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320 pages, Hardcover
Published November 12, 2015
"Papa, I do not — I have no wish to worry you...but if Nana and L'Assommoir...were at the boundary edge of public taste, it seems to me that this new book, The Soil, is beyond that scale. What is more, it lacks the lesson that those tales of urban degradation carry. I can see how it was possible to argue that those stories were meant as warning bells, by a moralistic author, to dissuade his readers from emulating the sorry and desperate heroines. But I feel that option is not open to us here; frankly, I don't know where an apologist would begin with The Soil. I have been going over the final proofs today...there is more revision before we can print."Ernest is aware of the furore that had erupted in France over the publication of the book and is well aware of how it will be met with in England, even in its sanitised form. But the Vizetelly's are about to come up against the National Vigilance Association (N.V.A.) an organisation that has political and journalistic support. Horne is fair enough in this section not to caricaturise the members of the N.V.A. as they believe that they are saving the country from such 'pernicious filth'. They are certainly patronising though, as they treat 'the masses' little more than children that need to be protected from such literature.
"But you can set the record right, Papa. You can tell people what happened, and how we were badly misrepresented by our counsel, and in what way you intended to fight the case, for the sake of literary freedom—"The book also covers Zola's affair with his mistress and mother of his children, Jeanne, which is contemporaneous with the trials, and Zola's visit to England in 1893, where he is hypocritically fêted by the British establishment, many of whom were intrumental in the Viztelly prosecution.
"Intended. But I did not."
"You were ill!"
"Yes, and I was afraid, which is implicit in my guilty plea. I did nothing for the cause, as you call it, except set it back...."