There is a critical opinion that Henry James's “Figure in the Carpet” is an ironic story in which the book-reviewer Corvick only pretends to discover a recurrent pattern in the works of a celebrated novelist in order to entice his fiancée, a literary compulsive, to marry him without waiting for her mother to die, the moral being that the search for such patterns does not represent a mature interest in literature. In his preface to the volume containing the story in the New York Edition, however, James replies to critics who demand to know “where on earth, where roundabout us at this hour,” he had found a living model for his pattern-weaving novelist: “As for the all-ingenious ‘Figure in the Carpet,’…nothing would induce me to come into close quarters with you on the correspondence of this anecdote.…All I can at this point say is that if ever I was aware of ground and matter for a significant fable, I was aware of them in that connection.” He adds that the impulse which led him to write the story, far from opposing a search for abstruse themes, was his opposition to the general “mistrust of anything like close or analytic appreciation—appreciation, to be appreciation, implying, of course, some such rudimentary zeal.…What I most remember of my proper process is the lively impulse, at the root of it, to reinstate analytic appreciation.” And in the story itself there is evidence that James intended Corvick to discover an actual pattern in Vereker's novels.