Edmund Wilson: Stevenson is second-rate. I don't know why you admire him so much - though he has done some rather fine short stories. I tried reading to Henry and Reuel a couple of summers ago one of the only books of Stevenson I had ever liked, The New Arabian Nights, but completely failed to interest them in it. It surprised me to find that these stories were the thinnest kind of verbalizing and that the characters had not even a fairy-tale existence. Sherlock Holmes, which we had just been reading and which was partly derived from The New Arabian Nights, seems a solid creation beside them. I didn't like Treasure Island even as a child.I had read these letters long ago, and remembered VN's reply more clearly than EW's side. Prof. Myers spurred me to revisit the exchange, and I find that I am vindicated, yes, vindicated. "[S]ome rather fine short stories" - exactly, exactly. With emphasis on rather and some.
Vladimir Nabokov: You approach Stevenson from the wrong side. Of course Treasure Island is poor stuff. The one masterpiece he wrote is the first-rate and permanent Jekyll and Hyde.*
And look, my judgment of the characters in "The Suicide Club" and "The Rajah Diamond" is just like Wilson's, although I find the "verbalizing" less thin, and, in fact, the point of the exercise. Characterization is a lifelong struggle for Stevenson.
I'll defer on Treasure Island, at least for now. I enjoyed it well enough, but I approach Stevenson from the wrong side. Nabokov is searching for the best of the best, drawing a line that excludes all but the greatest masterpieces. That is not where he really spent all of his reading time, nor do any of us. By Nabokov's standards, I don't think I've read a first-rate piece of fiction for six weeks.** Readers of Nabokov-the-critic should be careful with his (brilliant, infectious) rhetoric. Wilson, to extend the metaphor, draws many lines, but thinner ones.
In the little Nikolai Gogol, Nabokov diagrams "The Overcoat" as "mumble, mumble, lyrical wave, mumble, lyrical wave, mumble, lyrical wave, mumble, fantastic climax, mumble, mumble, and back into the chaos from which they all had derived" (borrowed from the anxious bibliographing nicole). To be clear, to Nabokov this is literary art at its highest level. The crucial calculation, then, in judging a story, or book, or paragraph, is the precise ratio of lyrical waves to mumbling, weighted perhaps by exactly how fantastic the climax is.
Glancing at my Currently Reading pile, I note that every book in it - by George MacDonald, Adalbert Stifter, Charles Chesnutt, and a young Leo Tolstoy - is second rate, at best. These books mumble plenty. I've read enough of each one to know that they are worth reading, and probably re-reading, although I can't speak to the climaxes yet.
I am not at all sure that I have done justice to Stevenson's short fiction this week. Yeah, most of what he wrote is second-rate, some worse, some better. I should be so lucky as to be second-rate. And I'm not tired of Stevenson, yet, not hardly.
* These are from letters 209 and 210 of Dear Bunny, Dear Volodya: The Nabokov-Wilson Letters, 1940-1971, ed. Simon Karlinsky, 2001.
** That piece of fiction was The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) by Robert Louis Stevenson.