MAN ABOUT TOWN
At that time New York was hardly more
than a big village, such as Boston continued to be
for a half-century later. Everybody (who was
anybody) knew everybody else in the friendly and informal
way which nowadays belongs to a “set.”
Conviviality this dignified name of the
thing best suggests the way in which it was looked
at then was as much a part of fashionable
life in New York as in Edinburgh or London. Into
this society Irving entered with zest, flirting, dancing,
tippling with other young swaggerers according to the
mode. He went back nominally to his legal studies,
but was really very little concerned with law or gospel.
Of this kind of life, “Salmagundi,” the
first number of which, appeared in January, 1807, was
the legitimate outcome. It was made up of short
satirical sketches of the “Spectator”
type. Irving and J. K. Paulding were the principal
contributors, but they had some assistance from William
Irving and a few others. In the course of a year
twenty numbers were published at irregular intervals,
when they suddenly ceased to appear. The authors,
who wrote under fictitious names, affected from the
start complete indifference to fame or profit.
Their purpose, they said with whimsical assurance,
was simply “to instruct the young, reform the
old, correct the town, and castigate the age.”
The audacity of the thing caught the town; it was
a decided success, and very profitable for
the publisher. There is a mildly sophomoric flavor
about the “Salmagundi” papers, as there
is about Irving’s letters of the same period.
But they are full of amusing things, and worth reading,
too, for the odd side-lights they throw upon the foibles
of that old New York.
As he grew older, Irving came to feel
the shallowness of fashionable society, but in the
Salmagundi days he appears to have asked for nothing
better. He had good looks, good humor, and good
manners, showed a proper susceptibility, and knew
how to turn a compliment or write a graceful letter.
No wonder he found himself welcome wherever he went.
After a visit to Philadelphia one of the ladies to
whom he had made himself agreeable wrote, “Half
the people exist but in the idea that you will
one day return.”
Early in the following year he had
a little experience of the practical working of ward
politics, which he described in a letter to a certain
charming Mary Fairlie: “Truly, this saving
one’s country is a nauseous piece of business,
and if patriotism is such a dirty virtue, prythee,
no more of it.... Such haranguing and puffing
and strutting among the little great men of the day.
Such shoals of unfledged heroes from the lower wards,
who had broke away from their mammas, and run to electioneer
with a slice of bread and butter in their hands.”
Irving’s patriotism was not found wanting when
the time came, but he had a life-long contempt for
the petty trickery of party politics. That year
he made another of his leisurely jaunts, nominally
on business, this time to Virginia. His letters
record the usual round of social gallantries, and
some graver matter. Burr’s trial was on
in Richmond. Irving made his acquaintance, and
was retained in some ornamental sense among his counsel.
One or two letters from Richmond show a sentimental
sympathy for his client of which the less said the
better. A characteristic weakness of Irving’s
was always an unreasoning fondness for the under dog.
In the autumn of 1807 his father died, one of the
most sincere among the “unco guid,” a
man whom few people loved and everybody respected.
Not long after the discontinuance
of the Salmagundi papers a new idea suggested itself
to Irving and his brother Peter, which in its original
form does not look especially promising. It was
to develop into a really remarkable work, and to place
Irving’s name in a secure place among living
humorists. The “Knickerbocker History of
New York” really laid the foundation of his
fame. The first plan was for a mere burlesque
of an absurd book just published, a Dr. Samuel Mitchill’s
“Picture of New York.” Mitchill began
with the aborigines: the Irvings began with the
creation of the world. Fortunately Peter was soon
called away to Europe, and Irving was left to his own
devices, which presently took a different and more
original turn. He threw out most of the pompous
erudition which belonged to the work as a burlesque,
and condensed what remained. Everything after
the five introductory chapters is his own.
At this time he had begun to do commission
business for certain New York houses, with a genuine
impulse toward steadiness and industry which it is
easy to account for. He was deep in love with
the second daughter of Mr. Hoffman, in whose office
he had originally idled. He had been for years
very intimate with the family, and had ended by making
a remarkable discovery about one of them. As he
was evidently not in a position to marry, he was now
setting to work with real energy to improve his means.
Matilda Hoffman was a girl of seventeen,
pretty, amiable, and clever. She died of quick
consumption in April, 1809. It is certain that
they loved each other very much, and that Irving never
forgot her. The claim put forth by his nephew
and biographer that he gave up marriage for her sake,
and was romantically scrupulous in his faithfulness
to her memory, seems hardly borne out by the facts.
He was crushed for the moment, but not heartbroken.
The truth is Irving’s nature was sentimental
rather than passionate. His love for Miss Hoffman
appears to have been the deepest feeling of his life,
but it did not absorb his whole nature. The first
effect of her loss was to fill him with a sort of
horror the rebellion of a young and sensitive
health against the tyranny of death. It was enough
to show that the mourner was by no means in desperate
case, for extreme grief is not afraid. In after
life he never mentioned her name, and wrote of her
only once. At the same time pretty faces and
the charm of womanly companionship continued to attract
him; indeed, a few years later he openly expressed
his expectation of some time marrying. That he
did not was clearly due to temper and circumstance
rather than to romantic fidelity or abnegation.
In the end his susceptibility became purely impersonal;
his satisfaction in the exercise of a gentle old-school
gallantry did much to take the sting from his life-long
bachelorhood. Plainly, Irving was the sort of
man who finds a grace in every feminine presence.
It is encouraging to find him in a
few months at work again upon the Knickerbocker history.
Its appearance was cleverly heralded by a series of
preliminary advertisements, announcing the disappearance
of one Diedrich Knickerbocker, and the finding of
a manuscript history by his hand. The book was
published in December, 1809, and made a remarkable
impression, in England as well as in America.
Henry Brevoort, a close friend of Irving’s,
in 1813 sent a copy of the second edition to Walter
Scott, who wrote at once: “I beg you to
accept my best thanks for the uncommon degree of entertainment
which I have received from the most excellently jocose
History of New York.... I have never read anything
so closely resembling the style of Dean Swift as the
annals of Diedrich Knickerbocker. I have been
employed these few evenings in reading them aloud to
Mrs. Scott and two ladies who are our guests, and
our sides have been absolutely sore with laughing.
I think, too, there are passages which indicate that
the author possesses powers of a different kind, and
has some touches which remind me much of Sterne.”
The work in its completed form is
a history of the three Dutch governors of New York,
whom Irving uses as a stalking-horse for purposes
of satire. Everybody laughed at it except a few
descendants of the old Dutch worthies with whose names
and characters he had made free. As late as the
year 1818, G. C. Verplanck, a personal friend of Irving’s,
called him to account in an address before the New
York Historical Society, to which the first edition
of Knickerbocker was gravely dedicated, for “wasting
the riches of his fancy on an ungrateful theme, and
his exuberant humor in a coarse caricature.”
One of his brothers wrote to Irving, deprecating the
attack. Irving replied: “I have seen
what Verplanck said of my work. He did me more
than justice in what he said of my mental qualifications;
and he said nothing of my work that I have not long
thought of it myself.... I am sure he wishes
me well, and his own talents and acquirements are too
great to suffer him to entertain jealousy; but were
I his bitterest enemy, such an opinion have I of his
integrity of mind, that I would refer any one to him
for an honest account of me, sooner than to almost
any one else.”
Soon after Knickerbocker came out,
Irving went to Albany in the fruitless pursuit of
a minor court appointment. There he found his
name come not altogether pleasantly before him.
“I have somehow or another formed acquaintance
with some of the good people,” he wrote, “and
several of the little Yffrouws, and have even made
my way and intrenched myself strongly in the parlors
of several genuine Dutch families, who had declared
utter hostility to me.” One lady had said
that if she were a man she would horsewhip him; but
an hour with Irving, who had made a point of meeting
her, left her resigned to be a woman.
Irving had now scored his first great
literary success. He had proved himself master
of a fluent humorous style which might have been applied
indefinitely to the treatment of similar themes.
He was twenty-seven years old, and there was no reason
why the next ten years should not be a most fruitful
period. Unfortunately, during most of that time
life was made too easy for him. He knew now that
he could write, but he had no desire to write for
a living. Probably he felt that such a course
would be in some way not quite suitable for a man
of fashion. At all events, ten years passed, and
middle age was at hand before the promising author
began to fulfill his promise. Not till 1819 appeared
his next literary venture, conceived in a more serious
spirit, and launched with many misgivings as the first
performance of the professional man of letters.
He had by this time pretty much given
up any notion he may have had of living by the law.
His attempts to gain civil appointments were not successful.
The brilliant younger brother must be provided for;
presently Peter and Ebenezer, who were proprietors
of a fairly prosperous hardware business, offered
him a partnership, with nominal duties and one fifth
of the profits. His connection with the firm was
at first a sinecure. Later, and when the business
had come to the brink of failure, the burden fell
upon him, and absorbed his whole time and energies
for nearly two years. His literary idling cannot
be said to have been due to this entanglement.
In his view writing was apparently little more than
an agreeable indulgence which had brought him some
half-deserved praise, and a pleasant social recognition
in desirable quarters. One of the first results
of his new connection was a visit to Washington, ostensibly
in the interests of the business. The character
of his services may be surmised from the fact that
his journey from New York to Washington, via
Philadelphia and Baltimore, consumed nineteen days;
and that was when the affairs of the firm were in
some straits, and supposed to be particularly in need
of representation at Washington.
In 1812 he accepted the editorship
of a periodical called “Select Reviews,”
to which during the next two years he contributed various
critical and biographical articles. He found little
to his liking in the editorial and still less in the
critical part of his work. “I do not profess,”
he wrote, “the art and mystery of reviewing,
and am not ambitious of being wise or facetious at
the expense of others.” He was never a
good critic, for he was too soft-hearted, and too little
in conceit with his own judgment to give an unfavorable
opinion. And this was in the period of “slashing”
criticism, when it was the proper thing, unless an
author could show good reason for being declared the
greatest man of the age, to hang, draw, and quarter
him on the spot. At about this time, Jeffrey
of the “Edinburgh Review,” a critic who
made the most of his prerogative, visited America.
His coming was heralded by Irving’s friend Brevoort
in a letter whose ludicrous climax is worth quoting:
“It is essential that Jeffrey may imbibe a just
estimate of the United States and its inhabitants....
Persuade him to visit Washington and by all means
to see the falls of Niagara.” Apparently
Irving received the great Jeffrey with courtesy and
composure; as an equal, and not in the least as an
idol to be propitiated with gewgaws.
It was an anxious time, the year 1813.
The struggle with England had assumed a more serious
form. At last the British succeeded in entering
Washington, and destroyed most of the public buildings.
Irving’s attitude had been uncompromisingly
American from the outset. This act of vandalism
aroused his indignation; he promptly offered his services
to Governor Tompkins of New York, and was made an aide
on his staff, with the brevet rank of colonel.
This position he held for four months, when Governor
Tompkins retired from the command. During that
time Irving showed much military zeal, and enough capacity
to be ordered to the front at Sackett’s Harbor,
at an important moment, with powers of which he made
creditable use.
In the spring of 1815 he narrowly
escaped sailing with Decatur on the expedition to
Algiers. It was largely by his advice that Decatur
decided to accept the command. Irving’s
trunks had been taken on board the commodore’s
frigate when orders came from Washington delaying the
expedition. Irving was afraid that his presence
might in some way embarrass the commander, and left
the ship at once. He was not to be balked of
Europe, however; he was ready to sail and the affairs
of the firm seemed to promise an easy competence.
On May 25 he embarked for Liverpool, with no very
distinct plans, but with no expectation of being long
abroad. It was seventeen years before he saw America
again.
He reached Liverpool at a dramatic
moment. Napoleon had fallen, and the mail coaches
were rushing through England with the news of Waterloo.
It was the sort of pageant which always roused Irving’s
fancy. He was absorbed in the situation.
His letters show that however he may
have shrunk from concerning himself with practical
politics, he viewed the great coups of statecraft
with the greatest interest. His sympathies are
with Bonaparte; the English were perhaps too recent
enemies to be treated quite charitably. “I
have made a short visit to London,” he wrote
to one of his brothers in July. “The spirits
of this nation, as you may suppose, are wonderfully
elated by their successes on the Continent, and English
pride is inflated to its full distention by the idea
of having Paris at the mercy of Wellington and his
army. The only thing that annoys the honest mob
is that old Louis will not cut throats and lop off
heads, and that Wellington will not blow up bridges
and monuments, and plunder palaces and galleries.
As to Bonaparte, they have disposed of him in a thousand
ways; every fat-sided John Bull has him dished up
in a way to please his own palate, excepting that as
yet they have not observed the first direction in
the famous receipt to cook a turbot, ’First
catchy our turbot.’” Then comes a postscript:
“The bells are ringing, and this moment news
is brought that poor Boney is a prisoner at Plymouth.
John has caught the turbot!”
Peter Irving was in charge of the
firm’s English office at Liverpool. He
was a bachelor, and Irving had to go to Birmingham,
to the house of his brother-in-law, Henry van Wart,
to find an American home in England. But he did
not make his permanent escape from Liverpool so easily.
Not many months had passed before Peter fell ill, had
to leave Liverpool, and Irving was left in charge.
For over eight months the entire management of an
ill-ordered establishment fell into his hands.
He seems to have made a thorough attempt to examine
and arrange the confusions of the office. He
studied bookkeeping, so that he might get some knowledge
of the accounts, and otherwise busied himself in a
methodical way foreign to his habit. At last,
in 1818, the best thing possible under the circumstances
happened, the business collapsed, and the
brothers found a road out of their difficulties by
way of the bankruptcy court. It was a great relief.
“For upwards of two years,” he wrote to
Brevoort, “I have been bowed down in spirit,
and harassed by the most sordid cares. As yet,
I trust, my mind has not lost its elasticity, and
I hope to recover some cheerful standing in the world.
Indeed, I feel very little solicitude about my own
prospects. I trust something will turn up to
procure me subsistence, and am convinced, however
scanty and precarious may be my lot, I can bring myself
to be content. But I feel harassed in mind at
times on behalf of my brothers. It is a dismal
thing to look round on the wrecks of such a family
connection. This is what, in spite of every exertion,
will sometimes steep my soul in bitterness.”
Irving had now fairly arrived at maturity.
The experience of the last few years had done much
to sober him. He was still fond of society, and
still of a cheerful temper; but the absorbing sophomoric
joy in cakes and ale was now past and not to return.
The pinch of necessity had come at last: the
world no longer offered him the life of an elegant
dawdler. He had a serious business before him, to
gain a competency for himself and his brother.
The unpractical younger brother was to be after this
the mainstay of the family fortunes. And what
especially makes this the finest moment of his life
is the sudden and clear perception that to gain this
end he must depend upon the steady and fruitful exercise
of his gift for writing. It was not to be taken
up as a last resort, but as a matter of deliberate
choice. Presently he received the offer of a
good position on the Navy Board at Washington, with
a salary of $2400. A few years earlier he would
have snatched at it. “Flattering as the
prospect undoubtedly is which your letters hold out,”
he wrote to his brother Ebenezer, “I have concluded
to decline it for various reasons.... The principal
one is, that I do not wish to undertake any situation
that must involve me in such a routine of duties as
to prevent my attending to literary pursuits.”
His determination was sturdy enough, but he was not
then nor afterward the master of his moods. “I
have heard him say,” notes Pierre Irving, “that
he was so disturbed by the responsibility he had taken
in refusing such an offer and trusting to the uncertain
chances of literary success, that for two months he
could scarcely write a line.” His elder
brothers were heartily disappointed by the decision.
They could not suppose that he would prove greatly
more busy or fruitful in the future than he had in
the past, and up to this time, he had done little
enough. The youthful “Salmagundi”
sketches, the broad satire of the Knickerbocker History
were not much for a man of leisure to boast of at
thirty-five. But they did not reckon justly with
the new seriousness which had come into his purposes.
Washington Irving was always fitful in his manner
of working, often uncertain of himself and of his
work. But from this time on he had no doubt of
his calling; he had ceased to be a man about town,
and become a man of letters.