An Apology for
Crudity
by
Sherwood Anderson
For a long time I have believed
that crudity is an inevitable quality in the production of a really significant present-day American literature. How indeed
is one to escape the obvious fact that there is as yet no native subtlety of thought or living among us? And if we are a crude
and childlike people how can our literature hope to escape the influence of that fact? Why indeed should we want it to escape?
If you are in doubt as to the crudity of thought in America, try an experiment. Come out of your offices, where you
sit writing and thinking, and try living with us. Get on a train at Pittsburg and go west to the mountains of Colorado. Stop
for a time in our towns and cities. Stay for a week in some Iowa corn-shipping town and for another week in one of the Chicago
clubs. As you loiter about read our newspapers and listen to our conversations, remembering, if you will, that as you see
us in the towns and cities, so we are. We are not subtle enough to conceal ourselves and he who runs with open eyes through
the Mississippi Valley may read the story of the Mississippi Valley.
It is a
marvelous story and we have not yet begun to tell the half of it. A little, I think I know why. It is because we who write
have drawn ourselves away. We have not had faith in our people and in the story of our people. If we are crude and childlike,
that is our story and our writing men must learn to dare to come among us until they know the story. The telling of the story
depends, I believe, upon their learning that lesson and accepting that burden.
To
my room, which is on a street near the loop in the city of Chicago, come men who write. They talk and I talk. We are fools.
We talk of writers of the old world and the beauty and subtlety of the work they do. Below us the roaring city lies like a
great animal on the prairies, but we do not run out to the prairies. We stay in our rooms and talk.
And so, having listened to talk and having myself talked overmuch, I grow weary of talk and walk in the streets.
As I walk alone, an old truth comes home to me and I know that we shall never have an American literature until we return
to faith in ourselves and to the facing of our own limitations. We must, in some way, become in ourselves more like our fellows,
more simple and real.
For surely it does not follow that because we Americans
are a people without subtlety, we are a dull or uninteresting people. Our literature is dull, but we are not. One remembers
how Dostoevsky had faith in the simplicity of the Russians and what he achieved. He lived and he expressed the life of his
time and people. The thing that he did brings hope of achievement for our men.
But
let us first of all accept certain truths. Why should we Americans aspire to a subtlety that belongs not to us but to old
lands and places? Why talk of intellectuality and of intellectual life when we have not accepted the life that we have? There
is death on that road and following it has brought death into much of American writing. Can you doubt what I say? Consider
the smooth slickness of the average magazine story.
There is often great subtlety
of plot and phrase, but there is no reality. Can such work live? The answer is that the most popular magazine story or novel
does not live in our minds for a month.
And what are we to do about it? To me
it seems that as writers we shall have to throw ourselves with greater daring into the life here. We shall have to begin to
write out of the people and not for the people. We shall have to find within ourselves a little of that courage. To continue
along the road we are travelling is unthinkable. To draw ourselves apart, to live in little groups and console ourselves with
the thought that we are achieving intellectuality, is to get nowhere. By such a road we can hope only to go on producing a
literature that has nothing to do with life as it is lived in these United States.
To
be sure, the doing of the thing I am talking about will not be easy. America is a land of objective writing and thinking.
New paths will have to be made. The subjective impulse is almost unknown to us. Because it is close to life, it works out
into crude and broken forms. It leads along a road that such American masters of prose as James and Howells did not want to
take, but if we are to get anywhere, we shall have to travel that road.
The
road is rough and the times are pitiless. Who, knowing our America and understanding the life in our towns and cities, can
close his eyes to the fact that life here is for the most part an ugly affair? As a people we have given ourselves to industrialism,
and industrialism is not lovely. If anyone can find beauty in an American factory town, I wish he would show me the way. For
myself, I cannot find it. To me, and I am living in industrial life, the whole thing is as ugly as modern war. I have to accept
that fact and I believe a great step forward will have been taken when it is more generally accepted.
But why, I am asked, is crudity and ugliness necessary? Why cannot a man like Mr. Dreiser write
in the spirit of the early Americans, why cannot he see fun in life? What we want is the note of health. In the work of Mark
Twain there was something wholesome and sweet. Why cannot the modern man be also wholesome and sweet?
To this I make answer that to me a man, say like Mr. Dreiser, is wholesome. He is true to something
in the life about him, and truth is always wholesome. Twain and Whitman wrote out of another age, out of an age and a land
of forests and rivers. The dominant note of American life in their time was the noisy, swaggering raftsman and the hairy-breasted
woodsman. To-day it is not so. The dominant note in American life to-day is the factory hand. When we have digested that fact,
we can begin to approach the task of the present-day novelist with a new point of view.
It is, I believe, self-evident that the work of the novelist must always lie somewhat outside the field of philosophic
thought. Your true novelist is a man gone a little mad with the life of his times. As he goes through life he lives, not in
himself, but in many people. Through his brain march figures and groups of figures. Out of the many figures, one emerges.
If he be at all sensitive to the life about him and that life be crude, the figure that emerges will be crude and will crudely
express itself.
I do not know how far a man may go on the road of subjective
writing. The matter, I admit, puzzles me. There is something approaching insanity in the very idea of sinking yourself too
deeply into modern American industrial life.
But it is my contention that there
is no other road. If one would avoid neat, slick writing, he must at least attempt to be brother to his brothers and live
as the men of his time live. He must share with them the crude expression of their lives. To our grandchildren the privilege
of attempting to produce a school of American writing that has delicacy and color may come as a matter of course. One hopes
that will be true, but it is not true now. And that is why, with so many of the younger Americans, I put my faith in the modern
literary adventurers. We shall, I am sure, have much crude, blundering American writing before the gift of beauty and subtlety
in prose shall honestly belong to us.