After the death of Henry Hart, his
widow remained with her children in New York and Brooklyn
until 1853. They were supported in part by her
family, the Ostranders, and in part by Bernard Hart.
There were four children, two sons and two daughters.
Eliza, the eldest, who is still living, and to whom
the author is indebted for information about the family,
was married in 1851 to Mr. F. F. Knaufft, and her
life has been passed mainly in New York and New Jersey.
Mr. Ernest Knaufft, editor of the “Art Student,”
and well known as a critic and writer, is her son.
Unfortunately, Mrs. Knaufft’s house was burned
in 1868, and with it many letters and papers relating
to her father and his parents, and also the mss.
of various lectures delivered by him.
The younger daughter, Margaret B.,
went to California with Bret Harte, and preceded him
as a contributor of stories and sketches to the “Golden
Era,” and other papers in San Francisco.
She married Mr. B. H. Wyman, and is still a resident
of California. Bret Harte’s sisters are
women of distinguished appearance, and remarkable
for force of character.
Bret Harte’s only brother, Henry,
had a short but striking career, which displayed,
even more perhaps than did the career of Bret Harte
himself, that intensity which seems to have been their
chief inheritance from the Hebrew strain. The
following account of him is furnished by Mrs. Knaufft:
“My brother Henry was two years
and six months older than his brother Francis Brett
Harte. Henry began reading history when he was
six years old, and from that time until he was twelve
years of age, he read history, ancient and modern,
daily, sometimes only one hour, at other times from
two to three hours. What interested him was the
wars; he would read for two or three hours, and then
if a battle had been won by his favorite warriors,
he would spring to his feet, shouting, ‘Victory
is ours,’ repeatedly. He would read lying
on the floor, and often we would say ridiculous and
provoking things about him, and sometimes pull his
hair, but he never paid the slightest attention to
us, being perfectly oblivious of his surroundings.
His memory was phenomenal. He read Froissart’s
Chronicles when he was about ten years old, and could
repeat page after page accurately. One evening
an old professor was talking with my mother about
some event in ancient history, and he mentioned the
date of a decisive battle. Henry, who was listening
intently, said, ’I beg pardon, Professor, you
are wrong. That battle was fought on such a date.’
The professor was astonished. ‘Where did
you hear about that battle?’ he asked.
‘I read that history last year,’ replied
Henry.
“When the boy was twelve years
old, he came home from school one day, and rushing
into his mother’s room, shouted, ’War is
declared! War is declared!’ ‘What
in the name of common sense has that got to do with
you?’ asked my mother. ‘Mother,’
said Henry, ’I am going to fight for my country;
that is what I was created for.’
“After some four or five months
of constant anxiety, caused by Henry’s offering
himself to every captain whose ship was going to or
near Mexico, a friend of my mother’s told Lieutenant
Benjamin Dove of the Navy about Henry, and he became
greatly interested, and finally, through his efforts,
Henry was taken on his ship. Henry was so small
that his uniform had to be made for him. The
ship went ashore on the Island of Eleuthera, to the
great delight of my brother, who wrote his mother a
startling account of the shipwreck. I cannot
remember whether the ship was able to go on her voyage,
or whether the men were all transferred to Commander
Tatnall’s ship the ‘Spitfire.’
I know that Henry was on Commander Tatnall’s
ship at the Bombardment of Vera Cruz, and was in the
fort or forts at Tuxpan, where the Commander and Henry
were both wounded. Commander Tatnall wrote my
mother that when Henry was wounded, he exclaimed, ’Thank
God, I am shot in the face,’ and that when he
inquired for Henry, he was told that he was hiding
because he did not want his wound dressed. When
the Commander found Henry, he asked him why he did
not want his wound dressed. With tears in his
eyes Henry said, ’Because I’m afraid it
won’t show any scar if the surgeon dresses it.’
“When my brother returned from
Mexico, he became very restless. The sea had
cast its spell about him, and finally a friend, captain
of a ship, took Henry on a very long voyage, going
around Cape Horn to California. When they arrived
at San Francisco, my brother, who was then just sixteen,
was taken in charge by a relative. I never heard
of his doing anything remarkable during his short
life. As the irony of fate would have it, he
died suddenly from pneumonia, just before the Civil
War.”
Bret Harte was equally precocious,
and he was precocious even in respect to the sense
of humor, which commonly requires some little experience
for its development. It is a family tradition
that he burlesqued the rather bald language of his
primer at the age of five; and his sisters distinctly
remember that, a year later, he came home from a school
exhibition, and made them scream with laughter by
mimicking the boy who spoke “My name is Norval.”
He was naturally a very quiet, studious child; and
this tendency was increased by ill health. From
his sixth to his tenth year, he was unable to lead
an active life. At the age of six he was reading
Shakspere and Froissart, and at seven he took up “Dombey
and Son,” and so began his acquaintance with
that author who was to influence him far more than
any other. From Dickens he proceeded to Fielding,
Goldsmith, Smollett, Cervantes, and Washington Irving.
During an illness of two months, when he was fourteen
years old, he learned to read Greek sufficiently well
to astonish his mother.
If the Hart family resembled the Alcott
family in the matter of misfortunes and privations,
so it did, also, in its intellectual atmosphere.
Mrs. Hart shared her husband’s passion for literature;
and she had a keen, critical faculty, to which, the
family think, Bret Harte was much indebted for the
perfection of his style. Henry Hart had accumulated
a library surprisingly large for a man of his small
means, and the whole household was given to the reading
not simply of books, but of the best books, and to
talking about them. It was a household in which
the literary second-rate was unerringly, and somewhat
scornfully, discriminated from the first-rate.
When Bret Harte was only eleven years
old he wrote a poem called Autumnal Musings
which he sent surreptitiously to the “New York
Sunday Atlas,” and the poem was published in
the next issue. This was a wonderful feat for
a boy of that age, and he was naturally elated by
seeing his verses in print; but the family critics
pointed out their defects with such unpleasant frankness
that the conceit of the youthful poet was nipped in
the bud. Many years afterward, Bret Harte said
with a laugh, “I sometimes wonder that I ever
wrote a line of poetry again.” But the discipline
was wholesome, and as he grew older his mother took
his literary ambitions more seriously. When he
was about sixteen, he wrote a long poem called The
Hudson River. It was never published, but
Mrs. Hart made a careful study of it; and at her son’s
request, wrote out her criticisms at length.
It will thus be seen that Bret Harte,
as an author, far from being an academic, was strictly
a home product. He left school at the age of
thirteen and went immediately into a lawyer’s
office where he remained about a year, and thence
into the counting-room of a merchant. He was
self-supporting before he reached the age of sixteen.
In 1851, as has already been mentioned, his older
sister was married; and in 1853 his mother went to
California with a party of relatives and friends, in
order to make her home there with her elder son, Henry.
She had intended to take with her the other two children,
Margaret and Francis Brett; but as the daughter was
in school, she left the two behind for a few months,
and they followed in February, 1854. They travelled
by the Nicaragua route, and after a long, tiresome,
but uneventful journey, landed safely in San Francisco.
No mention of their arrival was made in the newspapers;
no guns were fired; no band played; but the youth
of eighteen who thus slipped unnoticed into California
was the one person, out of the many thousands arriving
in those early years, whose coming was a fact of importance.