MISINFORMING A NATION

BOOKS BY MR. WRIGHT

MISINFORMING A NATION

MODERN PAINTING: Its Tendency and Meaning

WHAT NIETZSCHE TAUGHT

THE MAN OF PROMISE

THE CREATIVE WILL

IN PREPARATION

MODERN LITERATURE

PRINCIPLES OF AESTHETIC FORM AND ORGANIZATION

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Misinforming a A .ition

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COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY B. W, HUEBSCH

PRINTED IK THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

CONTENTS

CHAPTER

I COLONIZING AMERICA

PAGE i

II THE NOVEL , . . 24

III THE DRAMA . . » . . . . . . 52

IV POETRY . . . ..... > . i. . 68

V BRITISH PAINTING . . . » . * . . 85

VI NON-BRITISH PAINTING . . ^ . . . 102

VII Music . . .122

VIII SCIENCE .......... 148

IX INVENTIONS, PHOTOGRAPHY, ^ESTHETICS . 160

X PHILOSOPHY . . i?4

XI RELIGION . . . . ... . .195

XII Two HUNDRED OMISSIONS . ... .218

MISINFORMING A NATION

COLONIZING AMERICA

THE intellectual colonization of America by Eng- land has been going on for generations. Taking advantage of her position of authority a posi- tion built on centuries of aesthetic tradition Eng- land has let pass few opportunities to ridicule and disparage our activities in all lines of creative effort, and to impress upon us her own assumed cultural superiority. Americans, lacking that sense of security which long-established institu- tions would give them, have been influenced by the insular judgments of England, and, in an ef- fort to pose as au courant of the achievements of the older world, have adopted in large degree the viewpoint of Great Britain. The result has been that for decades the superstition of England's pre- eminence in the world of art and letters has spread and gained power in this country. Our native snobbery, both social and intellectual, has kept the fires of this superstition well supplied

2 MISINFORMING A NATION

with fuel ; and in our slavish imitation of England the only country in Europe of which we have any intimate knowledge we have de-American- ized ourselves to such an extent that there has grown up in us a typical British contempt for our own native achievements.

One of the cardinal factors in this Briticization of our intellectual outlook is the common language of England and America. Of all the civilized nations of the world, we are most deficient as linguists. Because of our inability to speak fluently any language save our own, a great bar- rier exists between us and the Continental coun- tries. But no such barrier exists between America and England; and consequently there is a con- stant exchange of ideas, beliefs, and opinions. English literature is at our command; English criticism is familiar to us; and English standards are disseminated among us without the impedi- ment of translation. Add to this lingual rap- prochement the traditional authority of Great Britain, together with the social aspirations of moneyed Americans, and you will have both the material and the psychological foundation on which the great edifice of English culture has been reared in this country.

The English themselves have made constant and liberal use of these conditions. An old and

COLONIZING AMERICA 3

disquieting jealousy, which is tinctured not a lit- tle by resentment, has resulted in an open con- tempt for all things American. And it is not un- natural that this attitude should manifest itself in a condescending patronage which is far from being good-natured. Our literature is derided; our artists are ridiculed; and in nearly every field of our intellectual endeavor England has found grounds for disparagement. It is necessary only to look through British newspapers and critical journals to discover the contemptuous and not infrequently venomous tone which characterizes the discussion of American culture.

At the same time, England grasps every op- portunity for foisting her own artists and artisans on this country. She it is who sets the standard which at once demolishes our individual expres- sion and glorifies the efforts of Englishmen. Our publishers, falling in line with this campaign, im- port all manner of English authors, eulogize them with the aid of biased English critics, and neglect better writers of America simply because they have displeased those gentlemen in London who sit in judgment upon our creative accomplishments. Our magazines, edited for the most part by timid nobodies whose one claim to intellectual distinc- tion is that they assiduously play the parrot to British opinion, fill their publications with the

4 MISINFORMING A NATION

work of English mediocrities and ignore the more deserving contributions of their fellow-country- men.

Even our educational institutions disseminate the English superstition and neglect the great men of America; for nowhere in the United States will you find the spirit of narrow snobbery so highly developed as in our colleges and universi- ties. Recently an inferior British poet came here, and, for no other reason apparently save that he was English, he was made a professor in one of our large universities! Certainly his talents did not warrant this appointment, for there are at least a score of American poets who are undeniably superior to this young Englishman. Nor has he shown any evidences of scholarship which would justify the honor paid him. But an Englishman, if he seek favors, needs little more than proof of his nationality, whereas an American must give evidence of his worth.

England has shown the same ruthlessness and unscrupulousness in her intellectual colonization of America as in her territorial colonizations ; and she has also exhibited the same persistent shrewd- ness. What is more, this cultural extension pol- icy has paid her lavishly. English authors, to take but one example, regard the United States as their chief source of income. If it were the high-

COLONIZING AMERICA $

est English culture that is, the genuinely signifi- cant scholarship of the few great modern British creators which was forced upon America, there would be no cause for complaint. But the gov- erning influences in English criticism are aggres- sively middle-class and chauvinistic, with the re- sult that it is the British bourgeois who has stifled our individual expression, and misinformed us on the subject of European culture.

No better instance of this fact can be pointed to than the utterly false impression which Amer- ica has of French attainments. French genius has always been depreciated and traduced by the British; and no more subtle and disgraceful cam- paign of derogation has been launched in modern times than the consistent method pursued by the English in misinterpreting French ideals and ac- complishments to Americans. To England is due largely, if not entirely, the uncomplimentary opin- ion that Americans have of France an opinion at once distorted and indecent. To the average American a French novel is regarded merely as a salacious record of adulteries. French periodi- cals are looked upon as collections of prurient an- ecdotes and licentious pictures. And the average French painting is conceived as a realistic presen- tation of feminine nakedness. So deeply rooted are these conceptions that the very word "French"

6 MISINFORMING A NATION

has become, in the American's vocabulary, an ad- jective signifying all manner of sexual abnormali- ties, and when applied to a play, a story, or an illustration, it is synonymous with "dirty" and "immoral." This country has yet to understand the true fineness of French life and character, or to appreciate the glories of French art and litera- ture; and the reason for our distorted ideas is that French culture, in coming to America, has been filtered through the nasty minds of middle-class English critics.

But it is not our biased judgment of the Con- tinental nations that is the most serious result of English misrepresentation ; in time we will come to realize how deceived we were in accepting Eng- land's insinuations that France is indecent, Ger- many stupid, Italy decadent, and Russia barbar- ous. The great harm done by England's contemptuous critics is in belittling American achievement. Too long has bourgeois British cul- ture been forced upon the United States; and we have been too gullible in our acceptance of it with- out question. English critics and English periodi- cals have consistently attempted to discourage the growth of any national individualism in America, by ridiculing or ignoring our best sesthetic efforts and by imposing upon us their own insular criteria. To such an extent have they succeeded that an

COLONIZING AMERICA 7

American author often must go to England before he will be accepted by his own countrymen. Thus purified by contact with English culture, he finds a way into our appreciation.

But on the other hand, almost any English author even one that England herself has little use for can acquire fame by visiting this coun- try. Upon his arrival he is interviewed by the newspapers; his picture appears in the "supple- ments"; his opinions emblazon the headlines and are discussed in editorials; and our publishers scramble for the distinction of bringing out his wares. In this the publishers, primarily com- mercial, reveal their business acumen, for they are not unaware of the fact that the "literary" sections of our newspapers are devoted largely to British authors and British letters. So firmly has the English superstition taken hold of our publishers that many of them print their books with English spelling. The reason for this un-American prac- tice, so they explain, is that the books may be ready for an English edition without resetting. The English, however, do not use American spell- ing at all, though, as a rule, the American editions of English books are much larger than the English edition of American books. But the English do not like our spelling; therefore we gladly arrange matters to their complete satisfaction.

8 MISINFORMING A NATION

The evidences of the American's enforced be- lief in English superiority are almost numberless. Apartment houses and suburban sub-divisions are named after English hotels and localities. The belief extends even to the manufacturers of cer- tain brands of cigarettes which, for sale purposes, are advertised as English, although it would be difficult to find a box of them abroad. The American actor, in order to gain distinction, apes the dress, customs, intonation and accent of Eng- lishmen. His great ambition is to be mistaken for a Londoner. This pose, however, is not all snobbery : it is the outcome of an earnest desire to appear superior; and so long has England insisted upon her superiority that many Americans have come to adopt it as a cultural fetish.

Hitherto this exalted intellectual guidance has been charitably given us: never before, as now, has a large fortune been spent to make America pay handsomely for the adoption of England's provincialism. I refer to the Encyclopedia Brit- annica which, by a colossal campaign of flamboy- ant advertising, has been scattered broadcast over every state in the union.

No more vicious and dangerous educational in- fluence on America can readily be conceived than the articles in this encyclopaedia. They distort the truth and disseminate false standards. Amer-

COLONIZING AMERICA 9

ica is now far enough behind the rest of the civ- ilized world in its knowledge of art, without hav- ing added to that ignorance the erroneous impres- sions created by this partial and disproportioned English work; for, in its treatment of the world's progress, it possesses neither universality of out- look nor freedom from prejudice in its judgments the two primary requisites for any work which lays claim to educational merit. Taken as a whole, the Britanniccts divisions on culture are little more than a brief for British art and science a brief fraught with the rankest injustice to-

Iward the achievements of other nations, and es- pecially toward those of America. The distinguishing feature of the Encyclopedia Britannic a is its petty national prejudice. This prejudice appears constantly and in many dis- guises through the Encyclopaedia's pages. It manifests itself in the most wanton carelessness in dealing with historical facts; in glaring inad- equacies when discussing the accomplishments of nations other than England; in a host of inex- cusable omissions of great men who do not happen to be blessed with English nationality; in venom and denunciation of viewpoints which do not hap- pen to coincide with "English ways of thinking" ; and especially in neglect of American endeavor. Furthermore, the Britannica shows unmistakable

10 MISINFORMING A NATION

signs of haste or carelessness in preparation. In- formation is not always brought up to date. Common proper names are inexcusably misspelled. Old errors remain uncorrected. Inaccuracies abound. Important subjects are ignored. And only in the field of English activity does there seem to be even an attempt at completeness.

The Encyclopedia Britannica^ if accepted un- questioningly throughout this country as an authoritative source of knowledge, would retard our intellectual development fully twenty years; for so one-sided is its information, so distorted are its opinions, so far removed is it from being an international and impartial reference work, that not only does it give inadequate advice on vital topics, but it positively creates false impressions. Second- and third-rate Englishmen are given space and praise much greater than that accorded truly great men of other nations; and the eulogis- tic attention paid English endeavor in general is out of all proportion to its deserts. In the fol- lowing chapters I shall show specifically how Brit- ish culture is glorified and exaggerated, and with what injustice the culture of other countries is treated. And I shall also show the utter failure of this Encyclopaedia to fulfill its claim of being a "universal" and "objective" reference library. To the contrary, it will be seen that tiizBritannica

COLONIZING AMERICA 1 1

is a narrow, parochial, opinionated work of dubi- ous scholarship and striking unreliability.

With the somewhat obscure history of the birth of the Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, or with the part played in that his- tory by Cambridge University and the London Times, I am not concerned. Nor shall I review the unethical record of the two issues of the En- cyclopaedia. To those interested in this side of the question I suggest that they read the follow- ing contributions in Reedy's Mirror: The Same Old Slippery Trick (March 24, 1916). The Encyclopedia Britannica Swindle (April 7, 1916). The Encyclopedia Britannica Fake (April 14, 1916); and also the article in the March 18 (1916) Bellman, Once More the Same Old Game.

Such matters might be within the range of for- giveness if the contents of the Britannica were what were claimed for them. But that which does concern me is the palpable discrepancies be- tween the statements contained in the advertising, and the truth as revealed by a perusal of the arti- cles and biographies contained in the work itself. The statements insisted that the Britannica was a supreme, unbiased, and international reference library an impartial and objective review of the world; and it was on these statements, repeated

12 MISINFORMING A NATION

constantly, that Americans bought the work. The truth is that the Encyclopedia Britannica, in its main departments of culture, is characterized by misstatements, inexcusable omissions, rabid and patriotic prejudices, personal animosities, blatant errors of fact, scholastic ignorance, gross neglect of non-British culture, an astounding egotism, and an undisguised contempt for American progress.

Rarely has this country witnessed such inde- fensible methods in advertising as those adopted by the Britannica's exploiters. The "copy" has fairly screamed with extravagant and fabulous ex- aggerations. The vocabulary of hyperbole has been practically exhausted in setting forth the du- bious merits of this reference work. The ethics and decencies of ordinary honest commerce have been thrown to the wind. The statements made day after day were apparently concocted irrespec- tive of any consideration save that of making a sale ; for there is an abundance of evidence to show that the Encyclopaedia was not what was claimed for it.

With the true facts regarding this encyclo- paedia it is difficult to reconcile the encomiums of many eminent Americans who, by writing eulogis- tic letters to the Britannicds editor concerning the exalted merits of his enterprise, revealed either their unfamiliarity with the books in question or

COLONIZING AMERICA 13

their ignorance of what constituted an educational reference work. These letters were duly photo- graphed and reproduced in the advertisements, and they now make interesting, if disconcerting, reading for the non-British student who put his faith in them and bought the Britannica. There is no need here to quote from these letters; for a subsequent inspection of the work thus recom- mended must have sufficiently mortified those of the enthusiastic correspondents who were educated and had consciences ; and the others would be un- moved by any revelations of mine.

Mention, however, should be made of the re- marks of the American Ambassador to Great Brit- ain at the banquet given in London to celebrate the Encyclopaedia's birth. This gentleman, in an amazing burst of unrestrained laudation, said he believed that "it is the general judgment of the scholars and the investigators of the world that the one book to which they can go for the most complete, comprehensive, thorough, and absolutely precise statements of fact upon every subject of human interest is the Encyclopedia Britannica" This is certainly an astonishing bit of eulogy. Its dogmatic positiveness and its assumption of infallibility caused one critic (who is also a great scholar) to write : "With all due respect for our illustrious fellow-countryman, the utterance is a

14 MISINFORMING A NATION

most superlative absurdity, unless it was intended to be an exercise of that playful and elusive American humor which the apperceptions of our English cousins so often fail to seize, much less appreciate." But there were other remarks of similar looseness at the banquet, and the dinner evidently was a greater success than the books under discussion.

Even the English critics themselves could not accept the Eritannica as a source for "the most comprehensive, thorough and absolutely precise statements on every subject of human interest." Many legitimate objections began appearing. There is space here to quote only a few. The London Nation complains that "the particularly interesting history of the French Socialist move- ment is hardly even sketched." And again it says: "The naval question is handled on the basis of the assumption which prevailed during our recent scare; the challenge of our Dread- nought building is hardly mentioned ; the menace of M. Delcasse's policy of encirclement is ignored, and both in the article on Germany and in the articles on Europe, Mr. McKenna's panic figures and charges of accelerated building are treated as the last word of historical fact." The same pub- lication, criticising the article on Europe, says: "There is nothing but a dry and summarized gen-

COLONIZING AMERICA 1$

eral history, ending with a paragraph or two on the Anglo-German struggle with the moral that 'Might is Right.' It is history of Europe which denies the idea of Europe."

Again, we find evidence of a more direct char* acter, which competently refutes the amazing an- nouncement of our voluble Ambassador to Great Britain. In a letter to the London Times^ an indignant representative of Thomas Carlyle's family objects to the inaccurate and biased man- ner in which Carlyle is treated in the Encyclo- pedia. "The article," he says, "was evidently written many years ago, before the comparatively recent publication of new and authentic material, and nothing has been done to bring it up to date. ... As far as I know, none of the original errors have been corrected, and many others of a worse nature have been added. The list of authorities on Carlyle's life affords evidence of ignorance or partisanship."

"Evidently," comments a shrewd critic who is not impressed either by the Ambassador's pane- gyric or the photographed letters, "the great man's family, and the public in general, have a reasonable cause of offense, and they may also conclude that if the Encyclopedia Britannica can blunder when handling such an approachable and easy British subject as Carlyle, it can be reason-

16 MISINFORMING A NATION

ably expected to do worse on other matters which are not only absolutely foreign, but intensely dis- tasteful to the uninformed and prejudiced scribes to whom they seem to be so frequently, if not systematically, assigned."

The expectation embodied in the above com- ment is more fully realized perhaps than the writer of those words imagined; and the purpose of this book is to reveal the blundering and mis- leading information which would appear to be the distinguishing quality of the Britannica's articles on culture. Moreover, as I have said, and as I shall show later, few subjects are as "in- tensely distasteful" to the "uninformed and prejudiced" British critics as is American achieve- ment. One finds it difficult to understand how any body of foreigners would dare offer America the brazen insult which is implied in the prodigal distribution of these books throughout the coun- try; for in their unconquerable arrogance, their unveiled contempt for this nation the outgrowth of generations of assumed superiority they sur- pass even the London critical articles dealing with our contemporary literary efforts.

Several of our more courageous and pro-Amer- ican scholars have called attention to the inade- quacies and insularities in the Britannica, but their voices have not been sufficiently far-reaching

COLONIZING AMERICA 17

to counteract either the mass or the unsavory character of the advertising by which this un- worthy and anti-American encyclopaedia was foisted upon the United States. Conspicuous among those publications which protested was the Twentieth Century Magazine. That period- ical, to refer to but one of its several criticisms, pointed out that the article on Democracy is "con- fined to the alleged democracies of Greece and their distinguished, if some time dead, advocates. Walt Whitman, Mazzini, Abraham Lincoln, Edward Carpenter, Lyof Tolstoi, Switzerland, New Zealand, Australia, Finland, Iceland, Ore- gon are unknown quantities to this anonymous classicist."

It is also noted that the author of the articles on Sociology "is not very familiar with the Amer- ican sociologists, still less with the German, and not at all with the French." The article is "a curious evidence of editorial insulation," and the one on Economics "betrays freshened British capitalistic insularity." In this latter article, which was substituted for Professor Ingram' s masterly and superb history of political economy in the Britannica's Ninth Edition, "instead of a catholic, scientific survey of economic thought, we have a 'fair trade' pamphlet, which actually in- cludes reference to Mr. Chamberlain," although

i8 MISINFORMING A NATION

the names of Henry George, Karl Marx, Fried- rich Engels, John A. Hobson, and William Smart are omitted.

The Eleventh Edition, concludes the Twentieth Century -, after recording many other specimens of ignorance and inefficiency, "is not only insular; it betrays its class-conscious limitation in being woefully defective in that prophetic instinct which guided Robertson Smith in his choice of con- tributors to the Ninth Edition, and the con- tributors themselves in their treatment of rapidly changing subjects." Robertson Smith, let it be noted, stood for fairness, progressiveness, and modernity; whereas the Britannica's present edi- tor is inflexibly reactionary, provincial, and un- just to an almost incredible degree.

The foregoing quotations are not isolated ob- jections: there were others of similar nature. And these few specimens are put down here merely to show that there appeared sufficient evi- dence, both in England and America, to establish the purely imaginary nature of the Britannicds claims of completeness and inerrancy, and to re- veal the absurdity of the American Ambassador's amazing pronouncement. Had the sale of the Encyclopedia Britannica been confined to that nation whose culture it so persistently and dog- matically glorifies at the expense of the culture

COLONIZING AMERICA 19

of other nations, its parochial egotism would not be America's concern. But since this reference work has become an American institution and has forced its provincial mediocrity into over 100,000 American homes, schools and offices, the astonish- ing truth concerning its insulting ineptitude has become of vital importance to this country. Its menace to American educational progress can no longer be ignored.

England's cultural campaign in the United States during past decades has been sufficiently insidious and pernicious to work havoc with our creative effort, and to retard us in the growth of that self-confidence and self-appreciation which alone make the highest achievement possible. But never before has there been so concentrated and virulently inimical a medium for British in- fluence as the present edition of the Encyclopedia Eritannica. These books, taken in conjunction with the methods by which they have been foisted upon us, constitute one of the most subtle and malign dangers to our national enlightenment and development which it has yet been our mis- fortune to possess; for they bid fair to remain, in large measure, the source of America's informa- tion for many years to come.

The regrettable part of England's intellectual intrigues in the United States is the subservient

20 MISINFORMING A NATION

and docile acquiescence of Americans themselves. Either they are impervious to England's sneers and deaf to her insults, or else their snobbery is stronger than their self-respect. I have learned from Britishers themselves, during an extended residence in London, that not a little of their con- tempt for Americans is due to our inordinate capacity for taking insults. Year after year English animus grows; and to-day it is the un- common thing to find an English publication which, in discussing the United States and its cul- ture, does not contain some affront to our in- telligence.

It is quite true, as the English insist, that we are painfully ignorant of Europe; but it must not be forgotten that the chief source of that ignor- ance is England herself. And the Encyclopedia Britannica, if accepted as authoritative, will go far toward emphasizing and extending that ignor- ance. Furthermore, it will lessen even the meagre esteem in which we now hold our own accomplishments and potentialities; for, as the following pages will show, the Britannica has per- sistently discriminated against all American en- deavor, not only in the brevity of the articles and biographies relating to this country and in the omissions of many of our leading artists and scientists, but in the bibliographies as well. And

COLONIZING AMERICA 21

it must be remembered that broad and unpreju- diced bibliographies are essential to any worthy encyclopaedia: they are the key to the entire tone of the work. The conspicuous absence of many high American authorities, and the inclusion of numerous reactionary and often dubious English authorities, sum up the Britannica's attitude.

However, as I have said, America, if the prin- cipal, is not the only country discriminated against. France has fallen a victim to the En- cyclopaedia's suburban patriotism, and scant jus- tice is done her true greatness. Russia, perhaps even more than France, is culturally neglected; and modern Italy's aesthetic achievements are given slight consideration. Germany's science and her older culture fare much better at the hands of the Brztannzca's editors than do the ef- forts of several other nations; but Germany, too, suffers from neglect in the field of modern en- deavor.

Even Ireland does not escape English preju- dice. In fact, it can be only on grounds of national, political, and personal animosity that one can account for the grossly biased manner in which Ireland, her history and her culture, is dealt with. To take but one example, regard the Britanniccfs treatment of what has come to be known as the Irish Literary Revival. Among

22 MISINFORMING A NATION

those conspicuous, and in one or two instances world-renowned, figures who do not receive bio- graphies are J. M. Synge, Lady Gregory, Lionel Johnson, Douglas Hyde, and William Larminie. (Although Lionel Johnson's name appears in the article on English literature, it does not appear in the Index a careless omission which, in vic- timizing an Irishman and not an Englishman, is perfectly in keeping with the deliberate omissions of the Britannica.)

Furthermore, there are many famous Irish writers whose names are not so much as men- tioned in the entire Encyclopaedia for instance, Stand ish O'Grady, James H. Cousins, John Tod- hunter, Katherine Tynan, T. W. Rolleston, Nora Hopper, Jane Barlow, Emily Lawless, "A. E." (George W. Russell), John Eglinton, Charles Kickam, Dora Sigerson Shorter, Shan Bullock, and Seumas MacManus. Modern Irish liter- ature is treated with a brevity and an injustice which are nothing short of contemptible; and what little there is concerning the new Irish re- naissance is scattered here and there in the arti- cles on English literature! Elsewhere I have indicated other signs of petty anti-Irish bias, especially in the niggardly and stupid treatment accorded George Moore.

Although such flagrant inadequacies in the case

COLONIZING AMERICA 23

of European art would form a sufficient basis for protest, the really serious grounds for our indigna- tion are those which have to do with the Britan- nica's neglect of America. That is why I have laid such emphasis on this phase of the Encyclo- paedia. It is absolutely necessary that this coun- try throw off the yoke of England's intellectual despotism before it can have a free field for an individual and national cultural evolution. America has already accomplished much. She has contributed many great figures to the world's progress. And she is teeming with tremendous and splendid possibilities. To-day she stands in need of no other nation's paternal guidance. In view of her great powers, of her fine intellectual strength, of her wide imagination, of her already brilliant past, and of her boundless and exalted future, such a work as the Encyclopedia Britan- nica should be resented by every American to whom the welfare of his country is of foremost concern, and in whom there exists one atom of national pride.

rn

THE NOVEL

LET us inspect first the manner in which the world's great modern novelists and story-tellers are treated in the Encyclopedia Britannica. No better department could be selected for the pur- pose; for literature is the most universal and popular art. The world's great figures in fiction are far more widely known than those in painting or music ; and since it is largely through literature that a nation absorbs its cultural ideas, especial interest attaches to the way that writers are inter- preted and criticised in an encyclopaedia.

It is disappointing, therefore, to discover the distorted and unjust viewpoint of the Britannica. An aggressive insular spirit is shown in both the general literary articles and in the biographies. The importance of English writers is constantly exaggerated at the expense of foreign authors. The number of biographies of British writers in- cluded in the Encyclopaedia far overweighs the biographical material accorded the writers of other nations. And superlatives of the most

24

THE NOVEL 25

sweeping kind are commonly used in describing the genius of these British authors, whereas in the majority of cases outside of England, criticism, when offered at all, is cool and circumscribed and not seldom adverse. There are few British writ- ers of any note whatever who are not taken into account; but many authors of very considerable importance belonging to France, Germany, Italy, Russia, and the United States are omitted en- tirely.

In the Encyclopedia's department of literature, as in other departments of the arts, the pious middle-class culture of England is carefully and consistently forced to the front. English pro- vincialism and patriotism not only dominate the criticism of this department, but dictate the amount of space which is allotted the different nations. The result is that one seeking in this encyclopaedia adequate and unprejudiced informa- tion concerning literature will fail completely in his quest. No mention whatever is made of many of the world's great novelists (provided, of course, they do not happen to be British); and the in- formation given concerning the foreign authors who are included is, on the whole, meagre and biased. If, as is natural, one should judge the relative importance of the world's novelists by the space devoted to them, one could not escape

26 MISINFORMING A NATION

the impression that the literary genius of the world resides almost exclusively in British writers.

This prejudiced and disproportionate treatment of literature would not be so regrettable if the Britannica's criticisms were cosmopolitan in char- acter, or if its standard of judgment was a purely literary one. But the criteria of the Encyclo- paedia's editors are, in the main, moral and puri- tanical. Authors are judged not so much by their literary and artistic merits as by their bourgeois virtue, their respectability and inoffensiveness. Consequently it is not even the truly great writers of Great Britain who are recommended the most highly, but those middle-class literary idols who teach moral lessons and whose purpose it is to uplift mankind. The Presbyterian complex, so evident throughout the Encyclopaedia's critiques, finds in literature a fertile field for operation.

Because of the limitations of space, I shall con- fine myself in this chapter to modern literature. I have, however, inspected the manner in which the older literature is set forth in the Encyclo- pedia Eritannica; and there, as elsewhere, is dis- cernible the same provincialism, the same theolog- ical point of view, the same flamboyant exag- geration of English writers, the same neglect of foreign genius. As a reference book the Britan- nica is chauvinistic, distorted, inadequate, dispro-

THE NOVEL 27

portioned, and woefully behind the times. De- spite the fact that the Eleventh Edition is sup- posed to have been brought up to date, few recent writers are included, and those few are largely second-rate writers of Great Britain.

Let us first regard the gross discrepancies in space between the biographies of English authors and those of the authors of other nations. To begin with, the number of biographies of English writers is nearly as many as is given all the writ- ers of France and Germany combined. Sir Walter Scott is given no less than thirteen col- umns, whereas Balzac has only seven columns, Victor Hugo only a little over four columns, and Turgueniev only a little over one column. Sam- uel Richardson is given nearly four columns, whereas Flaubert has only two columns, Dos- toievsky less than two columns, and Daudet only a column and a third! Mrs. Oliphant is given over a column, more space than is allotted to Ana- tole France, Coppee, or the Goncourts. George Meredith is given six columns, more space than is accorded Flaubert, de Maupassant and Zola put together ! Bulwer-Lytton has two columns, more space than is given Dostoievsky. Dickens is given two and a half times as much space as Vic- tor Hugo; and George Eliot, Trollope, and Stev- enson each has considerably more space than de

28 MISINFORMING A NATION

Maupassant, and nearly twice as much space as Flaubert. Anthony Hope has almost an equal amount of space with Turgueniev, nearly twice as much as Gorky, and more than William Dean Howells. Kipling, Barrie, Mrs. Gaskell, Mrs. Humphry Ward, and Felicia Hemans are each accorded more space than either Zola or Mark Twain. . . . Many more similar examples of in- justice could be given, but enough have been set down to indicate the manner in which British authors are accorded an importance far beyond their deserts. -

Of Jane Austen, to whom is given more space than to either Daudet or Turgueniev, we read that "it is generally agreed by the best critics that Miss Austen has never been approached in her own domain." What, one wonders, of Balzac's stories of provincial life*? Did he, after all, not even approach Miss Austen*? Mrs. GaskelPs Cranford "is unanimously accepted as a classic" ; and she is given an equal amount of space with Dostoievsky and Flaubert!

George Eliot's biography draws three and a half columns, twice as much space as Stendhal's, and half again as much as de Maupassant's. In it we encounter the following astonishing speci- men of criticism: No right estimate of her as

THE NOVEL 29

an artist or a philosopher "can be formed without a steady recollection of her infinite capacity for mental suffering, and her need of human sup- port." Just what these conditions have to do with an aesthetic or philosophic judgment of her is not made clear; but the critic finally brings him- self to add that "one has only to compare Romola or Daniel Deronda with the compositions of any author except herself to realize the greatness of her designs and the astonishing gifts brought to their final accomplishment."

The evangelical motif enters more strongly in the biography of George Macdonald, who draws about equal space with Gorky, Huysmans, and rres. Here we learn that Macdonald's "moral enthusiasm exercised great influence upon thought- ful minds." Ainsworth, the author of those shoddy historical melodramas, Jack Sheppard and uy Fawkes, is also given a biography equal in ength to that of Gorky, Huysmans, and Barres; and we are told that he wrote tales which, despite all their shortcomings, were "invariably instruc- tive, clean and manly." Mrs. Ewing, too, profited by her pious proclivities, for her biogra- phy takes up almost as much space as that of the "moral" Macdonald and the "manly" Ainsworth. Her stories are "sound and wholesome in mat-

30 MISINFORMING A NATION

ter," and besides, her best tales "have never been surpassed in the style of literature to which they belong."

Respectability and moral refinement were qualities also possessed by G. P. R. James, whose biography is equal in length to that of William Dean Howells. In it there is quite a long com- parison of James with Dumas, though it is frankly admitted that as an artist James was in- ferior. His plots were poor, his descriptions were weak, and his dialogue was bad. Therefore "his very best books fall far below Les Trois Mous- quetaires." But, it is added, "James never re- sorted to illegitimate methods to attract readers, and deserves such credit as may be due to a pur- veyor of amusement who never caters to the less creditable tastes of his guests." In other words, say what you will about James's technique, he was, at any rate, an upright and impeccable gentleman !

Even Mrs. Sarah Norton's lofty moral nature is rewarded with biographical space greater than that of Huysmans or Gorky. Mrs. Norton, we learn, "was not a mere writer of elegant trifles, but was one of the priestesses of the 'reforming' spirit." One of her books was "a most eloquent and rousing condemnation of child labor"; and her poems were "written with charming tender-

THE NOVEL 31

ness and grace." Great, indeed, are the rewards of virtue, if not in life, at least in the Encyclo- p&dia Britannica.

On the other hand, several English authors are condemned for their lack of nicety and respec- tability. Trollope, for instance, lacked that ele- gance and delicacy of sentiment so dear to the En- cyclopedia editor's heart. "He is," we read, "sometimes absolutely vulgar that is to say, he does not deal with low life, but shows, though always robust and pure in morality, a certain coarseness of taste."

Turning from the vulgar but pure Trollope to Charles Reade, we find more of this same kind of criticism: "His view of human life, especially of the life of women, is almost brutal . . . and he cannot, with all his skill as a story-teller, be numbered among the great artists who warm the heart and help to improve the conduct." (Here we have the Britannica 's true attitude toward literature. That art, in order to be great, must warm the heart, improve the conduct, and show one the way to righteousness.) Nor is Ouida to be numbered among the great uplifters. In her derogatory half-column biography we are in- formed that "on grounds of morality of taste Ouida's novels may be condemned" as they are "frequently unwholesome."

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Two typical examples of the manner in which truly great English writers, representative of the best English culture, are neglected in favor of those writers who epitomize England's provincial piety, are to be found in the biographies of George Moore and Joseph Conrad, neither of whom is concerned with improving the readers' conduct or even with warming their hearts. These two nov- elists, the greatest modern authors which England has produced, are dismissed peremptorily. Con- rad's biography draws but eighteen lines, about one-third of the space given to Marie Corelli ; and the only praise accorded him is for his vigorous style and brilliant descriptions. In this super- ficial criticism we have an example of ineptitude, if not of downright stupidity, rarely equaled even by newspaper reviewers. Not half of Conrad's books are mentioned, the last one to be recorded being dated 1906, nearly eleven years ago! Yet this is the Encyclopaedia which is supposed to have been brought up to date and to be adequate for purposes of reference !

In the case of George Moore there is less excuse for such gross injustice (save that he is Irish), for Moore has long been recognized as one of the great moderns. Yet his biography draws less space than that of Jane Porter, Gilbert Parker, Maurice Hewlett, Rider Haggard, or H. G.

THE NOVEL 33

Wells; half of the space given to Anthony Hope; and only a fourth of the space given to Mrs. Gas- kell and to Mrs. Humphry Ward! A Mum- mer's Wife, we learn, has "decidedly repulsive elements"; and the entire criticism of Esther Waters, admittedly one of the greatest of modern English novels, is that it is "a strong story with an anti-gambling motive." It would seem almost incredible that even the tin-pot evangelism of the Encyclopedia Britannica would be stretched to such a length, but there you have the criticism of Esther Waters set down word for word. The impelling art of this novel means nothing to the Encyclopaedia's critic: he cannot see the book's significance; nor does he recognize its admitted importance to modern literature. To him it is an anti-gambling tract!- And because, perhaps, he can find no uplift theme in A Mummer's Wife, that book is repulsive to him. Such is the culture America is being fed on at a price.

Thomas Hardy, another one of England's im- portant moderns, is condemned for his attitude toward women: his is a "man's point of view" and "more French than English." (We wonder if this accounts for the fact that the sentimental James M. Barrie is accorded more space and greater praise.) Samuel Butler is another in- tellectual English writer who has apparently been

34 MISINFORMING A NATION

sacrificed on the altar of Presbyterian respectabil- ity. He is given less than a column, a little more than half the space given the patriotic, tub- thumping Kipling, and less than half the space given Felicia Hemans. Nor is there any criticism of his work. The Way of all Flesh is merely mentioned in the list of his books. Gissing, an- other highly enlightened English writer, is ac- corded less space than Jane Porter, only about half the space given Anthony Hope, and less space than is drawn by Marie Corelli ! There is almost no criticism of his work a mere record of facts.

Mrs. M. E. Braddon, however, author of The Trail of the Serpent and Lady Audlefs Secret, is criticised in flattering terms. The biography speaks of her "large and appreciative public," and apology is made for her by the statement that her works give "the great body of readers of fiction exactly what they require." But why an apology is necessary one is unable to say since Aurora Floyd is "a novel with a strong affinity to Ma- dame Bovary." Mrs. Braddon and Flaubert! Truly a staggering alliance !

Mrs. Henry Wood, the author of East Lynne, is given more space than Conrad ; and her Johnny Ludlow tales are "the most artistic" of her works. But the "artistic" Mrs. Wood has no preference

THE NOVEL 35

over Julia Kavanagh. This latter lady, we dis- cover, draws equal space with Marcel Prevost; and she "handles her French themes with fidelity and skill." Judging from this praise and the fact that Prevost gets no praise but is accused of having written an "exaggerated" and "revolting" book, we can only conclude that the English authoress handles her French themes better than does Prevost.

George Meredith is accorded almost as much biographical space as Balzac; and in the article there appears such qualifying words as "seer," "greatness," and "master." The impression given is that he was greater than Balzac. In Jane Porter's biography, which is longer than that of Huysmans, we read of her "picturesque power of narration." Even of Samuel Warren, to whom three-fourths of a column is allotted (more space than is given to Bret Harte, Lafcadio Hearn, or Gorky), it is said that the interest in Ten Thousand a Year "is made to run with a powerful current."

Power also is discovered in the works of Lucas Malet. The Wages of Sin was "a powerful story" which "attracted great attention" ; and her next book "had an even greater success." Joseph Henry Shorthouse, who is given more space than Frank Norris and Stephen Crane combined, pos-

36 MISINFORMING A NATION

sessed "high earnestness of purpose, a luxuriant style and a genuinely spiritual quality." Though lacking dramatic facility and a workmanlike con- duct of narrative, "he had almost every other quality of the born novelist." After this remark it is obviously necessary to revise our aesthetic judgment in regard to the religious author of John Ingle s ant.

Grant Allen, alas ! lacked the benevolent qual- ities of the "spiritual" Mr. Shorthouse, and as a result, no doubt he is given less space, and his work and vogue are spoken of disparagingly. One of his books was a succes de scandale "on ac- count of its treatment of the sexual problem." Mr. Allen apparently neither "warmed the heart" nor "improved the conduct" of his audience. On the other hand, Mrs. Oliphant, in a long bio- graphy, is praised for her "sympathetic touch"; and we learn furthermore that she was long and "honorably" connected with the firm of Black- wood. Maurice Hewlett has nearly a half- column biography full of praise. Conan Doyle, also, is spoken of highly. Kipling's biography, longer than Mark Twain's, Bourget's, Daudet's, or Gogol's, also contains praise. In H. G. Wells's biography, which is longer than that of George Moore, "his very high place" as a novelist is spoken of; and Anthony Hope draws abundant

THE NOVEL 37

praise in a biography almost as long as that of Turgueniev !

In the treatment of Mrs. Humphry Ward, however, we have the key to the literary attitude of the Encyclopaedia. Here is an author who epitomizes that middle-class respectability which forms the Britannica's editors' standard of artistic judgment, and who represents that virtuous sub- urban culture which colors the Encyclopaedia's art departments. It is not surprising therefore that, of all recent novelists, she should be given the place of honor. Her biography extends to a column and two-thirds, much longer than the biography of Turgueniev, Zola, Daudet, Mark Twain, or Henry James; and over twice the length of William Dean Howells's biography. Even more space is devoted to her than is given to the biography of Poe !

Nor in this disproportionate amount of space alone is Mrs. Ward's superiority indicated. The article contains the most fulsome praise, and we are told that her "eminence among latter-day women novelists arises from her high conception of the art of fiction and her strong grasp on intel- lectual and social problems, her descriptive power . . . and her command of a broad and vigorous prose style." (The same enthusiastic gentleman who wrote Mrs. Ward's biography also wrote the

38 MISINFORMING A NATION

biography of Oscar Wilde. The latter is given much less space, and the article on him is a petty, contemptible attack written from the standpoint of a self-conscious puritan.)

Thackeray is given equal space with Balzac, and in the course of his biography it is said that some have wanted to compare him with Dickens but that such a comparison would be unprofitable. "It is better to recognize simply that the two novelists stood, each in his own way, distinctly above even their most distinguished contempor- aries." (Both Balzac and Victor Hugo were their contemporaries, and to say that Thackeray stood "distinctly above" them is to butcher French genius to make an English holiday.)

In Dickens's biography, which is nearly half again as long as that of Balzac and nearly two and a half times as long as that of Hugo, we en- counter such words and phrases as "masterpieces" and "wonderful books." No books of his sur- passed the early chapters of Great Expectations in "perfection of technique or in the mastery of all the resources of the novelist's art." Here, as in many other places, patriotic license has obviously been permitted to run wild. Where, outside of provincial England, will you find another critic, no matter how appreciative of Dickens's talent, who will agree that he possessed "perfection of

THE NOVEL 39

technique" and a "mastery of all the resources of the novelist's art"? But, as if this perfervid rhetoric were not sufficiently extreme, Swinburne is quoted as saying that to have created Abel Magwitch alone is to be a god indeed among the creators of deathless men. (This means that Dickens was a god beside the mere mundane cre- ator of Lucien de Rubempre, Goriot, and Eugenie Grandet.) And, again, on top of this unreasoned enthusiasm, it is added that in "intensity and range of creative genius he can hardly be said to have any modern rival."

Let us turn to Balzac who was not, according to this encyclopaedia, even Dickens's rival in in- tensity and range of creative genius. Here we find derogatory criticism which indeed bears out the contention of Dickens's biographer that the author of David Copperfield was superior to the author of Lost Illusions. Balzac, we read, "is never quite real." His style "lacks force and adequacy to his own purpose." And then we are given this final bit of insular criticism: "It is idle to claim for Balzac an absolute supremacy in the novel, while it may be questioned whether any single book of his, or any scene of a book, or even any single character or situation, is among the very greatest books, scenes, characters, situ- ations in literature." Alas, poor Balzac! the

40 MISINFORMING A NATION

inferior of both Dickens and Thackeray the writer who, if the judgment of the Encyclopedia Britannica is to be accepted, created no book, scene, character or situation which is among the greatest ! Thus are the world's true geniuses dis- paraged for the benefit of moral English culture.

De Vigny receives adverse criticism. He is compared unfavorably to Sir Walter Scott, and is attacked for his "pessimistic" philosophy. De Musset "had genius, though not genius of that strongest kind which its possessor can always keep in check" after the elegant and repressed man- ner of English writers, no doubt. De Musset's own character worked "against his success as a writer," and his break with George Sand "brought out the weakest side of his moral character." (Again the church-bell motif.) Gautier, that sensuous and un-English Frenchman, wrote a book called Mademoiselle de Maupin which was "un- fitted by its subject, and in parts by its treatment, for general perusal."

Dumas pere is praised, largely we infer, be- cause his work was sanctioned by Englishmen: "The three musketeers are as famous in England as in France. Thackeray could read about Athos from sunrise to sunset with the utmost content- ment of mind, and Robert Louis Stevenson and Andrew Lang have paid tribute to the band."

THE NOVEL 41

Pierre Loti, however, in a short biography, hardly meets with British approval. "Many of his best books are long sobs of remorseful memory, so per- sonal, so intimate, that an English reader is amazed to find such depth of feeling compatible with the power of minutely and publicly record- ing what is felt." Loti, like de Musset, lacked that prudish restraint which is so admirable a vir- tue in English writers. Daudet, in a short and very inadequate biography, is written down as an imitator of Dickens; and in Anatole France's biography, which is shorter than Marryat's or Mrs. Oliphant's, no adequate indication of his genius is given.

Zola is treated with greater unfairness than per- haps any other French author. Zola has always been disliked in England, and his English pub- lisher was jailed by the guardians of British morals. But it is somewhat astonishing to find to what lengths this insular prejudice has gone in the Encyclopedia Britannica. Zola's biography, which is shorter than Mrs. Humphry Ward's, is written by a former Accountant General of the English army, and contains adverse comment be- cause he did not idealize "the nobler elements in human nature," although, it is said, "his later books show improvement." Such scant treat- ment of Zola reveals the unfairness of extreme

42 MISINFORMING A NATION

prejudice, for no matter what the nationality, re- ligion, or taste of the critic, he must, in all fair- ness, admit that Zola is a more important and influential figure in modern letters than Mrs. Humphry Ward.

In the biography of George Sand we learn that <fas a thinker, George Eliot is vastly [sic] su- perior; her knowledge is more profound, and her psychological analysis subtler and more scien- tific." Almost nothing is said of Constant's writ- ings; and in the mere half-column sketch of Huys- mans there are only a few biographical facts with a list of his books. Of Stendhal there is prac- tically no criticism; and Coppee "exhibits all the defects of his qualities." Rene Bazin draws only seventeen lines a bare record of facts; and Edouard Rod is given a third of a column with no criticism.

Despite the praise given Victor Hugo, his biography, from a critical standpoint, is prac- tically worthless. In it there is no sense of crit- ical proportion : it is a mere panegyric which defi- nitely states that Hugo was greater than Balzac. This astonishing and incompetent praise is ac- counted for when we discover that it was written by Swinburne who, as is generally admitted, was a better poet than critic. In fact, turning to Swinburne's biography, we find the following

THE NOVEL 43

valuation of Swinburne as critic: "The very qualities which gave his poetry its unique charm and character were antipathetic to his success as a critic. He had very little capacity for cool and reasoned judgment, and his criticism is often a tangled thicket of prejudices and predilections. . . . Not one of his studies is satisfactory as a whole; the faculty for the sustained exercise of the judgment was denied him, and even his best appreciations are disfigured by error in taste and proportion."

Here we have the Encyclopaedia's own con- demnation of some of its material a personal and frank confession of its own gross inadequacy and bias! And Swinburne, let it be noted, con- tributes no less than ten articles on some of the most important literary men in history! If the Encyclopedia Britannica was as naif and honest about revealing the incapacity of all of its critics as it is in the case of Swinburne, there would be no need for me to call attention to those other tangled thickets of prejudices and predilections which have enmeshed so many of the gentlemen who write for it.

But the inadequacy of the Britannica as a ref- erence book on modern French letters can beststxe, judged by the fact that there appears n^feia- graphical mention whatever of Romain Rj01lafi;S 1l

44 MISINFORMING A NATION

Pierre de Coulevain, Tinayre, Rene Boylesve, Jean and Jerome Tharaud, Henry Bordeaux, or Pierre Mille. Rolland is the most gifted and conspicuous figure of the new school of writers in France to-day, and the chief representative of a new phase of French literature. Pierre de Coule- vain stands at the head of the women novelists in modern France; and her books are widely known in both England and America. Madame Tinayre's art, to quote an eminent English critic, "reflects the dawn of the new French spirit." Boylesve stands for the classic revival in French letters, and ranks in the forefront of contempor- ary European writers. The Tharauds became famous as novelists as far back as 1902, and hold a high place among the writers of Young France. Bordeaux's novels have long been familiar in translation even to American readers; and Pierre Mille holds very much the same place in France that Kipling does in England. Yet not only does not one of these noteworthy authors have a biography, but their names do not appear throughout the entire Encyclopaedia!

In the article on French Literature the literary renaissance of Young France is not mentioned. There apparently has been no effort at making the account modem or up-to-date in either its critical or historical side; and if you desire information

THE NOVEL 45

on the recent activities in French letters activ- ities of vital importance and including several of the greatest names in contemporary literature you need not seek it in the Britannica, that "su- preme" book of knowledge; for apparently only modern English achievement is judged worthy of consideration.

Modern Russian literature suffers even more from neglect. Dostoievsky has less than two columns, less space than Charles Reade, George Borrow, Mrs. Gaskell, or Charles Kingsley. Gogol has a column and a quarter, far less space than that given Felicia Hemans, James M. Barrie, of Mrs. Humphry Ward. Gorky is allotted little over half a column, one-third of the space given Kipling, and equal space with Ouida and Gilbert Parker. Tolstoi, however, seems to have in- flamed the British imagination. His sentimental philosophy, his socialistic godliness, his capacity to "warm the heart" and "improve the conduct" has resulted in a biography which runs to nearly sixteen columns!

The most inept and inadequate biography in the whole Russian literature department, how- ever, is that of Turgueniev. Turgueniev, almost universally conceded to be the greatest, and cer- tainly the most artistic, of the Russian writers, is accorded little over a column, less space than is

46 MISINFORMING A NATION

devoted to the biography of Thomas Love Pea- cock, Kipling, or Thomas Hardy ; and only a half or a third of the space given to a dozen other in- ferior English writers. And in this brief bio- graphy we encounter the following valuation: "Undoubtedly Turgueniev may be considered one of the great novelists, worthy to be ranked with Thackeray, Dickens and George Eliot; with the genius of the last of these he has many affinities." It will amuse, rather than amaze, the students of Slavonic literature to learn that Turgueniev was the George Eliot of Russia.

But those thousands of people who have bought the Encyclopedia Britannica, believing it to be an adequate literary reference work, should perhaps be thankful that Turgueniev is mentioned at all, for many other important modern Russians are without biographies. For instance, there is no biographical mention of Andreiev, Garshin, Kuprin, Tchernyshevsky, Grigorovich, Artzybash- eff, Korolenko, Veressayeff, Nekrasoff, or Tchek- hofT. And yet the work of nearly all these Rus- sian writers had actually appeared in English translation before the Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica went to press!

Italian fiction also suffers from neglect at the hands of the Britannica1 s critics. Giulio Barrili receives only thirteen lines; Farina, only nine

THE NOVEL 47

lines; and Giovanni Verga, only twelve. Fogaz- zaro draws twenty -six lines; and in the biography we learn that his "deeply religious spirit" ani- mates his literary productions, and that he con- tributed to modern Italian literature "wholesome elements of which it would otherwise be nearly destitute." He also was "Wordsworthian" in his simplicity and pathos. Amicis and Serao draw twenty-nine lines and half a column re- spectively; but there are no biographies of Emilio de Marchi, the prominent historical novelist; En- rico Butti, one of the foremost respresentatives of the psychological novel in modern Italy; and Grazia Deledda.

The neglect of modern German writers in the Encyclopedia Britannica is more glaring than that of any other European nation, not excluding Rus- sia. So little information can one get from this encyclopaedia concerning the really important German authors that it would hardly repay one to go to the Bntannica. Eckstein five of whose novels were issued in English before 1890 is de- nied a biography. So is Meinhold; so is Luise Muhlbach; so is Wachenroder; all well known in England long before the Britannica went to press. Even Gabriele Reuter, whose far-reach- ing success came as long ago as 1895, is with- out a biography. And what is less excusable

48 MISINFORMING A NATION

Max Kretzer, the first of Germany's naturalistic novelists, has no biographical mention in this great English encyclopedia !

But the omission of even these important names do not represent the Britannica's greatest injustice to Germany's literature; for one will seek in vain for biographies of Wilhelm von Polenz and Ompteda, two of the foremost Ger- man novelists, whose work marked a distinct step in the development of their nation's letters. Furthermore, Clara Viebig, Gustav Frenssen, and Thomas Mann, who are among the truly great figures in modern imaginative literature, are with- out biographies. These writers have carried the German novel to extraordinary heights. Mann's Buddenbrooks (1901) represents the culmination of the naturalistic novel in Germany; and Viebig and Frenssen are of scarcely less importance. There are few modern English novelists as de- serving as these three Germans ; and yet numerous comparatively insignificant English writers are given long critical biographies in the Britannica while Viebig, Frenssen and Mann receive no biographies whatever! Such unjust discrimina- tion against non-British authors would hardly be compatible with even the narrowest scholarship.

And there are other important and eminent German novelists who are far more deserving of

THE NOVEL 49

space in an international encyclopedia than many of the Englishmen who receive biographies in the Britannica for instance, Heinz Tovote, Her- mann Hesse, Ricarda Huch, Helene Bohlau, and Eduard von Keyserling not one of whom is given biographical consideration !

When we come to the American literary di- vision of the Britannica^ however, prejudice and neglect reach their highest point. Never have I seen a better example of the contemptuous atti- tude of England toward American literature than

the Encyclopaedia's treatment of the novelists >f the United States. William Dean Howells, in three-quarters-of-a-column biography, gets scant >raise and is criticised with not a little condescen- sion. F. Marion Crawford, in an even shorter >iography, receives only lukewarm and apologetic

lise. Frank Norris is accorded only twenty iines, less space than is given the English hack, r. A. Henty ! McTeague is "a story of the San Francisco slums" ; and The Octopus and The Pit are "powerful stories." This is the extent of the criticism. Stephen Crane is given twelve lines; Bret Harte, half a column with little criticism; Charles Brockden Brown and Lafcadio Hearn, two- thirds of a column each ; H. C. Bunner, twen- ty-one lines; and Thomas Nelson Page less than half a column.

50 MISINFORMING A NATION

What there is in Mark Twain's biography is written by Brander Matthews and is fair as far as it goes. The one recent American novelist who is given adequate praise is Henry James; and this may be accounted for by the fact of James's adoption of England as his home. The only other adequate biography of an American author is that of Nathaniel Hawthorne. But the few biographies of other United States writers who are included in the Encyclopaedia are very brief and insufficient.

In the omissions of American writers, British prejudice has overstepped all bounds of common justice. In the following list of names only one (Churchill's) is even mentioned in the entire 'En- cyclopedia: Edith Wharton, David Graham Phillips, Gertrude Atherton, Winston Churchill, Owen Wister, Ambrose Bierce, Theodore Dreiser, Margaret Deland, Jack London, Robert Grant, Ellen Glasgow, Booth Tarkington, Alice Brown and Robert Herrick. And yet there is abundant space in the Eritannica, not only for critical men- tion, but for detailed biographies, of such English writers as Hall Caine, Rider Haggard, Maurice Hewlett, Stanley Weyman, Flora Annie Steel, Edna Lyall, Elizabeth Charles, Annie Keary, Eliza Linton, Mrs. Henry Wood, Pett Ridge, W.

THE NOVEL 51

C. Russell, and still others of less consequence than many of the American authors omitted.

If the Encyclopedia Britannica was a work whose sale was confined to England, there could be little complaint of the neglect of the writers of other nationalities. But unjust pandering to Brit- ish prejudice and a narrow contempt for Ameri- can culture scarcely become an encyclopaedia whose chief profits are derived from the United States. So inadequate is the treatment of Amer- ican fiction that almost any modern text-book on our literature is of more value; for, as I have shown, all manner of inferior and little-known English authors are given eulogistic biographies, while many of the foremost American authors re- ceive no mention whatever.

As a reference book on modern fiction, the Encyclopedia Britannica is hopelessly inadequate and behind the times, filled with long eulogies of bourgeois English authors, lacking all sense of proportion, containing many glaring omissions, and compiled and written in a spirit of insular prejudice. And this is the kind of culture that America is exhorted, not merely to accept, but to pay a large price for.

Ill

THE DRAMA ,

PARTICULAR importance attaches to the manner in which the modern drama is treated in the En- cyclopedia Britannica, for to-day there exists a deep and intimate interest in this branch of litera- ture— an interest which is greater and more far- reaching than during any other period of modem times. Especially is this true in the United States. During the past fifteen years study in the history, art and technique of the stage has spread into almost every quarter of the country. The printed play has come back into favor; and there is scarcely a publisher of any note on whose lists do not appear many works of dramatic litera- ture. Dramatic and stage societies have been formed everywhere, and there is an increasing de- mand for productions of the better-class plays. Perhaps no other one branch of letters holds so conspicuous a place in our culture.

The drama itself during the last quarter of a century has taken enormous strides. After a period of stagnant mediocrity, a new vitality has

52

THE DRAMA 53

been fused into this art. In Germany, France, England, and Russia many significant drama- tists have sprung into existence. The literature of the stage has taken a new lease on life, and in its ranks are numbered many of the finest creative minds of our day. Furthermore, a school of capa- ble and serious critics has developed to meet the demands of the new work; and already there is a large and increasing library of books dealing with the subject from almost every angle.

Therefore, because of this renaissance and the widespread interest attaching to it, we should ex- pect to find in the Encyclopedia Britannica that "supreme book of knowledge," that "com- plete library" of information a full and com- prehensive treatment of the modern drama. The claims made in the advertising of the Britannica would lead one immediately to assume that so important and universally absorbing a subject would be set forth adequately. The drama has played, and will continue to play, a large part in our modern intellectual life; and, in an educa- tional work of the alleged scope and completeness of this encyclopaedia, it should be accorded care- ful and liberal consideration.

But in this department, as in others equally im- portant, the Encyclopedia Britannica fails inex- cusably. I have carefully inspected its dramatic

54 MISINFORMING A NATION

information, and its inadequacy left me with a feeling which fell little short of amazement. Not only is the modern drama given scant considera- tion, but those comparatively few articles which deal with it are so inept and desultory that no cor- rect idea of the development of modern dramatic literature can be obtained. As in the Encyclo- paedia's other departments of modern aesthetic cul- ture, the work of Great Britain is accorded an abnormally large amount of space, while the work of other nations is if mentioned at all dis- missed with comparatively few words. The Brit- ish drama, like the British novel, is exaggerated, both through implication and direct statement, out of all proportion to its inherent significance. Many of the truly great and important dramatists of foreign countries are omitted entirely in order to make way for minor and inconsequent English- men; and the few towering figures from abroad who are given space draw only a few lines of biographical mention, whereas second-rate British writers are accorded long and ninutely specific articles.

Furthermore, the Encyclopaedia reveals the fact that in a great many instances it has not been brought up to date. As a result, even when an alien dramatist has found his way into the ex- clusive British circle whose activities dominate

THE DRAMA 55

e aesthetic departments of the Britannica, one does not have a complete record of his work. This failure to revise adequately old material and to make the information as recent as the physical ex- igencies of book-making would permit, results no doubt in the fact that even the more recent and important English dramatists have suffered the fate of omission along with their less favored con- freres from other countries. Consequently, the dramatic material is not only biased but is in- adequate from the British standpoint as well.

As a reference book on the modern drama, either for students or the casual reader, the Encyclo- pedia Britannica is practically worthless. Its in- formation is old and prejudiced, besides being flagrantly incomplete. I could name a dozen books on the modern drama which do not pretend to possess the comprehensiveness and authenticity claimed by the Britannica^ and yet are far more adequate, both in extent and modernity of sub- ject-matter, and of vastly superior educational value. The limited information which has actu- ally found its way into this encyclopedia is marked by incompetency, prejudice, and carelessness; and its large number of indefensible omissions renders it almost useless as a reference work on modern dramatic literature.

In the general article on the Drama we have

56 MISINFORMING A NATION

a key to the entire treatment of the subject throughout the Encyclopaedia's twenty-seven vol- umes. The English drama is given forty-one col- umns. The French drama is given fifteen col- umns ; the German drama, nine ; the Scandinavian drama one; and the Russian drama, one-third of a column ! The American drama is not even given a separate division but is included under the Eng- lish drama, and occupies less than one column! The Irish drama also is without a separate division, and receives only twelve lines of exposition ! In the division on the Scandinavian drama, Strind- berg's name is not mentioned; and the reader is supplied with the antiquated, early- Victorian in- formation that Ibsen's Ghosts is "repellent." In the brief passage on the Russian drama almost no idea is given of its subject; in fact, no drama- tist born later than 1808 is mentioned! When we consider the wealth of the modern Russian drama and its influence on the theater of other nations, even of England, we can only marvel at such utter inadequacy and neglect.

In the sub-headings of "recent" drama under Drama, "Recent English Drama" is given over twelve columns, while "Recent French Drama" is given but a little over three. There is no sub- division for recent German drama, but mention is made of it in a short paragraph under "English

THE DRAMA 57

Drama" with the heading: "Influences of For- eign Drama I"

Regard this distribution of space for a moment. The obvious implication is that the more modern English drama is four times as important as the French ; and yet for years the entire inspiration of the English stage came from France, and certain English "dramatists" made their reputations by adapting French plays. And what of the more modern German drama? It is of importance, evi- dently, only as it had an influence on the English drama. Could self-complacent insularity go fur- ther? Even in its capacity as a mere contribu- tion to British genius, the recent German drama, it seems, is of little moment; and Sudermann counts for naught. In the entire article on Drama his name is not so much as mentioned! Such is the transcendent and superlative culture of the Encyclopedia Britannica!

Turning to the biographies, we find that British dramatists, when mentioned at all, are treated with cordial liberality. T. W. Robertson is given nearly three-fourths of a column with the com- ment that "his work is notable for its masterly stage-craft, wholesome and generous humor, bright and unstrained dialogue, and high dramatic sense of human character in its theatrical aspects." H. J. Byron is given over half a column. W. S.

58 MISINFORMING A NATION

Gilbert draws no less than a column and three- fourths. G. R. Sims gets twenty-two lines. Sydney Grundy is accorded half a column. James M. Barrie is given a column and a half, and George Bernard Shaw an equal amount of space. Pinero is given two-thirds of a column; and Henry Arthur Jones half a column. Jones, how- ever, might have had more space had the Ency- clopaedia's editor gone to the simple trouble of ex- tending that playwright's biography beyond 1904; but on this date it ends, with the result that there appears no mention of The Heroic Stubbs, The Hypocrites, The Evangelist, Dolly Reforms Himself, or The Knife all of which were produced before this supreme, up-to-date and informative encyclopaedia went to press.

Oscar Wilde, a man who revolutionized the English drama and who was unquestionably one of the important figures in modern English letters, is given a little over a column, less space than Shaw, Barrie, or Gilbert. In much of his writing there was, we learn, "an undertone of rather nasty suggestion"; and after leaving prison "he was necessarily an outcast from decent circles." Also, "it is still impossible to take a purely objec- tive view of Oscar Wilde's work," that is to say, literary judgment cannot be passed without re- course to morality !

THE DRAMA $g

Here is an actual confession by the editor him- self (for he contributed the article on Wilde) of the accusation I have made against the Britannica. A great artist, according to this encyclopaedia's criterion, is a respectable artist, one who preaches and practises an inoffensive suburbanism. But when the day comes if it ever does when the editor of the Encyclopedia Britannica^ along with other less prudish and less delicate critics, can re- gard Wilde's work apart from personal prejudice, perhaps Wilde will be given the consideration he deserves a consideration far greater, we hope, than that accorded Barrie and Gilbert.

Greater inadequacy than that revealed in Wilde's biography is to be found in the fact that Synge has no biography whatever in the Britan- nica! Nor has Hankin. Nor Granville Barker. Nor Lady Gregory. Nor Galsworthy. The bio- graphical omission of such important names as these can hardly be due to the editor's opinion that they are not deserving of mention, for lesser English dramatic names of the preceding genera- tion are given liberal space. The fact that these writers do not appear can be attributed only to the fact that the Encyclopedia Britannica has not been properly brought up to date a fact substantiated by an abundance of evidence throughout the entire work. Of what possible value to one interested

60 MISINFORMING A NATION

in the modern drama is a reference library which contains no biographical mention of such sig- nificant figures as these ?

The French drama suffers even more from in- completeness and scantiness of material. Becque draws just eleven lines, exactly half the space given to the British playwright whose reputation largely depends on that piece of sentimental clap- trap, Lights o' London. Hervieu draws half a column of biography, in which his two important dramas, Modestie and Connais-Toi (both out be- fore the Britannica went to press), are not men- tioned. Curel is given sixteen lines; Lavedan, fourteen lines, in which not all of even his best work is noted; Maurice Donnay, twenty lines, with no mention of La Patronne ( 1908) ; Lemai- tre, a third of a column; Rostand, half a column, less space than is accorded the cheap, slap-stick humorist from Manchester, H. J. Byron; Capus, a third of a column; Porto-Riche, thirteen lines; and Brieux twenty-six lines. In Brieux's very brief biography there is no record of La Fran^aise (1807), Simone (1908), or Suzette (1909). Henri Bernstein does not have even a biographical mention.

Maeterlinck's biography runs only to a column and a third, and the last work of his to be men- tioned is dated 1903, since which time the article

THE DRAMA 61

has apparently not been revised! Therefore, if you depend for information on this biography in the Encyclopedia Britannica, you will find no record of Sceur Beatrice, Ariane et Barbe-Bleu, UOiseau Bleu, or Maria Magdalene.

The modern Italian drama also receives very brief and inadequate treatment. Of the modern Italian dramatists only two of importance have biographies Pietro Cossa and Paolo Ferrari. Cossa is given twenty-four lines, and Ferrari only seven lines! The two eminent comedy writers, Gherardi del Testa and Ferdinando Martini, have no biographies. Nor has either Giuseppe Gia- cosa or Gerolamo Rovetta, the leaders of the new school, any biographical mention. And in d'An- nunzio's biography only seventeen lines are de- voted to his dramas. What sort of an idea of the modern Italian drama can one get from an encyclopaedia which contains such indefensible omissions and such scant accounts of prominent writers? And why should the writer who is as commonly known by the name of Stecchetti as Samuel Clemens is by the name of Mark Twain be listed under "Guerrini" without even a cross reference under the only name by which the ma- jority of readers know him*? Joseph Conrad might almost as well be listed under "Korzeniow- ski." There are few enough non-British writers

62 MISINFORMING A NATION

included in the Britannica without deliberately or ignorantly hiding those who have been lucky enough to be admitted.

Crossing over into Germany and Austria one may look in vain for any indication of the wealth of dramatic material and the great number of im- portant dramatic figures which have come from these two countries. Of all the recent German and Austrian dramatists of note, only two are so much as given biographical mention, and these two Sudermann and Hauptmann are treated with a brevity and inadequacy which, to my knowledge, are without a parallel in any modern reference work on the subject. Hauptmann and Sudermann receive just twenty-five lines each, less space than is given to Sydney Grundy, Pinero, Henry Arthur Jones, T. W. Robertson, H. J. Byron; and less than a third of the space given to Shaw and W. S. Gilbert ! Even Sims is given nearly as much space !

In these comparisons alone is discernible a chauvinism of almost incredible narrowness. But the biographies themselves emphasize this patriotic prejudice even more than does the brev- ity of space. In Sudermann's biography, which apparently ends in 1905, no mention whatever is made of such important works as Das Blumen- boot, Rosen, Strandkinder, and Das Hohe Lied

THE DRAMA 63

(The Song of Songs), all of which appeared be- fore the Britannica was printed.

And what of Hauptmann, perhaps the greatest and most important figure in dramatic literature of this and the last generation*? After a brief record of the facts in Hauptmann's life we read : "Of Hauptmann's subsequent work mention may be made of" and then the names of a few of his plays are set down. In the phrase, "mention may be made of," is summed up the critic's narrow viewpoint. And in that list it was thought un- necessary to mention Schluck und Jau9 Michael Kramer -, Der Arme Heinrich, Elga, Die Jung fern vom Bischofsberg, Kaiser Karls Geisel, and Gri- seldal Since all of these appeared in ample time to be included, it would, I believe, have occurred to an unprejudiced critic that mention might have been made of them. In fact, all the circumstan- tial evidence points to the supposition that had Hauptmann been an Englishman, not only would they have been mentioned, but they would have been praised as well. As it is, there is no criticism of Hauptmann's work and no indication of his greatness, despite the fact that he is almost uni- versally conceded to be a more important figure than any of the modern English playwrights who are given greater space and favorably criticised.

With such insufficient and glaringly prejudiced

64 MISINFORMING A NATION

treatment of giants like Sudermann and Haupt- mann, it is not at all surprising that not one other figure in German and Austrian recent dramatic literature should have a biography. For in- stance, there is no biography of Schnitzler, Arno Holz, Max Halbe, Ludwig Fulda, O. E. Hartle- ben, Max Dreyer, Ernst Hardt, Hirschfeld, Ernst Rosmer, Karl Schonherr, Hermann Bahr, Thoma, Beer-Hoffmann, Johannes Schlaf, or Wedekind! Although every one of these names should be in- cluded in some informative manner in an encyclo- paedia as large as the Britannica, and one which makes so lavish a claim for its educational com- pleteness, the omission of several of them may be excused on the grounds that, in the haste of the Encyclopaedia's editors to commercialize their cul- tural wares, they did not have sufficient time to take cognizance of the more recent of these dra- matists. Since the editors have overlooked men like Galsworthy from their own country, we can at least acquit them of the charge of snobbish patriotism in several of the present instances of wanton oversight.

In the cases of Schnitzler, Hartleben and Wedekind, however, no excuse can be offered. The work of these men, though recent, had gained for itself so important a place in the modern world before the Britannica went to press, that to

THE DRAMA 6$

ignore them biographically was an act of either wanton carelessness or extreme ignorance. The former would appear to furnish the explanation, for under Drama there is evidence that the editors knew of Schnitzler's and Wedekind's existence. But, since the Vberbrettl movement is given only seven lines, it would, under the circumstances, hardly be worth one's while to consult the Ency- clopedia Britannica for information on the mod- ern drama in Germany and Austria.

Even so, one would learn more of the drama in those countries than one could possibly learn of the drama of the United States. To be sure, no great significance attaches to our stage literature, but since this encyclopaedia is being foisted upon us and we are asked to buy it in preference to all others, it would have been well within the prov- ince of its editors to give the hundred of thou- sands of American readers a little enlightenment concerning their own drama.

The English, of course, have no interest in our institutions save only our banks and consist- ently refuse to attribute either competency or im- portance to our writers. They would prefer that we accept their provincial and mediocre culture and ignore entirely our own aesthetic struggles toward an individual expression. But all Amer- icans do not find intellectual contentment in this

66 MISINFORMING A NATION

paternal and protecting British attitude; and those who are interested in our native drama and who have paid money for the Britannica on the strength of its exorbitant and unsustainable claims, have just cause for complaint in the scanty and contemptuous way in which American letters are treated.

As I have already noted, the American drama is embodied in the article on the English Drama, and is given less space than a column. Under American Literature there is nothing concerning the American stage and its writers; nor is there a single biography in the entire Encyclopaedia of an American dramatist! James A. Herne re- ceives eight lines a note so meagre that for pur- poses of reference it might almost as well have been omitted entirely. And Augustin Daly, the most conspicuous figure in our theatrical history, is dismissed with twenty lines, about half the space given H. J. Byron ! If you desire any in- formation concerning the development of the American theater, or wish to know any details about David Belasco, Bronson Howard, Charles Hoyt, Steele MacKaye, Augustus Thomas, Clyde Fitch, or Charles Klein, you will have to go to a source other than the Encyclopedia Britannica.

By way of explaining this neglect of all Amer- ican culture I will quote from a recent advertise-

THE DRAMA 67

ment of the Britannica. "We Americans," it says, in a most intimate and condescending man- ner, "have had a deep sense of self-sufficiency. We haven't had time or inclination to know how the rest of the world lived. But now we must know." And let it be said for the Encyclopedia Britannica that it has done all in its power to dis- courage us in this self-sufficiency.

IV

POETRY

IN the field of poetry the Encyclopedia Britan- nica comes nearer being a competent reference library than in the field of painting, fiction, or drama. This fact, however, is not due to a spirit of fairness on the part of the Encyclopaedia's edi- tors so much as to the actual superiority of Eng- lish poetry. In this field England has led the world. It is the one branch of culture in which modern England stands highest. France sur- passes her in painting and in fiction, and Germany in music and the drama. But Great Britain is without a rival in poetry. Therefore, despite the fact that the Encyclopaedia is just as biased in dealing with this subject as it is in dealing with other cultural subjects, England's pre-eminence tends to reduce in this instance that insular prej- udice which distorts the Britannica's treatment of arts and letters.

But even granting this superiority, the En- cyclopaedia is neglectful of the poets of other nations; and while it comes nearer the truth in 68

POETRY 69

setting forth the glories of English prosody, it fails here as elsewhere in being an international reference book of any marked value. There is considerable and unnecessary exaggeration of the merits of British poets, even of second- and third- rate British poets. Evangelical criticism pre- dominates, and respectability is the measure of merit. Furthermore, the true value of poetry in France, Germany, Italy, Sweden and the United States is minimized, and many writers of these countries who unquestionably should have a place in an encyclopedia as large as the Britannica> are omitted. Especially is this true in the case of the United States, which stands second only to Great Britain in the quantity and quality of its modern poetry.

Let us first review briefly the complete and eulogistic manner in which English poets are dealt with. Then let us compare, while making all allowances for alien inferiority, this treatment of British poetry with the Encyclopaedia's treatment of the poetry of other nations. To begin with, I find but very few British poets of even minor importance who are not given a biography more than equal to their deserts. Coventry Patmore receives a biography of a column and a half. Sydney Dobell's runs to nearly a column. Wil- fred Scawen Blunt is accorded half a column;

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John Davidson, over a column of high praise; Henley, more than an entire page; Stephen Phillips, three-fourths of a column; Henry Clar- ence Kendall, eighteen lines; Roden Noel, twenty- eight lines; Alexander Smith, twenty-five lines; Lawrence Binyon, nineteen lines; Laurence Hous- man, twenty-three lines; Ebenezer Jones, twenty- four lines; Richard Le Gallienne, twenty lines; Henry Newbolt, fifteen lines; and Arthur Wil- liam Edgar O'Shaughnessy, twenty-nine lines. These names, together with the amount of space devoted to them, will give an indication of the thoroughness and liberality accorded British poets.

But these by no means complete the list. Robert Bridges receives half a column, in which we learn that "his work has had great influence in a select circle, by its restraint, purity, precision, and delicacy yet strength of expression." And in his higher flights "he is always noble and some- times sublime. . . . Spirituality informs his in- spiration." Here we have an excellent example of the Encyclopaedia's combination of the uplift and hyperbole. More of the same moral encom- ium is to be found in the biography of Christina Rossetti, which is a column in length. Her "sanctity" and "religious faith" are highly praised; and the article ends with the words:

POETRY 71

"All that we really need to know about her, save that she was a great saint, is that she was a great poet." Ah, yes! Saintliness that cardinal re- quisite in British aesthetics.

An example of how the Britannica's provincial puritanism of judgment works against a poet is to be found in the nearly-two-page biography of Swinburne, wherein we read that "it is impossible to acquit his poetry of the charge of animalism which wars against the higher issues of the spirit." No, Swinburne was not a pious uplifter; he did not use his art as a medium for evangelical ex- hortation. Consequently his work does not com- ply with the Britannica's parochial standard. And although Swinburne was contemporary with Francis Thompson, it is said in the latter's two- thirds-of-a-column biography that "for glory of inspiration and natural magnificence of utterance he is unique among the poets of his time." Watts-Dunton also, in his three-fourths-of-a- column biography, is praised lavishly and set down as a "unique figure in the world of letters."

William Watson receives over a column of biography, and is eulogized for his classic tradi- tions in an age of prosodic lawlessness. The sentimental and inoffensive Austin Dobson ap- parently is a high favorite with the editors of the Encyclopaedia, for he is given a column and three-

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fourths more space than is given John David- son, Francis Thompson, William Watson, Watts- Dunton, or Oscar Wilde an allowance out of all proportion to his importance.

In closing this brief record of the Encyclopedia Britannica's prodigal generosity to British poets, it might be well to mention that Thomas Chatter- ton receives a biography of five and a half columns a space considerably longer than that given to Heine. Since Thomas Chatterton died at the age of eighteen and Heinrich Heine did not die until he was fifty-nine, I leave it to statistic- ians to figure out how much more space than Heine Chatterton would have received had he lived to the age of the German poet.

On turning to the French poets and bearing in mind the long biographies accorded British poets, one cannot help feeling amazed at the scant treat- ment which the former receive. Baudelaire, for instance, is given less space than Christina Ros- setti, William Watson, Henley, Coventry Pat- more, John Davidson, or Austin Dobson. Ca- tulle Mendes receives considerably less space than Stephen Phillips. Verlaine is given equal space with Watts-Dunton, and less than half the space given to Austin Dobson ! Stephane Mallarme re- ceives only half the space given to John David- son, Christina Rossetti, or William Watson.

POETRY 73

Jean Moreas receives only half the space given to Sydney Dobell or Christina Rossetti. Viele- Griffin draws a shorter biography than Kendall, the Australian poet; and Regnier and Bouchor are dismissed in fewer words than is the Scotch poet, Alexander Smith. Furthermore, these biog- raphies are rarely critical, being in the majority of instances a cursory record of incomplete data. Here attention should be called to the fact that only in the cases of the very inconsequent British poets is criticism omitted : if the poet is even fairly well known there is a discussion of his work and an indication of the place he is supposed to hold in his particular field. But with foreign writers even the very prominent ones little or nothing concerning them is vouchsafed save historical facts, and these, as a general rule, fall far short of completeness. The impression given is that obscure Englishmen are more important than emi- nent Frenchmen, Germans, or Americans. Evi- dently the editors are of the opinion that if one is cognizant of British culture one can easily dis- pense with all other culture as inferior and un- necessary. Otherwise how, except on the ground of deliberate falsification, can one explain the lib- eral treatment accorded English poets as com- pared with the meagre treatment given French poets?

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Since the important French poets mentioned re- ceive such niggardly and grudging treatment, it is not to be wondered at that many other lesser poets yet poets who are of sufficient importance to be included in an encyclopaedia should receive no biographical mention. If you wish information concerning Adolphe Rette, Rene de Ghil, Stuart Merrill, Emmanuel Signoret, Jehan Rictus, Al- bert Samain, Paul Fort, who is the leading bal- ladist of young France, Herold, Quillard, or Francis Jammes, you will have to go to a source even more "supreme" than the Encyclopedia Britannica. These poets were famous in 1900, and even in America there had appeared at that time critical considerations of their work. Again, one ought to find, in so "complete" a "library" as the Britannica, information concerning the principal poets of the Belgian Renaissance. But of the eight leading modern poets of Belgium only three have biographies Lemonnier, Maeterlinck, and Verhaeren. There are no biographies of Eek- houd, Rodenbach, Elskamp, Severin and Cam- maerts.

Turning to Italy we find even grosser injustice and an even more woeful inadequacy in the treat- ment accorded her modern poets. To be sure, there are biographies of Carducci, Ferrari, Mar- radi, Mazzoni, and Arturo Graf. But Alfredo

POETRY 7?

Baccelli, Domenico Gnoli, Giovanni Pascoli, Mario Rapisardi, Chiarini, Panzacchi and Annie Vivanti are omitted. There should be biographies of these writers in an international encyclopaedia one-fourth the size of the Eritannica. Baceelli and Rapisardi are perhaps the two most important epic poets of modern Italy. Gnoli is one of the leaders of the classical school. Chiarini is not only a leading poet but is one of the first critics of Italy as well. Panzacchi, the romantic, is sec- ond only to the very greatest Italian poets of mod- ern times, and as far back as 1898 British critics were praising him and regretting that he was not better known in England. Annie Vivanti, born in London, is a poet known and esteemed all over Italy. (It may be noted here that Vivanti wrote a vehement denunciation and repudiation of Eng- land InAve Albion.')

But these names represent only part of the in- justice and neglect accorded modern Italian poetry by the Eritannica. There is not even so much as a mention in the entire twenty-nine volumes of the names of Alinda Bonacchi, the most widely known woman poet in Italy; Capuano, who, besides be- ing a notable poet, is also a novelist, dramatist and critic of distinction; Funcini (Tanfucio Neri), a household word in Tuscany and one held in high esteem all over Italy; "Countess Lara"

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(Eveline Cattermole), whose Versi gave her a foremost place among the poets of her day ; Pitteri, who was famous as long ago as 1890; and Nenci- oni, not only a fine poet but one of Italy's great critics. Nencioni has earned the reputation of being the Sainte-Beuve of Italy, and it was he who introduced Browning, Tennyson and Swin- burne to his countrymen. Then there are such poets as Fontana, Bicci and Arnaboldi, who should at least be mentioned in connection with modern Italian literature, but whose names do not appear in "this complete library of information."

But France, Belgium, and Italy, nevertheless, have great cause for feeling honored when com- parison is made between the way the Encyclo- pedia Britannic a deals with their modern poetry and the way it deals with modern German and Austrian poetry. Of all the important recent lyricists of Germany and Austria only one is given a biography, and that biography is so brief and inadequate as to be practically worthless for pur- poses of enlightenment. The one favored poet is Detlev von Liliencron. Liliencron is perhaps the most commanding lyrical figure in all recent Ger- man literature, and he receives just twenty -seven lines, or about one-fifth of the space given to Aus- tin Dobson! But there are no biographies of Richard Dehmel, Carl Busse, Stefan George, J. H.

POETRY 77

Mackay, Rainer Maria Rilke, Gustav Falke, Ernst von Wolzogen, Kark Henckell, Dormann, Otto Julius Bierbaum, and Hugo von Hofmann- sthal.

There can be no excuse for many of these omis- sions. Several of these names are of international eminence. Their works have not been confined to Germany, but have appeared in English trans- lation. They stand in the foremost rank of mod- ern literature, and both in England and America there are critical books which accord them exten- sive consideration. Without a knowledge of them no one not even a Britisher can lay claim to an understanding of modern letters. Yet the Encyclopedia Britannica denies them space and still poses as an adequate reference work.

One may hope to find some adequate treatment of the German lyric to recent years with its "re- markable variety of new tones and pregnant ideas," in the article on German Literature. But that hope will straightway be blasted when one turns to the article in question. The entire new renaissance in German poetry is dismissed in a brief paragraph of thirty-one lines! It would have been better to omit it altogether, for such a cursory and inadequate survey of a significant sub- ject can result only in disseminating a most un- just and distorted impression. And the bibli-

78 MISINFORMING A NATION

ography at the end of this article on modern Ger- man literature reveals nothing so much as the lack of knowledge on the part of the critic who com- piled it. Not only is the Britannica deficient in its information, but it does not reveal the best sources from which this omitted information might be gained.

An even more absurdly inadequate treatment is accorded the poets of modem Sweden. Despite the fact that Swedish literature is little known to Americans, the poetry of that country ranks very high higher (according to some eminent critics) than the poetry of France or Germany. But the Britannica makes no effort to disturb our ignor- ance; and so the great lyric poetry of Sweden since 1870 is barely touched upon. However, Mr. Ed- mund Gosse, a copious contributor to the En- cyclopsedia, has let the cat out of the bag. In one of his books he has pronounced Froding, Levertin and Heidenstam "three very great lyrical artists," and has called Snoilsky a poet of "unquestioned force and fire." Turning to the Britannica we find that Snoilsky is dismissed with half the space given Sydney Dobell and a third of the space given Patmore. Levertin receives only a third of a col- umn ; and Froding is denied any biography what- ever. He is thrown in with a batch of minor writers under Sweden. Heidenstam, the new

POETRY

79

Nobel prize-winner, a poet who, according to Charles Wharton Stork, "stands head and shoul- ders above any now writing in England," receives only eight lines in the general notice ! And Karl- feldt, another important lyrist, who is the Sec- retary of the Swedish Academy, is considered un- worthy of even a word in the "supreme" En- cyclopedia Britannica.

It would seem that unfair and scant treatment of a country's poetry could go no further. But if you will seek for information concerning American poetry you will find a deficiency which is even greater than that which marks the treatment of modern Swedish poetry.

Here again it might be in place to call atten- tion to the hyperbolical claims on which the 'En- cyclopedia Britannica has been sold in America. In the flamboyant and unsubstantiable advertis- ing of this reference work you will no doubt re- call the claim: "It will tell you more about everything than you can get from any other source." And perhaps you will also remember the statement: "The Britannica is a complete library of knowledge on every subject appealing to intelligent persons." It may be, of course, that the editors believe that the subject of American literature does not, or at least should not, appeal to any but ignorant persons, and that, in fact, only

8o MISINFORMING A NATION

middle-class English culture can possibly interest the intelligent. But unless such a belief can be proved to be correct, the American buyers of this Encyclopaedia have a grave and legitimate com- plaint against the editors for the manner in which the books were foisted upon them. The Encyclo- pedia Britannica, as I have pointed out, is not a complete library of knowledge on the subject of literature; and in the following pages I shall show that its gross inadequacy extends to many other very important fields of endeavor. Moreover, its incompleteness is most glaringly obvious in the field of American aesthetic effort a field which, under the circumstances, should be the last to be neglected.

On the subject of American poetry it is deficient almost to the extreme of worthlessness. In the article, American Literature, written by George E. Woodberry, we discover that truly British spirit and viewpoint which regards nothing as worth while unless it is old or eminently respectable and accepted. The result is that, in the paragraph on our poetry, such men as Aldrich, Stedman, Rich- ard Watson Gilder, Julia Ward Howe, H. H. Brownell and Henry Van Dyke are mentioned; but very few others. As a supreme surrender to modernity the names of Walt Whitman, Eugene Field, James Whitcomb Riley and Joaquin Miller

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are included. The great wealth of American poetry, which is second only to that of England, is not even suggested.

Turning to the biography of Edgar Allan Poe, we find that this writer receives only a column and a half, less space than is given Austin Dobson, Coventry Patmore, or W. E. Henley! And the biography itself is so inept that it is an affront to American taste and an insult to American intel- ligence. One is immediately interested in learn- ing what critic the Encyclopaedia's editors chose to represent this American who has long since be- come a world figure in literature. Turning to the index we discover that one David Hannay is the authority a gentleman who was formerly the British Vice-Consul at Barcelona. Mr. Hannay (apparently he holds no academic degree of any kind) lays claim to fame chiefly, it seems, as the author of Short History of the Royal Navy; but in just what way his research in naval matters qualifies him to write on Poe is not indicated. This is not, however, the only intimation we had that in the minds of the Encyclopedia's editors there exists some esoteric and recondite relation- ship between art and British sea-power. In the Britannia's criticism of J. M. W. Turner's paint- ings, that artist's work is said to be "like the Brit- ish fleet among the navies of the world." In the

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present instance, however, we can only trust that the other articles in this encyclopedia, by Mr. Hannay to- wit: Admiral Penn and Pirate and piracy are more competent than his critique on Poe.

Walt Whitman gets scarcely better treatment. His biography is no longer than Poe's and con- tains little criticism and no suggestion of his true place in American letters. This is all the more astonishing when we recall the high tribute paid Whitman by eminent English critics. Surely the Britannica's editors are not ignorant of Whitman's place in modern letters or of the generous man- ner in which he had been received abroad. What- ever one's opinion of him, he was a towering figure in our literature a pioneer who had more in- fluence on our later writers than any other Ameri- can. And yet his biography in this great British cultural work is shorter than that of Mrs. Hum- phry Ward !

With such obviously inadequate and contemptu- ous treatment as that accorded Poe and Whitman, it is not surprising that all other American poets should be treated peremptorily or neglected en- tirely. There are very short biographical notes on Stedman, Louise Chandler Moulton, Sill, Gil- der, Eugene Field, Sidney Lanier and Riley but they are scant records of facts and most insuffi-

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cient when compared to the biographies of second- rate poets of England.

But let us be grateful that the Encyclopedia Britannica was generous enough to record them at all; for one can look in vain through its entire twenty-nine volumes, no matter under what head- ing, for even a mention of Emily Dickinson, John Bannister Tabb, Florence Earle Coates, Edwin Markham, Lizette Wood worth Reese, Clinton Scollard, Louise Imogen Guiney, Richard Hovey, Madison Cawein, Edwin Arlington Robinson, George Sylvester Viereck, Ridgeley Torrence, Arthur Upson, Santayana, and many others who hold an important place in our literature. And the names of William Vaughn Moody, Percy MacKaye and Bliss Carman are merely mentioned casually, the first two under Drama and the last under Canadian Literature.

The palpable injustice in the complete omission of many of the above American names is rendered all the more glaring by the fact that the Encyclo- pedia Britannica pays high tribute to such minor British poets and versifiers as W. H. Davies, Sturge Moore, Locker Lampson, C. M. Doughty, Walter de la Mare, Alfred Noyes, Herbert Trench, Ernest Dowson, Mrs. Meynell, A. E. Housman and Owen Seaman.

This is the culture disseminated by the Encyclo-

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Britannica, which "is a complete library of knowledge on every subject appealing to intel- ligent persons," and which "will tell you more about everything than you can get from any other source!" This is the "supreme book of knowl- edge" which Americans are asked to buy in prefer- ence to all others. What pettier insult could one nation offer to another?

BRITISH PAINTING

IF one hopes to find in the Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica an unprejudiced critical and biographical survey of the world's painters, he will be sorely disappointed. Not only is the Encyclopaedia not comprehensive and up-to-date, but the manner in which British art and artists are constantly forced to the front rank is so grossly biased that a false impression of aesthetic history and art values is almost an inevitable result, un- less one is already equipped with a wide under- standing of the subject. If one were to form an opinion of art on the Britannica's articles, the opinion would be that English painting leads the modern world in both amount and quality. The Encyclopaedia raises English academicians to the ranks of exalted greatness, and at the same time tends to tear down the pedestals whereon rest the truly towering geniuses of alien nationality.

So consistently does British bourgeois prejudice and complacency characterize the material on painting contained in this Encyclopaedia, that any 85

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attempt to get from it an aesthetic point of view which would be judicious and universal, would fail utterly. Certain French, German, and Amer- ican artists of admitted importance are considered unworthy of space, or, if indeed deserving of men- tion, are unworthy of the amount of space, or the praise, which is conferred on a large number of lesser English painters. Both by implication and direct statement the editors have belittled the aesthetic endeavor of foreign nations, and have ex- aggerated, to an almost unbelievable degree, the art of their own country. The manner in which the -subject of painting is dealt with reveals the full-blown flower of British insularity, and apo- theosizes the narrow, aggressive culture of British middle-class respectability. In the world's art from 1700 on, comparatively little merit is recog- nized beyond the English Channel.

The number of English painters whose biog- raphies appear in the Britannica would, I be- lieve, astonish even certain English art critics; and the large amount of space devoted to them even to inconsequent and obscure academicians when compared with the brief notices given to greater painters of other nations, leaves the un- British searcher with a feeling of bewilderment. But not only with the large number of English painters mentioned or even with the obviously dis-

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proportionate amount of space devoted to them does the Encyclopaedia's chauvinistic campaign for England's aesthetic supremacy cease. The criticisms which accompany these biographies are as a rule generously favorable ; and, in many cases, the praise reaches a degree of extravagance which borders on the absurd.

Did this optimism of outlook, this hot desire to ferret out greatness where only mediocrity exists, this ambition to drag the obscure and inept into the glare of prominence, extend to all paint- ers, regardless of nationality, one might forgive the superlative eulogies heaped upon British art, and attribute them to that mellow spirit of senti- mental tolerance which sees good in everything. But, alas! such impartiality does not exist. It would seem that the moment the biographers of the Eritannica put foot on foreign ground, their spirit of generosity deserts them. And if space is any indication of importance, it must be noted that English painters are, in the editors' estima- tion, of considerably more importance than paint- ers from abroad.

Of William Etty, to whom three-fourths of a page is devoted, we are told that "in feeling and skill as a colorist he has few equals." The im- plication here that Etty, as a colorist, has never been surpassed scarcely needs refutation. It is

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unfortunate, however, that Mr. Etty is not with us at present to read this exorbitant testimony to his greatness, for it would astonish him, no doubt, as much as it would those other few unnamed painters who are regarded as his equals in color sensibilite. J. S. Cotman, we discover, was "a re- markable painter both in oil and water-color." This criticism is characteristic, for, even when there are no specific qualities to praise in an Eng- lish painter's work, we find this type of vague recommendation.

No points, though, it would seem, are over- looked. Regard the manner in which J. D. Hard- ing's questionable gifts are recorded. "Harding," you will find, "was noted for facility, sureness of hand, nicety of touch, and the various qualities which go to make up an elegant, highly-trained and accomplished sketcher from nature, and com- poser of picturesque landscape material; he was particularly skillful in the treatment of foliage." Turning from Mr. Harding, the "elegant" and "accomplished" depicter of foliage, to Birket Fos- ter, we find that his work "is memorable for its delicacy and minute finish, and for its daintiness and pleasantness of sentiment." Dainty and pleasant sentiment is not without weight with the art critics of this encyclopaedia. In one form or

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another it is mentioned very often in' connection with British painters.

Landseer offers an excellent example of the middle-class attitude which the Britannica takes toward art. To judge from the page-and-a-half biography of this indifferent portraitist of ani- mals one would imagine that Landseer was a great painter, for we are told that his Fzghting Dogs Getting Wind is "perfectly drawn, solidly and minutely finished, and carefully composed." Of what possible educational value is an art arti- cle which would thus criticise a Landseer pic- ture?

An English painter who, were we to accept the Encyclopaedia's valuation, combines the qualities of several great painters is Charles Holroyd. "In all his work," we learn, "Holroyd displays an im- pressive sincerity, with a fine sense of composition, and of style, allied to independent and modern thinking." Truly a giant! It would be diffi- cult to recall any other painter in history "all" of whose work displayed a "fine sense of composi- tion." Not even could this be said of Michel- angelo. But when it comes to composition, Arthur Melville apparently soars above his fellows. Be- sides, "several striking portraits in oil," he did a picture called The Return From the Crucifixion,

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which, so we are told, is a "powerful, colossal com- position." To have achieved only a "powerful" composition should have been a sufficiently re- markable feat for a painter of Mr. Melville's standing; for only of a very few masters in the world's history can it be said that their composi- tions were both powerful and colossal. El Greco, Giotto, Giorgione, Veronese, Titian, Michelangelo and Rubens rarely soared to such heights.

But Melville, it appears, had a contemporary who, if anything, was greater than he to-wit: W. Q. Orchardson, to whose glories nearly a page is devoted. "By the time he was twenty," says his biographer, "Orchardson had mastered the es- sentials of his art." In short, at twenty he had accomplished what few painters accomplished in a lifetime. A truly staggering feat ! We are not therefore surprised to learn that "as a portrait painter Orchardson must be placed in the first class." Does this not imply that he ranked with Titian, Velazquez, Rubens and Rembrandt*? What sort of an idea of the relative values in art will the uninformed person get from such loose and ill-considered rhetoric, especially when the critic goes on to say that Master Baby is "a mas- terpiece of design, color and broad execution"? There is much more eulogy of a similar careless variety, but enough has been quoted here to show

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that the world must entirely revise its opinions of art if the Encyclopedia Britannica's statements are to be accepted.

Even the pictures of Paul Wilson Steer are criticised favorably: "His figure subjects and landscapes show great originality and technical skill." And John Pet tie was "in his best days a colorist of a high order and a brilliant executant." George Reid, the Scottish artist, is accorded over half a column with detailed criticism and praise. Frederick Walker is given no less than an entire column which ends with a paragraph of fulsome eulogy. Even E. A. Waterlow painted land- scapes which were "admirable" and "handled with grace and distinction" more gaudy generaliza- tions. When the Encyclopaedia's critics can find no specific point to praise in the work of their coun- trymen, grace, distinction, elegance and sentiment are turned into aesthetic virtues.

Turning to Hogarth, we find no less than three and one-half pages devoted to him, more space than is given to Rubens's biography, and three times the space accorded Veronese! It was once thought that Hogarth was only an "ingenious humorist," but "time has reversed that unjust sentence." We then read that Hogarth's com- position leaves "little or nothing to be desired." If such were the case, he would unquestionably

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rank with Rubens, Michelangelo and Titian; for, if indeed his composition leaves little or nothing to be desired, he is as great as, or even greater than, the masters of all time. But even with this eulogy the Encyclopaedia's critic does not rest con- tent. As a humorist and a satirist upon canvas, "he has never been equalled." If we regard Hogarth as an "author" rather than artist, "his place is with the great masters of literature with the Thackerays and Fieldings, the Cervantes and Molieres." (Note that of these four "great mas- ters" two are English.)

Mastery in one form or another, if the Rritan- riica is to be believed, was common among Eng- lish painters. The pictures of Richard Wilson are "skilled and learned compositions ... the work of a painter who was thoroughly master of his materials." In this latter respect Mr. Wilson perhaps stands alone among the painters of the world; and yet, through some conspiracy of silence no doubt, the leading critics of other nations rarely mention him when speaking of those artists who thoroughly mastered their materials. In regard to Raeburn, the Encyclopaedia is less fulsome, de- spite the fact that over a page is allotted him. We are distinctly given to understand that he had his faults. Velazquez, however, constantly reminded Wilkie of Raeburn; yet, after all, Raeburn was

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not quite so great as Velazquez. This is frankly admitted.

It was left to Reynolds to equal if not to sur- pass Velazquez as well as Rubens and Rembrandt. In a two-page glorification of this English painter we come upon the following panegyric: "There can be no question of placing him by the side of the greatest Venetians or of the triumvirate of the seventeenth century, Rubens, Rembrandt, Velaz- quez." If by placing him beside these giants is meant that he in any wise approached their stature, there can be, and has been, outside of England, a very great question of putting him in such com- pany. In fact, his right to such a place has been very definitely denied him. But the unprejudiced opinion of the world matters not to the patriots who edited the Encyclopedia Britannica. That "supreme" English reference work goes on to say that in portraits, such as Mrs. Siddons as the Tragic Muse, Reynolds "holds the field. . . . No portrait painter has been more happy in his poses for single figures." Then, as if such enthusiasm were not enough, we are told that "nature had singled out Sir Joshua to endow him with certain gifts in which he has hardly an equal."

Nature, it seems, in her singling out process, was particularly partial to Englishmen, for among those other painters who just barely equalled

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Reynolds's transcendent genius was Gainsborough. Says the Britannica: "Gainsborough and Rey- nolds rank side by side. ... It is difficult to say which stands the higher of the two." Con- sequently hereafter we must place Gainsborough, too, along with Michelangelo, Rubens, Rem- brandt and Velazquez ! Such a complete revision of sesthetic judgment will, no doubt, be difficult at first, but, by living with the Encyclopedia Brit- annica and absorbing its British culture, we may in time be able to bracket Michelangelo, Rey- nolds, Rubens, Gainsborough, Rembrandt, Ho- garth and Velazquez without the slightest hesita- tion.

It is difficult to conceive how, in an encyclo- paedia with lofty educational pretences, extrav- agance of statement could attain so high a point as that reached in the biographies of Reynolds and Gainsborough. So obviously indefensible are these valuations that I would hesitate to accuse the Britannica 's editors of deliberate falsification that is, of purposely distorting sesthetic values for the benefit of English artists. Their total lack of discretion indicates an honest, if blind, be- lief in British aesthetic supremacy. But this fact does not lessen the danger of such judgments to the American public. As a nation we are ignor- ant of painting and therefore are apt to accept

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statements of this kind which have the impact of seeming authority behind them.

The same insular and extravagant point of view is discoverable in the article on Turner. To this painter nearly five pages are devoted a space out of all proportion to the biographies of the other painters of the world. Titian has only three and one-half pages; Rubens has only a little over three pages; and El Greco has less than two- thirds of a page ! Of course, it is not altogether fair to base a judgment on space alone; but such startling dis- crepancies are the rule and not the exception.

In the case of Turner the discrepancy is not only of space, however. In diction, as well, all relative values are thrown to the winds. In the criticism of Turner we find English patriotism at its high- water mark. We read that "the range of his powers was so vast that he covered the whole field of nature and united in his own person the classical and naturalistic schools." Even this pal- pable overstatement could be forgiven, since it has a basis of truth, if a little further we did not discover that Turner's Crossing the Brook in the London National Academy is "probably the most perfect landscape in the world." In this final and irrevocable judgment is manifest the supreme in- sular egotism which characterizes nearly all the art articles in the Encyclopedia Britannica. This

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criticism, to take merely one example, means that Crossing the Brook is more perfect than Rubens's Landscape with Chateau de Stein! But the En- cyclopaedia's summary of Turner's genius sur- passes in flamboyant chauvinism anything which I have yet seen in print. It is said that, despite any exception we may take to his pictures, "there will still remain a body of work which for ex- tent, variety, truth and artistic taste is like the British fleet among the navies of the world." Here patriotic fervor has entirely swallowed all restraint.

Over a page is devoted to Constable, in which we are informed that his "vivid tones and fresh color are grafted upon the formulae of Claude and Rubens." This type of criticism is not rare. One frequently finds second-rate English artists com- pared not unfavorably with the great artists of other nations; and it would seem that the English painters add a little touch of their own, the impu- tation being that they not seldom improve upon their models. Thus Constable adds "vivid tones and fresh colors" to Rubens's formula. Another instance of this kind is to be found in the case of Alfred Stevens, the British sculptor, not the Bel- gian painter. (The latter, by the way, though more important and better-known, receives less space than the Englishman.) The vigorous

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strength of his groups "recalls the style of Mi- chelangelo, but Stevens' s work throughout is orig- inal and has a character of its own." I do not deny that Stevens imitated Michelangelo, but, where English artists are concerned, these rela- tionships are indicated in deceptive phraseology. In the case of French artists, whose biographies are sometimes written by unbiased critics, the truth is not hidden in dictional suavities. Imitation is not made a virtue.

Let us now turn to Watts. Over two pages are accorded him, one page being devoted largely to eulogy, a passage of which reads : "It was the rare combination of supreme handicraft with a great imaginative intellect which secured to Watts his undisputed place in the public estimation of his day." Furthermore, we hear of "the grandeur and dignity of his style, the ease and purposeful- ness of his brushwork, the richness and harmoni- ousness of his coloring." But those "to whom his exceptional artistic attainment is a sealed book have gathered courage or consolation from the grave moral purpose and deep human sympathy of his teaching." Here we have a perfect exam- ple of the parochial moral uplift which permeates the Britannic ds art criticism. The great Presby- terian complex is found constantly in the judg- ments of this encyclopaedia.

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So important a consideration to the Britanniccfs critico-moralists is this puritan motif that the fact is actually set down that Millais was devoted to his family! One wonders how much influence this domestic devotion had on the critic who spends a page and a half to tell us of Millais, for not only is this space far in excess of Millais' im- portance, but the statement is made that he was "one of the greatest painters of his time," and that "he could paint what he saw with a force which has seldom been excelled." Unfortu- nately the few who excelled him are not men- tioned. Perhaps he stood second only to Turner, that super-dreadnought. Surely he was not ex- celled by Renoir, or Courbet, or Pissarro, or Monet, or Manet, or Cezanne; for these latter are given very little space (the greatest of them having no biography whatever in the Encyclo- paedia!); and there is no evidence to show that they are considered of more than minor im- portance.

Perhaps it was Rossetti, a fellow Pre-Raphael- ite, who excelled Millais in painting what he saw. Rossetti's The Song of Solomon, as regards bril- liance, finish and the splendor of its lighting, "occupies a great place in the highest grade of modern art of all the world." Even Holman Hunt, one of the lesser Pre-Raphaelites, is given

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over a full page,, and is spoken of in glowing terms. "Perhaps no painter of the nineteenth century," we read, "produced so great an im- pression by a few pictures" as did Hunt; and dur- ing the course of the eulogy the critic speaks of Hunt's "greatness." Can it be that the naif gentleman who wrote Hunt's biography has never heard of Courbet, or Manet, or of the Impression- ists, or Cezanne4? After so sweeping and un- reasoned a statement as the one concerning the great impression made by Hunt's pictures, such an extreme conclusion is almost inevitable. Or is this critic's patriotic vanity such that he considers an impression made in England as representative of the world*? Even to intimate that the impres- sion made by Hunt's pictures was comparable to that made by L' Enterrement a Ornans or Le Dejeuner sur VHerbe, or that the Pre-Raphaelites possessed even half the importance of Courbet and Manet, is to carry undeserved laudation to pre- posterous lengths.

Here as elsewhere, superlatives are used in such a way in describing unimportant English painters that no adequate adjectives are left for the truly great men of other nationality. It would be dif- ficult to find a better example of undeserving eulogy as applied to an inconsequent British painter than that furnished by Brangwyn, whose

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compositions, we are astonished to learn, have "a nobly impressive and universal character." Such a statement might justly sum up the greatness of a Michelangelo statue; but here it is attached to the works of a man who at best is no more than a capable and clever illustrator.

The foregoing examples by no means include all the instances of how English painters, as a re- sult of the liberal space allotted them and the lavish encomiums heaped upon them by the En- cyclop&dia Britannicds editors, are unduly ex- panded into great and important figures. A score of other names could be mentioned. From beginning to end, English art is emphasized and lauded until it is out of all proportion to the rest of the world.

Turn to the article on Painting and look at the sub-title, "Recent Schools." Under "British" you will fincl twelve columns, with inset headings. Under "French" you will find only seven columns, without insets. Practically all the ad- vances made in modern art have come out of France; and practically all important modern painters have been Frenchmen. England has contributed little or nothing to modern painting. And yet, recent British schools are given nearly twice the s^pace that is devoted to recent French schools! Again regard the article, Sculpture*

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Even a greater and more astonishing dispropor- tionment exists here. Modern British sculpture is given no less than thirteen and a half columns, while modern French sculpture, of vastly greater aesthetic importance, is given only seven and a half columns !

VI

NON-BRITISH PAINTING

IF the same kind of panegyrics which characterize the biographies of the British painters in the Encyclopedia Britannica were used in dealing with the painters of all nationalities, there could be made no charge of either unconscious or delib- erate injustice. But once we leave Great Brit- ain's shores, prodigal laudation ceases. As if worn out by the effort of proving that English- men are pre-eminent among the world's painters, the editors devote comparatively little space to those non-British artists who, we have always believed and been taught, were the truly signifi- cant men in painting. Therefore, if the Britan- nictfs implications are to be believed, England alone, among all modern countries, is the home of genius. And it would be difficult for one not well informed to escape the impression that not only Turner, but English painting in general, is 4 'like the British fleet among the navies of the world."

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A comparison, for instance, between English and French painters, as they are presented in this encyclopedia, would leave the neophyte with the conviction that France was considerably inferior in regard to graphic ability, as inferior, in fact if we may read the minds of the Britannica's editors as the French fleet is tq the British fleet. In its ignorant and un-English way the world for years has been laboring under the superstition that the glories of modern painting had been largely the property of France. But such a notion is now corrected.

For instance, we had always believed that Chardin was one of the greatest of still-life painters. We had thought him to be of exceed- ing importance, a man with tremendous influence, deserving of no little consideration. But when we turn to his biography in the Encyclopedia Britannica we are, to say the least, astonished at the extent of our over-valuation. He is dismissed with six lines ! And the only critical comment concerning him is: "He became famous for his still-life pictures and domestic interiors." And yet Thomas Stothard, an English painter who for twenty-five years was Chardin's contemporary, is given over a column; James Northcote, another English contemporary of Chardin's, is given half a column ; and many other British painters, whose

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names are little known outside of England, have long biographies and favorable criticisms.

Watteau, one of the greatest of French painters, has a biography of only a page and a quarter; Largilliere, half a column; Rigaud, less than half a column ; Lancret, a third of a column ; and Boucher has only fifteen lines a mere note with no criticism. (Jonathan Boucher, an English divine, whose name follows that of Boucher, is accorded three times the space!) La Tour and Nattier have half a column each. Greuze, another one of France's great eighteenth- century painters, is given only a column and a half with unfavorable comment. Greuze's bril- liant reputation seemed to have been due, "not to his requirements as a painter" but to the subjects of his pictures; and he is then adversely accused of possessing that very quality which in an Eng- lish painter, as we have seen, is a mark of supreme glory namely, "bourgeois morality." Half a column only is required to comment on Horace Vernet and to tell us that his most representative picture "begins and ends nowhere, and the com- position is all to pieces; but it has good qualities of faithful and exact representation."

Fragonard, another French painter whom we had always thought possessed of at least a minor

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greatness, is accorded no more than a column, less than half the space given to B. R. Hay don, the eighteenth-century English historical painter, and only one-third of the space devoted to David Wilkie, the Scotch painter. Fragonard's "scenes of love and voluptuousness," comments that art critic of the London Daily Mail^ who has been chosen to represent this French painter in the En- cyclopaedia, "are only made acceptable by the tender beauty of his color and the virtuosity of his facile brushwork." Alas ! that Fragonard did not possess the "grave moral purpose" of Watts! Had his work been less voluptuous he might have been given more than a fourth of the space de- voted to that moral Englishman, for surely Fragonard was the greater painter.

Gericault, one of the very important innovators of French realism, is given half a column, about an equal amount of space with such English painters as W. E. Frost, T. S. Cooper, Thomas Creswick, Francis Danby and David Scott; only about half the amount of space given to John Gil- bert, C. L. Eastlake, and William Mulready ; and only one-third of the space given to David Cox. One or two such disparities in space might be overlooked, but when to almost any kind of an English painter is imputed an importance equal

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to, if not greater than, truly significant painters from France, bias, whether conscious or uncon- scious, has been established.

Again regard Poussin. This artist, the most representative painter of his epoch and a man who marked a distinct step in the evolution of graphic art, is given less than half a page, about equal to the space devoted to W. P. Frith, J. W. Gordon, Samuel Cousins, John Crome, William Strang, and Thornhill; and only half the space given to Holman Hunt, and only one- third the space given to Millais ! There is almost no criti- cism of Poussin's art; merely a statement of the type of work he did; and of Gericault there is no criticism whatever. Herein lies another means by which, through implication, a greater relative significance is conferred on English art. Gen- erally British painters even minor ones are criticised favorably, from one standpoint or an- other; but only now and then is a Frenchman given specific complimentary criticism. And often a Frenchman is condemned for the very quality which is lauded in a British artist.

Of David it is written : "His style is severely academic, his color lacking in richness and warmth, his execution hard and uninteresting in its very perfection," and more in the same dero- gatory strain. Although this criticism may be

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strictly accurate, the same qualities in certain English painters of far less importance than David are made the basis for praise. The se- verely academic style in the case of Harding, for instance, becomes an "elegant, highly-trained" characteristic. And perfection of execution makes Birket Foster's work "memorable for its delicacy and minute finish," and becomes, in Paul Wilson Steer's pictures, "great technical skill."

Ingres, truly one of the giants of his day, is given little or no criticism and his biography draws only a little over half the space which is given to Watts (with his "grave, moral pur- pose"), and only a trifle more space than is given Millais, the Pre-Raphaelite who was "devoted to his family." In Guerin's short biography we read of his "strained and pompous dignity." Girodet's biography contains very adverse crit- icism: his style "harmonized ill" with his sub- jects, and his work was full of "incongruity" even to the point sometimes of being "ludicrous." Gros, exasperated by criticism, "sought refuge in the grosser pleasures of life." Flandrin also is tagged with a moral criticism.

Coming down to the more modern painters we find even less consideration given them by the Britannica's editors. Delacroix, who ushered in a new age of painting and brought compositi

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back to art after a period of stagnation and quiescence, is nailed to France as follows: "As a colorist and a romantic painter he now ranks among the greatest of French artists." Certainly not among the greatest English painters, for Con- stable is given more space than Delacroix; and Turner, the other precursor of the new era, is "like the British fleet among the navies of the world."

Courbet, the father of modern painting and the artist who revolutionized aesthetics, is given half a column, equal space with those contemporaries of his from across the Channel, Francis Grant, Thomas Creswick and George Harvey. Perhaps this neglect of the great Frenchman is explained by the following early- Victorian complaint: "Sometimes, it must be owned, his realism is rather coarse and brutal." And we learn that "he died of a disease of the liver aggravated by intemperance." Courbet, unable to benefit by the pious and elegant esthetique of the Encyclo- pedia Britannica, was never deeply impressed by the artistic value of "daintiness and pleasantness of sentiment," and as a result, perhaps, he is not held in as high esteem as is Birket Foster, who possessed those delicate and pleasing qualities.

The palpable, insular injustice dealt Courbet in point of space finds another victim in Daumier whose biography is almost as brief as that of Cour-

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bet. Most of it, however, is devoted to Dau- mier's caricature. Although this type of work was but a phase of his development, the article says that, despite his caricatures, "he found time for flight in the higher sphere of painting." Not only does this create a false impression of Dau- mier's tremendous importance to modern paint- ing, but it gives the erroneous idea that his principal metier was caricature. The entire criticism of his truly great work is summed up in the sentence: "As a painter, Daumier, one of the pioneers of naturalism, was before his time." Likewise, the half-page biography of Manet is, from the standpoint of space, inadequate, and from the critical standpoint, incompetent. To say that he is "regarded as the most important master of Impressionism" is a false statement. Manet, strictly speaking, was not an Impressionist at all ; and the high place that he holds in modern art is not even touched upon.

Such biographies as the foregoing are suf- ficiently inept to disqualify the Encyclopaedia as a source for accurate aesthetic information; but when Renoir, who is indeed recognized as the great master of Impressionism, is dismissed with one-fifth of a page, the height of injustice has been reached. Renoir, even in academic circles, is admittedly one of the great painters of all time.

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Not only did he sum up the Impressionists, close up an experimental cycle, and introduce com- positional form into the realistic painting of his day, but by his colossal vision and technical mastery he placed himself in the very front rank of all modern painters, if not of ancient painters as well. Yet he is accorded just twenty-seven lines and dismissed with this remark: 'Though he is perhaps the most unequal of the great Im- pressionists, his finest works rank among the masterpieces of the modern French school." Critical incompetency could scarcely go further. We can only excuse such inadequacy and ignor- ance on the ground that the Encyclopaedia's Eng- lish critic has seen none of Renoir's greatest work; and color is lent this theory when we note that in the given list of his paintings no mention is made of his truly masterful canvases.

Turning to the other lesser moderns in French painting but those who surpass the contemporan- eous British painters who are given liberal biog- raphies, we find them very decidedly neglected as to both space and comment. Such painters as Cazin, Harpignies, Ziem, Cormon, Besnard, Cot- tet and Bonnot are dismissed with brief mention, whereas sometimes twice and three times the at- tention is paid to English painters like Alfred East, Harry Furniss (a caricaturist and illustra-

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tor), Francis Lathrop, E. J. Poynter, and W. B. Richmond. Even Meissonier and Puvis de Cha- vannes draw only three-fourths of a page. Pissarro and Monet, surely important painters in the modern evolution, are given short shrift. A few brief facts concerning Pissarro extend to twenty lines ; and Monet gets a quarter of a page without any criticism save that "he became a plein air painter." Examples of this kind of incompe- tent and insufficient comment could be multiplied. The most astonishing omission, however, in the entire art division of the Encyclopedia Britannica is that of Cezanne. Here is a painter who, whether one appreciates his work or not, has ad- mittedly had more influence than any man of modern times. Not only in France has his tre- mendous power been felt, but in practically every other civilized country. Yet the name of this great Frenchman is not even given biographical mention in the great English Encyclopaedia with its twenty-nine volumes, its 30,000 pages, its 500,000 references, and its 44,000,000 words. Deliberately to omit Cezanne's biography, in view of his importance and (in the opinion of many) his genuine greatness, is an act of almost unbe- lievable narrow-mindedness. To omit his biog- raphy unconsciously is an act of almost unbeliev- able ignorance. Especially is this true when we

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find biographies of such British contemporaries of Cezanne as Edward John Gregory, James Guthrie, Luke Fildes, H. W. B. Davis, John Buxton Knight, George Reid, and J. W. Water- house. Nor can the editors offer the excuse that Cezanne was not known when the Encyclopaedia was compiled. Not only was he known, but books and criticisms had appeared on him in more than one language, and his greatness had been recognized. True, he had not reached England; but is it not the duty of the editor of an "inter- national" encyclopaedia to be aware of what is going on outside of his own narrow prov- ince?

Any encyclopaedia, no matter what the na- tionality, prejudices or tastes of its editors, which omits Cezanne has forfeited its claim to universal educational value. But when in addition there is no biographical mention of such conspicuous French painters as Maurice Denis, Vollatton, Lu- cien Simon, Vuillard, Louis Le Grand, Toulouse- Lautrec, Steinlen, Jean Paul Laurens, Redon, Rene Menard, Gauguin, and Carriere, although a score of lesser painters of British birth are in- cluded, petty national prejudice, whether through conscious intent or lack of information, has been carried to an extreme; and the editors of such a biased work have something to answer for to those

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readers who are not English, and who do not therefore believe that British middle-class culture should be exaggerated and glorified at the expense of the genuine intellectual culture of other nations.

Modern German painting fares even worse than French painting in the pages of the Britan- nica; and while it does not hold the high place that French painting does, it is certainly deserv- ing of far more liberal treatment than that which is accorded it. The comparatively few biog- raphies of German artists are inadequate; but it is not in them that we find the greatest neglect of German achievements in this branch of aesthetics : it is in the long list of conspicuous painters who are omitted entirely. The Britannica's meagre information on German art is particularly regret- table from the standpoint of American readers; for the subject is little known in this country, and as a nation we are woefully ignorant of the wealth of nineteenth-century German painting. The causes for this ignorance need not be gone into here. Suffice it to say that the Encyclopedia Britannica, far from fulfilling its function as a truly educational work, is calculated to perpetuate and cement our lack of knowledge in this field. It would appear that England also is unac- quainted with the merits of German graphic ex-

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pression; for the lapses in the Britannica would seem even too great to be accounted for on the grounds of British chauvinism. And they are too obvious to have been deliberate.

Among the important German painters of modern times who have failed to be given biog- raphies are Wilhelm Leibl, the greatest German painter since Holbein; Charles Schuch, one of Germany's foremost still-life artists; Triibner, who ranks directly in line with Leibl ; Karl Spitz- weg, the forerunner and classic exponent of Ger- man genre painting as well as the leading artist in that field; Heinrich von Ziigel, one of the fore- most animal painters of modern times; and Lud- wig Knaus who, though inferior, is a painter of world-wide fame. Furthermore, there are no biographies of Franz Kruger, Miiller, Von Marees, Habermann, and Louis Corinth. When we recall the extensive list of inferior British painters who are not only given biographies but praised, we wonder on just what grounds the Britannica was advertised and sold as an "inter- national dictionary of biography."

It might be well to note here that Van Gogh, the great Hollander, does not appear once in the entire Encyclopedia : there is not so much as a passing reference to him ! Nor has Zorn or Hod- ler a biography. And Sorolla draws just twenty

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lines in his biography, and Zuloaga less than half a column.

Despite, however, the curtailed and inferior consideration given Continental art, it does not suffer from prejudicial neglect nearly so much as does American art. This is not wholly surprising in view of the contempt in which England holds the cultural achievements of this country a con- tempt which is constantly being encountered in British critical journals. But in the case of an encyclopaedia whose stated aim is to review im- partially the world's activities, this contempt should be suppressed temporarily at least, espe- cially as it is from America that the Encyclopedia Britannica is reaping its monetary harvest. There is, though, no indication that England's contemptuous attitude toward our art has even been diminished. Our artists are either disposed of with cursory mention or ignored completely; and whenever it is possible for England to claim any credit for the accomplishments of our artists, the opportunity is immediately grasped.

It is true, of course, that the United States does not rank aesthetically with certain of the older na- tions of Europe, but, considering America's youth, she has contributed many important names to the history of painting, and among her artists there are many who greatly surpass the inconsequent

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English academicians who are accorded generous treatment.

The editors of the Encyclopaedia may contend that the work was compiled for England and that therefore they were justified in placing emphasis on a horde of obscure English painters and in neg- lecting significant French and German artists. But they can offer no such excuse in regard to America. The recent Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica was printed with the very definite purpose of selling in the United States; and the fact that they have sold many thousand copies of it here precludes any reason why American artists should be neglected or dis- posed of in a brief and perfunctory fashion. An American desiring adequate information concern- ing the painters or sculptors of his own country will seek through the Encyclopedia Britannica in vain. If he is entirely ignorant of aesthetic condi- tions in America and depends on the Encyclo- paedia for his knowledge, he will be led to inac- curate conclusions. The ideas of relative values established in his mind will be the reverse of the truth, for he cannot fail but be affected by the meagre and indifferent biographies of his native painters, as compared with the lengthy and metic- ulous concern with which British painters are regarded.

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And yet this is the encyclopaedia which has been foisted upon the American people by means of a P. T. Barnum advertising campaign almost un- precedented in book history. And this also is the encyclopaedia which, in that campaign, called itself "a history of all nations, an international dictionary of biography, an exhaustive gazetteer of the world, a hand-book to all the arts"; and which announced that "every artist or sculptor of note of any period, and of any land is the sub- ject of an interesting biography." This last statement is true only in the case of Great Britain. It is, as we have seen, not true of France or Ger- many; and especially is it not true of America. Not only are many American artists and sculptors of note omitted entirely, but many of those who have been awarded mention are the victims of English insular prejudice.

Looking up Benjamin West, who, by historians and critics has always been regarded as an Amer- ican artist, we find him designated as an "Eng- lish" painter. The designation is indeed aston- ishing, since not only does the world know him as an American, but West himself thought that he was an American. Perhaps the Encyclopedia Britannica, by some obscure process of logic, con- siders nationality from the standpoint of one's sentimental adoption. This being the case,

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Richard Le Gallienne would be an "American" poet. But when we turn to Le Gallienne's biog- raphy we discover that, after all, he is "English." Apparently the rule does not work with English- men. It is true that West went to London and lived there; but he was born in the United States, gained a reputation for painting here, and did not go to England until he was twenty-five. It is noteworthy that West, the "English" painter, is accorded considerable space.

Whistler, who also chose England in preference to America, is given nearly a page and a half with not unfavorable criticism. We cannot refrain from wondering what would have been Whistler's fate at the hands of the Encyclopaedia's editors had he remained in his native country. Sargent, surely a painter of considerable importance and one who is regarded in many enlightened quarters as a great artist, is dismissed with less than half a column! Even this comparatively long biogra- phy for an American painter may be accounted for by the following comment: "Though of the French school, and American by birth, it is as a British artist that he won fame." Again, Abbey receives high praise and quite a long biography, comparatively speaking. Once more we wonder if this painter's adoption of England as his home does not account for his liberal treatment.

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Albert F. Bellows, too, gets fourteen lines, in which it is noted that "he painted much in Eng- land."

Compare the following record with the amounts of space accorded British second-rate painters: William Chase, sixteen lines; Vedder, a third of a column; de Forest Brush, fifteen lines; T. W. Dewing, twelve lines; A. H. Wyant, ten lines; A. P. Ryder, eight lines; Tryon, fifteen lines; John W. Alexander, sixteen lines; Gari Melchers, eighteen lines; Childe Hassam, fifteen lines; Blashfield, ten lines; J. Francis Murphy, fifteen lines ; Blakelock, eight lines. Among these names are painters of a high and important order painters who stand in the foremost rank of Amer- ican art, and who unquestionably are greater than a score of English painters who receive very special critical biographies, some of which extend over columns. And yet apparently for no other discernible reason than that they are Americans they are given the briefest mention with no spe- cific criticism. Only the barest biographical de- tails are set down.

But if many of the American painters who have made our art history are dismissed peremptorily in biographies which, I assure you, are not "in- teresting," and which obviously are far from ade- quate or even fair when compared with the con-

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sideration given lesser English painters, what answer have the editors of the Britannica to offer their American customers when many of our note- worthy and important artists are omitted alto- gether? On what grounds is a biography of J. Alden Weir omitted entirely? For what reason does the name of Robert Henri not appear? Henri is one of the very important figures in modern American painting.

Furthermore, inspection reveals the fact that among those American "painters of note" who, so far as biographical mention in the Encyclopedia Britannica is concerned, do not exist, are Mary Cassatt, George Bellows, Twachtman, C. W. Hawthorne, Glackens, Jerome Meyers, George Luks, Sergeant Kendall, Paul Dougherty, Allen Talcott, Thomas Doughty, Richard Miller and Charles L. Elliott.

I could add more American painters to the list of those who are omitted and who are of equal importance with certain British painters who are included; but enough have been mentioned to prove the gross inadequacy of the Encyclopedia Britannica as an educational record of American art.

Outside of certain glaring omissions, what we read in the Encyclopaedia concerning the painters of France and Germany may be fair, from a

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purely impartial standard, if taken alone : in some instances, I believe, judicial critics of these other nations have performed the service. But when these unprejudiced accounts are interspersed with the patriotic and enthusiastic glorifications of British art, the only conclusion which the unin- formed man can draw from the combination is that the chief beauties of modern painting have sprung from England a conclusion which illy accords both with the facts and with the judg- ment of the world's impartial critics. But in the case of American art, not even the strictly impar- tial treatment occasionally accorded French and German painters is to be found, with the result that, for the most part, our art suffers more than that of any other nation when compared, in the pages of the Britannica^ with British art.

VII

MUSIC

THERE is one field of culture namely, music in which Great Britain has played so small and negligible a part that it would seem impossible, even for the passionately patriotic editors of the Encyclopedia Britannica, to find any basis on which an impressive monument to England could be erected. Great Britain, admittedly, possesses but slight musical significance when compared with other nations. The organisms of her en- vironment, the temper of her intellect, her very intellectual fibre, are opposed to the creation of musical composition.

This art in England, save during the Eliz- abethan era, has been largely a by-product. No great musical genius has come out of Great Brit- ain; and in modern times she has not produced even a great second-rate composer. So evident is England's deficiency in this field, that any one insisting upon it runs the risk of being set down a platitudinarian. Even British critics of the bet- ter class have not been backward in admitting the

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musical poverty of their nation; and many good histories of music have come out of England: indeed, one of the very best encyclopedias on this subject was written by Sir George Grove.

To attempt to place England on an equal foot- ing with other nations in the realm of music is to alter obvious facts. Name all the truly great composers since 1700, and not one of them will be an Englishman. In fact, it is possible to write an extensive history of music from that date to the present time without once referring to Great Britain. England, as the, world knows, is not a musical nation. Her temperament is not suited to subtle complexities of plastic harmonic expres- sion. Her modern composers are without im- portance; and for every one of her foremost musical creators there can be named a dozen from other nations who are equally inspired, and yet who hold no place in the world's musical evolu- tion because of contemporary fellow-countrymen who overshadow them.

As I have said, it would seem impossible, even for so narrowly provincial and chauvinistic a work as the Encyclopedia Britannica, to find any plausible basis for the glorification of English musical genius. But where others fail to achieve the impossible, the Eritannica succeeds. In the present instance, however, the task has been dif-

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ficult, for there is a certain limit to the undeserved praise which even a blatant partisan can confer on English composers; and there is such a paucity of conspicuous names in the British musical field that an encyclopaedia editor finds it difficult to gather enough of them together to make an ex- tensive patriotic showing. He can, however, omit or neglect truly significant names of other nations while giving undue prominence to second- and third-rate English composers.

And this is exactly the method followed by the editors of the Britannica. But the disproportion- ments are so obvious, the omissions so glaring, and the biographies and articles so distorted, both as to space and comment, that almost any one with a knowledge of music will be immediately struck by their absurdity and injustice. Modern mu- sical culture, as set forth in this encyclopaedia, is more biased than any other branch of culture. In this field the limits of the Britannica }s insularity would seem to have been reached.

I have yet to see even a short history of modern music which is not more informative and com- plete, and from which a far better idea of musical evolution could not be gained. And I know of no recent book of composers, no matter how brief, which does not give more comprehensive informa- tion concerning musical writers than does that

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"supreme book of knowledge," the Encyclopedia Eritannica. So deficient is it in its data, and so many great and significant modern composers are denied biographical mention in it, that one is led to the conclusion that little or no effort was made to bring it up-to-date.

It would be impossible in this short chapter to set down anywhere near all the inadequacies, omissions and disproportions which inform the Eritannica1 s treatment of music. Therefore I shall confine myself largely to modern music, since this subject is of foremost, vital concern at present ; and I shall merely indicate the more glar- ing instances of incompleteness and neglect. Furthermore, I shall make only enough com- parisons between the way in which British music is treated and the way in which the music of other nations is treated, to indicate the partisanship which underlies the outlook of this self-styled "in- ternational" and "universal" reference work.

Let us first regard the general article Music. In that division of the article entitled, Recent Music that is, music during the last sixty or seventy-five years we find the following aston- ishing division of space: recent German music re- ceives just eleven lines; recent French music, thirty-eight lines, or less than half a column; re- cent Italian music, nineteen lines; recent Russian

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music, thirteen lines; and recent British music, nearly four columns, or two full pages!

Regard these figures a moment. That period of German musical composition which embraced such men as Humperdinck, Richard Strauss, Karl Goldmark, Hugo Wolf, Gustav Mahler, Bruch, Reinecke, and von Billow, is allotted only eleven lines, and only two of the above names are even mentioned ! And yet modern British music, which is of vastly lesser importance, is given thirty -five times as much space as modern German music, and ten times as much space as modern French music! In these figures we have an ex- ample of prejudice and discrimination which it would be hard to match in any other book or music in existence. It is unnecessary to criticise such bias: the figures themselves are more elo- quently condemning than any comment could possibly be. And it is to this article on recent music, with its almost unbelievable distortions of relative importance, that thousands of Americans will apply for information. Furthermore, in the article Opera there is no discussion of modern realistic developments, and the names of Puccini and Charpentier are not even included !

In the biographies of English composers is to be encountered the same sort of prejudice and exag- geration. Sterndale Bennett, the inferior British

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Mendelssohn, is given nearly a column, -md in the criticism of him we read: "The principal charm of Bennett's compositions (not to mention his ab- solute mastery of the musical form) consists in the tenderness of their conception, rising oc- casionally to sweetest musical intensity." Turn- ing from Bennett, the absolute master of form, to William Thomas Best, the English organist, we find nearly a half-column biography of fulsome praise, in which Best is written down as an "all- round musician." Henry Bishop receives two- thirds of a column. "His melodies are clear, flowing, appropriate and often charming; and his harmony is always pure, simple and sweet."

Alfred Cellier is accorded nearly half a column, in which we are told that his music was "invar- iably distinguished by elegance and refinement." Frederick Co wen also wrote music which was "re- fined"; and in his three-fourths-of-a-column biography it is stated that "he succeeds wonder- fully in finding graceful expression for the poet- ical idea." John Field infused "elegance" into his music. His biography is over half a column in length, and we learn that his nocturnes "remain all but unrivaled for their tenderness and dream- iness of conception, combined with a continuous flow of beautiful melody."

Edward Elgar receives no less than two-thirds

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of a column, in which are such phrases as "fine work," "important compositions," and "stirring melody." Furthermore, his first orchestral sym- phony was "a work of marked power and beauty, developing the symphonic form with the original- ity of a real master of his art." The world out- side of England will be somewhat astonished to know that Elgar took part in the development of the symphonic form and that he was a real master of music. John Hatton, in a two-thirds-of-a- column biography, is praised, but not without reservation. He might, says the article, have gained a place of higher distinction among Eng- lish composers "had it not been for his irresistible animal spirits and a want of artistic reverence." He was, no doubt, without the "elegance" and "refinement" which seem to characterize so many English composers.

But Charles Parry evidently had no shortcom- ings to detract from his colossal and heaven- kissing genius. He is given a biography of nearly a column, and it is packed with praise. In some of his compositions to sacred words "are revealed the highest qualities of music." He has "skill in piling up climax after climax, and com- mand of every choral resource." But this is not all. In some of his works "he shows himself master of the orchestra"; and his "exquisite"

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chamber music and part-songs "maintain the high standard of his greater works." Not even here does his genius expire. Agamemnon "is among the most impressive compositions of the kind." Furthermore, The Frogs is a "striking example of humor in music." All this would seem to be enough glory for any man, but Parry has not only piled Pel ion on Ossa but has scaled Olympus. Outside his creative music, "his work for music was of the greatest importance" ; his Art of Music is a "splendid monument of musical literature." . . . There is even more of this kind of eulogy too much of it to quote here; but, once you read it, you cannot help feeling that the famous tri- umvirate, Brahms, Bach and Beethoven, has now become the quartet, Brahms, Bach, Beethoven, and Parry.

The vein of William Shield's melody "was conceived in the purest and most delicate taste"; and his biography is half a column in length. Goring Thomas is accorded two-thirds of a column; and it is stated that not only does his music reveal "a great talent for dramatic com- position and a real gift of refined and beautiful melody," but that he was "personally the most admirable of men." Michael Costa, on the other hand, was evidently not personally admirable, for in his half -column biography we read: "He

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was the great conductor of his day, but both his musical and his human sympathies were some- what limited." (Costa was a Spaniard by birth.) Samuel Wesley, Jr.'s, anthems are "masterly in design, fine in inspiration and expression, and noble in character." His biography runs to half a column. Even Wesley, Sr., has a third of a column biography.

The most amazing biography from the stand- point of length, however, is that of Sir Arthur Sullivan. It runs to three and a third columns (being much longer than Haydn's!) and is full of high praise of a narrowly provincial character. Thomas Attwood receives a half -column biog- raphy; Balfe, the composer of The Bohemian Girl, receives nearly a column; Julius Benedict, two-thirds of a column; William Jackson, nearly two-thirds of a column; Mackenzie, over three- fourths of a column; John Stainer, two-thirds of a column; Charles Stanford, nearly a column; Macfarren, over half a column; Henry Hugo Pierson, half a column; John Hullah, consider- ably over half a column; William Crotch, over half a column; Joseph Barnby, nearly half a column; John Braham, two-thirds of a column. And many others of no greater importance receive liberal biographies for instance, Frederic Clay, John Barnett, George Elvey, John Goss, Mac-

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Cunn, James Turk, and William Vincent Wal- lace.

Bearing all this in mind, we will now glance at the biographies of modern German composers in the Encyclopedia Britannic a. Johann Strauss, perhaps the greatest of all waltz writers, is given only half a column, less space than that given to John Field or William Crotch; and the only crit- icism of his music is contained in the sentence: "In Paris he associated himself with Musard, whose quadrilles became not much less popular than his own waltzes; but his greatest successes were achieved in London." Hummel, the most brilliant virtuoso of his day, whose concertos and masses are still popular, receives less space than John Hatton.

But what of Brahms, one of the three great composers of the world? Incredible as it may seem, he is given a biography even shorter than that of Sir Arthur Sullivan ! And Robert Franz, perhaps the greatest lyrical writer since Schubert, receives considerably less space than William Jackson. Richard Strauss is allotted only a column and two-thirds, about equal space with Charles Burney, the musical historian, and Wil- liam Byrd; and in it we are given little idea of his greatness. In fact, the critic definitely says that it remains to be seen for what Strauss's name will

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live! When one thinks of the tremendous in- fluence which Strauss has had, and of the way in which he has altered the musical conceptions of the world, one can only wonder, astounded, why, in an encyclopaedia as lengthy as the Britannica^ he should be dismissed with so inadequate and inept a biography.

After such injustice in the case of Strauss, it does not astonish one to find that Max Bruch, one of the most noteworthy figures in modern German music, and Reinecke, an important composer and long a professor at the Leipsic Conservatory, should receive only thirty lines each. But the neglect of Strauss hardly prepared us for the brief and incomplete record which passes for Humper- dinck's biography a biography shorter than that of Cramer, William Hawes, Henry Lazarus, the English clarinettist, and Henry Smart!

Mendelssohn, the great English idol, receives a biography out of all proportion to his importance a biography twice as long as that of Brahms, and considerably longer than either Schumann's or Schubert's ! And it is full of effulgent praise and more than intimates that Mendelssohn's counterpoint was like Bach's, that his sonata-form resembled Beethoven's, and that he invented a new style no less original than Schubert's ! Re- membering the parochial criterion by which the

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Encyclopaedia's editors judge art, we may per- haps account for this amazing partiality to Men- delssohn by the following ludicrous quotation from his biography : "His earnestness as a Chris- tian needs no stronger testimony than that af- forded by his own delineation of the character of St. Paul; but it is not too much to say that his heart and life were pure as those of a little child."

Although Hugo Wolfs biography is a column and a half in length, Konradin Kreutzer gets only eighteen lines; Nicolai, who wrote The Merry Wives of Windsor, only ten lines; Suppe, only fifteen; Nessler, only twelve; Franz Abt, only ten; Henselt, only twenty-six; Heller, only twenty-two; Lortzing, only twenty; and Thai- berg, only twenty-eight. In order to realize how much prejudice, either conscious or unconscious, entered into these biographies, compare the amounts of space with those given to the English composers above mentioned. Even Raff receives a shorter biography than Mackenzie; and von Billow's and Goldmark's biographies are briefer than Cowen's.

But where the Encyclopedia Britannica shows its utter inadequacy as a guide to modern music is in the long list of omission. For instance, there is no biography of Marschner, whose Hans Heil- ing still survives in Germany; of Friedrich Sil-

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cher, who wrote most of the famous German "folk-songs"; of Gustav Mahler, one of the truly important symphonists of modern times; of the Scharwenka brothers; or of Georg Alfred Schu- mann— all sufficiently important to have a place in an encyclopaedia like the Britannica.

But what is even more inexcusable Max Reger, one of the most famous German composers of the day, has no biography. Nor has Eugen d' Albert, renowned for both his chamber music and operas. (D' Albert repudiated his English antecedents and settled in Germany.) Kreisler also is omitted, although Kubelik, five years Kreisler's junior, draws a biography. In view of the obvious contempt which the Encyclopedia Britannica has for America, it may be noted in this connection that Kreisler's first great success was achieved in America, whereas Kubelik made his success in London before coming to this coun- try.

Among the German and Austrian composers who are without biographical mention in the Britannica^ are several of the most significant musical creators of modern times men who are world figures and whose music is known on every concert stage in the civilized world. On what possible grounds are Mahler, Reger and Eugen d' Albert denied biographies in an encyclopaedia

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which dares advertise itself as a "complete library of knowledge" and as an "international dictionary of biography"? And how is it pos- sible for one to get any adequate idea of the wealth or importance of modern German music from so biased and incomplete a source? Would the Encyclopaedia's editors dare state that such a subject would not appeal to "intelligent" per- sons'? And how will the Encyclopaedia's editors explain away the omission of Hanslick, the most influential musical critic that ever lived, when liberal biographies are given to several English critics?

Despite the incomplete and unjust treatment accorded German and Austrian music in the Encyclopedia Britannica, modern French music receives scarcely better consideration. Chopin is given space only equal to that of Purcell. Ber- lioz and Gounod, who are allotted longer biog- raphies than any other modern French com- posers, receive, nevertheless, considerably less space than Sir Arthur Sullivan. Saint-Saens and Debussy receive less than half the space given to Sullivan, while Auber and Cesar Franck are given only about equal space with Samuel Arnold, Balfe, Sterndale Bennett, and Charles Stanford! Massenet has less space than William Thomas Best or Joseph Barnby, and three-fourths of it is

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taken up with a list of his works. The remainder of the biographies are proportionately brief. There is not one of them of such length that you cannot find several longer biographies of much less important English composers.

Furthermore, one finds unexplainable errors and omissions in them. For instance, although Ernest Reyer died January 15, 1909, there is no mention of it in his biography; but there is, how- ever, the statement that his Quarante Ans de Musique "was published in 1909." This care- less oversight in not noting Reyer's death while at the same time recording a still later biographi- cal fact is without any excuse, especially as the death of Dudley Buck, who died much later than Reyer, is included. Furthermore, the biography omits stating that Reyer became Inspector Gen- eral of the Paris Conservatoire in 1908. Nor is his full name given, nor the fact recorded that his correct name was Rey.

Again, although Theodore Dubois relinquished his Directorship of the Conservatory in 190^, his biography in the Britannica merely mentions that he began his Directorship in 1896, showing that apparently no effort was made to complete the material. Still again, although Faure was made Director of the Conservatory in 1905, the fact is not set down in his biography. And once more,

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although d'Indy visited America in 1905 and conducted the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the fact is omitted from his biography. . . . These are only a few of the many indications to be found throughout the Britannica that this encyclopedia is untrustworthy and that its editors have not, as they claim, taken pains to bring it up to date.

Among the important French composers who should have biographies, but who are omitted from the Encyclopedia Britannica^ are Guilmant, perhaps the greatest modern organist and an im- portant classico-modern composer; Charpentier, who with Puccini, stands at the head of the mod- ern realistic opera, and whose Louise is to-day in every standard operatic repertoire ; and Ravel, the elaborate harmonist of the moderns.

Even greater inadequacy an inadequacy which could not be reconciled with an encyclo- paedia one-fourth the size of the Britannica exists in the treatment of modern Russian music. So brief, so inept, so negligent is the material on this subject that, as a reference book, the Britan- nica is practically worthless. The most char- itable way of explaining this woeful deficiency is to attribute it to wanton carelessness. Anton Rubinstein, for instance, is given a biography about equal with Balfe and Charles Stanford; while his brother Nikolaus, one of the greatest

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pianists and music teachers of his day, and the founder of the Conservatorium of Music at Mos- cow, has no biography whatever! Glinka, one of the greatest of Russian composers and the founder of a new school of music, is dismissed with a biography no longer than those of John Braham, the English singer, John Hatton, the Liverpool genius with the "irresistible animal spirits," and William Jackson; and shorter than that of Charles Dibdin, the British song-writer!

Tschaikowsky receives less than two columns, a little over half the space given to Sullivan. The criticism of his work is brief and inadequate, and in it there is no mention of his liberal use of folk-songs which form the basis of so many of his important compositions, such as the second movement of his Fourth and the first movement of his First Symphonies. Borodin, another of the important musical leaders of modern Russia, has a biography which is no longer than that of Frederic Clay, the English light-opera writer and whist expert; and which is considerably shorter than the biography of Alfred Cellier. Balakirev, the leader of the "New Russian" school, has even a shorter biography, shorter in fact than the biography of Henry Hugo Pierson, the weak English oratorio writer.

The biography of Moussorgsky a composer

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whose importance needs no indication here is only fifteen lines in length, shorter even than Wil- liam Hawes's, Henry Lazarus's, George Elvey's, or Henry Smart's! And yet Moussorgsky was "one of the finest creative composers in the ranks of the modern Russian school." Rimsky-Korsa- kov, another of the famous modern Russians, whose work has long been familiar both in Eng- land and America, draws less space than Michael Costa, the English conductor of Spanish origin, or than Joseph Barnby, the English composer- conductor of Sweet and Low fame.

Glazunov is given a biography only equal in length to that of John Goss, the unimportant English writer of church music. And although the biography tells us that he became Professor of the St. Petersburg Conservatory in 1900, it fails to mention that he was made Director in 1908 a bit of inexcusable carelessness which, though of no great importance, reveals the slip-shod in- completeness of the Britannica's Eleventh Edi- tion. Furthermore, many important works of Glazunov are not noted at all.

Here ends the Encyclopaedia's record of modern Russian composers! Cesar Cui, one of the very important modern Russians, has no biography whatever in this great English cultural work, al- though we find liberal accounts of such British

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composers as Turle, Walmisley, Potter, Richards (whose one bid to fame is having written God Bless the Prince of Wales) and George Alexander Lee, the song-writer whose great popular success was Come Where the Aspens Quiver. Nor will you find any biographical information of Arensky, another of the leading Russian composers of the new school ; nor of Taneiev or Grechaninov both of whom have acquired national and international fame. Even Scriabine, a significant Russian com- poser who has exploited new theories of scales and harmonies of far-reaching influence, is not con- sidered of sufficient importance to be given a place (along with insignificant Englishmen like Lacy and Smart) in the Encyclopedia Britannica.

The most astonishing omission, however, is that of Rachmaninov. Next to omitting Cesar Cui, the complete ignoring of so important and uni- versally accepted a composer as Rachmaninov, whose symphonic poem, The Island of the Dead, is one of the greatest Russian works since Tschai- kowsky, is the most indefensible of all. On what possible grounds can the Encyclopedia Britannica defend its extravagant claims to completeness when the name of so significant and well-known a composer as Rachmaninov does not appear in the entire twenty-nine volumes?

In the list of the important modern Italian

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musicians included in the Britannica one will seek in vain for information of Busoni, who has not only written much fine instrumental music, but who is held by many to be the greatest living vir- tuoso of the piano; or of Wolf-Ferrari, one of the important leaders of the new Italian school. And though Tosti, whose name is also omitted, is of slight significance, he is of far greater popular importance than several English song-writers who are accorded biographies.

Even Puccini, who has revolutionized the mod- ern opera and who stands at the head of living operatic composers, is given only eleven lines of biography, less space than is given to George Alex- ander Lee or John Barnett, and only equal space with Lacy, the Irish actor with musical inclina- tions, and Walmisley, the anthem writer and organist at Trinity College. It is needless to say that no biography of eleven lines, even if written in shorthand, would be adequate as a source of in- formation for such a composer as Puccini. The fact that he visited America in 1907 is not even mentioned, and although at that time he selected his theme for The Girl of the Golden West and began work on it in 1908, you will have to go to some other work more "supreme" than the En- cyclopedia Britannica for this knowledge.

Leoncavallo's biography is of the same brevity

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as Puccini's; and the last work of his that is men- tioned is dated 1904. His opera, Songe d'Une Nuit d'Ete, his symphonic poem, Serafita, and his ballet, La Vita d'Una Marionetta though all completed before 1908 are not recorded in this revised and up-to-date library of culture. Mas- cagni, apparently, is something of a favorite with the editors of the Britannica, for his biography runs to twenty-three lines, nearly as long as that of the English operatic composer, William Vin- cent Wallace, and of Alfred Cellier, the infra- Sbllivan. But even with this great partiality shown him there is no record of his return from America to Italy in 1903 or of the honor of Com- mander of the Crown of Italy which was con- ferred upon him.

Of important Northern composers there are not many, but the Britannica has succeeded in mini- mizing even their small importance. Gade has a biography only as long as Pierson's; and Kjerulf, who did so much for Norwegian music, is given less space than William Hawes, with no critical indication of his importance. Even Grieg receives but a little more space than Charles Stan- ford or Sterndale Bennett! Nordraak, who was Grieg's chief co-worker in the development of a national school of music, has no biography what- ever. Nor has Sinding, whose fine orchestral and

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chamber music is heard everywhere. Not even Sibelius, whose very notable compositions brought Finland into musical prominence, is considered worthy of biographical mention.

But the most astonishing omission is that of Buxtehude, one of the great and important figures in the early development of music. Not only was he the greatest organist of his age, but he was a great teacher as well. He made Liibeck famous for its music, and established the "Abendmusiken" which Bach walked fifty miles to hear. To the Britanniccfs editor, however, he is of less im- portance than Henry Smart, the English or- ganist !

In Dvorak's biography we learn that English sympathy was entirely won by the Stabat Mater; but no special mention is made of his famous E-minor (American) Symphony. Smetana, the first great Bohemian musician, receives less space than Henry Bishop, who is remembered princi- pally as the composer of Home, Sweet Home.

But when we pass over into Poland we find in- adequacy and omissions of even graver character. Moszkowski receives just eight lines of biography, the same amount that is given to God-Bless-the- Prince-of -Wales Richards. Paderewski is ac- corded equal space with the English pianist, Cipri- ani Potter; and no mention is made of his famous

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$10,000 fund for the best American compositions. This is a characteristic omission, however, for, as I have pointed out before, a composer's activities in America are apparently considered too trivial to mention, whereas, if it is at all possible to connect England, even in a remote and far-fetched way, with the genius of the world, it is done. Josef Hofmann, the other noted Polish pianist, is too insignificant to be given even passing mention in the Britannica. But such an inclusion could hardly be expected of a reference work which contains no biography of Leschetizky, the greatest and most famous piano teacher the world has ever known.

We come now to the most prejudiced and in- excusably inadequate musical section in the whole Britannica namely, to American composers. Again we find that narrow patronage, that provin- cial condescension and that contemptuous neglect which so conspicuously characterize the Encyclo- pedia Britannica' s treatment of all American in- stitutions and culture. We have already beheld how this neglect and contempt have worked against our painters, our novelists, our poets and our dramatists; we have seen what rank injustice has been dealt our artists and writers; we have reviewed the record of omissions contained in this Encyclopedia's account of our intellectual

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activities. But in no other instance has British scorn allowed itself so extreme and indefensible an expression as in the peremptory manner in which our musical composers are dismissed. The negligence with which American musical com- positions and composers are reviewed is greater than in the case of any other nation.

As I have said before, if the Encyclopedia Britannica had been compiled to sell only in suburban England, we would have no complaint against the petty contempt shown our artists ; but when an encyclopaedia is put together largely for the purpose of American distribution, the sweep- ing neglect of our native creative effort resolves itself into an insult which every American should hotly resent. And especially should such neglect be resented when the advertising campaign with which the Britannica was foisted upon the public claimed for that work an exalted supremacy as a library of international education, and definitely stated that it contained an adequate discussion of every subject which would appeal to intelligent persons. As I write this the Britannica adver- tises itself as containing "an exhaustive account of all human achievement." But I think I have shown with pretty fair conclusiveness that it does not contain anywhere near an exhaustive account of American achievement ; and yet I doubt if even

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an Englishman would deny that we were "hu- man."

Let us see how "exhaustive" the Britannica is in its record of American musical achievement. To begin with, there are just thirty-seven lines in the article on American composers; and for our other information we must depend on the bio- graphies. But what do we find*? Dudley Buck is given an incomplete biography of fourteen lines ; and MacDowell draws thirty lines of inadequate data. Gottschalk, the most celebrated of Ameri- can piano virtuosi, who toured Europe with great success and wrote much music which survives even to-day, is surely of enough historical importance to be given a biography; but his name does not so much as appear in the Britannica. John Knowles Paine has no biography; nor has William Mason; nor Arthur Foote; nor Chadwick; nor Edgar Still- man Kelly; nor Ethelbert Nevin; nor Charles Loeffler; nor Mrs. Beach; nor Henry K. Hadley; nor Cadman; nor Horatio Parker; nor Frederick Converse.

To be sure, these composers do not rank among the great world figures; but they do stand for the highest achievement in American music, and it is quite probable that many "intelligent" Americans would be interested in knowing about them. In fact, from the standpoint of intelligent interest,

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they are of far more importance than many lesser English composers who are given biographies. And although Sousa has had the greatest popular success of any composer since Johann Strauss, you will hunt the Eritannica through in vain for even so much as a mention of him. And while I do not demand the inclusion of Victor Herbert, never- theless if Alfred Cellier is given a place, Herbert, who is Cellier's superior in the same field, should not be discriminated against simply because he is not an Englishman.

It will be seen that there is practically no record whatever of the makers of American music; and while, to the world at large, our musical accom- plishments may not be of vital importance, yet to Americans themselves even "intelligent" Amer- icans (if the English will admit that such an adjective may occasionally be applied to us) they are not only of importance but of signifi- cance. It is not as if second-rate and greatly in- ferior composers of Great Britain were omitted also; but when Ethelbert Nevin is given no bio- graphy while many lesser British composers are not only given biographies but praised as well, Amer- icans have a complaint which the Britannica's ex- ploiters (who chummily advertise themselves as "we Americans") will find it difficult to meet.

VIII

SCIENCE

IN the field of medicine and biology the Encyclo- pedia Britannica reveals so narrow and obvious a partisanship that there has already been no lit- tle resentment on the part of American scientists. This country is surpassed by none in biological chemistry; and our fame in surgery and medical experimentation is world-wide. Among the ranks of our scientists stand men of such great importance and high achievement that no ad- equate history of biology or medicine could be written without giving vital consideration to them. Yet the Britannica fails almost com- pletely in revealing their significance. Many of our great experimenters men who have made important original contributions to science and who have pushed forward the boundaries of hu- man knowledge receive no mention whatever; and many of our surgeons and physicians whose researches have marked epochs in the history of medicine meet with a similar fate. On the other hand you will find scores of biographies of com- 148

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149

paratively little known and unimportant English scientists, some of whom have contributed noth- ing to medical and biological advancement.

It is not my intention to go into any great de- tail in this matter. I shall not attempt to make a complete list of the glaring omissions of our scientists or to set down anywhere near all of the lesser British scientists who are discussed liberally and con amore in the Britannica. Such a record were unnecessary. But I shall indicate a suffi- cient number of discrepancies between the treat- ment of American scientists and the treatment of English scientists, to reveal the utter inadequacy of the Britannica as a guide to the history and development of our science. If America did not stand so high in this field the Encyclopaedia's edi- tors would have some basis on which to explain away their wanton discrimination against our scientific activities. But when, as I say, America stands foremost among the nations of the world in biological chemistry and also holds high rank in surgery and medicine, there can be no excuse for such wilful neglect, especially as minor British scientists are accorded liberal space and generous consideration.

First we shall set down those three earlier path- finders in American medicine whose names do not so much as appear in the Britannica' 's Index:

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John Morgan, who in 1765, published his Dis- course Upon the Institution of Medical Schools in America, thus becoming the father of medical education in the United States; William Shippen, Jr., who aided John Morgan in founding our first medical school, the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania, and gave the first public lectures in obstetrics in this country, and who may be regarded as the father of American obstetrics; and Thomas Cadwalader, the first Philadelphian (at this time Philadelphia was the medical center of America) to teach anatomy by dissections, and the author of one of the best pamphlets on lead poisoning.

Among the somewhat later important American medical scientists who are denied any mention in the Britannica are: John Conrad Otto, the first who described hemophilia (an abnormal tendency to bleeding) ; James Jackson, author of one of the first accounts of alcoholic neuritis ; James Jack- son, Jr., who left his mark in physical diagnosis; Elisha North, who as early as 1811 advocated the use of the clinical thermometer in his original description of cerebrospinal meningitis (the first book on the subject) ; John Ware, who wrote one of the chief accounts of delirium tremens; Jacob Bigelow, one of the very great names in American medicine, whose essay, On Self-Limited Diseases,

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according to Holmes, "did more than any other work or essay in our language to rescue the prac- tice of medicine from the slavery to the drugging system which was a part of the inheritance of the profession"; W. W. Gerhard, who distinguished between typhoid and typhus; Daniel Drake, known as the greatest physician of the West, who as the result of thirty years of labor wrote the masterpiece, Diseases of the Interior Valley of North America; Caspar Wistar, who wrote the first American treatise on anatomy; and William Edmonds Homer, who discovered the tensor tarsi muscle, known as Homer's muscle. . . . Not only are these men not accorded biographies in the "universal" and "complete" Encyclopedia Britannica, but their names do not appear !

The father of American surgery was Philip Syng Physick, who invented the tonsillotome and introduced various surgical operations; but you must look elsewhere than in the Britannica for so much as a mention of him. And although the his- tory of American surgery is especially glorious and includes such great names as: the Warrens; Wright Post; J. C. Nott, who excised the coccyx and was the first who suggested the mosquito theory of yellow fever; Henry J. Bigelow, the first to describe the Y-ligament; Samuel David Gross, one of the chief surgeons of the nineteenth

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century; Nicholas Senn, one of the masters of modern surgery; Harvey Gushing, perhaps the greatest brain surgeon in the world to-day; George Crile, whose revolutionary work in surgi- cal shock was- made long before the Britannica went to press ; and William S. Halsted, among the greatest surgeons of the world, as I have said, al- though America has produced these important men, the Encyclopedia Britannica ignores the fact entirely, and does not so much as record one of their names !

Were all the rest of American medical scientists given liberal consideration in the Britannica, it would not compensate for the above omissions. But these omissions are by no means all : they are merely the beginning. The chief names in mod- ern operative gynecology are American. But of the nine men who are the leaders in this field, only one (Emmet) has a biography, and only one (McDowell) receives casual mention. Marion Sims who invented his speculum and introduced the operation for vesicovaginal fistula, Nathan Bozeman, J. C. Nott (previously mentioned), Theodore Gaillard Thomas, Robert Battey, E. C. Dudley, and Howard A. Kelly do not exist for the Britannica.

Furthermore, of the four chief pioneers in an- aesthesia— the practical discovery and use of which

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was an American achievement only two are mentioned. The other two C. W. Long, of Georgia, and the chemist, Charles T. Jackson are apparently unknown to the British editors of this encyclopaedia. And although in the history of pediatrics there is no more memorable name than that of Joseph O'Dwyer, of Ohio, whose work in intubation has saved countless numbers of infants, you will fail to find any reference to him in this "unbiased" English reference work.

One must not imagine that even here ends the Britanniccfs almost unbelievable injustice to American scientists. John J. Abel is not men- tioned either, yet Professor Abel is among the greatest pharmacologists of the world. His re- searches in animal tissues and fluids have definitely set forward the science of medicine; and it was Abel who, besides his great work with the artifi- cial kidney, first discovered the uses of epinephrin. R. G. Harrison, one of the greatest biologists of history, whose researches in the growth of tissue were epoch-making, and on whose investigations other scientists also have made international repu- tations, is omitted entirely from the Britannica. S. J. Meltzer, the physiologist, who has been the head of the department of physiology and phar- macology at Rockefeller Institute since 1906, is not in the Eritannica. T. H. Morgan, the zo-

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ologist, whose many books on the subject have long been standard works, is without a biography. E. B. Wilson, one of the great pathfinders in zoology and a man who stands in the front rank of that science, is also without a biography. And Abraham Jacobi, who is the father of pediatrics in America, is not mentioned.

The list of wanton omissions is not yet com- plete! C. S. Minot, the great American embry- ologist, is ignored. Theobald Smith, the pathol- ogist, is also thought unworthy of note. And among those renowned American scientists who, though mentioned, failed to impress the Encyclo- paedia's English editor sufficiently to be given biographies are : John Kerasley Mitchell, who was the first to describe certain neurological conditions, and was one of the advocates of the germ theory of disease before bacteriology; William Beau- mont, the first to study digestion in situ; Jacques Loeb, whose works on heliotropism, morphology, psychology, etc., have placed him among the world's foremost imaginative researchers; H. S. Jennings, another great American biologist; W. H. Welch, one of the greatest of modern patho- logists and bacteriologists; and Simon Flexner, whose work is too well known to the world to need any description here. These men unques- tionably deserve biographies in any encyclo-

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paedia which makes even a slight pretence of com- pleteness, and to have omitted them from the Britannica was an indefensible oversight or worse.

The editors of the Encyclopedia Britannica cannot explain away these amazing omissions on the ground that the men mentioned are not of sufficient importance to have come within the range of their consideration; for, when we look down the list of British medical scientists who are given biographies, we can find at least a score of far less important ones. For instance, Elizabeth G. Anderson, whose claim to glory lies in her ad- vocacy of admitting women into the medical pro- fession, is given considerably over half a column. Gilbert Blane, the introducer of lime-juice into the English navy, also has a biography. So has Richard Brocklesby, an eighteenth-century army physician ; and Andrew Clark, a fashionable Lon- don practitioner; and T. B. Curling; and John Elliotson, the English mesmerist; and Joseph Fayrer, known chiefly for his studies in the poison- ous snakes of India; and J. C. Forster; and James Clark, an army surgeon and physician in ordinary to Queen Victoria; and P. G. Hewett, another surgeon to Queen Victoria; and many others of no more prominence or importance.

In order to realize the astounding lengths of in-

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justice to which the Britannic a has gone in its petty neglect of America, compare these English names which are given detailed biographical con- sideration, with the American names which are left out. The editors of this encyclopaedia must either plead guilty to the most flagrant kind of prejudicial discrimination against this country, or else confess to an abysmal ignorance of the his- tory and achievements of modern science.

It might be well to note here that Luther Bur- bank's name is mentioned only once in the Britan- nic*a, under San fa Rosa, the comment being that Santa Rosa was his home. Not to have given Burbank a biography containing an account of his important work is nothing short of preposterous. Is it possible that Americans are not supposed to be interested in this great scientist? And are we to assume that Marianne North, the English nat- uralist and flower painter who is given a de- tailed biography is of more importance than Burbank? The list of English naturalists and botanists who receive biographies in the Britannica includes such names as William Aiton, Charles Alston, James Anderson, W. J. Broderip, and Robert Fortune; and yet there is no biography or even discussion of Luther Burbank, the Ameri- can!

Thus far in this chapter I have called attention

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only to the neglect of American scientists. It must not be implied, however, that America alone suffers from the Britannica's insular prejudice. No nation, save England, is treated with that justice and comprehensiveness upon which the Encyclopaedia's advertising has so constantly in- sisted. For instance, although Jonathan Hutch- inson, the English authority on syphilis, receives (and rightly so) nearly half a column biography, Ehrlich, the world's truly great figure in that field, is not considered of sufficient importance to be given biographical mention. It is true that Ehrlich's salvarsan did not become known until 1910, but he had done much immortal work be- fore then. Even Metchnikoff, surely one of the world's greatest modern scientists, has no biog- raphy! And although British biologists of even minor importance receive biographical considera- tion, Lyonet, the Hollander, who did the first structural work after Swammerdam, is without a biography.

Nor are there biographies of Franz Leydig, through whose extensive investigations all struct- ural studies upon insects assumed a new aspect; Rudolph Leuckart, another conspicuous figure in zoological progress; Meckel, who stands at the beginning of the school of comparative anatomy in Germany; Rathke, who made a significant ad-

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vance in comparative anatomy; Ramon y Cajal, whose histological research is of world-wide re- nown; Kowalevsky, whose work in embryology had enormous influence on all subsequent investi- gations; Wilhelm His, whose embryological in- vestigations, especially in the development of the nervous system and the origin of nerve fibres, are of very marked importance; Dujardin, the dis- coverer of sarcode; Lacaze-Duthiers, one of France's foremost zoological researchers; and Pouchet, who created a sensation with his experi- mentations in spontaneous generation.

Even suppose the Britannica's editor should argue that the foregoing biologists are not of the very highest significance and therefore are not deserving of separate biographies, how then can he explain the fact that such British biologists as Alfred Newton, William Yarrell, John G. Wood, G. J. Allman, F. T. Buckland, and T. S. Cobbold, are given individual biographies with a detailed discussion of their work? What becomes of that universality of outlook on which he so prides him- self? Or does he consider Great Britain as the universe?

As I have said, the foregoing notes do not aim at being exhaustive. To set down, even from an American point of view, a complete record of the inadequacies which are to be found in the Britan-

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nica's account of modern science would require much more space than I can devote to it here. I have tried merely to indicate, by a few names and a few comparisons, the insular nature of this En- cyclopaedia's expositions, and thereby to call at- tention to the very obvious fact that the Britan- nica is not "an international dictionary of bio- graphy," but a prejudiced work in which English endeavor, through undue emphasis and exaggera- tion, is given the first consideration. Should this Encyclopaedia be depended upon for information, one would get but the meagrest idea of the splen- did advances which America has made in modern science. And, although I have here touched only on medicine and biology, the same narrow and provincial British viewpoint can be found in the Britannica's treatment of the other sciences as well.

IX

INVENTIONS, PHOTOGRAPHY, AESTHETICS

IN the matter of American inventions the Encyclo- pedia Britannica would appear to have said as lit- tle as possible, and to have minimized our im- portance in that field as much as it dared. And yet American inventors, to quote H. Addington Bruce, "have not simply astonished mankind; they have enhanced the prestige, power, and pros- perity of their country." The Britannica's edi- tors apparently do not agree with this; and when we think of the wonderful romance of American inventions, and the possibilities in the subject for full and interesting writing, and then read the brief, and not infrequently disdainful, accounts that are presented, we are conscious at once not only of an inadequacy in the matter of facts, but of a niggardliness of spirit.

Let us regard the Encyclopaedia's treatment of steam navigation. Under Steamboat we read: 'The first practical steamboat was the tug 'Char- lotte Dundas,' built by William Symington

(Scotch), and tried in the Forth and Clyde Canal 160

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in 1802. ... The trial was successful, but steam towing was abandoned for fear of injuring the banks of the canal. Ten years later Henry Bell built the 'Comet,' with side-paddle wheels, which ran as a passenger steamer on the Clyde; but an earlier inventor to follow up Symington's success was the American, Robert Fulton. . . ."

This practically sums up the history of that notable achievement. Note the method of presen- tation, with the mention of Fulton as a kind of afterthought. While the data may technically come within the truth, the impression given is a false one, or at least a British one. Even Eng- lish authorities admit that Fulton established de- finitely the value of the steamboat as a medium for passenger and freight traffic; but here the credit, through implication, is given to Symington and Bell. And yet, if Symington is to be given so much credit for pioneer work, why are not Wil- liam Henry, of Pennsylvania, John Stevens, of New Jersey, Nathan Read, of Massachusetts, and John Fitch, of Connecticut, mentioned also? Surely each of these other Americans was im- portant in the development of the idea of steam as motive power in water.

Eli Whitney receives a biography of only two- thirds of a column; Morse, less than a column; and Elias Howe, only a little over half a column.

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Even Thomas Edison receives only thirty-three lines of biography a mere statement of facts. Such a biography is an obvious injustice; and the American buyers of the Encyclopedia Britannica have just cause for complaining against such in- adequacy. Edison admittedly is a towering fig- ure in modern science, and an encyclopaedia the size of the Britannica should have a full and in- teresting account of his life, especially since ob- scure English scientists are accorded far more liberal biographies.

Alexander Graham Bell, however, receives the scantiest biography of all. It runs to just fifteen lines! And the name of Daniel Drawbaugh is not mentioned. He and Bell filed their papers for a telephone on the same day; and it was only after eight years' litigation that the Supreme Court decided in Bell's favor four judges favor- ing him and three favoring Drawbaugh. No reference is made of this interesting fact. Would the omission have occurred had Drawbaugh been an Englishman instead of a Pennsylvanian, or had not Bell been a native Scotchman*?

The name of Charles Tellier, the Frenchman, does not appear in the Britannica. Not even under Refrigerating and Ice Making is he men- tioned. And yet back in 1868 he began experi- ments which culminated in the refrigerating

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plant as used on ocean vessels to-day. Tellier, more than any other man, can be called the in- ventor of cold storage, one of the most important of modern discoveries, for it has revolutionized the food question and had far-reaching effects on commerce. Again we are prompted to ask if his name would have been omitted from the Britan- nica had he been an Englishman .

Another unaccountable omission occurs in the case of Rudolph Diesel. Diesel, the inventor of the Diesel engine, is comparable only to Watts in the development of power; but he is not consid- ered of sufficient importance by the editors of the Encyclopedia Britannica to be given a biography. And under Oil Engine we read : "Mr. Diesel has produced a very interesting engine which departs considerably from other types." Then follows a brief technical description of it. This is the en- tire consideration given to Diesel, with his "in- teresting" engine, despite the fact that the Brit- ish Government sent to Germany for him in order to investigate his invention!

Few names in the history of modern invention stand as high as Wilbur and Orville Wright. To them can be attributed the birth of the airplane. In 1908, to use the words of an eminent author- ity, "the Wrights brought out their biplanes and practically taught the world to fly." The story

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of how these two brothers developed aviation is, according to the same critic, "one of the most in- spiring chronicles of the age." The Britannica's editors, if we are to judge their viewpoint by the treatment accorded the Wright brothers in this encyclopaedia, held no such opinion. Not only is neither of these men given a biography, but under Flight and Flying the only place in the whole twenty-nine volumes where their names ap- pear— they are accorded much less consideration than they deserve. Sir Hiram S. Maxim's flying adventures receive more space.

A subject which unfortunately is too little known in this country and yet one in the develop- ment of which America has played a very im- portant part, is pictorial photography. A double interest therefore attaches to the manner in which this subject is treated in the Britannic a. Since the writer of the article was thoroughly familiar with the true conditions, an adequate record might have been looked for. But no such record was forthcoming. In the discussion of photography in this Encyclopaedia the same bias is displayed as in other departments the same petty insularity, the same discrimination against America, the same suppression of vital truth, and the same ex- aggerated glorification of England. In this in-

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stance, however, there is documentary proof show- ing deliberate misrepresentation, and therefore we need not attribute the shortcomings to chau- vinistic stupidity, as we have so charitably done in similar causes.

In the article on Pictorial Photography in this aggressibly British reference work we find the following: "It is interesting to note that as a distinct movement pictorial photography is es- sentially of British origin, and this is shown by the manner in which organized photographic bodies in Vienna, Brussels, Paris, St. Petersburg, Florence, and other European cities, as well as in Philadelphia, Chicago, etc., following the exam- ple of London, held exhibitions on exactly similar lines to those of the London Photographic Salon, and invited known British exhibitors to contrib- ute." Then it is noted that the interchange of works between British and foreign exhibitors led, in the year 1900, "to a very remarkable cult call- ing itself 'The New American School,' which had a powerful influence on contemporaries in Great Britain."

The foregoing brief and inadequate statements contain all the credit that is given America in this field. New York, where much of the fore- most and important work was done, is not men- tioned; and the name of Alfred Stieglitz, who is

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undeniably the towering figure in American pho- tography as well as one of the foremost figures in the world's photography, is omitted entirely. Furthermore, slight indication is given of the "powerful influence" which America has had; and the significant part she has played in photography, together with the names of the American leaders, is completely ignored, although there is quite a lengthy discussion concerning English photo- graphic history, including credit to those who par- ticipated in it.

For instance, the American, Steichen, a world figure in photography and, of a type, perhaps the greatest who ever lived, is not mentioned. Nor are Gertrude Kasebier and Frank Eugene, both of whom especially the former, has had an enormous international influence in pictorial photography. And although there is a history of the formation of the "Linked Ring" in London, no credit is given to Stieglitz whose work, during twenty- five years in Germany and Vienna, was one of the prime influences in the crystallization of this brotherhood. Nor is there so much as a passing reference to Camera Work (published in New York) which stands at the head of photographic publications.

As I have said, there exists documentary evi- dence which proves the deliberate unfairness of

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this article. It is therefore not necessary to ac- cept my judgment on the importance of Stieglitz and the work done in America. A. Horsley Hinton, who is responsible for the prejudiced article in the Encyclopedia, was the editor of The Amateur Photographer, a London publication; and in that magazine, as long ago as 1904, we have, in Mr. Hinton's own words, a refutation of what he wrote for the Britannica. In the May 19 (1904) issue he writes: "We believe every one who is interested in the advance of photog- raphy generally, will learn with pleasure that Mr. Alfred Stieglitz, whose life-long and wholly disinterested devotion to pictorial photography should secure him a unique position, will be pres- ent at the opening of the next Exhibition of the Photographic Salon in London. Mr. Stieglitz was zealous in all good photographic causes long before the Salon, and indeed long before pictorial photography was discussed with Dr. Vogel in Germany, for instance, twenty-five years ago."

Elsewhere in this same magazine we read: "American photography is going to be the ruling note throughout the world unless others bestir themselves; indeed, the Photo-Secession (Ameri- can) pictures have already captured the highest places in the esteem of the civilized world. Hardly an exhibition of first importance is any-

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where held without a striking collection of Amer- ican work, brought together and sent by Mr. Al- fred Stieglitz. For the last two or three years in the European exhibitions these collections have secured the premier awards, or distinctions." And again we find high praise of Steichen, "than whom America possesses no more brilliant genius among her sons who have taken up photography."

These quotations and many similar ones ap- peared over a decade ago in Mr. Hinton's maga- zine— give evidence that Mr. Hinton was not unaware of the extreme importance of American photographic work or of the eminent men who took part in it; and yet in writing his article for the Britannica he has apparently carefully for- gotten what he himself had previously written.

But this is not the only evidence we have of deliberate injustice in the Encyclopaedia's dis- graceful neglect of our efforts in this line. In 1913, in the same English magazine, we find not only an indirect confession of the Britannictfs bias, but also the personal reason for that bias. Speaking of Stieglitz's connection with that phase of photographic history to which Mr. Hinton was most intimately connected, this publication says: "At that era, and for long afterwards, Stieglitz was, in fact, a thorn in our sides. 'Who's Boss of the Show*?' inquires a poster, now placarded

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in London. Had that question been asked of the (London) Salon, an irritated whisper of honesty would have replied 'Stieglitz.' And ... we didn't like it. We couldn't do without him; but these torrential doctrines of his were, to be candid, a nuisance. . . . He is an influence; an influence for which, even if photography were not concerned, we should be grateful, but which, as it is, we photographers can never perhaps justly estimate." After this frank admission the maga- zine adds: "Stieglitz too big a man to need any 'defense' has been considerably misunder- stood and misrepresented, and, in so far as this is so, photographers and photography itself are the losers."

What better direct evidence could one desire than this naif confession? Yes, Stieglitz, who, according to Mr. Hinton's own former publica- tion, was a thorn in that critic's side, has indeed been "misrepresented" ; but nowhere has he been neglected with so little excuse as in Mr. Hinton's own article in the Britannica. And though again according to this magazine Stieglitz is "too big a man to need any 'defense,' " I cannot resist defending him here; for the whole petty, personal and degrading affair is characteristic of the Encyclopedia Britannica's contemptible treat- ment of America and Americans.

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Such flagrant political intriguing, such an ob- vious attempt to use the Encyclopaedia to destroy America's high place in the world of modern achievement, can only arouse disgust in the un- prejudiced reader. The great light-bearer in the photographic field, Camera Work, if generally known and appreciated, would have put Hr. Hin- ton's own inferior magazine out of existence as a power; and his omitting to mention it in his arti- cle and even in his bibliography, is a flagrant ex- ample of the Britannicafs refusal to tell the whole truth whenever that truth would harm England or benefit America.

In view of the wide and growing interest in aesthetics and of the immense progress which has been made recently in aesthetic research, one would expect to find an adequate and comprehensive treatment of that subject in a work like the Britan- nica. But here again one will be disappointed. The article on aesthetics reveals a parti pris which illy becomes a work which should be, as it claims to be, objective and purely informative. The author of the article is critical and not seldom argumentative; and, as a result, full justice is not done the theories and research of many eminent modern aestheticians. Twenty-two lines are all that are occupied in setting forth the aesthetic

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writers in Germany since Goethe and Schiller, and in this brief paragraph, many of the most signifi- cant contributors to the subject are not even given passing mention. And, incredible as it may seem, that division of the article which deals with the German writers is shorter than the division dealing with English writers!

One might forgive scantiness of material in this general article if it were possible to find the lead- ing modern aesthetic theories set forth in the biographies of the men who conceived them. But what is even more astonishing in the Encyclo- pedia's treatment pf aesthetics there are no bi- ographies of many of the scientists whose names and discoveries are familiar to any one even superficially interested in the subject. Several of these men, whose contributions have marked a new epoch in psychological and aesthetic research, are not even mentioned in the text of the Encyclo- paedia; and the only indication we have that they lived and worked is in an occasional foot-note. Their names do not so much as appear in the Index!

Kiilpe, one of the foremost psychologists and aestheticians, has no biography, and he is merely mentioned in a foot-note as being an advocate of the principle of association. Lipps, who laid the foundation of the new philosophy of aesthetics and

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formulated the hypothesis of Einfuhlung, has no biography. His name appears once under ^Esthetics and his theory is actually disputed by the critic who wrote the article. Groos, another important esthetic leader, is also without a bi- ography; and his name is not in the Britannica's Index. Nor is Hildebrand, whose solutions to the problem of form are of grave importance, thought worthy of mention.

There is no excuse for such inadequacy, es- pecially as England possesses in Vernon Lee a most capable interpreter of aesthetics a writer thoroughly familiar with the subject, and one whose articles and books along this line of re- search have long been conspicuous for their bril- liancy and thoroughness.

Furthermore, in this article we have another example of the Britannica's contempt for Ameri- can achievement. This country has made impor- tant contributions to aesthetics; and only an Eng- lishman could have written a modern exposition of the subject without referring to the researches of William James and Hugo Miinsterberg. The Lange- James hypothesis has had an important in- fluence on aesthetic theory; and Miinsterberg's ob- servations on aesthetic preference, form-perception and projection of feelings, play a vital role in the history of modern aesthetic science; but you will

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look in vain for any mention of these Ameri- cans' work. Munsterberg's Principles of Art Education is not even included in the bibliog- raphy.

PHILOSOPHY

ONE going to the Encyclopedia Britannica for critical information concerning philosophy will encounter the very essence of that spirit which is merely reflected in the other departments of the Encyclopedia's culture. In this field the Eng- lish editors and contributors of the Britannica are dealing with the sources of thought, and as a re- sult British prejudice finds a direct outlet.

To be sure, it is difficult for a critic possessing the mental characteristics and the ethical and re- ligious predispositions of his nation, to reveal the entire field of philosophy without bias. He has certain temperamental affinities which will draw him toward his own country's philosophical sys- tems, and certain antipathies which will turn him against contrary systems of other nations. But in the higher realms of criticism it is possible to find that intellectual detachment which can re- view impersonally the development of thought, no matter what tangential directions it may take. There have been several adequate histories of phi- 174

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losophy written by British critics, proving that it is not necessary for an Englishman to regard the evolution of thinking only through distorted and prejudiced eyes.

The Encyclopedia Britannica, however, evi- dently holds to no such just ideal in its exposi- tion of philosophical research. Only in a very few of the biographies do we find evidences of an attempt to set forth this difficult subject with impartiality. As in its other departments, the Encyclopaedia places undue stress on British thinkers : it accords them space out of all propor- tion to their relative importance, and includes obscure and inconsequent British moralists while omitting biographies of far more important thinkers of other nations.

This obvious discrepancy in space might be overlooked did the actual material of the biog- raphies indicate the comparative importance of the thinkers dealt with. But when British critics consider the entire history of thought from the postulates of their own writers, and emphasize only those philosophers of foreign nationality who appeal to "English ways of thinking," then it is impossible to gain any adequate idea of the philosophical teachings of the world as a whole. And this is precisely the method pursued by the Britannica in dealing with the history and de-

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velopment of modern thought. In nearly every instance, and in every important instance, it has been an English didactician who has interpreted for this Encyclopaedia the teachings of the world's leading philosophers; and there are few biogra- phies which do not reveal British prejudice.

The modern English critical mind, being in the main both insular and middle-class, is dominated by a suburban moral instinct. And even among the few more scholarly critics there is a residue of puritanism which tinctures the syllogisms and dictates the deductions. In bringing their minds to bear on creative works these critics are filled with a sense of moral disquietude. At bottom they are Churchmen. They mistake the tastes and antipathies which have been bred in them by a narrow religious and ethical culture, for pure critical criteria. They regard the great men of other nations through the miasma of their tribal taboos.

This rigid and self-satisfied provincialism of outlook, as applied to philosophers in the Ency- clopedia Britannica, is not, I am inclined to be- lieve, the result of a deliberate attempt to exag- gerate the importance of British thinkers and to underrate the importance of non-British thinkers. To the contrary, it is, I believe, the result of an unconscious ethical prejudice coupled with a blind

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and self -con tented patriotism. But whatever the cause, the result is the same. Consequently, any one who wishes an unbiased exposition of philo- sophical history must go to a source less insular, and less distorted than the Britannica. Only a British moralist, or one encrusted with British morality, will be wholly satisfied with the manner in which philosophy is here treated; and since there are a great many Americans who have not, as yet, succumbed to English bourgeois theology and who do not believe, for instance, that Isaac Newton is of greater philosophic importance than Kant, this Encyclopedia will be of far more value to an Englishman than to an Ameri- can.

The first distortion which will impress one who seeks information in the Britannica is to be found in the treatment of English empirical philos- ophers— that is, of John Locke, Isaac Newton, George Berkeley, Shaftesbury, Francis Hutch- eson, Joseph Butler, Mandeville, Hume, Adam Smith and David Hartley. Locke receives fif- teen columns of detailed exposition, with inset headings. "He was," we are told, "typically English in his reverence for facts" and "a signal example in the Anglo-Saxon world of the love of attainable truth for the sake of truth and good- ness." Then we are given the quotation: "If

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Locke made few discoveries, Socrates made none." Furthermore, he was "memorable in the record of human progress."

Isaac Newton receives no less than nineteen col- umns filled with specific and unstinted praise; and in the three-and-a-half column biography of George Berkeley we learn that Berkeley's "new conception marks a distinct stage of progress in human thought"; that "he once for all lifted the problem of metaphysics to a higher level," and, with Hume, "determined the form into which later metaphysical questions have been thrown." Shaftesbury, whose main philosophical import- ance was due to his ethical and moral speculations in refutation of Hobbes' egoism, is represented by a biography of four and a half columns !

Hume receives over fourteen columns, with inset headings ; Adam Smith, nearly nine columns, five and a half of which are devoted to a detailed consideration of his Wealth of Nations. Hutch- eson, the ethical moralist who drew the analogy between beauty and virtue the doctrinaire of the moral sense and the benevolent feelings is given no less than five columns; while Joseph Butler, the philosophic divine who, we are told, is a "typical instance of the English philosophical mind" and whose two basic premises were the ex- istence of a theological god and the limitation of

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human knowledge, is given six and a half columns !

On the other hand, Mandeville receives only a column and two-thirds. To begin with, he was of French parentage, and his philosophy (accord- ing to the Britannica) "has always been stigma- tized as false, cynical and degrading." He did not believe in the higher Presbyterian virtues, and read hypocrisy into the vaunted goodness of the English. Although in a history of modern phi- losophy he is deserving of nearly equal space with Butler, in the Britannica he is given only a little over one-fifth of the space! Even David Hart- ley, the English physician who supplemented Hume's theory of knowledge, is given nearly as much consideration as the "degrading" Mande- ville. And Joseph Priestley, who merely popu- larized these theories, is given no less than two columns.

Let us turn now to what has been called the "philosophy of the enlightenment" in France and Germany, and we shall see the exquisite workings of British moral prejudice in all its purity. Vol- taire, we learn, "was one of the most astonishing, if not exactly one of the more admirable, figures of letters." He had "cleverness," but not "genius" ; and his great fault was an "inveterate superficiality." Again: ".Not the most elabor-

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ate work of Voltaire is of much value for matter." (The biography, a derogatory and condescending one, is written by the eminent moralist, George Saintsbury . )

Condillac, who is given far less space than either Berkeley or Shaftesbury, only half of the space given Hutcheson, and only a little over one- third of the space given Joseph Butler, is set down as important for "having established systemat- ically in France the principles of Locke." But his "genius was not of the highest order" ; and in his analysis of the mind "he missed out the active and spiritual side of human experience." James Mill did not like him, and his method of imag- inative reconstruction "was by no means suited to English ways of thinking." This latter short- coming no doubt accounts for the meagre and un- complimentary treatment Condillac receives in the great British reference work which is devoted so earnestly to "English ways of thinking."

Helvetius, whose theory of equality is closely related to Condillac's doctrine of psychic pas- sivity, is given even shorter shrift, receiving only a column and a third; and it is noted that "there is no doubt that his thinking was unsystematic." Diderot, however, fares much better, receiving five columns of biography. But then, more and more "did Diderot turn for the hope of the race

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to virtue; in other words, to such a regulation of conduct and motive as shall make us tender, piti- ful, simple, contented," an attitude eminently fitted to "English ways of thinking" ! And Di- derot's one great literary passion, we learn, was Richardson, the English novelist.

La Mettrie, the atheist, who held no brief for the pious virtues or for the theological soul so be- loved by the British, receives just half a column of biography in which the facts of his doctrine are set down more in sorrow than in anger. Von Holbach, the German-Parisian prophet of earthly happiness, who denied the existence of a deity and believed that the soul became extinct at physical death, receives only a little more space than La Mettrie less than a column. But then, the up- rightness of Von Holbach's character "won the friendship of many to whom his philosophy was repugnant."

Montesquieu, however, is given five columns with liberal praise both space and eulogy being beyond his deserts. Perhaps an explanation of such generosity lies in this sentence which we quote from his biography: "It is not only that he is an Anglo-maniac, but that he is rather Eng- lish than French in style and thought."

Rousseau, on the other hand, possessed no such exalted qualities; and the biography of this great

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Frenchman is shorter than Adam Smith's and only a little longer than that of the English divine, Joseph Butler! The Britannica informs us that Rousseau's moral character was weak and that he did not stand very high as a man. Furthermore, he was not a philosopher; the essence of his re- ligion was sentimentalism; and during the last ten or fifteen years of his life he was not sane. If you wish to see how unjust and biased is this moral denunciation of Rousseau, turn to any un- prejudiced history of philosophy, and compare the serious and lengthy consideration given him, with the consideration given the English moral think- ers who prove such great favorites with the Bri- tannicds editors.

The German "philosophers of the enlighten- ment" are given even less consideration. Chris- tian Wolff, whose philosophy admittedly held almost undisputed sway in Germany till eclipsed by Kantianism, receives only a column-and-a-half biography, only half the space given to Samuel Clarke, the English theological writer, and equal space with John Norris, the English philosophical divine, and with Arthur Collier, the English High Church theologian. Even Anthony Collins, the English deist, receives nearly as long a biography. Moses Mendelssohn draws only two and a half columns; Crusius, only half a column; Lambert,

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only a little over three-fourths of a column; Rei- marus, only a column and a third, in which he is considered from the standpoint of the English deists; and Edelmann and Tetens have no biog- raphies whatever!

Kant, as I have noted, receives less biographical space than Isaac Newton, and only about a fifth more space than does either John Locke or Hume. It is unnecessary to indicate here the prejudice shown by these comparisons. Every one is cog- nizant of Kant's tremendous importance in the history of thought, and knows what relative con- sideration should be given him in a work like the Britannica. Hamann, "the wise man of the North," who was the foremost of Kant's oppo- nents, receives only a column-and-a-quarter biog- raphy, in which he is denounced. His writings, to one not acquainted with the man, must be "entirely unintelligible and, from their peculiar, pietistic tone and scriptural jargon, probably of- fensive." And he expressed himself in "uncouth, barbarous fashion." Herder, however, another and lesser opponent of Kantianism, receives four and a half columns. Jacobi receives three ; Rein- hold, half a column ; Maimon, two-thirds of a column; and Schiller, four and a half columns. Compare these allotments of space with: Thomas Hill Green, the English neo-Kantian, two and

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two-thirds columns ; Richard Price, a column and three-fourths; Martineau, the English philosophic divine, five columns; Ralph Cudworth, two col- umns ; and Joseph Butler, six and a half columns ! In the treatment of German philosophic ro- manticism the Encyclopedia Britannica is curi- ously prejudiced. The particular philosophers of this school especially the ones with specula- tive systems who had a deep and wide influence on English thought, are treated with adequate liberality. But the later idealistic thinkers, who substituted criticism for speculation, receive scant attention, and in several instances are omitted en- tirely. For English readers such a dispropor- tioned and purely national attitude may be ade- quate, since England's intellectual ism is, in the main, insular. But, it must be remembered, the Britannica has assumed the character of an Amer- ican institution; and, to date, this country has not quite reached that state of British complacency where it chooses to ignore all information save that which is narrowly relative to English culture. Some of us are still un-British enough to want an encyclopedia of universal information. The Britannica is not such a reference work, and the manner in which it deals with the romantic philosophers furnishes ample substantiation of this fact.

PHILOSOPHY i8j

Fichte, for instance, whose philosophy em- bodies a moral idealism eminently acceptable to "English ways of thinking," receives seven col- umns of biography. Schelling, whose ideas were tainted with mythical mysticism, but who was not an evolutionist in the modern sense of the word, receives five columns. Hegel, who was, in a sense, the great English philosophical idol and whose doctrines had a greater influence in Great Britain than those of any other thinker, is given no less than fifteen columns, twice the space that is given to Rousseau, and five-sixths of the space that is given to Kant! Even Schleiermacher is given almost equal space with Rousseau, and his philosophy is interpreted as an effort "to reconcile science and philosophy with religion and theology, and the modern world with the Christian church." Also, the focus of his thought, culture and life, we are told, "was religion and theology."

Schopenhauer is one of the few foreign philos- ophers who receive adequate treatment in the Encyclopedia Britannica. But Bostrom, in whose works the romantic school attained its sys- tematic culmination, receives just twenty-four lines, less space than is devoted to Abraham Tucker, the English moralist, or to Garth Wilkin- son, the English Swedenborgian; and about the same amount of space as is given to John Morell,

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the English Congregational 1st minister who turned philosopher. And Frederick Christian Sibbern receives no biography whatever!

Kierkegaard, whose influence in the North has been profound, receives only half a column, equal space with Andrew Baxter, the feeble Scottish metaphysician; and only half the space given to Thomas Brown, another Scotch "philosopher." Fries who, with Herbart, was the forerunner of modern psychology and one of the leading repre- sentatives of the critical philosophy, is given just one column; but Beneke, a follower of Fries, who approached more closely to the English school, is allotted twice the amount of space that Fries receives.

The four men who marked the dissolution of the Hegelian school Krause, Weisse, I. H. Fichte and Feuerbach receive as the sum total of all their biographies less space than is given to the English divine, James Martineau, or to Francis Hutcheson. (In combating Hegelian- ism these four thinkers invaded the precincts of British admiration.) In the one-column biog- raphy of Krause we are told that the spirit of his thought is difficult to follow and that his term- inology is artificial. Weisse receives only twen- ty-three lines; and I. H. Fichte, the son of J. G. Fichte, receives only two-thirds of a column.

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Feuerbach, who marked the transition between romanticism and positivism and who accordingly holds an important position in the evolution of modern thought, is accorded a biography of a column and a half, shorter than that of Richard Price. Feuerbach, however, unlike Price, was an anti-theological philosopher, and is severely crit- icised for his spiritual shortcomings.

Let us glance quickly at the important phi- losophers of positivism as represented in the En- cyclopedia Eritannica. At the end of the seven- teenth and at the beginning of the nineteenth centuries the principal French philosophers repre- sentative of schools were de Maistre, Maine de Biran, Ampere, Saint-Simon and Victor Cousin. De Maistre, the most important philosopher of the principle of authority, is given a biography of a column and a third, is highly praised for his ecclesiasticism, and is permitted to be ranked with Hobbes. Maine de Biran receives a little over a column ; Ampere, less than a column ; and Saint- Simon, two and a third columns.

Victor Cousin is given the astonishing amount of space of eleven columns; but just why he should have been treated in this extravagant man- ner is not clear, for we are told that his search for principles was not profound and that he "left no distinctive, permanent principles of philosophy."

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Nor does it seem possible that he should draw nearly as much space as Rousseau and Montes- quieu combined simply because he left behind interesting analyses and expositions of the work of Locke and the Scottish philosophers. Even Comte is given only four and a half columns more.

The English philosophers of the nineteenth century before John Stuart Mill are awarded space far in excess of their importance, compara- tively speaking. For instance, James Mill re- ceives two columns of biography; Coleridge, who "did much to deepen and liberalize Christian thought in England," five and three-fourths col- umns; Carlyle, nine and two-thirds columns; William Hamilton, two and three-fourths col- umns; Henry Mansel, a disciple of Hamilton's, two-thirds of a column; Whewell, over a column; and Bentham, over three and a half columns.

Bentham's doctrines "have become so far part of the common thought of the time, that there is hardly an educated man who does not accept as too clear for argument truths which were invis- ible till Bentham pointed them out. . . . The services rendered by Bentham to the world would not, however, be exhausted even by the practical adoption of every one of his recommendations. There are no limits to the good results of his intro-

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duction of a true method of reasoning into the moral and political sciences." John Stuart Mill, whose philosophy is "generally spoken of as being typically English," receives nine and a half columns; Charles Darwin, seven columns; and Herbert Spencer, over five.

Positivism in Germany is represented by Diihr- ing in a biography which is only three-fourths of a column in length an article which is merely an attack, both personal and general. "His pa- triotism," we learn, "is fervent, but narrow and exclusive." (Diihring idolized Frederick the Great.) Ardigo, the important Italian positivist, receives no mention whatever in the Encyclo- paedia, although in almost any adequate history of modern philosophy, even a brief one, you will find a discussion of his work.

With the exception of Lotze, the philosophers of the new idealism receive scant treatment in the Britannica. Hartmann and Fechner are ac- corded only one column each; and Wilhelm Wundt, whose aesthetic and psychological re- searches outstrip even his significant philosophical work, is accorded only half a column! Francis Herbert Bradley has no biography a curious oversight, since he is English; and Fouillee re- ceives only a little over half a column.

The most inadequate and prejudiced treatment

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in the Eritannica of any modern philosopher is to be found in the biography of Nietzsche, which is briefer than Mrs. Humphry Ward's! Not only is Nietzsche accorded less space than is given to such British philosophical writers as Dugald Stewart, Henry Sidgwick, Richard Price, John Norris, Thomas Hill Green, James Frederick Ferrier, Adam Ferguson, Ralph Cudworth, An- thony Collins, Arthur Collier, Samuel Clarke and Alexander Bain an absurd and stupid piece of narrow provincial prejudice but the biography itself is superficial and inaccurate. The sup- posed doctrine of Nietzsche is here used to expose the personal opinions of the tutor of Corpus Christi College who was assigned the task of in- terpreting Nietzsche to the readers of the Bri- tannica. It would be impossible to gather any clear or adequate idea of Nietzsche and his work from this biased and moral source. Here middle- class British insularity reaches its high-water mark.

Other important modern thinkers, however, are given but little better treatment. Lange receives only three-fourths of a column ; Paulsen, less than half a column ; Ernst Mach, only seventeen lines ; Eucken, only twenty-eight lines, with a list of his works; and Renouvier, two-thirds of a column. J. C. Maxwell, though, the Cambridge professor,

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gets two columns twice the space given Nietzsche !

In the biography of William James we discern once more the contempt which England has for this country. Here is a man whose importance is unquestioned even in Europe, and who stands out as one of the significant figures in modern thought; yet the Encyclopedia Britannica^ that "supreme book of knowledge," gives him a biog- raphy of just twenty-eight lines! And it is Americans who are furnishing the profits for this English reference work!

Perhaps the British editors of this encyclopaedia think that we should feel greatly complimented at having William James admitted at all when so many other important moderns of Germany and France and America are excluded. But so long as unimportant English philosophical writers are given biographies, we have a right to expect, in a work which calls itself an "international dic- tionary of biography," the adequate inclusion of the more deserving philosophers of other nations.

But what do we actually find*? You may hunt the Encyclopedia Britannica through, yet you will not see the names of John Dewey and Stan- ley Hall mentioned! John Dewey, an Amer- ican, is perhaps the world's leading authority on the philosophy of education; but the British edi-

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tors of the Encyclopaedia do not consider him worth noting, even in a casual way. Further- more, Stanley Hall, another American, who stands in the front rank of the world's genetic psychologists, is not so much as mentioned. And yet Hall's great work, Adolescence, appeared five years before the Britannzca went to press! Nor has Josiah Royce a biography, despite the fact that he was one of the leaders in the philosophical thought of America, and was even made an LL.D. by Aberdeen University in 1900. These omis- sions furnish excellent examples of the kind of broad and universal culture which is supposed to be embodied in the Britannica.

But these are by no means all the omissions of the world's important modern thinkers. Incred- ible as it may seem, there is no biography of Her- mann Cohen, who elaborated the rationalistic elements in Kant's philosophy; of Alois Riehl, the positivist neo-Kantian; of Windelband and Rickert, whose contributions to the theory of eternal values in criticism are of decided sig- nificance to-day; of Freud, a man who has revo- lutionized modern psychology and philosophic determinism; of Amiel Boutroux, the modern French philosopher of discontinuity; of Henri Bergson, whose influence and popularity need no exposition here; of Guyau, one of the most ef-

PHILOSOPHY 193

fective critics of English utilitarianism and evo- lutionism; or of Jung.

When we add Roberto Ardigo, Weininger, Edelmann, Tetans, and Sibbern to this list of philosophic and psychologic writers who are not considered of sufficient importance to receive biographical mention in the Encyclopedia Britan- nica, we have, at a glance, the prejudicial inade- quacy and incompleteness of this "great" English reference work. Nor can any excuse be offered that the works of these men appeared after the Rritannica was printed. At the time it went to press even the most modern of these writers held a position of sufficient significance or note to have been included.

In closing, and by way of contrast, let me set down some of the modern British philosophical writers who are given liberal biographies: Rob- ert Adamson, the Scottish critical historian of philosophy; Alexander Bain; Edward and John Caird, Scottish philosophic divines; Harry Cald- erwood, whose work was based on the contention that fate implies knowledge and on the doctrine of divine sanction; David George Ritchie, an un- important Scotch thinker; Henry Sidgwick, an orthodox religionist and one of the founders of the Society for Psychical Research; James H. Stirling, an expounder of Hegel and Kant; Wil-

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liam Wallace, an interpreter of Hegel ; and Garth Wilkinson, the Swedenborgian homeopath.

Such is the brief record of the manner in which the world's modern philosophers are treated in the Encyclopedia Britannica. From this work hun- dreds of thousands of Americans are garnering their educational ideas.

XI

RELIGION

THROUGHOUT several of the foregoing chapters I have laid considerable emphasis on the narrow parochial attitude of the Britannica's editors and on the constant intrusion of England's middle- class Presbyterianism into nearly every branch of aesthetics. The Eritannica^ far from being the objective and unbiased work it claims to be, as- sumes a personal and prejudiced attitude, and the culture of the world is colored and tinctured by that viewpoint. It would appear self-obvious to say that the subject of religion in any encyclo- paedia whose aim is to be universal, should be limited to the articles on religious matters. But in the Encyclopedia Eritannica this is not the case. As I have shown, those great artists and thinkers who do not fall within the range of bourgeois England's suburban morality, are neg- lected, disparaged, or omitted entirely.

Not only patriotic prejudice, but evangelical prejudice as well, characterizes this encyclo- paedia's treatment of the world's great achieve-

196 MISINFORMING A NATION

ments; and nowhere does this latter bias exhibit itself more unmistakably than in the articles re- lating to Catholicism. The trickery, the mani- fest ignorance, the contemptuous arrogance, the inaccuracies, the venom, and the half-truths which are encountered in the discussion of the Catholic Church and its history almost pass the bounds of credibility. The wanton prejudice exhibited in this department of the Britannica cannot fail to find resentment even in non-Catholics, like my- self; and for scholars, either in or out of the Church, this encyclopaedia, as a source of infor- mation, is not only worthless but grossly mis- leading.

The true facts relating to the inclusion of this encyclopaedia's article on Catholicism, as showing the arrogant and unscholarly attitude of the edi- tors, are as interesting to those outside of the Church as to Catholics themselves. And it is for the reason that these articles are typical of a great many of the Encyclopedia's discussions of cul- ture in general that I call attention both to the misinformation contained in them and to the amazing refusal of the Britannica's editors to cor- rect the errors when called to their attention at a time when correction was possible. The treat- ment of the Catholic Church by the Britannica is quite in keeping with its treatment of other im-

RELIGION 197

portant subjects, and it emphasizes, perhaps bet- ter than any other topic, not only the Encyclo- paedia's petty bias and incompleteness, but the indefensible and mendacious advertising by which this set of books was foisted upon the American public. And it also gives direct and irrefutable substantiation to my accusation that the spirit of the Encyclopedia Britannica is closely allied to the provincial religious doctrines of the British bourgeoisie; and that therefore it is a work of the most questionable value".

Over five years ago T. J. Campbell, S. J., in The Catholic Mind, wrote an article entitled The Truth About the Encyclopedia Britannica an article which, from the standpoint of an author- ity, exposed the utter unreliability of this En- cyclopaedia's discussion of Catholicism. The article is too long to quote here, but enough of it will be given to reveal the inadequacy of the Britannica as a source of accurate information. "The Encyclopedia Britannica" the article be- gins, "has taken an unfair advantage of the public. By issuing all its volumes simultan- eously it prevented any protests against misstate- ments until the whole harm was done. Hence- forth prudent people will be less eager to put faith in prospectuses and promises. The volumes were delivered in two installments a couple of

198 MISINFORMING A NATION

months apart. The article Catholic Church, in which the animus of the Encyclopaedia might have been detected, should naturally have been in the first set. It was adroitly relegated to the end of the second set, under the caption Roman Cath- olic Church.

"It had been intimated to us that the Encyclo- paedia's account of the Jesuits was particularly offensive. That is our excuse for considering it first. Turning to it we found that the same old battered scarecrow had been set up. The article covers ten and a half large, double-columned, closely-printed pages, and requires more than an hour in its perusal. After reading it two or three times we closed the book with amazement, not at the calumnies with which the article teems and to which custom has made us callous, but at the lack of good judgment, of accurate scholarship, of common information, and business tact which it reveals in those who are responsible for its publication.

"It ought to be supposed that the subscribers to this costly encyclopaedia had a right to expect in the discussion of all the questions presented an absolute or quasi-absolute freedom from partisan bias, a sincere and genuine presentation of all the results of the most modern research, a positive exclusion of all second-hand and discredited mat-

RELIGION 199

ter, and a scrupulous adherence to historical truth. In the article in question all these essential con- ditions are woefully lacking.

"Encyclopaedias of any pretence take especial pride in the perfection and completeness of their bibliographies. It is a stamp of scholarship and a guarantee of the thoroughness and reliability of the article, which is supposed to be an extract and a digest of all that has been said or written on the subject. The bibliography annexed to the article on the Jesuits, is not only deplorably meagre, but hopelessly antiquated. Thus, for in- stance, only three works of the present century are quoted; one of them apparently for no reason whatever, viz.: The History of the Jesuits of North America, in three volumes, by Thomas Hughes, S. J., for, as far as we are able to see, the Encyclopaedia article makes no mention of their being with Lord Baltimore in Maryland, or of the preceding troubles of the Jesuits in Eng- land, which were considered important enough for a monumental work, but evidently not for a compiler of the Encyclopaedia. Again, the nine words, 'laboring amongst the Hurons and Iro- quois of North America,' form the sum total of all the information vouchsafed us about the great missions of the seventeenth and eighteenth cen- turies, though we are referred to the seventy-three

200 MISINFORMING A NATION

volumes of Thwaites' edition of the Jesuits Re- lations. Had the author or editor even glanced at these books he might have seen that besides the Huron and Iroquois missions, which were very brief in point of time and very restricted in their territorial limitations, the Jesuit missions with the Algonquins extended from Newfoundland to Alaska, and are still continued; he would have found that most of the ethnological, religious, linguistic and geographical knowledge we have of aboriginal North America comes from those Jesuit Relations; and possibly without much research the sluggish reader would have met with a certain inconspicuous Marquette; but as Englishmen, up to the Civil War, are said to have imagined that the Mississippi was the dividing line between the North and South, the value of the epoch-making discovery of the great river never entered this slow foreigner's mind. Nor is there any refer- ence to the gigantic labors of the Jesuits in Mex- ico; but perhaps Mexico is not considered to be in North America.

"Nor is there in this bibliography any mention of the Monumenta Historica Societatis Jesu, nor of the Monumenta Pzdagogica, nor is there any allusion to the great and learned works of Duhr, Tacchi-Venturi, Fouqueray, and Kroes, which have just been published and are mines of in-

RELIGION 201

formation on the history of the Society in Spain, Germany, Italy and France; and although we are told of the Historia Societatis Jesu by Orlandini, which bears the very remote imprint of 1620, is very difficult to obtain, and covers a very re- stricted period, there is apparently no knowledge of the classic work of Jouvency, nor is Sacchini cited, nor Polanco. The Ribliotheque des ecri- vains de la Compagnie de Jesus, by De Backer, not 'Backer,' as the Encyclopaedia has it, is listed; but it is simply shocking to find that there was no knowledge of Sommervogel, who is the continu- ator of De Backer, and who has left us a most scholarly and splendid work which is brought down to our own times, and for which De Back- er's, notable though it be, was only a preparation. In brief, the bibliography is absolutely worthless, not only for a scholar, but even for the average reader.

"On the other hand it is quite in keeping with the character of the writers who were chosen for the article. The New York Evening Post in- forms us that before 1880, when a search for a suitable scribe for the Jesuit article was instituted, some one started on a hunt for Cardinal Newman, but the great man had no time. Then he thought of Manning, who, of course, declined, and finally knowing no other 'Jesuit' he gave the work to

202 MISINFORMING A NATION

Littledale. Littledale, as everyone knows, was an Anglican minister, notorious not only for his antagonism to the Jesuits, but also to the Cath- olic Church. He gladly addressed himself to the task, and forthwith informed the world that 'the Jesuits controlled the policy of Spain'; that 'it was a matter of common knowledge that they kindled the Franco-Prussian war of 1870'; that Tope Julius II dispensed the Father General from his vow of poverty,' though that warrior Pope expired eight years before Ignatius sought the solitude of Manresa, and had as yet no idea of a Society of Jesus; again, that 'the Jesuits from the beginning never obeyed the Pope' ; that 'in their moral teaching they can attenuate and even defend any kind of sin' ; and, finally, not to be too prolix in this list of absurdities, that, prior to the Vatican Council, 'they had filled up all the sees of Latin Christendom with bishops of their own selection/

"It is true that only the last mentioned charge appears in the present edition, and it is a fortu- nate concession for Littledale's suffering victims; for if 'there are no great intellects among the Jesuits,' and if they are only a set of 'respectable mediocrities,' as this 'revised' article tells us, they can point with pride to this feat which makes a dozen Franco-Prussian wars pale into insig-

RELIGION 203

nificance alongside it. We doubt, however, if the 700 prelates who sat in the Vatican Council would accept that explanation of their promotion in the prelacy; and we feel certain that Cardinal Manning, who was one of the great figures in that assembly, would resent it, at least if it be true, as the Encyclopaedia assures us, that he consid- ered the suppression of the Society in 1773 to be the work of God, and was sure that another 1773 was coming.

"The wonder is that a writer who can be guilty of such absurdities should, after twenty years, be summoned from the dead as a witness to anything at all. But on the other hand it is not surprising when we see that the Rev. Ethelred Taunton, who is also dead and buried, should be made his yoke-fellow in ploughing over this old field, to sow again these poisonous weeds. There are many post-mortems in the Encyclopaedia. Had the careless editors of the Encyclopaedia consulted Usher's Reconstruction of the English Church, they would have found Taunton described as an author 'who makes considerable parade of the amount of his research, but has not gone very far and has added little, if anything, to what we knew before. As a whole, his book on The His- tory of the Jesuits in England is uncritical and prejudiced.'

204 MISINFORMING A NATION

"Such is the authority the Encyclopaedia ap- peals to for information. That is bad enough, but in the list of authors Taunton is actually de- scribed as a 'Jesuit.' Possibly it is one of the punishments the Almighty has meted out to him for his misuse of the pen while on earth. But he never did half the harm to the Jesuits by his ill-natured assaults as he has to the Encyclopaedia in being mistaken for an *S. J.'; for although there are some people who will believe anything an encyclopaedia tells them, there are others who are not so meek and who will be moved to inquire how, if the editor of this publication is so lament- ably ignorant of the personality and antecedents of his contributors, he can vouch for the reliabil- ity of what newspaper men very properly call the stuff that comes into the office. We are not told who revised the writings of those two dead men, one of whom departed this life twenty, the other four years ago; and we have to be satisfied with a posthumous and prejudiced and partly anon- ymous account of a great Order, about which many important books have been written since the demise of the original calumniators, and with which apparently the unknown reviser is unac- quainted.

"It may interest the public to know that many of these errors were pointed out to the managers

RELIGION 20?

of the Encyclopaedia at their New York office when the matter was still in page proof and could have been corrected. Evidently it was not thought worth while to pay any attention to the protest.

"It is true that in the minds of some of their enemies, especially in certain parts of the habit- able globe, Catholics have no right to resent any- thing that is said of their practices and beliefs, no matter how false or grotesque such statements may be; and, consequently, we are not surprised at the assumption by the Encyclopedia Britannica of its usual contemptuous attitude. Thus, for instance, on turning to the articles Casuistry and Roman Catholic Church we find them signed 'St. C.' Naturally and supernaturally to be under the guidance of a Saint C. or a Saint D. always inspires confidence in a Catholic; but this 'St. C.' turns out to be only the Viscount St. Cyres, a scion of the noble house of Sir Stafford Northcote, the one time leader of the House of Commons, who died in 1887. In the Viscount's ancestral tree we notice that Sir Henry Stafford Northcote, first Baronet, has appended to his name the title Trov. Master of Devonshire Free- masons.' What Trov.' means we do not know, but we are satisfied with the remaining part of the description. The Viscount was educated at

2o6 MISINFORMING A NATION

Eton, and Merton College, Oxford. He is a lay- man and a clubman, and as far as we know is not suspected of being a Catholic. A search in the Who's Who*?' failed to reveal anything on that point, though a glance at the articles over his name will dispense us from any worry about his religious status.

"We naturally ask why he should have been chosen to enlighten the world on Catholic topics'? 'Because,' says the editor of the Encyclopedia Britannica^ 'the Viscount St. Cyres has probably more knowledge of the development of theology in the Roman Catholic Church than any other person in that Church.'

"The Church was unaware that it had at its disposal such a source of information. It will be news to many, but we are inclined to ask how the Viscount acquired that marvelous knowledge. It would require a life-long absorption in the study of divinity quite incompatible with the social duties of one of his station. Furthermore, we should like to know whence comes the com- petency of the editor to decide on the ability of the Viscount, and to pass judgment on the cor- rectness of his contribution? That also supposes an adequate knowledge of all that the dogmatic, moral and mystic theologians ever wrote, a life- long training in the language and methods of the

RELIGION 207

science, and a special intellectual aptitude to com- prehend the sublime speculations of the Church's divines.

"It will not be unkind to deny him such quali- fications, especially now, for did he not tell his friends at the London banquet: 'During all these (seven) years I have been busy in the black- smith's shop (of the editor's room) and I do not hear the noise that is made by the hammers all around me* nor, it might be added, does he hear what is going on outside the Britannica's forge.

"Meantime, we bespeak the attention of all the Catholic theologians in every part of the world to the preposterous invitation to come to hear the last word about 'the development of theology' in the Catholic Church from a scholar whose claim to theological distinction is that 'he has written about Fenelon and Pascal.' The Britannica shows scant respect to Catholic scholarship and Catholic intelligence."

Father Campbell then devotes several pages to a specific indictment of the misstatements and the glaring errors to be found in several of the articles relating to the Catholic Church. He quotes eight instances of St. Cyres' inaccurate and personal accusations, and also many passages from the arti- cles on Papacy, Celibacy and St. Catherine of Siena passages which show the low and biased

208 MISINFORMING A NATION

standard of scholarship by which they were writ- ten. The injustice contained in them is obvious even to a superficial student of history. At the close of these quotations he accuses the Britannica of being neither up-to-date, fair, nor well-in- formed. "It repeats old calumnies that have been a thousand times refuted, and it persistently selects the Church's enemies who hold her up to ridicule and contempt. We are sorry for those who have been lavish in their praises of a book which is so defective, so prejudiced, so misleading and so insulting."

It seems that while the Britannica's contribu- tions to the general misinformation of the world were being discussed, the editor wrote to one of his subscribers saying that the Catholics were very much vexed because the article on the Jesuits was not "sufficiently eulogistic."

"He is evidently unaware," Father Campbell goes on to comment, "that the Society of Jesus is sufficiently known both in the Church and the world not to need a monument in the graveyard of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Not the hum- blest Brother in the Order expected anything but calumny and abuse when he saw appended to the article the initials of the well-known assassins of the Society's reputation. Not one was sur- prised, much less displeased, at the absence of

RELIGION 209

eulogy, sufficient or otherwise; but, on the con- trary, they were all amazed to find the loudly trumpeted commercial enterprise, which had been so persistently clamorous of its possession of the most recent results of research in every depart- ment of learning, endeavoring to palm off on the public such shopworn travesties of historical and religious truth. The editor is mistaken if he thinks they pouted. Old and scarred veterans are averse to being patted on the back by their enemies.

"It is not, however, the ill-judged gibe that compels us to revert to the Society, as much as the suspicion that the editor of the Encyclopedia Britannica seems to fancy that we had nothing to say beyond calling attention to his dilapidated bibliography, which he labels with the very of- fensive title of 'the bibliography of Jesuitism9—' a term which is as incorrect as it is insulting or that we merely objected to the employment of two dead and discredited witnesses to tell the world what kind of an organization the Society is.

"It may be, moreover, that we misjudged a cer- tain portion of the reading public in treating the subject so lightly, and as the Encyclopaedia is con- tinually reiterating the assertion that it has no 'bias' and that its statement of facts is purely 'ob- jective,' a few concrete examples of the opposite

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kind of treatment the one commonly employed may not be out of place.

"We are told, for instance, that 'the Jesuits had their share, direct or indirect, in the embroiling of States, in concocting conspiracies and in kind- ling wars. They were responsible by their theoretical teachings in theological schools for not a few assassinations' (340). 'They power- fully aided the revolution which placed the Duke of Braganza on the throne of Portugal, and their services were rewarded with the practical control of ecclesiastical and almost civil affairs in that kingdom for nearly one hundred years' (344). Their war against the Jansenists did not cease till the very walls of Port Royal were demolished in 1710, even to the very abbey church itself, and the bodies of the dead taken with every mark of insult from their graves and literally flung to the dogs to devour* (345). 'In Japan the Jesuits died with their converts bravely as martyrs to the Faith, yet it is impossible to acquit them of a large share of the causes of that overthrow' (345)- 'It was about the same time that the grave scandal of the Chinese and Malabar rites began to attract attention in Europe and to make thinking men ask seriously whether the Jesuit missionaries in those parts taught anything which could fairly be called Christianity at all'

RELIGION 211

(348). The political schemings of Parsons in England was an object lesson to the rest of Eu- rope of a restless ambition and a lust of domina- tion which were to find many imitators' (348). The General of the Order drove away six thou- sand exiled Jesuit priests from the coast of Italy, and made them pass several months of suffering on crowded vessels at sea to increase public sym- pathy, but the actual result was blame for the cruelty with which he had enhanced their mis- fortunes' (346). 'Clement XIV, who suppressed them, is said to have died of poison, but Tanucci and two others entirely acquit the Jesuits.' They are accountable in no small degree in France, as in England, for alienating the minds of men from the religion for which they professed to work' (345).

"Very little of this can be characterized as 'eulogistic,' especially as interwoven in the story are malignant insinuations, incomplete and dis- torted statements, suppressions of truth, gross errors of fact, and a continual injection of per- sonal venom which makes the argument not an 'unbiased and objective presentment' of the case, but the plea of a prejudiced prosecuting and persecuting attorney endeavoring by false testi- mony to convict before the bar of public opinion an alleged culprit, whose destruction he is trying

212 MISINFORMING A NATION

to accomplish with an uncanny sort of delight." After having adduced a long list of instances which "reveal the rancor and ignorance of many of the writers hired by the Encyclopaedia," the article then points out "the fundamental untruth- fulness" on which the Britannica is built. In a letter written by the Encyclopaedia's editor ap- pears the following specious explanation: "Ex- treme care was taken by the editors, and especially by the editor responsible for the theological side of the work, that every subject, either directly or indirectly concerned with religion, should as far as possible be objective and not subjective in their presentation. The majority of the articles on the various Churches and their beliefs were written by members within the several communions, and, if not so written, were submitted to those most competent to judge, for criticism and, if need be, correction."

Father Campbell in his answer to this letter says: "Without animadverting on the peculiar use of the English language by the learned Eng- lish editor who tells us that 'every subject' should be 'objective* in their presentation, we do not hesitate to challenge absolutely the assertion that 'the majority of the articles on the various Churches were written by members within the sev- eral communions, and if not so written were sub-

RELIGION 213

mitted to those most competent to judge, for criticism and, if need be, for correction.' Such a pretence is simply amazing, and thoroughly per- plexed, we asked: What are we supposed to understand when we are informed that 'the ma- jority of the articles on the various Churches and their beliefs were written by members within the several communions"?

"Was the article on The Roman Catholic Church written by a Catholic? Was the indi- vidual who accumulated and put into print all those vile aspersions on the Popes, the saints, the sacraments, the doctrines of the Church, a Cath- olic? Were the other articles on Casuistry, Celi- bacy, St. Catherine of Siena, and Mary, the mother of Jesus, written by a Catholic? The supposition is simply inconceivable, and it calls for more than the unlimited assurance of the En- cyclopedia Britannica to compel us to accept it.

"But cthey were submitted to the most compe- tent judge for criticism and, if need be, correc- tion/ Were they submitted to any judge at all, or to any man of sense, before they were sent off to be printed and scattered throughout the Eng- lish speaking world? Is it permissible to imagine for a moment that any Catholic could have read some of those pages and not have been filled with horror at the multiplied and studied insults to

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everything he holds most sacred in his religion? Or did 'the editor responsible for the theological side of the work' reserve for himself the right to reject or accept whatever recommended itself to his superior judgment*?"

The article then points out that "far from being just to Catholics, the Britannica pointedly and persistently discriminated against them." The article on the Episcopalians was assigned to the Rev. Dr. D. D. Addison, Rector of All Saints, Brookline, Mass. ; that on Methodists to the Rev. Dr. J. M. Buckley, Editor of the Christian Ad- vocate. New York; that on the Baptists to the Rev. Newton Herbert Marshall, Baptist Church, Hampstead, England; that on the Jews to Israel Abrahams, formerly President of the Jewish His- torical Society and now Reader on Talmudic and Rabbinic Literature in Cambridge, and so on for the Presbyterians, Unitarians, Lutherans, etc. But in the case of the Catholic Church not only its history but its theology was given to a critic who was neither a theologian, nor a cleric, nor even a Catholic, and who, as Father Campbell notes, is not known outside of his little London coterie.

The Britannica? s editor also apologized for his encyclopaedia by stating that "Father Braun, S. J., has assisted us in our article on Vestments, and that Father Delehaye, S. J., has contributed,

RELIGION 21.?

among other articles, those on The Bollandists and Canonization. Abbe Boudinhon and Mgr. Duchesne, and Luchaire and Ludwig von Pastor and Dr. Kraus have also contributed, and Abbot Butler, O. S. B., has written on the Augustinians, Benedictines, Carthusians, Cistercians, Domin- icans and Franciscans" ; and, finally : "The new Britannica has had the honor of having as a con- tributor His Eminence James Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore, who has written of the Roman Catholic Church in America."

"But, after all," answers Father Campbell, "it was not a very generous concession to let Father Joseph Braun, S. J., Staatsexamen als Religions- oberlehren fur Gymnasien, University of Bonn, assist the editors in the very safe article on Vest- ments^ nor to let the Bollandists write a column on their publication, which has been going on for three or four hundred years. The list of those who wrote on the Papacy is no doubt respectable in ability if not in number, but we note that the editor is careful to say that the writers of that article were 'principally' Roman Catholics.

"Again we are moved to ask why should a Benedictine, distinguished though he be, have as- signed to him the history of the Augustinians, Franciscans, Dominicans, etc.? Were there no men in those great and learned orders to tell what

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they must have known better than even the eru- dite Benedictine*? Nor will it avail to tell us that His Eminence of Baltimore wrote The His- tory of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, when that article comprises only a column of statistics, preceded by two paragraphs, one on the early missions, and the other on the settlement of Lord Baltimore. No one more than the illus- trious and learned churchman would have re- sented calling such a mere compilation of figures a History of the Catholic Church in the United States, and no one would be more shocked than he by the propinquity of his restricted article to the prolix and shameless one to which it is annexed."

Here in brief is an account of the "impartial" manner in which Catholicism is recorded and de- scribed in that "supreme" book of knowledge, the Encyclopedia Britannica. And I set down this record here not because it is exceptional but, to the contrary, because it is representative of the way in which the world's culture (outside of Eng- land), and especially the culture of America, is treated.

The intellectual prejudice and contempt of England for America is even greater if anything than England's religious prejudice and contempt for Catholicism; and this fact should be borne in mind when you consult the Britannica for knowl-

RELIGION 217

edge. It will not give you even scholarly or ob- jective information: it will advise you, by con- stant insinuation and intimation, as well as by direct statement, that English culture and achieve- ment represent the transcendent glories of the world, and that the great men and great accom- plishments of other nations are of minor im- portance. No more fatal intellectual danger to America can be readily conceived than this dis- torted, insular, incomplete, and aggressively Brit- ish reference work.

XII

TWO HUNDRED OMISSIONS

THE following list contains two hundred of the many hundreds of writers, painters, musicians and scientists who are denied biographies in the Britannica. There is not a name here which should not be in an encyclopaedia which claims for itself the completeness which the Britannica claims. Many of the names stand in the fore- front of modern culture. Their omission is noth- ing short of preposterous, and can be accounted for only on the grounds of ignorance or prejudice. In either case, they render the encyclopaedia in- adequate as an up-to-date and comprehensive ref- erence work.

It will be noted that not one of these names is English, and that America has suffered from neg- lect in a most outrageous fashion. After reading the flamboyant statements made in the Encyclo- pedia Britannica? s advertising, glance down this list. Then decide for yourself whether or not the statements are accurate.

Objection may be raised to some of the follow- 218

TWO HUNDRED OMISSIONS 219

ing names on the ground that they are not of suf- ficient importance to be included in an encyclo- paedia, and that their omission cannot be held to the discredit of the Eritannica. In answer let me state that for every name listed here as being de- nied a biography, there are one or two, and, in the majority of cases, many, Englishmen in the same field who are admittedly inferior and yet who are given detailed and generally laudatory biographies.

LITERATURE

"A. E." (George W. Rus- Eekhoud

sell) Clyde Fitch

Andreiev Paul Fort

Artzibashef Gustav Frenssen

Hermann Bahr Froding

Henri Bernstein Fucini (Tanfucio Neri)

Otto Julius Bierbaum Garshin

Ambrose Bierce Stefan George

Helene Bohlau Rene de Ghil

Henry Bordeaux Giacosa

Rene Boylesve Ellen Glasgow

Enrico Butti Remy de Gourmont

Cammaerts Robert Grant

Capuana Lady Gregory

Bliss Carman Grigorovich

Winston Churchill Hartleben

Pierre de Coulevain Heidenstam

Richard Dehmel Hirschfeld

Margaret Deland Hugo von Hofmannsthal

Grazia Deledda Arno Holz

Theodore Dreiser Richard Hovey

220 MISINFORMING A NATION

Bronson Howard

Ricarda Huch

James Huneker

Douglas Hyde

Lionel Johnson

Karlfeldt

Charles Klein

Korolenko

Kuprin

Percy MacKaye

Emilio de Marchi

Ferdinando Martini

Stuart Merrill

William Vaughn Moody

Nencioni

Standish O'Grady

Ompteda

Panzacchi

Giovanni Pascoli

David Graham Phillips

Wilhelm von Polenz

Rapisardi

Edwin Arlington Robinson

Remain Rolland

T. W. Rolleston

Rovetta

Albert Samain

George Santayana

Johannes Schlaf

Schnitzler

Severin

Signoret

Synge

John Bannister Tabb

Tchekhoff

Gherardi del Testa

Jerome and Jean Tharaud

Ludwig Thoma

Augustus Thomas

Tinayre

Katherine Tynan

Veressayeff

Clara Viebig

Annie Vivanti

Wackenroder

Wedekind

Edith Wharton

Owen Wister

Ernst von Wolzogen

George Bellows Carriere Mary Cassatt Cezanne Louis Corinth Maurice Denis Gauguin Habermann

PAINTING

C. W. Hawthorne

Robert Henri

Hodler

Sergeant Kendall

Ludwig Knaus

Kriiger

Jean Paul Laurens

Leibl

TWO HUNDRED OMISSIONS 221

Von Marees Toulouse-Lautrec

Rene Menard Triibner

Redon Twachtman

Charles Shuch Van Gogh

Lucien Simon Vallotton

Steinlen Zorn

MUSIC

d' Albert Marschner

Arensky Nevin

Mrs. Beach Nordraak

Busoni John Knowles Paine

Buxtehude Horatio Parker

Charpentier Rachmaninov

Frederick Converse Ravel

Cui Max Reger

Arthur Foote Nikolaus Rubinstein

Grechaninov Scharwenka brothers

Guilmant Georg Alfred Schumann

Henry K. Hadley Scriabine

Josef Hofmann Sibelius

Edgar Stillman Kelly Friedrich Silcher

Kreisler Sinding

Leschetitzky Taneiev

Gustav Mahler Wolf-Ferrari

SCIENCE AND INVENTION

William Beaumont Simon Flexner

John Shaw Billings W. W. Gerhard

Luther Burbank Samuel David Gross

George W. Crile William S. Halsted

Harvey Gushing Wilhelm His

Rudolph Diesel Abraham Jacobi

Daniel Drake Rudolph Leuckart

Ehrlich Franz Leydig

222 MISINFORMING A NATION

Jacques Loeb Ramon y Cajal

Percival Lowell Nicholas Senn

Lyonet (Lyonnet) Marion Sims

S. J. Meltzer Theobald Smith

Metchnikoff W. H. Welch

T. H. Morgan Orville Wright

Joseph O'Dwyer Wilbur Wright

PSYCHOLOGY AND PHILOSOPHY

Ardigo Jung

Bergson Kiilpe

Boutroux Lipps

Hermann Cohen Josiah Roycc

John Dewey Alois Riehl

Edelmann Sibbern

Freud Soloviov

Guyau Tetans

G. Stanley Hall Windelband Hildebrand

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