In the companion volume of this series,
“Men of Action,” the attempt was made
to give the essential facts of American history by
sketching in broad outline the men who made that history the
discoverers, pioneers, presidents, statesmen, soldiers,
and sailors and describing the part which
each of them played.
It was almost like watching a great
building grow under the hands of the workmen, this
one adding a stone and that one adding another; but
there was one great difference. For a building,
the plans are made carefully beforehand, worked out
to the smallest detail, and followed to the letter,
so that every stone goes exactly where it belongs,
and the work of all the men fits together into a complete
and perfect whole. But when America was started,
no one had more than the vaguest idea of what the
finished result was to be; indeed, many questioned
whether any enduring structure could be reared on
a foundation such as ours. So there was much
useless labor, one workman tearing down what another
had built, and only a few of them working with any
clear vision of the future.
The convention which adopted the Constitution
of the United States may fairly be said to have furnished
the first plan, and George Washington was the master-builder
who laid the foundations in accordance with it.
He did more than that, for the plan was only a mere
outline; so Washington added such details as he found
necessary, taking care always that they accorded with
the plan of the founders. He lived long enough
to see the building complete in all essential details,
and to be assured that the foundation was a firm one
and that the structure, which is called a Republic,
would endure.
All that has been done since his time
has been to build on an addition now and then, as
need arose, and to change the ornamentation to suit
the taste of the day. At one time, it seemed
that the whole structure might be rent asunder and
topple into ruins; but again there came a master-builder
named Abraham Lincoln, and with the aid of a million
devoted workmen who rallied to his call, he saved it.
There have been men, and there are
men to-day, who would attack the foundation were they
permitted; but never yet have they got within effective
striking distance. Others there are who have marred
the simple and classic beauty of the building with
strange excrescences. But these are only temporary,
and the hand of time will sweep them all away.
For the work of tearing down and building up is going
forward to-day just as it has always done; and the
changes are sometimes for the better and sometimes
for the worse; but, on the whole, the building grows
more stately and more beautiful as the generations
pass.
It was the work of the principal laborers
on this mighty edifice which we attempted to judge
in “Men of Action,” and this was a comparatively
easy task, because the work stands out concretely for
all to see, and, as far as essentials go, at least,
we are all agreed as to what is good work and what
is bad. But the task which is attempted in the
present volume is a much more difficult one, for here
we are called upon to judge not deeds but thoughts thoughts,
that is, as translated into a novel, or a poem, or
a statue, or a painting, or a theory of the universe.
Nobody has ever yet been able to devise
a universal scale by which thoughts may be measured,
nor any acid test to distinguish gold from dross in
art and literature. So each person has to devise
a scale of his own and do his measuring for himself;
he has to apply to the things he sees and reads the
acid test of his own intellect. And however imperfect
this measuring and testing may be, it is the only sort
which has any value for that particular person.
In other words, unless you yourself find a poem or
a painting great, it isn’t great for you, however
critics may extol it. So all the books about
art and literature and music are of value only as
they improve the scale and perfect the acid test of
the individual, so that the former measures more and
more correctly, and the latter bites more and more
surely through the glittering veneer which seeks to
disguise the dross beneath.
It follows from all this that, since
there are nearly as many scales as there are individuals,
very few of them will agree exactly. Time, however,
has a wonderful way of testing thoughts, of preserving
those that are worthy, and of discarding those that
are unworthy. Just how this is done nobody has
ever been able to explain; but the fact remains that,
somehow, a really great poem or painting or statue
or theory lives on from age to age, long after the
other products of its time have been forgotten.
And if it is really great, the older it grows, the
greater it seems. Shakespeare, to his contemporaries,
was merely an actor and playwright like any one of
a score of others; but, with the passing of years,
he has become the most wonderful figure in the world’s
literature. Rembrandt could scarcely make a living
with his brush, industriously as he used it, and passed
his days in misery, haunted by his creditors and neglected
by the public; to-day we recognize in him one of the
greatest artists who ever lived. Such instances
are common enough, for genius often goes unrecognized
until its possessor is dead; just as many men are
hailed as geniuses by their contemporaries, and promptly
forgotten by the succeeding generation. The touchstone
of time infallibly separates the false and the true.
Unfortunately, to American literature
and art no such test can be applied, for they are
less than a century old scarcely out of
swaddling clothes. The greater portion of the
product of our early years has long since been forgotten;
but whether any of that which remains is really immortal
will take another century or two to determine.
So the only tests we can apply at present are those
of taste and judgment, and these are anything but
infallible.
Especially is this true of literature.
Somebody announced, not long ago, that “the
foremost poet of a nation is that poet most widely
read and truly loved by it,” and added that,
in this respect, Longfellow was easily first in America.
No doubt many people will agree with this dictum;
and, indeed, the test of popularity is difficult to
disregard. But it is not at all a true test,
as we can see easily enough if we attempt to apply
it to art, or to music, or to public affairs.
Popularity is no more a test of genius in a poet than
in a statesman, and when we remember how far astray
the popular will has sometimes led us in regard to
politics, we may be inclined to regard with suspicion
its judgments in regard to literature.
The test of merit in literature is
not so much wide appeal as intelligent appeal; the
literature which satisfies the taste and judgment
of cultured people is pretty certain to rank higher
than that which is current among the uncultured.
And so with art. Consequently, for want of something
better, the general verdict of cultured people upon
our literature and art has been followed in these pages.
Two or three other classes of achievers
have been grouped, for convenience, in this volume scientists
and educators, philanthropists and reformers, men
of affairs, actors and inventors and it
may be truly argued concerning some of them that they
were more “men of action,” and less “men
of mind” than many who were included in the
former volume. But all distinctions and divisions
and classifications are more or less arbitrary; and
there is no intention, in this one, to intimate that
the “men of action” were not also “men
of mind,” or vice versa. The division has
been made simply for convenience.
These thumb-nail sketches are in no
sense the result of original research. The material
needed has been gathered from such sources as are
available in any well-equipped public library.
An attempt has been made, however, to color the narrative
with human interest, and to give it consecutiveness,
though this has sometimes been very hard to do.
But, even at the best, this is only a first book in
the study of American art and letters, and is designed
to serve only as a stepping-stone to more elaborate
and comprehensive ones.
There are several short histories
of American literature which will prove profitable
and pleasant reading. Mr. W. P. Trent’s
is written with a refreshing humor and insight.
The “American Men of Letters” series gives
carefully written biographies of about twenty-five
of our most famous authors all that anyone
need know about in detail. There is a great mass
of other material on the shelves of every public library,
which will take one as far as one may care to go.
But the important thing in literature
is to know the man’s work rather than his life.
If his work is sound and helpful and inspiring, his
life needn’t bother us, however hopeless it
may have been. The striking example of this,
in American literature, is Edgar Allan Poe, whose fame,
in this country, is just emerging from the cloud which
his unfortunate career cast over it. The life
of the man is of importance only as it helps you to
understand his work. Most important of all is
to create within yourself a liking for good books
and a power of telling good from bad. This is
one of the most important things in life, indeed; and
Mr. John Macy points the way to it in his “Child’s
Guide to Reading.”
Only second to the power to appreciate
good literature is the power to appreciate good art.
For the material in this volume the author is indebted
largely to the excellent monographs by Mr. Samuel Isham
and Mr. Lorado Taft on “American Painting,”
and “American Sculpture.” There are
many, guides to the study of art, among the best of
them being Mr. Charles C. Caffin’s “Child’s
Guide to Pictures,” “American Masters of
Painting,” “American Masters of Sculpture,”
and “How to Study Pictures”; Mr. John
C. VanDyke’s “How to Judge of a Picture,”
and “The Meaning of Pictures,” and Mr.
John LaFarge’s “Great Masters.”
In the study of art, as of literature, you will soon
find that America’s place is as yet comparatively
unimportant.
For the chapter on “The Stage,”
Mr. William Winter’s various volumes of biography
and criticism have been drawn upon, more especially
with reference to the actors of the “old school,”
which Mr. Winter admires so deeply. There are
a number of books, besides these, which make capital
reading Clara Morris’s “Life
on the Stage,” Joseph Jefferson’s autobiography,
Stoddart’s “Recollections of a Player,”
and Henry Austin Clapp’s “Reminiscences
of a Dramatic Critic,” among them.
The material for the other chapters
has been gathered from many sources, none of which
is important enough to be mentioned here. Appleton’s
“Cyclopedia of American Biography” is a
mine from which most of the facts concerning any American,
prominent twenty years or more ago, may be dug; but
it gives only the dry bones, so to speak. For
more than that you must go to the individual biographies
in your public library.
If you live in a small town, the librarian
will very probably be glad to permit you to look over
the shelves yourself, as well as to give you such
advice and direction as you may need. In the larger
cities, this is, of course, impossible, to say nothing
of the fact that you would be lost among the thousands
of books on the shelves. But you will find a
children’s librarian whose business and pleasure
it is to help children to the right books. If
this book helps you to form the library habit, and
gives you an incentive to the further study of art
and literature, it will more than fulfill its mission.