C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Critical and Biographical Introduction
By Donald Grant Mitchell (Ik Marvel) (18221908)
I
There is always a new generation coming forward, to the members of which the brightness of the sunshine, and the freshness of the air, and the greenness of the woods and fields, appeal; whose hearts are full of romance, and whose minds are full of hope and enthusiasm: and even when mayhap youth has taken flight, there is with some—it is to be hoped with many—a kindly response to the thoughts, the dreams, the hopes, and the ambitions of the days of youth:—
A certain French professor once said, referring to ‘Evangeline,’ “What have I to do with that cow?” The ‘Reveries of a Bachelor’ and ‘Dream Life’ were not written for such as he, nor do they appeal to the taste which is gratified by much of the French and not a little of the English school of to-day; but they are true to youth in every age, and grateful to the unspoiled appetite to which they appeal.
They are exuberant. They are books of sentiment—some would say even of sentimentalism. Yet the sentiment is as eternal as the race; and deep down in his heart the critic responds to it, unless his lost youth be not only lost but forgotten—buried in Lethe. The love that is the theme of these books may be vealy; but he is to be pitied who has no chord far within which vibrates in response to its portrayal, with a feeling which is pure, positive, and intense. And the nature of the life which they depict may be simple, but it is nevertheless based upon the eternal verities. It is a comfort to the reader, and sets him up a little in his own esteem, that after knocking about this world for forty years,—this world which each sometimes thinks that he could reconstruct upon a better plan,—he can again take up the ‘Reveries of a Bachelor,’ and read it with much the same feelings with which he read it when he, it, and the world were young. And it speaks well for the book itself that this can be; for only a book which is sound at the core, and which appeals to a true and abiding sentiment in the race,—only a book which also has definite literary merit,—could endure this test.
In the preface to an edition printed in 1863, its author said:—
In later years Mr. Mitchell published a novel more ambitious in intention, ‘Dr. Johns,’ in which the motif is the contrast between the life of a retired village of Puritan Connecticut and that of the South of France. It is full of carefully drawn pictures of the former,—pictures drawn by one whose early life had been spent amid just such scenes. A different life—that of the metropolis in the days of the ‘Potiphar Papers’ and Mr. Brown of Grace Church—is depicted with a satiric pen in the Lorgnette, which was issued anonymously, and periodically, after the manner of the Spectator; and in ‘Fudge Doings,’ a slight novel of New York society (which appears in the ‘Grand Dictionnaire Universel du XIX
He was also a frequent lecturer on literature and history; and in ‘English Lands, Letters, and Kings’ has gathered pleasant perceptive sketches of literature and social forces from the time of the Celt to the time of Wordsworth.
But after his books of sentiment, those which are best known are his books upon rural life: ‘My Farm at Edgewood,’ ‘Wet Days at Edgewood,’ ‘Rural Studies,’ etc.; written from the standpoint of the man of letters and of worldly experience, who enjoys to the uttermost the varying aspects of nature, the growth and passing of vegetation, and the changes of the seasons. These books are full of prudent caution to the over-sanguine, of wise advice, of healthy delight in the contest of man with nature.
Mr. Mitchell was born at Norwich, Connecticut, April 12th, 1822; was graduated at Yale College in 1841; studied law; was appointed United States Consul at Venice in 1853, remaining there however but a short time; and in 1855 purchased the farm near New Haven which he called Edgewood, and where he afterwards made his home. He died December 15, 1908.