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And now; with many apologies; I will turn to mundane things again。 Before I do so; however; as I dare say I shall allude to the subject no more; I will add a word on the general matter of the writing of romances。 This; I gather; from remarks that have been made to me and many letters that I have received; is supposed to be a very easy art; if indeed it is worthy to be classified under that high name。 As a matter of fact it is difficult。 In a novel; as the word is generally understood; the author may discourse upon a thousand topics; nothing; or at any rate very little; is barred to him。 He may burrow in the obscene depths of human nature; he may discuss politics; religion; metaphysics; socialism; “love” in all its forms; the elemental or artificial divisions between the sexes — oh! what is there that he may not and does not discuss? Nothing that appears in the columns of the daily papers; nothing that is within the range of the human intellect; lies beyond his legitimate; or illegitimate; scope。
In romance all this is different; the lines between which he must move are by parison extremely narrow: as I remember; Besant put it admirably when answering some onslaught on myself in connection with “Montezuma’s Daughter”: “There is but one bag of tricks in romance。”
The love interest; at least among the English…speaking peoples; must be limited and restrained in tone; must follow the accepted lines of thought and what is defined as morality。 Indeed it may even be