"Cliff Notes - Daisy Miller" - читать интересную книгу автора (Cliff Notes)HENRY JAMES: THE AUTHOR AND HIS TIMES In the mid 1850s, a father made this observation about his 14-year-old son's unexceptional performance in school: "Harry is not so fond of study, properly so-called, as of reading.... He has considerable talent as a writer, but I am at a loss to know whether he will ever accomplish much." The father need not have worried. Within fifty years, "Harry" (as family and friends called Henry James) would be known among his peers as "The Master." He is known to us today as one of the greatest novelists to have written in English. Henry James was born in New York City on April 15, 1843, into a family that was as eccentric as it was wealthy and as brilliant as it was eccentric. Henry James Sr., was a philosopher who counted among his visitors many of the noted thinkers of the day, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. His oldest son, William, would in time also write on philosophy and psychology, surpassing his father to become one of the most important figures in American intellectual history. The James family made frequent and lengthy trips through Europe, giving the young Henry a formal education that was at best haphazard, but also exposing him early to the continent, that would become the setting and the subject of so much of his writing. Wealth, leisure, and travel should perhaps have made Henry James's childhood an idyll. But it was an idyll shadowed by James's fears and insecurities. Compared to his confident older brother, Henry felt frail and unmasculine; sometimes mocked by other boys, he retreated into the company of his mother, sister, and aunt. In 1860 the family had settled at Newport, Rhode Island. There, the following year, while helping others fight a stable fire, James suffered an injury he described as "a horrid even if an obscure hurt." Throughout his life he remained as mysterious about the specific nature of this injury as he would be about the evil in The Turn of the Screw, but it severely affected him. It prevented him from fighting in the Civil War. Some critics also contend that it was the cause--or perhaps simply the convenient excuse--behind James's apparently total lifelong rejection of sexual relationships. In any case, the physical and psychological pain it gave him was one more force isolating him from the rest of the world. It was to compensate for this sense of isolation, to make some connection with others, that James turned to writing. After giving formal schooling one final try at age 19 in a miserable and unsuccessful year at Harvard Law School, James determined to make literature his career. He began to publish his first book reviews and stories. Some of these early works |
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