Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/393

 Bret Harte 377 permanently into the channels that it has followed in France, is doubtful. The great success in the middle seventies of the anonymous Saxe Holm's Stories, with their mid-century senti- ment and romantic atmosphere, would imply that America at heart was still what it was in the days of Hawthorne and the annuals. What might have happened had James and Howells and Aldrich had full control it is idle to speculate; what did happen was the sudden appearance of a short story that stampeded America and for two decades set the style in short fiction. Bret Harte's The Luck of Roaring Camp, whatever one may think of its merits, must be admitted to be the most influential short story ever written in America. Francis Bret Harte' was born in 1839 at Albany, where his father, a scholar and an itinerant teacher of languages, hap- pened at the time to be stationed. A youth of frail physique, he became a precocious reader, preferring a Hawthome-like seclusion among books to playground activities among boys of his own age. From his childhood he was predisposed to litera- ture ; he dreamed over it, and he began to make poems even in his early school days. His removal to California at the age of fifteen, five years after the first gold rush, came from no initia- tive of his. To the delicate youth dreaming over his books it was an exile at the barbarous ends of the world. For a time he Hved at his mother's home at Oakland — after a nine years' widowhood she had married again — and then half heartedly he began to support himself as a school teacher, as a private tutor, as a druggist's clerk, and later as a type-setter on a rural newspaper. There is little doubt that for a time he saw something of mining life during a visit to Humboldt County, but the experience was brief. He had no taste for the rough life of the border. The greater part of his seven- teen years in California he spent in San Francisco, first as type-setter, then as editor in various newspaper and maga- zine establishments. He was a man of the city, a professional literary worker, a poet, and a dreamer over the work of the older poets and romancers. Harte came to the short story by way of Irving. His first dream was to do for the lands of the Spanish missions what Irving had done for the highlands of the Hudson. As early as ' See also Book III, Chap. v.