II
Three sensitive areas—religion, politics and economics, and
morals
—especially inspired caution in publishers and editors in their role
of
protecting readers from contributors. The religious controversies of the
sixties and seventies were dangerous ground. George Smith's
Cornhill is a case in point. Thackeray in his prospectus
(1859)
set forth the principles which the magazine was to follow:
At our social table we shall suppose the ladies and children always
present; we shall not set rival politicians by the ears; we shall listen to
every guest who has an apt word to say, and I hope induce clergymen of
various denominations to say grace in their turn.
[17]
The result, as Leslie Stephen later remarked, was "an unprecedented
shillings-worth . . . limited to the inoffensive." In his desire to avoid
offense, Thackeray asked Frederick Locker to change the last line in "My
Neighbour Rose" from "God go with her" to "Joy go with her": the
mention of the Deity in a light love-poem, he felt, might cause
objections.
[18] When Stephen became
editor in 1871, he replied to a friend's congratulations with a complaint
about Smith's policies: "What can one make of a magazine which excludes
the only subjects in which reasonable men take any interest: politics and
religion?"
[19] Already known as an
agnostic, he had to warn contributors against possible alienation of readers.
When James Sully, for example, proposed an article on pessimism, Stephen
warned him not to mention Schopenhauer. "The ordinary parson, who is the
general object of my dread, has never heard of Schopenhauer; but he may
vaguely
scent infidelity in a German name."
[20]
It was apparently George Smith who intervened to suspend Matthew
Arnold's
Literature and Dogma, breaking off the series rather
awkwardly after the second instalment (October, 1871) as "too explosive"
for the
Cornhill.
[21] He
had
previously rejected George Meredith's "Martin's Puzzle" for its
"free-thinking opinions." While
personally admiring the poem, he wrote to Meredith, "it would offend
many of his readers."
[22]
One striking phenomenon of Victorian publishing was the magazine
for "Sunday Reading," and the most successful of this kind was
Good
Words, edited by Norman Macleod and published by Alexander
Strahan. It was a remarkable monthly, especially distinguished for its wood
engravings and for its eclectic range of articles, verse, and fiction; by the
mid-sixties it had a circulation of 110,000—larger, according to
Strahan,
than that of any other magazine in England or America. Macleod, one of
Queen Victoria's chaplains and a well known Glasgow clergyman, had
Strahan's support in attempting to improve the literary quality of reading
matter acceptable to religious families. But he was soon attacked by the
Evangelicals for admitting contributions from such liberal clergymen as
Charles Kingsley and Dean Stanley. When he advertised a novel by
Anthony Trollope, the Evangelical Record (which perhaps
remembered Mr. Slope and Mrs. Proudie) threatened that Good
Words
should be "crushed." Trollope's Rachel Ray, which Macleod
had requested and for which he had agreed to pay £1000, could not
appear in Good Words. After a considerable portion had been
set up in type it was returned, and Strahan paid a £500 forfeit at
Trollope's threat of legal action.
Trollope's account of the affair in his Autobiography
is
perhaps not quite fair to Macleod:
There is some dancing in one of the early chapters, described, no
doubt, with that approval of the amusement which I have always
entertained; and it was to this that my friend demurred.
[23]
And he wrote to John Millais:
Good Words has thrown me over. They write me word
that I am too wicked. . . . They have tried to serve God and the devil
together, and finding that goodness pays best, have thrown over me and the
devil. . . . I am altogether unsuited to the regenerated.
[24]
Actually
Rachel Ray contains an even more unsympathetic
picture of Low-Church activities than
Barchester Towers. As
Macleod wrote to Trollope, "You cast a gloom over Dorcas societies, and
a glory over balls lasting until four in the morning . . . enough to keep
Good Words
and its editor in boiling water until either or both were boiled to
death."
[25] Granted the legitimacy of
Trollope's satire on the Evangelicals,
Good Words was
obviously not the place to publish it; Macleod, I think, was honest when he
denied to Trollope that he "sacrificed you to the vile
Record
and
to the cry it and its followers have raised against you, as well as
me."
[26] Trollope, at any rate,
continued to contribute to
Good Words. And yet such
concessions to puritanism gave rise to a legend about "Sunday magazines";
here is one form of it:
It was the editor of one of these magazines who is said, though I do
not vouch for the truth of the story, to have implored the author, who was
running a novel through his columns, to shift the date on which he had
made his lovers meet from Saturday afternoon to "Sunday after church
time," in deference to the susceptibilities of his subscribers.
[27]
It was not only family magazines like the Cornhill and
magazines for Sunday reading like Good Words which had
to
be careful to avoid offense in religious matters. Huxley's chapter on the
critical reception of Darwin's Origin of Species, contributed
to
the authorized biography of Darwin, shows how far scientific thought was
modified in the reviews by what Darwin called odium
theologicum. Later, when James Knowles was making Strahan's
Contemporary Review into a menagerie of lions, he
welcomed
Huxley's defense of The Descent of Man. But he drew the
line
at Francis Galton's "Statistical Inquiries into the Efficacy of Prayer," which
had also been refused by George Grove for Macmillan's
Magazine. Knowles wrote to Galton:
I am afraid that after all my courage is not greater than Grove's. You
will think that editors are a "feeble folk," and so perhaps they are, but it is
certain that our constituents (who are largely clergymen) must not be tried
much further just now by proposals following Tyndall's friend on
prayer—and of a similar bold,—or as you yourself say,
"audacious
character."
[28]
The essay was finally accepted by Morley for the
Fortnightly.
After Knowles had left the
Contemporary and started the
Nineteenth Century—an open forum for the
encouragement
of the star system, some critics called it—he still felt the need of
caution.
The controversy between Gladstone and Huxley on the scientific validity of
the book of Genesis, in the mid-eighties, was an editor's dream; for an
impresario
like Knowles nothing could have been better. But he asked Huxley to revise
one article as too "pungent," and Huxley replied: "I spent three mortal
hours this morning taming my wild cat. He is now castrated; his claws are
cut."
[29]
Knowles had left the Contemporary when Strahan
incorporated his firm with the support of Samuel Morley and other
prominent Nonconformists in 1877. Strahan had perhaps been disturbed by
the furore resulting from the publication of W. K. Clifford's article on "The
Ethics of Belief."[30] His break with
Knowles was somewhat acrimonious, but he assumed the editorship himself,
kept up the standard of the review, and stated his position fairly enough in
an article on "The Higher Controversy and Periodical Literature":
The business of the editor of a periodical in which the higher
controversy finds a place is not to dam out arbitrarily, but to see, as far as
he can, that the waters are not poisoned by any influx of bad faith, cynical
ethics, or mere folly.
[31]