• Skip to main content

Aesthetic Realism Online Library

Home > Reviews > Breathe Upon These Slain, by Evelyn Scott

Scribner’s Magazine

Book Reviews by Eli Siegel 1931-1934

Breathe upon These Slain, by Evelyn Scott.

Smith, Haas. $2.50.

One fine thing about Evelyn Scott as a novelist is that one constantly feels that she is compelled to imagine the way she does. There are not in her books the clever little falsities and the adroit superficialities conspicuous elsewhere. Her imagination leads her willy-nilly: she was born to imagine.

This is clear in Breathe upon These Slain. Mrs. Scott begins an imaginative tour with some photographs and pictures she sees on the walls of a cottage she has rented near the English seacoast. Mrs. Scott tells us she means to use her findings as a starting-point for creation; but we don’t feel this is just part of a novelist’s technique; a new trick of the fiction-writer in a world where fiction abounds. We feel that this way of writing a novel is a soul’s command, though deliberately followed. And as Mrs. Scott tells us of the vagaries of her imagination, appearance and reality seem delightfully and deeply to interchange.

From what she finds in her English cottage, Mrs. Scott creates an English family and its human and non-human surroundings. From the photograph of four sisters, Mrs. Scott makes four lives, all of which nicely blend with the lives we ourselves have been meeting. There is Tilly, gently intense, who dies young, and whose dying comes again and again into the lives of those who live on. There is Ethel, whose love confuses her and other people for many years. There is the attractively matter-of-fact Cora. There is Meg, whose destiny is in her ungainliness. And there is the fussily domineering mother, Fidelia Courtney; and the intricately weak husband, Philip Courtney.

Perhaps, however, the high point in characterization of Mrs. Scott’s book is the bustling, scheming, stupid, fawning, mighty servant of the family, Annie Rose Roberts. She grayly and luminously shows what a many-spoked wheel character is. And in Mrs. Scott’s book there is the war and various suffering warriors and non-warriors. And a Yarmouth mighty unlike the Yarmouth of Dickens’s David Copperfield. And many seas and many weathers. And people living gently and hatingly among themselves. And a termination, which, like the termination of life, doesn’t really terminate.

Eli Siegel.

1934

Reviews by Eli Siegel from Scribner's Magazines 1931-1934. Copyright 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934 Charles Scribner's Sons; copyrights renewed. Reprinted with the permission of Charles Scribner's Sons.

Stay in touch

Receive email alerts for each new issue of The Right Of, and announcements of events at the Aesthetic Realism Foundation.

Subscribe

Follow us:   

Contact Us Support Our Work

Aesthetic Realism Foundation
141 Greene Street
New York, NY 10012
tel 212.777.4490

Copyright © 1997-2025 Aesthetic Realism Foundation

MENU
  • Home
  • Periodical (TRO)
    • Current Issue
    • Drama & Acting
    • Literature & Poetry
    • Love
    • Mind
    • Music
    • Teaching Method
    • The Visual Arts
    • Archive
  • Poetry
    • Poems by Eli Siegel
      • Short Poems
      • Civil War Poems
    • Translations with Notes
    • Poets: Their Lives & Works
    • What Poetry Really Is
    • The Critical Muse
    • Critics Speak
    • A Celebration of Poetry
    • Poetry of Martha Baird
  • Books
  • Essays
  • Lectures
  • Definitions
  • Reviews
  • News Archive
    • Educational Method
    • Love & the Family
    • Art & Life
    • More Issues of Our Time
  • The Eli Siegel Collection
  • Aesthetic Realism Fdn.
  • Terrain Gallery