Friday, November 29, 2019
Stephen Crane Essays - Stephen Crane, The Open Boat
  Stephen Crane    Stephen Crane was the youngest of fourteen children. His father was a strict  Methodist minister, who died in 1880, leaving his devout, strong mother to raise  the rest of the family. Crane lasted through preparatory school, but spent less  than two years in college, excelling at Syracuse in baseball and partying far  more than academics. After leaving school, he went to live in New York, doing  freelance writing and working on his first book Maggie, A Girl of the Streets.  His times in New York City were split between his apartment in the Bowery slum  in Manhattan and well-off family in the nearby town of Port Jervis. Crane  published Maggie, a study of an innocent slum girl and her downfall in a world  of prostitution and abuse, in 1893 at his own expense. It was especially  scandalous for the times, and sold few copies. It did attract the attention of  other critics and writers, most notably William Dean Howells, who helped Crane  receive backing for his next project, The Red Badge of Courage. Published in  1895, The Red Badge was quite different from Maggie in style and approach, and  brought Crane international fame and quite a bit of money. Rather than plod  through moral tropes, the book is subtle and imagistic, while still being firmly  entrenched in the realism of the late 1890's in America. Crane's rich portrayal  of Henry Fleming's growth through the trials and terrors of a Civil War battle  betray the fact that he himself had not yet seen any fighting or battles when he  wrote the book. Many veterans of the Civil War (only thirty years had gone by  since its end) praised the book for capturing the feelings and pictures of  actual combat. Bolstered by the success of The Red Badge and his book of poetry  The Black Riders, Crane became subsumed with ideas of war. He was hired to go to  Cuba as a journalist to report on the rebellion there against the Spanish. On  the way to the island, Crane was in a shipwreck, from which he was originally  reported dead. He rowed to shore in a dinghy, along with three other men, having  to swim to shore and drop his money in the sea to prevent from drowning. This  experience directly led to his most famous short story "The Open Boat"  (1897). For various reasons, Crane stopped writing novels during this time and  moved primarily to short stories?probably because they could sell in magazines  better but also because he was constantly moving. When staying in Jacksonville,  Florida, he met the owner of a brothel, Cora Taylor. She accompanied him to  Greece as he reported on the Greco-Turkish War for New York newspapers; and  stayed with him until the end of his life. At this point, rumors abounded about  Crane, few of them good. There was talk of drug addiction, rampant promiscuity,  and even Satanism, none of them true. Crane was disgusted with them and  eventually relocated to England. After reporting on the Spanish-American War and  Theodore Roosevelt's famed Rough Riders, Crane returned home to England. He then  drove himself deeply into debt by throwing huge, expensive parties, reportedly  at Cora Taylor's insistence. While he could now count Joseph Conrad, H. G.  Wells, and other authors in his circle, most people sponged off of Crane and his  lavishness. He worked on a novel about the Greek War and continued writing short  stories and poetry, at this point to pay off his large debts. The stress of this  life, compounded by an almost blatant disregard for his own health, led to his  contracting tuberculosis. He died while in Baden, Germany, trying to recover  from this illness. He was not yet 29 years old.    
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