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Tuckerman, Bayard

"A History of English Prose Fiction"

But
now, let the same tale be read aloud after breakfast, from a newspaper,
with the affidavits of the witnesses of the apparition duly attached,
and only laughter can be the result.
Now let us apply the same test to romance. We open the "Morte d'Arthur";
we find ourselves at once in an unreal, almost nameless land; we meet
with knights whom we only know apart by their armor, and queens ambling
through pathless forests on white palfreys; we attend brilliant
tournaments and witness superhuman deeds of arms. Our minds, untroubled
by scepticism and thoughtless of unreality, yield themselves to the
poetical illusion. Who stops to think of the incredible when Sir
Bedivere hurls into the lake the dying Arthur's sword Excalibur?
Then Sir Bedivere departed, and went to the sword, and lightly took
it up, and went to the water side, and there he bound the girdle
about the hilts, and then he threw the sword as far into the water
as he might, and there came an arm and an hand above the water, and
met it, and caught it, and so shook it thrice and brandished, and
then vanished away the hand with the sword in the water.
But when we are introduced to the castle of Otranto, when we know its
dimensions and appearance, when we have become acquainted with its
inmates, and have been made to realize that they are flesh and blood
like ourselves, we cannot receive without a shock the account of the
supernatural occurrences by which they are affected.


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