His Writings.
"Suppose," wrote Victor Hugo, "that in place of the romance of narrative, and the romance epistolary, a creative brain produced the romance dramatic, wherein the action should unfold itself in a series of faithful and varied pictures, just as the events of real life occur; which should know no other division than that which the changing scenes demanded—which should be, in short, a long drama, in which the description supplies the scenery and the costumes?"
Dumas was destined to realise this ideal much more extensively and closely than Hugo himself. He possessed, in the first place, the constructive, dramatic skill; he only needed the impetus. He found it in the love of history; but it was needful that he should first find the historians who would reconcile him to the task.
"What France is looking for, is the historical novel," said Lassagne to Dumas once, in the early days of the writer's career.
"But the history of France is so dull and tedious!" answered the ignorant young dramatist dogmatically.