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.
Carter, Everett. Introduction. The Damnation of Theron Ware.
By Harold Frederic. 1896. Cambridge: Belknap P of Harvard UP,
1960. vii-xxiv.
Carter, Everett. “Naturalism and Introspection.” Howells
and the Age of Realism. Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1966.
239-45.
Donaldson, Scott. Introduction. The Damnation of Theron Ware. By Harold
Frederic. 1896. New York: Penguin, 1986. vii-xxx.
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.
Hirsh, John C. “The Frederic Papers, The McGlynn Affair,
and The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American
Literary Realism 17.1 (1984): 12-23.
Lackey, Lionel. “Redemption and The Damnation of Theron
Ware.” South Atlantic Review 55 (1990): 81-91.
Myers, Robert M. “Antimodern Protest in The Damnation
of Theron Ware.” American Literary Realism
26.3 (1994): 52-64.
Myers, Robert M. “Author of The Damnation of Theron
Ware.” Reluctant Expatriate: The Life of Harold
Frederic. Westport, CT: Greenwood P, 1995. 115-34.
O’Donnell, Thomas F. “The Baxter Marginalia: Theron
Ware a Clef.” Frederic Herald 1.3 (1967): 5.
O’Donnell, Thomas F, and Hoyt C. Franchere. “The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Harold Frederic.
New York: Twayne Publishers, 1961. 108-17.
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.
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.
Wilson, Edmund. “Two Neglected American Novelists: II—Harold
Frederic, the Expanding Upstarter.” The New Yorker (6
June 1970): 112-34.
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.
Woodward, Robert H. “Some Sources for Harold Frederic’s
The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American Literature
33.1 (1961): 46-51.
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.
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).
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).
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).
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.
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
is 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).
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).
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, 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).
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).
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).
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. “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).