OUR PRESIDENT
We are so much accustomed to kings
and queens and other privileged persons of that sort
in this world that it is only on reflection that we
wonder how they became so. The mystery is not
their continuance, but how did they get a start?
We take little help from studying the bees originally
no one could have been born a queen. There must
have been not only a selection, but an election, not
by ballot, but by consent some way expressed, and
the privileged persons got their positions because
they were the strongest, or the wisest, or the most
cunning. But the descendants of these privileged
persons hold the same positions when they are neither
strong, nor wise, nor very cunning. This also
is a mystery. The persistence of privilege is
an unexplained thing in human affairs, and the consent
of mankind to be led in government and in fashion by
those to whom none of the original conditions of leadership
attach is a philosophical anomaly. How many of
the living occupants of thrones, dukedoms, earldoms,
and such high places are in position on their own
merits, or would be put there by common consent?
Referring their origin to some sort of an election,
their continuance seems to rest simply on forbearance.
Here in America we are trying a new experiment; we
have adopted the principle of election, but we have
supplemented it with the equally authoritative right
of deposition. And it is interesting to see how
it has worked for a hundred years, for it is human
nature to like to be set up, but not to like to be
set down. If in our elections we do not always
get the best perhaps few elections ever
did we at least do not perpetuate forever
in privilege our mistakes or our good hits.
The celebration in New York, in 1889,
of the inauguration of Washington was an instructive
spectacle. How much of privilege had been gathered
and perpetuated in a century? Was it not an occasion
that emphasized our republican democracy? Two
things were conspicuous. One was that we did
not honor a family, or a dynasty, or a title, but a
character; and the other was that we did not exalt
any living man, but simply the office of President.
It was a demonstration of the power of the people to
create their own royalty, and then to put it aside
when they have done with it. It was difficult
to see how greater honors could have been paid to any
man than were given to the President when he embarked
at Elizabethport and advanced, through a harbor crowded
with decorated vessels, to the great city, the wharves
and roofs of which were black with human beings a
holiday city which shook with the tumult of the popular
welcome. Wherever he went he drew the swarms
in the streets as the moon draws the tide. Republican
simplicity need not fear comparison with any royal
pageant when the President was received at the Metropolitan,
and, in a scene of beauty and opulence that might
be the flowering of a thousand years instead of a
century, stood upon the steps of the “dais”
to greet the devoted Centennial Quadrille, which passed
before him with the courageous five, ‘Imperator,
morituri te salutamus’. We had done
it we, the people; that was our royalty.
Nobody had imposed it on us. It was not even
selected out of four hundred. We had taken one
of the common people and set him up there, creating
for the moment also a sort of royal family and a court
for a background, in a splendor just as imposing for
the passing hour as an imperial spectacle. We
like to show that we can do it, and we like to show
also that we can undo it. For at the banquet,
where the Elected ate his dinner, not only in the
presence of, but with, representatives of all the
people of all the States, looked down on by the acknowledged
higher power in American life, there sat also with
him two men who had lately been in his great position,
the centre only a little while ago, as he was at the
moment, of every eye in the republic, now only common
citizens without a title, without any insignia of rank,
able to transmit to posterity no family privilege.
If our hearts swelled with pride that we could create
something just as good as royalty, that the republic
had as many men of distinguished appearance, as much
beauty, and as much brilliance of display as any traditional
government, we also felicitated ourselves that we
could sweep it all away by a vote and reproduce it
with new actors next day.
It must be confessed that it was a
people’s affair. If at any time there was
any idea that it could be controlled only by those
who represented names honored for a hundred years,
or conspicuous by any social privilege, the idea was
swamped in popular feeling. The names that had
been elected a hundred years ago did not stay elected
unless the present owners were able to distinguish
themselves. There is nothing so to be coveted
in a country as the perpetuity of honorable names,
and the “centennial” showed that we are
rich in those that have been honorably borne, but
it also showed that the century has gathered no privilege
that can count upon permanence.
But there is another aspect of the
situation that is quite as serious and satisfactory.
Now that the ladies of the present are coming to dress
as ladies dressed a hundred years ago, we can make
an adequate comparison of beauty. Heaven forbid
that we should disparage the women of the Revolutionary
period! They looked as well as they could under
all the circumstances of a new country and the hardships
of an early settlement. Some of them looked exceedingly
well there were beauties in those days
as there were giants in Old Testament times. The
portraits that have come down to us of some of them
excite our admiration, and indeed we have a sort of
tradition of the loveliness of the women of that remote
period. The gallant men of the time exalted them.
Yet it must be admitted by any one who witnessed the
public and private gatherings of April, 1889, in New
York, contributed to as they were by women from every
State, and who is unprejudiced by family associations,
that the women of America seem vastly improved in
personal appearance since the days when George Washington
was a lover: that is to say, the number of beautiful
women is greater in proportion to the population,
and their beauty and charm are not inferior to those
which have been so much extolled in the Revolutionary
time. There is no doubt that if George Washington
could have been at the Metropolitan ball he would
have acknowledged this, and that while he might have
had misgivings about some of our political methods,
he would have been more proud than ever to be still
acknowledged the Father of his Country.
THE NEWSPAPER-MADE MAN
A fair correspondent has
the phrase an old-time sound? thinks we
should pay more attention to men. In a revolutionary
time, when great questions are in issue, minor matters,
which may nevertheless be very important, are apt
to escape the consideration they deserve. We share
our correspondent’s interest in men, but must
plead the pressure of circumstances. When there
are so many Woman’s Journals devoted to the
wants and aspirations of women alone, it is perhaps
time to think of having a Man’s journal, which
should try to keep his head above-water in the struggle
for social supremacy. When almost every number
of the leading periodicals has a paper about Woman written
probably by a woman Woman Today, Woman
Yesterday, Woman Tomorrow; when the inquiry is daily
made in the press as to what is expected of woman,
and the new requirements laid upon her by reason of
her opportunities, her entrance into various occupations,
her education the impartial observer is
likely to be confused, if he is not swept away by
the rising tide of femininity in modern life.
But this very superiority of interest
in the future of women is a warning to man to look
about him, and see where in this tide he is going to
land, if he will float or go ashore, and what will
be his character and his position in the new social
order. It will not do for him to sit on the stump
of one of his prerogatives that woman has felled, and
say with Brahma, “They reckon ill who leave
me out,” for in the day of the Subjection of
Man it may be little consolation that he is left in.
It must be confessed that man has
had a long inning. Perhaps it is true that he
owed this to his physical strength, and that he will
only keep it hereafter by intellectual superiority,
by the dominance of mind. And how in this generation
is he equipping himself for the future? He is
the money-making animal. That is beyond dispute.
Never before were there such business men as this
generation can show Napoleons
of finance, Alexanders of adventure, Shakespeares
of speculation, Porsons of accumulation. He is
great in his field, but is he leaving the intellectual
province to woman? Does he read as much as she
does? Is he becoming anything but a newspaper-made
person? Is his mind getting to be like the newspaper?
Speaking generally of the mass of business men and
the mass are business men in this country have
they any habit of reading books? They have clubs,
to be sure, but of what sort? With the exception
of a conversation club here and there, and a literary
club, more or less perfunctory, are they not mostly
social clubs for comfort and idle lounging, many of
them known, as other workmen are, by their “chips”?
What sort of a book would a member make out of “Chips
from my Workshop”? Do the young men, to
any extent, join in Browning clubs and Shakespeare
clubs and Dante clubs? Do they meet for the study
of history, of authors, of literary periods, for reading,
and discussing what they read? Do they in concert
dig in the encyclopaedias, and write papers about the
correlation of forces, and about Savonarola, and about
the Three Kings? In fact, what sort of a hand
would the Three Kings suggest to them? In the
large cities the women’s clubs, pursuing literature,
art, languages, botany, history, geography, geology,
mythology, are innumerable. And there is hardly
a village in the land that has not from one to six
clubs of young girls who meet once a week for some
intellectual purpose. What are the young men
of the villages and the cities doing meantime?
How are they preparing to meet socially these young
ladies who are cultivating their minds? Are they
adapting themselves to the new conditions? Or
are they counting, as they always have done, on the
adaptability of women, on the facility with which
the members of the bright sex can interest themselves
in base-ball and the speed of horses and the chances
of the “street”? Is it comfortable
for the young man, when the talk is about the last
notable book, or the philosophy of the popular poet
or novelist, to feel that laughing eyes are sounding
his ignorance?
Man is a noble creation, and he has
fine and sturdy qualities which command the admiration
of the other sex, but how will it be when that sex,
by reason of superior acquirements, is able to look
down on him intellectually? It used to be said
that women are what men wish to have them, that they
endeavored to be the kind of women who would win masculine
admiration. How will it be if women have determined
to make themselves what it pleases them to be, and
to cultivate their powers in the expectation of pleasing
men, if they indulge any such expectation, by their
higher qualities only? This is not a fanciful
possibility. It is one that young men will do
well to ponder. It is easy to ridicule the literary
and economic and historical societies, and the naïve
courage with which young women in them attack the
gravest problems, and to say that they are only a
passing fashion, like decorative art and a mode of
dress. But a fashion is not to be underestimated;
and when a fashion continues and spreads like this
one, it is significant of a great change going on
in society. And it is to be noticed that this
fashion is accompanied by other phenomena as interesting.
There is scarcely an occupation, once confined almost
exclusively to men, in which women are not now conspicuous.
Never before were there so many women who are superior
musicians, performers themselves and organizers of
musical societies; never before so many women who
can draw well; never so many who are successful in
literature, who write stories, translate, compile,
and are acceptable workers in magazines and in publishing
houses; and never before were so many women reading
good books, and thinking about them, and talking about
them, and trying to apply the lessons in them to the
problems of their own lives, which are seen not to
end with marriage. A great deal of this activity,
crude much of it, is on the intellectual side, and
must tell strongly by-and-by in the position of women.
And the young men will take notice that it is the
intellectual force that must dominate in life.
INTERESTING GIRLS
It seems hardly worth while to say
that this would be a more interesting country if there
were more interesting people in it. But the remark
is worth consideration in a land where things are
so much estimated by what they cost. It is a
very expensive country, especially so in the matter
of education, and one cannot but reflect whether the
result is in proportion to the outlay. It costs
a great many thousands of dollars and over four years
of time to produce a really good base-ball player,
and the time and money invested in the production
of a society young woman are not less. No complaint
is made of the cost of these schools of the higher
education; the point is whether they produce interesting
people. Of course all women are interesting.
It has got pretty well noised about the world that
American women are, on the whole, more interesting
than any others. This statement is not made boastfully,
but simply as a market quotation, as one might say.
They are sought for; they rule high. They have
a “way”; they know how to be fascinating,
to be agreeable; they unite freedom of manner with
modesty of behavior; they are apt to have beauty,
and if they have not, they know how to make others
think they have. Probably the Greek girls in
their highest development under Phidias were never
so attractive as the American girls of this period;
and if we had a Phidias who could put their charms
in marble, all the antique galleries would close up
and go out of business.
But it must be understood that in
regard to them, as to the dictionaries, it is necessary
to “get the best.” Not all women are
equally interesting, and some of those on whom most
educational money is lavished are the least so.
It can be said broadly that everybody is interesting
up to a certain point. There is no human being
from whom the inquiring mind cannot learn something.
It is so with women. Some are interesting for
five minutes, some for ten, some for an hour; some
are not exhausted in a whole day; and some (and this
shows the signal leniency of Providence) are perennially
entertaining, even in the presence of masculine stupidity.
Of course the radical trouble of this world is that
there are not more people who are interesting comrades,
day in and day out, for a lifetime. It is greatly
to the credit of American women that so many of them
have this quality, and have developed it, unprotected,
in free competition with all countries which have
been pouring in women without the least duty laid
upon their grace or beauty. We, have a tariff
upon knowledge we try to shut out all of
that by a duty on books; we have a tariff on piety
and intelligence in a duty on clergymen; we try to
exclude art by a levy on it; but we have never excluded
the raw material of beauty, and the result is that
we can successfully compete in the markets of the
world.
This, however, is a digression.
The reader wants to know what this quality of being
interesting has to do with girls’ schools.
It is admitted that if one goes into a new place he
estimates the agreeableness of it according to the
number of people it contains with whom it is a pleasure
to converse, who have either the ability to talk well
or the intelligence to listen appreciatingly even
if deceivingly, whose society has the beguiling charm
that makes even natural scenery satisfactory.
It is admitted also that in our day the burden of
this end of life, making it agreeable, is mainly thrown
upon women. Men make their business an excuse
for not being entertaining, or the few who cultivate
the mind (aside from the politicians, who always try
to be winning) scarcely think it worth while to contribute
anything to make society bright and engaging.
Now if the girls’ schools and colleges, technical
and other, merely add to the number of people who
have practical training and knowledge without personal
charm, what becomes of social life? We are impressed
with the excellence of the schools and colleges for
women impressed also with the co-educating
institutions. There is no sight more inspiring
than an assemblage of four or five hundred young women
attacking literature, science, and all the arts.
The grace and courage of the attack alone are worth
all it costs. All the arts and science and literature
are benefited, but one of the chief purposes that should
be in view is unattained if the young women are not
made more interesting, both to themselves and to others.
Ability to earn an independent living may be conceded
to be important, health is indispensable, and beauty
of face and form are desirable; knowledge is priceless,
and unselfish amiability is above the price of rubies;
but how shall we set a value, so far as the pleasure
of living is concerned, upon the power to be interesting?
We hear a good deal about the highly educated young
woman with reverence, about the emancipated young
woman with fear and trembling, but what can take the
place of the interesting woman? Anxiety is this
moment agitating the minds of tens of thousands of
mothers about the education of their daughters.
Suppose their education should be directed to the purpose
of making them interesting women, what a fascinating
country this would be about the year 1900.
GIVE THE MEN A CHANCE
Give the men a chance. Upon the
young women of America lies a great responsibility.
The next generation will be pretty much what they choose
to make it; and what are they doing for the elevation
of young men? It is true that there are the colleges
for men, which still perform a good work though
some of them run a good deal more to a top-dressing
of accomplishments than to a sub-soiling of discipline but
these colleges reach comparatively few. There
remain the great mass who are devoted to business
and pleasure, and only get such intellectual cultivation
as society gives them or they chance to pick up in
current publications. The young women are the
leisure class, consequently so we hear the
cultivated class. Taking a certain large proportion
of our society, the women in it toil not, neither
do they spin; they do little or no domestic work;
they engage in no productive occupation. They
are set apart for a high and ennobling service the
cultivation of the mind and the rescue of society
from materialism. They are the influence that
keeps life elevated and sweet are they
not? For what other purpose are they set apart
in elegant leisure? And nobly do they climb up
to the duties of their position. They associate
together in esoteric, intellectual societies.
Every one is a part of many clubs, the object of which
is knowledge and the broadening of the intellectual
horizon. Science, languages, literature, are
their daily food. They can speak in tongues; they
can talk about the solar spectrum; they can interpret
Chaucer, criticise Shakespeare, understand Browning.
There is no literature, ancient or modern, that they
do not dig up by the roots and turn over, no history
that they do not drag before the club for final judgment.
In every little village there is this intellectual
stir and excitement; why, even in New York, readings
interfere with the german; [’Dances’,
likely referring to the productions of the Straus
family in Vienna. D.W.] and Boston!
Boston is no longer divided into wards, but into Browning
“sections.”
All this is mainly the work of women.
The men are sometimes admitted, are even hired to
perform and be encouraged and criticised; that is,
men who are already highly cultivated, or who are
in sympathy with the noble feminization of the age.
It is a glorious movement. Its professed object
is to give an intellectual lift to society. And
no doubt, unless all reports are exaggerated, it is
making our great leisure class of women highly intellectual
beings. But, encouraging as this prospect is,
it gives us pause. Who are these young women
to associate with? with whom are they to hold high
converse? For life is a two-fold affair.
And meantime what is being done for the young men
who are expected to share in the high society of the
future? Will not the young women by-and-by find
themselves in a lonesome place, cultivated away beyond
their natural comrades? Where will they spend
their evenings? This sobering thought suggests
a duty that the young women are neglecting. We
refer to the education of the young men. It is
all very well for them to form clubs for their own
advancement, and they ought not to incur the charge
of selfishness in so doing; but how much better would
they fulfill their mission if they would form special
societies for the cultivation of young men! sort of intellectual mission bands.
Bring them into the literary circle. Make it attractive for them.
Women with their attractions, not to speak of their wiles, can do anything they
set out to do. They can elevate the entire present generation of young
men, if they give their minds to it, to care for the intellectual pursuits they
care for. Give the men a chance, and
Musing along in this way we are suddenly
pulled up by the reflection that it is impossible
to make an unqualified statement that is wholly true
about anything. What chance have I, anyway? inquires
the young man who thinks sometimes and occasionally
wants to read. What sort of leading-strings are
these that I am getting into? Look at the drift
of things. Is the feminization of the world a
desirable thing for a vigorous future? Are the
women, or are they not, taking all the virility out
of literature? Answer me that. All the novels
are written by, for, or about women brought
to their standard. Even Henry James, who studies
the sex untiringly, speaks about the “feminization
of literature.” They write most of the
newspaper correspondence and write it for
women. They are even trying to feminize the colleges.
Granted that woman is the superior being; all the
more, what chance is there for man if this sort of
thing goes on? Are you going to make a race of
men on feminine fodder? And here is the still
more perplexing part of it. Unless all analysis
of the female heart is a delusion, and all history
false, what women like most of all things in this
world is a Man, virile, forceful, compelling, a solid
rock of dependence, a substantial unfeminine being,
whom it is some satisfaction and glory and interest
to govern and rule in the right way, and twist round
the feminine finger. If women should succeed in
reducing or raising of course raising men
to the feminine standard, by feminizing society, literature,
the colleges, and all that, would they not turn on
their creations for even the Bible intimates
that women are uncertain and go in search of a Man?
It is this sort of blind instinct of the young man
for preserving himself in the world that makes him
so inaccessible to the good he might get from the
prevailing culture of the leisure class.
THE ADVENT OF CANDOR
Those who are anxious about the fate
of Christmas, whether it is not becoming too worldly
and too expensive a holiday to be indulged in except
by the very poor, mark with pleasure any indications
that the true spirit of the day brotherhood
and self-abnegation and charity is infusing
itself into modern society. The sentimental Christmas
of thirty years ago could not last; in time the manufactured
jollity got to be more tedious and a greater strain
on the feelings than any misfortune happening to one’s
neighbor. Even for a day it was very difficult
to buzz about in the cheery manner prescribed, and
the reaction put human nature in a bad light.
Nor was it much better when gradually the day became
one of Great Expectations, and the sweet spirit of
it was quenched in worry or soured in disappointment.
It began to take on the aspect of a great lottery,
in which one class expected to draw in reverse proportion
to what it put in, and another class knew that it
would only reap as it had sowed. The day, blessed
in its origin, and meaningless if there is a grain
of selfishness in it, was thus likely to become a
sort of Clearing-house of all obligations and assume
a commercial aspect that took the heart out of it like
the enormous receptions for paying social debts which
take the place of the old-fashioned hospitality.
Everybody knew, meantime, that the spirit of good-will,
the grace of universal sympathy, was really growing
in the world, and that it was only our awkwardness
that, by striving to cram it all for a year into twenty-four
hours, made it seem a little farcical. And everybody
knows that when goodness becomes fashionable, goodness
is likely to suffer a little. A virtue overdone
falls on t’other side. And a holiday that
takes on such proportions that the Express companies
and the Post-office cannot handle it is in danger
of a collapse. In consideration of these things,
and because, as has been pointed out year after year,
Christmas is becoming a burden, the load of which
is looked forward to with apprehension and
back on with nervous prostration fear has
been expressed that the dearest of all holidays in
Christian lands would have to go again under a sort
of Puritan protest, or into a retreat for rest and
purification. We are enabled to announce for
the encouragement of the single-minded in this best
of all days, at the close of a year which it is best
not to characterize, that those who stand upon the
social watch-towers in Europe and America begin to
see a light or, it would be better to say,
to perceive a spirit in society which is
likely to change many things, and; among others, to
work a return of Christian simplicity. As might
be expected in these days, the spirit is exhibited
in the sex which is first at the wedding and last in
the hospital ward. And as might have been expected,
also, this spirit is shown by the young woman of the
period, in whose hands are the issues of the future.
If she preserve her present mind long enough, Christmas
will become a day that will satisfy every human being,
for the purpose of the young woman will pervade it.
The tendency of the young woman generally to simplicity,
of the American young woman to a certain restraint
(at least when abroad), to a deference to her elders,
and to tradition, has been noted. The present
phenomenon is quite beyond this, and more radical.
It is, one may venture to say, an attempt to conform
the inner being to the outward simplicity. If
one could suspect the young woman of taking up any
line not original, it might be guessed that the present
fashion (which is bewildering the most worldly men
with a new and irresistible fascination) was set by
the self-revelations of Marie Bashkirtseff. Very
likely, however, it was a new spirit in the world,
of which Marie was the first publishing example.
Its note is self-analysis, searching, unsparing, leaving
no room for the deception of self or of the world.
Its leading feature is extreme candor. It is
not enough to tell the truth (that has been told before);
but one must act and tell the whole truth. One
does not put on the shirt front and the standing collar
and the knotted cravat of the other sex as a mere
form; it is an act of consecration, of rigid, simple
come-out-ness into the light of truth. This noble
candor will suffer no concealments. She would
not have her lover even, still more the general world
of men, think she is better, or rather other, than
she is. Not that she would like to appear a man
among men, far from that; but she wishes to talk with
candor and be talked to candidly, without taking advantage
of that false shelter of sex behind which women have
been accused of dodging. If she is nothing else,
she is sincere, one might say wantonly sincere.
And this lucid, candid inner life is reflected in her
dress. This is not only simple in its form, in
its lines; it is severe. To go into the shop
of a European modiste is almost to put one’s
self into a truthful and candid frame of mind.
Those leave frivolous ideas behind who enter here.
The ‘modiste’ will tell the philosopher
that it is now the fashion to be severe; in a word,
it is ‘fesch’. Nothing can go
beyond that. And it symbolizes the whole life,
its self-examination, earnestness, utmost candor in
speech and conduct.
The statesman who is busy about his
tariff and his reciprocity, and his endeavor to raise
money like potatoes, may little heed and much undervalue
this advent of candor into the world as a social force.
But the philosopher will make no such mistake.
He knows that they who build without woman build in
vain, and that she is the great regenerator, as she
is the great destroyer. He knows too much to disregard
the gravity of any fashionable movement. He knows
that there is no power on earth that can prevent the
return of the long skirt. And that if the young
woman has decided to be severe and candid and frank
with herself and in her intercourse with others, we
must submit and thank God.
And what a gift to the world is this
for the Christmas season! The clear-eyed young
woman of the future, always dear and often an anxiety,
will this year be an object of enthusiasm.
THE AMERICAN MAN
The American man only develops himself
and spreads himself and grows “for all he is
worth” in the Great West. He is more free
and limber there, and unfolds those generous peculiarities
and largenesses of humanity which never blossomed
before. The “environment” has much
to do with it. The great spaces over which he
roams contribute to the enlargement of his mental
horizon. There have been races before who roamed
the illimitable desert, but they traveled on foot
or on camelback, and were limited in their range.
There was nothing continental about them, as there
is about our railway desert travelers, who swing along
through thousands of miles of sand and sage-bush with
a growing contempt for time and space. But expansive
and great as these people have become under the new
conditions, we have a fancy that the development of
the race has only just begun, and that the future
will show us in perfection a kind of man new to the
world. Out somewhere on the Santa Fe route, where
the desert of one day was like the desert of the day
before, and the Pullman car rolls and swings over
the wide waste beneath the blue sky day after day,
under its black flag of smoke, in the early gray of
morning, when the men were waiting their turns at
the ablution bowls, a slip of a boy, perhaps aged
seven, stood balancing himself on his little legs,
clad in knicker-bockers, biding his time, with all
the nonchalance of an old campaigner. “How
did you sleep, cap?” asked a well-meaning elderly
gentleman. “Well, thank you,” was
the dignified response; “as I always do on a
sleeping-car.” Always does? Great horrors!
Hardly out of his swaddling-clothes, and yet he always
sleeps well in a sleeper! Was he born on the
wheels? was he cradled in a Pullman? He has always
been in motion, probably; he was started at thirty
miles an hour, no doubt, this marvelous boy of our
new era. He was not born in a house at rest, but
the locomotive snatched him along with a shriek and
a roar before his eyes were fairly open, and he was
rocked in a “section,” and his first sensation
of life was that of moving rapidly over vast arid spaces,
through cattle ranges and along canons. The effect
of quick and easy locomotion on character may have
been noted before, but it seems that here is the production
of a new sort of man, the direct product of our railway
era. It is not simply that this boy is mature,
but he must be a different and a nobler sort of boy
than one born, say, at home or on a canal-boat; for,
whether he was born on the rail or not, he belongs
to the railway system of civilization. Before
he gets into trousers he is old in experience, and
he has discounted many of the novelties that usually
break gradually on the pilgrim in this world.
He belongs to the new expansive race that must live
in motion, whose proper home is the Pullman (which
will probably be improved in time into a dustless,
sweet-smelling, well-aired bedroom), and whose domestic
life will be on the wing, so to speak. The Inter-State
Commerce Bill will pass him along without friction
from end to end of the Union, and perhaps a uniform
divorce law will enable him to change his marital relations
at any place where he happens to dine. This promising
lad is only a faint intimation of what we are all
coming to when we fully acquire the freedom of the
continent, and come into that expansiveness of feeling
and of language which characterizes the Great West.
It is a burst of joyous exuberance that comes from
the sense of an illimitable horizon. It shows
itself in the tender words of a local newspaper at
Bowie, Arizona, on the death of a beloved citizen:
“‘Death loves a shining mark,’ and
she hit a dandy when she turned loose on Jim.”
And also in the closing words of a New Mexico obituary,
which the Kansas Magazine quotes: “Her tired
spirit was released from the pain-racking body and
soared aloft to eternal glory at 4.30 Denver time.”
We die, as it were, in motion, as we sleep, and there
is nowhere any boundary to our expansion. Perhaps
we shall never again know any rest as we now understand
the term rest being only change of motion and
we shall not be able to sleep except on the cars, and
whether we die by Denver time or by the 90th meridian,
we shall only change our time. Blessed be this
slip of a boy who is a man before he is an infant,
and teaches us what rapid transit can do for our race!
The only thing that can possibly hinder us in our
progress will be second childhood; we have abolished
first.
THE ELECTRIC WAY
We are quite in the electric way.
We boast that we have made electricity our slave,
but the slave whom we do not understand is our master.
And before we know him we shall be transformed.
Mr. Edison proposes to send us over the country at
the rate of one hundred miles an hour. This pleases
us, because we fancy we shall save time, and because
we are taught that the chief object in life is to
“get there” quickly. We really have
an idea that it is a gain to annihilate distance, forgetting
that as a matter of personal experience we are already
too near most people. But this speed by rail
will enable us to live in Philadelphia and do business
in New York. It will make the city of Chicago
two hundred miles square. And the bigger Chicago
is, the more important this world becomes. This
pleasing anticipation that of traveling
by lightning, and all being huddled together is
nothing to the promised universal illumination by a
diffused light that shall make midnight as bright as
noonday. We shall then save all the time there
is, and at the age of thirty-five have lived the allotted
seventy years, and long, if not for ‘Götterdämmerung’,
at least for some world where, by touching a button,
we can discharge our limbs of electricity and take
a little repose. The most restless and ambitious
of us can hardly conceive of Chicago as a desirable
future state of existence.
This, however, is only the external
or superficial view of the subject; at the best it
is only symbolical. Mr. Edison is wasting his
time in objective experiments, while we are in the
deepest ignorance as to our electric personality or
our personal electricity. We begin to apprehend
that we are electric beings, that these outward manifestations
of a subtile form are only hints of our internal state.
Mr. Edison should turn his attention from physics
to humanity electrically considered in its social
condition. We have heard a great deal about affinities.
We are told that one person is positive and another
negative, and that representing socially opposite
poles they should come together and make an electric
harmony, that two positives or two negatives repel
each other, and if conventionally united end in divorce,
and so on. We read that such a man is magnetic,
meaning that he can poll a great many votes; or that
such a woman thrilled her audience, meaning probably
that they were in an electric condition to be shocked
by her. Now this is what we want to find out to
know if persons are really magnetic or sympathetic,
and how to tell whether a person is positive or negative.
In politics we are quite at sea. What is the
good of sending a man to Washington at the rate of
a hundred miles an hour if we are uncertain of his
electric state? The ideal House of Representatives
ought to be pretty nearly balanced half
positive, half negative. Some Congresses seem
to be made up pretty much of negatives. The time
for the electrician to test the candidate is before
he is put in nomination, not dump him into Congress
as we do now, utterly ignorant of whether his currents
run from his heels to his head or from his head to
his heels, uncertain, indeed, as to whether he has
magnetism to run in at all. Nothing could be more
unscientific than the process and the result.
In social life it is infinitely worse.
You, an electric unmarried man, enter a room full
of attractive women. How are you to know who is
positive and who is negative, or who is a maiden lady
in equilibrium, if it be true, as scientists affirm,
that the genus old maid is one in whom the positive
currents neutralize the negative currents? Your
affinity is perhaps the plainest woman in the room.
But beauty is a juggling sprite, entirely uncontrolled
by electricity, and you are quite likely to make a
mistake. It is absurd the way we blunder on in
a scientific age. We touch a button, and are
married. The judge touches another button, and
we are divorced. If when we touched the first
button it revealed us both negatives, we should start
back in horror, for it is only before engagement that
two negatives make an affirmative. That is the
reason that some clergymen refuse to marry a divorced
woman; they see that she has made one electric mistake,
and fear she will make another. It is all very
well for the officiating clergyman to ask the two intending
to commit matrimony if they have a license from the
town clerk, if they are of age or have the consent
of parents, and have a million; but the vital point
is omitted. Are they electric affinities?
It should be the duty of the town-clerk, by a battery,
or by some means to be discovered by electricians,
to find out the galvanic habit of the parties, their
prevailing electric condition. Temporarily they
may seem to be in harmony, and may deceive themselves
into the belief that they are at opposite poles equidistant
from the equator, and certain to meet on that imaginary
line in matrimonial bliss. Dreadful will be the
awakening to an insipid life, if they find they both
have the same sort of currents. It is said that
women change their minds and their dispositions, that
men are fickle, and that both give way after marriage
to natural inclinations that were suppressed while
they were on the good behavior that the supposed necessity
of getting married imposes. This is so notoriously
true that it ought to create a public panic. But
there is hope in the new light. If we understand
it, persons are born in a certain electrical condition,
and substantially continue in it, however much they
may apparently wobble about under the influence of
infirm minds and acquired wickedness. There are,
of course, variations of the compass to be reckoned
with, and the magnet may occasionally be bewitched
by near and powerful attracting objects. But,
on the whole, the magnet remains the same, and it
is probable that a person’s normal electric condition
is the thing in him least liable to dangerous variation.
If this be true, the best basis for matrimony is the
electric, and our social life would have fewer disappointments
if men and women went about labeled with their scientifically
ascertained electric qualities.
CAN A HUSBAND OPEN HIS WIFE’S LETTERS?
Can a husband open his wife’s letters? That would depend, many would say,
upon what kind of a husband he is. But it cannot be put aside in that
flippant manner, for it is a legal right that is in question, and it has
recently been decided in a Paris tribunal that the husband has the right
to open the letters addressed to his wife. Of course in America an appeal
would instantly be taken from this decision, and perhaps by husbands
themselves; for in this world rights are becoming so impartially
distributed that this privilege granted to the husband might at once be
extended to the wife, and she would read all his business correspondence,
and his business is sometimes various and complicated. The Paris decision
must be based upon the familiar formula that man and wife are one, and
that that one is the husband. If a man has the right to read all the
letters written to his wife, being his property by reason of his
ownership of her, why may he not have a legal right to know all that is
said to her? The question is not whether a wife ought to receive letters
that her husband may not read, or listen to talk that he may not hear,
but whether he has a sort of lordship that gives him privileges which she
does not enjoy. In our modern notion of marriage, which is getting itself
expressed in statute law, marriage is supposed to rest on mutual trust
and mutual rights. In theory the husband and wife are still one, and
there can nothing come into the life of one that is not shared by the
other; in fact, if the marriage is perfect and the trust absolute, the
personality of each is respected by the other, and each is freely the
judge of what shall be contributed to the common confidence; and if there
are any concealments, it is well believed that they are for the mutual
good. If every one were as perfect in the marriage relation as those who
are reading these lines, the question of the wife’s letters would never
arise. The man, trusting his wife, would not care to pry into any little
secrets his wife might have, or bother himself about her correspondence;
he would know, indeed, that if he had lost her real affection, a
surveillance of her letters could not restore it.
Perhaps it is a modern notion that
marriage is a union of trust and not of suspicion,
of expectation of faithfulness the more there is freedom.
At any rate, the tendency, notwithstanding the French
decision, is away from the common-law suspicion and
tyranny towards a higher trust in an enlarged freedom.
And it is certain that the rights cannot all be on
one side and the duties on the other. If the
husband legally may compel his wife to show him her
letters, the courts will before long grant the same
privilege to the wife. But, without pressing this
point, we hold strongly to the sacredness of correspondence.
The letters one receives are in one sense not his
own. They contain the confessions of another soul,
the confidences of another mind, that would be rudely
treated if given any sort of publicity. And while
husband and wife are one to each other, they are two
in the eyes of other people, and it may well happen
that a friend will desire to impart something to a
discreet woman which she would not intrust to the
babbling husband of that woman. Every life must
have its own privacy and its own place of retirement.
The letter is of all things the most personal and
intimate thing. Its bloom is gone when another
eye sees it before the one for which it was intended.
Its aroma all escapes when it is first opened by another
person. One might as well wear second-hand clothing
as get a second-hand letter. Here, then, is a
sacred right that ought to be respected, and can be
respected without any injury to domestic life.
The habit in some families for the members of it to
show each other’s letters is a most disenchanting
one. It is just in the family, between persons
most intimate, that these delicacies of consideration
for the privacy of each ought to be most respected.
No one can estimate probably how much of the refinement,
of the delicacy of feeling, has been lost to the world
by the introduction of the postal-card. Anything
written on a postal-card has no personality; it is
banal, and has as little power of charming any one
who receives it as an advertisement in the newspaper.
It is not simply the cheapness of the communication
that is vulgar, but the publicity of it. One may
have perhaps only a cent’s worth of affection
to send, but it seems worth much more when enclosed
in an envelope. We have no doubt, then, that on
general principles the French decision is a mistake,
and that it tends rather to vulgarize than to retain
the purity and delicacy of the marriage relation.
And the judges, so long even as men only occupy the
bench, will no doubt reverse it when the logical march
of events forces upon them the question whether the
wife may open her husband’s letters.
A LEISURE CLASS
Foreign critics have apologized for
real or imagined social and literary shortcomings
in this country on the ground that the American people
have little leisure. It is supposed that when
we have a leisure class we shall not only make a better
showing in these respects, but we shall be as agreeable having
time to devote to the art of being agreeable as
the English are. But we already have a considerable
and increasing number of people who can command their
own time if we have not a leisure class, and the sociologist
might begin to study the effect of this leisureliness
upon society. Are the people who, by reason of
a competence or other accidents of good-fortune, have
most leisure, becoming more agreeable? and are they
devoting themselves to the elevation of the social
tone, or to the improvement of our literature?
However this question is answered, a strong appeal
might be made to the people of leisure to do not only
what is expected of them by foreign observers, but
to take advantage of their immense opportunities.
In a republic there is no room for a leisure class
that is not useful. Those who use their time merely
to kill it, in imitation of those born to idleness
and to no necessity of making an exertion, may be
ornamental, but having no root in any established
privilege to sustain them, they will soon wither away
in this atmosphere, as a flower would which should
set up to be an orchid when it does not belong to
the orchid family. It is required here that those
who are emancipated from the daily grind should vindicate
their right to their position not only by setting
an example of self-culture, but by contributing something
to the general welfare. It is thought by many
that if society here were established and settled
as it is elsewhere, the rich would be less dominated
by their money and less conscious of it, and having
leisure, could devote themselves even more than they
do now to intellectual and spiritual pursuits.
Whether these anticipations will ever
be realized, and whether increased leisure will make
us all happy, is a subject of importance; but it is
secondary, and in a manner incidental, to another and
deeper matter, which may be defined as the responsibility
of attractiveness. And this responsibility takes
two forms the duty of every one to be attractive,
and the danger of being too attractive. To be
winning and agreeable is sometimes reckoned a gift,
but it is a disposition that can be cultivated; and,
in a world so given to grippe and misapprehension as
this is, personal attractiveness becomes a duty, if
it is not an art, that might be taught in the public
schools. It used to be charged against New Englanders
that they regarded this gift as of little value, and
were inclined to hide it under a bushel, and it was
said of some of their neighbors in the Union that
they exaggerated its importance, and neglected the
weightier things of the law. Indeed, disputes
have arisen as to what attractiveness consisted in some
holding that beauty or charm of manner (which is almost
as good) and sweetness and gayety were sufficient,
while others held that a little intelligence sprinkled
in was essential. But one thing is clear, that
while women were held to strict responsibility in
this matter, not stress enough was laid upon the equal
duty of men to be attractive in order to make the world
agreeable. Hence it is, probably, that while
no question has been raised as to the effect of the
higher education upon the attractiveness of men, the
colleges for girls have been jealously watched as
to the effect they were likely to have upon the attractiveness
of women. Whether the college years of a young
man, during which he knows more than he will ever know
again, are his most attractive period is not considered,
for he is expected to develop what is in him later
on; but it is gravely questioned whether girls who
give their minds to the highest studies are not dropping
those graces of personal attractiveness which they
will find it difficult to pick up again. Of course
such a question as this could never arise except in
just such a world as this is. For in an ideal
world it could be shown that the highest intelligence
and the highest personal charm are twins. If,
therefore, it should turn out, which seems absurd,
that college-educated girls are not as attractive
as other women with less advantages, it will have
to be admitted that something is the matter with the
young ladies, which is preposterous, or that the system
is still defective. For the postulate that everybody
ought to be attractive cannot be abandoned for the
sake of any system. Decision on this system cannot
be reached without long experience, for it is always
to be remembered that the man’s point of view
of attractiveness may shift, and he may come to regard
the intellectual graces as supremely attractive; while,
on the other hand, the woman student may find that
a winning smile is just as effective in bringing a
man to her feet, where he belongs, as a logarithm.
The danger of being too attractive,
though it has historic illustration, is thought by
many to be more apparent than real. Merely being
too attractive has often been confounded with a love
of flirtation and conquest, unbecoming always in a
man, and excused in a woman on the ground of her helplessness.
It could easily be shown that to use personal attractiveness
recklessly to the extent of hopeless beguilement is
cruel, and it may be admitted that woman ought to
be held to strict responsibility for her attractiveness.
The lines are indeed hard for her. The duty is
upon her in this poor world of being as attractive
as she can, and yet she is held responsible for all
the mischief her attractiveness produces. As
if the blazing sun should be called to account by
people with weak eyes.
WEATHER AND CHARACTER
The month of February in all latitudes
in the United States is uncertain. The birth
of George Washington in it has not raised it in public
esteem. In the North, it is a month to flee from;
in the South, at best it is a waiting month a
month of rain and fickle skies. A good deal has
been done for it. It is the month of St. Valentine,
it is distinguished by the leap-year addition of a
day, and ought to be a favorite of the gentle sex;
but it remains a sort of off period in the year.
Its brevity recommends it, but no one would take any
notice of it were it not for its effect upon character.
A month of rigid weather is supposed to brace up the
moral nature, and a month of gentleness is supposed
to soften the asperities of the disposition, but February
contributes to neither of these ends. It is neither
a tonic nor a soother; that is, in most parts of our
inexplicable land. We make no complaint of this.
It is probably well to have a period in the year that
tests character to the utmost, and the person who
can enter spring through the gate of February a better
man or woman is likely to adorn society the rest of
the year.
February, however, is merely an illustration
of the effect of weather upon the disposition.
Persons differ in regard to their sensitiveness to
cloudy, rainy, and gloomy days. We recognize this
in a general way, but the relation of temper and disposition
to the weather has never been scientifically studied.
Our observation of the influence of climate is mostly
with regard to physical infirmities. We know the
effect of damp weather upon rheumatics, and of the
east wind upon gouty subjects, but too little allowance
is made for the influence of weather upon the spirits
and the conduct of men. We know that a long period
of gloomy weather leads to suicides, and we observe
that long-continued clouds and rain beget “crossness”
and ill-temper, and we are all familiar with the universal
exhilaration of sunshine and clear air upon any company
of men and women. But the point we wish to make
is that neither society nor the law makes any allowance
for the aberrations of human nature caused by dull
and unpleasant weather. And this is very singular
in this humanitarian age, when excuse is found for
nearly every moral delinquency in heredity or environment,
that the greatest factor of discontent and crookedness,
the weather, should be left out of consideration altogether.
The relation of crime to the temperature and the humidity
of the atmosphere is not taken into account.
Yet crime and eccentricity of conduct are very much
the result of atmospheric conditions, since they depend
upon the temper and the spirit of the community.
Many people are habitually blue and down-hearted in
sour weather; a long spell of cloudy, damp, cold weather
depresses everybody, lowers hope, tends to melancholy;
and people when they are not cheerful are more apt
to fall into evil ways, as a rule, than when they
are in a normal state of good-humor. And aside
from crimes, the vexation, the friction, the domestic
discontent in life, are provoked by bad weather.
We should like to have some statistics as to incompatibility
between married couples produced by damp and raw days,
and to know whether divorces are more numerous in the
States that suffer from a fickle climate than in those
where the climate is more equable. It is true
that in the Sandwich Islands and in Egypt there is
greater mental serenity, less perturbation of spirit,
less worry, than in the changeable United States.
Something of this placidity and resignation to the
ills inevitable in human life is due to an even climate,
to the constant sun and the dry air. We cannot
hope to prevent crime and suffering by statistics,
any more than we have been able to improve our climate
(which is rather worse now than before the scientists
took it in charge) by observations and telegraphic
reports; but we can, by careful tabulation of the
effects of bad weather upon the spirits of a community,
learn what places in the Union are favorable to the
production of cheerfulness and an equal mind.
And we should lift a load of reprobation from some
places which now have a reputation for surliness and
unamiability. We find the people of one place
hospitable, lighthearted, and agreeable; the people
of another place cold, and morose, and unpleasant.
It would be a satisfaction to know that the weather
is responsible for the difference. Observation
of this sort would also teach us doubtless what places
are most conducive to literary production, what to
happy homes and agreeing wives and husbands. All
our territory is mapped out as to its sanitary conditions;
why not have it colored as to its effect upon the
spirits and the enjoyment of life? The suggestion
opens a vast field of investigation.
BORN WITH AN “EGO”
There used to be a notion going round
that it would be a good thing for people if they were
more “self-centred.” Perhaps there
was talk of adding a course to the college curriculum,
in addition to that for training the all-competent
“journalist,” for the self-centring of
the young. To apply the term to a man or woman
was considered highly complimentary. The advisers
of this state of mind probably meant to suggest a desirable
equilibrium and mental balance; but the actual effect
of the self-centred training is illustrated by a story
told of Thomas H. Benton, who had been described as
an egotist by some of the newspapers. Meeting
Colonel Frank Blair one day, he said: “Colonel
Blair, I see that the newspapers call me an egotist.
I wish you would tell me frankly, as a friend, if you
think the charge is true.” “It is
a very direct question, Mr. Benton,” replied
Colonel Blair, “but if you want my honest opinion,
I am compelled to say that I think there is some foundation
for the charge.” “Well, sir,”
said Mr. Benton, throwing his head back and his chest
forward, “the difference between me and these
little fellows is that I have an Ego!” Mr.
Benton was an interesting man, and it is a fair consideration
if a certain amount of egotism does not add to the
interest of any character, but at the same time the
self-centred conditions shut a person off from one
of the chief enjoyments to be got out of this world,
namely, a recognition of what is admirable in others
in a toleration of peculiarities. It is odd,
almost amusing, to note how in this country people
of one section apply their local standards to the
judgment of people in other sections, very much as
an Englishman uses his insular yardstick to measure
all the rest of the world. It never seems to
occur to people in one locality that the manners and
speech of those of another may be just as admirable
as their own, and they get a good deal of discomfort
out of their intercourse with strangers by reason
of their inability to adapt themselves to any ways
not their own. It helps greatly to make this
country interesting that nearly every State has its
peculiarities, and that the inhabitants of different
sections differ in manner and speech. But next
to an interesting person in social value, is an agreeable
one, and it would add vastly to the agreeableness
of life if our widely spread provinces were not so
self-centred in their notion that their own way is
the best, to the degree that they criticise any deviation
from it as an eccentricity. It would be a very
nice world in these United States if we could all
devote ourselves to finding out in communities what
is likable rather than what is opposed to our experience;
that is, in trying to adapt ourselves to others rather
than insisting that our own standard should measure
our opinion and our enjoyment of them.
When the Kentuckian describes a man
as a “high-toned gentleman” he means exactly
the same that a Bostonian means when, he says that
a man is a “very good fellow,” only the
men described have a different culture, a different
personal flavor; and it is fortunate that the Kentuckian
is not like the Bostonian, for each has a quality
that makes intercourse with him pleasant. In
the South many people think they have said a severe
thing when they say that a person or manner is thoroughly
Yankee; and many New Englanders intend to express
a considerable lack in what is essential when they
say of men and women that they are very Southern.
When the Yankee is produced he may turn out a cosmopolitan
person of the most interesting and agreeable sort;
and the Southerner may have traits and peculiarities,
growing out of climate and social life unlike the New
England, which are altogether charming. We talked
once with a Western man of considerable age and experience
who had the placid mind that is sometimes, and may
more and more become, the characteristic of those who
live in flat countries of illimitable horizons, who
said that New Yorkers, State and city, all had an
assertive sort of smartness that was very disagreeable
to him. And a lady of New York (a city whose dialect
the novelists are beginning to satirize) was much disturbed
by the flatness of speech prevailing in Chicago, and
thought something should be done in the public schools
to correct the pronunciation of English. There
doubtless should be a common standard of distinct,
rounded, melodious pronunciation, as there is of good
breeding, and it is quite as important to cultivate
the voice in speaking as in singing, but the people
of the United States let themselves be immensely irritated
by local differences and want of toleration of sectional
peculiarities. The truth is that the agreeable
people are pretty evenly distributed over the country,
and one’s enjoyment of them is heightened not
only by their differences of manner, but by the different,
ways in which they look at life, unless he insists
upon applying everywhere the yardstick of his own locality.
If the Boston woman sets her eyeglasses at a critical
angle towards the ‘laisser faire’
flow of social amenity in New Orleans, and the New
Orleans woman seeks out only the prim and conventional
in Boston, each may miss the opportunity to supplement
her life by something wanting and desirable in it,
to be gained by the exercise of more openness of mind
and toleration. To some people Yankee thrift is
disagreeable; to others, Southern shiftlessness is
intolerable. To some travelers the negro of the
South, with his tropical nature, his capacity for picturesque
attitudes, his abundant trust in Providence, is an
element of restfulness; and if the chief object of
life is happiness, the traveler may take a useful
hint from the race whose utmost desire, in a fit climate,
would be fully satisfied by a shirt and a banana-tree.
But to another traveler the dusky, careless race is
a continual affront.
If a person is born with an “Ego,”
and gets the most enjoyment out of the world by trying
to make it revolve about himself, and cannot make-allowances
for differences, we have nothing to say except to express
pity for such a self-centred condition; which shuts
him out of the never-failing pleasure there is in
entering into and understanding with sympathy the
almost infinite variety in American life.
JUVENTUS MUNDI
Sometimes the world seems very old.
It appeared so to Bernard of Cluny in the twelfth
century, when he wrote:
“The
world is very evil,
The
times are waning late.”
There was a general impression among
the Christians of the first century of our era that
the end was near. The world must have seemed very
ancient to the Egyptians fifteen hundred years before
Christ, when the Pyramid of Cheops was a relic of
antiquity, when almost the whole circle of arts, sciences,
and literature had been run through, when every nation
within reach had been conquered, when woman had been
developed into one of the most fascinating of beings,
and even reigned more absolutely than Elizabeth or
Victoria has reigned since: it was a pretty tired
old world at that time. One might almost say
that the further we go back the older and more “played
out” the world appears, notwithstanding that
the poets, who were generally pessimists of the present,
kept harping about the youth of the world and the
joyous spontaneity of human life in some golden age
before their time. In fact, the world is old in
spots in Memphis and Boston and Damascus
and Salem and Ephesus. Some of these places are
venerable in traditions, and some of them are actually
worn out and taking a rest from too much civilization lying
fallow, as the saying is. But age is so entirely
relative that to many persons the landing of the Mayflower
seems more remote than the voyage of Jason, and a
Mayflower chest a more antique piece of furniture than
the timbers of the Ark, which some believe can still
be seen on top of Mount Ararat. But, speaking
generally, the world is still young and growing, and
a considerable portion of it unfinished. The
oldest part, indeed, the Laurentian Hills, which were
first out of water, is still only sparsely settled;
and no one pretends that Florida is anything like finished,
or that the delta of the Mississippi is in anything
more than the process of formation. Men are so
young and lively in these days that they cannot wait
for the slow processes of nature, but they fill up
and bank up places, like Holland, where they can live;
and they keep on exploring and discovering incongruous
regions, like Alaska, where they can go and exercise
their juvenile exuberance.
In many respects the world has been
growing younger ever since the Christian era.
A new spirit came into it then which makes youth perpetual,
a spirit of living in others, which got the name of
universal brotherhood, a spirit that has had a good
many discouragements and set-backs, but which, on
the whole, gains ground, and generally works in harmony
with the scientific spirit, breaking down the exclusive
character of the conquests of nature. What used
to be the mystery and occultism of the few is now
general knowledge, so that all the playing at occultism
by conceited people now seems jejune and foolish.
A little machine called the instantaneous photograph
takes pictures as quickly and accurately as the human
eye does, and besides makes them permanent. Instead
of fooling credulous multitudes with responses from
Delphi, we have a Congress which can enact tariff
regulations susceptible of interpretations enough to
satisfy the love of mystery of the entire nation.
Instead of loafing round Memnon at sunrise to catch
some supernatural tones, we talk words into a little
contrivance which will repeat our words and tones to
the remotest generation of those who shall be curious
to know whether we said those words in jest or earnest.
All these mysteries made common and diffused certainly
increase the feeling of the equality of opportunity
in the world. And day by day such wonderful things
are discovered and scattered abroad that we are warranted
in believing that we are only on the threshold of
turning to account the hidden forces of nature.
There would be great danger of human presumption and
conceit in this progress if the conceit were not so
widely diffused, and where we are all conceited there
is no one to whom it will appear unpleasant. If
there was only one person who knew about the telephone
he would be unbearable. Probably the Eiffel Tower
would be stricken down as a monumental presumption,
like that of Babel, if it had not been raised with
the full knowledge and consent of all the world.
This new spirit, with its multiform
manifestations, which came into the world nearly nineteen
hundred years ago, is sometimes called the spirit
of Christmas. And good reasons can be given for
supposing that it is. At any rate, those nations
that have the most of it are the most prosperous,
and those people who have the most of it are the most
agreeable to associate with. Know all men by
these Presents, is an old legal form which has come
to have a new meaning in this dispensation. It
is by the spirit of brotherhood exhibited in giving
presents that we know the Christmas proper, only we
are apt to take it in too narrow a way. The real
spirit of Christmas is the general diffusion of helpfulness
and good-will. If somebody were to discover an
elixir which would make every one truthful, he would
not, in this age of the world, patent it. Indeed,
the Patent Office would not let him make a corner on
virtue as he does in wheat; and it is not respectable
any more among the real children of Christmas to make
a corner in wheat. The world, to be sure, tolerates
still a great many things that it does not approve
of, and, on the whole, Christmas, as an ameliorating
and good-fellowship institution, gains a little year
by year. There is still one hitch about it, and
a bad one just now, namely, that many people think
they can buy its spirit by jerks of liberality, by
costly gifts. Whereas the fact is that a great
many of the costliest gifts in this season do not
count at all. Crumbs from the rich man’s
table don’t avail any more to open the pearly
gates even of popular esteem in this world. Let
us say, in fine, that a loving, sympathetic heart
is better than a nickel-plated service in this world,
which is surely growing young and sympathetic.
A BEAUTIFUL OLD AGE
In Autumn the thoughts lightly turn
to Age. If the writer has seemed to be interested,
sometimes to the neglect of other topics, in the American
young woman, it was not because she is interested in
herself, but because she is on the way to be one of
the most agreeable objects in this lovely world.
She may struggle against it; she may resist it by all
the legitimate arts of the coquette and the chemist;
she may be convinced that youth and beauty are inseparable
allies; but she would have more patience if she reflected
that the sunset is often finer than the sunrise, commonly
finer than noon, especially after a stormy day.
The secret of a beautiful old age is as well worth
seeking as that of a charming young maidenhood.
For it is one of the compensations for the rest of
us, in the decay of this mortal life, that women, whose
mission it is to allure in youth and to tinge the
beginning of the world with romance, also make the
end of the world more serenely satisfactory and beautiful
than the outset. And this has been done without
any amendment to the Constitution of the United States;
in fact, it is possible that the Sixteenth Amendment
would rather hinder than help this gracious process.
We are not speaking now of what is called growing old
gracefully and regretfully, as something to be endured,
but as a season to be desired for itself, at least
by those whose privilege it is to be ennobled and
cheered by it. And we are not speaking of wicked
old women. There is a unique fascination all
the novelists recognize it in a wicked
old woman; not very wicked, but a woman of abundant
experience, who is perfectly frank and a little cynical,
and delights in probing human nature and flashing
her wit on its weaknesses, and who knows as much about
life as a club man is credited with knowing. She
may not be a good comrade for the young, but she is
immensely more fascinating than a semi-wicked old
man. Why, we do not know; that is one of the unfathomable
mysteries of womanhood. No; we have in mind quite
another sort of woman, of which America has so many
that they are a very noticeable element in all cultivated
society. And the world has nothing more lovely.
For there is a loveliness or fascination sometimes
in women between the ages of sixty and eighty that
is unlike any other a charm that woos us
to regard autumn as beautiful as spring.
Perhaps these women were great beauties
in their day, but scarcely so serenely beautiful as
now when age has refined all that was most attractive.
Perhaps they were plain; but it does not matter, for
the subtle influence of spiritualized-intelligence
has the power of transforming plainness into the beauty
of old age. Physical beauty is doubtless a great
advantage, and it is never lost if mind shines through
it (there is nothing so unlovely as a frivolous old
woman fighting to keep the skin-deep beauty of her
youth); the eyes, if the life has not been one of
physical suffering, usually retain their power of moving
appeal; the lines of the face, if changed, may be refined
by a certain spirituality; the gray hair gives dignity
and softness and the charm of contrast; the low sweet
voice vibrates to the same note of femininity, and
the graceful and gracious are graceful and gracious
still. Even into the face and bearing of the
plain woman whose mind has grown, whose thoughts have
been pure, whose heart has been expanded by good deeds
or by constant affection, comes a beauty winning and
satisfactory in the highest degree.
It is not that the charm of the women
of whom we speak is mainly this physical beauty; that
is only incidental, as it were. The delight in
their society has a variety of sources. Their
interest in life is broader than it once was, more
sympathetically unselfish; they have a certain philosophical
serenity that is not inconsistent with great liveliness
of mind; they have got rid of so much nonsense; they
can afford to be truthful and how much
there is to be learned from a woman who is truthful!
they have a most delicious courage of opinion, about
men, say, and in politics, and social topics, and
creeds even. They have very little any longer
to conceal; that is, in regard to things that should
be thought about and talked about at all. They
are not afraid to be gay, and to have enthusiasms.
At sixty and eighty a refined and well-bred woman is
emancipated in the best way, and in the enjoyment of
the full play of the richest qualities of her womanhood.
She is as far from prudery as from the least note
of vulgarity. Passion, perhaps, is replaced by
a great capacity for friendliness, and she was never
more a real woman than in these mellow and reflective
days. And how interesting she is adding
so much knowledge of life to the complex interest
that inheres in her sex! Knowledge of life, yes,
and of affairs; for it must be said of these ladies
we have in mind that they keep up with the current
thought, that they are readers of books, even of newspapers for
even the newspaper can be helpful and not harmful
in the alembic of their minds.
Let not the purpose of this paper
be misunderstood. It is not to urge young women
to become old or to act like old women. The independence
and frankness of age might not be becoming to them.
They must stumble along as best they can, alternately
attracting and repelling, until by right of years
they join that serene company which is altogether beautiful.
There is a natural unfolding and maturing to the beauty
of old age. The mission of woman, about which
we are pretty weary of hearing, is not accomplished
by any means in her years of vernal bloom and loveliness;
she has equal power to bless and sweeten life in the
autumn of her pilgrimage. But here is an apologue:
The peach, from blossom to maturity, is the most attractive
of fruits. Yet the demands of the market, competition,
and fashion often cause it to be plucked and shipped
while green. It never matures, though it may
take a deceptive richness of color; it decays without
ripening. And the last end of that peach is worse
than the first.
THE ATTRACTION OF THE REPULSIVE
On one of the most charming of the
many wonderfully picturesque little beaches on the
Pacific coast, near Monterey, is the idlest if not
the most disagreeable social group in the world.
Just off the shore, farther than a stone’s-throw,
lies a mass of broken rocks. The surf comes leaping
and laughing in, sending up, above the curving green
breakers and crests of foam, jets and spirals of water
which flash like silver fountains in the sunlight.
These islets of rocks are the homes of the sea-lion.
This loafer of the coast congregates here by the thousand.
Sometimes the rocks are quite covered, the smooth
rounded surface of the larger one presenting the appearance
at a distance of a knoll dotted with dirty sheep.
There is generally a select knot of a dozen floating
about in the still water under the lee of the rock,
bobbing up their tails and flippers very much as black
driftwood might heave about in the tide. During
certain parts of the day members of this community
are off fishing in deep water; but what they like
best to do is to crawl up on the rocks and grunt and
bellow, or go to sleep in the sun. Some of them
lie half in water, their tails floating and their
ungainly heads wagging. These uneasy ones are
always wriggling out or plunging in. Some crawl
to the tops of the rocks and lie like gunny bags stuffed
with meal, or they repose on the broken surfaces like
masses of jelly. When they are all at home the
rocks have not room for them, and they crawl on and
over each other, and lie like piles of undressed pork.
In the water they are black, but when they are dry
in the sun the skin becomes a dirty light brown.
Many of them are huge fellows, with a body as big as
an ox. In the water they are repulsively graceful;
on the rocks they are as ungainly as boneless cows,
or hogs that have lost their shape in prosperity.
Summer and winter (and it is almost always summer
on this coast) these beasts, which are well fitted
neither for land nor water, spend their time in absolute
indolence, except when they are compelled to cruise
around in the deep water for food. They are of
no use to anybody, either for their skin or their
flesh. Nothing could be more thoroughly disgusting
and uncanny than they are, and yet nothing more fascinating.
One can watch them the irresponsible, formless
lumps of intelligent flesh for hours without
tiring. I scarcely know what the fascination is.
A small seal playing by himself near the shore, floating
on and diving under the breakers, is not so very disagreeable,
especially if he comes so near that you can see his
pathetic eyes; but these brutes in this perpetual
summer resort are disgustingly attractive. Nearly
everything about them, including their voice, is repulsive.
Perhaps it is the absolute idleness of the community
that makes it so interesting. To fish, to swim,
to snooze on the rocks, that is all, for ever and
ever. No past, no future. A society that
lives for the laziest sort of pleasure. If they
were rich, what more could they have? Is not
this the ideal of a watering-place life?
The spectacle of this happy community
ought to teach us humility and charity in judgment.
Perhaps the philosophy of its attractiveness lies
deeper than its ‘dolce far niente’
existence. We may never have considered the attraction
for us of the disagreeable, the positive fascination
of the uncommonly ugly. The repulsive fascination
of the loathly serpent or dragon for women can hardly
be explained on theological grounds. Some cranks
have maintained that the theory of gravitation alone
does not explain the universe, that repulsion is as
necessary as attraction in our economy. This may
apply to society. We are all charmed with the
luxuriance of a semi-tropical landscape, so violently
charmed that we become in time tired of its overpowering
bloom and color. But what is the charm of the
wide, treeless desert, the leagues of sand and burnt-up
chaparral, the distant savage, fantastic mountains,
the dry desolation as of a world burnt out? It
is not contrast altogether. For this illimitable
waste has its own charm; and again and again, when
we come to a world of vegetation, where the vision
is shut in by beauty, we shall have an irrepressible
longing for these wind-swept plains as wide as the
sea, with the ashy and pink horizons. We shall
long to be weary of it all again its vast
nakedness, its shimmering heat, its cold, star-studded
nights. It seems paradoxical, but it is probably
true, that a society composed altogether of agreeable
people would become a terrible bore. We are a
“kittle” lot, and hard to please for long.
We know how it is in the matter of climate. Why
is it that the masses of the human race live in the
most disagreeable climates to be found on the globe,
subject to extremes of heat and cold, sudden and unprovoked
changes, frosts, fogs, malarias? In such
regions they congregate, and seem to like the vicissitudes,
to like the excitement of the struggle with the weather
and the patent medicines to keep alive. They hate
the agreeable monotony of one genial day following
another the year through. They praise this monotony,
all literature is full of it; people always say they
are in search of the equable climate; but they continue
to live, nevertheless, or try to live, in the least
equable; and if they can find one spot more disagreeable
than another there they build a big city. If
man could make his ideal climate he would probably
be dissatisfied with it in a month. The effect
of climate upon disposition and upon manners needs
to be considered some day; but we are now only trying
to understand the attractiveness of the disagreeable.
There must be some reason for it; and that would explain
a social phenomenon, why there are so many unattractive
people, and why the attractive readers of these essays
could not get on without them.
The writer of this once traveled for
days with an intelligent curmudgeon, who made himself
at all points as prickly as the porcupine. There
was no getting on with him. And yet when he dropped
out of the party he was sorely missed. He was
more attractively repulsive than the sea-lion.
It was such a luxury to hate him. He was such
a counter-irritant, such a stimulant; such a flavor
he gave to life. We are always on the lookout
for the odd, the eccentric, the whimsical. We
pretend that we like the orderly, the beautiful, the
pleasant. We can find them anywhere the
little bits of scenery that please the eye, the pleasant
households, the group of delightful people. Why
travel, then? We want the abnormal, the strong,
the ugly, the unusual at least. We wish to be
startled and stirred up and repelled. And we
ought to be more thankful than we are that there are
so many desolate and wearisome and fantastic places,
and so many tiresome and unattractive people in this
lovely world.
GIVING AS A LUXURY
There must be something very good
in human nature, or people would not experience so
much pleasure in giving; there must be something very
bad in human nature, or more people would try the
experiment of giving. Those who do try it become
enamored of it, and get their chief pleasure in life
out of it; and so evident is this that there is some
basis for the idea that it is ignorance rather than
badness which keeps so many people from being generous.
Of course it may become a sort of dissipation, or more
than that, a devastation, as many men who have what
are called “good wives” have reason to
know, in the gradual disappearance of their wardrobe
if they chance to lay aside any of it temporarily.
The amount that a good woman can give away is only
measured by her opportunity. Her mind becomes
so trained in the mystery of this pleasure that she
experiences no thrill of delight in giving away only
the things her husband does not want. Her office
in life is to teach him the joy of self-sacrifice.
She and all other habitual and irreclaimable givers
soon find out that there is next to no pleasure in
a gift unless it involves some self-denial.
Let one consider seriously whether
he ever gets as much satisfaction out of a gift received
as out of one given. It pleases him for the moment,
and if it is useful, for a long time; he turns it over,
and admires it; he may value it as a token of affection,
and it flatters his self-esteem that he is the object
of it. But it is a transient feeling compared
with that he has when he has made a gift. That
substantially ministers to his self-esteem. He
follows the gift; he dwells upon the delight of the
receiver; his imagination plays about it; it will never
wear out or become stale; having parted with it, it
is for him a lasting possession. It is an investment
as lasting as that in the debt of England. Like
a good deed, it grows, and is continually satisfactory.
It is something to think of when he first wakes in
the morning a time when most people are
badly put to it for want of something pleasant to think
of. This fact about giving is so incontestably
true that it is a wonder that enlightened people do
not more freely indulge in giving for their own comfort.
It is, above all else, amazing that so many imagine
they are going to get any satisfaction out of what
they leave by will. They may be in a state where
they will enjoy it, if the will is not fought over;
but it is shocking how little gratitude there is accorded
to a departed giver compared to a living giver.
He couldn’t take the property with him, it is
said; he was obliged to leave it to somebody.
By this thought his generosity is always reduced to
a minimum. He may build a monument to himself
in some institution, but we do not know enough of the
world to which he has gone to know whether a tiny
monument on this earth is any satisfaction to a person
who is free of the universe. Whereas every giving
or deed of real humanity done while he was living would
have entered into his character, and would be of lasting
service to him that is, in any future which
we can conceive.
Of course we are not confining our
remarks to what are called Christmas gifts commercially
so called nor would we undertake to estimate
the pleasure there is in either receiving or giving
these. The shrewd manufacturers of the world
have taken notice of the periodic generosity of the
race, and ingeniously produce articles to serve it,
that is, to anticipate the taste and to thwart all
individuality or spontaneity in it. There is,
in short, what is called a “line of holiday goods,”
fitting, it may be supposed, the periodic line of charity.
When a person receives some of these things in the
blessed season of such, he is apt to be puzzled.
He wants to know what they are for, what he is to do
with them. If there are no “directions”
on the articles, his gratitude is somewhat tempered.
He has seen these nondescripts of ingenuity and expense
in the shop windows, but he never expected to come
into personal relations to them. He is puzzled,
and he cannot escape the unpleasant feeling that commerce
has put its profit-making fingers into Christmas.
Such a lot of things seem to be manufactured on purpose
that people may perform a duty that is expected of
them in the holidays. The house is full of these
impossible things; they occupy the mantelpieces, they
stand about on the tottering little tables, they are
ingenious, they are made for wants yet undiscovered,
they tarnish, they break, they will not “work,”
and pretty soon they look “second-hand.”
Yet there must be more satisfaction in giving these
articles than in receiving them, and maybe a spice
of malice not that of course, for in the
holidays nearly every gift expresses at least kindly
remembrance but if you give them you do
not have to live with them. But consider how full
the world is of holiday goods costly goods
too that are of no earthly use, and are
not even artistic, and how short life is, and how
many people actually need books and other indispensable
articles, and how starved are many fine drawing-rooms,
not for holiday goods, but for objects of beauty.
Christmas stands for much, and for
more and more in a world that is breaking down its
barriers of race and religious intolerance, and one
of its chief offices has been supposed to be the teaching
of men the pleasure there is in getting rid of some
of their possessions for the benefit of others.
But this frittering away a good instinct and tendency
in conventional giving of manufactures made to suit
an artificial condition is hardly in the line of developing
the spirit that shares the last crust or gives to
the thirsty companion in the desert the first pull
at the canteen. Of course Christmas feeling is
the life of trade and all that, and we will be the
last to discourage any sort of giving, for one can
scarcely disencumber himself of anything in his passage
through this world and not be benefited; but the hint
may not be thrown away that one will personally get
more satisfaction out of his periodic or continual
benevolence if he gives during his life the things
which he wants and other people need, and reserves
for a fine show in his will a collected but not selected
mass of holiday goods.
CLIMATE AND HAPPINESS
The idea of the relation of climate
to happiness is modern. It is probably born of
the telegraph and of the possibility of rapid travel,
and it is more disturbing to serenity of mind than
any other. Providence had so ordered it that
if we sat still in almost any region of the globe
except the tropics we would have, in course of the
year, almost all the kinds of climate that exist.
The ancient societies did not trouble themselves about
the matter; they froze or thawed, were hot or cold,
as it pleased the gods. They did not think of
fleeing from winter any more than from the summer
solstice, and consequently they enjoyed a certain
contentment of mind that is absent from modern life.
We are more intelligent, and therefore more discontented
and unhappy. We are always trying to escape winter
when we are not trying to escape summer. We are
half the time ‘in transitu’, flying hither
and thither, craving that exact adaptation of the
weather to our whimsical bodies promised only to the
saints who seek a “better country.”
There are places, to be sure, where nature is in a
sort of equilibrium, but usually those are places
where we can neither make money nor spend it to our
satisfaction. They lack either any stimulus to
ambition or a historic association, and we soon find
that the mind insists upon being cared for quite as
much as the body.
How many wanderers in the past winter
left comfortable homes in the United States to seek
a mild climate! Did they find it in the sleet
and bone-piercing cold of Paris, or anywhere in France,
where the wolves were forced to come into the villages
in the hope of picking up a tender child? If
they traveled farther, were the railway carriages anything
but refrigerators tempered by cans of cooling water?
Was there a place in Europe from Spain to Greece,
where the American could once be warm really
warm without effort in or out of doors?
Was it any better in divine Florence than on the chill
Riviera? Northern Italy was blanketed with snow,
the Apennines were white, and through the clean streets
of the beautiful town a raw wind searched every nook
and corner, penetrating through the thickest of English
wraps, and harder to endure than ingratitude, while
a frosty mist enveloped all. The traveler forgot
to bring with him the contented mind of the Italian.
Could he go about in a long cloak and a slouch hat,
curl up in doorways out of the blast, and be content
in a feeling of his own picturesqueness? Could
he sit all day on the stone pavement and hold out
his chilblained hand for soldi? Could he even
deceive himself, in a palatial apartment with a frescoed
ceiling, by an appearance of warmth in two sticks
ignited by a pine cone set in an aperture in one end
of the vast room, and giving out scarcely heat enough
to drive the swallows from the chimney? One must
be born to this sort of thing in order to enjoy it.
He needs the poetic temperament which can feel in
January the breath of June. The pampered American
is not adapted to this kind of pleasure. He is
very crude, not to say barbarous, yet in many of his
tastes, but he has reached one of the desirable things
in civilization, and that is a thorough appreciation
of physical comfort. He has had the ingenuity
to protect himself in his own climate, but when he
travels he is at the mercy of customs and traditions
in which the idea of physical comfort is still rudimentary.
He cannot warm himself before a group of statuary,
or extract heat from a canvas by Raphael, nor keep
his teeth from chattering by the exquisite view from
the Boboli Gardens. The cold American is insensible
to art, and shivers in the presence of the warmest
historical associations. It is doubtful if there
is a spot in Europe where he can be ordinarily warm
in winter. The world, indeed, does not care whether
he is warm or not, but it is a matter of great importance
to him. As he wanders from palace to palace and
he cannot escape the impression that nothing is good
enough for him except a palace he cannot
think of any cottage in any hamlet in America that
is not more comfortable in winter than any palace
he can find. And so he is driven on in cold and
weary stretches of travel to dwell among the French
in Algeria, or with the Jews in Tunis, or the Moslems
in Cairo. He longs for warmth as the Crusader
longed for Jerusalem, but not short of Africa shall
he find it. The glacial period is coming back
on Europe.
The citizens of the great republic
have a reputation for inordinate self-appreciation,
but we are thinking that they undervalue many of the
advantages their ingenuity has won. It is admitted
that they are restless, and must always be seeking
something that they have not at home. But aside
from their ability to be warm in any part of their
own country at any time of the year, where else can
they travel three thousand miles on a stretch in a
well-heated too much heated car,
without change of car, without revision of tickets,
without encountering a customhouse, without the necessity
of stepping outdoors either for food or drink, for
a library, for a bath for any item, in short,
that goes to the comfort of a civilized being?
And yet we are always prating of the superior civilization
of Europe. Nay, more, the traveler steps into
a car which is as comfortable as a house in
Boston, and alights from it only in the City of Mexico.
In what other part of the world can that achievement
in comfort and convenience be approached?
But this is not all as to climate
and comfort. We have climates of all sorts within
easy reach, and in quantity, both good and bad, enough
to export more in fact than we need of all sorts.
If heat is all we want, there are only three or four
days between the zero of Maine and the 80 deg.
of Florida. If New England is inhospitable and
New York freezing, it is only a matter of four days
to the sun and the exhilarating air of New Mexico
and Arizona, and only five to the oranges and roses
of that semi-tropical kingdom by the sea, Southern
California. And if this does not content us,
a day or two more lands us, without sea-sickness, in
the land of the Aztecs, where we can live in the temperate
or the tropic zone, eat strange fruits, and be reminded
of Egypt and Spain and Italy, and see all the colors
that the ingenuity of man has been able to give his
skin. Fruits and flowers and sun in the winter-time,
a climate to lounge and be happy in all
this is within easy reach, with the minimum of disturbance
to our daily habits. We started out, when we turned
our backs on the Old World, with the declaration that
all men are free, and entitled to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of an agreeable climate. We have
yet to learn, it seems, that we can indulge in that
pursuit best on our own continent. There is no
winter climate elsewhere to compare with that found
in our extreme Southwest or in Mexico, and the sooner
we put this fact into poetry and literature, and begin
to make a tradition of it, the better will it be for
our peace of mind and for our children. And if
the continent does not satisfy us, there lie the West
Indies within a few hours’ sail, with all the
luxuriance and geniality of the tropics. We are
only half emancipated yet. We are still apt to
see the world through the imagination of England,
whose literature we adopted, or of Germany. To
these bleak lands Italy was a paradise, and was so
sung by poets who had no conception of a winter without
frost. We have a winter climate of another sort
from any in Europe; we have easy and comfortable access
to it. The only thing we need to do now is to
correct our imagination, which has been led astray.
Our poets can at least do this for us by the help of
a quasi-international copyright.
THE NEW FEMININE RESERVE
In times past there have been expressed
desire and fear that there should be an American aristocracy,
and the materials for its formation have been a good
deal canvassed. In a political point of view it
is of course impossible, but it has been hoped by
many, and feared by more, that a social state might
be created conforming somewhat to the social order
in European countries. The problem has been exceedingly
difficult. An aristocracy of derived rank and
inherited privilege being out of the question, and
an aristocracy of talent never having succeeded anywhere,
because enlightenment of mind tends to liberalism and
democracy, there was only left the experiment of an
aristocracy of wealth. This does very well for
a time, but it tends always to disintegration, and
it is impossible to keep it exclusive. It was
found, to use the slang of the dry-goods shops, that
it would not wash, for there were liable to crowd
into it at any moment those who had in fact washed
for a living. An aristocracy has a slim tenure
that cannot protect itself from this sort of intrusion.
We have to contrive, therefore, another basis for a
class (to use an un-American expression), in a sort
of culture or training, which can be perpetual, and
which cannot be ordered for money, like a ball costume
or a livery.
Perhaps the “American Girl”
may be the agency to bring this about. This charming
product of the Western world has come into great prominence
of late years in literature and in foreign life, and
has attained a notoriety flattering or otherwise to
the national pride. No institution has been better
known or more marked on the Continent and in England,
not excepting the tramway and the Pullman cars.
Her enterprise, her daring, her freedom from conventionality,
have been the theme of the novelists and the horror
of the dowagers having marriageable daughters.
Considered as “stock,” the American Girl
has been quoted high, and the alliances that she has
formed with families impecunious but noble have given
her eclat as belonging to a new and conquering race
in the world. But the American Girl has not simply
a slender figure and a fine eye and a ready tongue,
she is not simply an engaging and companionable person,
she has excellent common-sense, tact, and adaptability.
She has at length seen in her varied European experience
that it is more profitable to have social good form
according to local standards than a reputation for
dash and brilliancy. Consequently the American
Girl of a decade ago has effaced herself. She
is no longer the dazzling courageous figure. In
England, in France, in Germany, in Italy, she takes,
as one may say, the color of the land. She has
retired behind her mother. She who formerly marched
in the van of the family procession, leading them including
the panting mother a whimsical dance, is
now the timid and retiring girl, needing the protection
of a chaperon on every occasion. The satirist
will find no more abroad the American Girl of the
old type whom he continues to describe. The knowing
and fascinating creature has changed her tactics altogether.
And the change has reacted on American society.
The mother has come once more to the front, and even
if she is obliged to own to forty-five years to the
census-taker, she has again the position and the privileges
of the blooming woman of thirty. Her daughters
walk meekly and with downcast (if still expectant)
eyes, and wait for a sign.
That this change is the deliberate
work of the American Girl, no one who knows her grace
and talent will deny. In foreign travel and residence
she has been quick to learn her lesson. Dazzled
at first by her own capacity and the opportunities
of the foreign field, she took the situation by storm.
But she found too often that she had a barren conquest,
and that the social traditions survived her success
and became a lifelong annoyance; that is to say, it
was possible to subdue foreign men, but the foreign
women were impregnable in their social order.
The American Girl abroad is now, therefore, with rare
exceptions, as carefully chaperoned and secluded as
her foreign sisters.
It is not necessary to lay too much
stress upon this phase of American life abroad, but
the careful observer must notice its reflex action
at home. The American freedom and unconventionality
in the intercourse of the young of both sexes, which
has been so much commented on as characteristic of
American life, may not disappear, but that small section
which calls itself “society” may attain
a sort of aristocratic distinction by the adoption
of this foreign conventionality. It is sufficient
now to note this tendency, and to claim the credit
of it for the wise and intelligent American Girl.
It would be a pity if it were to become nationally
universal, for then it would not be the aristocratic
distinction of a few, and the American woman who longs
for some sort of caste would be driven to some other
device.
It is impossible to tell yet what
form this feminine reserve and retirement will take.
It is not at all likely to go so far as the Oriental
seclusion of women. The American Girl would never
even seemingly give up her right of initiative.
If she is to stay in the background and pretend to
surrender her choice to her parents, and with it all
the delights of a matrimonial campaign, she will still
maintain a position of observation. If she seems
to be influenced at present by the French and Italian
examples, we may be sure that she is too intelligent
and too fond of freedom to long tolerate any system
of chaperonage that she cannot control. She will
find a way to modify the traditional conventionalities
so as not to fetter her own free spirit. It may
be her mission to show the world a social order free
from the forward independence and smartness of which
she has been accused, and yet relieved of the dull
stiffness of the older forms. It is enough now
to notice that a change is going on, due to the effect
of foreign society upon American women, and to express
the patriotic belief that whatever forms of etiquette
she may bow to, the American Girl will still be on
earth the last and best gift of God to man.
REPOSE IN ACTIVITY
What we want is repose. We take
infinite trouble and go to the ends of the world to
get it. That is what makes us all so restless.
If we could only find a spot where we could sit down,
content to let the world go by, away from the Sunday
newspapers and the chronicles of an uneasy society,
we think we should be happy. Perhaps such a place
is Coronado Beach that semi-tropical flower-garden
by the sea. Perhaps another is the Timeo
Terrace at Taormina. There, without moving, one
has the most exquisite sea and shore far below him,
so far that he has the feeling of domination without
effort; the most picturesque crags and castle peaks;
he has all classic legend under his eye without the
trouble of reading, and mediaeval romance as well;
ruins from the time of Theocritus to Freeman, with
no responsibility of describing them; and one of the
loveliest and most majestic of snow mountains, never
twice the same in light and shade, entirely revealed
and satisfactory from base to summit, with no self
or otherwise imposed duty of climbing it. Here
are most of the elements of peace and calm spirit.
And the town itself is quite dead, utterly exhausted
after a turbulent struggle of twenty-five hundred
years, its poor inhabitants living along only from
habit. The only new things in it the
two caravansaries of the traveler are a
hotel and a cemetery. One might end his days
here in serene retrospection, and more cheaply than
in other places of fewer attractions, for it is all
Past and no Future. Probably, therefore, it would
not suit the American, whose imagination does not
work so easily backward as forward, and who prefers
to build his own nest rather than settle in anybody
else’s rookery. Perhaps the American deceives
himself when he says he wants repose; what he wants
is perpetual activity and change; his peace of mind
is postponed until he can get it in his own way.
It is in feeling that he is a part of growth and not
of decay. Foreigners are fond of writing essays
upon American traits and characteristics. They
touch mostly on surface indications. What really
distinguishes the American from all others for
all peoples like more or less to roam, and the English
of all others are globe-trotters is not
so much his restlessness as his entire accord with
the spirit of “go-ahead,” the result of
his absolute breaking with the Past. He can repose
only in the midst of intense activity. He can
sit down quietly in a town that is growing rapidly;
but if it stands still, he is impelled to move his
rocking-chair to one more lively. He wants the
world to move, and to move unencumbered; and Europe
seems to him to carry too much baggage. The American
is simply the most modern of men, one who has thrown
away the impedimenta of tradition. The world never
saw such a spectacle before, so vast a territory informed
with one uniform spirit of energy and progress, and
people tumbling into it from all the world, eager
for the fair field and free opportunity. The American
delights in it; in Europe he misses the swing and
“go” of the new life.
This large explanation may not account
for the summer restlessness that overtakes nearly
everybody. We are the annual victims of the delusion
that there exists somewhere the ideal spot where manners
are simple, and milk is pure, and lodging is cheap,
where we shall fall at once into content. We
never do. For content consists not in having all
we want, nor, in not wanting everything, nor in being
unable to get what we want, but in not wanting that
we can get. In our summer flittings we carry our
wants with us to places where they cannot be gratified.
A few people have discovered that repose can be had
at home, but this discovery is too unfashionable to
find favor; we have no rest except in moving about.
Looked at superficially, it seems curious that the
American is, as a rule, the only person who does not
emigrate. The fact is that he can go nowhere
else where life is so uneasy, and where, consequently,
he would have so little of his sort of repose.
To put him in another country would be like putting
a nineteenth-century man back into the eighteenth
century. The American wants to be at the head
of the procession (as he fancies he is), where he
can hear the band play, and be the first to see the
fireworks of the new era. He thinks that he occupies
an advanced station of observation, from which his
telescope can sweep the horizon for anything new.
And with some reason he thinks so; for not seldom he
takes up a foreign idea and tires of it before it is
current elsewhere. More than one great writer
of England had his first popular recognition in America.
Even this season the Saturday Review is struggling
with Ibsen, while Boston, having had that disease,
has probably gone on to some other fad.
Far be it from us to praise the American
for his lack of repose; it is enough to attempt to
account for it. But from the social, or rather
society, point of view, the subject has a disquieting
aspect. If the American young man and young woman
get it into their heads that repose, especially of
manner, is the correct thing, they will go in for it
in a way to astonish the world. The late cultivation
of idiocy by the American dude was unique. He
carried it to an extreme impossible to the youth of
any nation less “gifted.” And if the
American girl goes in seriously for “repose,”
she will be able to give odds to any modern languidity
or to any ancient marble. If what is wanted in
society is cold hauteur and languid superciliousness
or lofty immobility, we are confident that with a
little practice she can sit stiller, and look more
impassive, and move with less motion, than any other
created woman. We have that confidence in her
ability and adaptability. It is a question whether
it is worth while to do this; to sacrifice the vivacity
and charm native to her, and the natural impulsiveness
and generous gift of herself which belong to a new
race in a new land, which is walking always towards
the sunrise.
In fine, although so much is said
of the American lack of repose, is it not best for
the American to be content to be himself, and let the
critics adapt themselves or not, as they choose, to
a new phenomenon?
Let us stick a philosophic name to
it, and call it repose in activity. The American
might take the candid advice given by one friend to
another, who complained that it was so difficult to
get into the right frame of mind. “The
best thing you can do,” he said, “is to
frame your mind and hang it up.”
WOMENIDEAL AND REAL
We have not by any means got to the
bottom of Realism. It matters very little what
the novelists and critics say about it what
it is and what it is not; the attitude of society
towards it is the important thing. Even if the
critic could prove that nature and art are the same
thing, and that the fiction which is Real is only
a copy of nature, or if another should prove that
Reality is only to be found in the Ideal, little would
be gained. Literature is well enough in its place,
art is an agreeable pastime, and it is right that
society should take up either in seasons when lawn-tennis
and polo are impracticable and afternoon teas become
flavorless; but the question that society is or should
be interested in is whether the young woman of the
future upon whose formation all our social
hopes depend is going to shape herself by
a Realistic or an Ideal standard. It should be
said in parenthesis that the young woman of the passing
period has inclined towards Realism in manner and
speech, if not in dress, affecting a sort of frank
return to the easy-going ways of nature itself, even
to the adoption of the language of the stock exchange,
the race-course, and the clubs an offering
of herself on the altar of good-fellowship, with the
view, no doubt, of making life more agreeable to the
opposite sex, forgetting the fact that men fall in
love always, or used to in the days when they could
afford that luxury, with an ideal woman, or if not
with an ideal woman, with one whom they idealize.
And at this same time the world is full of doubts and
questionings as to whether marriage is a failure.
Have these questionings anything to do with the increasing
Realism of women, and a consequent loss of ideals?
Of course the reader sees that the
difficulty in considering this subject is whether
woman is to be estimated as a work of nature or of
art. And here comes in the everlasting question
of what is the highest beauty, and what is most to
be desired. The Greek artists, it seems to be
well established, never used a model, as our artists
almost invariably do, in their plastic and pictorial
creations. The antique Greek statues, or their
copies, which give us the highest conceptions of feminine
charm and manly beauty, were made after no woman,
or man born of woman, but were creations of the ideal
raised to the highest conception by the passionate
love and long study of nature, but never by faithful
copying of it. The Romans copied the Greek art.
The Greek in his best days created the ideal figure,
which we love to accept as nature. Generation
after generation the Greek learned to draw and learned
to observe, until he was able to transmute his knowledge
into the forms of grace and beauty which satisfy us
as nature at her best; just as the novelist trains
all his powers by the observation of life until he
is able to transmute all the raw material into a creation
of fiction which satisfies us. We may be sure
that if the Greek artist had employed the service of
models in his studio, his art would have been merely
a passing phase in human history. But as it is,
the world has ever since been in love with his ideal
woman, and still believes in her possibility.
Now the young woman of today should
not be deceived into the notion of a preferable Realistic
development because the novelist of today gets her
to sit to him as his model. This may be no certain
indication that she is either good art or good nature.
Indeed she may be quite drifting away from the ideal
that a woman ought to aim at if we are to have a society
that is not always tending into a realistic vulgarity
and commonplace. It is perfectly true that a
woman is her own excuse for being, and in a way she
is doing enough for the world by simply being a woman.
It is difficult to rouse her to any sense of her duty
as a standard of aspiration. And it is difficult
to explain exactly what it is that she is to do.
If she asks if she is expected to be a model woman,
the reply must be that the world does not much hanker
after what is called the “model woman.”
It seems to be more a matter of tendency than anything
else. Is she sagging towards Realism or rising
towards Idealism? Is she content to be the woman
that some of the novelists, and some of the painters
also, say she is, or would she prefer to approach
that ideal which all the world loves? It is a
question of standards.
It is natural that in these days,
when the approved gospel is that it is better to be
dead than not to be Real, society should try to approach
nature by the way of the materialistically ignoble,
and even go such a pace of Realism as literature finds
it difficult to keep up with; but it is doubtful if
the young woman will get around to any desirable state
of nature by this route. We may not be able to
explain why servile imitation of nature degrades art
and degrades woman, but both deteriorate without an
ideal so high that there is no earthly model for it.
Would you like to marry, perhaps, a Greek statue?
says the justly contemptuous critic.
Not at all, at least not a Roman copy
of one. But it would be better to marry a woman
who would rather be like a Greek statue than like some
of these figures, without even an idea for clothing,
which are lying about on green banks in our spring
exhibitions.
THE ART OF IDLENESS
Idleness seems to be the last accomplishment
of civilization. To be idle gracefully and contentedly
and picturesquely is an art. It is one in which
the Americans, who do so many things well, do not excel.
They have made the excuse that they have not time,
or, if they have leisure, that their temperament and
nervous organization do not permit it. This excuse
will pass for a while, for we are a new people, and
probably we are more highly and sensitively organized
than any other nation at least the physiologists
say so; but the excuse seems more and more inadequate
as we accumulate wealth, and consequently have leisure.
We shall not criticise the American colonies in Paris
and Rome and Florence, and in other Continental places
where they congregate. They know whether they
are restless or contented, and what examples they
set to the peoples who get their ideas of republican
simplicity and virtue from the Americans who sojourn
among them. They know whether with all their leisure
they get placidity of mind and the real rest which
the older nations have learned to enjoy. It may
not be the most desirable thing for a human being to
be idle, but if he will be, he should be so in a creditable
manner, and with some enjoyment to himself. It
is no slander to say that we in America have not yet
found out the secret of this. Perhaps we shall
not until our energies are spent and we are in a state
of decay. At present we put as much energy into
our pleasure as into our work, for it is inbred in
us that laziness is a sin. This is the Puritan
idea, and it must be said for it that in our experience
virtue and idleness are not commonly companions.
But this does not go to the bottom of the matter.
The Italians are industrious; they
are compelled to be in order to pay their taxes for
the army and navy and get macaroni enough to live on.
But see what a long civilization has done for them.
They have the manner of laziness, they have the air
of leisure, they have worn off the angular corners
of existence, and unconsciously their life is picturesque
and enjoyable. Those among them who have money
take their pleasure simply and with the least expense
of physical energy. Those who have not money do
the same thing. This basis of existence is calm
and unexaggerated; life is reckoned by centimes,
not by dollars. What an ideal place is Venice!
It is not only the most picturesque city in the world,
rich in all that art can invent to please the eye,
but how calm it is! The vivacity which entertains
the traveler is all on the surface. The nobleman
in his palace if there be any palace that is not turned
into a hotel, or a magazine of curiosities, or a municipal
office can live on a diet that would make
an American workman strike, simply because he has
learned to float through life; and the laborer is
equally happy on little because he has learned to
wait without much labor. The gliding, easy motion
of the gondola expresses the whole situation; and
the gondolier who with consummate skill urges his
dreamy bark amid the throng and in the tortuous canals
for an hour or two, and then sleeps in the sun, is
a type of that rest in labor which we do not attain.
What happiness there is in a dish of polenta, or of
a few fried fish, in a cup of coffee, and in one of
those apologies for cigars which the government furnishes,
dear at a cent the cigar with a straw in
it, as if it were a julep, which it needs five minutes
to ignite, and then will furnish occupation for a whole
evening! Is it a hard lot, that of the fishermen
and the mariners of the Adriatic? The lights
are burning all night long in a cafe on the Riva
del Schiavoni, and the sailors and idlers of
the shore sit there jabbering and singing and trying
their voices in lusty hallooing till the morning light
begins to make the lagoon opalescent. The traveler
who lodges near cannot sleep, but no more can the
sailors, who steal away in the dawn, wafted by painted
sails. In the heat of the day, when the fish will
not bite, comes the siesta. Why should the royal
night be wasted in slumber? The shore of the
Riva, the Grand Canal, the islands, gleam with twinkling
lamps; the dark boats glide along with a star in the
prow, bearing youth and beauty and sin and ugliness,
all alike softened by the shadows; the electric lights
from the shores and the huge steamers shoot gleams
on towers and façades; the moon wades among the fleecy
clouds; here and there a barge with colored globes
of light carries a band of singing men and women and
players on the mandolin and the fiddle, and from every
side the songs of Italy, pathetic in their worn gayety,
float to the entranced ears of those who lean from
balconies, or lounge in gondolas and listen with hearts
made a little heavy and wistful with so much beauty.
Can any one float in such scenes and
be so contentedly idle anywhere in our happy land?
Have we learned yet the simple art of easy enjoyment?
Can we buy it with money quickly, or is it a grace
that comes only with long civilization? Italy,
for instance, is full of accumulated wealth, of art,
even of ostentation and display, and the new generation
probably have lost the power to conceive, if not the
skill to execute, the great works which excite our
admiration. Nothing can be much more meretricious
than its modern art, when anything is produced that
is not an exact copy of something created when there
was genius there. But in one respect the Italians
have entered into the fruits of the ages of trial and
of failure, and that, is the capacity of being idle
with much money or with none, and getting day by day
their pay for the bother of living in this world.
It seems a difficult lesson for us to learn in country
or city. Alas! when we have learned it shall
we not want to emigrate, as so many of the Italians
do? Some philosophers say that men were not created
to be happy. Perhaps they were not intended to
be idle.
IS THERE ANY CONVERSATION
Is there any such thing as conversation?
It is a delicate subject to touch, because many people
understand conversation to be talk; not the exchange
of ideas, but of words; and we would not like to say
anything to increase the flow of the latter.
We read of times and salons in which real conversation
existed, held by men and women. Are they altogether
in the past? We believe that men do sometimes
converse. Do women ever? Perhaps so.
In those hours sacred to the relaxation of undress
and the back hair, in the upper penetralia of the
household, where two or three or six are gathered
together on and about the cushioned frame intended
for repose, do they converse, or indulge in that sort
of chat from which not one idea is carried away?
No one reports, fortunately, and we do not know.
But do all the women like this method of spending hour
after hour, day after day-indeed, a lifetime?
Is it invigorating, even restful? Think of the
talk this past summer, the rivers and oceans of it,
on piazzas and galleries in the warm evenings or the
fresher mornings, in private houses, on hotel verandas,
in the shade of thousands of cottages by the sea and
in the hills! As you recall it, what was it all
about? Was the mind in a vapid condition after
an evening of it? And there is so much to read,
and so much to think about, and the world is so interesting,
if you do think about it, and nearly every person
has some peculiarity of mind that would be worth study
if you could only get at it! It is really, we
repeat, such an interesting world, and most people
get so little out of it. Now there is the conversation
of hens, when the hens are busy and not self-conscious;
there is something fascinating about it, because the
imagination may invest it with a recondite and spicy
meaning; but the common talk of people! We infer
sometimes that the hens are not saying anything, because
they do not read, and consequently their minds are
empty. And perhaps we are right. As to conversation,
there is no use in sending the bucket into the well
when the well is dry it only makes a rattling
of windlass and chain. We do not wish to be understood
to be an enemy of the light traffic of human speech.
Deliver us from the didactic and the everlastingly
improving style of thing! Conversation, in order
to be good, and intellectually inspiring, and spiritually
restful, need not always be serious. It must
be alert and intelligent, and mean more by its suggestions
and allusions than is said. There is the light
touch-and-go play about topics more or less profound
that is as agreeable as heat-lightning in a sultry
evening. Why may not a person express the whims
and vagaries of a lambent mind (if he can get a lambent
mind) without being hauled up short for it, and plunged
into a heated dispute? In the freedom of real
conversation the mind throws out half-thoughts, paradoxes,
for which a man is not to be held strictly responsible
to the very roots of his being, and which need to
be caught up and played with in the same tentative
spirit. The dispute and the hot argument are
usually the bane of conversation and the death of originality.
We like to express a notion, a fancy, without being
called upon to defend it, then and there, in all its
possible consequences, as if it were to be an article
in a creed or a plank in a platform. Must we be
always either vapid or serious?
We have been obliged to take notice
of the extraordinary tendency of American women to
cultivation, to the improvement of the mind, by means
of reading, clubs, and other intellectual exercises,
and to acknowledge that they are leaving the men behind;
that is, the men not in the so-called professions.
Is this intellectualization beginning to show in the
conversation of women when they are together, say in
the hours of relaxation in the penetralia spoken of,
or in general society? Is there less talk about
the fashion of dress, and the dearness or cheapness
of materials, and about servants, and the ways of
the inchoate citizen called the baby, and the infinitely
little details of the private life of other people?
Is it true that if a group of men are talking, say
about politics, or robust business, or literature,
and they are joined by women (whose company is always
welcome), the conversation is pretty sure to take
a lower mental plane, to become more personal, more
frivolous, accommodating itself to quite a different
range? Do the well-read, thoughtful women, however
beautiful and brilliant and capable of the gayest
persiflage, prefer to talk with men, to listen to the
conversation of men, rather than to converse with
or listen to their own sex? If this is true,
why is it? Women, as a rule, in “society”
at any rate, have more leisure than men. In the
facilities and felicities of speech they commonly
excel men, and usually they have more of that vivacious
dramatic power which is called “setting out
a thing to the life.” With all these advantages,
and all the world open to them in newspapers and in
books, they ought to be the leaders and stimulators
of the best conversation. With them it should
never drop down to the too-common flatness and banality.
Women have made this world one of the most beautiful
places of residence to be conceived. They might
make it one of the most interesting.
THE TALL GIRL
It is the fashion for girls to be
tall. This is much more than saying that tall
girls are the fashion. It means not only that
the tall girl has come in, but that girls are tall,
and are becoming tall, because it is the fashion,
and because there is a demand for that sort of girl.
There is no hint of stoutness, indeed the willowy
pattern is preferred, but neither is leanness suggested;
the women of the period have got hold of the poet’s
idea, “tall and most divinely fair,” and
are living up to it. Perhaps this change in fashion
is more noticeable in England and on the Continent
than in America, but that may be because there is less
room for change in America, our girls being always
of an aspiring turn. Very marked the phenomenon
is in England; on the street, at any concert or reception,
the number of tall girls is so large as to occasion
remark, especially among the young girls just coming
into the conspicuousness of womanhood. The tendency
of the new generation is towards unusual height and
gracious slimness. The situation would be embarrassing
to thousands of men who have been too busy to think
about growing upward, were it not for the fact that
the tall girl, who must be looked up to, is almost
invariably benignant, and bears her height with a sweet
timidity that disarms fear. Besides, the tall
girl has now come on in such force that confidence
is infused into the growing army, and there is a sense
of support in this survival of the tallest that is
very encouraging to the young.
Many theories have been put forward
to account for this phenomenon. It is known that
delicate plants in dark places struggle up towards
the light in a frail slenderness, and it is said that
in England, which seems to have increasing cloudiness,
and in the capital more and more months of deeper
darkness and blackness, it is natural that the British
girl should grow towards the light. But this
is a fanciful view of the case, for it cannot be proved
that English men have proportionally increased their
stature. The English man has always seemed big
to the Continental peoples, partly because objects
generally take on gigantic dimensions when seen through
a fog. Another theory, which has much more to
commend it, is that the increased height of women
is due to the aesthetic movement, which has now spent
its force, but has left certain results, especially
in the change of the taste in colors. The woman
of the aesthetic artist was nearly always tall, usually
willowy, not to say undulating and serpentine.
These forms of feminine loveliness and commanding
height have been for many years before the eyes of
the women of England in paintings and drawings, and
it is unavoidable that this pattern should not have
its effect upon the new and plastic generation.
Never has there been another generation so open to
new ideas; and if the ideal of womanhood held up was
that of length and gracious slenderness, it would
be very odd if women should not aspire to it.
We know very well the influence that the heroines
of the novelists have had from time to time upon the
women of a given period. The heroine of Scott
was, no doubt, once common in society the
delicate creature who promptly fainted on the reminiscence
of the scent of a rose, but could stand any amount
of dragging by the hair through underground passages,
and midnight rides on lonely moors behind mailed and
black-mantled knights, and a run or two of hair-removing
typhoid fever, and come out at the end of the story
as fresh as a daisy. She could not be found now,
so changed are the requirements of fiction. We
may assume, too, that the full-blown aesthetic girl
of that recent period the girl all soul
and faded harmonies would be hard to find,
but the fascination of the height and slenderness
of that girl remains something more than a tradition,
and is, no doubt, to some extent copied by the maiden
just coming into her kingdom.
Those who would belittle this matter
may say that the appearance of which we speak is due
largely to the fashion of dress the long
unbroken lines which add to the height and encourage
the appearance of slenderness. But this argument
gives away the case. Why do women wear the present
fascinating gowns, in which the lithe figure is suggested
in all its womanly dignity? In order that they
may appear to be tall. That is to say, because
it is the fashion to be tall; women born in the mode
are tall, and those caught in a hereditary shortness
endeavor to conform to the stature of the come and
coming woman.
There is another theory, that must
be put forward with some hesitation, for the so-called
emancipation of woman is a delicate subject to deal
with, for while all the sex doubtless feel the impulse
of the new time, there are still many who indignantly
reject the implication in the struggle for the rights
of women. To say, therefore, that women are becoming
tall as a part of their outfit for taking the place
of men in this world would be to many an affront,
so that this theory can only be suggested. Yet
probably physiology would bear us out in saying that
the truly emancipated woman, taking at last the place
in affairs which men have flown in the face of Providence
by denying her, would be likely to expand physically
as well as mentally, and that as she is beginning to
look down upon man intellectually, she is likely to
have a corresponding physical standard.
Seriously, however, none of these
theories are altogether satisfactory, and we are inclined
to seek, as is best in all cases, the simplest explanation.
Women are tall and becoming tall simply because it
is the fashion, and that statement never needs nor
is capable of any explanation. Awhile ago it
was the fashion to be petite and arch; it is now the
fashion to be tall and gracious, and nothing more can
be said about it. Of course the reader, who is
usually inclined to find the facetious side of any
grave topic, has already thought of the application
of the self-denying hymn, that man wants but little
here below, and wants that little long; but this may
be only a passing sigh of the period. We are
far from expressing any preference for tall women over
short women. There are creative moods of the
fancy when each seems the better. We can only
chronicle, but never create.
THE DEADLY DIARY
Many people regard the keeping of
a diary as a meritorious occupation. The young
are urged to take up this cross; it is supposed to
benefit girls especially. Whether women should
do it is to some minds not an open question, although
there is on record the case of the Frenchman who tried
to shoot himself when he heard that his wife was keeping
a diary. This intention of suicide may have arisen
from the fear that his wife was keeping a record of
his own peccadilloes rather than of her own thoughts
and emotions. Or it may have been from the fear
that she was putting down those little conjugal remarks
which the husband always dislikes to have thrown up
to him, and which a woman can usually quote accurately,
it may be for years, it may be forever, without the
help of a diary. So we can appreciate without
approving the terror of the Frenchman at living on
and on in the same house with a growing diary.
For it is not simply that this little book of judgment
is there in black and white, but that the maker of
it is increasing her power of minute observation and
analytic expression. In discussing the question
whether a woman should keep a diary it is understood
that it is not a mere memorandum of events and engagements,
such as both men and women of business and affairs
necessarily keep, but the daily record which sets down
feelings, emotions, and impressions, and criticises
people and records opinions. But this is a question
that applies to men as well as to women.
It has been assumed that the diary
serves two good purposes: it is a disciplinary
exercise for the keeper of it, and perhaps a moral
guide; and it has great historical value. As
to the first, it may be helpful to order, method,
discipline, and it may be an indulgence of spleen,
whims, and unwholesome criticism and conceit.
The habit of saying right out what you think of everybody
is not a good one, and the record of such opinions
and impressions, while it is not so mischievous to
the public as talking may be, is harmful to the recorder.
And when we come to the historical value of the diary,
we confess to a growing suspicion of it. It is
such a deadly weapon when it comes to light after
the passage of years. It has an authority which
the spoken words of its keeper never had. It is
’ex parte’, and it cannot be
cross-examined. The supposition is that being
contemporaneous with the events spoken of, it must
be true, and that it is an honest record. Now,
as a matter of fact, we doubt if people are any more
honest as to themselves or others in a diary than out
of it; and rumors, reported facts, and impressions
set down daily in the heat and haste of the prejudicial
hour are about as likely to be wrong as right.
Two diaries of the same events rarely agree. And
in turning over an old diary we never know what to
allow for the personal equation. The diary is
greatly relied on by the writers of history, but it
is doubtful if there is any such liar in the world,
even when the keeper of it is honest. It is certain
to be partisan, and more liable to be misinformed than
a newspaper, which exercises some care in view of
immediate publicity. The writer happens to know
of two diaries which record, on the testimony of eye-witnesses,
the circumstances of the last hours of Garfield, and
they differ utterly in essential particulars.
One of these may turn up fifty years from now, and
be accepted as true. An infinite amount of gossip
goes into diaries about men and women that would not
stand the test of a moment’s contemporary publication.
But by-and-by it may all be used to smirch or brighten
unjustly some one’s character. Suppose a
man in the Army of the Potomac had recorded daily
all his opinions of men and events. Reading it
over now, with more light and a juster knowledge of
character and of measures, is it not probable that
he would find it a tissue of misconceptions?
Few things are actually what they seem today; they
are colored both by misapprehensions and by moods.
If a man writes a letter or makes report of an occurrence
for immediate publication, subject to universal criticism,
there is some restraint on him. In his private
letter, or diary especially, he is apt to set down
what comes into his head at the moment, often without
much effort at verification.
We have been led to this disquisition
into the fundamental nature of this private record
by the question put to us, whether it is a good plan
for a woman to keep a diary. Speaking generally,
the diary has become a sort of fetich, the authority
of which ought to be overthrown. It is fearful
to think how our characters are probably being lied
away by innumerable pen scratches in secret repositories,
which may some day come to light as unimpeachable
witnesses. The reader knows that he is not the
sort of man which the diarist jotted him down to be
in a single interview. The diary may be a good
thing for self-education, if the keeper could insure
its destruction. The mental habit of diarizing
may have some value, even when it sets undue importance
upon trifles. We confess that, never having seen
a woman’s private diary (except those that have
been published), we do not share the popular impression
as to their tenuity implied in the question put to
us. Taking it for granted that they are full of
noble thoughts and beautiful imaginings, we doubt
whether the time spent on them could not be better
employed in acquiring knowledge or taking exercise.
For the diary forgotten and left to the next generation
may be as dangerous as dynamite.
THE WHISTLING GIRL
The wisdom of our ancestors packed
away in proverbial sayings may always be a little
suspected. We have a vague respect for a popular
proverb, as embodying folk-experience, and expressing
not the wit of one, but the common thought of a race.
We accept the saying unquestioning, as a sort of inspiration
out of the air, true because nobody has challenged
it for ages, and probably for the same reason that
we try to see the new moon over our left shoulder.
Very likely the musty saying was the product of the
average ignorance of an unenlightened time, and ought
not to have the respect of a scientific and traveled
people. In fact it will be found that a large
proportion of the proverbial sayings which we glibly
use are fallacies based on a very limited experience
of the world, and probably were set afloat by the
idiocy or prejudice of one person. To examine
one of them is enough for our present purpose.
“Whistling girls
and crowing hens
Always come to some
bad ends.”
It would be interesting to know the
origin of this proverb, because it is still much relied
on as evincing a deep knowledge of human nature, and
as an argument against change, that is to say, in
this case, against progress. It would seem to
have been made by a man, conservative, perhaps malevolent,
who had no appreciation of a hen, and a conservatively
poor opinion of woman. His idea was to keep woman
in her place a good idea when not carried
too far but he did not know what her place
is, and he wanted to put a sort of restraint upon
her emancipation by coupling her with an emancipated
hen. He therefore launched this shaft of ridicule,
and got it to pass as an arrow of wisdom shot out of
a popular experience in remote ages.
In the first place, it is not true,
and probably never was true even when hens were at
their lowest. We doubts its Sanscrit antiquity.
It is perhaps of Puritan origin, and rhymed in New
England. It is false as to the hen. A crowing
hen was always an object of interest and distinction;
she was pointed out to visitors; the owner was proud
of her accomplishment, he was naturally likely to
preserve her life, and especially if she could lay.
A hen that can lay and crow is a ’rara
avis’. And it should be parenthetically
said here that the hen who can crow and cannot lay
is not a good example for woman. The crowing hen
was of more value than the silent hen, provided she
crowed with discretion; and she was likely to be a
favorite, and not at all to come to some bad end.
Except, indeed, where the proverb tended to work its
own fulfillment. And this is the regrettable
side of most proverbs of an ill-nature, that they
do help to work the evil they predict. Some foolish
boy, who had heard this proverb, and was sent out to
the hen-coop in the evening to slay for the Thanksgiving
feast, thought he was a justifiable little providence
in wringing the neck of the crowing hen, because it
was proper (according to the saying) that she should
come to some bad end. And as years went on, and
that kind of boy increased and got to be a man, it
became a fixed idea to kill the amusing, interesting,
spirited, emancipated hen, and naturally the barn-yard
became tamer and tamer, the production of crowing
hens was discouraged (the wise old hens laid no eggs
with a crow in them, according to the well-known principle
of heredity), and the man who had in his youth exterminated
the hen of progress actually went about quoting that
false couplet as an argument against the higher education
of woman.
As a matter of fact, also, the couplet
is not true about woman; whether it ought to be true
is an ethical question that will not be considered
here. The whistling girl does not commonly come
to a bad end. Quite as often as any other girl
she learns to whistle a cradle song, low and sweet
and charming, to the young voter in the cradle.
She is a girl of spirit, of independence of character,
of dash and flavor; and as to lips, why, you must
have some sort of presentable lips to whistle; thin
ones will not. The whistling girl does not come
to a bad end at all (if marriage is still considered
a good occupation), except a cloud may be thrown upon
her exuberant young life by this rascally proverb.
Even if she walks the lonely road of life, she has
this advantage, that she can whistle to keep her courage
up. But in a larger sense, one that this practical
age can understand, it is not true that the whistling
girl comes to a bad end. Whistling pays.
It has brought her money; it has blown her name about
the listening world. Scarcely has a non-whistling
woman been more famous. She has set aside the
adage. She has done so much towards the emancipation
of her sex from the prejudice created by an ill-natured
proverb which never had root in fact.
But has the whistling woman come to
stay? Is it well for woman to whistle? Are
the majority of women likely to be whistlers?
These are serious questions, not to be taken up in
a light manner at the end of a grave paper. Will
woman ever learn to throw a stone? There it is.
The future is inscrutable. We only know that
whereas they did not whistle with approval, now they
do; the prejudice of generations gradually melts away.
And woman’s destiny is not linked with that of
the hen, nor to be controlled by a proverb perhaps
not by anything.
BORN OLD AND RICH
We have been remiss in not proposing
a remedy for our present social and economic condition.
Looking backward, we see this. The scheme may
not be practical, any more than the Utopian plans
that have been put forward, but it is radical and
interesting, and requires, as the other schemes do,
a total change in human nature (which may be a good
thing to bring about), and a general recasting of
the conditions of life. This is and should be
no objection to a socialistic scheme. Surface
measures will not avail. The suggestion for a
minor alleviation of inequality, which seems to have
been acted on, namely, that women should propose, has
not had the desired effect if it is true, as reported,
that the eligible young men are taking to the woods.
The workings of such a measure are as impossible to
predict in advance as the operation of the McKinley
tariff. It might be well to legislate that people
should be born equal (including equal privileges of
the sexes), but the practical difficulty is to keep
them equal. Life is wrong somehow. Some
are born rich and some are born poor, and this inequality
makes misery, and then some lose their possessions,
which others get hold of, and that makes more misery.
We can put our fingers on the two great evils of life
as it now is: the first is poverty; and the second
is infirmity, which is the accompaniment of increasing
years. Poverty, which is only the unequal distribution
of things desired, makes strife, and is the opportunity
of lawyers; and infirmity is the excuse for doctors.
Think what the world would be without lawyers and
doctors!
We are all born young, and most of
us are born poor. Youth is delightful, but we
are always getting away from it. How different
it would be if we were always going towards it!
Poverty is unpleasant, and the great struggle of life
is to get rid of it; but it is the common fortune that
in proportion as wealth is attained the capacity of
enjoying it departs. It seems, therefore, that
our life is wrong end first. The remedy suggested
is that men should be born rich and old. Instead
of the necessity of making a fortune, which is of
less and less value as death approaches, we should
have only the privilege of spending it, and it would
have its natural end in the cradle, in which we should
be rocked into eternal sleep. Born old, one would,
of course, inherit experience, so that wealth could
be made to contribute to happiness, and each day,
instead of lessening the natural powers and increasing
infirmities, would bring new vigor and capacity of
enjoyment. It would be going from winter to autumn,
from autumn to summer, from summer to spring.
The joy of a life without care as to ways and means,
and every morning refitted with the pulsations of
increasing youth, it is almost impossible to imagine.
Of course this scheme has difficulties on the face
of it. The allotting of the measure of wealth
would not be difficult to the socialists, because
they would insist that every person should be born
with an equal amount of property. What this should
be would depend upon the length of life; and how should
this be arrived at? The insurance companies might
agree, but no one else would admit that he belongs
in the average. Naturally the Biblical limit
of threescore and ten suggests itself; but human nature
is very queer. With the plain fact before them
that the average life of man is less than thirty-four
years, few would be willing, if the choice were offered,
to compromise on seventy. Everybody has a hope
of going beyond that, so that if seventy were proposed
as the year at birth, there would no doubt be as much
dissatisfaction as there is at the present loose arrangement.
Science would step in, and demonstrate that there
is no reason why, with proper care of the system, it
should not run a hundred years. It is improbable,
then, that the majority could be induced to vote for
the limit of seventy years, or to exchange the exciting
uncertainty of adding a little to the period which
must be accompanied by the weight of the grasshopper,
for the certainty of only seventy years in this much-abused
world.
But suppose a limit to be agreed on,
and the rich old man and the rich old woman (never
now too old to marry) to start on their career towards
youth and poverty. The imagination kindles at
the idea. The money would hold out just as long
as life lasted, and though it would all be going downhill,
as it were, what a charming descent, without struggle,
and with only the lessening infirmities that belong
to decreasing age! There would be no second childhood,
only the innocence and elasticity of the first.
It all seems very fair, but we must not forget that
this is a mortal world, and that it is liable to various
accidents. Who, for instance, could be sure that
he would grow young gracefully? There would be
the constant need of fighting the hot tempers and
impulses of youth, growing more and more instead of
less and less unreasonable. And then, how many
would reach youth? More than half, of course,
would be cut off in their prime, and be more and more
liable to go as they fell back into the pitfalls and
errors of childhood. Would people grow young together
even as harmoniously as they grow old together?
It would be a pretty sight, that of the few who descended
into the cradle together, but this inversion of life
would not escape the woes of mortality. And there
are other considerations, unless it should turn out
that a universal tax on land should absolutely change
human nature. There are some who would be as
idle and spendthrift going towards youth as they now
are going away from it, and perhaps more, so that
half the race on coming to immaturity would be in
child asylums. And then others who would be stingy
and greedy and avaricious, and not properly spend
their allotted fortune. And we should have the
anomaly, which is so distasteful to the reformer now,
of rich babies. A few babies inordinately rich,
and the rest in asylums.
Still, the plan has more to recommend
it than most others for removing poverty and equalizing
conditions. We should all start rich, and the
dying off of those who would never attain youth would
amply provide fortunes for those born old. Crime
would be less also; for while there would, doubtless,
be some old sinners, the criminal class, which is very
largely under thirty, would be much smaller than it
is now. Juvenile depravity would proportionally
disappear, as not more people would reach non-age
than now reach over-age. And the great advantage
of the scheme, one that would indeed transform the
world, is that women would always be growing younger.
THE “OLD SOLDIER”
The “old soldier” is beginning
to outline himself upon the public mind as a distant
character in American life. Literature has not
yet got hold of him, and perhaps his evolution is
not far enough advanced to make him as serviceable
as the soldier of the Republic and the Empire, the
relic of the Old Guard, was to Hugo and Balzac, the
trooper of Italy and Egypt, the maimed hero of Borodino
and Waterloo, who expected again the coming of the
Little Corporal. It takes time to develop a character,
and to throw the glamour of romance over what may
be essentially commonplace. A quarter of a century
has not sufficed to separate the great body of the
surviving volunteers in the war for the Union from
the body of American citizens, notwithstanding the
organization of the Grand Army of the Republic, the
encampments, the annual reunions, and the distinction
of pensions, and the segregation in Soldiers’
Homes. The “old soldier” slowly eliminates
himself from the mass, and begins to take, and to make
us take, a romantic view of his career. There
was one event in his life, and his personality in
it looms larger and larger as he recedes from it.
The heroic sacrifice of it does not diminish, as it
should not, in our estimation, and he helps us to
keep glowing a lively sense of it. The past centres
about him and his great achievement, and the whole
of life is seen in the light of it. In his retreat
in the Home, and in his wandering from one Home to
another, he ruminates on it, he talks of it; he separates
himself from the rest of mankind by a broad distinction,
and his point of view of life becomes as original
as it is interesting. In the Homes the battered
veterans speak mainly of one thing; and in the monotony
of their spent lives develop whimseys and rights and
wrongs, patriotic ardors and criticisms on their singular
fate, which are original in their character in our
society. It is in human nature to like rest but
not restriction, bounty but not charity, and the tired
heroes of the war grow restless, though every physical
want is supplied. They have a fancy that they
would like to see again the homes of their youth, the
farmhouse in the hills, the cottage in the river valley,
the lonesome house on the wide prairie, the street
that ran down to the wharf where the fishing-smacks
lay, to see again the friends whom they left there,
and perhaps to take up the occupations that were laid
down when they seized the musket in 1861. Alas!
it is not their home anymore; the friends are no longer
there; and what chance is there of occupation for a
man who is now feeble in body and who has the habit
of campaigning? This generation has passed on
to other things. It looks upon the hero as an
illustration in the story of the war, which it reads
like history. The veteran starts out from the
shelter of the Home. One evening, towards sunset,
the comfortable citizen, taking the mild air on his
piazza, sees an interesting figure approach.
Its dress is half military, half that of the wanderer
whose attention to his personal appearance is only
spasmodic.
The veteran gives the military salute,
he holds himself erect, almost too erect, and his
speech is voluble and florid. It is a delightful
evening; it seems to be a good growing-time; the country
looks prosperous. He is sorry to be any trouble
or interruption, but the fact is yes, he
is on his way to his old home in Vermont; it seems
like he would like to taste some home cooking again,
and sit in the old orchard, and perhaps lay his bones,
what is left of them, in the burying-ground on the
hill. He pulls out his well-worn papers as he
talks; there is the honorable discharge, the permit
of the Home, and the pension. Yes, Uncle Sam is
generous; it is the most generous government God ever
made, and he would willingly fight for it again.
Thirty dollars a month, that is what he has; he is
not a beggar; he wants for nothing. But the pension
is not payable till the end of the month. It
is entirely his own obligation, his own fault; he
can fight, but he cannot lie, and nobody is to blame
but himself; but last night he fell in with some old
comrades at Southdown, and, well, you know how it
is. He had plenty of money when he left the Home,
and he is not asking for anything now, but if he had
a few dollars for his railroad fare to the next city,
he could walk the rest of the way. Wounded?
Well, if I stood out here against the light you could
just see through me, that’s all. Bullets?
It’s no use to try to get ’em out.
But, sir, I’m not complaining. It had to
be done; the country had to be saved; and I’d
do it again if it were necessary. Had any hot
fights? Sir, I was at Gettysburg! The veteran
straightens up, and his eyes flash as if he saw again
that sanguinary field. Off goes the citizen’s
hat. Children, come out here; here is one of
the soldiers of Gettysburg! Yes, sir; and this
knee you see I can’t bend it much got
stiffened at Chickamauga; and this scratch here in
the neck was from a bullet at Gaines Mill; and this
here, sir thumping his chest you
notice I don’t dare to cough much after
the explosion of a shell at Petersburg I found myself
lying on my-back, and the only one of my squad who
was not killed outright. Was it the imagination
of the citizen or of the soldier that gave the impression
that the hero had been in the forefront of every important
action of the war? Well, it doesn’t matter
much. The citizen was sitting there under his
own vine, the comfortable citizen of a free republic,
because of the wounds in this cheerful and imaginative
old wanderer. There, that is enough, sir, quite
enough. I am no beggar. I thought perhaps
you had heard of the Ninth Vermont. Woods is
my name Sergeant Woods. I trust some
time, sir, I shall be in a position to return the compliment.
Good-evening, sir; God bless your honor! and accept
the blessing of an old soldier. And the dear
old hero goes down the darkening avenue, not so steady
of bearing as when he withstood the charge of Pickett
on Cemetery Hill, and with the independence of the
American citizen who deserves well of his country,
makes his way to the nearest hospitable tavern.
THE ISLAND OF BIMINI
To the northward of Hispaniola lies
the island of Bimini. It may not be one of the
spice islands, but it grows the best ginger to be found
in the world. In it is a fair city, and beside
the city a lofty mountain, at the foot of which is
a noble spring called the ‘Fons Juventutis’.
This fountain has a sweet savor, as of all manner
of spicery, and every hour of the day the water changes
its savor and its smell. Whoever drinks of this
well will be healed of whatever malady he has, and
will seem always young. It is not reported that
women and men who drink of this fountain will be always
young, but that they will seem so, and probably to
themselves, which simply means, in our modern accuracy
of language, that they will feel young. This
island has never been found. Many voyages have
been made in search of it in ships and in the imagination,
and Liars have said they have landed on it and drunk
of the water, but they never could guide any one else
thither. In the credulous centuries when these
voyages were made, other islands were discovered,
and a continent much more important than Bimini; but
these discoveries were a disappointment, because they
were not what the adventurers wanted. They did
not understand that they had found a new land in which
the world should renew its youth and begin a new career.
In time the quest was given up, and men regarded it
as one of the delusions which came to an end in the
sixteenth century. In our day no one has tried
to reach Bimini except Heine. Our scientific
period has a proper contempt for all such superstitions.
We now know that the ‘Fons Juventutis’
is in every man, and that if actually juvenility cannot
be renewed, the advance of age can be arrested and
the waste of tissues be prevented, and an uncalculated
length of earthly existence be secured, by the injection
of some sort of fluid into the system. The right
fluid has not yet been discovered by science, but
millions of people thought that it had the other day,
and now confidently expect it. This credulity
has a scientific basis, and has no relation to the
old absurd belief in Bimini. We thank goodness
that we do not live in a credulous age.
The world would be in a poor case
indeed if it had not always before it some ideal or
millennial condition, some panacea, some transmutation
of base metals into gold, some philosopher’s
stone, some fountain of youth, some process of turning
charcoal into diamonds, some scheme for eliminating
evil. But it is worth mentioning that in the historical
evolution we have always got better things than we
sought or imagined, developments on a much grander
scale. History is strewn with the wreck of popular
delusions, but always in place of them have come realizations
more astonishing than the wildest fancies of the dreamers.
Florida was a disappointment as a Bimini, so were
the land of the Ohio, the land of the Mississippi,
the Dorado of the Pacific coast. But as the illusions,
pushed always westward, vanished in the light of common
day, lo! a continent gradually emerged, with millions
of people animated by conquering ambition of progress
in freedom; an industrial continent, covered with
a network of steel, heated by steam, and lighted by
electricity. What a spectacle of youth on a grand
scale is this! Christopher Columbus had not the
slightest conception of what he was doing when he
touched the button. But we are not satisfied.
Quite as far from being so as ever. The popular
imagination runs a hard race with any possible natural
development. Being in possession of so much, we
now expect to travel in the air, to read news in the
sending mind before it is sent, to create force without
cost, to be transported without time, and to make
everybody equal in fortune and happiness to everybody
else by act of Congress. Such confidence have
we in the power of a “resolution” of the
people and by the people that it seems feasible to
make women into men, oblivious of the more important
and imperative task that will then arise of making
men into women. Some of these expectations are
only Biminis of the present, but when they have vanished
there will be a social and industrial world quite
beyond our present conceptions, no doubt. In
the article of woman, for instance, she may not become
the being that the convention expects, but there may
appear a Woman of whom all the Aspasias and Helens
were only the faintest types. And although no
progress will take the conceit out of men, there may
appear a Man so amenable to ordinary reason that he
will give up the notion that he can lift himself up
by his bootstraps, or make one grain of wheat two by
calling it two.
One of the Biminis that have always
been looked for is an American Literature. There
was an impression that there must be such a thing
somewhere on a continent that has everything else.
We gave the world tobacco and the potato, perhaps
the most important contributions to the content and
the fatness of the world made by any new country, and
it was a noble ambition to give it new styles of art
and literature also. There seems to have been
an impression that a literature was something indigenous
or ready-made, like any other purely native product,
not needing any special period of cultivation or development,
and that a nation would be in a mortifying position
without one, even before it staked out its cities
or built any roads. Captain John Smith, if he
had ever settled here and spread himself over the
continent, as he was capable of doing, might have
taken the contract to furnish one, and we may be sure
that he would have left us nothing to desire in that
direction. But the vein of romance he opened was
not followed up. Other prospectings were made.
Holes, so to speak, were dug in New England, and in
the middle South, and along the frontier, and such
leads were found that again and again the certainty
arose that at last the real American ore had been
discovered. Meantime a certain process called
civilization went on, and certain ideas of breadth
entered into our conceptions, and ideas also of the
historical development of the expression of thought
in the world, and with these a comprehension of what
American really is, and the difficulty of putting
the contents of a bushel measure into a pint cup.
So, while we have been expecting the American Literature
to come out from some locality, neat and clean, like
a nugget, or, to change the figure, to bloom any day
like a century-plant, in one striking, fragrant expression
of American life, behold something else has been preparing
and maturing, larger and more promising than our early
anticipations. In history, in biography, in science,
in the essay, in the novel and story, there are coming
forth a hundred expressions of the hundred aspects
of American life; and they are also sung by the poets
in notes as varied as the migrating birds. The
birds perhaps have the best of it thus far, but the
bird is limited to a small range of performances while
he shifts his singing-boughs through the climates
of the continent, whereas the poet, though a little
inclined to mistake aspiration for inspiration, and
vagueness of longing for subtlety, is experimenting
in a most hopeful manner. And all these writers,
while perhaps not consciously American or consciously
seeking to do more than their best in their several
ways, are animated by the free spirit of inquiry and
expression that belongs to an independent nation,
and so our literature is coming to have a stamp of
its own that is unlike any other national stamp.
And it will have this stamp more authentically and
be clearer and stronger as we drop the self-consciousness
of the necessity of being American.
JUNE
Here is June again! It never
was more welcome in these Northern latitudes.
It seems a pity that such a month cannot be twice as
long. It has been the pet of the poets, but it
is not spoiled, and is just as full of enchantment
as ever. The secret of this is that it is the
month of both hope and fruition. It is the girl
of eighteen, standing with all her charms on the eve
of womanhood, in the dress and temperament of spring.
And the beauty of it is that almost every woman is
young, if ever she were young, in June. For her
the roses bloom, and the red clover. It is a
pity the month is so short. It is as full of vigor
as of beauty. The energy of the year is not yet
spent; indeed, the world is opening on all sides;
the school-girl is about to graduate into liberty;
and the young man is panting to kick or row his way
into female adoration and general notoriety.
The young men have made no mistake about the kind of
education that is popular with women. The women
like prowess and the manly virtues of pluck and endurance.
The world has not changed in this respect. It
was so with the Greeks; it was so when youth rode
in tournaments and unhorsed each other for the love
of a lady. June is the knightly month. On
many a field of gold and green the heroes will kick
their way into fame; and bands of young women, in
white, with their diplomas in their hands, star-eyed
mathematicians and linguists, will come out to smile
upon the victors in that exhibition of strength that
women most admire. No, the world is not decaying
or losing its juvenility. The motto still is,
“Love, and may the best man win!” How jocund
and immortal is woman! Now, in a hundred schools
and colleges, will stand up the solemn, well-intentioned
man before a row of pretty girls, and tell them about
Womanhood and its Duties, and they will listen just
as shyly as if they were getting news, and needed
to be instructed by a man on a subject which has engaged
their entire attention since they were five years old.
In the light of science and experience the conceit
of men is something curious. And in June! the
most blossoming, riant, feminine time of the year.
The month itself is a liberal education to him who
is not insensible to beauty and the strong sweet promise
of life. The streams run clear then, as they
do not in April; the sky is high and transparent;
the world seems so large and fresh and inviting.
Our houses, which six months in the year in these
latitudes are fortifications of defense, are open
now, and the breath of life flows through them.
Even over the city the sky is benign, and all the
country is a heavenly exhibition. May was sweet
and capricious. This is the maidenhood deliciousness
of the year. If you were to bisect the heart
of a true poet, you would find written therein June.