"Neither realism nor romance alone will ever with its small plummet sound to its depths the human heart or its mystery; yet from the union of the two much perhaps might come. We believe that just here lies the value of the novels of Henryk Sienkiewicz. He has worked out the problem of the modern novel so as to satisfy the most ardent realist, but he has worked it out upon great and broadly human lines. For him facts are facts indeed; but facts have souls as well as bodies. His genius is analytic, but also imaginative and constructive; it is not forever going upon botanizing excursions. He paints things and thoughts human. The greatest genius assimilates unconsciously the best with which it comes in contact, and by a subtle chemistry of its own makes new combinations. Shakespeare, Dante, Goethe, and the realists, as well as all the forces of nature, have helped to make Henryk Sienkiewicz; yet he is not any one of them. He is never merely imitative. Originality and imaginative fire, a style vivid and strong, large humor, a profound pathos, a strong feeling for nature, and a deep reverence for the forms and the spirit of religion, the breath of the true cosmopolitan united with the intense patriotism of the Pole, a great creative genius, — these are the most striking qualities of the work of this modern novelist, who has married Romance to Realism."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Historical novelistsAcademics from PolandCatholics from PolandNovelists from PolandJournalists from Poland
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Publisher's Preface to Without Dogma : A Novel of Modern Poland (1893), published by Little, Brown, and Company
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henryk_Sienkiewicz
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Henryk Sienkiewicz
1846 – 1916
polnischer Schriftsteller
41 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Henryk Sienkiewicz →
Related Quotes
"This homage has been rendered not to me – for the Polish soil is fertile and does not lack better writers than me – b…"
"There is within us a moral instinct which forbids us to rejoice at the death of even an enemy."
"I consider that in dialectics I am the equal of Socrates. As to women, I agree that each has three or four souls, but…"
"Life deserves laughter, hence people laugh at it."
"Riches, glory, power are mere smoke, vanity! The rich man will find a richer than himself; the greater glory of anoth…"
"Not Nero, but God, rules the world."
"Pliny declares, as I hear, that he does not believe in the gods, but he believes in dreams; and perhaps he is right. …"
"A time will come when under changed circumstances she will recover her beauty. I thought of it to-day and at once ask…"
"O Petronius, thou hast seen what endurance and comfort that religion gives in misfortune, how much patience and coura…"
"A man who leaves memoirs, whether well or badly written, provided they be sincere, renders a service to future psycho…"