Carrington, Jr., George C. “Harold Frederic’s Clear
Farcical Vision: The Damnation of Theron Ware.”
American Literary Realism 19.3 (1987): 3-26.
Donaldson, Scott. “The Seduction of Theron Ware.”
Nineteenth-Century Fiction 29 (1975): 441-52.
Johnson, George W. “Harold Frederic’s Young Goodman
Ware: The Ambiguities of a Realistic Romance.” Modern
Fiction Studies 8 (1963): 361-74.
Luedtke, Luther S. “Harold Frederic’s Satanic Sister
Soulsby: Interpretation and Sources.” Nineteenth-Century
Fiction 30.1 (1975): 82-104.
Miller, Linda Patterson. “Casting Graven Images: The
Damnation of Theron Ware.” Renascence: Essays on
Values in Literature 30 (1978): 179-84.
Myers, Robert M. “Antimodern Protest in The Damnation
of Theron Ware.” American Literary Realism
26.3 (1994): 52-64.
Oehlschlaeger, Fritz. “Passion, Authority, and Faith in
The Damnation of Theron Ware.” American Literature
58.2 (1986): 238-55.
Raleigh, John Henry. “The Damnation of Theron Ware.”
American Literature 30 (1958): 210-27.
Raleigh, John Henry. “The Damnation of Theron Ware.” Time,
Place, and Idea: Essays on the Novel. Carbondale: Southern
Illinois UP, 1968. 75-95.
Raleigh, John Henry. Introduction. The Damnation of Theron
Ware. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1960. vii-xxvi.
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.
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).
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).
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).
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 were 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).
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
her 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).
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).
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).
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.
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.