Dickens's David Copperfield in The Spectator

Consistency in fiction is of two kinds. One is a perfect coherence of incident, action, and discourse; but this exact consistency is not often realized, and cannot be looked for in books that are published piecemeal. There is another consistency which arises from the present cause being adequate for immediate effect; and this is mostly wanting in David Copperfield.

View 1850 review of David Copperfield in the Spectator.

Website by Center for Digital Research and Scholarship at Columbia University Libraries