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Джеймс Брэнч Кейбелл
And, roughly, the distinction serves. Yet minute consideration discovers, I think, in these two sets of legends a more profound, if subtler, difference, in the handling of the protagonist: with Jurgen all of the physical and mental man is rendered as a matter of course; whereas in dealing with Manuel there is, always, I believe, a certain perceptible and strange, if not inexplicable, aloofness. Manuel did thus and thus, Manuel said so and so, these legends recount: yes, but never anywhere have I detected any firm assertion as to Manuel's thoughts and emotions, nor any peep into the workings of this hero's mind. He is «done» from the outside, always at arm's length. It is not merely that Manuel's nature is tinctured with the cool unhumanness of his father the water-demon: rather, these old poets of Poictesme would seem, whether of intention or no, to have dealt with their national hero as a person, howsoever admirable in many of his exploits, whom they have never been able altogether to love, or entirely to sympathize with, or to view quite without distrust.
There are several ways of accounting for this fact,—ranging from the hurtful as well as beneficent aspect of the storm-god, to the natural inability of a poet to understand a man who succeeds in everything: but the fact is, after all, of no present importance save that it may well have prompted Lewistam to scamp his dealings with this always somewhat ambiguous Manuel, and so to omit the hereinafter included legends, as unsuited to the clearer and sunnier atmosphere of the
For my part, I am quite content, in this Comedy of Appearances, to follow the old romancers' lead. «Such and such things were said and done by our great Manuel,» they say to us, in effect: «such and such were the appearances, and do you make what you can of them.»
I say that, too, with the addition that in real life, also, such is the fashion in which we are compelled to deal with all happenings and with all our fellows, whether they wear or lack the gaudy name of heroism.
Chronology of James Branch Cabell's Published Works
1879: April 14, James Branch Cabell born at 101 East Franklin Street, Richmond, Virginia.
1894: Matriculated College of William and Mary at age fifteen.
1898: Graduated from college, where he had taught French and Greek as an undergraduate.
1898—1900: Worked as a newspaper reporter in New York.
1901: Reporter in Richmond; first stories accepted for publication; suspected of murder in Richmond.
1902: Seven stories published in national magazines.
1904: The Eagle's Shadow.
1905: The Line of Love.
1907: Branchiana (genealogy); Gallantry.
1909: The Cords of Vanity; Chivalry.
1911: Branch of Abingdom (genealogy).
1911—1913: Employed in office of the Branch (his uncle's) coal mines in West Virginia
1913: The Soul of Melicent (later title Domnei); November 8, married Priscilla Bradley Shepard.
1915: The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck; August 25, Ballard Hartwell Cabell born; The Major's and Their Marriages (his wife's genealogy).