A NIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF THE TUILERIES
It was in the time of the Second Empire.
To be exact, it was the night of the 18th of June,
1868; I remember the date, because, contrary to the
astronomical theory of short nights at this season,
this was the longest night I ever saw. It was
the loveliest time of the year in Paris, when one
was tempted to lounge all day in the gardens and to
give to sleep none of the balmy nights in this gay
capital, where the night was illuminated like the
day, and some new pleasure or delight always led along
the sparkling hours. Any day the Garden of the
Tuileries was a microcosm repaying study. There
idle Paris sunned itself; through it the promenaders
flowed from the Rue de Rivoli gate by the palace to
the entrance on the Place de la Concorde, out to the
Champs-Elysees and back again; here in the north grove
gathered thousands to hear the regimental band in
the afternoon; children chased butterflies about the
flower-beds and amid the tubs of orange-trees; travelers,
guide-book in hand, stood resolutely and incredulously
before the groups of statuary, wondering what that
Infant was doing with, the snakes and why the recumbent
figure of the Nile should have so many children climbing
over him; or watched the long façade of the palace
hour after hour, in the hope of catching at some window
the flutter of a royal robe; and swarthy, turbaned
Zouaves, erect, lithe, insouciant, with the firm,
springy step of the tiger, lounged along the allees.
Napoleon was at home a
fact attested by a reversal of the hospitable rule
of democracy, no visitors being admitted to the palace
when he was at home. The private garden, close
to the imperial residence, was also closed to the
public, who in vain looked across the sunken fence
to the parterres, fountains, and statues, in
the hope that the mysterious man would come out there
and publicly enjoy himself. But he never came,
though I have no doubt that he looked out of the windows
upon the beautiful garden and his happy Parisians,
upon the groves of horse-chestnuts, the needle-like
fountain beyond, the Column of Luxor, up the famous
and shining vista terminated by the Arch of the Star,
and reflected with Christian complacency upon the
greatness of a monarch who was the lord of such splendors
and the goodness of a ruler who opened them all to
his children. Especially when the western sunshine
streamed down over it all, turning even the dust of
the atmosphere into gold and emblazoning the windows
of the Tuileries with a sort of historic glory, his
heart must have swelled within him in throbs of imperial
exaltation. It is the fashion nowadays not to
consider him a great man, but no one pretends to measure
his goodness.
The public garden of the Tuileries
was closed at dusk, no one being permitted to remain
in it after dark. I suppose it was not safe to
trust the Parisians in the covert of its shades after
nightfall, and no one could tell what foreign fanatics
and assassins might do if they were permitted to pass
the night so near the imperial residence. At any
rate, everybody was drummed out before the twilight
fairly began, and at the most fascinating hour for
dreaming in the ancient garden. After sundown
the great door of the Pavilion de l’Horloge swung
open and there issued from it a drum-corps, which
marched across the private garden and down the broad
allée of the public garden, drumming as if the
judgment-day were at hand, straight to the great gate
of the Place de la Concorde, and returning by a side
allée, beating up every covert and filling all
the air with clamor until it disappeared, still thumping,
into the court of the palace; and all the square seemed
to ache with the sound. Never was there such
pounding since Thackeray’s old Pierre, who, “just
to keep up his drumming, one day drummed down the
Bastile”:
At midnight I beat the
tattoo,
And woke up the Pikemen
of Paris
To follow the bold Barbaroux.
On the waves of this drumming the
people poured out from every gate of the garden, until
the last loiterer passed and the gendarmes closed
the portals for the night. Before the lamps were
lighted along the Rue de Rivoli and in the great square
of the Revolution, the garden was left to the silence
of its statues and its thousand memories. I often
used to wonder, as I looked through the iron railing
at nightfall, what might go on there and whether historic
shades might not flit about in the ghostly walks.
Late in the afternoon of the 18th
of June, after a long walk through the galleries of
the Louvre, and excessively weary, I sat down to rest
on a secluded bench in the southern grove of the garden;
hidden from view by the tree-trunks. Where I
sat I could see the old men and children in that sunny
flower-garden, La Petite Provence, and I could see
the great fountain-basin facing the Porte du Pont-Tournant.
I must have heard the evening drumming, which was
the signal for me to quit the garden; for I suppose
even the dead in Paris hear that and are sensitive
to the throb of the glory-calling drum. But if
I did hear it, it was only like an echo
of the past, and I did not heed it any more than Napoleon
in his tomb at the Invalides heeds, through the
drawn curtain, the chanting of the daily mass.
Overcome with fatigue, I must have slept soundly.
When I awoke it was dark under the
trees. I started up and went into the broad promenade.
The garden was deserted; I could hear the plash of
the fountains, but no other sound therein. Lights
were gleaming from the windows of the Tuileries, lights
blazed along the Rue de Rivoli, dotted the great Square,
and glowed for miles up the Champs Elysees. There
were the steady roar of wheels and the tramping of
feet without, but within was the stillness of death.
What should I do? I am not naturally
nervous, but to be caught lurking in the Tuileries
Garden in the night would involve me in the gravest
peril. The simple way would have been to have
gone to the gate nearest the Pavillon de
Marsan, and said to the policeman on duty there that
I had inadvertently fallen asleep, that I was usually
a wide-awake citizen of the land that Lafayette went
to save, that I wanted my dinner, and would like to
get out. I walked down near enough to the gate
to see the policeman, but my courage failed.
Before I could stammer out half that explanation to
him in his trifling language (which foreigners are
mockingly told is the best in the world for conversation),
he would either have slipped his hateful rapier through
my body, or have raised an alarm and called out the
guards of the palace to hunt me down like a rabbit.
A man in the Tuileries Garden at night!
an assassin! a conspirator! one of the Carbonari,
perhaps a dozen of them who knows? Orsini
bombs, gunpowder, Greek-fire, Polish refugees, murder,
émeutes, revolution!
No, I’m not going to speak to
that person in the cocked hat and dress-coat under
these circumstances. Conversation with him out
of the best phrase-books would be uninteresting.
Diplomatic row between the two countries would be
the least dreaded result of it. A suspected conspirator
against the life of Napoleon, without a chance for
explanation, I saw myself clubbed, gagged, bound, searched
(my minute notes of the Tuileries confiscated), and
trundled off to the Conciergerie, and hung up
to the ceiling in an iron cage there, like Ravaillac.
I drew back into the shade and rapidly
walked to the western gate. It was closed, of
course. On the gate-piers stand the winged steeds
of Marly, never less admired than by me at that moment.
They interested me less than a group of the Corps
d’Afrique, who lounged outside, guarding the
entrance from the square, and unsuspicious that any
assassin was trying to get out. I could see the
gleam of the lamps on their bayonets and hear their
soft tread. Ask them to let me out? How nimbly
they would have scaled the fence and transfixed me!
They like to do such things. No, no whatever
I do, I must keep away from the clutches of these cats
of Africa.
And enough there was to do, if I had
been in a mind to do it. All the seats to sit
in, all the statuary to inspect, all the flowers to
smell. The southern terrace overlooking the Seine
was closed, or I might have amused myself with the
toy railway of the Prince Imperial that ran nearly
the whole length of it, with its switches and turnouts
and houses; or I might have passed delightful hours
there watching the lights along the river and the
blazing illumination on the amusement halls. But
I ascended the familiar northern terrace and wandered
amid its bowers, in company with Hercules, Meleager,
and other worthies I knew only by sight, smelling
the orange-blossoms, and trying to fix the site of
the old riding-school where the National Assembly
sat in 1789.
It must have been eleven o’clock
when I found myself down by the private garden next
the palace. Many of the lights in the offices
of the household had been extinguished, but the private
apartments of the Emperor in the wing south of the
central pavilion were still illuminated. The
Emperor evidently had not so much desire to go to bed
as I had. I knew the windows of his petits appartements as
what good American did not? and I wondered
if he was just then taking a little supper, if he
had bidden good-night to Eugenie, if he was alone in
his room, reflecting upon his grandeur and thinking
what suit he should wear on the morrow in his ride
to the Bois. Perhaps he was dictating an editorial
for the official journal; perhaps he was according
an interview to the correspondent of the London Glorifier;
perhaps one of the Abbotts was with him. Or was
he composing one of those important love-letters of
state to Madame Blank which have since delighted the
lovers of literature? I am not a spy, and I scorn
to look into people’s windows late at night,
but I was lonesome and hungry, and all that square
round about swarmed with imperial guards, policemen,
keen-scented Zouaves, and nobody knows what other
suspicious folk. If Napoleon had known that there
was a
Manin the garden!
I suppose he would have called up
his family, waked the drum-corps, sent for the Prefect
of Police, put on the alert the ‘sergents
de ville,’ ordered under arms a regiment
of the Imperial Guards, and made it unpleasant for
the Man.
All these thoughts passed through
my mind, not with the rapidity of lightning, as is
usual in such cases, but with the slowness of conviction.
If I should be discovered, death would only stare me
in the face about a minute. If he waited five
minutes, who would believe my story of going to sleep
and not hearing the drums? And if it were true,
why didn’t I go at once to the gate, and not
lurk round there all night like another Clement?
And then I wondered if it was not the disagreeable
habit of some night-patrol or other to beat round the
garden before the Sire went to bed for good, to find
just such characters as I was gradually getting to
feel myself to be.
But nobody came. Twelve o’clock,
one o’clock sounded from the tower of the church
of St. Germain l’Auxerrois, from whose belfry
the signal was given for the beginning of the Massacre
of St. Bartholomew the same bells that
tolled all that dreadful night while the slaughter
went on, while the effeminate Charles IX fired from
the windows of the Louvre upon stray fugitives on
the quay bells the reminiscent sound of
which, a legend (which I fear is not true) says, at
length drove Catharine de Medici from the Tuileries.
One o’clock! The lights
were going out in the Tuileries, had nearly all gone
out. I wondered if the suspicious and timid and
wasteful Emperor would keep the gas burning all night
in his room. The night-roar of Paris still went
on, sounding always to foreign ears like the beginning
of a revolution. As I stood there, looking at
the window that interested me most, the curtains were
drawn, the window was opened, and a form appeared
in a white robe. I had never seen the Emperor
before in a night-gown, but I should have known him
among a thousand. The Man of Destiny had on a
white cotton night-cap, with a peaked top and no tassel.
It was the most natural thing in the land; he was
taking a last look over his restless Paris before
he turned in. What if he should see me! I
respected that last look and withdrew into the shadow.
Tired and hungry, I sat down to reflect upon the pleasures
of the gay capital.
One o’clock and a half!
I had presence of mind enough to wind my watch; indeed,
I was not likely to forget that, for time hung heavily
on my hands. It was a gay capital. Would
it never put out its lights, and cease its uproar,
and leave me to my reflections? In less than an
hour the country legions would invade the city, the
market-wagons would rumble down the streets, the vegetable-man
and the strawberry-woman, the fishmongers and the
greens-venders would begin their melodious cries, and
there would be no repose for a man even in a public
garden. It is secluded enough, with the gates
locked, and there is plenty of room to turn over and
change position; but it is a wakeful situation at the
best, a haunting sort of place, and I was not sure
it was not haunted.
I had often wondered as I strolled
about the place in the daytime or peered through the
iron fence at dusk, if strange things did not go on
here at night, with this crowd of effigies of
persons historical and more or less mythological,
in this garden peopled with the representatives of
the dead, and no doubt by the shades of kings and queens
and courtiers, ‘intrigantes’ and
panders, priests and soldiers, who live once in this
old pile real shades, which are always invisible
in the sunlight. They have local attachments,
I suppose. Can science tell when they depart
forever from the scenes of their objective intrusion
into the affairs of this world, or how long they are
permitted to revisit them? Is it true that in
certain spiritual states, say of isolation or intense
nervous alertness, we can see them as they can see
each other? There was I the I catalogued
in the police description present in that
garden, yet so earnestly longing to be somewhere else
that would it be wonderful if my ‘eidolon’
was somewhere else and could be seen? though
not by a policeman, for policemen have no spiritual
vision.
There were no policemen in the garden,
that I was certain of; but a little after half-past
one I saw a Man, not a man I had ever seen before,
clad in doublet and hose, with a short cloak and a
felt cap with a white plume, come out of the Pavillon
de Flore and turn down the quay towards
the house I had seen that afternoon where it stood of
the beautiful Gabrielle d’Estrees. I might
have been mistaken but for the fact that, just at
this moment, a window opened in the wing of the same
pavilion, and an effeminate, boyish face, weak and
cruel, with a crown on its head, appeared and looked
down into the shadow of the building as if its owner
saw what I had seen. And there was nothing remarkable
in this, except that nowadays kings do not wear crowns
at night. It occurred to me that there was a
masquerade going on in the Tuileries, though I heard
no music, except the tinkle of, it might be, a harp,
or “the lascivious pleasing of a lute,”
and I walked along down towards the central pavilion.
I was just in time to see two ladies emerge from it
and disappear, whispering together, in the shrubbery;
the one old, tall, and dark, with the Italian complexion,
in a black robe, and the other young, petite, extraordinarily
handsome, and clad in light and bridal stuffs, yet
both with the same wily look that set me thinking on
poisons, and with a grace and a subtle carriage of
deceit that could be common only to mother and daughter.
I didn’t choose to walk any farther in the part
of the garden they had chosen for a night promenade,
and turned off abruptly.
What?
There, on the bench of the marble
hemicycle in the north grove, sat a row of graybeards,
old men in the costume of the first Revolution, a sort
of serene and benignant Areopagus. In the cleared
space before them were a crowd of youths and maidens,
spectators and participants in the Floral Games which
were about to commence; behind the old men stood attendants
who bore chaplets of flowers, the prizes in the games.
The young men wore short red tunics with copper belts,
formerly worn by Roman lads at the ludi, and
the girls tunics of white with loosened girdles, leaving
their limbs unrestrained for dancing, leaping, or
running; their hair was confined only by a fillet
about the head. The pipers began to play and
the dancers to move in rhythmic measures, with the
slow and languid grace of those full of sweet wine
and the new joy of the Spring, according to the habits
of the Golden Age, which had come again by decree in
Paris. This was the beginning of the classic
sports, but it is not possible for a modern pen to
describe particularly the Floral Games. I remember
that the Convention ordered the placing of these hémicycles
in the garden, and they were executed from Robespierre’s
designs; but I suppose I am the only person who ever
saw the games played that were expected to be played
before them. It was a curious coincidence that
the little livid-green man was also there, leaning
against a tree and looking on with a half sneer.
It seemed to me an odd classic revival, but then Paris
has spasms of that, at the old Theatre Francais and
elsewhere.
Pipes in the garden, lutes in the
palace, paganism, Revolution the situation
was becoming mixed, and I should not have been surprised
at a ghostly procession from the Place de la Concorde,
through the western gates, of the thousands of headless
nobility, victims of the axe and the basket; but,
thank Heaven, nothing of that sort appeared to add
to the wonders of the night; yet, as I turned a moment
from the dancers, I thought I saw something move in
the shrubbery. The Laocoon? It could not
be. The arms moving? Yes. As I drew
nearer the arms distinctly moved, putting away at
length the coiling serpent, and pushing from the pedestal
the old-men boys, his comrades in agony. Laocoon
shut his mouth, which had been stretched open for
about eighteen centuries, untwisted the last coil
of the snake, and stepped down, a free man. After
this it did not surprise me to see Spartacus also
step down and approach him, and the two ancients square
off for fisticuffs, as if they had done it often before,
enjoying at night the release from the everlasting
pillory of art. It was the hour of releases,
and I found myself in a moment in the midst of a “classic
revival,” whimsical beyond description.
Aeneas hastened to deposit his aged father in a heap
on the gravel and ran after the Sylvan Nymphs; Theseus
gave the Minotaur a respite; Themistocles was bending
over the dying Spartan, who was coming to life; Venus
Pudica was waltzing about the diagonal basin
with Antinous; Ascanius was playing marbles with the
infant Hercules. In this unreal phantasmagoria
it was a relief to me to see walking in the area of
the private garden two men: the one a stately
person with a kingly air, a handsome face, his head
covered with a huge wig that fell upon his shoulders;
the other a farmer-like man, stout and ungracious,
the counterpart of the pictures of the intendant Colbert.
He was pointing up to the palace, and seemed to be
speaking of some alterations, to which talk the other
listened impatiently. I wondered what Napoleon,
who by this time was probably dreaming of Mexico,
would have said if he had looked out and seen, not
one man in the garden, but dozens of men, and all
the stir that I saw; if he had known, indeed, that
the Great Monarch was walking under his windows.
I said it was a relief to me to see
two real men, but I had no reason to complain of solitude
thereafter till daybreak. That any one saw or
noticed me I doubt, and I soon became so reassured
that I had more delight than fear in watching the
coming and going of personages I had supposed dead
a hundred years and more; the appearance at windows
of faces lovely, faces sad, faces terror-stricken;
the opening of casements and the dropping of billets
into the garden; the flutter of disappearing robes;
the faint sounds of revels from the interior of the
palace; the hurrying of feet, the flashing of lights,
the clink of steel, that told of partings and sudden
armings, and the presence of a king that will be denied
at no doors. I saw through the windows of the
long Galerie de Diane the roues
of the Regency at supper, and at table with them a
dark, semi-barbarian little man in a coat of Russian
sable, the coolest head in Europe at a drinking-bout.
I saw enter the south pavilion a tall lady in black,
with the air of a royal procuress; and presently crossed
the garden and disappeared in the pavilion a young
Parisian girl, and then another and another, a flock
of innocents, and I thought instantly of the dreadful
Parc aux Cerfs at Versailles.
So wrought upon was I by the sight
of this infamy that I scarcely noticed the incoming
of a royal train at the southern end of the palace,
and notably in it a lady with light hair and noble
mien, and the look in her face of a hunted lioness
at bay. I say scarcely, for hardly had the royal
cortege passed within, when there arose a great clamor
in the inner court, like the roar of an angry multitude,
a scuffling of many feet, firing of guns, thrusting
of pikes, followed by yells of defiance in mingled
French and German, the pitching of Swiss Guards from
doorways and windows, and the flashing of flambeaux
that ran hither and thither. “Oh!”
I said, “Paris has come to call upon its sovereign;
the pikemen of Paris, led by the bold Barbaroux.”
The tumult subsided as suddenly as
it had risen, hushed, I imagined, by the jarring of
cannon from the direction of St. Roch; and in the quiet
I saw a little soldier alight at the Rue de Rivoli
gate a little man whom you might mistake
for a corporal of the guard with a wild,
coarse-featured Corsican (say, rather, Basque) face,
his disordered chestnut hair darkened to black locks
by the use of pomatum a face selfish and
false, but determined as fate. So this was the
beginning of the Napoleon “legend”; and
by-and-by this coarse head will be idealized into
the Roman Emperor type, in which I myself might have
believed but for the revelations of the night of strange
adventure.
What is history? What is this
drama and spectacle, that has been put forth as history,
but a cover for petty intrigue, and deceit, and selfishness,
and cruelty? A man shut into the Tuileries Garden
begins to think that it is all an illusion, the trick
of a disordered fancy. Who was Grand, who was
Well-Beloved, who was Desired, who was the Idol of
the French, who was worthy to be called a King of
the Citizens? Oh, for the light of day!
And it came, faint and tremulous,
touching the terraces of the palace and the Column
of Luxor. But what procession was that moving
along the southern terrace? A squad of the National
Guard on horseback, a score or so of King’s
officers, a King on foot, walking with uncertain step,
a Queen leaning on his arm, both habited in black,
moved out of the western gate. The King and the
Queen paused a moment on the very spot where Louis
XVI. was beheaded, and then got into a carriage drawn
by one horse and were driven rapidly along the quays
in the direction of St. Cloud. And again Revolution,
on the heels of the fugitives, poured into the old
palace and filled it with its tatterdemalions.
Enough for me that daylight began
to broaden. “Sleep on,” I said, “O
real President, real Emperor (by the grace of coup
d’etat) at last, in the midst of the most virtuous
court in Europe, loved of good Americans, eternally
established in the hearts of your devoted Parisians!
Peace to the palace and peace to its lovely garden,
of both of which I have had quite enough for one night!”
The sun came up, and, as I looked
about, all the shades and concourse of the night had
vanished. Day had begun in the vast city, with
all its roar and tumult; but the garden gates would
not open till seven, and I must not be seen before
the early stragglers should enter and give me a chance
of escape. In my circumstances I would rather
be the first to enter than the first to go out in
the morning, past those lynx-eyed gendarmes.
From my covert I eagerly watched for my coming deliverers.
The first to appear was a ‘chiffonnier,’
who threw his sack and pick down by the basin, bathed
his face, and drank from his hand. It seemed to
me almost like an act of worship, and I would have
embraced that rag-picker as a brother. But I
knew that such a proceeding, in the name even of égalité
and fraternité would have been misinterpreted;
and I waited till two and three and a dozen entered
by this gate and that, and I was at full liberty to
stretch my limbs and walk out upon the quay as nonchalant
as if I had been taking a morning stroll.
I have reason to believe that the
police of Paris never knew where I spent the night
of the 18th of June. It must have mystified them.
TRUTHFULNESS
Truthfulness is as essential in literature
as it is in conduct, in fiction as it is in the report
of an actual occurrence. Falsehood vitiates a
poem, a painting, exactly as it does a life. Truthfulness
is a quality like simplicity. Simplicity in literature
is mainly a matter of clear vision and lucid expression,
however complex the subject-matter may be; exactly
as in life, simplicity does not so much depend upon
external conditions as upon the spirit in which one
lives. It may be more difficult to maintain simplicity
of living with a great fortune than in poverty, but
simplicity of spirit that is, superiority
of soul to circumstance is possible in
any condition. Unfortunately the common expression
that a certain person has wealth is not so true as
it would be to say that wealth has him. The life
of one with great possessions and corresponding responsibilities
may be full of complexity; the subject of literary
art may be exceedingly complex; but we do not set complexity
over against simplicity. For simplicity is a quality
essential to true life as it is to literature of the
first class; it is opposed to parade, to artificiality,
to obscurity.
The quality of truthfulness is not
so easily defined. It also is a matter of spirit
and intuition. We have no difficulty in applying
the rules of common morality to certain functions
of writers for the public, for instance, the duties
of the newspaper reporter, or the newspaper correspondent,
or the narrator of any event in life the relation of
which owes its value to its being absolutely true.
The same may be said of hoaxes, literary or scientific,
however clear they may be. The person indulging
in them not only discredits his office in the eyes
of the public, but he injures his own moral fibre,
and he contracts such a habit of unveracity that he
never can hope for genuine literary success. For
there never was yet any genuine success in letters
without integrity. The clever hoax is no better
than the trick of imitation, that is, conscious imitation
of another, which has unveracity to one’s self
at the bottom of it. Burlesque is not the highest
order of intellectual performance, but it is legitimate,
and if cleverly done it may be both useful and amusing,
but it is not to be confounded with forgery, that is,
with a composition which the author attempts to pass
off as the production of somebody else. The forgery
may be amazingly smart, and be even popular, and get
the author, when he is discovered, notoriety, but
it is pretty certain that with his ingrained lack
of integrity he will never accomplish any original
work of value, and he will be always personally suspected.
There is nothing so dangerous to a young writer as
to begin with hoaxing; or to begin with the invention,
either as reporter or correspondent, of statements
put forward as facts, which are untrue. This sort
of facility and smartness may get a writer employment,
unfortunately for him and the public, but there is
no satisfaction in it to one who desires an honorable
career. It is easy to recall the names of brilliant
men whose fine talents have been eaten away by this
habit of unveracity. This habit is the greatest
danger of the newspaper press of the United States.
It is easy to define this sort of
untruthfulness, and to study the moral deterioration
it works in personal character, and in the quality
of literary work. It was illustrated in the forgeries
of the marvelous boy Chatterton. The talent he
expended in deception might have made him an enviable
reputation, the deception vitiated whatever
good there was in his work. Fraud in literature
is no better than fraud in archaeology, Chatterton
deserves no more credit than Shapiro who forged the
Moabite pottery with its inscriptions. The reporter
who invents an incident, or heightens the horror of
a calamity by fictions is in the case of Shapiro.
The habit of this sort of invention is certain to destroy
the writer’s quality, and if he attempts a legitimate
work of the imagination, he will carry the same unveracity
into that. The quality of truthfulness cannot
be juggled with. Akin to this is the trick which
has put under proper suspicion some very clever writers
of our day, and cost them all public confidence in
whatever they do, the trick of posing for
what they are not. We do not mean only that the
reader does not believe their stories of personal
adventure, and regards them personally as “frauds,”
but that this quality of deception vitiates all their
work, as seen from a literary point of view.
We mean that the writer who hoaxes the public, by
inventions which he publishes as facts, or in regard
to his own personality, not only will lose the confidence
of the public but he will lose the power of doing
genuine work, even in the field of fiction. Good
work is always characterized by integrity.
These illustrations help us to understand
what is meant by literary integrity. For the
deception in the case of the correspondent who invents
“news” is of the same quality as the lack
of sincerity in a poem or in a prose fiction; there
is a moral and probably a mental defect in both.
The story of Robinson Crusoe is a very good illustration
of veracity in fiction. It is effective because
it has the simple air of truth; it is an illusion
that satisfies; it is possible; it is good art:
but it has no moral deception in it. In fact,
looked at as literature, we can see that it is sincere
and wholesome.
What is this quality of truthfulness
which we all recognize when it exists in fiction?
There is much fiction, and some of it, for various
reasons, that we like and find interesting which is
nevertheless insincere if not artificial. We
see that the writer has not been honest with himself
or with us in his views of human life. There may
be just as much lying in novels as anywhere else.
The novelist who offers us what he declares to be
a figment of his own brain may be just as untrue as
the reporter who sets forth a figment of his own brain
which he declares to be a real occurrence. That
is, just as much faithfulness to life is required
of the novelist as of the reporter, and in a much higher
degree. The novelist must not only tell the truth
about life as he sees it, material and spiritual,
but he must be faithful to his own conceptions.
If fortunately he has genius enough to create a character
that has reality to himself and to others, he must
be faithful to that character. He must have conscience
about it, and not misrepresent it, any more than he
would misrepresent the sayings and doings of a person
in real life. Of course if his own conception
is not clear, he will be as unjust as in writing about
a person in real life whose character he knew only
by rumor. The novelist may be mistaken about
his own creations and in his views of life, but if
he have truthfulness in himself, sincerity will show
in his work.
Truthfulness is a quality that needs
to be as strongly insisted on in literature as simplicity.
But when we carry the matter a step further, we see
that there cannot be truthfulness about life without
knowledge. The world is full of novels, and their
number daily increases, written without any sense
of responsibility, and with very little experience,
which are full of false views of human nature and of
society. We can almost always tell in a fiction
when the writer passes the boundary of his own experience
and observation he becomes unreal, which
is another name for untruthful. And there is
an absence of sincerity in such work. There seems
to be a prevailing impression that any one can write
a story. But it scarcely need be said that literature
is an art, like painting and music, and that one may
have knowledge of life and perfect sincerity, and
yet be unable to produce a good, truthful piece of
literature, or to compose a piece of music, or to
paint a picture.
Truthfulness is in no way opposed
to invention or to the exercise of the imagination.
When we say that the writer needs experience, we do
not mean to intimate that his invention of character
or plot should be literally limited to a person he
has known, or to an incident that has occurred, but
that they should be true to his experience. The
writer may create an ideally perfect character, or
an ideally bad character, and he may try him by a
set of circumstances and events never before combined,
and this creation may be so romantic as to go beyond
the experience of any reader, that is to say, wholly
imaginary (like a composed landscape which has no
counterpart in any one view of a natural landscape),
and yet it may be so consistent in itself, so true
to an idea or an aspiration or a hope, that it will
have the element of truthfulness and subserve a very
high purpose. It may actually be truer to our
sense of verity to life than an array of undeniable,
naked facts set down without art and without imagination.
The difficulty of telling the truth
in literature is about as great as it is in real life.
We know how nearly impossible it is for one person
to convey to another a correct impression of a third
person. He may describe the features, the manner,
mention certain traits and sayings, all literally
true, but absolutely misleading as to the total impression.
And this is the reason why extreme, unrelieved realism
is apt to give a false impression of persons and scenes.
One can hardly help having a whimsical notion occasionally,
seeing the miscarriages even in our own attempts at
truthfulness, that it absolutely exists only in the
imagination.
In a piece of fiction, especially
romantic fiction, an author is absolutely free to
be truthful, and he will be if he has personal and
literary integrity. He moves freely amid his own
creations and conceptions, and is not subject to the
peril of the writer who admittedly uses facts, but
uses them so clumsily or with so little conscience,
so out of their real relations, as to convey a false
impression and an untrue view of life. This quality
of truthfulness is equally evident in “The Three
Guardsmen” and in “Midsummer Night’s
Dream.” Dumas is as conscientious about
his world of adventure as Shakespeare is in his semi-supernatural
region. If Shakespeare did not respect the laws
of his imaginary country, and the creatures of his
fancy, if Dumas were not true to the characters he
conceived, and the achievements possible to them,
such works would fall into confusion. A recent
story called “The Refugees” set out with
a certain promise of veracity, although the reader
understood of course that it was to be a purely romantic
invention. But very soon the author recklessly
violated his own conception, and when he got his “real”
characters upon an iceberg, the fantastic position
became ludicrous without being funny, and the performances
of the same characters in the wilderness of the New
World showed such lack of knowledge in the writer
that the story became an insult to the intelligence
of the reader. Whereas such a romance as that
of “The Ms. Found in a Copper Cylinder,”
although it is humanly impossible and visibly a figment
of the imagination, is satisfactory to the reader
because the author is true to his conception, and it
is interesting as a curious allegorical and humorous
illustration of the ruinous character in human affairs
of extreme unselfishness. There is the same sort
of truthfulness in Hawthorne’s allegory of “The
Celestial Railway,” in Froude’s “On
a Siding at a Railway Station,” and in Bunyan’s
“Pilgrim’s Progress.”
The habit of lying carried into fiction
vitiates the best work, and perhaps it is easier to
avoid it in pure romance than in the so-called novels
of “every-day life.” And this is probably
the reason why so many of the novels of “real
life” are so much more offensively untruthful
to us than the wildest romances. In the former
the author could perhaps “prove” every
incident he narrates, and produce living every character
he has attempted to describe. But the effect
is that of a lie, either because he is not a master
of his art, or because he has no literary conscience.
He is like an artist who is more anxious to produce
a meretricious effect than he is to be true to himself
or to nature. An author who creates a character
assumes a great responsibility, and if he has not
integrity or knowledge enough to respect his own creation,
no one else will respect it, and, worse than this,
he will tell a falsehood to hosts of undiscriminating
readers.
THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS
Perhaps the most curious and interesting
phrase ever put into a public document is “the
pursuit of happiness.” It is declared to
be an inalienable right. It cannot be sold.
It cannot be given away. It is doubtful if it
could be left by will.
The right of every man to be six feet
high, and of every woman to be five feet four, was
regarded as self-evident until women asserted their
undoubted right to be six feet high also, when some
confusion was introduced into the interpretation of
this rhetorical fragment of the eighteenth century.
But the inalienable right to the pursuit
of happiness has never been questioned since it was
proclaimed as a new gospel for the New World.
The American people accepted it with enthusiasm, as
if it had been the discovery of a gold-prospector,
and started out in the pursuit as if the devil were
after them.
If the proclamation had been that
happiness is a common right of the race, alienable
or otherwise, that all men are or may be happy, history
and tradition might have interfered to raise a doubt
whether even the new form of government could so change
the ethical condition. But the right to make
a pursuit of happiness, given in a fundamental bill
of rights, had quite a different aspect. Men
had been engaged in many pursuits, most of them disastrous,
some of them highly commendable. A sect in Galilee
had set up the pursuit of righteousness as the only
or the highest object of man’s immortal powers.
The rewards of it, however, were not always immediate.
Here was a political sanction of a pursuit that everybody
acknowledged to be of a good thing.
Given a heart-aching longing in every
human being for happiness, here was high warrant for
going in pursuit of it. And the curious effect
of this ‘mot d’ordre’ was that the
pursuit arrested the attention as the most essential,
and the happiness was postponed, almost invariably,
to some future season, when leisure or plethora, that
is, relaxation or gorged desire, should induce that
physical and moral glow which is commonly accepted
as happiness. This glow of well-being is sometimes
called contentment, but contentment was not in the
programme. If it came at all, it was only to
come after strenuous pursuit, that being the inalienable
right.
People, to be sure, have different
conceptions of happiness, but whatever they are, it
is the custom, almost universal, to postpone the thing
itself. This, of course, is specially true in
our American system, where we have a chartered right
to the thing itself. Other nations who have no
such right may take it out in occasional driblets,
odd moments that come, no doubt, to men and races
who have no privilege of voting, or to such favored
places as New York city, whose government is always
the same, however they vote.
We are all authorized to pursue happiness,
and we do as a general thing make a pursuit of it.
Instead of simply being happy in the condition where
we are, getting the sweets of life in human intercourse,
hour by hour, as the bees take honey from every flower
that opens in the summer air, finding happiness in
the well-filled and orderly mind, in the sane and
enlightened spirit, in the self that has become what
the self should be, we say that tomorrow, next year,
in ten or twenty or thirty years, when we have arrived
at certain coveted possessions or situation, we will
be happy. Some philosophers dignify this postponement
with the name of hope.
Sometimes wandering in a primeval
forest, in all the witchery of the woods, besought
by the kindliest solicitations of nature, wild flowers
in the trail, the call of the squirrel, the flutter
of birds, the great world-music of the wind in the
pine-tops, the flecks of sunlight on the brown carpet
and on the rough bark of immemorial trees, I find myself
unconsciously postponing my enjoyment until I shall
reach a hoped-for open place of full sun and boundless
prospect.
The analogy cannot be pushed, for
it is the common experience that these open spots
in life, where leisure and space and contentment await
us, are usually grown up with thickets, fuller of
obstacles, to say nothing of labors and duties and
difficulties, than any part of the weary path we have
trod.
Why add the pursuit of happiness to
our other inalienable worries? Perhaps there
is something wrong in ourselves when we hear the complaint
so often that men are pursued by disaster instead of
being pursued by happiness.
We all believe in happiness as something
desirable and attainable, and I take it that this
is the underlying desire when we speak of the pursuit
of wealth, the pursuit of learning, the pursuit of
power in office or in influence, that is, that we
shall come into happiness when the objects last named
are attained. No amount of failure seems to lessen
this belief. It is matter of experience that
wealth and learning and power are as likely to bring
unhappiness as happiness, and yet this constant lesson
of experience makes not the least impression upon human
conduct. I suppose that the reason of this unheeding
of experience is that every person born into the world
is the only one exactly of that kind that ever was
or ever will be created, so that he thinks he may be
exempt from the general rules. At any rate, he
goes at the pursuit of happiness in exactly the old
way, as if it were an original undertaking. Perhaps
the most melancholy spectacle offered to us in our
short sojourn in this pilgrimage, where the roads
are so dusty and the caravansaries so ill provided,
is the credulity of this pursuit. Mind, I am not
objecting to the pursuit of wealth, or of learning,
or of power, they are all explainable, if not justifiable, but
to the blindness that does not perceive their futility
as a means of attaining the end sought, which is happiness,
an end that can only be compassed by the right adjustment
of each soul to this and to any coming state of existence.
For whether the great scholar who is stuffed with
knowledge is happier than the great money-getter who
is gorged with riches, or the wily politician who is
a Warwick in his realm, depends entirely upon what
sort of a man this pursuit has made him. There
is a kind of fallacy current nowadays that a very
rich man, no matter by what unscrupulous means he has
gathered an undue proportion of the world into his
possession, can be happy if he can turn round and
make a generous and lavish distribution of it for worthy
purposes. If he has preserved a remnant of conscience,
this distribution may give him much satisfaction,
and justly increase his good opinion of his own deserts;
but the fallacy is in leaving out of account the sort
of man he has become in this sort of pursuit.
Has he escaped that hardening of the nature, that
drying up of the sweet springs of sympathy, which
usually attend a long-continued selfish undertaking?
Has either he or the great politician or the great
scholar cultivated the real sources of enjoyment?
The pursuit of happiness! It
is not strange that men call it an illusion.
But I am well satisfied that it is not the thing itself,
but the pursuit, that is an illusion. Instead
of thinking of the pursuit, why not fix our thoughts
upon the moments, the hours, perhaps the days, of this
divine peace, this merriment of body and mind, that
can be repeated and perhaps indefinitely extended
by the simplest of all means, namely, a disposition
to make the best of whatever comes to us? Perhaps
the Latin poet was right in saying that no man can
count himself happy while in this life, that is, in
a continuous state of happiness; but as there is for
the soul no time save the conscious moment called
“now,” it is quite possible to make that
“now” a happy state of existence.
The point I make is that we should not habitually
postpone that season of happiness to the future.
No one, I trust, wishes to cloud the
dreams of youth, or to dispel by excess of light what
are called the illusions of hope. But why should
the boy be nurtured in the current notion that he
is to be really happy only when he has finished school,
when he has got a business or profession by which
money can be made, when he has come to manhood?
The girl also dreams that for her happiness lies ahead,
in that springtime when she is crossing the line of
womanhood, all the poets make much of this, when
she is married and learns the supreme lesson how to
rule by obeying. It is only when the girl and
the boy look back upon the years of adolescence that
they realize how happy they might have been then if
they had only known they were happy, and did not need
to go in pursuit of happiness.
The pitiful part of this inalienable
right to the pursuit of happiness is, however, that
most men interpret it to mean the pursuit of wealth,
and strive for that always, postponing being happy
until they get a fortune, and if they are lucky in
that, find at the end that the happiness has somehow
eluded them, that; in short, they have not cultivated
that in themselves that alone can bring happiness.
More than that, they have lost the power of the enjoyment
of the essential pleasures of life. I think that
the woman in the Scriptures who out of her poverty
put her mite into the contribution-box got more happiness
out of that driblet of generosity and self-sacrifice
than some men in our day have experienced in founding
a university.
And how fares it with the intellectual
man? To be a selfish miner of learning, for self-gratification
only, is no nobler in reality than to be a miser of
money. And even when the scholar is lavish of
his knowledge in helping an ignorant world, he may
find that if he has made his studies as a pursuit
of happiness he has missed his object. Much knowledge
increases the possibility of enjoyment, but also the
possibility of sorrow. If intellectual pursuits
contribute to an enlightened and altogether admirable
character, then indeed has the student found the inner
springs of happiness. Otherwise one cannot say
that the wise man is happier than the ignorant man.
In fine, and in spite of the political
injunction, we need to consider that happiness is
an inner condition, not to be raced after. And
what an advance in our situation it would be if we
could get it into our heads here in this land of inalienable
rights that the world would turn round just the same
if we stood still and waited for the daily coming of
our Lord!
LITERATURE AND THE STAGE
Is the divorce of Literature and the
Stage complete, or is it still only partial?
As the lawyers say, is it a ‘vínculo’,
or only a ’mensa et thoro?’ And if this
divorce is permanent, is it a good thing for literature
or the stage? Is the present condition of the
stage a degeneration, as some say, or is it a natural
evolution of an art independent of literature?
How long is it since a play has been
written and accepted and played which has in it any
so-called literary quality or is an addition to literature?
And what is dramatic art as at present understood and
practiced by the purveyors of plays for the public?
If any one can answer these questions, he will contribute
something to the discussion about the tendency of
the modern stage.
Every one recognizes in the “good
old plays” which are occasionally “revived”
both a quality and an intention different from anything
in most contemporary productions. They are real
dramas, the interest of which depends upon sentiment,
upon an exhibition of human nature, upon the interaction
of varied character, and upon plot, and we recognize
in them a certain literary art. They can be read
with pleasure. Scenery and mechanical contrivance
may heighten the effects, but they are not absolute
essentials.
In the contemporary play instead of
character we have “characters,” usually
exaggerations of some trait, so pushed forward as to
become caricatures. Consistency to human nature
is not insisted on in plot, but there must be startling
and unexpected incidents, mechanical devices, and
a great deal of what is called “business,”
which clearly has as much relation to literature as
have the steps of a farceur in a clog-dance.
The composition of such plays demands literary ability
in the least degree, but ingenuity in inventing situations
and surprises; the text is nothing, the action is
everything; but the text is considerably improved
if it have brightness of repartee and a lively apprehension
of contemporary events, including the slang of the
hour. These plays appear to be made up by the
writer, the manager, the carpenter, the costumer.
If they are successful with the modern audiences,
their success is probably due to other things than
any literary quality they may have, or any truth to
life or to human nature.
We see how this is in the great number
of plays adapted from popular novels. In the
“dramatization” of these stories, pretty
much everything is left out of the higher sort that
the reader has valued in the story. The romance
of “Monte Cristo” is an illustration of
this. The play is vulgar melodrama, out of which
has escaped altogether the refinement and the romantic
idealism of the stirring romance of Dumas. Now
and then, to be sure, we get a different result, as
in “Olivia,” where all the pathos and
character of the “Vicar of Wakefield” are
preserved, and the effect of the play depends upon
passion and sentiment. But as a rule, we get
only the more obvious saliencies, the bones of the
novel, fitted in or clothed with stage “business.”
Of course it is true that literary
men, even dramatic authors, may write and always have
written dramas not suited to actors, that could not
well be put upon the stage. But it remains true
that the greatest dramas, those that have endured
from the Greek times down, have been (for the audiences
of their times) both good reading and good acting plays.
I am not competent to criticise the
stage or its tendency. But I am interested in
noticing the increasing non-literary character of modern
plays. It may be explained as a necessary and
justifiable evolution of the stage. The managers
may know what the audience wants, just as the editors
of some of the most sensational newspapers say that
they make a newspaper to suit the public. The
newspaper need not be well written, but it must startle
with incident and surprise, found or invented.
An observer must notice that the usual theatre-audience
in New York or Boston today laughs at and applauds
costumes, situations, innuendoes, doubtful suggestions,
that it would have blushed at a few years ago.
Has the audience been creating a theatre to suit its
taste, or have the managers been educating an audience?
Has the divorce of literary art from the mimic art
of the stage anything to do with this condition?
The stage can be amusing, but can
it show life as it is without the aid of idealizing
literary art? And if the stage goes on in this
materialistic way, how long will it be before it ceases
to amuse intelligent, not to say intellectual people?
THE LIFE-SAVING AND LIFE PROLONGING ART
In the minds of the public there is
a mystery about the practice of medicine. It
deals more or less with the unknown, with the occult,
it appeals to the imagination. Doubtless confidence
in its practitioners is still somewhat due to the
belief that they are familiar with the secret processes
of nature, if they are not in actual alliance with
the supernatural. Investigation of the ground
of the popular faith in the doctor would lead us into
metaphysics. And yet our physical condition has
much to do with this faith. It is apt to be weak
when one is in perfect health; but when one is sick
it grows strong. Saint and sinner both warm up
to the doctor when the judgment Day heaves in view.
In the popular apprehension the doctor
is still the Medicine Man. We smile when we hear
about his antics in barbarous tribes; he dresses fantastically,
he puts horns on his head, he draws circles on the
ground, he dances about the patient, shaking his rattle
and uttering incantations. There is nothing to
laugh at. He is making an appeal to the imagination.
And sometimes he cures, and sometimes he kills; in
either case he gets his fee. What right have
we to laugh? We live in an enlightened age, and
yet a great proportion of the people, perhaps not a
majority, still believe in incantations, have faith
in ignorant practitioners who advertise a “natural
gift,” or a secret process or remedy, and prefer
the charlatan who is exactly on the level of the Indian
Medicine Man, to the regular practitioner, and to the
scientific student of mind and body and of the properties
of the materia medica. Why, even here
in Connecticut, it is impossible to get a law to protect
the community from the imposition of knavish or ignorant
quacks, and to require of a man some evidence of capacity
and training and skill, before he is let loose to
experiment upon suffering humanity. Our teachers
must pass an examination though the examiner
sometimes does not know as much as the candidate, for
misguiding the youthful mind; the lawyer cannot practice
without study and a formal admission to the bar; and
even the clergyman is not accepted in any responsible
charge until he has given evidence of some moral and
intellectual fitness. But the profession affecting
directly the health and life of every human body, which
needs to avail itself of the accumulated experience,
knowledge, and science of all the ages, is open to
every ignorant and stupid practitioner on the credulity
of the public. Why cannot we get a law regulating
the profession which is of most vital interest to
all of us, excluding ignorance and quackery?
Because the majority of our legislature, representing,
I suppose, the majority of the public, believe in the
“natural bone-setter,” the herb doctor,
the root doctor, the old woman who brews a decoction
of swamp medicine, the “natural gift” of
some dabbler in diseases, the magnetic healer, the
faith cure, the mind cure, the Christian Science cure,
the efficacy of a prescription rapped out on a table
by some hysterical medium, in anything but
sound knowledge, education in scientific methods,
steadied by a sense of public responsibility.
Not long ago, on a cross-country road, I came across
a woman in a farmhouse, where I am sure the barn-yard
drained into the well, who was sick; she had taken
a shop-full of patent medicines. I advised her
to send for a doctor. She had no confidence in
doctors, but said she reckoned she would get along
now, for she had sent for the seventh son of a seventh
son, and didn’t I think he could certainly cure
her? I said that combination ought to fetch any
disease except agnosticism. That woman probably
influenced a vote in the legislature. The legislature
believes in incantations; it ought to have in attendance
an Indian Medicine Man.
We think the world is progressing
in enlightenment; I suppose it is inch
by inch. But it is not easy to name an age that
has cherished more delusions than ours, or been more
superstitious, or more credulous, more eager to run
after quackery. Especially is this true in regard
to remedies for diseases, and the faith in healers
and quacks outside of the regular, educated professors
of the medical art. Is this an exaggeration?
Consider the quantity of proprietary medicines taken
in this country, some of them harmless, some of them
good in some cases, some of them injurious, but generally
taken without advice and in absolute ignorance of
the nature of the disease or the specific action of
the remedy. The drug-shops are full of them,
especially in country towns; and in the far West and
on the Pacific coast I have been astonished at the
quantity and variety displayed. They are found
in almost every house; the country is literally dosed
to death with these manufactured nostrums and panaceas and
that is the most popular medicine which can be used
for the greatest number of internal and external diseases
and injuries. Many newspapers are half supported
by advertising them, and millions and millions of
dollars are invested in this popular industry.
Needless to say that the patented remedies most in
request are those that profess a secret and unscientific
origin. Those most “purely vegetable”
seem most suitable to the wooden-heads who believe
in them, but if one were sufficiently advertised as
not containing a single trace of vegetable matter,
avoiding thus all possible conflict of one organic
life with another organic life, it would be just as
popular. The favorites are those that have been
secretly used by an East Indian fakir, or accidentally
discovered as the natural remedy, dug out of the ground
by an American Indian tribe, or steeped in a kettle
by an ancient colored person in a southern plantation,
or washed ashore on the person of a sailor from the
South Seas, or invented by a very aged man in New Jersey,
who could not read, but had spent his life roaming
in the woods, and whose capacity for discovering a
“universal panacea,” besides his ignorance
and isolation, lay in the fact that his sands of life
had nearly run. It is the supposed secrecy or
low origin of the remedy that is its attraction.
The basis of the vast proprietary medicine business
is popular ignorance and credulity. And it needs
to be pretty broad to support a traffic of such enormous
proportions.
During this generation certain branches
of the life-saving and life-prolonging art have made
great advances out of empiricism onto the solid ground
of scientific knowledge. Of course I refer to
surgery, and to the discovery of the causes and improvement
in the treatment of contagious and epidemic diseases.
The general practice has shared in this scientific
advance, but it is limited and always will be limited
within experimental bounds, by the infinite variations
in individual constitutions, and the almost incalculable
element of the interference of mental with physical
conditions. When we get an exact science of man,
we may expect an exact science of medicine. How
far we are from this, we see when we attempt to make
criminal anthropology the basis of criminal legislation.
Man is so complex that if we were to eliminate one
of his apparently worse qualities, we might develop
others still worse, or throw the whole machine into
inefficiency. By taking away what the phrenologists
call combativeness, we could doubtless stop prize-fight,
but we might have a springless society. The only
safe way is that taught by horticulture, to feed a
fruit-tree generously, so that it has vigor enough
to throw off its degenerate tendencies and its enemies,
or, as the doctors say in medical practice, bring
up the general system. That is to say, there
is more hope for humanity in stimulating the good,
than in directly suppressing the evil. It is
on something like this line that the greatest advance
has been made in medical practice; I mean in the direction
of prevention. This involves, of course, the exclusion
of the evil, that is, of suppressing the causes that
produce disease, as well as in cultivating the resistant
power of the human system. In sanitation, diet,
and exercise are the great fields of medical enterprise
and advance. I need not say that the physician
who, in the case of those under his charge, or who
may possibly require his aid, contents himself with
waiting for developed disease, is like the soldier
in a besieged city who opens the gates and then attempts
to repel the invader who has effected a lodgment.
I hope the time will come when the chief practice of
the physician will be, first, in oversight of the sanitary
condition of his neighborhood, and, next, in preventive
attendance on people who think they are well, and
are all unconscious of the insidious approach of some
concealed malady.
Another great change in modern practice
is specialization. Perhaps it has not yet reached
the delicate particularity of the practice in ancient
Egypt, where every minute part of the human economy
had its exclusive doctor. This is inevitable
in a scientific age, and the result has been on the
whole an advance of knowledge, and improved treatment
of specific ailments. The danger is apparent.
It is that of the moral specialist, who has only one
hobby and traces every human ill to strong liquor or
tobacco, or the corset, or taxation of personal property,
or denial of universal suffrage, or the eating of
meat, or the want of the centralization of nearly
all initiative and interest and property in the state.
The tendency of the accomplished specialist in medicine
is to refer all physical trouble to the ill conduct
of the organ he presides over. He can often trace
every disease to want of width in the nostrils, to
a defective eye, to a sensitive throat, to shut-up
pores, to an irritated stomach, to auricular defect.
I suppose he is generally right, but I have a perhaps
natural fear that if I happened to consult an amputationist
about catarrh he would want to cut off my leg.
I confess to an affection for the old-fashioned, all-round
country doctor, who took a general view of his patient,
knew his family, his constitution, all the gossip
about his mental or business troubles, his affairs
of the heart, disappointments in love, incompatibilities
of temper, and treated the patient, as the phrase
is, for all he was worth, and gave him visible medicine
out of good old saddle-bags how much faith
we used to have in those saddle-bags and
not a prescription in a dead language to be put up
by a dead-head clerk who occasionally mistakes arsenic
for carbonate of soda. I do not mean, however,
to say there is no sense in the retention of the hieroglyphics
which the doctors use to communicate their ideas to
a druggist, for I had a prescription made in Hartford
put up in Naples, and that could not have happened
if it had been written in English. And I am not
sure but the mysterious symbols have some effect on
the patient.
The mention of the intimate knowledge
of family and constitutional conditions possessed
by the old-fashioned country doctor, whose main strength
lay in this and in his common-sense, reminds me of
another great advance in the modern practice, in the
attempt to understand nature better by the scientific
study of psychology and the occult relations of mind
and body. It is in the study of temper, temperament,
hereditary predispositions, that we may expect the
most brilliant results in preventive medicine.
As a layman, I cannot but notice another
great advance in the medical profession. It is
not alone in it. It is rather expected that the
lawyers will divide the oyster between them and leave
the shell to the contestants. I suppose that
doctors, almost without exception, give more of their
time and skill in the way of charity than almost any
other profession. But somebody must pay, and
fees have increased with the general cost of living
and dying. If fees continue to increase as they
have done in the past ten years in the great cities,
like New York, nobody not a millionaire can afford
to be sick. The fees will soon be a prohibitive
tax. I cannot say that this will be altogether
an evil, for the cost of calling medical aid may force
people to take better care of themselves. Still,
the excessive charges are rather hard on people in
moderate circumstances who are compelled to seek surgical
aid. And here we touch one of the regrettable
symptoms of the times, which is not by any means most
conspicuous in the medical profession. I mean
the tendency to subordinate the old notion of professional
duty to the greed for money. The lawyers are
almost universally accused of it; even the clergymen
are often suspected of being influenced by it.
The young man is apt to choose a profession on calculation
of its profit. It will be a bad day for science
and for the progress of the usefulness of the medical
profession when the love of money in its practice becomes
stronger than professional enthusiasm, than the noble
ambition of distinction for advancing the science,
and the devotion to human welfare.
I do not prophesy it. Rather
I expect interest in humanity, love of science for
itself, sympathy with suffering, self-sacrifice for
others, to increase in the world, and be stronger
in the end than sordid love of gain and the low ambition
of rivalry in materialistic display. To this
higher life the physician is called. I often wonder
that there are so many men, brilliant men, able men,
with so many talents for success in any calling, willing
to devote their lives to a profession which demands
so much self-sacrifice, so much hardship, so much contact
with suffering, subject to the call of all the world
at any hour of the day or night, involving so much
personal risk, carrying so much heart-breaking responsibility,
responded to by so much constant heroism, a heroism
requiring the risk of life in a service the only glory
of which is a good name and the approval of one’s
conscience.
To the members of such a profession,
in spite of their human infirmities and limitations
and unworthy hangers-on, I bow with admiration and
the respect which we feel for that which is best in
this world.
“H.H.” IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
It seems somehow more nearly an irreparable
loss to us than to “H. H.” that she
did not live to taste her very substantial fame in
Southern California. We should have had such
delight in her unaffected pleasure in it, and it would
have been one of those satisfactions somewhat adequate
to our sense of fitness that are so seldom experienced.
It was my good fortune to see Mrs. Jackson frequently
in the days in New York when she was writing “Ramona,”
which was begun and perhaps finished in the Berkeley
House. The theme had complete possession of her,
and chapter after chapter flowed from her pen as easily
as one would write a letter to a friend; and she had
an ever fresh and vigorous delight in it. I have
often thought that no one enjoyed the sensation of
living more than Mrs. Jackson, or was more alive to
all the influences of nature and the contact of mind
with mind, more responsive to all that was exquisite
and noble either in nature or in society, or more
sensitive to the disagreeable. This is merely
saying that she was a poet; but when she became interested
in the Indians, and especially in the harsh fate of
the Mission Indians in California, all her nature
was fused for the time in a lofty enthusiasm of pity
and indignation, and all her powers seemed to be consecrated
to one purpose. Enthusiasm and sympathy will not
make a novel, but all the same they are necessary
to the production of a work that has in it real vital
quality, and in this case all previous experience
and artistic training became the unconscious servants
of Mrs. Jackson’s heart. I know she had
very little conceit about her performance, but she
had a simple consciousness that she was doing her
best work, and that if the world should care much for
anything she had done, after she was gone, it would
be for “Ramona.” She had put herself
into it.
And yet I am certain that she could
have had no idea what the novel would be to the people
of Southern California, or how it would identify her
name with all that region, and make so many scenes
in it places of pilgrimage and romantic interest for
her sake. I do not mean to say that the people
in California knew personally Ramona and Alessandro,
or altogether believe in them, but that in their idealizations
they recognize a verity and the ultimate truth of
human nature, while in the scenery, in the fading
sentiment of the old Spanish life, and the romance
and faith of the Missions, the author has done for
the region very much what Scott did for the Highlands.
I hope she knows now, I presume she does, that more
than one Indian school in the Territories is called
the Ramona School; that at least two villages in California
are contending for the priority of using the name
Ramona; that all the travelers and tourists (at least
in the time they can spare from real-estate speculations)
go about under her guidance, are pilgrims to the shrines
she has described, and eager searchers for the scenes
she has made famous in her novel; that more than one
city and more than one town claims the honor of connection
with the story; that the tourist has pointed out to
him in more than one village the very house where Ramona
lived, where she was married indeed, that
a little crop of legends has already grown up about
the story itself. I was myself shown the house
in Los Angeles where the story was written, and so
strong is the local impression that I confess to looking
at the rose-embowered cottage with a good deal of
interest, though I had seen the romance growing day
by day in the Berkeley in New York.
The undoubted scene of the loves of
Ramona and Alessandro is the Comulos rancho, on the
railway from Newhall to Santa Paula, the route that
one takes now (unless he wants to have a lifelong
remembrance of the ground swells of the Pacific in
an uneasy little steamer) to go from Los Angeles to
Santa Barbara. It is almost the only one remaining
of the old-fashioned Spanish haciendas, where the
old administration prevails. The new railway
passes it now, and the hospitable owners have been
obliged to yield to the public curiosity and provide
entertainment for a continual stream of visitors.
The place is so perfectly described in “Ramona”
that I do not need to draw it over again, and I violate
no confidence and only certify to the extraordinary
powers of delineation of the novelist, when I say
that she only spent a few hours there, not
a quarter of the time we spent in identifying her
picture. We knew the situation before the train
stopped by the crosses erected on the conspicuous
peaks of the serrated ashy or shall I say
purple hills that enfold the fertile valley.
It is a great domain, watered by a swift river, and
sheltered by wonderfully picturesque mountains.
The house is strictly in the old Spanish style, of
one story about a large court, with flowers and a
fountain, in which are the most noisy if not musical
frogs in the world, and all the interior rooms opening
upon a gallery. The real front is towards the
garden, and here at the end of the gallery is the
elevated room where Father Salvierderra slept when
he passed a night at the hacienda, a pretty
room which has a case of Spanish books, mostly religious
and legal, and some quaint and cheap holy pictures.
We had a letter to Signora Del Valle, the mistress,
and were welcomed with a sort of formal extension
of hospitality that put us back into the courtly manners
of a hundred years ago. The Signora, who is in
no sense the original of the mistress whom “H.
H.” describes, is a widow now for seven years,
and is the vigilant administrator of all her large
domain, of the stock, the grazing lands, the vineyard,
the sheep ranch, and all the people. Rising very
early in the morning, she visits every department,
and no detail is too minute to escape her inspection,
and no one in the great household but feels her authority.
It was a very lovely day on the 17th
of March (indeed, I suppose it had been preceded by
364 days exactly like it) as we sat upon the gallery
looking on the garden, a garden of oranges, roses,
citrons, lemons, peaches what fruit
and flower was not growing there? acres
and acres of vineyard beyond, with the tall cane and
willows by the stream, and the purple mountains against
the sapphire sky. Was there ever anything more
exquisite than the peach-blossoms against that blue
sky! Such a place of peace. A soft south
wind was blowing, and all the air was drowsy with the
hum of bees. In the garden is a vine-covered arbor,
with seats and tables, and at the end of it is the
opening into a little chapel, a domestic chapel, carpeted
like a parlor, and bearing all the emblems of a loving
devotion. By the garden gate hang three small
bells, from some old mission, all cracked, but serving
(each has its office) to summon the workmen or to
call to prayer.
Perfect system reigns in Signora Del
Valle’s establishment, and even the least child
in it has its duty. At sundown a little slip of
a girl went out to the gate and struck one of the
bells. “What is that for?” I asked
as she returned. “It is the Angelus,”
she said simply. I do not know what would happen
to her if she should neglect to strike it at the hour.
At eight o’clock the largest bell was struck,
and the Signora and all her household, including the
house servants, went out to the little chapel in the
garden, which was suddenly lighted with candles, gleaming
brilliantly through the orange groves. The Signora
read the service, the household responding a
twenty minutes’ service, which is as much a part
of the administration of the establishment as visiting
the granaries and presses, and the bringing home of
the goats. The Signora’s apartments, which
she permitted us to see, were quite in the nature of
an oratory, with shrines and sacred pictures and relics
of the faith. By the shrine at the head of her
bed hung the rosary carried by Father Junípero, a
priceless possession. From her presses and armoires,
the Signora, seeing we had a taste for such things,
brought out the feminine treasures of three generations,
the silk and embroidered dresses of last century, the
ribosas, the jewelry, the brilliant stuffs of China
and Mexico, each article with a memory and a flavor.
But I must not be betrayed into writing
about Ramona’s house. How charming indeed
it was the next morning, though the birds
in the garden were astir a little too early, with
the thermometer set to the exact degree of warmth
without languor, the sky blue, the wind soft, the air
scented with orange and jessamine. The Signora
had already visited all her premises before we were
up. We had seen the evening before an enclosure
near the house full of cashmere goats and kids, whose
antics were sufficiently amusing most of
them had now gone afield; workmen were coming for
their orders, plowing was going on in the barley fields,
traders were driving to the plantation store, the fierce
eagle in a big cage by the olive press was raging
at his detention. Within the house enclosure
are an olive mill and press, a wine-press and a great
storehouse of wine, containing now little but empty
casks, a dusky, interesting place, with
pomegranates and dried bunches of grapes and oranges
and pieces of jerked meat hanging from the rafters.
Near by is a cornhouse and a small distillery, and
the corrals for sheep shearing are not far off.
The ranches for cattle and sheep are on the other side
of the mountain.
Peace be with Comulos. It must
please the author of “Ramona” to know that
it continues in the old ways; and I trust she is undisturbed
by the knowledge that the rage for change will not
long let it be what it now is.
SIMPLICITY
No doubt one of the most charming
creations in all poetry is Nausicaa, the white-armed
daughter of King Alcinous. There is no scene,
no picture, in the heroic times more pleasing than
the meeting of Ulysses with this damsel on the wild
seashore of Scheria, where the Wanderer had been tossed
ashore by the tempest. The place of this classic
meeting was probably on the west coast of Corfu, that
incomparable island, to whose beauty the legend of
the exquisite maidenhood of the daughter of the king
of the Phaeacians has added an immortal bloom.
We have no difficulty in recalling
it in all its distinctness: the bright morning
on which Nausicaa came forth from the palace, where
her mother sat and turned the distaff loaded with
a fleece dyed in sea-purple, mounted the car piled
with the robes to be cleansed in the stream, and,
attended by her bright-haired, laughing handmaidens,
drove to the banks of the river, where out of its
sweet grasses it flowed over clean sand into the Adriatic.
The team is loosed to browse the grass; the garments
are flung into the dark water, then trampled with hasty
feet in frolic rivalry, and spread upon the gravel
to dry. Then the maidens bathe, give their limbs
the delicate oil from the cruse of gold, sit by the
stream and eat their meal, and, refreshed, mistress
and maidens lay aside their veils and play at ball,
and Nausicaa begins a song. Though all were fair,
like Diana was this spotless virgin midst her maids.
A missed ball and maidenly screams waken Ulysses from
his sleep in the thicket. At the apparition of
the unclad, shipwrecked sailor the maidens flee right
and left. Nausicaa alone keeps her place, secure
in her unconscious modesty. To the astonished
Sport of Fortune the vision of this radiant girl, in
shape and stature and in noble air, is more than mortal,
yet scarcely more than woman:
“Like
thee, I saw of late,
In Delos, a young palm-tree growing
up
Beside Apollo’s altar.”
When the Wanderer has bathed, and
been clad in robes from the pile on the sand, and
refreshed with food and wine which the hospitable maidens
put before him, the train sets out for the town, Ulysses
following the chariot among the bright-haired women.
But before that Nausicaa, in the candor of those early
days, says to her attendants:
“I
would that I might call
A man like him my husband,
dwelling here
And here content to
dwell.”
Is there any woman in history more
to be desired than this sweet, pure-minded, honest-hearted
girl, as she is depicted with a few swift touches
by the great poet? the dutiful daughter
in her father’s house, the joyous companion
of girls, the beautiful woman whose modest bearing
commands the instant homage of man. Nothing is
more enduring in literature than this girl and the
scene on the Corfu sands.
The sketch, though distinct, is slight,
little more than outlines; no elaboration, no analysis;
just an incident, as real as the blue sky of Scheria
and the waves on the yellow sand. All the elements
of the picture are simple, human, natural, standing
in as unconfused relations as any events in common
life. I am not recalling it because it is a conspicuous
instance of the true realism that is touched with the
ideality of genius, which is the immortal element
in literature, but as an illustration of the other
necessary quality in all productions of the human mind
that remain age after age, and that is simplicity.
This is the stamp of all enduring work; this is what
appeals to the universal understanding from generation
to generation. All the masterpieces that endure
and become a part of our lives are characterized by
it. The eye, like the mind, hates confusion and
overcrowding. All the elements in beauty, grandeur,
pathos, are simple as simple as the lines
in a Nile picture: the strong river, the yellow
desert, the palms, the pyramids; hardly more than a
horizontal line and a perpendicular line; only there
is the sky, the atmosphere, the color-those need genius.
We may test contemporary literature
by its confortuity to the canon of simplicity that
is, if it has not that, we may conclude that it lacks
one essential lasting quality. It may please; it
may be ingenious brilliant, even; it may
be the fashion of the day, and a fashion that will
hold its power of pleasing for half a century, but
it will be a fashion. Mannerisms of course will
not deceive us, nor extravagances, eccentricities,
affectations, nor the straining after effect by the
use of coined or far-fetched words and prodigality
in adjectives. But, style? Yes, there is
such a thing as style, good and bad; and the style
should be the writer’s own and characteristic
of him, as his speech is. But the moment I admire
a style for its own sake, a style that attracts my
attention so constantly that I say, How good that is!
I begin to be suspicious. If it is too good,
too pronouncedly good, I fear I shall not like it
so well on a second reading. If it comes to stand
between me and the thought, or the personality behind
the thought, I grow more and more suspicious.
Is the book a window, through which I am to see life?
Then I cannot have the glass too clear. Is it
to affect me like a strain of music? Then I am
still more disturbed by any affectations. Is it
to produce the effect of a picture? Then I know
I want the simplest harmony of color. And I have
learned that the most effective word-painting, as it
is called, is the simplest. This is true if it
is a question only of present enjoyment. But
we may be sure that any piece of literature which
attracts only by some trick of style, however it may
blaze up for a day and startle the world with its
flash, lacks the element of endurance. We do
not need much experience to tell us the difference
between a lamp and a Roman candle. Even in our
day we have seen many reputations flare up, illuminate
the sky, and then go out in utter darkness. When
we take a proper historical perspective, we see that
it is the universal, the simple, that lasts.
I am not sure whether simplicity is
a matter of nature or of cultivation. Barbarous
nature likes display, excessive ornament; and when
we have arrived at the nobly simple, the perfect proportion,
we are always likely to relapse into the confused
and the complicated. The most cultivated men,
we know, are the simplest in manners, in taste, in
their style. It is a note of some of the purest
modern writers that they avoid comparisons, similes,
and even too much use of metaphor. But the mass
of men are always relapsing into the tawdry and the
over-ornamented. It is a characteristic of youth,
and it seems also to be a characteristic of over-development.
Literature, in any language, has no sooner arrived
at the highest vigor of simple expression than it
begins to run into prettiness, conceits, over-elaboration.
This is a fact which may be verified by studying different
periods, from classic literature to our own day.
It is the same with architecture.
The classic Greek runs into the excessive elaboration
of the Roman period, the Gothic into the flamboyant,
and so on. We, have had several attacks of architectural
measles in this country, which have left the land spotted
all over with houses in bad taste. Instead of
developing the colonial simplicity on lines of dignity
and harmony to modern use, we stuck on the pseudo-classic,
we broke out in the Mansard, we broke all up into the
whimsicalities of the so-called Queen Anne, without
regard to climate or comfort. The eye speedily
tires of all these things. It is a positive relief
to look at an old colonial mansion, even if it is as
plain as a barn. What the eye demands is simple
lines, proportion, harmony in mass, dignity; above
all, adaptation to use. And what we must have
also is individuality in house and in furniture; that
makes the city, the village, picturesque and interesting.
The highest thing in architecture, as in literature,
is the development of individuality in simplicity.
Dress is a dangerous topic to meddle
with. I myself like the attire of the maidens
of Scheria, though Nausicaa, we must note, was “clad
royally.” But climate cannot be disregarded,
and the vestment that was so fitting on a Greek girl
whom I saw at the Second Cataract of the Nile would
scarcely be appropriate in New York. If the maidens
of one of our colleges for girls, say Vassar for illustration,
habited like the Phaeacian girls of Scheria, went
down to the Hudson to cleanse the rich robes of the
house, and were surprised by the advent of a stranger
from the city, landing from a steamboat a
wandering broker, let us say, clad in wide trousers,
long topcoat, and a tall hat I fancy that
he would be more astonished than Ulysses was at the
bevy of girls that scattered at his approach.
It is not that women must be all things to all men,
but that their simplicity must conform to time and
circumstance. What I do not understand is that
simplicity gets banished altogether, and that fashion,
on a dictation that no one can trace the origin of,
makes that lovely in the eyes of women today which
will seem utterly abhorrent to them tomorrow.
There appears to be no line of taste running through
the changes. The only consolation to you, the
woman of the moment, is that while the costume your
grandmother wore makes her, in the painting, a guy
in your eyes, the costume you wear will give your grandchildren
the same impression of you. And the satisfaction
for you is the thought that the latter raiment will
be worse than the other two that is to say,
less well suited to display the shape, station, and
noble air which brought Ulysses to his knees on the
sands of Corfu.
Another reason why I say that I do
not know whether simplicity belongs to nature or art
is that fashion is as strong to pervert and disfigure
in savage nations as it is in civilized. It runs
to as much eccentricity in hair-dressing and ornament
in the costume of the jingling belles of Nootka and
the maidens of Nubia as in any court or coterie which
we aspire to imitate. The only difference is
that remote and unsophisticated communities are more
constant to a style they once adopt. There are
isolated peasant communities in Europe who have kept
for centuries the most uncouth and inconvenient attire,
while we have run through a dozen variations in the
art of attraction by dress, from the most puffed and
bulbous ballooning to the extreme of limpness and lankness.
I can only conclude that the civilized human being
is a restless creature, whose motives in regard to
costumes are utterly unfathomable.
We need, however, to go a little further
in this question of simplicity. Nausicaa was
“clad royally.” There was a distinction,
then, between her and her handmaidens. She was
clad simply, according to her condition. Taste
does not by any means lead to uniformity. I have
read of a commune in which all the women dressed alike
and unbecomingly, so as to discourage all attempt
to please or attract, or to give value to the different
accents of beauty. The end of those women was
worse than the beginning. Simplicity is not ugliness,
nor poverty, nor barrenness, nor necessarily plainness.
What is simplicity for another may not be for you,
for your condition, your tastes, especially for your
wants. It is a personal question. You go
beyond simplicity when you attempt to appropriate
more than your wants, your aspirations, whatever they
are, demand that is, to appropriate for
show, for ostentation, more than your life can assimilate,
can make thoroughly yours. There is no limit to
what you may have, if it is necessary for you, if
it is not a superfluity to you. What would be
simplicity to you may be superfluity to another.
The rich robes that Nausicaa wore she wore like a
goddess. The moment your dress, your house, your
house-grounds, your furniture, your scale of living,
are beyond the rational satisfaction of your own desires that
is, are for ostentation, for imposition upon the public they
are superfluous, the line of simplicity is passed.
Every human being has a right to whatever can best
feed his life, satisfy his legitimate desires, contribute
to the growth of his soul. It is not for me to
judge whether this is luxury or want. There is
no merit in riches nor in poverty. There is merit
in that simplicity of life which seeks to grasp no
more than is necessary for the development and enjoyment
of the individual. Most of us, in all conditions;
are weighted down with superfluities or worried to
acquire them. Simplicity is making the journey
of this life with just baggage enough.
The needs of every person differ from
the needs of every other; we can make no standard
for wants or possessions. But the world would
be greatly transformed and much more easy to live
in if everybody limited his acquisitions to his ability
to assimilate them to his life. The destruction
of simplicity is a craving for things, not because
we need them, but because others have them. Because
one man who lives in a plain little house, in all
the restrictions of mean surroundings, would be happier
in a mansion suited to his taste and his wants, is
no argument that another man, living in a palace,
in useless ostentation, would not be better off in
a dwelling which conforms to his cultivation and habits.
It is so hard to learn the lesson that there is no
satisfaction in gaining more than we personally want.
The matter of simplicity, then, comes
into literary style, into building, into dress, into
life, individualized always by one’s personality.
In each we aim at the expression of the best that
is in us, not at imitation or ostentation.
The women in history, in legend, in
poetry, whom we love, we do not love because they
are “clad royally.” In our day, to
be clad royally is scarcely a distinction. To
have a superfluity is not a distinction. But
in those moments when we have a clear vision of life,
that which seems to us most admirable and desirable
is the simplicity that endears to us the idyl of Nausicaa.
THE ENGLISH VOLUNTEERS DURING THE LATE INVASION
The most painful event since the bombardment
of Alexandria has been what is called by an English
writer the “invasion” of “American
Literature in England.” The hostile forces,
with an advanced guard of what was regarded as an
“awkward squad,” had been gradually effecting
a landing and a lodgment not unwelcome to the unsuspicious
natives. No alarm was taken when they threw out
a skirmish-line of magazines and began to deploy an
occasional wild poet, who advanced in buckskin leggings,
revolver in hand, or a stray sharp-shooting sketcher
clad in the picturesque robes of the sunset.
Put when the main body of American novelists got fairly
ashore and into position the literary militia of the
island rose up as one man, with the strength of a
thousand, to repel the invaders and sweep them back
across the Atlantic. The spectacle had a dramatic
interest. The invaders were not numerous, did
not carry their native tomahawks, they had been careful
to wash off the frightful paint with which they usually
go into action, they did not utter the defiant whoop
of Pogram, and even the militia regarded them as on
the whole “amusin’ young ’possums”
and yet all the resources of modern and ancient warfare
were brought to bear upon them. There was a crack
of revolvers from the daily press, a lively fusillade
of small-arms in the astonished weeklies, a discharge
of point-blank blunderbusses from the monthlies; and
some of the heavy quarterlies loaded up the old pieces
of ordnance, that had not been charged in forty years,
with slugs and brickbats and junk-bottles, and poured
in raking broadsides. The effect on the island
was something tremendous: it shook and trembled,
and was almost hidden in the smoke of the conflict.
What the effect is upon the invaders it is too soon
to determine. If any of them survive, it will
be God’s mercy to his weak and innocent children.
It must be said that the American
people such of them as were aware of this
uprising took the punishment of their presumption
in a sweet and forgiving spirit. If they did
not feel that they deserved it, they regarded it as
a valuable contribution to the study of sociology and
race characteristics, in which they have taken a lively
interest of late. We know how it is ourselves,
they said; we used to be thin-skinned and self-conscious
and sensitive. We used to wince and cringe under
English criticism, and try to strike back in a blind
fury. We have learned that criticism is good
for us, and we are grateful for it from any source.
We have learned that English criticism is dictated
by love for us, by a warm interest in our intellectual
development, just as English anxiety about our revenue
laws is based upon a yearning that our down-trodden
millions shall enjoy the benefits of free-trade.
We did not understand why a country that admits our
beef and grain and cheese should seem to seek protection
against a literary product which is brought into competition
with one of the great British staples, the modern novel.
It seemed inconsistent. But we are no more consistent
ourselves. We cannot understand the action of
our own Congress, which protects the American author
by a round duty on foreign books and refuses to protect
him by granting a foreign copyright; or, to put it
in another way, is willing to steal the brains of
the foreign author under the plea of free knowledge,
but taxes free knowledge in another form. We have
no defense to make of the state of international copyright,
though we appreciate the complication of the matter
in the conflicting interests of English and American
publishers.
Yes; we must insist that, under the
circumstances, the American people have borne this
outburst of English criticism in an admirable spirit.
It was as unexpected as it was sudden. Now, for
many years our international relations have been uncommonly
smooth, oiled every few days by complimentary banquet
speeches, and sweetened by abundance of magazine and
newspaper “taffy.” Something too much
of “taffy” we have thought was given us
at times for, in getting bigger in various ways, we
have grown more modest. Though our English admirers
may not believe it, we see our own faults more clearly
than we once did thanks, partly, to the
faithful castigations of our friends and
we sometimes find it difficult to conceal our blushes
when we are over-praised. We fancied that we were
going on, as an English writer on “Down-Easters”
used to say, as “slick as île,” when
this miniature tempest suddenly burst out in a revival
of the language and methods used in the redoubtable
old English periodicals forty years ago. We were
interested in seeing how exactly this sort of criticism
that slew our literary fathers was revived now for
the execution of their degenerate children. And
yet it was not exactly the same. We used to call
it “slang-whanging.” One form of it
was a blank surprise at the pretensions of American
authors, and a dismissal with the formula of previous
ignorance of their existence. This is modified
now by a modest expression of “discomfiture”
on reading of American authors “whose very names,
much less peculiarities, we never heard of before.”
This is a tribunal from which there is no appeal.
Not to have been heard of by an Englishman is next
door to annihilation. It is at least discouraging
to an author who may think he has gained some reputation
over what is now conceded to be a considerable portion
of the earth’s surface, to be cast into total
obscurity by the negative damnation of English ignorance.
There is to us something pathetic in this and in the
surprise of the English critic, that there can be any
standard of respectable achievement outside of a seven-miles
radius turning on Charing Cross.
The pathetic aspect of the case has
not, however, we are sorry to say, struck the American
press, which has too often treated with unbecoming
levity this unaccountable exhibition of English sensitiveness.
There has been little reply to it; at most, generally
only an amused report of the war, and now and then
a discriminating acceptance of some of the criticism
as just, with a friendly recognition of the fact that
on the whole the critic had done very well considering
the limitation of his knowledge of the subject on
which he wrote. What is certainly noticeable
is an entire absence of the irritation that used to
be caused by similar comments on America thirty years
ago. Perhaps the Americans are reserving their
fire as their ancestors did at Bunker Hill, conscious,
maybe, that in the end they will be driven out of
their slight literary entrenchments. Perhaps
they were disarmed by the fact that the acrid criticism
in the London Quarterly Review was accompanied by a
cordial appreciation of the novels that seemed to
the reviewer characteristically American. The
interest in the tatter’s review of our poor field
must be languid, however, for nobody has taken the
trouble to remind its author that Brockden Brown who
is cited as a typical American writer, true to local
character, scenery, and color put no more
flavor of American life and soil in his books than
is to be found in “Frankenstein.”
It does not, I should suppose, lie
in the way of The Century, whose general audience
on both sides of the Atlantic takes only an amused
interest in this singular revival of a traditional
literary animosity an anachronism in these
tolerant days when the reading world cares less and
less about the origin of literature that pleases it it
does not lie in the way of The Century to do more
than report this phenomenal literary effervescence.
And yet it cannot escape a certain responsibility as
an immediate though innocent occasion of this exhibition
of international courtesy, because its last November
number contained some papers that seem to have been
irritating. In one of them Mr. Howells let fall
some chance remarks on the tendency of modern fiction,
without adequately developing his theory, which were
largely dissented from in this country, and were like
the uncorking of six vials in England. The other
was an essay on England, dictated by admiration for
the achievements of the foremost nation of our time,
which, from the awkwardness of the eulogist, was unfortunately
the uncorking of the seventh vial an uncorking
which, as we happen to know, so prostrated the writer
that he resolved never to attempt to praise England
again. His panic was somewhat allayed by the
soothing remark in a kindly paper in Blackwood’s
Magazine for January, that the writer had discussed
his theme “by no means unfairly or disrespectfully.”
But with a shudder he recognized what a peril he had
escaped. Great Scott! the reference
is to a local American deity who is invoked in war,
and not to the Biblical commentator what
would have happened to him if he had spoken of England
“disrespectfully”!
We gratefully acknowledge also the
remark of the Blackwood writer in regard-to the claims
of America in literature. “These claims,”
he says, “we have hitherto been very charitable
to.” How our life depends upon a continual
exhibition by the critics of this divine attribute
of charity it would perhaps be unwise in us to confess.
We can at least take courage that it exists who
does not need it in this world of misunderstandings? since
we know that charity is not puffed up, vaunteth not
itself, hopeth all things, endureth all things, is
not easily provoked; whether there be tongues, they
shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall
vanish; but charity never faileth. And when all
our “dialects” on both sides of the water
shall vanish, and we shall speak no more Yorkshire
or Cape Cod, or London cockney or “Pike”
or “Cracker” vowel flatness, nor write
them any more, but all use the noble simplicity of
the ideal English, and not indulge in such odd-sounding
phrases as this of our critic that “the combatants
on both sides were by way of detesting each other,”
though we speak with the tongues of men and of angels we
shall still need charity.
It will occur to the charitable that
the Americans are at a disadvantage in this little
international “tiff.” For while the
offenders have inconsiderately written over their
own names, the others preserve a privileged anonymity.
Any attempt to reply to these voices out of the dark
reminds one of the famous duel between the Englishman
and the Frenchman which took place in a pitch-dark
chamber, with the frightful result that when the tender-hearted
Englishman discharged his revolver up the chimney
he brought down his man. One never can tell in
a case of this kind but a charitable shot might bring
down a valued friend or even a peer of the realm.
In all soberness, however, and setting
aside the open question, which country has most diverged
from the English as it was at the time of the separation
of the colonies from the motherland, we may be permitted
a word or two in the hope of a better understanding.
The offense in The Century paper on “England”
seems to have been in phrases such as these:
“When we began to produce something that was
the product of our own soil and of our own social
conditions, it was still judged by the old standards;”
and, we are no longer irritated by “the snobbishness
of English critics of a certain school,” “for
we see that its criticism is only the result of ignorance
simply of inability to understand.”
Upon this the reviewer affects to
lose his respiration, and with “a gasp of incredulity”
wants to know what the writer means, “and what
standards he proposes to himself when he has given
up the English ones?” The reviewer makes a more
serious case than the writer intended, or than a fair
construction of the context of his phrases warrants.
It is the criticism of “a certain school”
only that was said to be the result of ignorance.
It is not the English language nor its body of enduring
literature the noblest monument of our common
civilization that the writer objected to
as a standard of our performances. The standard
objected to is the narrow insular one (the term “insular”
is used purely as a geographical one) that measures
life, social conditions, feeling, temperament, and
national idiosyncrasies expressed in our literature
by certain fixed notions prevalent in England.
Probably also the expression of national peculiarities
would diverge somewhat from the “old standards.”
All we thought of asking was that allowance should
be made for this expression and these peculiarities,
as it would be made in case of other literatures and
peoples. It might have occurred to our critics,
we used to think, to ask themselves whether the English
literature is not elastic enough to permit the play
of forces in it which are foreign to their experience.
Genuine literature is the expression, we take it, of
life-and truth to that is the standard of its success.
Reference was intended to this, and not to the common
canons of literary art. But we have given up
the expectation that the English critic “of a
certain school” will take this view of it, and
this is the plain reason not intended to
be offensive why much of the English criticism
has ceased to be highly valued in this country, and
why it has ceased to annoy. At the same time,
it ought to be added, English opinion, when it is seen
to be based upon knowledge, is as highly respected
as ever. And nobody in America, so far as we
know, entertains, or ever entertained, the idea of
setting aside as standards the master-minds in British
literature. In regard to the “inability
to understand,” we can, perhaps, make ourselves
more clearly understood, for the Blackwood’s
reviewer has kindly furnished us an illustration in
this very paper, when he passes in patronizing review
the novels of Mr. Howells. In discussing the character
of Lydia Blood, in “The Lady of the Aroostook,”
he is exceedingly puzzled by the fact that a girl
from rural New England, brought up amid surroundings
homely in the extreme, should have been considered
a lady. He says:
“The really ‘American
thing’ in it is, we think, quite undiscovered
either by the author or his heroes, and that is the
curious confusion of classes which attributes to a
girl brought up on the humblest level all the prejudices
and necessities of the highest society. Granting
that there was anything dreadful in it, the daughter
of a homely small farmer in England is not guarded
and accompanied like a young lady on her journeys
from one place to another. Probably her mother
at home would be disturbed, like Lydia’s aunt,
at the thought that there was no woman on board, in
case her child should be ill or lonely; but, as for
any impropriety, would never think twice on that subject.
The difference is that the English girl would not
be a young lady. She would find her sweetheart
among the sailors, and would have nothing to say to
the gentlemen. This difference is far more curious
than the misadventure, which might have happened anywhere,
and far more remarkable than the fact that the gentlemen
did behave to her like gentlemen, and did their best
to set her at ease, which we hope would have happened
anywhere else. But it is, we think, exclusively
American, and very curious and interesting, that this
young woman, with her antecedents so distinctly set
before us, should be represented as a lady, not at
all out of place among her cultivated companions,
and ’ready to become an ornament of society the
moment she lands in Venice.”
Reams of writing could not more clearly
explain what is meant by “inability to understand”
American conditions and to judge fairly the literature
growing out of them; and reams of writing would be
wasted in the attempt to make our curious critic comprehend
the situation. There is nothing in his experience
of “farmers’ daughters” to give him
the key to it. We might tell him that his notion
of a farmer’s daughters in England does not
apply to New England. We might tell him of a sort
of society of which he has no conception and can have
none, of farmers’ daughters and farmers’
wives in New England more numerous, let
us confess, thirty or forty years ago than now who
lived in homely conditions, dressed with plainness,
and followed the fashions afar off; did their own household
work, even the menial parts of it; cooked the meals
for the “men folks” and the “hired
help,” made the butter and cheese, and performed
their half of the labor that wrung an honest but not
luxurious living from the reluctant soil. And
yet those women the sweet and gracious ornaments
of a self-respecting society were full
of spirit, of modest pride in their position, were
familiar with much good literature, could converse
with piquancy and understanding on subjects of general
interest, were trained in the subtleties of a solid
theology, and bore themselves in any company with
that traditional breeding which we associate with the
name of lady. Such strong native sense had they,
such innate refinement and courtesythe product, it
used to be said, of plain living and high thinking that,
ignorant as they might be of civic ways, they would,
upon being introduced to them, need only a brief space
of time to “orient” themselves to the
new circumstances. Much more of this sort might
be said without exaggeration. To us there is
nothing incongruous in the supposition that Lydia
Blood was “ready to become an ornament to society
the moment she lands in Venice.”
But we lack the missionary spirit
necessary to the exertion to make our interested critic
comprehend such a social condition, and we prefer to
leave ourselves to his charity, in the hope of the
continuance of which we rest in serenity.
NATHAN HALE1887
In a Memorial Day address at New Haven
in 1881, the Hon. Richard D. Hubbard suggested the
erection of a statue to Nathan Hale in the State Capitol.
With the exception of the monument in Coventry no memorial
of the young hero existed. The suggestion was
acted on by the Hon. E. S. Cleveland, who introduced
a resolution in the House of Representatives in the
session of 1883, appropriating money for the purpose.
The propriety of this was urged before a committee
of the Legislature by Governor Hubbard, in a speech
of characteristic grace and eloquence, seconded by
the Hon. Henry C. Robinson and the Hon. Stephen W.
Kellogg. The Legislature appropriated the sum
of five thousand dollars for a statue in bronze, and
a committee was appointed to procure it. They
opened a public competition, and, after considerable
delay, during which the commission was changed by
death and by absence, indeed four successive
governors, Hubbard, Waller, Harrison, and Lounsbury
have served on it, the work was awarded
to Karl Gerhardt, a young sculptor who began his career
in this city. It was finished in clay, and accepted
in October, 1886, put in plaster, and immediately
sent to the foundry of Melzar Masman in Chicopee,
Massachusetts.
Today in all its artistic perfection
and beauty it stands here to be revealed to the public
gaze. It is proper that the citizens of Connecticut
should know how much of this result they owe to the
intelligent zeal of Mr. Cleveland, the mover of the
resolution in the Legislature, who in the commission,
and before he became a member of it, has spared neither
time nor effort to procure a memorial worthy of the
hero and of the State. And I am sure that I speak
the unanimous sentiment of the commission in the regret
that the originator of this statue could not have
seen the consummation of his idea, and could not have
crowned it with the one thing lacking on this occasion,
the silver words of eloquence we always heard from
his lips, that compact, nervous speech, the perfect
union of strength and grace; for who so fitly as the
lamented Hubbard could have portrayed the moral heroism
of the Martyr-Spy?
This is not a portrait statue.
There is no likeness of Nathan Hale extant. The
only known miniature of his face, in the possession
of the lady to whom he was betrothed at the time of
his death, disappeared many years ago. The artist
was obliged, therefore, to create an ideal figure,
aided by a few fragmentary descriptions of Hale’s
personal appearance. His object has been to represent
an American youth of the period, an American patriot
and scholar, whose manly beauty and grace tradition
loves to recall, to represent in face and in bearing
the moral elevation of character that made him conspicuous
among his fellows, and to show forth, if possible,
the deed that made him immortal. For it is the
deed and the memorable last words we think of when
we think of Hale. I know that by one of the canons
of art it is held that sculpture should rarely fix
a momentary action; but if this can be pardoned in
the Laocoon, where suffering could not otherwise be
depicted to excite the sympathy of the spectator,
surely it can be justified in this case, where, as
one may say, the immortality of the subject rests
upon a single act, upon a phrase, upon the attitude
of the moment. For all the man’s life, all
his character, flowered and blossomed into immortal
beauty in this one supreme moment of self-sacrifice,
triumph, defiance. The ladder of the gallows-tree
on which the deserted boy stood, amidst the enemies
of his country, when he uttered those last words which
all human annals do not parallel in simple patriotism, the
ladder I am sure ran up to heaven, and if angels were
not seen ascending and descending it in that gray
morning, there stood the embodiment of American courage,
unconquerable, American faith, invincible, American
love of country, unquenchable, a new democratic manhood
in the world, visible there for all men to take note
of, crowned already with the halo of victory in the
Revolutionary dawn. Oh, my Lord Howe! it seemed
a trifling incident to you and to your bloodhound,
Provost Marshal Cunningham, but those winged last words
were worth ten thousand men to the drooping patriot
army. Oh, your Majesty, King George the Third!
here was a spirit, could you but have known it, that
would cost you an empire, here was an ignominious death
that would grow in the estimation of mankind, increasing
in nobility above the fading pageantry of kings.
On the 21st of April, 1775, a messenger,
riding express from Boston to New York with the tidings
of Lexington and Concord, reached New London.
The news created intense excitement. A public
meeting was called in the court-house at twilight,
and among the speakers who exhorted the people to
take up arms at once, was one, a youth not yet twenty
years of age, who said, “Let us march immediately,
and never lay down our arms until we have obtained
our independence,” one of the first,
perhaps the first, of the public declarations of the
purpose of independence. It was Nathan Hale,
already a person of some note in the colony, of a family
then not unknown and destined in various ways to distinction
in the Republic. A kinsman of the same name lost
his life in the Louisburg fight. He had been
for a year the preceptor of the Union Grammar School
at New London. The morning after the meeting
he was enrolled as a volunteer, and soon marched away
with his company to Cambridge.
Nathan Hale, descended from Robert
Hale who settled in Charlestown in 1632, a scion of
the Hales of Kent, England, was born in Coventry,
Connecticut, on the 6th of June, 1755, the sixth child
of Richard Hale and his wife Elizabeth Strong, persons
of strong intellect and the highest moral character,
and Puritans of the strictest observances. Brought
up in this atmosphere, in which duty and moral rectitude
were the unquestioned obligations in life, he came
to manhood with a character that enabled him to face
death or obloquy without flinching, when duty called,
so that his behavior at the last was not an excitement
of the moment, but the result of ancestry, training,
and principle. Feeble physically in infancy,
he developed into a robust boy, strong in mind and
body, a lively, sweet-tempered, beautiful youth, and
into a young manhood endowed with every admirable
quality. In feats of strength and agility he
recalls the traditions of Washington; he early showed
a remarkable avidity for knowledge, which was so sought
that he became before he was of age one of the best
educated young men of his time in the colonies.
He was not only a classical scholar, with the limitations
of those days; but, what was then rare, he made scientific
attainments which greatly impressed those capable
of judging, and he had a taste for art and a remarkable
talent as an artist. His father intended him for
the ministry. He received his preparatory education
from Dr. Joseph Huntington, a classical scholar and
the pastor of the church in Coventry, entered Yale
College at the age of sixteen, and graduated with high
honors in a class of sixty, in September, 1773.
At the time of his graduation his personal appearance
was notable. Dr. Enos Monro of New Haven, who
knew him well in the last year at Yale, said of him,
“He was almost six feet in height,
perfectly proportioned, and in figure and deportment
he was the most manly man I have ever met. His
chest was broad; his muscles were firm; his face wore
a most benign expression; his complexion was roseate;
his eyes were light blue and beamed with intelligence;
his hair was soft and light brown in color, and
his speech was rather low, sweet, and musical.
His personal beauty and grace of manner were most
charming. Why, all the girls in New Haven
fell in love with him,” said Dr. Munro, “and
wept tears of real sorrow when they heard of his
sad fate. In dress he was always neat; he
was quick to lend a hand to a being in distress,
brute or human; was overflowing with good humor, and
was the idol of all his acquaintances.”
Dr. Jared Sparks, who knew several
of Hale’s intimate friends, writes of him:
“Possessing genius, taste, and
order, he became distinguished as a scholar; and
endowed in an eminent degree with those graces and
gifts of Nature which add a charm to youthful excellence,
he gained universal esteem and confidence.
To high moral worth and irreproachable habits were
joined gentleness of manner, an ingenuous disposition,
and vigor of understanding. No young man of his
years put forth a fairer promise of future usefulness
and celebrity; the fortunes of none were fostered
more sincerely by the generous good wishes of his
superiors.”
It was remembered at Yale that he
was a brilliant debater as well as scholar. At
his graduation he engaged in a debate on the question,
“Whether the education of daughters be not, without
any just reason, more neglected than that of the sons.”
“In this debate,” wrote James Hillhouse,
one of his classmates, “he was the champion of
the daughters, and most ably advocated their cause.
You may be sure that he received the plaudits of the
ladies present.”
Hale seems to have had an irresistible
charm for everybody. He was a favorite in society;
he had the manners and the qualities that made him
a leader among men and gained him the admiration of
women. He was always intelligently busy, and
had the Yankee ingenuity, he “could
do anything but spin,” he used to say to the
girls of Coventry, laughing over the spinning wheel.
There is a universal testimony to his alert intelligence,
vivacity, manliness, sincerity, and winningness.
It is probable that while still an
under-graduate at Yale, he was engaged to Alice Adams,
who was born in Canterbury, a young lady distinguished
then as she was afterwards for great beauty and intelligence.
After Hale’s death she married Mr. Eleazer Ripley,
and was left a widow at the age of eighteen, with
one child, who survived its father only one year.
She married, the second time, William Lawrence, Esq.,
of Hartford, and died in this city, greatly respected
and admired, in 1845, aged eighty-eight. It is
a touching note of the hold the memory of her young
hero had upon her admiration that her last words, murmured
as life was ebbing, were, “Write to Nathan.”
Hale’s short career in the American
army need not detain us. After his flying visit
as a volunteer to Cambridge, he returned to New London,
joined a company with the rank of lieutenant, participated
in the siege of Boston, was commissioned a captain
in the Nineteenth Connecticut Regiment in January,
1776, performed the duties of a soldier with vigilance,
bravery, and patience, and was noted for the discipline
of his company. In the last dispiriting days
of 1775, when the terms of his men had expired, he
offered to give them his month’s pay if they
would remain a month longer. He accompanied the
army to New York, and shared its fortunes in that
discouraging spring and summer. Shortly after
his arrival Captain Hale distinguished himself by
the brilliant exploit of cutting out a British sloop,
laden with provisions, from under the guns of the
man-of-war “Asia,” sixty-four, lying in
the East River, and bringing her triumphantly into
slip. During the summer he suffered a severe
illness.
The condition of the American army
and cause on the 1st of September, 1776, after the
retreat from Long Island, was critical. The army
was demoralized, clamoring in vain for pay, and deserting
by companies and regiments; one-third of the men were
without tents, one-fourth of them were on the sick
list. On the 7th, Washington called a council
of war, and anxiously inquired what should be done.
On the 12th it was determined to abandon the city
and take possession of Harlem Heights. The British
army, twenty-five thousand strong, admirably equipped,
and supported by a powerful naval force, threatened
to envelop our poor force, and finish the war in a
stroke. Washington was unable to penetrate the
designs of the British commander, or to obtain any
trusty information of the intentions or the movements
of the British army. Information was imperatively
necessary to save us from destruction, and it could
only be obtained by one skilled in military and scientific
knowledge and a good draughtsman, a man of quick eye,
cool head, tact, sagacity, and courage, and one whose
judgment and fidelity could be trusted. Washington
applied to Lieutenant-Colonel Knowlton, who summoned
a conference of officers in the name of the commander-in-chief,
and laid the matter before them. No one was willing
to undertake the dangerous and ignominious mission.
Knowlton was in despair, and late in the conference
was repeating the necessity, when a young officer,
pale from recent illness, entered the room and said,
“I will undertake it.” It was Captain
Nathan Hale. Everybody was astonished. His
friends besought him not to attempt it. In vain.
Hale was under no illusion. He silenced all remonstrances
by saying that he thought he owed his country the
accomplishment of an object so important and so much
desired by the commander-in-chief, and he knew no
way to obtain the information except by going into
the enemy’s camp in disguise. “I
wish to be useful,” he said; “and every
kind of service necessary for the public good becomes
honorable by being necessary. If the exigencies
of my country demand a peculiar service, its claims
to the performance of that service are imperious.”
The tale is well known. Hale
crossed over from Norwalk to Huntington Cove on Long
Island. In the disguise of a schoolmaster, he
penetrated the British lines and the city, made accurate
drawings of the fortifications, and memoranda in Latin
of all that he observed, which he concealed between
the soles of his shoes, and returned to the point on
the shore where he had first landed. He expected
to be met by a boat and to cross the Sound to Norwalk
the next morning. The next morning he was captured,
no doubt by Tory treachery, and taken to Howe’s
headquarters, the mansion of James Beekman, situated
at (the present) Fiftieth Street and First Avenue.
That was on the 21st of September. Without trial
and upon the evidence found on his person, Howe condemned
him to be hanged as a spy early next morning.
Indeed Hale made no attempt at defense. He frankly
owned his mission, and expressed regret that he could
not serve his country better. His open, manly
bearing and high spirit commanded the respect of his
captors. Mercy he did not expect, and pity was
not shown him. The British were irritated by
a conflagration which had that morning laid almost
a third of the city in ashes, and which they attributed
to incendiary efforts to deprive them of agreeable
winter quarters. Hale was at first locked up
in the Beekman greenhouse. Whether he remained
there all night is not known, and the place of his
execution has been disputed; but the best evidence
seems to be that it took place on the farm of Colonel
Rutger, on the west side, in the orchard in the vicinity
of the present East Broadway and Market Street, and
that he was hanged to the limb of an apple-tree.
It was a lovely Sunday morning, before
the break of day, that he was marched to the place
of execution, September 22d. While awaiting the
necessary preparations, a courteous young officer permitted
him to sit in his tent. He asked for the presence
of a chaplain; the request was refused. He asked
for a Bible; it was denied. But at the solicitation
of the young officer he was furnished with writing
materials, and wrote briefly to his mother, his sister,
and his betrothed. When the infamous Cunningham,
to whom Howe had delivered him, read what was written,
he was furious at the noble and dauntless spirit shown,
and with foul oaths tore the letters into shreds,
saying afterwards “that the rebels should never
know that they had a man who could die with such firmness.”
As Hale stood upon the fatal ladder, Cunningham taunted
him, and tauntingly demanded his “last dying
speech and confession.” The hero did not
heed the words of the brute, but, looking calmly upon
the spectators, said in a clear voice, “I only
regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.”
And the ladder was snatched from under him.
My friends, we are not honoring today
a lad who appears for a moment in a heroic light,
but one of the most worthy of the citizens of Connecticut,
who has by his lofty character long honored her, wherever
patriotism is not a mere name, and where Christian
manhood is respected. We have had many heroes,
many youths of promise, and men of note, whose names
are our only great and enduring riches; but no one
of them all better illustrated, short as was his career,
the virtues we desire for all our sons. We have
long delayed this tribute to his character and his
deeds, but in spite of our neglect his fame has grown
year by year, as war and politics have taught us what
is really admirable in a human being; and we are now
sure that we are not erecting a monument to an ephemeral
reputation. It is fit that it should stand here,
one of the chief distinctions of our splendid Capitol,
here in the political centre of the State, here in
the city where first in all the world was proclaimed
and put into a political charter the fundamental idea
of democracy, that “government rests upon the
consent of the people,” here in the city where
by the action of these self existing towns was formed
the model, the town and the commonwealth, the bi-cameral
legislature, of our constitutional federal union.
If the soul of Nathan Hale, immortal in youth in the
air of heaven, can behold today this scene, as doubtless
it can, in the midst of a State whose prosperity the
young colonist could not have imagined in his wildest
dreams for his country, he must feel anew the truth
that there is nothing too sacred for a man to give
for his native land.
Governor Lounsbury, the labor of the
commission is finished. On their behalf I present
this work of art to the State of Connecticut.
Let the statue speak for itself.