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Carl Van Doren
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The American Novel
>
Subject Index
> Page 238
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CONTENTS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
·
SUBJECT INDEX
Carl Van Doren
(18851950).
The American Novel.
1921.
Page 238
quaint or homely touches may be found in two other novels of the period which both exploit elderly, eccentric, charming heroes: F. Hopkinson Smiths
Colonel Carter of Cartersville
(1891), displaying the type of old school Virginia gentleman now firmly fixed in the popular imagination; and Edward Noyes Westcotts
David Harum
(1898), a novel dominated by a shrewd, racy-tongued upstate New Yorker who holds a comfortable place in the long American tradition of the unlettered philosopher and humorist.
2. Francis Marion Crawford
I
N
the eighties began the career of that later American writer who gave to the novel his most complete allegiance, undeflected by the vogue of briefer narratives, which he only barely attempted, or by other forms of imaginative literature. Francis Marion Crawford, descendant of the Revolutionary general and son of the sculptor, Thomas Crawford, was born at Bagni di Lucca, Tuscany, in 1854. Though the father lived in Rome, he sent his son to prepare for college at St. Pauls School, New Hampshire, and then to Harvard; but Crawford soon left Cambridge to study successively at the English Cambridge, Heidelberg, and Rome. Having become interested in Sanskrit, and having lost the expectation of a fortune, he went to India and there edited
The Indian Herald
at Allahabad. But he shortly returned to America, spent another year upon Sanskrit with Professor Lanman of Harvard, and wrote his first novel,
Mr. Isaacs
(1882), on the advice of an uncle who had been struck by Crawfords oral account
CONTENTS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
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SUBJECT INDEX
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