
the agency of point of view.” (Note: The above is from WilsonSelect,
an electronic database that does not include Style’s
page numbers.)
Fortenberry, George, Charlyne Dodge, Stanton Garner, and Robert
H. Woodward, eds. The Correspondence of Harold Frederic.
Fort Worth, TX: Texas Christian UP, 1977.
Fortenberry, Dodge, Garner, and Woodward’s bibliography
contains a complete file of letters to and from Harold Frederic,
organized by date. In addition to the texts of the letters, the
editors provide biographies of some of the correspondents, samples
of letterhead used by Frederic, a list of “Known and Inferred
Private Correspondence, Not Located,” and an index. The
editors discovered five letters after this book had been published;
the letters are listed in Noel Polk, The Literary Manuscripts
of Harold Frederic: A Catalogue (New York: Garland, 1979)
104-07.
Garner, Stanton. “The Damnation of Theron Ware,
or Illumination: The Title of Harold Frederic’s
Novel.” Proof: The Yearbook of American Bibliographical
and Textual Studies. Ed. Joseph Katz. Vol. 5. New York: J.
Faust, 1979. 57-66.
Garner’s chapter is a textual analysis that focuses upon
the title of Harold Frederic’s “finest novel” (57),
published simultaneously as The Damnation of Theron Ware in
the United States and as Illumination in England. Garner
examines “the
possibility that one title should have priority over the other”
and produces evidence for both arguments: either the different
titles were intentional, meant “to attract the two distinct
bodies of readers to whom the novel was offered for sale,”
or the Damnation title was unintended, printed in error
(58). Evidence supporting the former argument includes the fact
that (1) Frederic, in correspondence, referred to the novel as
“The Damnation of Theron Ware” nearly two
years before its publication in the U.S., (2) he did not change
the Damnation title on the publisher’s proofs,
and (3) the two different titles appear on the title pages of
the U.S. and English original editions. However, evidence supporting
the argument that the Damnation title was appended
in error includes (1) literary gossip appearing in the London Daily
Chronicle, The New York Times, The Critic,
and The Review of Reviews as little as two months
after the novel’s publication, (2) the addition of
the English title as a subtitle to later American editions,
(3) Frederic’s
habit of making changes to his compositions up to the last possible
moment, and (4) his documented difficulty in selecting titles
for his works. Garner judges the evidence to be in favor of Illumination
as Frederic’s preferred choice of title: “A return
to Illumination would in all probability rectify an
error which has for nearly eight decades misrepresented Frederic’s
final intention” (65).
Garner, Stanton. “The Other Harold Frederic.” Upstate
Literature: Essays in Memory of Thomas F. O’Donnell.
Ed. Frank Bergmann. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse UP, 1985. 129-41.
Garner’s chapter is a biographical sketch of Frederic
that acknowledges his achievements as an editor and a journalist,
but concentrates
upon Frederic’s literary contributions as a writer of fiction.
Joseph Conrad characterized Frederic as “a notable journalist
(who had written some novels).” Garner contends that
Conrad’s
comment is an example of how Frederic’s fiction has been,
and continues to be, misunderstood and underappreciated (130).
In Garner’s opinion, Frederic is a “fine stylist”
who, “in the ease and fluency of his language [. . .],
belongs in the camp of Mark Twain” (133). Garner examines
genre in The Damnation of Theron Ware, Gloria Mundi,
and The Market-Place to show Frederic’s growth
as an author. Frederic’s early works set in upstate New
York establish him as a regionalist; however, most of Frederic’s
later works are set abroad and are a “fusion of types,”
borrowing elements of regionalism, realism, and romance (135).
For example, elements of realism and romance flavor The
Damnation of Theron Ware, one of Frederic’s later
novels (although set in New York), with provocative social
and moral issues. The
setting of Gloria Mundi and The Market-Place,
Frederic’s last two novels, moves beyond the Mohawk Valley
to “the ancient European cradle out of which [. . . Frederic’s
regional American] culture had risen” and on to “the
future of the West and of mankind” in the character
of Joel Thorpe. Garner concludes “that in addition
to the regionalist we know there was another Harold Frederic
whose vision grew much
broader” (140).
Genthe, Charles V. “The Damnation of Theron Ware
and Elmer Gantry.” Research Studies 32
(1964): 334-43.
Genthe’s article is a structural analysis of Frederic’s The
Damnation of Theron Ware (1896) and Sinclair Lewis’
Elmer Gantry (1927) that considers “striking similarities”
in “certain characters, materials, and techniques”
(334), suggesting that Lewis must have known Frederic’s
novel. Celia Madden and Sharon Falconer, although “vastly
different in background and occupation,” “epitomize
beauty and savoir faire to Ware and Gantry, and the bower
seduction
scenes are markedly similar” (335). Ministers Theron Ware
and Frank Shallard, a minor character in Elmer Gantry,
share similar “background[s],” “environments,”
and “influences,” specifically “Darwinism,
the Higher Criticism, and the social gospel” (337). Genthe
notes that the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species
(1859) and Descent of Man (1871) “constituted
a separation point between an old order of thought and a new”
(338). Higher Criticism, in the minds of some clergymen, threatened
to do away with God; and the social gospel, “a movement
within the churches to help the common person in his struggle
for a material existence,” “helped to level the old
barriers between the secular and sacred” (339). For Theron
Ware, these influences are embodied in the characters of Dr.
Ledsmar,
Father Forbes, and Celia Madden. For Frank Shallard, they are
all combined in the single character of Dr. Bruno Zechlin,
Professor
of Hebrew at Mizpah Baptist Seminary. “[I]t is a tribute
to American realism that Lewis and Frederic created these two
characters and their plot situations with such verisimilitude,”
writes Genthe. The similarity could be attributed to “the
fact that both authors saw the same basic forces in American
religious
patterns,” or Lewis may have used Frederic’s novel
for source material (343). Genthe opts for the second possibility,
that Lewis borrowed from Frederic.
Graham, Don. “‘A Degenerate Methodist’: A New
Review of The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American
Literary Realism 9 (1976): 280-84.
Graham’s bibliographical article identifies and reprints
an 1896 book review of The Damnation of Theron Ware previously
unlisted in Frederic bibliographies. The unidentified reviewer
labels the book “an important novel” (281) and proceeds
to summarize the plot, concluding that “we suspect the
probabilities of such unconscious degeneration; it seems impossible
that the
conditions postulated should precipitate so involuntary a downfall.
It seems so useless the game these various characters play
against
the unfortunate minister; his disillusion is so gratuitous, so
merciless” (284).
“Harold Frederic (1856-1898): A Critical Bibliography of Secondary Comment.” American
Literary Realism 2 (1968): 1-70.
The editors of American Literary Realism, under the leadership
of Clayton L. Eichelberger, along with twenty-four other contributors,
compiled the first annotated bibliography of secondary criticism
on Harold Frederic and his work. Sources for the bibliography
include books, dissertations, and periodical articles; newspaper
articles are specifically omitted. This bibliography provided
the foundation upon which later bibliographies were complied
(see Thomas F. O’Donnell, Stanton Garner, and Robert H.
Woodward’s A Bibliography of Writings By and About
Harold Frederic, 1975).
Heddendorf, David. “Pragmatists and Plots: Pierre
and The Damnation of Theron Ware.” Studies
in the Novel 22.3 (1990): 271-81.
Heddendorf’s article is a psychological study of Pierre
Glendinning, in Herman Melville’s Pierre, and
Theron Ware, in Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron
Ware, that
focuses on the downfall of the two protagonists. According
to Heddendorf,
Glendinning and Ware seem incapable of comprehending the “prescription
for practical results” recommended by their advisors,
Plinlimmon and Sister Soulsby. The “rightness or wrongness” of
the pragmatic figures of Plinlimmon and Sister Soulsby is not
at issue, argues Heddendorf; rather “the relationship between
philosophy and narrative is the point of these encounters [.
.
.] and the simple fact that neither Pierre nor Theron understands
what his would-be counselor is talking about” (272). For
Pierre Glendinning, it is a pamphlet by Plinlimmon that describes
the “irrelevance of an absolute time standard to the requirement
of everyday life” that he cannot understand because he
is
“repressing an understanding of his present extreme circumstances”
(273). As readers, Heddendorf asserts, we can see that the pamphlet
holds the pragmatic solution to Glendinning’s problems.
For Theron Ware, Sister Soulsby’s declaration that she
and her husband are “good frauds” is misleading;
Ware assumes that he too is to be a “good fraud.” Unfortunately
for Ware, he is not a very good fraud and manages to alienate
family, friends, and community because he fails to understand
Sister Soulsby’s advice. Heddendorf concludes, “In
Pierre and The Damnation of Theron Ware, the
narratives of belief, abandonment and new belief lead less happily
to a view of human beings as not licensed but condemned to believe”
(280).
Hirsh, John C. “The Frederic Papers, The McGlynn Affair,
and The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American
Literary Realism 17.1 (1984): 12-23.
Hirsh combines textual and biographical approaches in his examination
of the Frederic Papers, preserved in the Library of Congress,
“to help illuminate some of the more important structural
and thematic concerns of the novel, particularly those affecting
Fr. Forbes and the Catholics” (12). In his article, Hirsh
produces excerpts from the author’s early notes that indicate
some of the relationships that Frederic intended to develop,
among
them
Theron
Ware, Father Forbes, and Dr. Ledsmar; Celia Madden and Father
Forbes; Father Forbes and his Bishop. Hirsh cites Paul Haines’ 1945
unpublished dissertation that identifies Father Edward Terry,
a priest whom Frederic knew in Utica, as a possible source for
the development of Father Forbes. However, Hirsh suggests that
a more influential source may have been Father Edward McGlynn,
an Irish-Catholic priest in New York who made newspaper headlines
in the 1880s for his political activism and American ideal of
Catholicism (he was excommunicated in 1887 and reconciled with
the church in 1893). The character of Father Forbes, as it emerged
in The Damnation of Theron Ware, is forceful, powerful,
and sophisticated. Elements of the role that were in Frederic’s
working notes but eliminated from the novel include public
condemnation
of the priest for a scandalous relationship with Celia Madden
and serious political activism.
Howells, William Dean. “My Favorite Novelist and His Best
Book.” W. D. Howells as Critic. Ed. Edwin H. Cady.
London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1973. 268-80.
Howells’ review of Frederic’s novel was published
in Munsey’s in April 1897. Howells names The
Damnation of Theron Ware one of his favorite books. His comment
on Frederic’s novel is often quoted by critics: “I
was particularly interested in the book, for when you get to the
end, although you have carried a hazy notion in your mind of the
sort of man Ware was, you fully realize, for the first time, that
the author has never for a moment represented him anywhere to
you as a good or honest man, or as anything but a very selfish
man” (278).
Jefferson, Margo. “Seven Unsung Novels Crying to be Filmed.”
New York Times 18 Jan. 1998, late ed., sec. 2: 1+.
Jefferson’s feature article focuses on “seven unsung
novels crying to be filmed” (1). While noting Hollywood’s
recent fascination with making movies from the novels of Henry
James, Jane Austin, all three Brontës, and Edith Wharton,
Jefferson laments Hollywood’s oversight in not filming such
novels as William Dean Howells’ A Modern Instance
(1882), Charles W. Chesnutt’s The House Behind the Cedars
(1900) and The Marrow of Tradition (1901), David Graham
Phillips’ Susan Lenox: Her Fall and Rise (1917),
Abraham Cahan’s The Rise of David Levinsky (1917),
Anzia Yezierska’s Salome of the Tenements (1923),
and Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron Ware
(1896).
Johnson, George W. “Harold Frederic’s Young Goodman
Ware: The Ambiguities of a Realistic Romance.” Modern
Fiction Studies 8 (1963): 361-74.
Johnson's article combines structural and genre criticism to
explore the
“sinning minister” in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s
works as an influence on Frederic’s minister, “brought
up to date and given topicality in the ‘turbulent’
milieu of the 1890’s” (362). Although sensitive to
Sister Soulsby’s duplicity, Johnson regards her influence
as comparable to that of Celia Madden. Johnson writes, Sister
Soulsby “patches together Theron’s splintered ego
by giving him a role to play. Henceforth, she counsels, he is
to be a conscious fraud, an actor superior to his audience.”
Her seduction of Theron Ware takes a different tack from Celia
Madden’s, “[b]ut Sister Soulsby has in a way seduced
him” by appealing to his pride and fueling his ego. Ware
emerges from the forest scene with Madden, “like another
Dimmesdale,” unable to reconcile the “radical
contradictions”
that plague his mind (365). Johnson observes that Frederic’s
novel is, on the one hand, “a realistic rendering of societal
relationships” and, on the other, “a romancer’s
poetic rendering, complete with archetypal trees, gardens,
and
snakes, of a representative figure” (367). In the character
of Theron Ware, Frederic has created a “seeker who combines
the temperament of both a romancer and a realist”; however,
Johnson concludes that the novel “remains a literary
near-miss”
because “Theron Ware is an average man who remains throughout
the book merely a boy” (372). A novel “[a]t the
last more complicated than complex,” Johnson asserts
that The
Damnation of Theron Ware is “a flawed monument to
an endeavor audacious, artful, and American” (374).
Jolliff, William. “The Damnation of Bryan Dalyrimple—and
Theron Ware: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Debt to Harold Frederic.” Studies
in Short Fiction 35.1 (1998): 85-90.
Jolliff combines thematic criticism and character analysis in
his note arguing that F. Scott Fitzgerald was influenced
by Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron Ware when
he wrote “Dalyrimple Goes Wrong.” Jolliff establishes
that Fitzgerald knew and admired Frederic’s novel. He states
that “Bryan Dalyrimple’s story shares many similarities
with Theron Ware’s both in theme and detail” and
suggests that Dalyrimple was the prototype of Jay Gatsby (87). “[T]ypically
adamic,” both Ware and Dalyrimple initially believe that
hard work will lead to success, discover that “‘common
sense’ is a code word that sometimes stands for the sacrifice
of moral conviction,” and eventually surrender their “traditional
ideas of good and evil” in favor of the common sense that
will help them to obtain their worldly desires (87-88). As Ware
and Dalyrimple abandon their moral codes, each finds that he
has become better at his “legitimate work” (88).
In addition, both rely upon their rhetorical skills as the key
to their future success in politics. Noting that Dalyrimple’s “amoral
mentor” and boss is named “Theron G. Macy” (89),
Jolliff concludes, Ware and Dalyrimple “present us with
examples of what sometimes happens when the American Adam comes
of age: a thorough disillusionment resulting not in self-knowledge
but in moral degeneracy. [. . .] For if Fitzgerald was the voice
of a generation, surely Harold Frederic had prophesied its coming” (89-90).
Jolliff, William. “Frederic’s The Damnation of
Theron Ware.” The Explicator 47.2 (1989):
37-38.
Jolliff’s textual approach to Frederic’s novel
reveals that one of the working titles for The Damnation
of Theron Ware was “Snarl,” a term popularly
interpreted as suggesting the tangled relationships of the novel’s
characters. Jolliff offers another explanation. In his note,
he suggests the title “would
direct the reader to consider the beast within Theron Ware”
and points to the “abundance of animal imagery” in
the novel. Dr. Ledsmar renames one of his lizard specimens “the
Rev. Theron Ware,” and “Theron’s name derives
from a Greek word meaning ‘wild beast.’” At
his lowest point, Theron Ware bemoans to Sister Soulsby, “[I]sn’t
there any God at all—but only men who live and die
like animals?” (37). Ware likens himself to a “mongrel
cur,” one that Sister Soulsby threatens with a “good
cuffing” if he does not shape up (38). Jolliff concludes
that such an interpretation of the working title “Snarl”
must certainly have been deliberate on the part of the author.
Kane, Patricia. “Lest Darkness Come Upon You: An Interpretation
of The Damnation of Theron Ware.” Iowa English
Bulletin 10 (1965): 55-59.
Kane’s article is a Biblical study of The Damnation
of Theron Ware
that focuses on Frederic’s use of symbols and images to
trace Theron Ware’s fall from the light of innocence into
the
“darkness of damnation” (55). Theron and Alice Ware’s
garden initially evokes not only “the lost agrarian America,”
but also “the sterility of life in a small town, which
is relieved only by faith in God.” Later, the garden becomes
a spiritual symbol associated with Alice Ware, and Theron Ware’s
attitudes toward his wife and her garden chart his descent.
The
image of a garden is also used to describe Theron Ware’s
supposed illumination: at one point he vows to “bend all
his energies to cultivating his mind till it should blossom
like
a garden” (56). Yet in the Maddens’ hothouse garden,
Michael Madden tells Ware that his face now resembles that of
a bar-keeper, not a saint, and asks him to leave. This scene
recalls the Archangel Michael’s expulsion of Adam and
Eve from the Garden of Eden. Jesus warns in John 12:35, “Walk
while ye have the light, lest darkness come upon you; for he
that walketh
in darkness knoweth not whither he goeth” (57). Kane also
notes Reverend Ware’s ironic use of “Christian language
and symbolism of salvation to describe his damnation”:
after his evening at Celia Madden’s house, Ware is “a
new being” (John 3: 3) and a “child of light” (John
12: 36) (56-57). Ware believes himself to be reborn in lightness;
but as Kane observes, he is confused and mistaken in his illumination—he
is “becoming a child of darkness” (57). The light
imagery turns evil when Ware is rebuffed by Celia Madden: “The
horrible notion of killing her spread over the chaos of his
mind
with the effect of unearthly light,—red and abnormally
evil”
(59). Although Kane concedes that “the Biblical allusions
here are not insistent,” she maintains that “they
hover with enough tenacity to become part of a pattern in a
story
about a fall from innocence” (56).
Kantor, J. R. K. “The Damnation of Theron Ware
and John Ward, Preacher.” The Serif 3.1
(1996): 16-21.
Kantor’s article is an analysis of the character development
and structure of The Damnation of Theron Ware (1896)
and Margaret Deland’s John Ward, Preacher (1888).
The similarities in the treatment of religious doctrine in
the
two stories, according to Kantor, support the thesis that Frederic
was familiar with Deland’s novel. First, Kantor notes
that critics have argued Frederic was familiar with Mrs.
Humphrey Ward’s
Robert Elsmere, a novel published the same year as John
Ward, Preacher, and often reviewed with it because of their
similarities. Second, attitudes toward religion are central
to
character development in both Frederic’s and Deland’s
novels. The pragmatic attitudes of Sister Soulsby and of Gifford
Woodhouse complement one another, and in the end, both characters
are a source of consolation and hope. Kantor also notes similarities
between the meetings of the ministers and the trustees in both
novels. The trustees are in control, and both groups have one
dissenter among them: Levi Gorringe opposes the high interest
rate charged by the other trustees, and Elder Johnson defends
Helen Ward against the judgment of the others. In both novels,
church officials are opposed to all things Catholic. Finally,
the names of the two ministers—Ware and Ward—cannot
be ignored.
Klopfenstein, Glenn D. “‘The Flying Dutchman of American
Literature’: Harold Frederic and the American Canon, a Centenary
Overview.” American Literary Realism 30.1 (1997):
34-46.
Klopfenstein’s bibliographical article opens with a brief
review of the state of Frederic scholarship since the 1950s.
His reference to “the Flying Dutchman” is borrowed
from Austin Briggs: “Harold Frederic, unless the interest
of the 1960’s abides, seems doomed to play the Flying
Dutchman of American literature. Over the decades he has been
enthusiastically
sighted again and again, only to disappear into the fogs of obscurity”
(35). According to Klopfenstein, the exclusion of The Damnation
of Theron Ware from the American canon can be attributed
to “changing critical (aesthetic) standards and political
(institutional) forces” (36); it has been exacerbated
by Vernon Louis Parrington’s negative criticism of
the novel in Main Currents in American Thought (1927).
Klopfenstein further speculates that the novel and its author
may have been
marginalized prior to the work’s brief revival in the 1960s
because Frederic, an expatriate living in England, was not American
enough and his effeminate antihero was not masculine enough to
appeal to critics. While lamenting that Frederic has been pigeonholed
as a regionalist, a realist, and a naturalist, and that his novel
has become “fodder for the reductions of literary theorists
and specialists,” Klopfenstein praises Stanton Garner’s
theory that Frederic’s “true descent” was
from Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville and holds out
hope that
The Damnation of Theron Ware may yet be resurrected
in the coming years by a new generation of Frederic enthusiasts
(43).
Krause, Sydney J. “Harold Frederic and the Failure Motif.”
Studies in American Fiction 15.1 (1987): 55-69.
Krause’s cultural and psychological approach to Frederic’s
novel juxtaposes the American myth of success with American
novelists’
fascination with failure. Published during the period when “Horatio
Alger stories were still at the ‘zenith of their fame’”
(57), Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron Ware “represents
that counter-phenomenon in the American tradition wherein knowledge
not only fails to set someone free, it actually enslaves him
to a false notion of the freed Self” (56). A key element
in Theron Ware’s failure, according to Krause's article,
is “his
inability to accept a negative image of himself for wrongs done”
(59). Sympathetic to Ware’s motives for wanting “to
cultivat[e] his mind till it should blossom like a garden,”
Krause acknowledges “Frederic’s strategy of ambiguity,”
wherein Ware’s desire for “personal enrichment”
is hindered by his complete lack of self knowledge (61). Krause
argues that Celia Madden’s musical seduction of Ware “becomes
such a blatantly erotic performance as to constitute a rape
of
his senses” (62). For those “characters who fall
socially and thereafter rehabilitate themselves, [ . . . Frederic]
provides
moral redemption” or, if necessary, a graceful death. However,
those characters “who fall morally and fail to acknowledge
it,” such as Ware, must live with their ignominy (63).
Krause concludes that Theron Ware’s “failure is
fundamental and national; it is his persisting in the American
illusion that
there is no final failure, that success only awaits a new beginning
elsewhere” (64).
Lackey, Lionel. “Redemption and The Damnation of Theron
Ware.” South Atlantic Review 55 (1990): 81-91.
Lackey’s biographical and psychological study examines
Frederic’s portrayal, and possible redemption, of Theron
Ware. Lackey’s article is a sympathetic reading of Ware
influenced by his opinion that Frederic never achieved total
honesty
in his
own life; thus “the author neither expected nor achieved
total honesty in his characters” (81). Frederic’s
practices regarding money, friendships, and extra-marital relationships,
for example, are reflected in Ware’s desire for financial
freedom, cultured friends, and a liaison with Celia Madden.
Because
Ware lacks “the financial access to culturally enlightened
circles that would have afforded him the expertise and discretion
to enter into moral ambiguities gracefully and knowingly—on
Forbes’ and Celia’s own level,” they judge
him a bore (85). Sister Soulsby consoles Theron Ware after
his rejection
by Celia Madden and Father Forbes. Some critics see this consolation
as “a prelude to renewed vanity, delusion, and failure”
(86), but Lackey prefers to believe “there is ground for
hope that Theron may after all have learned something valuable
from his mistakes [. . .]. Having lost his life, Theron may yet
save it” (87). Lackey speculates that Frederic may have
intended the ending to be ambiguous in order to pave the way
for
another book, perhaps “The Redemption of Theron Ware.”
In any case, Lackey chooses “to place the best construction
on the various ambivalences Frederic positions in the concluding
chapters” (88).
LeClair, Thomas. “The Ascendant Eye: A Reading of The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Studies in American
Fiction 3 (1975): 95-102.
LeClair’s psychological analysis of The Damnation
of Theron Ware explores “the complex relationship
between being seen and seeing, between the person as object
of perception
and the person as perceiver of self and others” (95). In
his article, LeClair asserts that Theron Ware’s visibility
as a small-town minister invites other characters to form superficial
perceptions
about
his character, perceptions that ultimately contribute to Ware’s
“loss of self” (96). Levi Gorringe, Celia Madden,
and Sister Soulsby are each wrong in their initial impressions
of “Theron’s superiority and potential for transformation”
(97), but Theron Ware willingly embraces their characterizations,
preferring the illusion of being seen to the reality of seeing.
LeClair extends his argument to include the “recurring
imagery of eyes and sight” and of “light, darkness,
and elevation”
(96). He concludes that “Theron abandons whatever was genuine
in him, accepts the identity others provide, and eventually
becomes
a synthetic person, the makeshift creation of Sister Soulsby,
[. . .who] advocates picking an illusion, knowing that it is
an
illusion, and then using it to survive in a time of confusion”
(101-02).
Luedtke, Luther S. “Harold Frederic’s Satanic Sister
Soulsby: Interpretation and Sources.” Nineteenth-Century
Fiction 30.1 (1975): 82-104.
Luedtke’s thematic, especially moral, approach to The
Damnation of Theron Ware identifies Sister Soulsby as “the
agent of a damnation that has moral as well as social
reality” (82; emphasis Luedtke’s). Luedtke writes
in his article,
“Frederic intends Sister Soulsby, the materialist, to function
as a Mephistophelean tempter of Theron’s soul and a minion
of spiritual darkness” (84). Tracing the four parts of
the novel, Luedtke states that it is not Theron Ware’s
introduction to his new church or town, Father Forbes, Dr.
Ledsmar, or Celia
Madden in Part I that sets him on the path to damnation, but
rather it is his interaction with the Soulsbys in Part II
that plants
the seeds of his destruction. Sister Soulsby’s remarks
about Alice Ware cause Theron Ware first to re-evaluate his
marriage
and, later, to suspect his wife of infidelity. Her lecture to
Ware on the art and uses of performance prompt him to brag about
his new perspective to Dr. Ledsmar and Celia Madden, alienating
them in the process. Luedtke recites the Soulsbys’ long
history of questionable employment and concludes that they
are
confidence artists for whom religion is “only the latest
con game” (92). Ware believes Sister Soulsby when she
tells him that she and Soulsby had “both soured on living
by fakes”
and are now “good frauds” (93). Luedtke notes Frederic’s
debt to Nathaniel Hawthorne in the character of Westervelt (The
Blithedale Romance), who, like Sister Soulsby, has false
teeth and is “stamped with [. . . the] totems of the
serpent and the evil eye” (94). Although Luedtke contends
that The
Damnation of Theron Ware offers ample evidence of Frederic’s
“judgments on Sister Soulsby” (98), he concludes
his essay by offering two British models for the character of
Sister
Soulsby: Lucy Helen Muriel Soulsby (1856-1927) and Charles Dickens’
fictional Mrs. Jellyby (Bleak House).
MacFarlane, Lisa. “Resurrecting Man: Desire and The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” A Mighty Baptism: Race,
Gender, and the Creation of American Protestantism. Ed. Susan Juster and Lisa
MacFarlane. Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1996. 65-80.
MacFarlane’s chapter is reprinted, with minor changes,
from an article published in Studies in American Fiction 20.2
(1992): 127-43.
MacFarlane, Lisa Watt. “Resurrecting Man: Desire and The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Studies in American
Fiction 20.2 (1992): 127-43.
MacFarlane’s article is a feminist study of The Damnation
of Theron Ware that examines the social and cultural roles
of ministers, who are viewed as possessing both masculine and
feminine characteristics.
Ministers are often referred to as “feminized,” “neutral,”
or “hybrid” because they represent “the patriarchal
authority of God the Father” while their cultural work “aligns
them socially with women” (128-29). The ambiguity of
the minister’s “social constructions of gender,”
according to MacFarlane, gives him power over both men and women
(129). In The Damnation of Theron Ware, “a series
of gender-confusing triangles”—particularly the
Theron Ware-Alice Ware-Levi Gorringe and Theron Ware-Celia
Madden-Father
Forbes triangles—demonstrate Theron Ware’s unstable
gender identity. In certain company, Ware takes on the role
of
female, while in other circumstances, he plays the role of the
male. Even the novel’s ending is ambiguous in terms of
gender identity: Ware dreams of succeeding in politics, a traditionally
male-dominated sphere; however, when he “shivers with pleasure”
at the fantasy of enthralling the masses with his rhetoric, he
assumes a feminine identity (132). MacFarlane suggests that
Frederic’s
novel may be read as “an allegory about the social constructions
of gender.” She concludes that “[t]he feminized
minister is not an androgynous creature, selecting judiciously
from an
orderly list of binarily gendered characteristics. Rather, he
is an instable, fractured being whose multiply gendered identity
shifts as he negotiates his professional and personal positions”
(141).
Michelson, Bruce. “Theron Ware in the Wilderness of Ideas.” American
Literary Realism 25.1 (1992): 54-73.
Michelson’s article combines thematic and structural criticism
in his examination of Theron Ware’s “modern intellectual
experience” in The Damnation of Theron Ware (55). First,
Michelson focuses on establishing the date for the novel’s
action—late 1880s—in an effort to understand Ware’s “culture-crisis
at the hands of Father Forbes, Dr. Ledsmar, and Celia Madden.” The
trio, argues Michelson, are “intellectual-pretenders” for
whom ideas are merely “social weapons, rationalizations,
playthings for idle hours” (57). Initially regarding Ware
as an acquisition, the poseurs compete in a game of one-upmanship,
exhibiting for Ware their intellectual sophistication. When Ware
tries to join their game, however, he fails to understand that “sayings
and doings require no reconciliation” (60) and “self-interest
and the protection of a public mask” are survival skills
he has not mastered (61). Sister Soulsby tries to teach Ware
this lesson, but he “never hears the right words at the
right time” (67), and he “misses obvious signs of
duplicity” in the actions of the trio (68). Ultimately,
Forbes, Ledsmar, and Madden do not reject Ware for his duplicity,
but for his “clumsiness in trying to do what they manage
deftly” (70). “Disaster has taught [. . . Theron]
little,” insists Michelson, “the consequences of
stupidity have not crushed him.” Rather, “[a]s a
modernized, incoherent man he may now be on his way to public
triumphs, readier for them than ever before” (71). Thus
Ware’s story, concludes Michelson, “is ultimately ‘about’ a
change in American intellectual and cultural life, [. . .] of
a degradation of the intellect” (72).
Miller, Linda Patterson. “Casting Graven Images: The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Renascence: Essays on
Values in Literature 30 (1978): 179-84.
Miller's article combines moral and structural criticism in
an analysis of the “moral wasteland” that confronts
Alice Ware, Celia Madden, Sister Soulsby, and Theron Ware in The
Damnation of Theron Ware. Their “search for personal
salvation”
transforms the concept of the church into something familiar
and comforting: for Alice Ware, it is her “garden”;
for Celia Madden, it is her “‘sacred chamber’ of
art”; for Sister Soulsby, it is a “theatrical stage”;
and for Theron Ware, it is the “‘maternal idea’
as embodied in Alice, Celia, and Sister Soulsby” (179).
Alice Ware’s religion is her garden. Images of flowers
blossoming and, later, withering are associated with her vivaciousness
and
despair. Miller observes that, rather than freeing her, both
Methodism and her garden serve to isolate Alice Ware until
she despairs,
“[I]f there is a God, he has forgotten me” (180).
Celia Madden seeks to transcend the wasteland in the “sacred
chamber” of her rooms where she is worshipped as both
seductress and madonna. When Celia Madden “cannot realize
moments of transcendence,” she regards herself as “the
most helpless and forlorn and lonesome of atoms” (181).
Sister Soulsby’s
approach is to disguise the wasteland with the machinery of the
theatrical stage, all the while knowing that the performance
is
only an illusion. Theron Ware’s quest for salvation turns
first to Alice Ware, then to Celia Madden, and finally to Sister
Soulsby, but his misplaced faith in Sister Soulsby seals his
damnation. Miller agrees with Stanton Garner’s assessment
of Sister Soulsby’s failed religion: “to look for
stage machinery instead of truth is to invite degeneration,
to confuse darkness
with illumination, to strike a bargain with Satan, to lose what
weed-grown Paradise is left in a diminished world.” Miller
concludes that none of the characters finds “real personal
salvation”; none finds God (184).
Morace, Robert A. “Arthur Warren’s and Robert Sherard’s
Interviews with Harold Frederic.” American Literary
Realism 11.1 (1978): 52-70.
Morace’s article is a reprint of two “important
interviews” with
Harold Frederic that have been relatively inaccessible to Frederic
scholars in the past. Morace’s intention was to “increase
their accessibility and thereby to further the interests of Frederic
scholarship” (52). Arthur Warren’s interview, entitled “An
American Journalist in London. A Chat with Mr. Harold Frederic,” originally
appeared in The Sketch on March 13, 1895. Robert H.
Sherard’s
interview, simply entitled “Harold Frederic,” originally
appeared in The Idler in November 1897. (See the section “Frederic
and Contemporaries: On Writing” for summaries of the
interviews by Warren and Sherard.)
Morace, Robert A. “Harold Frederic’s ‘Degenerate
Methodist.’” Markham Review 5 (1976): 58.
Morace’s bibliographical note reprints a portion of a
long review of Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron
Ware that appeared in the San Francisco Wave on April 25, 1895.
The anonymous reviewer writes, “Indeed, considering the
book, there can be no question of its great ability, or of the
vivid interest its narrative inspires. There is serious doubt,
however, of the truth of the situations; we suspect the probabilities
of such unconscious degeneration; it seems impossible that the
conditions postulated should precipitate so involuntary a downfall” (58).
Myers, Robert M. “Antimodern Protest in The Damnation
of Theron Ware.” American Literary Realism
26.3 (1994): 52-64.
Myers combines biographical and cultural criticism in his article
to examine Frederic’s portrayal of nineteenth-century America,
particularly the country’s attitude toward religion. According
to Myers, many earlier critics of Frederic’s works “tended
to see Frederic as an objective critic standing outside of
his culture”;
he, however, detects in The Damnation of Theron Ware
the author’s concern for the effect of “overcivilization
and fragmentation of modernism” on American cultural institutions
(52). Frederic undertook extensive research on Methodism, Catholicism,
and higher Biblical criticism in order to be as accurate as possible
in his portrayal of a minister and a priest. Myers notes that
Frederic’s sources on comparative religion “map a
decline in traditional faith” resulting in “a profound
ambivalence about the psychological and social effects of faithlessness.”
Frederic’s own views on religion “altered between
contempt for religious superstition and a recognition of the
social
value of religion”(54). In the 1890s, tensions between
liberal Methodists, who “adopted the modern optimistic
belief in the inevitability of progress,” and conservative
Methodists, who protested the “modernizing trends of the
liberals,”
were dividing the church. Reverend Ware’s attempt to bring
“modern ideas” to the Methodists of Octavius is thwarted
by “a strong conservative faction” (56). Partly
in reaction to his frustration with primitive Methodism, Ware
embraces
Celia Madden’s aesthetic paganism. He is also exposed to
Father Forbes’ Catholicism, described by Myers as “a
useful social institution” (59), and Sister Soulsby’s
pragmatism, “based on social utility rather than theology.”
Myers observes, “Father Forbes, Doctor Ledsmar, Celia,
and Sister Soulsby all contribute to Theron’s destruction
by consistently overestimating his ability to assimilate a modern
view of religion.” Catholicism can tolerate a Father Forbes
in its midst because the “corporate ethic of the Catholic
Church de-emphasizes the significance of the individual priest”
(60). Reverend Ware does not have that luxury in Methodism: “if
the minister be corrupt his ministry will be corrupt also.”
Myers concludes, “Forbes’ vision of a national church,
focused on the needs of the consumers rather than doctrinal
disputes
with other religions, parallels simultaneous developments in
American business. [. . .] The pragmatic approach to religion
that emerges
from Theron Ware points to a church strikingly similar to the
modern corporation, an institution that took shape in the late
nineteenth century” (61).
Myers, Robert M. “Author of The Damnation of Theron
Ware.” Reluctant
Expatriate: The Life of Harold Frederic. Westport, CT: Greenwood
P, 1995. 115-34.
Myers’ biographical essay examines the influence of events
in Harold Frederic’s life on the writing of The Damnation
of Theron Ware. In this chapter, Myers notes that Frederic’s
attempts to keep the circumstances of his unconventional life
private—specifically, the maintenance of two households—may
have “contributed to his conception of the difficulties
Theron Ware faced as he began to separate his public from his
private self” (116). A decade of expatriation may also
have afforded Frederic an outsider’s perspective with regard
to American culture; he was particularly concerned that “America
had become overcivilized and that the homogenous American spirit
was being torn apart by such factors as the growing class unrest
and the increasing conflict between the sexes” (119). According
to Myers, these concerns are reflected in Frederic’s novel.
Having perused Frederic’s notes on “extensive readings
in science, comparative religion, and the history of Methodism,” collected
in The Frederic Papers in the Library of Congress, Myers also
theorizes
that Frederic may have used the characters of Father Forbes,
Dr. Ledsmar, and Celia Madden to express his own views on religion,
philosophy, and American culture (120).
Oates, Joyce Carol. “Fall From Grace.” Rev. of The
Damnation of Theron Ware, by Harold Frederic. The New
York Times Book Review 17 Dec. 1995: 24+.
Oates’ book review focuses upon genre and influence as
she recalls her discovery of Frederic’s novel in the 1960s.
In her opinion, the novel is an “odd, unexpected link
between the crude naturalism of the young Stephen Crane [.
. .] and the
elegant dissections of wealthy New York society of Edith Wharton”;
it has less in common with Nathaniel Hawthorne’s fiction
than it does with Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian
Gray, a novel in which the “young, ingenuous hero
is
‘poisoned’ by a book of amoral hedonism and by his
friendship with a mentor whose disregard for convention completely
unhinges him.” The title character in The Damnation
of Theron Ware is also seduced by worldly desires, and
he has not one mentor, but four. Oates argues Frederic’s
novel inspired two 1920s novels by Sinclair Lewis, Main
Street
and Elmer Gantry, but believes that Frederic manages
his narrative with more finesse than does Lewis. She asserts,
The Damnation of Theron Ware “is American literary
realism at its most accomplished” and is also a comedy
(24). Her prediction of Ware’s future is optimistic: “he
will live from now on without illusion” and he “will
not only survive but succeed” (25).
Oates, Joyce Carol. “Rediscovering Harold Frederic’s
The Damnation of Theron Ware.” Where I’ve Been, and
Where I’m Going. New York: Penguin, 1999. 304-10.
Oates’ chapter is a close version of her review entitled “Fall
From Grace,” which first appeared in The New York Times
Book Review in December 1995.
O’Donnell, Thomas F. “The Baxter Marginalia: Theron
Ware a Clef.” Frederic Herald 1.3 (1967): 5.
O’Donnell’s note relates some of the brief marginalia
contained in a copy of The Damnation of Theron Ware (Herbert
S. Stone, 1899) acquired by O’Donnell and believed to have
belonged to one of Harold Frederic’s close friends and
first cousin, John Baxter. The marginalia are generally biographical
in nature, referring to events, people, buildings, streets, or
places that appear in Frederic’s novel and are also familiar
to Baxter. For example, next to the text that reads, “[.
. .] my very particular friend, Dr. Ledsmar,” the margin
note reads, “My mother’s name and of course his mother’s
as well spelled backwards” (underlined in original). Frederic’s
and Baxter’s mothers’ maiden names were Ramsdell.
Opposite the name “Father Forbes” on one page, Baxter
wrote “Father Terry,” and next to “Octavius,” he
wrote “Utica.” In two places, Baxter seems to identify
elements in the book directly with Frederic: opposite the text
that reads, “[. . .] and a copy of ‘Josephus’ which
had belonged to his grandmother,” Baxter penned the words, “My
grandmother’s book. Here he makes himself Theron”;
opposite the text that reads, “[. . .] it did have a curious
effect upon Theron Ware,” Baxter wrote, “Harry,” the
name by which friends and family members knew Harold Frederic.
O’Donnell states that the marginalia “demonstrate
the extent to which F[rederic] relied on his memories of Utica
as he wrote the novel” (5).
O’Donnell, Thomas F. “Harold Frederic (1856-1898).” American
Literary Realism 1 (1967): 39-44.
O’Donnell’s article is a brief overview of the state
of Frederic studies up to the 1960s. His bibliographical essay
credits Paul Haines with the “rediscovery of Frederic” in
1945, when he wrote his “pioneer dissertation at New York
University” (39). In the 1950s, about a half-dozen dissertations
and articles continued the Frederic revival. Then from 1960 to
1965, the annual PMLA bibliographies listed thirty items of Frederic
scholarship; O’Donnell briefly mentions most of them.
O’Donnell, Thomas F. “Theron Ware, the Irish Picnic,
and Comus.” American Literature: A Journal
of Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography 46 (1975):
528-37.
O’Donnell combines textual and structural criticism in
an examination of possible literary sources for the scene of
the
Irish picnic in Frederic’s novel. In his article, he acknowledges
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s influence on Frederic, but argues
that John Milton’s masque Comus may have inspired
the picnic in The Damnation of Theron Ware. Elements
of Comus
are echoed throughout the novel. According to O’Donnell,
Comus is Theron Ware; the Lady is Celia Madden; and the Attendant
Spirit is Father Forbes. However, Frederic’s version inverts
certain elements: “Comus-Theron rather than the Lady moved
along through a thick wood,” and he eagerly accepts the
potion (lager beer) Milton’s Lady refuses (531). The
Lady’s
brothers do not rescue Celia Madden; rather she and Comus-Theron
are left alone in the forest. And though it appears that
Celia
Madden may allow herself to be seduced by Comus-Theron, he receives
only a perfunctory good-bye kiss from his Lady. While Milton’s
Comus is a rewriting of the Circe legend, O’Donnell
observes, “Abundant precedent for the naturalizing—and
nationalizing—of European and classical myth was available
in American literature” (535). He concludes that Comus
clearly provided the elements necessary to Frederic’s “final
climactic temptation” of Theron Ware (537).
O’Donnell, Thomas F., ed. The Merrill Checklist of Harold Frederic. Columbus,
OH: Charles E. Merrill, 1969.
O’Donnell’s bibliography, a brief 34-page checklist,
is a select compilation of writings by or about Harold Frederic “intended
to provide students with the tools that will give them access
to the most meaningful published resources for the study of an
author” (iii). Divided into eight sections, the checklist
begins with “Books and Major Separate Publications” (1-2),
which includes both fiction and non-fiction, followed by “Uncollected
Writings” (2-6), which includes fiction, poetry, reviews,
and articles. Section III (6-7) lists “Editions” of
Frederic’s works. Section IV, “Letters” (7),
directs readers to Robert H. Woodward’s “Harold Frederic:
A Bibliography.” (In 1969, The Correspondence of Harold
Frederic had not been published.) Section V, “Special
Journal” (7), lists a single journal, The Frederic
Herald, devoted to short biographical, critical, and bibliographical
notes on Frederic; nine issues were published between April 1967
and January 1970. Section VI (7-8) is “Bibliographies and
Checklists”; Section VII (8) lists “Biographies.” The
last and largest section, “Scholarship and Criticism” (9-34),
lists books and articles about Frederic’s major works,
arranged in sub-sections by title.
O’Donnell, Thomas F, and Hoyt C. Franchere. “The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Harold Frederic.
New York: Twayne Publishers, 1961. 108-17.
O’Donnell and Franchere’s chapter on The Damnation
of Theron Ware combines biographical and cultural criticism
in an examination of the writing and reception of the novel. The
essay opens with a survey of the novel’s contemporaneous
reviews in both England and the United States, then moves on to
speculate upon the genesis of the work, which took Frederic “five
years of conscious, careful, and silent planning” to write.
O’Donnell and Franchere believe the idea for the novel may
have occurred to Frederic “as far back as his Utica days
when his long conversations with Father Terry, the brilliant and
candid priest, had so stimulated him” (110). They point
out that Frederic observed the growth of religious skepticism
in the 1870s and 1880s—fueled by Darwin’s theories,
higher Biblical criticism, aestheticism, and intellectual epicureanism—and
incorporated these influences in the characters of Dr. Ledsmar,
Father Forbes, and Celia Madden, with disastrous results for his
title character. Unable to reconcile “currents of thought
that are disturbing the very universe of his time [, . . .] Theron
brings about his own damnation,” conclude O’Donnell
and Franchere (116).
O’Donnell, Thomas F., Stanton Garner, and Robert H. Woodward,
eds. A Bibliography of Writings By and About Harold Frederic.
Boston: G.K. Hall, 1975.
O’Donnell, Garner, and Woodward’s compilation is
the most recent and comprehensive Harold Frederic bibliography
published. It includes writings by and about Frederic and is “[i]ntended
to be of use to the scholar, student, or interested general reader
of Harold Frederic by providing various kinds of bibliographical
information not previously available, or available only in periodicals
and pamphlets.” “Writings by Frederic” (1-105)
identifies Frederic’s books (fiction and non-fiction), shorter
works (short fiction, essays, letters, and features), journalism
(articles, editorials, and reviews in The Observer, New
York Times, and The Manchester Guardian), and editions.
“Writings about Frederic” (109-308) lists bibliographies;
reviews and notices; writings to 1900 (books, newspapers, and
periodicals); books, parts of books, monographs, and pamphlets
(1900-1973); dissertations and theses; manuscripts, letters, library
holdings, and likenesses; and The Frederic Herald. The
compilers claim the book “lists every piece of published
writing attributable to Frederic at this time (1974). [. . .]
It identifies and locates all of Frederic’s manuscripts,
letters, and related documents that could be uncovered by a lengthy
and wide-ranging search. It lists—with brief objective annotations—most
of the biographical, critical, and bibliographical comment about
Frederic that appeared in print between 1879 and 1 January 1974.
It also lists all those doctoral dissertations the compilers were
able to identify as containing significant discussion of Frederic’s
work, as well as a number of master’s theses” (v).
Oehlschlaeger, Fritz. “Passion, Authority, and Faith in
The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American Literature
58.2 (1986): 238-55.
Oehlschlaeger’s article combines reader response, feminist,
and psychological criticism in an analysis of authority in Frederic’s
novel. According to Oehlschlaeger, Frederic “systematically
discredits every authority figure in the novel while simultaneously
revealing Theron’s own search for authority.” He argues
that what Frederic’s novel presents “is not an innocent’s
fall into corrupt sexuality but a critique of the way corrupt
authority poisons sexuality,” a claim demonstrated in Theron
Ware’s relationships with his wife Alice Ware and Celia
Madden (239). Theron Ware becomes “progressively effeminized”
by the novel’s “proscription of female sexuality by
male authority” (244). All of the novel’s authority
figures—the Methodist trustees; Father Forbes; Dr. Ledsmar;
Sister Soulsby, perhaps the most complex authority figure; the
Catholic Church; and even Jeremiah Madden, “the book’s
most dignified figure”—are discredited by their words
or actions (254). Oehlschlaeger acknowledges that critics have
seen Sister Soulsby “either as a Satanic figure or as a
voice for Frederic’s own supposed pragmatism” (246);
however, he disagrees with both views. First, Sister Soulsby is
neither all good nor all bad, and her pragmatism is “inadequate
to deal with the highly irrational world that Frederic depicts,”
which undercuts her validity as an authority figure (247). Second,
Oehlschlaeger does not agree with critics who have pointed to
Sister Soulsby’s pragmatism as an indication of Frederic’s
personal views. In Oehlschlaeger’s opinion, Frederic’s
views are evident in his respect for “certain religious
values” represented by the venerable church elders and the
Christian idea of repentance (253).
Polk, Noel. The Literary Manuscripts of Harold Frederic: A
Catalogue. New York: Garland, 1979.
Polk’s bibliography identifies and locates Harold Frederic’s
extant novel manuscripts. An examination of Frederic’s working
papers shows him “to have been a disciplined, methodical
worker and an unusually meticulous craftsman” (xi). Most
of Frederic’s extant manuscripts are now located in the
Library of Congress; however, Polk identifies the exceptions (thirteen
locations in the U.S. and the U.K.). The manuscripts of Seth’s
Brother’s Wife and The Lawton Girl are either
lost or no longer extant. Paul Haines’ 1945 New York University
dissertation, “Harold Frederic,” is the only source
for descriptions and quotations from these manuscripts. Section
A lists Frederic’s novels; Section B, stories; Section C,
non-fiction prose; Section D, poetry; Section E, unpublished fiction;
Section F, unpublished plays; Section G, unpublished poetry; and
Section H, unpublished non-fiction prose. Section I lists miscellaneous
items in the Library of Congress, such as three of Frederic’s
diaries for the years 1891, 1892, and 1893; the Frederic-Heinemann
(his London publisher) Papers; Frederic-Brown, Shipley & Co.
Papers; miscellaneous, unclassifiable papers; Frederic’s
will (not in Frederic’s hand); and a “photograph of
Frederic and an unidentified woman, possibly Kate Lyon”
(102). Section J is a guide to correspondences written by Harold
Frederic. Polk directs readers to The Correspondence of Harold
Frederic (1977) for a complete file of Frederic’s correspondence.
Prioleau, Elizabeth S. “The Minister and the Seductress
in American Fiction: The Adamic Myth Redux.” Journal
of American Culture 16.4 (1993): 1-6.
Prioleau’s structural approach identifies the “odd
couple” of American literature that reveals “surprising
shifts and reversals in the minister-temptress drama” (1)
in six novels: Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet
Letter
(1850), Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron Ware
(1896), Winston Churchill’s The Inside of the Cup
(1913), Sinclair Lewis’ Elmer Gantry (1927), Peter
De Vries’ The Mackerel Plaza (1958), and John
Updike’s
A Month of Sundays (1974). In her article, Prioleau
observes that Hawthorne’s
Dimmesdale is the model clergyman, a “saint on earth,” for
whom Hester Prynne’s freedom and lawlessness prove to
be powerfully seductive. When Dimmesdale falls, “the
reverberations are momentous.” The title character in
Frederic’s novel
is a “diminished version” of Dimmesdale, and Celia
Madden is a “spoiled, vain, fin de siecle voluptuary”
(2). Prioleau observes, “Due to the minister’s lowered
status at the century’s end,” Ware’s “fall
resembles more of a pratfall, for which the reader feels mixed
pathos and contempt.” Churchill’s innocent and idealistic
minister, John, “denounces everything he had believed”;
and his seducer, wealthy and freethinking “pagan”
Alison Parr, “metamorphoses into a Victorian hausfrau—domestic
and dependent” (3). Prioleau concludes that Churchill’s
attempt to create “a happy resolution of the clergy-temptress
drama” misses the mark. Literature in the 1920s reveals
a decline in the clergyman’s reputation. Lewis’ Elmer
Gantry is already corrupt when he meets Sharon Faulkner,
an even
more corrupt tent revivalist. By novel’s end, Faulkner
is dead and Gantry has become the new “seducer, exploiter,
megalomaniac, and muddled nonbeliever.” De Vries’
Andrew Mackerel is a degenerate minister who believes in nothing.
The women in the novel are a parody of earlier seductresses
such
as Hester Prynne, prompting Prioleau to observe, “The temptations
of America for clergymen in the fifties have been indulged to
a point of satiation, ennui, and meaninglessness.” Lastly,
Updike’s Tom Marshfield is both minister and seducer,
and the temptresses—Ms. Prynne and Alicia—have “evolved
into the seduced” (4).
Raleigh, John Henry. “The Damnation of Theron Ware.”
American Literature 30 (1958): 210-27.
Raleigh’s analysis of The Damnation of Theron Ware situates
Frederic’s writing within a cultural context. In his article,
Raleigh argues that the novel reflects American history and culture
on three levels: (1) its representation of nineteenth-century
America, (2) its representation of the nineteenth-century American
and “his relationship to Europe,” and (3) its “metaphorical
statement about the essential polarities of all human existence” (213).
On the first level, Raleigh describes Theron Ware as an anachronism: “an
Emersonian, a Romantic, a lover of nature” (215). Ware’s “lingering
intuitionalism” and “reliance upon feelings” are
challenged by Celia Madden’s aestheticism and Dr. Ledsmar’s
Darwinism (214). On the second level, Frederic’s novel “shows
Irish Catholicism conquering American Protestantism,” an
unusual perspective in the nineteenth century. In theme, the
novel resembles Henry James’ Roderick Hudson;
in the character of Sister Soulsby, Frederic has captured the
essence of Mark Twain’s Huck Finn. On the third level,
Raleigh asserts that the “highest and strongest” (223)
attitudes in the novel belong to Father Forbes, “the voice
of history, of tragedy, of loneliness, [. . .] of the mysteries
that surround and encompass us,” and to Sister Soulsby, “the
spokesman for the here-and-now, for life as a comedy, for the
efficacy of common sense” (226). “As psychological
surrogates,” Raleigh proposes, “Father Forbes is
the ‘father,’ while Sister Soulsby is the ‘mother.’” He
concludes that “the two forces represented by Father Forbes
and Sister Soulsby are not antithetical but complementary.” Both
are “right,” and neither subscribes to “Absolute
Truths” (227).
Raleigh, John Henry. “The Damnation of Theron Ware.” Time,
Place, and Idea: Essays on the Novel. Carbondale: Southern
Illinois UP, 1968. 75-95.
Raleigh’s chapter is a reprint of his article entitled “The
Damnation of Theron Ware” that appeared in American
Literature 30 (1958): 210-27.
Raleigh, John Henry. Introduction. The Damnation of Theron
Ware.
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1960. vii-xxvi.
Raleigh’s introduction is a reprint of his article entitled “The
Damnation of Theron Ware” that appeared in American
Literature 30 (1958): 210-27.
Rees, John. “‘Dead Men’s Bones, Dead Men’s
Beliefs’: Ideas of Antiquity in Upstate New York and Theron
Ware.” American Studies 16.2 (1975): 77-87.
Rees’ biographical and psychological approach to the
last of Frederic’s New York State novels leads him to
speculate in this article that a “special regional consciousness” in
areas like
“religion, history, [. . . and] legend” contributes
to the “psychological interest” of The Damnation
of Theron Ware (78). Father Forbes claims that the “idea
that humanity progresses” is “utterly baseless
and empty.” Theron Ware confesses to Sister Soulsby, “It
oppresses me, and yet it fascinates me—this idea that
the dead men have known more than we know, done more than
we do; that
there is nothing new anywhere” (79). Rees contends that
Frederic believed the past is constantly imposing itself on
the
present and that “beneath the rising American republic
lay an empire of the dead” (83). Beliefs, for example,
about pre-Columbian America—including the theory that “the
Indians were descended from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel”
and the Mound-builders were a “physically and mentally
superior race”—promoted a sense of “religious
antiquarianism”
in residents of upstate New York, the regional consciousness
that permeates Frederic’s novel (82-85).
Spangler, George. “Theron Ware and the Perils of Relativism.”
Canadian Review of American Studies 5 (1974): 36-46.
Spangler’s thematic study critiques the moral values
of nineteenth-century America by focusing upon the “economic
motives in Theron’s behavior” and the “decisive
role of the Soulsbys” in Theron Ware’s moral decline
(36). According to Spangler's article, Theron Ware’s
interest in money attracted him first to his wife and then
to the
very wealthy Celia
Madden; it also inspired his idea to write a book on Abraham.
In fact, Ware anticipates F. Scott Fitzgerald’s James
Gatz and Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie. Ware’s
relationship to the Soulsbys further reveals the morality
of the period. His
wholesale acceptance of Sister Soulsby’s ethics—wherein
the “appearance of virtue is as important as the reality”
and the ends justify the means—destroys his moral integrity;
and Sister Soulsby’s seemingly casual comment about Alice
Ware causes him to conclude that she is no longer worthy to
be
his wife (43).
Steele, Mildred R. “Ware’s Post-Seattle Career Dept.” Frederic
Herald 3.2 (1969): 6.
Steele’s sketch describes Theron Ware’s political
career in Seattle and, later, in Washington. This “sequel,” inspired
by Steele’s reading of Ralph Rogers’ 1961 dissertation
entitled “Harold Frederic: His Development as a Comic Realist,” outlines
the major events of Ware’s new career with striking thematic
and structural similarities to The Damnation of Theron Ware (6).
Stein, Allen F. “Evasions of an American Adam: Structure
and Theme in The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American
Literary Realism 5 (1972): 23-36.
Stein’s structural analysis of The Damnation of Theron
Ware reveals “a whole series of spurious ‘fresh
starts’ for Theron, recurring at virtually equidistant
intervals in the plot-line” (23). Stein notes in this
article that Theron Ware’s
character, unlike that in most portrayals of an American
Adam, “is ultimately
unchanged by his process of initiation,” and the ending
of the novel, “looking westward in Springtime, bespeaks
[. . .] not affirmation, but damnation [. . .] rendered in
mocking,
anti-romantic terms criticizing misplaced faith in the powers
of spiritual renewal in shallow souls” (24). The novel
is divided into four parts, corresponding to the four seasons.
Excluding
the first three chapters and the last chapter, which are expository
in nature, the story is structured in four groups of seven
chapters
each. The last chapter of each seven-chapter group ends in a
supposed
“resolution” to Ware’s most recent conflict
(25). At the end of Part One, Reverend Ware has met the trio
of
Father Forbes, Dr. Ledsmar, and Celia Madden and has assumed
an attitude of superiority over his wife and congregation. Throughout
Part Two, Ware’s contempt for the unillumined grows, along
with his suspicions about an illicit affair between his wife
and
Levi Gorringe. A temporary resolution to Ware’s conflicts
is presented in the counsel of Sister Soulsby to be a “good
fraud” (31). Part Three traces Ware’s rapid degeneration
and alienation from his new, intellectual friends. In Part
Four,
encouraged by Celia Madden’s kiss, Ware turns his back
on the Methodist world in favor of the civilized world represented
by the trio. Stein observes, Ware’s “flouting of
the conventions of both worlds will literally drive him from
both
into the western forests for a new start and new dreams”
(33). In Chapter 31, rejected and forlorn, Ware turns to Sister
Soulsby for consolation, but “Theron’s despair,
unfortunately, is not symptomatic of any attempt to face the
consequences of
his actions in a mature manner” (35). In the final chapter,
spring has returned with a new cycle of fresh starts for Theron
Ware. Stein concludes, “Presumably Theron will rush blithely
onward, an American Adam of the Gilded Age, so unsubstantial
that
nothing can touch him.” The damnation Ware suffers, according
to Stein, is “the most insidious kind not only for him
but [also] for his society” because he and others like
him are unaware of their damnation (36).
Stronks, James. “Supplements to the Standard Bibliographies
of Ade, Bierce, Crane, Frederic, Fuller, Garland, Norris, and
Twain.” American Literary Realism 16.2 (1983): 272-77.
Stronks’ bibliographical note cites five additions to
A Bibliography of Writings By and About Harold Frederic by Thomas
F. O’Donnell, Stanton Garner, and Robert H. Woodward (Boston:
G. K. Hall, 1975).
Stronks, James. “Supplements to the Standard Bibliographies
of Crane, Dreiser, Frederic, Fuller, Garland, London, and Norris.” American
Literary Realism 11.1 (1978): 124-33.
Stronks’ bibliographical note cites three additions to
A Bibliography of Writings By and About Harold Frederic by Thomas
F. O’Donnell, Stanton Garner, and Robert H. Woodward (Boston:
G. K. Hall, 1975).
Stronks, James B. “Addenda to the Bibliographies of Stephen
Crane, Dreiser, Frederic, Fuller, Garland, Herne, Howells, London,
and Norris.” The Papers of the Bilbiographical Society
of America 71.3 (1977): 362-68.
Stronks’ bibliographical note cites one addition to A
Bibliography of Writings By and About Harold Frederic by Thomas
F. O’Donnell, Stanton Garner, and Robert H. Woodward (Boston:
G. K. Hall, 1975).
Strother, Garland. “The Control of Distance in Theron Ware.” Frederic
Herald 3.2 (1969): 4.
Strother’s note is a structural analysis of Harold Frederic’s
The Damnation of Theron Ware “involving the manipulation
of Theron’s name” as a “distancing factor [.
. .] between the narrator and Theron and, hence, between the
reader and Theron.” When reporting from within the mind
of Ware, Frederic’s narrator usually uses the character’s
first name. Other times, when the narrator relates events from
outside Ware’s mind, the references to the title character
tend to be more formal—Theron Ware, “the Rev. Theron
Ware,” and “the Rev. Mr. Ware”—and should
alert readers to distance themselves from Ware (4).
Strother, Garland. “Shifts in Point of View in The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Frederic Herald 3.1 (1969): 2.
Strother opens his note by refuting Everett Carter’s assertion
that The Damnation of Theron Ware is “told strictly from
the minister’s point of view.” In his own structural
analysis of the novel, Strother states that “[o]n at least
three occasions, Frederic significantly shifts the point of view
away from Theron to another character.” The first shift
occurs in Chapter 21 when Dr. Ledsmar renames his lizard “‘the
Rev. Mr. Ware.’” The second shift occurs in Chapter
25 when Levi Gorringe says that Ware is “‘so much
meaner than any other man,’” and the third shift
occurs in Chapter 26 when Father Forbes tells his housekeeper
that he is not home should Ware call again. “The function
of the shifts in point of view is in each case to indicate Theron’s
loss of esteem in the eyes of another character. By shifting
the point of view from Theron to the other character,” Strother
argues, “Frederic dramatizes clearly this loss of esteem
and foreshadows Theron’s eventual damnation” (2).
Strout, Cushing. “In Hawthorne’s Shadow: The Minister
and the Woman in Howells, Adams, Frederic, and Updike.” Making
American Tradition: Visions and Revisions from Ben Franklin to
Alice Walker. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1990. 22-39.
Strout’s Chapter 2 examines the influence of Nathaniel
Hawthorne’s “marital triangle”—and more
specifically, his “symbolic use of Hester Prynne”—in
The Scarlet Letter (1850) on novels by William Dean
Howells, Henry Adams, Harold Frederic, and John Updike. According
to Strout,
Hawthorne’s unlikely heroine is presented as a “female
apostle [. . .] walking in the footsteps of the Puritan Anne
Hutchinson” (22); symbolically, she poses a threat to established
views about love, marriage, and Christian authority. Howells’ A
Modern Instance (1882) treats the issue of divorce in its impartial
portrayal of “a marriage without love and a love without
marriage” (29). Adams’ title character in Esther (1884) is torn between her love for a minister and her scientific
agnosticism; the romantic triangle “is defined by her relationship
to a scientist and a minister” (30). In The Damnation
of Theron Ware (1896), argues Strout, “Frederic turned [.
. . Hawthorne’s marital] triangle to the purposes of serious
comedy” (33). The forest scene in which Celia Madden bestows
upon Theron Ware a kiss is most reminiscent of the relationship
between Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale; however, Frederic’s
version is “comically ironical” because Ware’s
dream of a future with Celia Madden is “inspired by a kiss
that is ‘a swift, almost perfunctory caress’” and
his dream is corrupted by his lust for Madden’s wealth
(33). Ware’s fall is less significant than Dimmesdale’s
because Ware was “deeply flawed” to begin with. Ware,
as a representative of his generation of Methodist preachers,
is a poor specimen of religious piety as compared to the older
generation present at the Nedahma conference. Thus, suggests
Strout, “[t]he fall that Frederic measures is not a moral
one within the minister but an historical one in America. [.
. .] Frederic has an accurate sense of the way in which modernist
forms of Protestantism were, in fact, allying themselves with
science, evolution, and historical criticism of the Bible, jettisoning
traditional Christian doctrine in the process and presupposing
a sentimental confidence that change is inevitably progress” (33-34).
The last section of this chapter addresses Updike’s Roger’s
Version (1986), a comic tale of adultery, in which Hawthorne’s
triangle is expanded to a marital quadrangle, related from the
cuckolded husband’s perspective.
Suderman, Elmer F. “The Damnation of Theron Ware
as a Criticism of American Religious Thought.” Huntington
Library Quarterly 33 (1969): 61-75.
Suderman’s article combines psychological and genre criticism
in an examination of The Damnation of Theron Ware and
the conventions of the sentimental religious novel of the late
nineteenth century. According to Suderman, Frederic’s decidedly
non-sentimental novel “modifies the stereotype” and
“brings it to life” (66). The young (Protestant)
woman in the sentimental novel is recast as the sensual, red-headed,
Irish-Catholic beauty Celia Madden. The young skeptic in the
sentimental novel who is saved by his love for the young woman
and her God
is the Methodist minister Theron Ware. In The Damnation of
Theron Ware, Celia Madden is the skeptic and Reverend Ware
represents the already-converted young man. Rather than a conversion
to Christianity, Ware experiences a counter-conversion to Madden’s
religion of beauty and “absolute freedom from moral bugbears”
(68-69). In one situation after another, Frederic subverts sentimental
conventions: Ware converts in the space of a page as opposed
to
a few chapters; instead of giving up smoking, Ware accepts a
cigarette from Madden; at the point in the novel where the young
woman would
typically pray for her skeptical young man, Madden offers Ware
a drink of Benedictine; the convert’s faith in an afterlife
is substituted for Ware’s faith in a life of luxury aboard
a yacht. Suderman observes that Frederic “has transformed
a sterile conventional plot into a convincing, realistic
story”
(71). Whereas the sentimental religious novel generally ended
on an uplifting note, at the end of Chapter 31, Ware, feeling
rejected and alone, questions the very existence of God. In true
Theron Ware-fashion, however, he “does not live with his
more realistic and somber knowledge very long. [. . .] Theron,
after two conversions—three if you count the drunken orgy—returns
to his routine life unchanged” (74).
Suderman, Elmer F. “Modernization as Damnation in The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Ball State University
Forum 27.1 (1986): 12-19.
Suderman’s thematic consideration of The Damnation
of Theron Ware focuses upon the way in which modernism
causes
“man” to think “differently about the nature
of man, of the universe, of God,” and of “the different
way in which he relates to himself and others, to the community
and its institutions, and to God” (12). According to Suderman's
article, modern attitudes have already damned Celia Madden, Sister
Soulsby,
Dr. Ledsmar, and Father Forbes when they are introduced to the
reader. Furthermore, technological advancement and urbanization
lead to the “damnation of community, a church, and a minister
who discovers that his substitution of modern personality traits
for traditional ones does not help him cope with an intractable
world” (18). Suderman concludes that Theron Ware has no
place in either modern or traditional society.
Vanderbeets, Richard. “The Ending of The Damnation of
Theron Ware.” American Literature: A Journal of
Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography 36 (1964):
358-59.
Vanderbeets’ textual analysis of Frederic’s novel
and working notes challenges earlier criticism labeling Frederic
a “comic realist” (358). The ending of The Damnation
of Theron Ware, Vanderbeets argues in his article, is not
tragic: Theron Ware relocates to Seattle for a career in real
estate
and dreams of becoming a Senator. However, Frederic’s working
notes read, “Soulsby & wife at deathbed—their
words finish book.” Vanderbeets contends that since this
note immediately follows references to Ware, it must refer
to
his deathbed. Furthermore, if Frederic intended to kill off his
main character in some earlier version of the novel, then
the
ending “reveals an inconsistency incompatible with the
picture of ‘comic realist’” (359).
Watson, Douglas. “Folk Speech, Custom, and Belief in Harold
Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron Ware and Stories
of York State.” New York Folklore 3 (1977):
83-99.
Watson’s linguistic and biographical study of The
Damnation of Theron Ware and Stories of York State
examines the materials and processes of folklore—specifically
speech, customs, and beliefs. Watson reasons in his article, “Frederic’s
life provided him with both a natural and a practiced awareness
of the ‘folk,’ and his fiction became a medium for
recording the particulars of that awareness.” Folk speech
is “used for the purposes of characterization and establishment
of setting.” It portrays Brother Pierce’s upstate
New York fundamentalism: “We are a plain sort o’ folk
up in these parts. [. . .] We ain’t gone traipsin’
after strange gods [. . .]. No new-fangled notions can go down
here” (84). Sister Soulsby’s figurative expressions
and use of proverbial sayings—“You’ve got
to take folks as you find them” and “you’ve
got to find them the best way you can”—“express
her understanding of human nature and her attitude toward
overcoming
its limitations” (86). Watson notes three distinct dialect
patterns in Stories of York State: the upstate New
York dialect (similar to Pierce’s in The Damnation
of Theron Ware), the Irish immigrant dialect, and the
German immigrant dialect. In addition to using folk speech
patterns to create realistic
characters, Frederic also used folk beliefs and customs, such
as the rustics’ opposition to intellectualism and the
Methodists’
suspicions of the Irish and the Italians. Folk customs in The
Damnation of Theron Ware include the camp meeting, the
lovefeast, donation parties, and the rental of pews. According
to Watson,
Frederic attended a Methodist camp meeting in 1875 and wrote
an essay attacking “the hypocrisies of the barely religious
event” (96). “Frederic’s use of the folklore
of his native Mohawk Valley,” asserts Watson, “appears
to be not only extensive, but basically accurate as well”
(97).
Wilkie, Brian. “Morality and Its Alternatives: The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Value and Vision in
American Literature: Literary Essays in Honor of Ray Lewis White. Ed. Joseph Candido.
Athens, OH: Ohio UP, 1999. 64-82.
Wilkie approaches his analysis of Harold Frederic’s The
Damnation of Theron Ware from a moral and psychological
perspective. His main purpose is to explore “the competing
claims of morality and of a radically antinomian personal freedom” (66)
that result in contradictions or a “confounding of affects” in
the novel (69). For example, Wilkie describes Sister Soulsby
as unscrupulous; however, he does not consider her self-absorbed
or devious in her personal relationships. In fact, she seems
to exhibit genuine concern for the Wares. Likewise, Celia Madden
is both captivating and comic, and Father Forbes is both devoted
to and dismissive of Catholicism. Dr. Ledsmar and Celia Madden
seem to be the antithesis of one another, but they are united
in their rejection of Theron Ware. Sister Soulsby, a pragmatist,
and Celia Madden, an idealist, “both register an affinity
to Chopin’s music.” According to Wilkie, “This
method, of creating polarities (as they seem at first) that later
dissolve into unities or (more often) fragment kaleidoscopically,
is the heart of Frederic’s novelistic strategy in Theron
Ware” (71). The death of MacEvoy “epitomizes the
double vision of values—aesthetic and moral—that,
perhaps more than any other of the novel’s confounding
of affects, gives Theron Ware its disturbing resonance as philosophical
speculation” (74): Jeremiah Madden, “the most sympathetically
portrayed character in the entire novel,” is ultimately
responsible for MacEvoy’s death, and the beauty of the
last rites and of Celia Madden’s attire overshadows the
somber images of MacEvoy’s deathbed (73). Wilkie suggests “that
the recurrent strategy by which the novel’s affects cancel
one another out are variants, presented indirectly, of its exploration
of the antinomian theme” (77). Theron Ware’s attraction
toward Celia Madden and Father Forbes may be commendable, but
his actions toward them seem contemptible. Wilkie argues that “Frederic
has rendered, with almost unique success, and primarily through
his double-takes on matters involving values, the perennial problem
that emerges when antinomian spiritual energizing clashes head-on
with morality, when two perfectly valid senses of good collide” (77-78).
Furthermore, Frederic avoids “definitive judgment[s]” with
respect to the morality of his characters (78), while at the
same time his novel demonstrates the “utter incompatibility” of
the pursuit of both morality and beauty and freedom (80).
Wilson, Edmund. “Two Neglected American Novelists: II—Harold
Frederic, the Expanding Upstarter.” The New Yorker (6 June
1970): 112-34.
Wilson’s biographical criticism of The Damnation
of Theron Ware likens the title character to his creator, Harold Frederic.
Wilson dedicates a large portion of his article to Frederic’s
biography and a chronological review of Frederic’s literary
works. Drawing parallels between events in Frederic’s life
and events in his novels, Wilson states that Frederic “violates
the genteel conventions by allowing sex often to figure in its
rawest, least romantic form” (114). To support his point,
Wilson cites Frederic’s public defense of prostitution
in London and his maintenance of two households—one with
his legally-married wife and children, the other with his common-law
wife and children. The Damnation of Theron Ware is described
as “amusing, absorbing, rather shocking” (124). Wilson
identifies the “three tempters” (Father Forbes, Dr.
Ledsmar, and Celia Madden) as the agents of Ware’s damnation
and Sister Soulsby as the only “redeeming element among
Theron’s mischief-making friends” (125-26). Ware’s “illumination” is
a feeble version of the “intellectual and imaginative expansion” Frederic
himself experienced. Furthermore, Frederic and Ware shared a “kind
of disregard of consequences”; Wilson cites the serious
debt both faced as an example (126). Wilson concludes that “Theron
Ware was an unself-flattering version of Harold Frederic as a
young provincial eager to widen his social, aesthetic, and intellectual
scope and to make for himself a career” (133).
Wilson, Edmund. “Two Neglected American Novelists: Harold
Frederic, the Expanding Upstater.” The Devils and Canon
Barham: Ten Essays on Poets, Novelists and Monsters. New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973. 48-76.
Wilson’s chapter was first published as an article in The
New Yorker (6 June 1970): 112-34.
Woodward, Robert H. “The Frederic Bibliographies: Errata.” The
Frederic Herald 3.1 (1969): 3-4.
Woodward’s note identifies bibliographic errors in three
published bibliographies of secondary comment on Frederic: “Harold
Frederic: A Bibliography” by Robert H. Woodward (Studies
in Bibliography 13 [1960]: 247-57); “Harold Frederic (1856-1898):
A Critical Bibliography of Secondary Comment,” compiled
by the editors of ALR and numerous contributors (American
Literary Realism 2 [1968]: 1-70); and “Frederic’s Collection
of Reviews: Supplement to the Checklist of Contemporary Reviews
of Frederic’s Writings” by Robert H. Woodward (American
Literary Realism 2 [1968]: 84-89).
Woodward, Robert H. “Harold Frederic: Supplemental Critical
Bibliography of Secondary Comment.” American Literary
Realism 3.2 (1970): 95-147.
Woodward’s critical bibliography is the first supplement
to the bibliography compiled by the editors of American Literary
Realism in 1968 (“Harold Frederic [1856-1898]: A Critical
Bibliography of Secondary Comment”). This bibliography
expands on the earlier compilation in that it includes newspaper
articles and theses on Frederic. It is divided into three categories:
books (including dissertations and theses), periodicals (including
magazines and newspapers), and errata (corrections of known errors
in the first Frederic bibliography).
Woodward, Robert H. “Some Sources for Harold Frederic’s
The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American Literature
33.1 (1961): 46-51.
Woodward combines textual, biographical, and cultural criticism
in his examination of Frederic’s writing methods and sources.
The article opens with a statement Frederic made in an interview
published in Literary Digest in which he describes his
research: “‘I seek to know my people through and through.
[. . .] I set myself the task of knowing everything they knew.
[. . .] I have got up masses of stuff.’” Among the
background works Frederic studied, Woodward cites Samuel Laing’s
Human Origins (1892) as the source for Father Forbes’
Abraham speech and Zénaïde A. Ragozin’s The
Story of Chaldea from the Earliest Times to the Rise of Assyria
(1886) for Forbes’ discussion of eponyms. In the case of
Dr. Ledsmar’s conversation with Theron Ware, all the German
and French historians he refers to are among those listed in Mme.
Ragozin’s book. The books Dr. Ledsmar loans to Reverend
Ware, with the exception of the one written by Ernest Renan, are
also on the list. According to Woodward, Celia Madden’s
classification of people as Greeks or Jews comes from Renan’s
Recollections of My Youth (1883). Frederic relied upon
his readings in the Northern Christian Advocate, a Methodist
journal, for “‘all the details of a Methodist minister’s
work, obligation, and daily routine, and all the machinery of
his church’” (46). Sister Soulsby’s woodchuck
story is quoted almost verbatim from an 1893 issue of that journal.
Woodward concludes that Frederic’s characters “had
to reveal themselves—their intellectual selves as well as
their personalities—through their conversation,” and
that Frederic, “to make his characters speak convincingly,
had to know what they would know” (50-51).
Ziff, Larzer. “Overcivilization: Harold Frederic, the Roosevelt-Adams
Outlook, Owen Wister.” The American 1890s: Life and
Times of a Lost Generation. New York: Viking P, 1966. 206-28.
Ziff’s Chapter 10 situates Frederic’s writing,
particularly
The Damnation of Theron Ware, within the cultural milieu
of the late nineteenth century. He characterizes Frederic as “a
walking treasury of local history and manners,” which served
to shape the imaginary towns of Tyre, Thessaly, and Tecumseh
(207). “Possessed of an imaginative knowledge
of his home county, in which character was inseparable from ethnic,
religious, historical, political, and social conditions, [. .
. Frederic] was able to follow Howells’ lead in producing
a fiction of the commonplace, yet to surpass the dean in rendering
a sense of communal density,” argues Ziff (209). The Damnation of Theron Ware, Frederic’s last
novel set in New York State, represents a culmination of plot
and material
not achieved in any of his earlier novels; yet the novel reverberates “as
a symbolic tale of America’s progress to disunity in the
latter half of the nineteenth century” (212). In the character
of Theron Ware, Frederic has created a “pitiful creature” who
has thrown away the ideals of Christianity in favor of “a
grab bag of third-hand tastes, ill-digested ideas, and smirkingly
cynical opinions about those who nourished and shaped him” (214).
One bright spot in this dark landscape is the Soulsbys, whose
manipulations, according to Ziff, are “finally for the
good of those manipulated.” The Soulsbys represent Frederic’s
answer to Social Darwinism: “men can control the future
of their society if they but yield power to the able” (216).
Zimmermann, David H. “Clay Feet, Modernism, and Fundamental
Option in Harold Frederic’s The Damnation of Theron
Ware.” The American Benedictine Review 45.1
(1994): 33-44.
Zimmermann’s thematic and psychological approach to The
Damnation of Theron Ware focuses upon Frederic’s “careful
study of Methodism and Catholicism.” Zimmermann argues
in his article that the novel “records an important
shift in religious thought within modern Christianity” (34). “[T]he
theologies of Forbes and Soulsby,” notes Zimmermann, “include
many tenets adopted by twentieth-century Christian theologians”
(35). Father Forbes tells Reverend Ware, “The Church is
always compromising” (37). This perspective reflects Forbes’
“positivist view of history that forms the basis of his
theologies and biblical interpretations” (38); however,
“[o]nce Forbes has altered Theron’s understanding
of history, he has altered Theron’s understanding of religion
[. . . without providing] him with any basis on which to begin
reconstructing his understanding of the world” (39). Zimmermann
suggests that, within the context of modern theology, Sister
Soulsby
has undergone a conversion because she and Soulsby have “both
soured on living by fakes” (42). Sister Soulsby’s
theology embraces a belief in “humanity’s essential
goodness,” and she “provides Theron with the forgiveness
and direction necessary to begin the redemptive process”
(42-43). Zimmermann asserts that, unlike many critics who blame
Father Forbes and Sister Soulsby for Ware’s damnation,
he does not find fault with either of them. In fact, he does
not
consider Ware damned. According to Zimmermann, “damnation
occurs only after death,” when the option of free choice
can no longer be exercised. Thus, “Sister Soulsby is
correct when she points out that the sheep and the goats will
not be separated
until judgment day” (44). Theron Ware’s future, in
light of Zimmermann’s interpretation of Sister Soulsby’s
and Father Forbes’ theologies, remains ambiguous.
Zlotnick, Joan. “The Damnation of Theron Ware,
with a Backward Glance at Hawthorne.” Markham Review
2 (Feb 1971): 90-92.
Zlotnick’s genre study examines possible literary sources
for The Damnation of Theron Ware. She notes in her
article that Frederic considered Nathaniel Hawthorne one of
his “literary
parents”
and compares Frederic’s novel to The Scarlet Letter,
“Young Goodman Brown,” “My Kinsman, Major Molineux,”
and “Rappaccini’s Daughter” (90). Reverend
Ware is likened to the “sinning minister” Dimmesdale
and Young Goodman Brown, Celia Madden to Hester Prynne, and
Dr. Ledsmar
to Rappaccini and Chillingworth. Zlotnick argues that The
Damnation of Theron Ware and “Young Goodman Brown”
have the same theme, the loss of innocence. In addition, Frederic
employs light and dark imagery to develop “the Hawthornian
theme of reality versus appearance and even offers his own
version
of Hawthorne’s ocular deception.” Other imagery common
to The Damnation of Theron Ware and “Young Goodman
Brown” includes the forest scene and ribbons (in Celia
Madden’s
hair and on the maypole). Like many of Hawthorne’s characters,
argues Zlotnick, Ware is not guilty of the sin of passion; instead,
he is guilty of the sin of pride, “a sin which results
in the separation of so many Hawthornian characters from the ‘magic
circle of humanity’” (91).