![]() ![]() But even he conceded that “weather is necessary to a narrative of human experience.” Through the ages, we have used weather in our stories to illuminate the workings of our universe, our culture, our politics, our relationships, and ourselves. That was the context in which Twain joked about eradicating weather from his work. Weather facts served to make weather fictions seem overwrought, while the newly empirical understanding of the atmosphere-and, more staggering at the time, the ability to predict its behavior-made weather itself seem suddenly more prosaic. With that scientific model of weather in ascendance, the literary models came to seem suspect. Twain was writing in the late nineteenth century, a time when the field of meteorology was belatedly coming into its own. But melodrama and banality are aesthetic judgments, and, as such, they are sometimes also products of their context. ![]() ![]() Melodramatic or banal prose mostly gets blamed on the author, reasonably enough. “It was a dark and stormy night,” begins Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s 1830 novel “Paul Clifford,” which goes on to invoke torrential rain, gusting wind, guttering lamplight, and rattling rooftops: weather as plot, setting, star, and supporting cast of what is, by broad consensus, the worst sentence in the history of English literature. On the other hand, it stands perpetually accused of melodrama. On the one hand, weather is widely regarded as the most banal topic in the world-in print as in conversation, the one we resort to when we have nothing else to say. More precisely, it has two terrible reputations that do not get along. As literary subjects go, weather has a terrible reputation. Twain was not alone in mistrusting meteorological activity in fiction. “Many a reader who wanted to read a tale through was not able to do it,” he writes, “because of delays on account of the weather.” “No weather will be found in this book,” Mark Twain declares in the opening pages of his 1892 novel “The American Claimant.” He has determined to do without it, he explains, on the ground that it usually just gets in the way of the story. ![]()
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