Diary and Notes of Horace Templeton Esq Author:Charles James Lever Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III. Another note from Favancourt, asking me to (line and meet Alfred de Vigny, whose " Cinque Mars " I praised so highly. Be it so ; I am curious to ... more »see a Frenchman who has preferred the high esteem of the best critics of his country, to the noisy popularity such men as Sue and Dumas write for. De Vigny is a French Washington Irving, with more genius, higher taste, but not that heartfelt appreciation of tranquil, peaceful life, that the American possesses. As episode, his little tale, the " Canne de Jonc," is one of the most affecting I ever read. From the outset you feel that the catastrophe must be sad, yet thera is nothing harassing or wearying in the suspense. The cloud of evil, not bigger than a man's hand at first, spreads gradually till it spans the heavens from east to west, and night falls solemn and dark, but without storm or hurricane. I scarcely anticipate that such a writer can be abrilliant converser. The best gauge I have ever found of an author's agreeability, is in the amount of dialogue he throws into his books. Wherever narrative, pure narrative, predominates, and the reflective tone prevails, the author will be, perhaps necessarily, more disposed to silence. But he who writes dialogue well, must be himself a talker. Take Scott, for instance; the very character of his dialogue scenes was the type of his own social powers: a strong and nervous common sense; a high chivalry, that brooked nothing low or mean ; a profound veneration for antiquity; an innate sense of the humorous, ran through his manner in the world, as they display themselves in his works. See Sheridan, too, he talked the School for Scandal all his life; whereas Goldsmith was a dull man in company. Taking this criterion, Alfred de Vigny will be quiet, reserved, and thoughtful; p...« less