Garland, 1931
Garland, Hamlin. Companions on the trail; a literary chronicle. New York: The Macmillan company, 1931. USA
Popis
https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000433911
11 Seton, coby zastánce britského impéria (20. ledna 1901) https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=25
14–15 Vzpomínka na to jak se sblížil se Setonem https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=28
Drobná zmínka o Grace, v souvislosti s jeho ženou https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=31
51–54 3. listopad 1901, zmínka o setkání s Twainem, když se míjeli u Setona. https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=65
As I looked around me, I found my fellow authors in the midst of unexampled prosperity. Ernest Seton-Thompson (as he signed his name at this time) was in high demand, both as lecturer and writer. Winston Churchill's books, like those of George Barr McCutcheon, were selling in hundreds of thousands. Young Stewart Edward White was enjoying a boom, along with Frank Norris, Ellen Glasgow, and Booth Tarkington. They all had something to sell which the larger public wanted. Only a few cared to read my books.
Warner's death, as Howells said, was a warning and a prophecy to the older men. "We old fellows feel a pang when one of our number drops away," he said somberly, and I realized that he, too, was nearing the end of his day.
Each morning I worked a little on "The Silent Eaters," which grew in interest as I wrought. "I'd like to make it a prose epic," I confessed to Fuller who had encouraged me in its original draft. One evening I went out to witness the closing phase of the campaign. The Roosevelt demonstration was a superb display of fireworks, but the crowd was singularly lethargic, as if made up merely of onlookers, and I came home with the feeling that McKinley needed all the votes he could get. That night I made the record: "It would be making strange history — a great turning point in our national course — if Bryan should win. The importance of it all comes over me with great power now and again. To reelect McKinley is merely to do the expected thing. To reverse his policy and to elect Bryan would mean a mighty stirring of stagnant waters."
"As I was coming away from Mrs. Seton-Thompson's tea, this afternoon, I met Mark Twain on the walk searching for the entrance with the action of a stray rooster, his head turned sidewise and upward. I greeted him and he asked, 'Can you show me the Seton-Thompson trail?' 'That I can,' I replied, and sent him up the elevator, smiling. He appeared shockingly old, a small, hesitant, white-haired gentleman. All his Western qualities have been planed away or softened by quiet city life."99 informace o tom že Seton za poslední 4 roky vydělal del vlastních slov 200 tisíc dolarů https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=113
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182–183 O Swetonově ateliéru nad Bryant parkem a jeho návštěvnících (Charles G. D. Roberts a Emery Pottle) https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=196
He liked to have his friends come in of an afternoon and chat. Visitors appeared to help rather than to hinder his drawing — a fact which puzzled me. I could work only in solitude and silence.
Among those who frequently spent an afternoon hour with him were Charles G. D. Roberts, the Cana- dian poet, and young Emery Pottle, who was "trying to write" at this time. Pottle was a tall, blond boy whose pleasing smile, unworried brow, and unhurried manner led to his nickname, "The Bambino." I never took him seriously. Some years passed before he matured to the point of writing a successful play. He had many friends who were confident of his ultimate success, but none of them expected him to win a place upon the stage, which he did as Gilbert Emery. Roberts, who was a very handsome, scholarly man of forty, had been a professor of literature in a college in Canada, but had won success as a writer of animal stories, somewhat in Seton's vein. The best of these, to my thinking, was his "Heart of the Ancient Wood," a picture of his boyhood home, a beautifully written and deeply felt sylvan romance.
Although a small man, pale and poetic of features, he was said to be of astonishing skill as a wrestler. One of his friends said to me, "Charles is a jujitsu expert. He could fling me over his head with one hand."
Despite his early training as a teacher, his life in New York City was wholly literary. I saw little of him, however, but I came to know his brother, William Carman Roberts, very well, and from him had an occasional word of his "profane" brother, an allusion to his initials, C. G. D. He went away to England and later to Paris, and gradually dropped out of the literary columns of American papers. He was a skilled and graceful writer, always, but only one or two of his books survived the War. I liked him and regarded him as one of the best of the "nature fakers," as Roosevelt so vividly characterized them, for he was avowedly the fictionist.198 https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015003682153?urlappend=%3Bseq=212
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