« But why writers should be more esteemed the older they
grow, has long perplexed me. At one time I thought that the
praise accorded to them when they had ceased for twenty years to
write anything of interest was largely due to the fact that the
younger men, having no longer to fear their competition, felt it
safe to extol their merit ; and it is well known that to
praise someone whose rivalry you do not dread is often a very
good way of putting a spoke in the wheel of someone whose rivalry
you do. But it is to take a low view of human nature and I would
not for the world lay myself open to a charge of cheap cynicism.
After mature consideration I have come to the conclusion that the
real reason for the universal applause that comforts the
declining years of the author who exceeds the common span of man
is that intelligent people after the age of thirty read nothing
at all. As they grow older the books they read in their youth are
lit with its glamour and with every year that passes they ascribe
greater merit to the author that wrote them. Of course he must go
on ; he must keep in the public eye. It is no good his
thinking that it is enough to write one or two
masterpieces ; he must provide a pedestal for them of forty
or fifty works of no particular consequence. This needs time. His
production must be such that if he cannot captivate a reader by
his charm he can stun him by his weight. »