BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
The county of Franklin in Northwestern
Massachusetts, if not rivaling in certain ways the
adjoining Berkshire, has still a romantic beauty of
its own. In the former half of the nineteenth
century its population was largely given up to the
pursuit of agriculture, though not under altogether
favorable conditions. Manufactures had not yet
invaded the region either to add to its wealth or
to defile its streams. The villages were small,
the roads pretty generally wretched save in summer,
and from many of the fields the most abundant crop
that could be gathered was that of stones.
The character of the people conformed
in many ways to that of the soil. The houses
which lined the opposite sides of the single street,
of which the petty places largely consisted, as well
as the dwellings which dotted the country, were the
homes of men who possessed in fullness many of the
features, good and bad, that characterized the Puritan
stock to which they belonged. There was a good
deal of religion in these rural communities and occasionally
some culture. Still, as a rule, it must be confessed,
there would be found in them much more of plain living
than of high thinking. Broad thinking could hardly
be said to exist at all. By the dwellers in that
region Easter had scarcely even been heard of; Christmas
was tolerated after a fashion, but was nevertheless
looked upon with a good deal of suspicion as a Popish
invention. In the beliefs of these men several
sins not mentioned in the decalogue took really, if
unconsciously, precedence of those which chanced to
be found in that list. Dancing was distinctly
immoral; card-playing led directly to gambling with
all its attendant evils; theatre-going characterized
the conduct of the more disreputable denizens of great
cities. Fiction was not absolutely forbidden;
but the most lenient regarded it as a great waste
of time, and the boy who desired its solace on any
large scale was under the frequent necessity of seeking
the seclusion of the haymow.
But however rigid and stern the beliefs
of men might be, nature was there always charming,
not only in her summer beauty, but even in her wildest
winter moods. Narrow, too, as might be the views
of the members of these communities about the conduct
of life, there was ever before the minds of the best
of them an ideal of devotion to duty, an earnest all-pervading
moral purpose which implanted the feeling that neither
personal success nor pleasure of any sort could ever
afford even remotely compensation for the neglect
of the least obligation which their situation imposed.
It was no misfortune for any one, who was later to
be transported to a broader horizon and more genial
air, to have struck the roots of his being in a soil
where men felt the full sense of moral responsibility
for everything said or done, and where the conscience
was almost as sensitive to the suggestion of sin as
to its actual accomplishment.
It was amidst such surroundings that
Charles Dudley Warner was born on the 12th of September,
1829. His birthplace was the hill town of Plainfield,
over two thousand feet above the level of the sea.
His father, a farmer, was a man of cultivation, though
not college-bred. He died when his eldest son
had reached the age of five, leaving to his widow
the care of two children. Three years longer the
family continued to remain on the farm. But however
delightful the scenery of the country might be, its
aesthetic attractions did not sufficiently counterbalance
its agricultural disadvantages. Furthermore, while
the summers were beautiful on this high table land,
the winters were long and dreary in the enforced solitude
of a thinly settled region. In consequence, the
farm was sold after the death of the grandfather, and
the home broken up. The mother with her two children,
went to the neighboring village of Charlemont on the
banks of the Deerfield. There the elder son took
up his residence with his guardian and relative, a
man of position and influence in the community, who
was the owner of a large farm. With him he stayed
until he was twelve years old, enjoying all the pleasures
and doing all the miscellaneous jobs of the kind which
fall to the lot of a boy brought up in an agricultural
community.
The story of this particular period
of his life was given by Warner in a work which was
published about forty years later. It is the volume
entitled “Being a Boy.” Nowhere has
there been drawn a truer or more vivid picture of
rural New England. Nowhere else can there be found
such a portrayal of the sights and sounds, the pains
and pleasures of life on a farm as seen from the point
of view of a boy. Here we have them all graphically
represented: the daily “chores” that
must be looked after; the driving of cows to and from
the pasture; the clearing up of fields where vegetation
struggled with difficulty against the prevailing stones;
the climbing of lofty trees and the swaying back and
forth in the wind on their topmost boughs; the hunting
of woodchucks; the nutting excursions of November
days, culminating in the glories of Thanksgiving; the
romance of school life, over which vacations, far
from being welcomed with delight, cast a gloom as
involving extra work; the cold days of winter with
its deep or drifting snows, the mercury of the thermometer
clinging with fondness to zero, even when the sun
was shining brilliantly; the long chilling nights
in which the frost carved fantastic structures on
the window-panes; the eager watching for the time when
the sap would begin to run in the sugar-maples; the
evenings given up to reading, with the inevitable
inward discontent at being sent to bed too early; the
longing for the mild days of spring to come, when the
heavy cowhide boots could be discarded, and the boy
could rejoice at last in the covering for his feet
which the Lord had provided. These and scores
of similar descriptions fill up the picture of the
life furnished here. It was nature’s own
school wherein was to be gained the fullest intimacy
with her spirit. While there was much which she
could not teach, there was also much which she alone
could teach. From his communion with her the
boy learned lessons which the streets of crowded cities
could never have imparted.
At the age of twelve this portion
of his education came to an end. The family then
moved to Cazenovia in Madison county in Central New
York, from which place Warner’s mother had come,
and where her immediate relatives then resided.
Until he went to college this was his home. There
he attended a preparatory school under the direction
of the Methodist Episcopal Church, which was styled
the Oneida Conference Seminary. It was at this
institution that he fitted mainly for college; for
to college it had been his father’s dying wish
that he should go, and the boy himself did not need
the spur of this parting injunction. A college
near his home was the excellent one of Hamilton in
the not distant town of Clinton in the adjoining county
of Oneida. Thither he repaired in 1848, and as
he had made the best use of his advantages, he was
enabled to enter the sophomore class. He was
graduated in 1851.
But while fond of study he had all
these years been doing something besides studying.
The means of the family were limited, and to secure
the education he desired, not only was it necessary
to husband the resources he possessed, but to increase
them in every possible way. Warner had all the
American boy’s willingness to undertake any occupation
not in itself discreditable. Hence to him fell
a full share of those experiences which have diversified
the early years of so many men who have achieved success.
He set up type in a printing office; he acted as an
assistant in a bookstore; he served as clerk in a
post-office. He was thus early brought into direct
contact with persons of all classes and conditions
of life.
The experience gave to his keenly
observant mind an insight into the nature of men which
was to be of special service to him in later years.
Further, it imparted to him a familiarity with their
opinions and hopes and aspirations which enabled him
to understand and sympathize with feelings in which
he did not always share.
During the years which immediately
followed his departure from college, Warner led the
somewhat desultory and apparently aimless life of many
American graduates whose future depends upon their
own exertions and whose choice of a career is mainly
determined by circumstances. From the very earliest
period of his life he had been fond of reading.
It was an inherited taste. The few books he found
in his childhood’s home would have been almost
swept out of sight in the torrent, largely of trash,
which pours now in a steady stream into the humblest
household. But the books, though few, were of
a high quality; and because they were few they were
read much, and their contents became an integral part
of his intellectual equipment. Furthermore, these
works of the great masters, with which he became familiar,
set for him a standard by which to test the value
of whatever he read, and saved him even in his earliest
years from having his taste impaired and his judgment
misled by the vogue of meretricious productions which
every now and then gain popularity for the time.
They gave him also a distinct bent towards making literature
his profession. But literature, however pleasant
and occasionally profitable as an avocation, was not
to be thought of as a vocation. Few there are
at any period who have succeeded in finding it a substantial
and permanent support; at that time and in this country
such a prospect was practically hopeless for any one.
It is no matter of surprise, therefore, that Warner,
though often deviating from the direct path, steadily
gravitated toward the profession of law.
Still, even in those early days his
natural inclination manifested itself. The Knickerbocker
Magazine was then the chosen organ to which all young
literary aspirants sent their productions. To
it even in his college days Warner contributed to
some extent, though it would doubtless be possible
now to gather out of this collection but few pieces
which, lacking his own identification, could be assigned
to him positively. At a later period he contributed
articles to Putnam’s Magazine, which began its
existence in 1853. Warner himself at one time,
in that period of struggle and uncertainty, expected
to become an editor of a monthly which was to be started
in Detroit. But before the magazine was actually
set on foot the inability of the person who projected
it to supply the necessary means for carrying it on
prevented the failure which would inevitably have
befallen a venture of that sort, undertaken at that
time and in that place. Yet he showed in a way
the native bent of his mind by bringing out two years
after his graduation from college a volume of selections
from English and American authors entitled “The
Book of Eloquence.” This work a publisher
many years afterward took advantage of his later reputation
to reprint.
This unsettled period of his life
lasted for several years. He was resident for
a while in various places. Part of the time he
seems to have been in Cazenovia; part of the time
in New York; part of the time in the West. One
thing in particular there was which stood in the way
of fixing definitely his choice of a profession.
This was the precarious state of his health, far poorer
then than it was in subsequent years. Warner,
however, was never at any period of his life what is
called robust. It was his exceeding temperance
in all things which enabled him to venture upon the
assumption and succeed in the accomplishment of tasks
which men, physically far stronger than he, would
have shrunk from under-taking, even had they been
possessed of the same abilities. But his condition,
part of that time, was such that it led him to take
a course of treatment at the sanatorium in Clifton
Springs. It became apparent, however, that life
in the open air, for a while at least, was the one
thing essential. Under the pressure of this necessity
he secured a position as one of an engineering party
engaged in the survey of a railway in Missouri.
In that occupation he spent a large part of 1853 and
1854. He came back from this expedition restored
to health. With that result accomplished, the
duty of settling definitely upon what he was to do
became more urgent. Among other things he did,
while living for a while with his uncle in Binghamton,
N. Y., he studied law in the office of Daniel S. Dickinson.
In the Christmas season of 1854 he
went with a friend on a visit to Philadelphia and
stayed at the house of Philip M. Price, a prominent
citizen of that place who was engaged, among other
things, in the conveyancing of real estate. It
will not be surprising to any one who knew the charm
of his society in later life to be told that he became
at once a favorite with the older man. The latter
was advanced in years, he was anxious to retire from
active business. Acting under his advice, Warner
was induced to come to Philadelphia in 1855 and join
him, and to form subsequently a partnership in legal
conveyancing with another young man who had been employed
in Mr. Price’s office. Thus came into being
the firm of Barton and Warner. Their headquarters
were first in Spring Garden Street and later in Walnut
Street. The future soon became sufficiently assured
to justify Warner in marriage, and in October, 1856,
he was wedded to Susan Lee, daughter of William Elliott
Lee of New York City.
But though in a business allied to
the law, Warner was not yet a lawyer. His occupation
indeed was only in his eyes a temporary makeshift while
he was preparing himself for what was to be his real
work in life. Therefore, while supporting himself
by carrying on the business of conveyancing, he attended
the courses of study at the law department of the
University of Pennsylvania, during the academic years
of 1856-57 and 1857-58. From that institution
he received the degree of bachelor of law in 1858 often
misstated 1856 and was ready to begin the
practice of his, profession.
In those days every young man of ability
and ambition was counseled to go West and grow up
with the country, and was not unfrequently disposed
to take that course of his own accord. Warner
felt the general impulse. He had contemplated
entering, in fact had pretty definitely made up his
mind to enter, into a law partnership with a friend
in one of the smaller places in that region.
But on a tour, somewhat of exploration, he stopped
at Chicago. There he met another friend, and after
talking over the situation with him he decided to
take up his residence in that city. So in 1858
the law-firm of Davenport and Warner came into being.
It lasted until 1860. It was not exactly a favorable
time for young men to enter upon the practice of this
profession. The country was just beginning to
recover from the depression which had followed the
disastrous panic of 1857; but confidence was as yet
far from being restored. The new firm did a fairly
good business; but while there was sufficient work
to do, there was but little money to pay for it.
Still Warner would doubtless have continued in the
profession had he not received an offer, the acceptance
of which determined his future and changed entirely
his career.
Hawley, now United States Senator
from Connecticut, was Warner’s senior by a few
years. He had preceded him as a student at the
Oneida Conference Seminary and at Hamilton College.
Practicing law in Hartford, he had started in 1857,
in conjunction with other leading citizens, a paper
called the Evening Press. It was devoted to the
advocacy of the principles of the Republican party,
which was at that time still in what may be called
the formative state of its existence. This was
a period in which for some years the dissolution had
been going on of the two old parties which had divided
the country. Men were changing sides and were
aligning themselves anew according to their views on
questions which were every day assuming greater prominence
in the minds of all. There was really but one
great subject talked about or thought about. It
split into opposing sections the whole land over which
was lowering the grim, though as yet unrecognizable,
shadow of civil war. The Republican party had
been in existence but a very few years, but in that
short time it had attracted to its ranks the young
and enthusiastic spirits of the North, just as to
the other side were impelled the members of the same
class in the South. The intellectual contest
which preceded the physical was stirring the hearts
of all men. Hawley, who was well aware of Warner’s
peculiar ability, was anxious to secure his co-operation
and assistance. He urged him to come East and
join him in the conduct of the new enterprise he had
undertaken.
Warner always considered that he derived
great benefit from his comparatively limited study
and practice of law; and that the little time he had
given up to it had been far from being misspent.
But the opening which now presented itself introduced
him to a field of activity much more suited to his
talents and his tastes. He liked the study of
law better than its practice; for his early training
had not been of a kind to reconcile him to standing
up strongly for clients and causes that he honestly
believed to be in the wrong. Furthermore, his
heart, as has been said, had always been in literature;
and though journalism could hardly be called much
more than a half-sister, the one could provide the
support which the other could never promise with certainty.
So in 1860 Warner removed to Hartford and joined his
friend as associate editor of the newspaper he had
founded. The next year the war broke out.
Hawley at once entered the army and took part in the
four years’ struggle. His departure left
Warner in editorial charge of the paper, into the conduct
of which he threw himself with all the earnestness
and energy of his nature, and the ability, both political
and literary, displayed in its columns gave it at
once a high position which it never lost.
At this point it may be well to give
briefly the few further salient facts of Warner’s
connection with journalism proper. In 1867 the
owners of the Press purchased the Courant, the
well-known morning paper which had been founded more
than a century before, and consolidated the Press
with it. Of this journal, Hawley and Warner, now
in part proprietors, were the editorial writers.
The former, who had been mustered out of the army
with the rank of brevet Major-General, was soon diverted
from journalism by other employments. He was
elected Governor, he became a member of Congress,
serving successively in both branches. The main
editorial responsibility for the conduct of the paper
devolved in consequence upon Warner, and to it he
gave up for years nearly all his thought and attention.
Once only during that early period was his labor interrupted
for any considerable length of time. In May, 1868,
he set out on the first of his five trips across the
Atlantic. He was absent nearly a year. Yet
even then he cannot be said to have neglected his special
work. Articles were sent weekly from the other
side, describing what he saw and experienced abroad.
His active connection with the paper he never gave
up absolutely, nor did his interest in it ever cease.
But after he became connected with the editorial staff
of Harpers Magazine the contributions he made to his
journal were only occasional and what may be called
accidental.
When 1870 came, forty years of Warner’s
life had gone by, and nearly twenty years since he
had left college. During the latter ten years
of this period he had been a most effective and forcible
leader-writer on political and social questions, never
more so than during the storm and stress of the Civil
War. Outside of these topics he had devoted a
great deal of attention to matters connected with
literature and art. His varied abilities were
fully recognized by the readers of the journal he
edited.
But as yet there was little or no
recognition outside. It is no easy matter to
tell what are the influences, what the circumstances,
which determine the success of a particular writer
or of a particular work. Hitherto Warner’s
repute was mainly confined to the inhabitants of a
provincial capital and its outlying and dependent towns.
However cultivated the class to which his writings
appealed and as a class it was distinctly
cultivated their number was necessarily
not great. To the country at large what he did
or what he was capable of doing was not known at all.
Some slight efforts he had occasionally put forth to
secure the publication of matter he had prepared.
He experienced the usual fate of authors who seek
to introduce into the market literary wares of a new
and better sort. His productions did not follow
conventional lines. Publishers were ready to
examine what he offered, and were just as ready to
declare that these new wares were of a nature in which
they were not inclined to deal.
But during 1870 a series of humorous
articles appeared in the Hartford Courant, detailing
his experiences in the cultivation of a garden.
Warner had become the owner of a small place then
almost on the outskirts of the city. With the
dwelling-house went the possession of three acres of
land. The opportunity thus presented itself of
turning into a blessing the primeval curse of tilling
the soil, in this instance not with a hoe, but with
a pen. These articles detailing his experiences
excited so much amusement and so much admiration that
a general desire was manifested that they should receive
a more permanent life than that accorded to articles
appearing in the columns of newspapers, and should
reach a circle larger than that to be found in the
society of the Connecticut capital. Warner’s
previous experience had not disposed him to try his
fortunes with the members of the publishing fraternity.
In fact he did not lay so much stress upon the articles
as did his readers and friends. He always insisted
that he had previously written other articles which
in his eyes certainly were just as good as they, if
not better.
It so chanced that about this time
Henry Ward Beecher came to Hartford to visit his sister,
Harriet Beecher Stowe. Warner was invited to meet
him. In the course of the conversation the articles
just mentioned were referred to by some one of those
present. Beecher’s curiosity was aroused
and he expressed a desire to see them. To him
they were accordingly sent for perusal. No sooner
had he run through them than he recognized in them
the presence of a rare and delicate humor which struck
a distinctly new note in American literature.
It was something he felt which should not be confined
to the knowledge of any limited circle. He wrote
at once to the publisher James T. Fields, urging the
production of these articles in book form. Beecher’s
recommendation in those days was sufficient to insure
the acceptance of any book by any publisher. Mr.
Fields agreed to bring out the work, provided the
great preacher would prefix an introduction.
This he promised to do and did; though in place of
the somewhat more formal piece he was asked to write,
he sent what he called an introductory letter.
The series of papers published under
the title of “My Summer in a Garden” came
out at the very end of 1870, with the date of 1871
on the title-page. The volume met with instantaneous
success. It was the subject of comment and conversation
everywhere and passed rapidly through several editions.
There was a general feeling that a new writer had suddenly
appeared, with a wit and wisdom peculiarly his own,
precisely like which nothing had previously existed
in our literature. To the later editions of the
work was added an account of a cat which had been presented
to the author by the Stowes. For that reason
it was given from the Christian name of the husband
of the novelist the title of Calvin. To this John
was sometimes prefixed, as betokening from the purely
animal point of view a certain resemblance to the
imputed grimness and earnestness of the great reformer.
There was nothing in the least exaggerated in the account
which Warner gave of the character and conduct of
this really remarkable member of the feline race.
No biography was ever truer; no appreciation was ever
more sympathetic; and in the long line of cats none
was ever more worthy to have his story truly and sympathetically
told. All who had the fortune to see Calvin in
the flesh will recognize the accuracy with which his
portrait was drawn. All who read the account of
him, though not having seen him, will find it one
of the most charming of descriptions. It has
the fullest right to be termed a cat classic.
With the publication of “My
Summer in a Garden” Warner was launched upon
a career of authorship which lasted without cessation
during the thirty years that remained of his life.
It covered a wide field. His interests were varied
and his activity was unremitting. Literature,
art, and that vast diversity of topics which are loosely
embraced under the general name of social science upon
all these he had something fresh to say, and he said
it invariably with attractiveness and effect.
It mattered little what he set out to talk about,
the talk was sure to be full both of instruction and
entertainment. No sooner had the unequivocal success
of his first published work brought his name before
the public than he was besieged for contributions
by conductors of periodicals of all sorts; and as
he had ideas of his own upon all sorts of subjects,
he was constantly furnishing matter of the most diverse
kind for the most diverse audiences.
As a result, the volumes here gathered
together represent but a limited portion of the work
he accomplished. All his life, indeed, Warner
was not only an omnivorous consumer of the writings
of others, but a constant producer. The manifestation
of it took place in ways frequently known to but few.
It was not merely the fact that as an editor of a daily
paper he wrote regularly articles on topics of current
interest to which he never expected to pay any further
attention; but after his name became widely known
and his services were in request everywhere, he produced
scores of articles, some long, some short, some signed,
some unsigned, of which he made no account whatever.
One looking through the pages of contemporary periodical
literature is apt at any moment to light upon pieces,
and sometimes upon series of them, which the author
never took the trouble to collect. Many of those
to which his name was not attached can no longer be
identified with any approach to certainty. About
the preservation of much that he did and
some of it belonged distinctly to his best and most
characteristic work he was singularly careless,
or it may be better to say, singularly indifferent.
If I may be permitted to indulge in
the recital of a personal experience, there is one
incident I recall which will bring out this trait in
a marked manner. Once on a visit to him I accompanied
him to the office of his paper. While waiting
for him to discharge certain duties there, and employing
myself in looking over the exchanges, I chanced to
light upon a leading article on the editorial page
of one of the most prominent of the New York dailies.
It was devoted to the consideration of some recent
utterances of a noted orator who, after the actual
mission of his life had been accomplished, was employing
the decline of it in the exploitation of every political
and economic vagary which it had entered into the
addled brains of men to evolve. The article struck
me as one of the most brilliant and entertaining of
its kind I had ever read; it was not long indeed before
it appeared that the same view of it was taken by
many others throughout the country. The peculiar
wit of the comment, the keenness of the satire made
so much of an impression upon me that I called Warner
away from his work to look at it. At my request
he hastily glanced over it, but somewhat to my chagrin
failed to evince any enthusiasm about it. On
our way home I again spoke of it and was a good deal
nettled at the indifference towards it which he manifested.
It seemed to imply that my critical judgment was of
little value; and however true might be his conclusion
on that point, one does not enjoy having the fact
thrust too forcibly upon the attention in the familiarity
of conversation. Resenting therefore the tone
he had assumed, I took occasion not only to reiterate
my previously expressed opinion somewhat more aggressively,
but also went on to insinuate that he was himself
distinctly lacking in any real appreciation of what
was excellent. He bore with me patiently for
a while. “Well, sonny,” he said at
last, “since you seem to take the matter so
much to heart, I will tell you in confidence that
I wrote the piece myself.” I found that
this was not only true in the case just specified,
but that while engaged in preparing articles for his
own paper he occasionally prepared them for other
journals. No one besides himself and those immediately
concerned, ever knew anything about the matter.
He never asserted any right to these pieces, he never
sought to collect them, though some of them exhibited
his happiest vein of humor. Unclaimed, unidentified,
they are swept into that wallet of oblivion in which
time stows the best as well as the worst of newspaper
production.
The next volume of Warner’s
writings that made its appearance was entitled “Saunterings.”
It was the first and, though good of its kind, was
by no means the best of a class of productions in which
he was to exhibit signal excellence. It will
be observed that of the various works comprised in
this collective edition, no small number consist of
what by a wide extension of the phrase may be termed
books of travel. There are two or three which
fall strictly under that designation. Most of
them, however, can be more properly called records
of personal experience and adventure in different
places and regions, with the comments on life and
character to which they gave rise.
Books of travel, if they are expected
to live, are peculiarly hard to write. If they
come out at a period when curiosity about the region
described is predominant, they are fairly certain,
no matter how wretched, to achieve temporary success.
But there is no kind of literary production to which,
by the very law of its being, it is more difficult
to impart vitality. Paradoxical as it may seem,
it is perfectly true that the greatest hinderance
to their permanent interest is the information they
furnish. The more full, specific and even accurate
that is, the more rapidly does the work containing
it lose its value. The fresher knowledge conveyed
by a new, and it may be much inferior book, crowds
out of circulation those which have gone before.
The changed or changing conditions in the region traversed
renders the information previously furnished out of
date and even misleading. Hence the older works
come in time to have only an antiquarian interest.
Their pages are consulted only by that very limited
number of persons who are anxious to learn what has
been and view with stolid indifference what actually
is. Something of this transitory nature belongs
to all sketches of travel. It is the one great
reason why so very few of the countless number of such
works, written, and sometimes written by men of highest
ability, are hardly heard of a few years after publication.
Travels form a species of literary production in which
great classics are exceedingly rare.
From this fatal characteristic, threatening
the enduring life of such works, most of Warner’s
writings of this sort were saved by the method of
procedure he followed. He made it his main object
not to give facts but impressions. All details
of exact information, everything calculated to gratify
the statistical mind or to quench the thirst of the
seeker for purely useful information, he was careful,
whether consciously or unconsciously, to banish from
those volumes of his in which he followed his own
bent and felt himself under no obligation to say anything
but what he chose. Hence these books are mainly
a record of views of men and manners made by an acute
observer on the spot, and put down at the moment when
the impression created was most vivid, not deferred
till familiarity had dulled the sense of it or custom
had caused it to be disregarded. Take as an illustration
the little book entitled “Baddeck,” one
of the slightest of his productions in this field.
It purports to be and is nothing more than an account
of a two weeks’ tour made to a Cape Breton locality
in company with the delightful companion to whom it
was dedicated. You take it up with the notion
that you are going to acquire information about the
whole country journeyed over, you are beguiled at
times with the fancy that you are getting it.
In the best sense it may be said that you do get it;
for it is the general impression of the various scenes
through which the expedition leads the travelers that
is left upon the mind, not those accurate details
of a single one of them which the lapse of a year
might render inaccurate. It is to the credit of
the work therefore than one gains from it little specific
knowledge. In its place are the reflections both
wise and witty upon life, upon the characters of the
men that are met, upon the nature of the sights that
are seen.
This is what constitutes the enduring
charm of the best of these pictures of travel which
Warner produced. It is perhaps misleading to assert
that they do not furnish a good deal of information.
Still it is not the sort of information which the
ordinary tourist gives and which the cultivated reader
resents and is careful not to remember. Their
dominant note is rather the quiet humor of a delightful
story-teller, who cannot fail to say something of
interest because he has seen so much; and who out of
his wide and varied observation selects for recital
certain sights he has witnessed, certain experiences
he has gone through, and so relates them that the
way the thing is told is even more interesting than
the thing told. The chief value of these works
does not accordingly depend upon the accidental, which
passes. Inns change and become better or worse.
Facilities for transportation increase or decrease.
Scenery itself alters to some extent under the operation
of agencies brought to bear upon it for its own improvement
or for the improvement of something else. But
man’s nature remains a constant quantity.
Traits seen here and now are sure to be met with somewhere
else, and even in ages to come. Hence works of
this nature, embodying descriptions of men and manners,
always retain something of the freshness which characterized
them on the day of their appearance.
Of these productions in which the
personal element predominates, and where the necessity
of intruding information is not felt as a burden,
those of Warner’s works which deal with the Orient
take the first rank. The two “My
Winter on the Nile” and “In the Levant” constitute
the record of a visit to the East during the years
1875 and 1876.
They would naturally have of themselves
the most permanent value, inasmuch as the countries
described have for most educated men an abiding interest.
The lifelike representation and graphic characterization
which Warner was apt to display in his traveling sketches
were here seen at their best, because nowhere else
did he find the task of description more congenial.
Alike the gorgeousness and the squalor of the Orient
appealed to his artistic sympathies. Egypt in
particular had for him always a special fascination.
Twice he visited it at the time just mentioned
and again in the winter of 1881-82. He rejoiced
in every effort made to dispel the obscurity which
hung over its early history. No one, outside
of the men most immediately concerned, took a deeper
interest than he in the work of the Egyptian Exploration
Society, of which he was one of the American vice-presidents.
To promoting its success he gave no small share of
time and attention. Everything connected with
either the past or the present of the country had
for him an attraction. A civilization which had
been flourishing for centuries, when the founder of
Israel was a wandering sheik on the Syrian plains
or in the hill-country of Canaan; the slow unraveling
of records of dynasties of forgotten kings; the memorials
of Egypt’s vanished greatness and the vision
of her future prosperity these and things similar
to these made this country, so peculiarly the gift
of the Nile, of fascinating interest to the modern
traveler who saw the same sights which had met the
eyes of Herodotus nearly twenty-five hundred years
before.
To the general public the volume which
followed “In the Levant” was
perhaps of even deeper interest. At all events
it dealt with scenes and memories with which every
reader, educated or uneducated, had associations.
The region through which the founder of Christianity
wandered, the places he visited, the words he said
in them, the acts he did, have never lost their hold
over the hearts of men, not even during the periods
when the precepts of Christianity have had the least
influence over the conduct of those who professed to
it their allegiance. In the Levant, too, were
seen the beginnings of commerce, of art, of letters,
in the forms in which the modern world best knows them.
These, therefore, have always made the lands about
the eastern Mediterranean an attraction to cultivated
men and the interest of the subject accordingly reinforced
the skill of the writer.
There are two or three of these works
which can not be included in the class just described.
They were written for the specific purpose of giving
exact information at the time. Of these the most
noticeable are the volumes entitled “South and
West” and the account of Southern California
which goes under the name of “Our Italy.”
They are the outcome of journeys made expressly with
the intent of investigating and reporting upon the
actual situation and apparent prospects of the places
and regions described. As they were written to
serve an immediate purpose, much of the information
contained in them tends to grow more and more out
of date as time goes on; and though of value to the
student of history, these volumes must necessarily
become of steadily diminishing interest to the ordinary
reader. Yet it is to be said of them that while
the pill of useful information is there, it has at
least been sugar-coated. Nor can we afford to
lose sight of the fact that the widely-circulated articles,
collected under the title of “South and West,”
by the spirit pervading them as well as by the information
they gave, had a marked effect in bringing the various
sections of the country into a better understanding
of one another, and in imparting to all a fuller sense
of the community they possessed in profit and loss,
in honor and dishonor.
It is a somewhat singular fact that
these sketches of travel led Warner incidentally to
enter into an entirely new field of literary exertion.
This was novel-writing. Something of this nature
he had attempted in conjunction with Mark Twain in
the composition of “The Gilded Age,” which
appeared in 1873. The result, however, was unsatisfactory
to both the collaborators. Each had humor, but
the humor of each was fundamentally different.
But the magazine with which Warner had become connected
was desirous that he should prepare for it an account
of some of the principal watering-places and summer
resorts of the country. Each was to be visited
in turn and its salient features were to be described.
It was finally suggested that this could be done most
effectively by weaving into a love story occurrences
that might happen at a number of these places which
were made the subjects of description. The principal
characters were to take their tours under the personal
conduct of the novelist. They were to go to the
particular spots selected North and South, according
to the varying seasons of the year. It was a somewhat
novel way of, visiting resorts of this nature; there
are those to whom it will seem altogether more agreeable
than would be the visiting of them in person.
Hence appeared in 1886 the articles which were collected
later in the volume entitled “Their Pilgrimage.”
Warner executed the task which had
been assigned him with his wonted skill. The
completed work met with success with so
much success indeed that he was led later to try his
fortune further in the same field and bring out the
trilogy of novels which go under the names respectively
of “A Little Journey in the World,” “The
Golden House,” and “That Fortune.”
Each of these is complete in itself, each can be read
by itself; but the effect of each and of the whole
series can be best secured by reading them in succession.
In the first it is the story of how a great fortune
was made in the stock market; in the second, how it
was fraudulently diverted from the object for which
it was intended; and in the third, how it was most
beneficially and satisfactorily lost. The scene
of the last novel was laid in part in Warner’s
early home in Charlemont. These works were produced
with considerable intervals of time between their
respective appearances, the first coming out in 1889
and the third ten years later. This detracted
to some extent from the popularity which they would
have attained had the different members followed one
another rapidly. Still, they met with distinct
success, though it has always been a question whether
this success was due so much to the story as to the
shrewd observation and caustic wit which were brought
to bear upon what was essentially a serious study
of one side of American social life.
The work with which Warner himself
was least satisfied was his life of Captain John Smith,
which came out in 18881. It was originally intended
to be one of a series of biographies of noted men,
which were to give the facts accurately but to treat
them humorously. History and comedy, however,
have never been blended successfully, though desperate
attempts have occasionally been made to achieve that
result. Warner had not long been engaged in the
task before he recognized its hopelessness. For
its preparation it required a special study of the
man and the period, and the more time he spent upon
the preliminary work, the more the humorous element
tended to recede. Thus acted on by two impulses,
one of a light and one of a grave nature, he moved
for a while in a sort of diagonal between the two
to nowhere in particular; but finally ended in treating
the subject seriously.
In giving himself up to a biography
in which he had no special interest, Warner felt conscious
that he could not interest others. His forebodings
were realized. The work, though made from a careful
study of original sources, did not please him, nor
did it attract the public. The attempt was all
the more unfortunate because the time and toil he spent
upon it diverted him from carrying out a scheme which
had then taken full possession of his thoughts.
This was the production of a series of essays to be
entitled “Conversations on Horseback.”
Had it been worked up as he sketched it in his mind,
it would have been the outdoor counterpart of his
“Backlog Studies.” Though in a measure
based upon a horseback ride which he took in Pennsylvania
in 1880, the incidents of travel as he outlined its
intended treatment would have barely furnished the
slightest of backgrounds. Captain John Smith,
however, interfered with a project specially suited
to his abilities and congenial to his tastes.
That he did so possibly led the author of his life
to exhibit a somewhat hostile attitude towards his
hero. When the biography was finished, other
engagements were pressing upon his attention.
The opportunity of taking up and completing the projected
series of essays never presented itself, though the
subject lay in his mind for a long time and he himself
believed that it would have turned out one of the best
pieces of work he ever did.
It was unfortunate. For to me and
very likely to many others if not to most Warner’s
strength lay above all in essay-writing. What
he accomplished in this line was almost invariably
pervaded by that genial grace which makes work of
the kind attractive, and he exhibited everywhere in
it the delicate but sure touch which preserves the
just mean between saying too much and too little.
The essay was in his nature, and his occupation as
a journalist had developed the tendency towards this
form of literary activity, as well as skill in its
manipulation. Whether he wrote sketches of travel,
or whether he wrote fiction, the scene depicted was
from the point of view of the essayist rather than
from that of the tourist or of the novelist. It
is this characteristic which gives to his work in
the former field its enduring interest. Again
in his novels, it was not so much the story that was
in his thoughts as the opportunity the varying scenes
afforded for amusing observations upon manners, for
comments upon life, sometimes good-natured, sometimes
severe, but always entertaining, and above all, for
serious study of the social problems which present
themselves on every side for examination. This
is distinctly the province of the essayist, and in
it Warner always displayed his fullest strength.
We have seen that his first purely
humorous publication of this nature was the one which
made him known to the general public. It was speedily
followed, however, by one of a somewhat graver character,
which became at the time and has since remained a
special favorite of cultivated readers. This
is the volume entitled “Backlog Studies.”
The attractiveness of this work is as much due to
the suggestive social and literary discussions with
which it abounds as to the delicate and refined humor
with which the ideas are expressed. Something
of the same characteristics was displayed in the two
little volumes of short pieces dealing with social
topics, which came out later under the respective
titles of “As We Were Saying,” and “As
We Go.” But there was a deeper and more
serious side of his nature which found utterance in
several of his essays, particularly in some which
were given in the form of addresses delivered at various
institutions of learning. They exhibit the charm
which belongs to all his writings; but his feelings
were too profoundly interested in the subjects considered
to allow him to give more than occasional play to his
humor. Essays contained in such a volume, for
instance, as “The Relation of Literature to
Life” will not appeal to him whose main object
in reading is amusement. Into them Warner put
his deepest and most earnest convictions. The
subject from which the book just mentioned derived
its title lay near to his heart. No one felt
more strongly than he the importance of art of all
kinds, but especially of literary art, for the uplifting
of a nation. No one saw more distinctly the absolute
necessity of its fullest recognition in a moneymaking
age and in a money-making land, if the spread of the
dry rot of moral deterioration were to be prevented.
The ampler horizon it presented, the loftier ideals
it set up, the counteracting agency it supplied to
the sordidness of motive and act which, left unchecked,
was certain to overwhelm the national spirit all
these were enforced by him again and again with clearness
and effectiveness. His essays of this kind will
never be popular in the sense in which are his other
writings. But no thoughtful man will rise up from
reading them without having gained a vivid conception
of the part which literature plays in the life of
even the humblest, and without a deeper conviction
of its necessity to any healthy development of the
character of a people.
During the early part of his purely
literary career a large proportion of Warner’s
collected writings, which then appeared, were first
published in the Atlantic Monthly. But about
fourteen years before his death he became closely
connected with Harper’s Magazine. From May,
1886, to March, 1892, he conducted the Editor’s
Drawer of that periodical. The month following
this last date he succeeded William Dean Howells as
the contributor of the Editor’s Study.
This position he held until July, 1898. The scope
of this department was largely expanded after the
death of George William Curtis in the summer of 1892,
and the consequent discontinuance of the Editor’s
Easy Chair. Comments upon other topics than those
to which his department was originally devoted, especially
upon social questions, were made a distinct feature.
His editorial connection with the magazine naturally
led to his contributing to it numerous articles besides
those which were demanded by the requirements of the
position he held. Nearly all these, as well as
those which appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, are
indicated in the bibliographical notes prefixed to
the separate works.
There were, however, other literary
enterprises in which he was concerned; for the calls
upon him were numerous, his own appetite for work
was insatiable, and his activity was indefatigable.
In 1881 he assumed the editorship of the American
Men of Letters series. This he opened with his
own biography of Washington Irving, the resemblance
between whom and himself has been made the subject
of frequent remark. Later he became the editor-in-chief
of the thirty odd volumes which make up the collection
entitled “The World’s Best Literature.”
To this he contributed several articles of his own
and carefully allotted and supervised the preparation
of a large number of others. The labor he put
upon the editing of this collection occupied him a
great deal of the time from 1895 to 1898.
But literature, though in it lay his
chief interest, was but one of the subjects which
employed his many-sided activity. He was constantly
called upon for the discharge of civic duties.
The confidence felt by his fellow-citizens in his
judgment and taste was almost equal to the absolute
trust reposed in his integrity. The man who establishes
a reputation for the possession of these qualities
can never escape from bearing the burdens which a
good character always imposes. If any work of
art was ordered by the state, Warner was fairly certain
to be chosen a member of the commission selected to
decide upon the person who was to do it and upon the
way it was to be done. By his fellow-townsmen
he was made a member of the Park Commission.
Such were some of the duties imposed; there were others
voluntarily undertaken. During the latter years
of his life he became increasingly interested in social
questions, some of which partook of a semi-political
character. One of the subjects which engaged
his attention was the best method to be adopted for
elevating the character and conduct of the negro population
of the country. He recognized the gravity of
the problem with which the nation had to deal and
the difficulties attending its solution. One essay
on the subject was prepared for the meeting held at
Washington in May, 1900, of the American Social Science
Association, of which he was president. He was
not able to be there in person. The disease which
was ultimately to strike him down had already made
its preliminary attack. His address was accordingly
read for him. It was a subject of special regret
that he could not be present to set forth more fully
his views; for the debate, which followed the presentation
of his paper, was by no means confined to the meeting,
but extended to the press of the whole country.
Whether the conclusions he reached were right or wrong,
they were in no case adopted hastily nor indeed without
the fullest consideration.
But a more special interest of his
lay in prison reform. The subject had engaged
his attention long before he published anything in
connection with it. Later one of the earliest
articles he wrote for Harper’s Magazine was
devoted to it. It was in his thoughts just before
his death. He was a member of the Connecticut
commission on prisons, of the National Prison Association,
and a vice-president of the New York Association for
Prison Reform. A strong advocate of the doctrine
of the indeterminate sentence, he had little patience
with many of the judicial outgivings on that subject.
To him they seemed opinions inherited, not formed,
and in most cases were nothing more than the result
of prejudice working upon ignorance. This particular
question was one which he purposed to make the subject
of his address as president of the Social Science Association,
at its annual meeting in 1901. He never lived
to complete what he had in mind.
During his later years the rigor of
the Northern winter had been too severe for Warner’s
health. He had accordingly found it advisable
to spend as much of this season as he could in warmer
regions. He visited at various times parts of
the South, Mexico, and California. He passed the
winter of 1892-93 at Florence; but he found the air
of the valley of the Arno no perceptible improvement
upon that of the valley of the Connecticut. In
truth, neither disease nor death entertains a prejudice
against any particular locality. This fact he
was to learn by personal experience. In the spring
of 1899, while at New Orleans, he was stricken by
pneumonia which nearly brought him to the grave.
He recovered, but it is probable that the strength
of his system was permanently impaired, and with it
his power of resisting disease. Still his condition
was not such as to prevent him from going on with
various projects he had been contemplating or from
forming new ones. The first distinct warning of
the approaching end was the facial paralysis which
suddenly attacked him in April, 1900, while on a visit
to Norfolk, Va. Yet even from that he seemed
to be apparently on the full road to recovery during
the following summer.
It was in the second week of October,
1900, that Warner paid me a visit of two or three
days. He was purposing to spend the winter in
Southern California, coming back to the East in ample
time to attend the annual meeting of the Social Science
Association. His thoughts were even then busy
with the subject of the address which, as president,
he was to deliver on that occasion. It seemed
to me that I had never seen him when his mind was
more active or more vigorous. I was not only struck
by the clearness of his views some of which
were distinctly novel, at least to me but
by the felicity and effectiveness with which they were
put.
Never, too, had I been more impressed
with the suavity, the agreeableness, the general charm
of his manner. He had determined during the coming
winter to learn to ride the wheel, and we then and
there planned to take a bicycle trip during the following
summer, as we had previously made excursions together
on horseback. When we parted, it was with the
agreement that we should meet the next spring in Washington
and fix definitely upon the time and region of our
intended ride. It was on a Saturday morning that
I bade him good-by, apparently in the best of health
and spirits. It was on the evening of the following
Saturday October 20th that
the condensed, passionless, relentless message which
the telegraph transmits, informed me that he had died
that afternoon.
That very day he had lunched at a
friend’s, where were gathered several of his
special associates who had chanced to come together
at the same house, and then had gone to the office
of the Hartford Courant. There was not the
slightest indication apparent of the end that was so
near. After the company broke up, he started
out to pay a visit to one of the city parks, of which
he was a commissioner. On his way thither, feeling
a certain faintness, he turned aside into a small
house whose occupants he knew, and asked to sit down
for a brief rest, and then, as the faintness increased,
to lie undisturbed on the lounge for a few minutes.
The few minutes passed, and with them his life.
In the strictest sense of the words, he had fallen
asleep. From one point of view it was an ideal
way to die. To the individual, death coming so
gently, so suddenly, is shorn of all its terrors.
It is only those who live to remember and to lament
that the suffering comes which has been spared the
victim. Even to them, however, is the consolation
that though they may have been fully prepared for
the coming of the inevitable event, it would have been
none the less painful when it actually came.
Warner as a writer we all know.
The various and varying opinions entertained about
the quality and value of his work do not require notice
here. Future times will assign him his exact position
in the roll of American authors, and we need not trouble
ourselves to anticipate, as we shall certainly not
be able to influence, its verdict. But to only
a comparatively few of those who knew him as a writer
was it given to know him as a man; to still fewer
to know him in that familiarity of intimacy which
reveals all that is fine or ignoble in a man’s
personality. Scanty is the number of those who
will come out of that severest of ordeals so successfully
as he. The same conclusion would be reached, whether
we were to consider him in his private relations or
in his career as a man of letters. Among the
irritable race of authors no one was freer from petty
envy or jealousy. During many years of close intercourse,
in which he constantly gave utterance to his views
both of men and things with absolute unreserve, I
recall no disparaging opinion ever expressed of any
writer with whom he had been compared either for praise
or blame. He had unquestionably definite and
decided opinions. He would point out that such
or such a work was above or below its author’s
ordinary level; but there was never any ill-nature
in his comment, no depreciation for depreciation’s
sake. Never in truth was any one more loyal to
his friends. If his literary conscience would
not permit him to say anything in favor of something
which they had done, he usually contented himself
with saying nothing. Whatever failing there was
on his critical side was due to this somewhat uncritical
attitude; for it is from his particular friends that
the writer is apt to get the most dispassionate consideration
and sometimes the coldest commendation. It was
a part of Warner’s generous recognition of others
that he was in all sincerity disposed to attribute
to those he admired and to whom he was attached an
ability of which some of them at least were much inclined
to doubt their own possession.
Were I indeed compelled to select
any one word which would best give the impression,
both social and literary, of Warner’s personality,
I should be disposed to designate it as urbanity.
That seems to indicate best the one trait which most
distinguished him either in conversation or writing.
Whatever it was, it was innate, not assumed. It
was the genuine outcome of the kindliness and broad-mindedness
of his nature and led him to sympathize with men of
all positions in life and of all kinds of ability.
It manifested itself in his attitude towards every
one with whom he came in contact. It led him
to treat with fullest consideration all who were in
the least degree under his direction, and converted
in consequence the toil of subordinates into a pleasure.
It impelled him to do unsought everything which lay
in his power for the success of those in whom he felt
interest. Many a young writer will recall his
words of encouragement at some period in his own career
when the quiet appreciation of one meant more to him
than did later the loud applause of many. As it
was in public, so it was in private life. The
generosity of his spirit, the geniality and high-bred
courtesy of his manner, rendered a visit to his home
as much a social delight as his wide knowledge of literature
and his appreciation of what was best in it made it
an intellectual entertainment.
THOMAS R. LOUNSBURY.
THE RELATION OF LITERATURE TO LIFE
I hade a vision once you
may all have had a like one of the stream
of time flowing through a limitless land. Along
its banks sprang up in succession the generations
of man. They did not move with the stream-they
lived their lives and sank away; and always below them
new generations appeared, to play their brief parts
in what is called history the sequence
of human actions. The stream flowed on, opening
for itself forever a way through the land. I
saw that these successive dwellers on the stream were
busy in constructing and setting afloat vessels of
various size and form and rig arks, galleys,
galleons, sloops, brigs, boats propelled by oars,
by sails, by steam. I saw the anxiety with which
each builder launched his venture, and watched its
performance and progress. The anxiety was to
invent and launch something that should float on to
the generations to come, and carry the name of the
builder and the fame of his generation. It was
almost pathetic, these puny efforts, because faith
always sprang afresh in the success of each new venture.
Many of the vessels could scarcely be said to be launched
at all; they sank like lead, close to the shore.
Others floated out for a time, and then, struck by
a flaw in the wind, heeled over and disappeared.
Some, not well put together, broke into fragments in
the bufleting of the waves. Others danced on
the flood, taking the sun on their sails, and went
away with good promise of a long voyage. But only
a few floated for any length of time, and still fewer
were ever seen by the generation succeeding that which
launched them. The shores of the stream were
strewn with wrecks; there lay bleaching in the sand
the ribs of many a once gallant craft.
Innumerable were the devices of the
builders to keep their inventions afloat. Some
paid great attention to the form of the hull, others
to the kind of cargo and the loading of it, while
others and these seemed the majority trusted
more to some new sort of sail, or new fashion of rudder,
or new application of propelling power. And it
was wonderful to see what these new ingenuities did
for a time, and how each generation was deceived into
the belief that its products would sail on forever.
But one fate practically came to the most of them.
They were too heavy, they were too light, they were
built of old material, and they went to the bottom,
they went ashore, they broke up and floated in fragments.
And especially did the crafts built in imitation of
something that had floated down from a previous generation
come to quick disaster. I saw only here and there
a vessel, beaten by weather and blackened by time so old, perhaps, that the name of the maker
was no longer legible; or some fragments of antique
wood that had evidently come from far up the stream.
When such a vessel appeared there was sure to arise
great dispute about it, and from time to time expeditions
were organized to ascend the river and discover the
place and circumstances of its origin. Along the
banks, at intervals, whole fleets of boats and fragments
had gone ashore, and were piled up in bays, like the
driftwood of a subsided freshet. Efforts were
made to dislodge these from time to time and set them
afloat again, newly christened, with fresh paint and
sails, as if they stood a better chance of the voyage
than any new ones. Indeed, I saw that a large
part of the commerce of this river was, in fact, the
old hulks and stranded wrecks that each generation
had set afloat again. As I saw it in this foolish
vision, how pathetic this labor was from generation
to generation; so many vessels launched; so few making
a voyage even for a lifetime; so many builders confident
of immortality; so many lives outlasting this coveted
reputation! And still the generations, each with
touching hopefulness, busied themselves with this child’s
play on the banks of the stream; and still the river
flowed on, whelming and wrecking the most of that
so confidently committed to it, and bearing only here
and there, on its swift, wide tide, a ship, a boat,
a shingle.
These hosts of men whom I saw thus
occupied since history began were authors; these vessels
were books; these heaps of refuse in the bays were
great libraries. The allegory admits of any amount
of ingenious parallelism. It is nevertheless
misleading; it is the illusion of an idle fancy.
I have introduced it because it expresses, with some
whimsical exaggeration not much more than
that of “The Vision of Mirza” the
popular notion about literature and its relation to
human life. In the popular conception, literature
is as much a thing apart from life as these boats
on the stream of time were from the existence, the
struggle, the decay of the generations along the shore.
I say in the popular conception, for literature is
wholly different from this, not only in its effect
upon individual lives, but upon the procession of lives
upon this earth; it is not only an integral part of
all of them, but, with its sister arts, it is the
one unceasing continuity in history. Literature
and art are not only the records and monuments made
by the successive races of men, not only the local
expressions of thought and emotion, but they are,
to change the figure, the streams that flow on, enduring,
amid the passing show of men, reviving, transforming,
ennobling the fleeting generations. Without this
continuity of thought and emotion, history would present
us only a succession of meaningless experiments.
The experiments fail, the experiments succeed at
any rate, they end and what remains for
transmission, for the sustenance of succeeding peoples?
Nothing but the thought and emotion evolved and expressed.
It is true that every era, each generation, seems
to have its peculiar work to do; it is to subdue the
intractable earth, to repel or to civilize the barbarians,
to settle society in order, to build cities, to amass
wealth in centres, to make deserts bloom, to construct
edifices such as were never made before, to bring
all men within speaking distance of each other lucky
if they have anything to say when that is accomplished to
extend the information of the few among the many, or
to multiply the means of easy and luxurious living.
Age after age the world labors for these things with
the busy absorption of a colony of ants in its castle
of sand. And we must confess that the process,
such, for instance, as that now going on here this
onset of many peoples, which is transforming the continent
of America is a spectacle to excite the
imagination in the highest degree. If there were
any poet capable of putting into an epic the spirit
of this achievement, what an epic would be his!
Can it be that there is anything of more consequence
in life than the great business in hand, which absorbs
the vitality and genius of this age? Surely, we
say, it is better to go by steam than to go afoot,
because we reach our destination sooner getting
there quickly being a supreme object. It is well
to force the soil to yield a hundred-fold, to congregate
men in masses so that all their energies shall be
taxed to bring food to themselves, to stimulate industries,
drag coal and metal from the bowels of the earth,
cover its surface with rails for swift-running carriages,
to build ever larger palaces, warehouses, ships.
This gigantic achievement strikes the imagination.
If the world in which you live happens
to be the world of books, if your pursuit is to know
what has been done and said in the world, to the end
that your own conception of the value of life may be
enlarged, and that better things may be done and said
hereafter, this world and this pursuit assume supreme
importance in your mind. But you can in a moment
place yourself in relations you have not
to go far, perhaps only to speak to your next neighbor where
the very existence of your world is scarcely recognized.
All that has seemed to you of supreme importance is
ignored. You have entered a world that is called
practical, where the things that we have been speaking
of are done; you have interest in it and sympathy
with it, because your scheme of life embraces the development
of ideas into actions; but these men of realities
have only the smallest conception of the world that
seems to you of the highest importance; and, further,
they have no idea that they owe anything to it, that
it has ever influenced their lives or can add anything
to them. And it may chance that you have, for
the moment, a sense of insignificance in the small
part you are playing in the drama going forward.
Go out of your library, out of the small circle of
people who talk of books, who are engaged in research,
whose liveliest interest is in the progress of ideas,
in the expression of thought and emotion that is in
literature; go out of this atmosphere into a region
where it does not exist, it may be into a place given
up to commerce and exchange, or to manufacturing, or
to the development of certain other industries, such
as mining, or the pursuit of office which
is sometimes called politics. You will speedily
be aware how completely apart from human life literature
is held to be, how few people regard it seriously
as a necessary element in life, as anything more than
an amusement or a vexation. I have in mind a mountain
district, stripped, scarred, and blackened by the
ruthless lumbermen, ravished of its forest wealth;
divested of its beauty, which has recently become the
field of vast coal-mining operations. Remote from
communication, it was yesterday an exhausted, wounded,
deserted country. Today audacious railways are
entering it, crawling up its mountain slopes, rounding
its dizzy precipices, spanning its valleys on iron
cobwebs, piercing its hills with tunnels. Drifts
are opened in its coal seams, to which iron tracks
shoot away from the main line; in the woods is seen
the gleam of the engineer’s level, is heard
the rattle of heavily-laden wagons on the newly-made
roads; tents are pitched, uncouth shanties have sprung
up, great stables, boarding-houses, stores, workshops;
the miner, the blacksmith, the mason, the carpenter
have arrived; households have been set up in temporary
barracks, children are already there who need a school,
women who must have a church and society; the stagnation
has given place to excitement, money has flowed in,
and everywhere are the hum of industry and the swish
of the goad of American life. On this hillside,
which in June was covered with oaks, is already in
October a town; the stately trees have been felled;
streets are laid out and graded and named; there are
a hundred dwellings, there are a store, a post-office,
an inn; the telegraph has reached it, and the telephone
and the electric light; in a few weeks more it will
be in size a city, with thousands of people a
town made out of hand by drawing men and women from
other towns, civilized men and women, who have voluntarily
put themselves in a position where they must be civilized
over again.
This is a marvelous exhibition of
what energy and capital can do. You acknowledge
as much to the creators of it. You remember that
not far back in history such a transformation as this
could not have been wrought in a hundred years.
This is really life, this is doing something in the
world, and in the presence of it you can see why the
creators of it regard your world, which seemed to
you so important, the world whose business is the
evolution and expression of thought and emotion, as
insignificant. Here is a material addition to
the business and wealth of the race, here employment
for men who need it, here is industry replacing stagnation,
here is the pleasure of overcoming difficulties and
conquering obstacles. Why encounter these difficulties?
In order that more coal may be procured to operate
more railway trains at higher speed, to supply more
factories, to add to the industrial stir of modern
life. The men who projected and are pushing on
this enterprise, with an executive ability that would
maintain and manoeuvre an army in a campaign, are not,
however, consciously philanthropists, moved by the
charitable purpose of giving employment to men, or
finding satisfaction in making two blades of grass
grow where one grew before. They enjoy no doubt
the sense of power in bringing things to pass, the
feeling of leadership and the consequence derived
from its recognition; but they embark in this enterprise
in order that they may have the position and the luxury
that increased wealth will bring, the object being,
in most cases, simply material advantages sumptuous
houses, furnished with all the luxuries which are
the signs of wealth, including, of course, libraries
and pictures and statuary and curiosities, the most
showy équipages and troops of servants; the object
being that their wives shall dress magnificently,
glitter in diamonds and velvets, and never need to
put their feet to the ground; that they may command
the best stalls in the church, the best pews in the
theatre, the choicest rooms in the inn, and a
consideration that Plato does not mention, because
his world was not our world that they may
impress and reduce to obsequious deference the hotel
clerk.
This life for this enterprise
and its objects are types of a considerable portion
of life is not without its ideal, its hero,
its highest expression, its consummate flower.
It is expressed in a word which I use without any
sense of its personality, as the French use the word
Barnum for our crude young nation has the
distinction of adding a verb to the French language,
the verb to barnum it is expressed in the
well-known name Croesus. This is a standard impossible
to be reached perhaps, but a standard. If one
may say so, the country is sown with seeds of Croesus,
and the crop is forward and promising. The interest
to us now in the observation of this phase of modern
life is not in the least for purposes of satire or
of reform. We are inquiring how wholly this conception
of life is divorced from the desire to learn what has
been done and said to the end that better things may
be done and said hereafter, in order that we may understand
the popular conception of the insignificant value
of literature in human affairs. But it is not
aside from our subject, rather right in its path,
to take heed of what the philosophers say of the effect
in other respects of the pursuit of wealth.
One cause of the decay of the power
of defense in a state, says the Athenian Stranger
in Plato’s Laws one cause is the love
of wealth, which wholly absorbs men and never for
a moment allows them to think of anything but their
private possessions; on this the soul of every citizen
hangs suspended, and can attend to nothing but his
daily gain; mankind are ready to learn any branch
of knowledge and to follow any pursuit which tends
to this end, and they laugh at any other; that is the
reason why a city will not be in earnest about war
or any other good and honorable pursuit.
The accumulation of gold in the treasury
of private individuals, says Socrates, in the Republic,
is the ruin of democracy. They invent illegal
modes of expenditure; and what do they or their wives
care about the law?
“And then one, seeing another’s
display, proposes to rival him, and thus the whole
body of citizens acquires a similar character.
“After that they get on in a
trade, and the more they think of making a fortune,
the less they think of virtue; for when riches and
virtue are placed together in the balance, the one
always rises as the other falls.
“And in proportion as riches
and rich men are honored in the state, virtue and
the virtuous are dishonored.
“And what is honored is cultivated,
and that which has no honor is neglected.
“And so at last, instead of
loving contention and glory, men become lovers of
trade and money, and they honor and reverence the rich
man and make a ruler of him, and dishonor the poor
man.
“They do so.”
The object of a reasonable statesman
(it is Plato who is really speaking in the Laws) is
not that the state should be as great and rich as
possible, should possess gold and silver, and have
the greatest empire by sea and land.
The citizen must, indeed, be happy
and good, and the legislator will seek to make him
so; but very rich and very good at the same time he
cannot be; not at least in the sense in which many
speak of riches. For they describe by the term
“rich” the few who have the most valuable
possessions, though the owner of them be a rogue.
And if this is true, I can never assent to the doctrine
that the rich man will be happy: he must be good
as well as rich. And good in a high degree and
rich in a high degree at the same time he cannot be.
Some one will ask, Why not? And we shall answer,
Because acquisitions which come from sources which
are just and unjust indifferently are more than double
those which come from just sources only; and the sums
which are expended neither honorably nor disgracefully
are only half as great as those which are expended
honorably and on honorable purposes. Thus if one
acquires double and spends half, the other, who is
in the opposite case and is a good man, cannot possibly
be wealthier than he. The first (I am speaking
of the saver, and not of the spender) is not always
bad; he may indeed in some cases be utterly bad, but
as I was saying, a good man he never is. For he
who receives money unjustly as well as justly, and
spends neither justly nor unjustly, will be a rich
man if he be also thrifty. On the other hand,
the utterly bad man is generally profligate, and therefore
poor; while he who spends on noble objects, and acquires
wealth by just means only, can hardly be remarkable
for riches any more than he can be very poor.
The argument, then, is right in declaring that the
very rich are not good, and if they are not good they
are not happy.
And the conclusion of Plato is that
we ought not to pursue any occupation to the neglect
of that for which riches exist “I
mean,” he says, “soul and body, which
without gymnastics and without education will never
be worth anything; and therefore, as we have said
not once but many times, the care of riches should
have the last place in our thoughts.”
Men cannot be happy unless they are
good, and they cannot be good unless the care of the
soul occupies the first place in their thoughts.
That is the first interest of man; the interest in
the body is midway; and last of all, when rightly
regarded, is the interest about money.
The majority of mankind reverses this
order of interests, and therefore it sets literature
to one side as of no practical account in human life.
More than this, it not only drops it out of mind, but
it has no conception of its influence and power in
the very affairs from which it seems to be excluded.
It is my purpose to show not only the close relation
of literature to ordinary life, but its eminent position
in life, and its saving power in lives which do not
suspect its influence or value. Just as it is
virtue that saves the state, if it be saved, although
the majority do not recognize it and attribute the
salvation of the state to energy, and to obedience
to the laws of political economy, and to discoveries
in science, and to financial contrivances; so it is
that in the life of generations of men, considered
from an ethical and not from a religious point of
view, the most potent and lasting influence for a
civilization that is worth anything, a civilization
that does not by its own nature work its decay, is
that which I call literature. It is time to define
what we mean by literature. We may arrive at the
meaning by the definition of exclusion. We do
not mean all books, but some books; not all that is
written and published, but only a small part of it.
We do not mean books of law, of theology, of politics,
of science, of medicine, and not necessarily books
of travel, or adventure, or biography, or fiction
even. These may all be ephemeral in their nature.
The term belles-lettres does not fully express
it, for it is too narrow. In books of law, theology,
politics, medicine, science, travel, adventure, biography,
philosophy, and fiction there may be passages that
possess, or the whole contents may possess, that quality
which comes within our meaning of literature.
It must have in it something of the enduring and the
universal. When we use the term art, we do not
mean the arts; we are indicating a quality that may
be in any of the arts. In art and literature
we require not only an expression of the facts in nature
and in human life, but of feeling, thought, emotion.
There must be an appeal to the universal in the race.
It is, for example, impossible for a Christian today
to understand what the religious system of the Egyptians
of three thousand years ago was to the Egyptian mind,
or to grasp the idea conveyed to a Chinaman’s
thought in the phrase, “the worship of the principle
of heaven”; but the Christian of today comprehends
perfectly the letters of an Egyptian scribe in the
time of Thotmes iii., who described the comical
miseries of his campaign with as clear an appeal to
universal human nature as Horace used in his ‘Iter
Brundusium;’ and the maxims of Confucius are
as comprehensible as the bitter-sweetness of Thomas
a Kempis. De Quincey distinguishes between the
literature of knowledge and the literature of power.
The definition is not exact; but we may say that the
one is a statement of what is known, the other is an
emanation from the man himself; or that one may add
to the sum of human knowledge, and the other addresses
itself to a higher want in human nature than the want
of knowledge. We select and set aside as literature
that which is original, the product of what we call
genius. As I have said, the subject of a production
does not always determine the desired quality which
makes it literature. A biography may contain all
the facts in regard to a man and his character, arranged
in an orderly and comprehensible manner, and yet not
be literature; but it may be so written, like Plutarch’s
Lives or Defoe’s account of Robinson Crusoe,
that it is literature, and of imperishable value as
a picture of human life, as a satisfaction to the
want of the human mind which is higher than the want
of knowledge. And this contribution, which I desire
to be understood to mean when I speak of literature,
is precisely the thing of most value in the lives
of the majority of men, whether they are aware of
it or not. It may be weighty and profound; it
may be light, as light as the fall of a leaf or a
bird’s song on the shore; it may be the thought
of Plato when he discourses of the character necessary
in a perfect state, or of Socrates, who, out of the
theorem of an absolute beauty, goodness, greatness,
and the like, deduces the immortality of the soul;
or it may be the lovesong of a Scotch plowman:
but it has this one quality of answering to a need
in human nature higher than a need for facts, for
knowledge, for wealth.
In noticing the remoteness in the
popular conception of the relation of literature to
life, we must not neglect to take into account what
may be called the arrogance of culture, an arrogance
that has been emphasized, in these days of reaction
from the old attitude of literary obsequiousness,
by harsh distinctions and hard words, which are paid
back by equally emphasized contempt. The apostles
of light regard the rest of mankind as barbarians
and Philistines, and the world retorts that these
self-constituted apostles are idle word-mongers, without
any sympathy with humanity, critics and jeerers who
do nothing to make the conditions of life easier.
It is natural that every man should magnify the circle
of the world in which he is active and imagine that
all outside of it is comparatively unimportant.
Everybody who is not a drone has his sufficient world.
To the lawyer it is his cases and the body of law,
it is the legal relation of men that is of supreme
importance; to the merchant and manufacturer all the
world consists in buying and selling, in the production
and exchange of products; to the physician all the
world is diseased and in need of remedies; to the clergyman
speculation and the discussion of dogmas and historical
theology assume immense importance; the politician
has his world, the artist his also, and the man of
books and letters a realm still apart from all others.
And to each of these persons what is outside of his
world seems of secondary importance; he is absorbed
in his own, which seems to him all-embracing.
To the lawyer everybody is or ought to be a litigant;
to the grocer the world is that which eats, and pays with
more or less regularity; to the scholar the world
is in books and ideas. One realizes how possessed
he is with his own little world only when by chance
he changes his profession or occupation and looks
back upon the law, or politics, or journalism, and
sees in its true proportion what it was that once absorbed
him and seemed to him so large. When Socrates
discusses with Gorgias the value of rhetoric, the
use of which, the latter asserts, relates to the greatest
and best of human things, Socrates says: I dare
say you have heard men singing at feasts
the old drinking-song, in which the singers enumerate
the goods of life-first, health; beauty next; thirdly,
wealth honestly acquired. The producers of these
things the physician, the trainer, the
money-maker each in turn contends that his
art produces the greatest good. Surely, says
the physician, health is the greatest good; there is
more good in my art, says the trainer, for my business
is to make men beautiful and strong in body; and consider,
says the money-maker, whether any one can produce
a greater good than wealth. But, insists Gorgias,
the greatest good of men, of which I am the creator,
is that which gives men freedom in their persons,
and the power of ruling over others in their several
states that is, the word which persuades
the judge in the court, or the senators in the council,
or the citizens in the assembly: if you have
the power of uttering this word, you will have the
physician your slave, and the trainer your slave,
and the moneymaker of whom you talk will be found
to gather treasures, not for himself, but for those
who are able to speak and persuade the multitude.
What we call life is divided into
occupations and interest, and the horizons of mankind
are bounded by them. It happens naturally enough,
therefore, that there should be a want of sympathy
in regard to these pursuits among men, the politician
despising the scholar, and the scholar looking down
upon the politician, and the man of affairs, the man
of industries, not caring to conceal his contempt
for both the others. And still more reasonable
does the division appear between all the world which
is devoted to material life, and the few who live in
and for the expression of thought and emotion.
It is a pity that this should be so, for it can be
shown that life would not be worth living divorced
from the gracious and ennobling influence of literature,
and that literature suffers atrophy when it does not
concern itself with the facts and feelings of men.
If the poet lives in a world apart
from the vulgar, the most lenient apprehension of
him is that his is a sort of fool’s paradise.
One of the most curious features in the relation of
literature to life is this, that while poetry, the
production of the poet, is as necessary to universal
man as the atmosphere, and as acceptable, the poet
is regarded with that mingling of compassion and undervaluation,
and perhaps awe, which once attached to the weak-minded
and insane, and which is sometimes expressed by the
term “inspired idiot.” However the
poet may have been petted and crowned, however his
name may have been diffused among peoples, I doubt
not that the popular estimate of him has always been
substantially what it is today. And we all know
that it is true, true in our individual consciousness,
that if a man be known as a poet and nothing else,
if his character is sustained by no other achievement
than the production of poetry, he suffers in our opinion
a loss of respect. And this is only recovered
for him after he is dead, and his poetry is left alone
to speak for his name. However fond my lord and
lady were of the ballad, the place of the minstrel
was at the lower end of the hall. If we are pushed
to say why this is, why this happens to the poet and
not to the producers of anything else that excites
the admiration of mankind, we are forced to admit
that there is something in the poet to sustain the
popular judgment of his in utility. In all the
occupations and professions of life there is a sign
put up, invisible but none the less real,
and expressing an almost universal feeling “No
poet need apply.” And this is not because
there are so many poor poets; for there are poor lawyers,
poor soldiers, poor statesmen, incompetent business
men; but none of the personal disparagement attaches
to them that is affixed to the poet. This popular
estimate of the poet extends also, possibly in less
degree, to all the producers of the literature that
does not concern itself with knowledge. It is
not our care to inquire further why this is so, but
to repeat that it is strange that it should be so
when poetry is, and has been at all times, the universal
solace of all peoples who have emerged out of barbarism,
the one thing not supernatural and yet akin to the
supernatural, that makes the world, in its hard and
sordid conditions, tolerable to the race. For
poetry is not merely the comfort of the refined and
the delight of the educated; it is the alleviator of
poverty, the pleasure-ground of the ignorant, the
bright spot in the most dreary pilgrimage. We
cannot conceive the abject animal condition of our
race were poetry abstracted; and we do not wonder
that this should be so when we reflect that it supplies
a want higher than the need for food, for raiment,
or ease of living, and that the mind needs support
as much as the body. The majority of mankind
live largely in the imagination, the office or use
of which is to lift them in spirit out of the bare
physical conditions in which the majority exist.
There are races, which we may call the poetical races,
in which this is strikingly exemplified. It would
be difficult to find poverty more complete, physical
wants less gratified, the conditions of life more
bare than among the Oriental peoples from the Nile
to the Ganges and from the Indian Ocean to the steppes
of Siberia. But there are perhaps none among the
more favored races who live so much in the world of
imagination fed by poetry and romance. Watch
the throng seated about an Arab or Indian or Persian
story-teller and poet, men and women with all the marks
of want, hungry, almost naked, without any prospect
in life of ever bettering their sordid condition;
see their eyes kindle, their breathing suspended, their
tense absorption; see their tears, hear their laughter,
note their excitement as the magician unfolds to them
a realm of the imagination in which they are free
for the hour to wander, tasting a keen and deep enjoyment
that all the wealth of Croesus cannot purchase for
his disciples. Measure, if you can, what poetry
is to them, what their lives would be without it.
To the millions and millions of men who are in this
condition, the bard, the story-teller, the creator
of what we are considering as literature, comes with
the one thing that can lift them out of poverty, suffering all
the woe of which nature is so heedless.
It is not alone of the poetical nations
of the East that this is true, nor is this desire
for the higher enjoyment always wanting in the savage
tribes of the West. When the Jesuit Fathers in
1768 landed upon the almost untouched and unexplored
southern Pacific coast, they found in the San Gabriel
Valley in Lower California that the Indians had games
and feasts at which they decked themselves in flower
garlands that reached to their feet, and that at these
games there were song contests which sometimes lasted
for three days. This contest of the poets was
an old custom with them. And we remember how
the ignorant Icelanders, who had never seen a written
character, created the splendid Saga, and handed it
down from father to son. We shall scarcely find
in Europe a peasantry whose abject poverty is not
in some measure alleviated by this power which literature
gives them to live outside it. Through our sacred
Scriptures, through the ancient storytellers, through
the tradition which in literature made, as I said,
the chief continuity in the stream of time, we all
live a considerable, perhaps the better, portion of
our lives in the Orient. But I am not sure that
the Scotch peasant, the crofter in his Highland cabin,
the operative in his squalid tenement-house, in the
hopelessness of poverty, in the grime of a life made
twice as hard as that of the Arab by an inimical climate,
does not owe more to literature than the man of culture,
whose material surroundings are heaven in the imagination
of the poor. Think what his wretched life would
be, in its naked deformity, without the popular ballads,
without the romances of Scott, which have invested
his land for him, as for us, with enduring charm;
and especially without the songs of Burns, which keep
alive in him the feeling that he is a man, which impart
to his blunted sensibility the delicious throb of spring-songs
that enable him to hear the birds, to see the bits
of blue sky-songs that make him tender of the wee
bit daisy at his feet songs that hearten
him when his heart is fit to break with misery.
Perhaps the English peasant, the English operative,
is less susceptible to such influences than the Scotch
or the Irish; but over him, sordid as his conditions
are, close kin as he is to the clod, the light of
poetry is diffused; there filters into his life, also,
something of that divine stream of which we have spoken,
a dialect poem that touches him, the leaf of a psalm,
some bit of imagination, some tale of pathos, set
afloat by a poor writer so long ago that it has become
the common stock of human tradition-maybe from Palestine,
maybe from the Ganges, perhaps from Athens some
expression of real emotion, some creation, we say,
that makes for him a world, vague and dimly apprehended,
that is not at all the actual world in which he sins
and suffers. The poor woman, in a hut with an
earth floor, a reeking roof, a smoky chimney, barren
of comfort, so indecent that a gentleman would not
stable his horse in it, sits and sews upon a coarse
garment, while she rocks the cradle of an infant about
whom she cherishes no illusions that his lot will
be other than that of his father before him.
As she sits forlorn, it is not the wretched hovel that
she sees, nor other hovels like it rows
of tenements of hopeless poverty, the ale-house, the
gin-shop, the coal-pit, and the choking factory but:
“Sweet
fields beyond the swelling flood
Stand
dressed in living green”
for her, thanks to the poet.
But, alas for the poet there is not a peasant nor
a wretched operative of them all who will not shake
his head and tap his forehead with his forefinger
when the poor poet chap passes by. The peasant
has the same opinion of him that the physician, the
trainer, and the money-lender had of the rhetorician.
The hard conditions of the lonely
New England life, with its religious theories as sombre
as its forests, its rigid notions of duty as difficult
to make bloom into sweetness and beauty as the stony
soil, would have been unendurable if they had not
been touched with the ideal created by the poet.
There was in creed and purpose the virility that creates
a state, and, as Menander says, the country which
is cultivated with difficulty produces brave men;
but we leave out an important element in the lives
of the Pilgrims if we overlook the means they had of
living above their barren circumstances. I do
not speak only of the culture which many of them brought
from the universities, of the Greek and Roman classics,
and what unworldly literature they could glean from
the productive age of Elizabeth and James, but of
another source, more universally resorted to, and
more powerful in exciting imagination and emotion,
and filling the want in human nature of which we have
spoken. They had the Bible, and it was more to
them, much more, than a book of religion, than a revelation
of religious truth, a rule for the conduct of life,
or a guide to heaven. It supplied the place to
them of the Mahabharata to the Hindoo, of the story-teller
to the Arab. It opened to them a boundless realm
of poetry and imagination.
What is the Bible? It might have
sufficed, accepted as a book of revelation, for all
the purposes of moral guidance, spiritual consolation,
and systematized authority, if it had been a collection
of precepts, a dry code of morals, an arsenal of judgments,
and a treasury of promises. We are accustomed
to think of the Pilgrims as training their intellectual
faculties in the knottiest problems of human responsibility
and destiny, toughening their mental fibre in wrestling
with dogmas and the decrees of Providence, forgetting
what else they drew out of the Bible: what else
it was to them in a degree it has been to few peoples
many age. For the Bible is the unequaled record
of thought and emotion, the reservoir of poetry, traditions,
stories, parables, exaltations, consolations, great
imaginative adventure, for which the spirit of man
is always longing. It might have been, in warning
examples and commands, all-sufficient to enable men
to make a decent pilgrimage on earth and reach a better
country; but it would have been a very different book
to mankind if it had been only a volume of statutes,
and if it lacked its wonderful literary quality.
It might have enabled men to reach a better country,
but not, while on earth, to rise into and live in that
better country, or to live in a region above the sordidness
of actual life. For, apart from its religious
intention and sacred character, the book is so written
that it has supremely in its history, poetry, prophecies,
promises, stories, that clear literary quality that
supplies, as certainly no other single book does,
the want in the human mind which is higher than the
want of facts or knowledge.
The Bible is the best illustration
of the literature of power, for it always concerns
itself with life, it touches it at all points.
And this is the test of any piece of literature its
universal appeal to human nature. When I consider
the narrow limitations of the Pilgrim households,
the absence of luxury, the presence of danger and hardship,
the harsh laws only less severe than the
contemporary laws of England and Virginia the
weary drudgery, the few pleasures, the curb upon the
expression of emotion and of tenderness, the ascetic
repression of worldly thought, the absence of poetry
in the routine occupations and conditions, I can feel
what the Bible must have been to them. It was
an open door into a world where emotion is expressed,
where imagination can range, where love and longing
find a language, where imagery is given to every noble
and suppressed passion of the soul, where every aspiration
finds wings. It was history, or, as Thucydides
said, philosophy teaching by example; it was the romance
of real life; it was entertainment unfailing; the
wonder-book of childhood, the volume of sweet sentiment
to the shy maiden, the sword to the soldier, the inciter
of the youth to heroic enduring of hardness, it was
the refuge of the aged in failing activity. Perhaps
we can nowhere find a better illustration of the true
relation of literature to life than in this example.
Let us consider the comparative value
of literature to mankind. By comparative value
I mean its worth to men in comparison with other things
of acknowledged importance, such as the creation of
industries, the government of States, the manipulation
of the politics of an age, the achievements in war
and discovery, and the lives of admirable men.
It needs a certain perspective to judge of this aright,
for the near and the immediate always assume importance.
The work that an age has on hand, whether it be discovery,
conquest, the wars that determine boundaries or are
fought for policies, the industries that develop a
country or affect the character of a people, the wielding
of power, the accumulation of fortunes, the various
activities of any given civilization or period, assume
such enormous proportions to those engaged in them
that such a modest thing as the literary product seems
insignificant in comparison; and hence it is that
the man of action always holds in slight esteem the
man of thought, and especially the expresser of feeling
and emotion, the poet and the humorist. It is
only when we look back over the ages, when civilizations
have passed or changed, over the rivalries of States,
the ambitions and enmities of men, the shining deeds
and the base deeds that make up history, that we are
enabled to see what remains, what is permanent.
Perhaps the chief result left to the world out of a
period of heroic exertion, of passion and struggle
and accumulation, is a sheaf of poems, or the record
by a man of letters of some admirable character.
Spain filled a large place in the world in the sixteenth
century, and its influence upon history is by no means
spent yet; but we have inherited out of that period
nothing, I dare say, that is of more value than the
romance of Don Quixote. It is true that the best
heritage of generation from generation is the character
of great men; but we always owe its transmission to
the poet and the writer. Without Plato there would
be no Socrates. There is no influence comparable
in human life to the personality of a powerful man,
so long as he is present to his generation, or lives
in the memory of those who felt his influence.
But after time has passed, will the world, will human
life, that is essentially the same in all changing
conditions, be more affected by what Bismarck did
or by what Goethe said?
We may without impropriety take for
an illustration of the comparative value of literature
to human needs the career of a man now living.
In the opinion of many, Mr. Gladstone is the greatest
Englishman of this age. What would be the position
of the British empire, what would be the tendency
of English politics and society without him, is a matter
for speculation. He has not played such a rôle
for England and its neighbors as Bismarck has played
for Germany and the Continent, but he has been one
of the most powerful influences in molding English
action. He is the foremost teacher. Rarely
in history has a nation depended more upon a single
man, at times, than the English upon Gladstone, upon
his will, his ability, and especially his character.
In certain recent crises the thought of losing him
produced something like a panic in the English mind,
justifying in regard to him, the hyperbole of Choate
upon the death of Webster, that the sailor on the
distant sea would feel less safe as if
a protecting providence had been withdrawn from the
world. His mastery of finance and of economic
problems, his skill in debate, his marvelous achievements
in oratory, have extorted the admiration of his enemies.
There is scarcely a province in government, letters,
art, or research in which the mind can win triumphs
that he has not invaded and displayed his power in;
scarcely a question in politics, reform, letters, religion,
archaeology, sociology, which he has not discussed
with ability. He is a scholar, critic, parliamentarian,
orator, voluminous writer. He seems equally at
home in every field of human activity a
man of prodigious capacity and enormous acquirements.
He can take up, with a turn of the hand, and always
with vigor, the cause of the Greeks, Papal power,
education, theology, the influence of Egypt on Homer,
the effect of English legislation on King O’Brien,
contributing something noteworthy to all the discussions
of the day. But I am not aware that he has ever
produced a single page of literature. Whatever
space he has filled in his own country, whatever and
however enduring the impression he has made upon English
life and society, does it seem likely that the sum
total of his immense activity in so many fields, after
the passage of so many years, will be worth to the
world as much as the simple story of Rab and his Friends?
Already in America I doubt if it is. The illustration
might have more weight with some minds if I contrasted
the work of this great man as to its answering
to a deep want in human nature with a novel
like ‘Henry Esmond’ or a poem like ‘In
Memoriam’; but I think it is sufficient to rest
it upon so slight a performance as the sketch by Dr.
John Brown, of Edinburgh. For the truth is that
a little page of literature, nothing more than a sheet
of paper with a poem written on it, may have that
vitality, that enduring quality, that adaptation to
life, that make it of more consequence to all who
inherit it than every material achievement of the
age that produced it. It was nothing but a sheet
of paper with a poem on it, carried to the door of
his London patron, for which the poet received a guinea,
and perhaps a seat at the foot of my lord’s
table. What was that scrap compared to my lord’s
business, his great establishment, his équipages
in the Park, his position in society, his weight in
the House of Lords, his influence in Europe?
And yet that scrap of paper has gone the world over;
it has been sung in the camp, wept over in the lonely
cottage; it has gone with the marching regiments,
with the explorers with mankind, in short,
on its way down the ages, brightening, consoling,
elevating life; and my lord, who regarded as scarcely
above a menial the poet to whom he tossed the guinea my
lord, with all his pageantry and power, has utterly
gone and left no witness.