Bret Harte returned to San Francisco
in 1857, and his first occupation was that of setting
type in the office of the “Golden Era.”
To this paper his sister, Mrs. Wyman, had been a contributor
for some time, and it was through her that Bret Harte
obtained employment on it as a printer.
The “Golden Era” had been
established by young men. “It was,”
writes Mr. Stoddard, “the cradle and the grave
of many a high hope. There was nothing to be
compared with it on that side of the Mississippi; and
though it could point with pride it never
failed to do so to a somewhat notable list
of contributors, it had always the fine air of the
amateur, and was most complacently patronizing.
The very pattern of paternal patronage was amiable
Joe Lawrence, its Editor. He was an inveterate
pipe-smoker, a pillar of cloud, as he sat in his editorial
chair, an air of literary mystery enveloping him.
He spoke as an oracle, and I remember his calling
my attention to a certain anonymous contribution just
received, and nodding his head prophetically, for
he already had his eye on the fledgling author, a
young compositor on the floor above. It was Bret
Harte’s first appearance in the ‘Golden
Era,’ and doubtless Lawrence encouraged him
as he had encouraged me when, out of the mist about
him, he handed me secretly, and with a glance of caution for
his business partner, the marble-hearted, sat at his
ledger not far away he handed me a folded
paper on which he had written this startling legend!
’Write some prose for the “Golden Era,”
and I will give you a dollar a column.’”
It was not long before Bret Harte
was promoted from the compositor’s stand to
the editorial room of the paper, and thus began his
literary career. Among the sketches which he
wrote a few years later, and which have been preserved
in the complete edition of his works, are In a Balcony,
A Boy’s Dog, and Sidewalkings.
Except for a slight restraint and stiffness of style,
as if the author had not quite attained the full use
of his wings, they show no indications of youth or
crudity. M’liss also appeared in the
“Golden Era,” illustrated by a specially
designed woodcut; and some persons think that this,
the first, is also the best of Bret Harte’s
stories. At all events, the early M’liss
is far superior to the author’s lengthened and
rewritten M’liss which was included in
the collected edition of his works.
When it is added that the Condensed
Novels, or at least the first of them, were also
published in the “Golden Era,” it will
be seen with what astonishing quickness his literary
style matured. He wrote at first anonymously;
afterward, gaining a little self-confidence, he signed
his stories “B,” and then “Bret.”
It was while engaged in writing for
the “Golden Era,” namely, on August 11,
1862, that Bret Harte was married to Miss Anna Griswold,
daughter of Daniel S. and Mary Dunham Griswold of
the city of New York. The marriage took place
at San Raphael.
In 1864 he was appointed Secretary
of the California Mint, an office which he held for
six years and until he left California. For this
position he was indebted to Mr. R. B. Swain, Superintendent
of the Mint, a friend and parishioner of the Reverend
Mr. King, who in that way became a friend of Bret
Harte. Mr. Swain had a great liking for the young
author, and made the official path easy for him.
In fact, the position seems to have been one of those
sinécures or nearly that which
are the traditional reward of men of letters, but
which a reforming and materialistic age has diverted
to less noble uses.
In San Francisco, both before and
after his marriage, Bret Harte lived a quiet, studious
life, going very little into society. Of the time
during which he was Secretary of the Mint, Mr. Stoddard
writes: “He was now a man with a family;
the resources derived from literature were uncertain
and unsatisfactory. His influential friends paid
him cheering visits in the gloomy office at the Mint
where he leavened his daily loaves; and at his desk,
between the exacting pages of the too literal ledger,
many a couplet cropped out, and the outlines of now
famous sketches were faintly limned. His friends
were few, but notable. Society he ignored in those
days. He used to accuse me of wasting my substance
in riotous visitations, and thought me a spendthrift
of time. He had the precious companionship of
books, and the lives of those about him were as an
open volume wherein he read ‘curiously and to
his profit.’”
Of the notable friends alluded to
by Mr. Stoddard, the most important were the Reverend
Thomas Starr King, and Mrs. Jessie Benton Fremont,
daughter of Senator Benton, and wife of that Captain,
afterward General Fremont, who became the first United
States Senator from California, and Republican candidate
for the Presidency in 1856, but who is best known as
The Pathfinder. His adventures and narratives
form an important part of California history.
Mrs. Fremont was an extremely clever,
kind-hearted woman, who assisted Bret Harte greatly
by her advice and criticism, still more by her sympathy
and encouragement. Bret Harte was always inclined
to underrate his own powers, and to be despondent
as to his literary future. On one occasion when,
as not seldom happened, he was cast down by his troubles
and anxieties, and almost in despair as to his prospects,
Mrs. Fremont sent him some cheering news, and he wrote
to her: “I shall no longer disquiet myself
about changes in residence or anything else, for I
believe that if I were cast upon a desolate island,
a savage would come to me next morning and hand me
a three-cornered note to say that I had been appointed
Governor at Mrs. Fremont’s request, at a salary
of $2400 a year.”
How much twenty-four hundred a year
seemed to him then, and how little a few years later!
A Pioneer who knew them both writes: “Mrs.
Fremont helped Bret Harte in many ways. In turn
he marvelled at her worldly wisdom, being
able to tell one how to make a living. He named
her daughter’s pony ‘Chiquita,’
after the equine heroine of his poem.” It
was by Mrs. Fremont’s intervention that Bret
Harte first appeared in the “Atlantic Monthly,”
for, some years before he achieved fame, namely in
1863, The Legend of Monte del Diablo was published
in that magazine. The story was gracefully, even
beautifully written, but both in style and treatment
it was a reflection of Washington Irving, who at that
time rivalled Dickens as a popular author.
Many interesting letters were received
by Mrs. Fremont from Bret Harte, letters,
her daughter thinks, almost as entertaining as his
published writings; but unfortunately these treasures
were destroyed by a fire in the city of New York.
Starr King, Bret Harte’s other
friend, was by far the most notable of the Protestant
ministers in California. The son of a Universalist
minister, he was born in the city of New York, but
was brought up mainly in Charlestown, now a part of
Boston. Upon leaving school he became first a
clerk, then a school-teacher, and finally a Unitarian
minister, preaching first at his father’s old
church in Charlestown, and afterward at the Hollis
Street Unitarian Church in Boston. He obtained
a wide reputation as preacher and lecturer, and as
author of “The White Hills,” still the
best book upon the mountains of New England.
In 1860, at the very time when his services were needed
there, he became the pastor of a church in San Francisco,
and to him is largely ascribed the credit of saving
California to the Union. He was a man of deep
moral convictions, and his addresses stirred the heart
and moved the conscience of California.
The Southern element was very strong
on the Pacific Slope, and it made itself felt in politics
especially. Nearly one third of the delegates
to the Constitutional Convention, held in September,
1849, were Southern men, and they acted as a unit
under the leadership of W. M. Gwinn, afterward a member
of the United States Senate. The ultimate design
of the Southern delegates was the division of California
into two States, the more southern of which should
be a slave State. Slavery in California was openly
advocated. But the Southern party was a minority,
and the State Constitution declared that “neither
slavery nor involuntary servitude, unless for the
punishment of crime, shall ever be tolerated in this
State.” The Constitution did, however, exclude
the testimony of colored persons from the courts;
and when, in 1852, the negroes in San Francisco presented
a petition to the House of Representatives asking for
this right or privilege, the House refused to receive
the petition, a majority of the members taking it
as an insult. One member seriously proposed that
it should be thrown out of the window.
In May, 1852, the “San Francisco
Daily Herald” declared that the delay in admitting
California as a State was due to Northern Abolitionists,
of whom it said, with characteristic mildness:
“Take the vile crowd of Abolitionists from the
Canadian frontier to the banks of the Delaware, and
you cannot find one in ten thousand of them who from
philanthropy cares the amount of a dollar what becomes
of the colored race. What they want is office.”
It does not seem to have occurred to the writer that
in espousing the smallest and most hated political
party in the whole country, the Abolitionists had
not taken a very promising step in the direction of
office-holding.
There was even talk of turning California
into a “Pacific Republic,” in the event
of a dissolution of the Union. And that event
was longed for by at least one California paper on
the ground that “it would shut down on the immigration
of these vermin,” i. e. the Chinese.
How far Southern effrontery went may be gathered from
the fact that even the sacred institution of Thanksgiving
Day was ridiculed by another California paper as an
absurd Yankee notion.
From 1851 until the period of the
Civil War the Democratic Party ruled the State of
California under the leadership of Gwinn. Northern
men constituted a majority of the party, but they
submitted to the dictation of the Southerners, just
as the Democratic Party in the North submitted to
the dictation of the Southern leaders. The only
California politician who could cope with Gwinn was
Broderick, a typical Irishman, trained by
Tammany Hall.
Not without difficulty was California
saved to the Union; in fact, until the rebels fired
upon Fort Sumter, the real sentiment of the State was
unknown. Bret Harte has touched upon this episode.
In Mrs. Bunker’s Conspiracy, the attempt
of the extreme Southern element to seize and fortify
a bluff commanding the city of San Francisco is foiled
by a Northern woman; and in Clarence we have
a glimpse of the city as it appeared after news came
of the first act of open rebellion: “From
every public building and hotel, from the roofs of
private houses and even the windows of lonely dwellings,
flapped and waved the striped and starry banner.
The steady breath of the sea carried it out from masts
and yards of ships at their wharves, from the battlements
of the forts, Alcatraz and Yerba Buena.... Clarence
looked down upon it with haggard, bewildered eyes,
and then a strange gasp and fulness of the throat.
For afar a solitary bugle had blown the reveille at
Fort Alcatraz.”
At this critical time, a mass meeting
was held in San Francisco, and, at the suggestion
of Starr King, Bret Harte wrote a poem to be read at
the meeting. The poem was called The Reveille,
but is better known as The Drum. The first and last stanzas are as
follows:
Hark! I hear the
tramp of thousands,
And of armed men the hum;
Lo! a nation’s hosts have gathered
Round the quick alarming drum,
Saying, “Come,
Freemen, Come!
Ere your heritage be wasted,” said the quick
alarming drum.
Thus they answered, hoping,
fearing,
Some in faith, and doubting some,
Till a trumpet-voice, proclaiming,
Said, “My chosen people, come!”
Then the drum
Lo! was dumb,
For the great heart of the nation, throbbing, answered,
“Lord, we come!”
As these last words were read, the
great audience rose to its feet, and with a mighty
shout proclaimed the loyalty of California. Emerson,
as Mr. John Jay Chapman has finely said, sent a thousand
sons to the war; and it is not unreasonable to suppose
that Bret Harte’s noble poem fired many a manly
heart in San Francisco.
When the war began, Starr King was
active in establishing the California branch of the
Sanitary Commission. He died of diphtheria in
March, 1864, just as the tide of battle was turning
in favor of the North. It will thus be seen that
his career in California exactly covered, and only
just covered, that short period in the history of
the State when the services of such a man were, humanly
speaking, indispensable.
The Reveille was followed by
other patriotic poems, and after Mr. King’s
death Bret Harte wrote in memory of him the poem called
Relieving Guard, which indicates, one may safely
say, the high-water mark of the author’s poetic
talent. In the year following Mr. King’s
death Bret Harte’s second son was born, and
received the name of Francis King.
On May 25, 1864, the first number
of “The Californian” appeared. This
was the famous weekly edited and published by the
late Charles Henry Webb, and written mainly by Bret
Harte, Mark Twain, Webb himself, Prentice Mulford,
and Mr. Stoddard. It was of “The Californian”
that Mr. Howells wittily said: “These ingenuous
young men, with the fatuity of gifted people, had
established a literary newspaper in San Francisco,
and they brilliantly cooeperated to its early extinction.”
It is an interesting coincidence that Bret Harte and Mark Twain both began
their literary careers in San Francisco, and at almost the same time. Bret
Harte was engaged upon The Californian, and Mark Twain was a reporter for the
Morning Call, when they were introduced to each other by a common friend, Mr.
George Barnes. Bret Harte thus describes his first impression of the new
acquaintance:
“His head was striking.
He had the curly hair, the aquiline nose, and even
the aquiline eye an eye so eagle-like that
a second lid would not have surprised me of
an unusual and dominant nature. His eyebrows were
very thick and bushy. His dress was careless,
and his general manner one of supreme indifference
to surroundings and circumstances. Barnes introduced
him as Mr. Sam Clemens, and remarked that he had shown
a very unusual talent in a number of newspaper articles
contributed under the signature of ‘Mark Twain.’
We talked on different topics, and about a month afterward
Clemens dropped in upon me again. He had been
away in the mining districts on some newspaper assignment
in the mean time. In the course of conversation
he remarked that the unearthly laziness that prevailed
in the town he had been visiting was beyond anything
in his previous experience. He said the men did
nothing all day long but sit around the bar-room stove,
spit, and ‘swop lies.’ He spoke in
a slow, rather satirical drawl, which was in itself
irresistible. He went on to tell one of those
extravagant stories, and half unconsciously dropped
into the lazy tone and manner of the original narrator.
I asked him to tell it again to a friend who came
in, and then asked him to write it out for ‘The
Californian.’ He did so, and when published
it was an emphatic success. It was the first
work of his that had attracted general attention, and
it crossed the Sierras for an Eastern reading.
The story was ’The Jumping Frog of Calaveras.’
It is now known and laughed over, I suppose, wherever
the English language is spoken; but it will never
be as funny to any one in print as it was to me, told
for the first time by the unknown Twain himself on
that morning in the San Francisco Mint.”
The first article that appeared in
“The Californian” was Bret Harte’s
Neighborhoods I have Moved From, and next his
Ballad of the Émeu, but neither was signed.
Both of these are in the collected edition of his
works. The Condensed Novels were continued
in “The Californian,” and Bret Harte also
contributed to it many poems, sketches, essays, editorial
articles and book reviews. Some of these were
unsigned; some were signed “B” or “Bret,”
and occasionally the signature was his full name.
No reader who appreciates the finished
workmanship of Bret Harte will be surprised to learn
that he was a slow and intensely self-critical writer.
There is much interesting testimony on this point.
Mr. Howells says: “His talent was not a
facile gift; he owned that he often went day after
day to his desk, and sat down before that yellow post-office
paper on which he liked to write his literature, in
that exquisitely refined script of his, without being
able to inscribe a line.... When it came to literature,
all the gay improvidence of life forsook him, and he
became a stern, rigorous, exacting self-master, who
spared himself nothing to achieve the perfection at
which he aimed. He was of the order of literary
men like Goldsmith and De Quincey and Sterne and Steele,
in his relations with the outer world, but in his
relations with the inner world, he was one of the
most duteous and exemplary citizens.”
Noah Brooks wrote as follows:
“Scores of writers have become known to me in
the course of a long life, but I have never known another
so fastidious and so laborious as Bret Harte.
His writing materials, the light and heat, and even
the adjustment of the furniture of the writing-room,
must be as he desired; otherwise he could not go on
with his work. Even when his environment was
all that he could wish, there were times when the divine
afflatus would not come and the day’s work must
be abandoned. My editorial rooms in San Francisco
were not far from his secluded den, and often, if
he opened my door late in the afternoon, with a peculiar
cloud on his face, I knew that he had come to wait
for me to go to dinner with him, having given up the
impossible task of writing when the mood was not on
him. ‘It’s no use, Brooks,’
he would say. ’Everything goes wrong; I
cannot write a line. Let’s have an early
dinner at Martini’s.’ As soon as I
was ready we would go merrily off to dine together,
and, having recovered his equanimity, he would stick
to his desk through the later hours of the night,
slowly forging those masterpieces which cost him so
dearly.
“Harte was reticent concerning
his work while it was in progress. He never let
the air in upon his story or his verses. Once,
indeed, he asked me to help him in a calculation to
ascertain how long a half-sack of flour and six pounds
of side-meat would last a given number of persons.
This was the amount of provision he had allowed his
outcasts of Poker Flat, and he wanted to know just
how long the snow-bound scapegoats could live on that
supply. I used to save for him the Eastern and
English newspaper notices of his work, and once, when
he had looked through a goodly lot of these laudatory
notes, he said: ’These fellows see a heap
of things in my stories that I never put there.’”
Mr. Stoddard recalls this incident:
“One day I found him pacing the floor of his
office in the United States Mint; he was knitting his
brows and staring at vacancy, I wondered
why. He was watching and waiting for a word,
the right word, the one word of all others to fit into
a line of recently written prose. I suggested
one; it would not answer; it must be a word of two
syllables, or the natural rhythm of the sentence would
suffer. Thus he perfected his prose.”
In the sketch entitled My First
Book, printed in volume ten of his works, Bret
Harte has given some amusing reminiscences concerning
the volume of California poems edited by him, and
published in 1866. His selection as Editor, he
says, “was chiefly owing to the circumstance
that I had from the outset, with precocious foresight,
confided to the publisher my intention of not putting
any of my own verses in the volume. Publishers
are appreciative; and a self-abnegation so sublime,
to say nothing of its security, was not without its
effect.” After narrating his extreme difficulty
in reducing the number of his selections from the
numerous poets of California, he goes on to describe
the reception of the volume. It sold well, the
purchasers apparently being amateur poets who were
anxious to discover whether they were represented in
the book. “People would lounge into the
shop, turn over the leaves of other volumes, say carelessly
‘Got a new book of California poetry out, haven’t
you?’ purchase it, and quietly depart.”
There were as yet, the Editor continues, no notices from the press; the
big dailies were silent; there was something ominous in this calm. Out of
it the bolt fell; and he quotes the following notice from a country paper:
The Hogwash and purp stuff ladled out from the slop-bucket of Messrs.
and Co., of ’Frisco, by some lop-eared Eastern
apprentice, and called “A Compilation of Californian
Verse,” might be passed over, so far as criticism
goes. A club in the hands of any able-bodied citizen
of Red Dog, and a steamboat ticket to the Bay, cheerfully
contributed from this office, would be all-sufficient.
But when an imported greenhorn dares to call his flapdoodle
mixture “Californian,” it is an insult
to the State that has produced the gifted “Yellowhammer,”
whose lofty flights have from time to time dazzled
our readers in the columns of the “Jay Hawk.”
That this complacent editorial jackass, browsing among
the docks and thistles which he has served up in this
volume, should make no allusion to California’s
greatest bard is rather a confession of his idiocy
than a slur upon the genius of our esteemed contributor.’”
Other criticisms, inspired by like
omissions, followed, each one rivalling its predecessor
in severity. “The big dailies collected
the criticisms and published them in their own columns
with the grim irony of exaggerated head-lines.
The book sold tremendously on account of this abuse,
but I am afraid that the public was disappointed.
The fun and interest lay in the criticisms, and not
in any pointedly ludicrous quality in the rather commonplace
collection ... and I have long since been convinced
that my most remorseless critics were not in earnest,
but were obeying some sudden impulse, started by the
first attacking journal.... It was a large, contagious
joke, passed from journal to journal in a peculiar
cyclonic Western fashion.”
A year later, not, as Bret Harte himself
states, in 1865, but in 1867, the first collection
of his own poems was published. The volume was
a thin twelvemo, bound in green cloth, with a gilt
design of a sail on the cover, the title-page reading
as follows: “The Lost Galleon and Other
Tales. By Fr. Bret Harte, San Francisco.
Tame and Bacon, Printers, 1867.” Most of
these poems are contained in the standard edition of
his works.
In the same year were published the
Condensed Novels and the Bohemian Papers,
reprinted from “The Bulletin” and “The
Californian,” and making, as the author himself
said, “a single, not very plethoric volume, the
writer’s first book of prose.” He
adds that “during this period,” i. e.
from 1862 to 1867, he produced “The Society
upon the Stanislaus, and The Story of M’liss, the
first a dialectical poem, the second a Californian
romance, his first efforts toward indicating
a peculiarly characteristic Western American literature.
He would like to offer these facts as evidence of
his very early, half-boyish, but very enthusiastic
belief in such a possibility, a belief which
never deserted him, and which, a few years later,
from the better known pages of the ’Overland
Monthly,’ he was able to demonstrate to a larger
and more cosmopolitan audience in the story of The
Luck of Roaring Camp, and the poem of the Heathen
Chinee.”
The “Overland Monthly”
was founded in July, 1868, by Anton Roman, a bookseller
on Montgomery Street, and later on Clay Street.
Mr. Roman was possessed of that enthusiasm which every
new enterprise demands. “He had thought
and talked about the Magazine,” he declared,
“until it was in his bones.” Bret
Harte became the first Editor, and it was he who selected
the name. The “Overland” was well
printed, on good paper, and the cover was adorned
by that historic grizzly bear who, standing on the
ties of the newly-laid railroad track, with half-turned
body and lowered head, seems prepared to dispute the
right of way with the locomotive which might shortly
be expected to come screaming down the track.
There was originally no railroad track
in the picture, simply the bear; and how the deficiency
was supplied is thus explained by Mark Twain in a
letter to Thomas Bailey Aldrich: “Do you
know the prettiest fancy and the neatest that ever
shot through Harte’s brain? It was this:
When they were trying to decide upon a vignette for
the cover of the ‘Overland,’ a grizzly
bear (of the arms of the State of California) was chosen.
Nahl Bros. carved him and the page was printed, with
him in it, looking thus:
“As a bear, he was a success he
was a good bear. But then, it was objected,
that he was an objectless bear a
bear that meant nothing in particular, signified
nothing, simply stood there snarling over
his shoulder at nothing and was painfully
and manifestly a boorish and ill-natured intruder
upon the fair page. All hands said that none
were satisfied. They hated badly to give him
up, and yet they hated as much to have him there when
there was no point to him. But presently
Harte took a pencil and drew these two simple lines
under his feet and behold he was a magnificent success! the
ancient symbol of Californian savagery snarling at
the approaching type of high and progressive Civilization,
the first Overland locomotive!
“I think that was nothing less than inspiration
itself.”
In the same letter Mark Twain pays
the following magnanimous tribute to his old friend:
“Bret Harte trimmed and trained and schooled
me patiently until he changed me from an awkward utterer
of coarse grotesqueness to a writer of paragraphs
and chapters that have found a certain favor in the
eyes of even some of the very decentest people in the
land, and this grateful remembrance of
mine ought to be worth its face, seeing that Bret
broke our long friendship a year ago without any cause
or provocation that I am aware of.”
The Editor had no prose article of
his own in the first number of the “Overland,”
but he contributed two poems, the noble lines about
San Francisco, which, with characteristic modesty
he placed in the middle of the number, and the poem
entitled Returned in the “Etc.”
column at the end.
And now we come to the publication
which first made Bret Harte known upon the Atlantic
as well as upon the Pacific coast. The opening
number of the “Overland” had contained
no “distinctive Californian romance,” as
Bret Harte expressed it, and none such being offered
for the second number, the Editor supplied the omission
with The Luck of Roaring Camp. But the
printer, instead of sending the proof-sheets to the
writer of the story, as would have been the ordinary
course, submitted them to the publisher, with a statement
that the matter was so “indecent, irreligious
and improper” that his proofreader, a young
lady, had with difficulty been induced to read it.
Then followed many consultations between author, publisher,
and various high literary authorities whose judgment
had been invoked. Opinions differed, but the
weight of opinion was against the tale, and the expediency
of printing it. Nevertheless, the author conceiving
that his fitness as Editor was now in question stood
to his guns; the publisher, though fearful of the result,
stood by him; and the tale was published without the
alteration of a word. It was received very coldly
by the secular press in California, its “singularity”
being especially pointed out; and it was bitterly denounced
by the religious press as being immoral and unchristian.
But there was a wider public to hear from. The
return mail from the East brought newspapers and reviews
“welcoming the little foundling of Californian
literature with an enthusiasm that half frightened
its author." The mail brought also a letter from
the Editor of the “Atlantic Monthly” with
a request “upon the most flattering terms”
that he would write a story for the “Atlantic,”
similar to the Luck.
It should be recorded, as an interesting
contrast to the impression made by the Luck
upon the San Francisco young woman, that it was also
a girl, Miss Susan M. Francis, a literary assistant
with the publishers of the “Atlantic Monthly,”
who, struck by the freshness and beauty of the tale,
brought it to the attention of Mr. James T. Fields,
then the Editor of the magazine, with the result which
Bret Harte has described.
Nor should the attitude of the California
young person, and of San Francisco in general, excite
surprise. The Pioneers could not be expected
to see the moral beauty that lay beneath the rough
outward aspect of affairs on the Pacific Slope.
The poetry of their own existence was hidden from
them. But California, though crude, was self-distrustful,
and it bowed to the decision of the East. Bret
Harte was honored, even if not understood or appreciated.
The “Overland” was well
received, and the high character of the first two
numbers was long maintained. Aside from Bret Harte’s
work, many volumes of prose and verse have been republished
from the magazine, and most of them deserved the honor.
In the early Fifties the proportion of really educated
men to the whole population was greater in California
than in any other State, and probably this was true
even of the period when the “Overland”
was founded. Scholarship and cultivation were
concealed in rough mining towns, in lumber camps,
and on remote ranches. Among the women, especially,
were many who, like the Sappho of Green Springs, gathered
from their lonely, primitive lives a freshness and
originality which perhaps they never would have shown
in more conventional surroundings. This class
furnished numerous readers and a few writers.
Officers of the Army and Navy stationed in California
contributed some interesting scientific and literary
articles to the early numbers of the “Overland.”
Notwithstanding the success of his
first story, Bret Harte was in no haste to rush into
print with another. He had none of that disposition
to make hay while the sun shines which has spoiled
many a story-writer. Six months elapsed before
the Luck was followed by The Outcasts of
Poker Flat. Meanwhile he was carefully and
patiently discharging his duties as Editor. Mr.
Stoddard has thus described him in that capacity:
“Fortunately for me he took an interest in me
at a time when I was most in need of advice, and to
his criticism and his encouragement I feel that I owe
all that is best in my literary efforts. He was
not afraid to speak his mind, and I know well enough
what occasion I gave him: yet he did not judge
me more severely than I judged myself.... I am
sure that the majority of the contributors to the
‘Overland Monthly’ profited as I did by
his careful and judicious criticism. Fastidious
to a degree, he could not overlook a lack of finish
in the manuscript offered to him. He had a special
taste in the choice of titles, and I have known him
to alter the name of an article two or three times
in order that the table of contents might read handsomely
and harmoniously.”
One of the most frequent contributors
to the “Overland” was Miss Ina B. Coolbrith,
author of many polished and imaginative poems and stories.
In a recent letter Miss Coolbrith thus speaks of Bret
Harte as an Editor: “To me he was unfailingly
kind and generous, looking out for my interests as
one of his contributors with as much care as he accorded
to his own. I can only speak of him in terms
of unqualified praise as author, friend and man.”
The poem entitled Plain Language
from Truthful James, or the Heathen Chinee,
as it is popularly known, and as Bret Harte himself
afterward called it, first appeared in the “Overland”
for September, 1870. Within a few weeks it had
spread over the English-speaking world. The Luck
of Roaring Camp gave Bret Harte a literary reputation,
but this poem made him famous. It was copied
by the newspapers almost universally, both here and
in England; and it increased the circulation of the
“Overland” so much that, two months after
its appearance, a single news company in New York
was selling twelve hundred copies of the magazine.
Almost everybody had a clipping of these verses tucked
into his waistcoat pocket or carried in his purse.
Quotations from it were on every lip, and some of its
most significant lines were recited with applause
in the National House of Representatives.
It came at a fortunate moment when
the people of this country were just awaking to the
fact that there was a “Chinese problem,”
and when interest in the race was becoming universal
in the East as well as in the West. Says that
acute critic, Mr. James Douglas: “There
is an element of chance in the fabrication of great
poems. The concatenation comes, the artist puts
the pieces into their places, and the result is permanent
wonder. The Heathen Chinee in its happy
felicity is quite as unique as ’The Blessed
Damozel.’”
The Heathen Chinee is remarkable
for the absolutely impartial attitude of the writer.
He observes the Chinaman neither from the locally
prejudiced, California point of view, nor from an ethical
or reforming point of view. His part is neither
to approve nor condemn, but simply to state the fact
as it is, not indeed with the coldness of an historian
but with the sympathy and insight of a poet.
But this is not all, in fact, as need hardly be said,
it is not enough to make the poem endure. It endures
because it has a beauty of form which approaches perfection.
It is hackneyed, and yet as fresh as on the day when
it was written.
Truthful James himself who tells the
story was a real character, nay is, for,
at the writing of these pages, he still lived in the
same little shanty where he was to be found when Bret
Harte knew him. At that time, in 1856, or thereabout,
Bret Harte was teaching school at Tuttletown, a few
miles north of Sonora, and Truthful James, Mr. James
W. Gillis, lived over the hill from Tuttletown, at
a place called Jackass Flat. Mr. Gillis was well
known and highly respected in all that neighborhood,
and he figures not only in Bret Harte’s poetry,
but also in Mark Twain’s works, where he is
described as “The Sage of Jackass Hill.”
It is a proof both of Bret Harte’s
remarkable freedom from vanity, and of the keen criticism
which he bestowed upon his own writings, that he never
set much value upon the Heathen Chinee, even
after its immense popularity had been attained.
When he wrote it, he thought it unworthy of a place
in the “Overland” and handed it over to
Mr. Ambrose Bierce, then Editor of the “News
Letter," a weekly paper, for publication there.
Mr. Bierce, however, recognizing its value, unselfishly
advised Bret Harte to give it a place in the “Overland,”
and this was finally done. “Nevertheless,”
says Mr. Bierce, “it was several months before
he overcame his prejudice against the verses and printed
them. Indeed he never cared for the thing, and
was greatly amused by the meanings that so many read
into it. He said he meant nothing whatever by
it.”
We have Mark Twain’s word to
the same effect. “In 1866,” he writes,
“I went to the Sandwich Islands, and when I
returned, after several years, Harte was famous as
the author of the Heathen Chinee. He said
that the Heathen Chinee was an accident, and
that he had higher literary ambitions than the fame
that could come from an extravaganza of that sort.”
“The Luck of Roaring Camp,” Mr.
Clemens goes on to say, “was the salvation of
his literary career. It placed him securely on
a literary road which was more to his taste.”
Bret Harte, indeed, frequently held
back for weeks poems which he had completed, but with
which he was not content. As one of his fellow-workers
declared, “He was never fully satisfied with
what he finally allowed to go to the printer.”
His position in San Francisco was
now assured. He had been made professor of recent
literature in the University of California; he retained
his place at the Mint, he was the successful Editor
of the “Overland,” and he was happy in
his home life. One who knew him well at this period
speaks of him as “always referring to his wife
in affectionate terms, and quoting her clever speeches,
and relating with fond enjoyment the funny sayings
and doings of his children.”
Let us, for the moment, leave Bret
Harte thus happily situated, and glance at that Pioneer
life which he was now engaged in portraying. Said
a San Francisco paper in 1851, “The world will
never know, and no one could imagine the heart-rending
scenes, or the instances of courage and heroic self-sacrifice
which have occurred among the California Pioneers during
the last three years!”
And yet when these words were penned
there was growing up in the East a stripling destined
to preserve for posterity some part, at least, of those
very occurrences which otherwise would have remained
“unrecorded and forgot.”