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Charles Dickens
My Dear Sirs:
Not many minutes elapsed after I was informed of your literary venture
before I firmly resolved to communicate my feelings concerning your proposed
attempt at publishing such a magazine. I hope that my letter has reached
you in sufficient time to do a little practical good before your maiden
issue. One consideration important to me must be pursued immediately. I
refer, sirs; to the very noticable similarity between the title of your
magazine, The Artful Dodge, and a deservedly remembered character
from one of my own works. If symbolism was in fact the intention behind
the christening of your publication in such a manner, it is hoped that neither
of the literary parties involved, that is, your magazine or my character,
shall suffer from an association of this sort. I cannot bring myself to
believe that you would name your magazine our of deference to me or my work;
nor, can I entertain the notion that you would select such a character as
an historical source toward which you would refer your contemporary readers.
On the contrary, I realize quite well that neither of the present editors
of The Artful Dodge has ever shown a striking, at the least fleeting
I would say, interest in my own works. Since I have strong feelings about
being a spring of water that would flow outward in personally contrary channels,
I hope just as urgently that even if you do not direct your magazine in
the course prepared by my own accomplishments. By this I mean, and I am
ready now to be frank, I fear that in naming your magazineThe Artful
Dodge you may supply the connotation of flippant dexterity, fluid deviousness,
or refined scoundrelry to the serious tasks towards which all responsible
literature should be directed. That literature should be nimble and vibrant
goes without saying. But for literary form to be a spineless means along
the route of least resistance toward a goal of lotus-stuffed diversion,
oblivious to the important clarification of what is at stake in the life
with which we are confronted, this line of development, in which the delight
which literature may jutificably offer the reader becomes instead decay,
I shall not begin to admit of following, let alone recommend or approve.
I do not wish The Artful Dodge, if it insists on utilizing this name,
to become the banner for an army of frivolous elves, who would fiddle away
at literature while a deserving segment of society burns for a literature
which would be of true significance. But let me turn my critical comments
onto a more sounding path. May your magazine be the grounds where is displayed
a supple fortitude, created by literary endeavor, in the face of a stagnant
enemy of both artistic and social concoction. It is such a banner of sincerity
and playful fortitude that I would gladly entrust to your keeping.
But now that I have admonished you much in the manner of a parent discipling
her children before they have done srong, that is, unfairly and with a stronger
regard to my own good conscience than to your proper and just upbringing,
let me turn to another matter which furnishes me with some degree of uneasiness,
and which is something that you have indeed done and is not a product of
any predilection on my part towards admonition when it is not as of yet
due. I notice that your first issue includes neither advertising nor, shall
we say, a suitable degree of professional "means of production."
Let me instruct you, all in the spirit of well-intentioned advice, that
it would due to heed the gentle prddings of the praticalities with which
God has seen fit to provide us and to seek out methods of funding your literary
venture by means other than the monies of your readers. If my own literary
works, which have on the whole withstood the obscuring influence that a
hundred years could well cloak around any work of art, were quite able to
be intially presented along with advertisements in magazines and pamphlets
without suffering, then you too are capable of withstanding a few adverstisments
scattered about the pages of your magazine also. If politics makes strange
bedfellows, it must further and perhaps even more assuredly be stated that
literature must endure some sort of realistic but unaesthetic bonds with
the rest of society; in this manner literature will remain neither aloof
nor ignored. Therefore, let me once again be blunt: acquire advertising
and entertain seriously the idea of promising your forthcoming issues a
better process of printing. Both your readers and your magazine would benefit
from such a vow.
I would much look forward also to your solicitation of authentic letter
from your contemporaries to supplement these "forged letters"
with which you intend to populate your magazine. Take care that you do not
litter your issues with the tombstones of the past at the expense of walking
space of the present. One does not usually go to a museum for fresh air.
But, I would not be adverse to affirming a position not overly far from
the converse of the above. These "forged letters" of yours could
just as well furnish the reader with an interesting and hopefully illuminating
link with the all too often unused, and, for the timid reader, frightful,
corridors of the past. Perhaps everyone needs an occasional encounter with
a Marley's ghost, even of a preconceived demeanor, as I admit mine was.
Forgive me even of a preconceived demeanor, as I admit mine was. Forgive
me for my levity as I have forgiven you for writing this "forged letter."
I hope that I have addressed thoughtful and concerned men.
Believe me
Most sincerely yours,
Charles Dickens
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