Scattered here and there through the
stacks of unpublished manuscript which constitute
this formidable Autobiography and Diary of mine, certain
chapters will in some distant future be found which
deal with “Claimants” claimants
historically notorious: Satan, Claimant; the
Golden Calf, Claimant; the Veiled Prophet of Khorassan,
Claimant; Louis XVII., Claimant; William Shakespeare,
Claimant; Arthur Orton, Claimant; Mary Baker G. Eddy,
Claimant and the rest of them. Eminent
Claimants, successful Claimants, defeated Claimants,
royal Claimants, pleb Claimants, showy Claimants,
shabby Claimants, revered Claimants, despised Claimants,
twinkle starlike here and there and yonder through
the mists of history and legend and tradition and
oh, all the darling tribe are clothed in mystery and
romance, and we read about them with deep interest
and discuss them with loving sympathy or with rancorous
resentment, according to which side we hitch ourselves
to. It has always been so with the human race.
There was never a Claimant that couldn’t get
a hearing, nor one that couldn’t accumulate
a rapturous following, no matter how flimsy and apparently
unauthentic his claim might be. Arthur Orton’s
claim that he was the lost Tichborne baronet come to
life again was as flimsy as Mrs. Eddy’s that
she wrote Science and Health from the direct
dictation of the Deity; yet in England near forty years
ago Orton had a huge army of devotees and incorrigible
adherents, many of whom remained stubbornly unconvinced
after their fat god had been proven an impostor and
jailed as a perjurer, and to-day Mrs. Eddy’s
following is not only immense, but is daily augmenting
in numbers and enthusiasm. Orton had many fine
and educated minds among his adherents, Mrs. Eddy has
had the like among hers from the beginning. Her
church is as well equipped in those particulars as
is any other church. Claimants can always count
upon a following, it doesn’t matter who they
are, nor what they claim, nor whether they come with
documents or without. It was always so.
Down out of the long-vanished past, across the abyss
of the ages, if you listen you can still hear the
believing multitudes shouting for Perkin Warbeck and
Lambert Simnel.
A friend has sent me a new book, from
England The Shakespeare Problem Restated well
restated and closely reasoned; and my fifty years’
interest in that matter asleep for the last
three years is excited once more.
It is an interest which was born of Delia Bacon’s
book away back in that ancient day 1857,
or maybe 1856. About a year later my pilot-master,
Bixby, transferred me from his own steamboat to the
Pennsylvania, and placed me under the orders
and instructions of George Ealer dead now,
these many, many years. I steered for him a good
many months as was the humble duty of the
pilot-apprentice: stood a daylight watch and
spun the wheel under the severe superintendence and
correction of the master. He was a prime chess
player and an idolater of Shakespeare. He would
play chess with anybody; even with me, and it cost
his official dignity something to do that. Also quite
uninvited he would read Shakespeare to
me; not just casually, but by the hour, when it was
his watch, and I was steering. He read well,
but not profitably for me, because he constantly injected
commands into the text. That broke it all up,
mixed it all up, tangled it all up to that
degree, in fact, that if we were in a risky and difficult
piece of river an ignorant person couldn’t have
told, sometimes, which observations were Shakespeare’s
and which were Ealer’s. For instance:
What man dare, I dare!
Approach thou what are you laying
in the leads for? what a hell of an idea! like
the rugged ease her off a little, ease her off! rugged
Russian bear, the armed rhinoceros or the there
she goes! meet her, meet her! didn’t you
know she’d smell the reef if you crowded
it like that? Hyrcan tiger; take any shape
but that and my firm nerves she’ll be in
the woods the first you know! stop the starboard!
come ahead strong on the larboard! back the starboard!
. . . Now then, you’re all right;
come ahead on the starboard; straighten up and go
’long, never tremble: or be alive again,
and dare me to the desert damnation can’t
you keep away from that greasy water? pull her down!
snatch her! snatch her baldheaded! with thy sword;
if trembling I inhabit then, lay in the leads! no,
only the starboard one, leave the other alone,
protest me the baby of a girl. Hence horrible
shadow! eight bells that watchman’s
asleep again, I reckon, go down and call Brown
yourself, unreal mockery, hence!
He certainly was a good reader, and
splendidly thrilling and stormy and tragic, but it
was a damage to me, because I have never since been
able to read Shakespeare in a calm and sane way.
I cannot rid it of his explosive interlardings, they
break in everywhere with their irrelevant “What
in hell are you up to now! pull her down! more!
more! there now, steady as you go,”
and the other disorganizing interruptions that were
always leaping from his mouth. When I read Shakespeare
now, I can hear them as plainly as I did in that long-departed
time fifty-one years ago. I never
regarded Ealer’s readings as educational.
Indeed they were a detriment to me.
His contributions to the text seldom
improved it, but barring that detail he was a good
reader, I can say that much for him. He did not
use the book, and did not need to; he knew his Shakespeare
as well as Euclid ever knew his multiplication table.
Did he have something to say this
Shakespeare-adoring Mississippi pilot anent
Delia Bacon’s book? Yes. And he said
it; said it all the time, for months in
the morning watch, the middle watch, the dog watch;
and probably kept it going in his sleep. He bought
the literature of the dispute as fast as it appeared,
and we discussed it all through thirteen hundred miles
of river four times traversed in every thirty-five
days the time required by that swift boat
to achieve two round trips. We discussed, and
discussed, and discussed, and disputed and disputed
and disputed; at any rate he did, and I got in a word
now and then when he slipped a cog and there was a
vacancy. He did his arguing with heat, with
energy, with violence; and I did mine with the reserve
and moderation of a subordinate who does not like
to be flung out of a pilot-house that is perched forty
feet above the water. He was fiercely loyal
to Shakespeare and cordially scornful of Bacon and
of all the pretensions of the Baconians. So
was I at first. And at first he was
glad that that was my attitude. There were even
indications that he admired it; indications dimmed,
it is true, by the distance that lay between the lofty
boss-pilotical altitude and my lowly one, yet perceptible
to me; perceptible, and translatable into a compliment compliment
coming down from above the snow-line and not well
thawed in the transit, and not likely to set anything
afire, not even a cub-pilot’s self-conceit;
still a detectable compliment, and precious.
Naturally it flattered me into being
more loyal to Shakespeare if possible than
I was before, and more prejudiced against Bacon if
possible than I was before. And so we discussed
and discussed, both on the same side, and were happy.
For a while. Only for a while. Only for
a very little while, a very, very, very little while.
Then the atmosphere began to change; began to cool
off.
A brighter person would have seen
what the trouble was, earlier than I did, perhaps,
but I saw it early enough for all practical purposes.
You see, he was of an argumentative disposition.
Therefore it took him but a little time to get tired
of arguing with a person who agreed with everything
he said and consequently never furnished him a provocative
to flare up and show what he could do when it came
to clear, cold, hard, rose-cut, hundred-faceted, diamond-flashing
reasoning. That was his name for it. It
has been applied since, with complacency, as many as
several times, in the Bacon-Shakespeare scuffle.
On the Shakespeare side.
Then the thing happened which has
happened to more persons than to me when principle
and personal interest found themselves in opposition
to each other and a choice had to be made: I
let principle go, and went over to the other side.
Not the entire way, but far enough to answer the
requirements of the case. That is to say, I took
this attitude, to wit: I only believed
Bacon wrote Shakespeare, whereas I knew Shakespeare
didn’t. Ealer was satisfied with that,
and the war broke loose. Study, practice, experience
in handling my end of the matter presently enabled
me to take my new position almost seriously; a little
bit later, utterly seriously; a little later still,
lovingly, gratefully, devotedly; finally: fiercely,
rabidly, uncompromisingly. After that, I was
welded to my faith, I was theoretically ready to die
for it, and I looked down with compassion not unmixed
with scorn, upon everybody else’s faith that
didn’t tally with mine. That faith, imposed
upon me by self-interest in that ancient day, remains
my faith to-day, and in it I find comfort, solace,
peace, and never-failing joy. You see how curiously
theological it is. The “rice Christian”
of the Orient goes through the very same steps, when
he is after rice and the missionary is after him;
he goes for rice, and remains to worship.
Ealer did a lot of our “reasoning” not
to say substantially all of it. The slaves of
his cult have a passion for calling it by that large
name. We others do not call our inductions and
deductions and reductions by any name at all.
They show for themselves, what they are, and we can
with tranquil confidence leave the world to ennoble
them with a title of its own choosing.
Now and then when Ealer had to stop
to cough, I pulled my induction-talents together and
hove the controversial lead myself: always getting
eight feet, eight-and-a-half, often nine, sometimes
even quarter-less-twain as I believed;
but always “no bottom,” as he said.
I got the best of him only once.
I prepared myself. I wrote out a passage from
Shakespeare it may have been the very one
I quoted a while ago, I don’t remember and
riddled it with his wild steamboatful interlardings.
When an unrisky opportunity offered, one lovely summer
day, when we had sounded and buoyed a tangled patch
of crossings known as Hell’s Half Acre, and
were aboard again and he had sneaked the Pennsylvania
triumphantly through it without once scraping sand,
and the A. T. Lacey had followed in our
wake and got stuck, and he was feeling good, I showed
it to him. It amused him. I asked him to
fire it off: read it; read it, I diplomatically
added, as only he could read dramatic poetry.
The compliment touched him where he lived. He
did read it; read it with surpassing fire and spirit;
read it as it will never be read again; for he
knew how to put the right music into those thunderous
interlardings and make them seem a part of the text,
make them sound as if they were bursting from Shakespeare’s
own soul, each one of them a golden inspiration and
not to be left out without damage to the massed and
magnificent whole.
I waited a week, to let the incident
fade; waited longer; waited until he brought up for
reasonings and vituperation my pet position, my pet
argument, the one which I was fondest of, the one which
I prized far above all others in my ammunition-wagon,
to wit: that Shakespeare couldn’t have
written Shakespeare’s works, for the reason that
the man who wrote them was limitlessly familiar with
the laws, and the law-courts, and law-proceedings,
and lawyer-talk, and lawyer-ways and if
Shakespeare was possessed of the infinitely-divided
star-dust that constituted this vast wealth, how did
he get it, and where, and when?
“From books.”
From books! That was always
the idea. I answered as my readings of the champions
of my side of the great controversy had taught me to
answer: that a man can’t handle glibly
and easily and comfortably and successfully the argot
of a trade at which he has not personally served.
He will make mistakes; he will not, and cannot, get
the trade-phrasings precisely and exactly right; and
the moment he departs, by even a shade, from a common
trade-form, the reader who has served that trade will
know the writer hasn’t. Ealer would
not be convinced; he said a man could learn how to
correctly handle the subtleties and mysteries and
free-masonries of any trade by careful reading and
studying. But when I got him to read again the
passage from Shakespeare with the interlardings, he
perceived, himself, that books couldn’t teach
a student a bewildering multitude of pilot-phrases
so thoroughly and perfectly that he could talk them
off in book and play or conversation and make no mistake
that a pilot would not immediately discover.
It was a triumph for me. He was silent awhile,
and I knew what was happening: he was losing
his temper. And I knew he would presently close
the session with the same old argument that was always
his stay and his support in time of need; the same
old argument, the one I couldn’t answer because
I dasn’t: the argument that I was an ass,
and better shut up. He delivered it, and I obeyed.
Oh, dear, how long ago it was how
pathetically long ago! And here am I, old, forsaken,
forlorn and alone, arranging to get that argument out
of somebody again.
When a man has a passion for Shakespeare,
it goes without saying that he keeps company with
other standard authors. Ealer always had several
high-class books in the pilot-house, and he read the
same ones over and over again, and did not care to
change to newer and fresher ones. He played
well on the flute, and greatly enjoyed hearing himself
play. So did I. He had a notion that a flute
would keep its health better if you took it apart
when it was not standing a watch; and so, when it was
not on duty it took its rest, disjointed, on the compass-shelf
under the breast-board. When the Pennsylvania
blew up and became a drifting rack-heap freighted
with wounded and dying poor souls (my young brother
Henry among them), pilot Brown had the watch below,
and was probably asleep and never knew what killed
him; but Ealer escaped unhurt. He and his pilot-house
were shot up into the air; then they fell, and Ealer
sank through the ragged cavern where the hurricane
deck and the boiler deck had been, and landed in a
nest of ruins on the main deck, on top of one of the
unexploded boilers, where he lay prone in a fog of
scalding and deadly steam. But not for long.
He did not lose his head: long familiarity with
danger had taught him to keep it, in any and all emergencies.
He held his coat-lappels to his nose with one hand,
to keep out the steam, and scrabbled around with the
other till he found the joints of his flute, then
he is took measures to save himself alive, and was
successful. I was not on board. I had been
put ashore in New Orleans by Captain Klinefelter.
The reason however, I have told all about
it in the book called Old Times on the Mississippi,
and it isn’t important anyway, it is so long
ago.