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Transcendentalism Studies
Hawthorne at Brook
Farm
By Henry James
Hawthorne By Henry James V The Three American Novels THE PROSPECT of official
station and emolument which Hawthorne mentions in one of those paragraphs
from his Journals which I have just quoted, as having offered itself and
then passed away, was at last, in the event, confirmed by his receiving
from the administration of President Polk the gift of a place in the Custom-house
of his native town. The office was a modest one, and "official station"
may perhaps appear a magniloquent formula for the functions sketched in
the admirable Introduction to The Scarlet Letter. Hawthorne's duties were
those of Surveyor of the port of Salem, and they had a salary attached,
which was the important part; as his biographer tells us that he had received
almost nothing for the contributions to the Democratic Review. He bade
farewell to his ex-parsonage and went back to Salem in 1846, and the immediate
effect of his ameliorated fortune was to make him stop writing. None of
his Journals of the period from his going to Salem to 1850 have been published;
from which I infer that he even ceased to journalise. The Scarlet Letter
was not written till 1849. In the delightful prologue to that work, entitled
The Custom-house, he embodies some of the impressions gathered during
these years of comparative leisure (I say of leisure because he does not
intimate in this sketch of his occupations that his duties were onerous).
He intimates, however, that they were not interesting, and that it was
a very good thing for him, mentally and morally, when his term of service
expired--or rather when he was removed from office by the operation of
that wonderful "rotatory" system which his countrymen had invented for
the administration of their affairs. This sketch of the Custom-house is,
as simple writing, one of the most perfect of Hawthorne's compositions,
and one of the most gracefully and humorously autobiographic. It would
be interesting to examine it in detail, but I prefer to use my space for
making some remarks upon the work which was the ultimate result of this
period of Hawthorne's residence--in his native town and I shall, for convenience'
sake, say directly afterwards what I have to say about the two companions
of The Scarlet Letter--The House of the Seven Gables and The Blithedale
Romance. I quoted some passages from the prologue to the first of these
novels in the early pages of this essay. There is another passage, however,
which bears particularly upon this phase of Hawthorne's career, and which
is so happily expressed as to make it a pleasure to transcribe it--the
passage in which he says that "for myself, during the whole of my Custom-house
experience, moonlight and sunshine, and the glow of the fire-light, were
just alike in my regard, and neither of them was of one whit more avail
than the twinkle of a tallow candle. An entire class of susceptibilities,
and a gift connected with them--of no great richness or value, but the
best I had--was gone from me." He goes on to say that he believes that
he might have done something if he could have made up his mind to convert
the very substance of the commonplace that surrounded him into matter
of literature. "I might, for instance, have contented myself with writing
out the narratives of a veteran shipmaster, one of the inspectors, whom
I should be most ungrateful not to mention; since scarcely a day passed
that he did not stir me to laughter and admiration by his marvellous gift
as a story teller.... Or I might readily have found a more serious task.
It was a folly, with the materiality of this daily life pressing so intrusively
upon me, to attempt to fling myself back into another age; or to insist
on creating a semblance of a world out of airy matter. . . . The wiser
effort would have been, to diffuse thought and imagination through the
opaque substance of to-day, and thus make it a bright transparency ....
to seek resolutely the true and indestructible value that lay hidden in
the petty and wearisome incidents and ordinary characters with which I
was now conversant. The fault was mine. The page of life that was spread
out before me was dull and commonplace, only because I had not fathomed
its deeper import. A better book than I shall ever write was there These
perceptions came too late. . . . I had ceased to be a writer of tolerably
poor tales and essays, and had become a tolerably good Surveyor of the
Customs. That was all. But, nevertheless, it is anything but agreeable
to be haunted by a suspicion that one's intellect is dwindling away, or
exhaling, without your consciousness, like ether out of phial; so that
at every glance you find a smaller and less volatile residuum." As, however,
it was with what was left of his intellect after three years' evaporation,
that Hawthorne wrote The Scarlet Letter, there is little reason to complain
of the injury he suffered in his Surveyorship. His publisher, Mr. Fields,
in a volume entitled Yesterdays with Authors, has related the circumstances
in which Hawthorne's masterpiece came into the world. "In the winter of
1849, after he had been ejected from the Custom-house, I went down to
Salem to see him and inquire after his health, for we heard he had been
suffering from illness. He was then living in a modest wooden house....
I found him alone in a chamber over the sitting-room of the dwelling,
and as the day was cold he was hovering near a stove. We fell into talk
about his future prospects, and he was, as I feared I should find him,
in a very desponding mood." His visitor urged him to bethink himself of
publishing something, and Hawthorne replied by calling his attention to
the small popularity his published productions had yet acquired, and declaring
that he had done nothing and had no spirit for doing anything. The narrator
of the incident urged upon him the necessity of a more hopeful view of
his situation, and proceeded to take leave. He had not reached the street,
however, when Hawthorne hurried to overtake him, and, placing a roll of
MS. in his hand, bade him take it to Boston, read it, and pronounce upon
it. "It is either very good or very bad," said the author; "I don't know
which." "On my way back to Boston," says Mr. Fields, "I read the germ
of The Scarlet Letter; before I slept that night I wrote him a note all
aglow with admiration of the marvellous story he had put into my hands,
and told him that I would come again to Salem the next day and arrange
for its publication. I went on in such an amazing state of excitement,
when we met again in the little house, that he would not believe I was
really in earnest. He seemed to think I was beside myself, and laughed
sadly at my enthusiasm." Hawthorne, however, went on with the book and
finished it, but it appeared only a year later. His biographer quotes
a passage from a letter which he wrote in February, 1850, to his friend
Horatio Bridge. "I finished my book only yesterday; one end being in the
press at Boston, while the other was in my head here at Salem, so that,
as you see, my story is at least fourteen miles long. . . My book, the
publisher tells me, will not be out before April. He speaks of it in tremendous
terms of approbation, so does Mrs. Hawthorne, to whom I read the conclusion
last night. It broke her heart, and sent her to bed with a grievous headache--which
I look upon as a triumphant success. Judging from the effect upon her
and the publisher, I may calculate on what bowlers call a ten- strike.
But I don't make any such calculation." And Mr. Lathrop calls attention,
in regard to this passage, to an allusion in the English Note-Books (September
14, 1855). "Speaking of Thackeray, I cannot but wonder at his coolness
in respect to his own pathos, and compare it to my emotions when I read
the last scene of The Scarlet Letter to my wife, just after writing it--tried
to read it rather, for my voice swelled and heaved as if I were tossed
up and down on an ocean as it subsides after a storm.. But I was in a
very nervous state then, having gone through a great diversity of emotion
while writing it, for many months." The work has the tone of the circumstances
in which it was produced. If Hawthorne was in a sombre mood, and if his
future was painfully vague, The Scarlet Letter contains little enough
of gaiety or of hopefulness. It is densely dark, with a single spot of
vivid colour in it; and it will probably long remain the most consistently
gloomy of English novels of the first order. But I just now called it
the author's masterpiece, and I imagine it will continue to be, for other
generations than ours, his most substantial title to fame. The subject
had probably lain a long time in his mind, as his subjects were apt to
do; so that he appears completely to possess it, to know it and feel it.
It is simpler and more complete than his other novels; it achieves more
perfectly what it attempts, and it has about it that charm, very hard
to express, which we find in an artist's work the first time he has touched
his highest mark--a sort of straightness and naturalness of execution,
an unconsciousness of his public, and freshness of interest in his theme.
It was a great success, and he immediately found himself famous. The writer
of these lines, who was a child at the time, remembers dimly the sensation
the book produced, and the little shudder with which people alluded to
it, as if a peculiar horror were mixed with its attractions. He was too
young to read it himself, but its title, upon which he fixed his eyes
as the book lay upon the table, had a mysterious charm. He had a vague
belief indeed that the "letter" in question was one of the documents that
come by the post, and it was a source of perpetual wonderment to him that
it should be of such an unaccustomed hue. Of course it was difficult to
explain to a child the significance of poor Hester Prynne's blood-coloured
A. But the mystery was at last partly dispelled by his being taken to
see a collection of pictures (the annual exhibition of the National Academy),
where he encountered a representation of a pale, handsome woman, in a
quaint black dress and a white coif, between her knees an an little girl,
fantastically dressed and crowned with flowers. Embroidered on the woman's
breast was a great crimson A, over which the child's fingers, as she glanced
strangely out of the picture, were maliciously playing. I was told that
this was Hester Prynne and little Pearl, and that when I grew older I
might read their interesting history. But the picture remained vividly
imprinted on my mind; I had been vaguely frightened and made uneasy by
it; and when, years afterwards, I first read the novel, I seemed to myself
to have read it before, and to be familiar with its two strange heroines.
I mention this incident simply as an indication of the degree to which
the success of The Scarlet Letter had made the book what is called an
actuality. Hawthorne himself was very modest about it; he wrote to his
publisher, when there was a question of his undertaking another novel,
that what had given the history of Hester Prynne its "vogue" was simply
the introductory chapter. In fact, the publication of The Scarlet Letter
was in the United States a literary event of the first importance. The
book was the finest piece of imaginative writing yet put forth in the
country. There was a consciousness of this in the welcome was given it--a
satisfaction in the idea of America having produced a novel that belonged
to literature, and to the forefront of it. Something might at last be
sent to Europe as exquisite in quality as anything that had been received,
and the best of it was that the thing was absolutely American; it belonged
to the soil, to the air; it came out of the very heart of New England.
It is beautiful, admirable, extraordinary; it has in the highest degree
that merit which I have spoken of as the mark of Hawthorne's best things--an
indefinable purity and lightness of conception, a quality which in a work
of art affects one in the same way as the absence of grossness does in
a human being. His fancy, as I just now said, had evidently brooded over
the subject for a long time; the situation to be represented had disclosed
itself to him in all its phases. When I say in all its phases, the sentence
demands modification; for it is to be remembered that if Hawthorne laid
his hand upon the well-worn theme, upon the familiar combination of the
wife, the lover, and the husband, it was after all but to one period of
the history of these three persons that he attached himself. The situation
is the situation after the woman's fault has been committed, and the current
of expiation and repentance has set in. In spite of the relation between
Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale, no story of love was surely ever
less of a "love story." To Hawthorne's imagination the fact that these
two persons had loved each other too well was of an interest comparatively
vulgar; what appealed to him was the idea of their moral situation in
the long years that were to follow. The story indeed is in a secondary
degree that of Hester Prynne; she becomes, really, after the first scene,
an accessory figure; it is not upon her the denoument depends. It is upon
her guilty lover that the author projects most frequently the cold, thin
rays of his fitfully-moving lantern, which makes here and there a little
luminous circle, on the edge of which hovers the livid and sinister figure
of the injured and retributive husband. The story goes on for the most
part between the lover and the husband--the tormented young Puritan minister,
who carries the secret of his own lapse from pastoral purity locked up
beneath an exterior that commends itself to the reverence of his flock,
while he sees the softer partner of his guilt standing in the full glare
of exposure and humbling herself to the misery of atonement--between this
more wretched and pitiable culprit, to whom dishonour would come as a
comfort and the pillory as a relief, and the older, keener, wiser man,
who, to obtain satisfaction for the wrong he has suffered, devises the
infernally ingenious plan of conjoining himself with his wronger, living
with him, living upon him, and while he pretends to minister to his hidden
ailment and to sympathise with his pain, revels in his unsuspected knowledge
of these things and stimulates them by malignant arts. The attitude of
Roger Chillingworth, and the means he takes to compensate himself--these
are the highly original elements in the situation that Hawthorne so ingeniously
treats. None of his works are so impregnated with that after-sense of
the old Puritan consciousness of life to which allusion has so often been
made. If, as M. Montégut says, the qualities of his ancestors filtered
down through generations into his composition, The Scarlet Letter was,
as it were, the vessel that gathered up the last of the precious drops.
And I say this not because the story happens to be of so-called historical
cast, to be told of the early days of Massachusetts and of people in steeple-crowned
hats and sad coloured garments. The historical colouring is rather weak
than otherwise; there is little elaboration of detail, of the modern realism
of research; and the author has made no great point of causing his figures
to speak the English of their period. Nevertheless, the book is full of
the moral presence of the race that invented Hester's penance--diluted
and complicated with other things, but still perfectly recognisable. Puritanism
in a word, is there, not only objectively, as Hawthorne tried to place
it there, but subjectively as well. Not, I mean, in his judgment of his
characters, in any harshness of prejudice, or in the obtrusion of a moral
lesson; but in the very quality of his own vision, in the tone of the
picture, in a certain coldness and exclusiveness of treatment. The faults
of the book are, to my sense, a want of reality and an abuse of the fanciful
element--of a certain superficial symbolism. The people strike me not
as characters, but as representatives. very picturesquely arranged, of
a single state of mind; and the interest of the story lies, not in them,
but in the situation, which is insistently kept before us, with little
progression, though with a great deal, as I have said, of a certain stable
variation; and to which they, out of their reality, contribute little
that helps it to live and move. I was made to feel this want of reality,
this over-ingenuity, of The Scarlet Letter, by chancing not long since
upon a novel which was read fifty years ago much more than to-day, but
which is still worth reading--the story of Adam Blair, by John Gibson
Lockhart. This interesting and powerful little tale has a great deal of
analogy with Hawthorne's novel--quite enough, at least, to suggest a comparison
between them; and the comparison is a very interesting one to make, for
it speedily leads us to larger considerations than simple resemblances
and divergences of plot. Adam Blair, like Arthur Dimmesdale, is a Calvinistic
minister who becomes the lover of a married woman, is overwhelmed with
remorse at his misdeed, and makes a public confession of it; then expiates
it by resigning his pastoral office and becoming a humble tiller of the
soil, as his father had been. The two stories are of about the same length,
and each is the masterpiece (putting aside of course, as far as Lockhart
is concerned, the Life of Scott) of the author. They deal alike with the
manners of a rigidly theological society, and even in certain details
they correspond. In each of them, between the guilty pair, there is a
charming little girl; though I hasten to say that Sarah Blair (who is
not the daughter of the heroine but the legitimate offspring of the hero,
a widower) is far from being as brilliant and graceful an apparition as
the admirable little Pearl of The Scarlet Letter. The main difference
between the two tales is the fact that in the American story the husband
plays an all-important part, and in the Scottish plays almost none at
all. Adam Blair is the history of the passion, and The Scarlet Letter
the history of its sequel; but neverthelss, if one has read the two books
at a short interval, it is impossible to avoid confronting them. I confess
that a large portion of the interest of Adam Blair, to my mind, when once
I had perceived that it would repeat in a great measure the situation
of The Scarlet Letter, lay in noting its difference of tone. It threw
into relief the passionless quality of Hawthorne's novel its element of
cold and ingenious fantasy, its elaborate imaginative delicacy. These
things do not precisely constitute a weakness in The Scarlet Letter; indeed,
in a certain way they constitute a great strength; but the absence of
a certain something warm and straightforward, a trifle more grossly human
and vulgarly natural, which one finds in Adam Blair, will always make
Hawthorne's tale less touching to a large number of even very intelligent
readers, than a love-story told with the robust, synthetic pathos which
served Lockhart so well. His novel is not of the first rank (I should
call it an excellent second-rate one), but it borrows a charm from the
fact that his vigorous, but not strongly imaginative, mind was impregnated
with the reality of his subject. He did not always succeed in rendering
this reality; the expression is sometimes awkward and poor. But the reader
feels that his vision was clear, and his feeling about the matter very
strong and rich. Hawthorne's imagination, on the other hand, plays with
his theme so incessantly, leads it such a dance through the moonlighted
air of his intellect, that the thing cools off, as it were, hardens and
stiffens, and, producing effects much more exquisite, leaves the reader
with a sense of having handled a splendid piece of silversmith's work.
Lockhart, by means much more vulgar, produces at moments a greater illusion,
and satisfies our inevitable desire for something, in the people in whom
it is sought to interest us, that shall be of the same pitch and the same
continuity with ourselves. Above all, it is interesting to see how the
same subject appears to two men of a thoroughly different cast of mind
and of a different race. Lockhart was struck with the warmth of the subject
that offered itself to him, and Hawthorne with its coldness; the one with
its glow, its sentimental interest--the other with its shadow, its moral
interest. Lockhart's story is as decent, as severely draped, as The Scarlet
Letter; but the author has a more vivid sense than appears to have imposed
itself upon Hawthorne, of some of the incidents of the situation he describes;
his tempted man and tempting woman are more actual and personal; his heroine
in especial, though not in the least a delicate or a subtle conception,
has a sort of credible, visible, palpable property, a vulgar roundness
and relief, which are lacking to the dim and chastened image of Hester
Prynne. But I am going too far; I am comparing simplicity with subtlety,
the usual with the refined. Each man wrote as his turn of mind impelled
him, but each expressed something more than himself. Lockhart was a dense,
substantial Briton, with a taste for the concrete, and Hawthorne was a
thin New Englander, with a miasmatic conscience. In The Scarlet Letter
there is a great deal of symbolism; there is, I think, too much. It is
overdone at times, and be- comes mechanical; it ceases to be impressive,
and grazes triviality. The idea of the mystic A which the young minister
finds imprinted upon his breast and eating into his flesh, in sympathy
with the embroidered badge that Hester is condemned to wear, appears to
me to be a case in point. This suggestion should, I think, have been just
made and dropped; to insist upon it and return to it, is to exaggerate
the weak side of the subject. Hawthorne returns to it constantly, plays
with it, and seems charmed by it; until at last the reader feels tempted
to declare that his enjoyment of it is puerile. In the admirable scene,
so superbly conceived and beautifully executed, in which Mr. Dimmesdale,
in the stillness of the night, in the middle of the sleeping town, feels
impelled to go and stand upon the scaffold where his mistress had formerly
enacted her dreadful penance, and then, seeing Hester pass along the street,
from watching at a sick-bed, with little Pearl at her side, calls them
both to come and stand there beside him--in this masterly episode the
effect is almost spoiled by the introduction of one of these superficial
conceits. What leads up to it is very fine--so fine that I cannot do better
than quote it as a specimen of one of the striking pages of the book.
"But before Mr. Dimmesdale had done speaking, a light gleamed far and
wide over all the muffled sky. It was doubtless caused by one of those
meteors which the night-watcher may so often observe burning out to waste
in the vacant regions of the atmosphere. So powerful was its radiance
that it thoroughly illuminated the dense medium of cloud, betwixt the
sky and earth. The great vault brightened, like the dome of an immense
lamp. It showed the familiar scene of the street with the distinctness
of mid-day, but also with the awfulness that is always imparted to familiar
objects by an unaccustomed light. The wooden houses, with their jutting
stories and quaint gable-peaks; the doorsteps and thresholds, with the
early grass springing up about them; the garden-plots, black with freshly-turned
earth; the wheel-track, little worn, and, even in the market-place margined
with green on either side;--all were visible, but with a singularity of
aspect that seemed to give another moral interpretation to the things
of this world than they had ever borne before. And there stood the minister,
with his hand over his heart; and Hester Prynne, with the embroidered
letter glimmering on her bosom; and little Pearl, herself a symbol, and
the connecting-link between these two. They stood in the noon of that
strange and solemn splendour, as if it were the light that is to reveal
all secrets, and the daybreak that shall unite all that belong to one
another." That is imaginative, impressive, poetic; but when, almost immediately
afterwards, the author goes on to say that "the minister looking upward
to the zenith, beheld there the appearance of an immense letter--the letter
A--marked out in lines of dull red light," we feel that he goes too far
and is in danger of crossing the line that separates the sublime from
its intimate neighbour. We are tempted to say that this is not moral tragedy,
but physical comedy. In the same way, too much is made of the intimation
that Hester's badge had a scorching property, and that if one touched
it one would immediately withdraw one's hand. Hawthorne is perpetually
looking for images which shall place themselves in picturesque correspondence
with the spiritual facts with which he is concerned, and of course the
search is of the very essence of poetry. But in such a process discretion
is everything, and when the image becomes importunate it is in danger
of seeming to stand for nothing more serious than itself. When Hester
meets the minister by appointment in the forest, and sits talking with
him while little Pearl wanders away and plays by the edge of the brook,
the child is represented as at last making her way over to the other side
of the woodland stream, and disporting herself there in a manner which
makes her mother feel herself, "in some indistinct and tantalising manner,
estranged from Pearl; as if the child, in her lonely ramble through the
forest, had strayed out of the sphere in which she and her mother dwelt
together, and was now vainly seeking to return to it." And Hawthorne devotes
a chapter to this idea of the child's having, by putting the brook between
Hester and herself, established a kind of spiritual gulf, on the verge
of which her little fantastic person innocently mocks at her mother's
sense of bereavement. This conception belongs, one would say, quite to
the lighter order of a story-teller's devices, and the reader hardly goes
with Hawthorne in the large development he gives to it. He hardly goes
with him either, I think, in his extreme predilection for a small number
of vague ideas which are represented by such terms as "sphere" and "sympathies."
Hawthorne makes too liberal a use of these two substantives; it is the
solitary defect of his style; and it counts as a defect partly because
the words in question are a sort of specialty with certain writers immeasurably
inferior to himself. I had not meant, however, to expatiate upon his defects,
which are of the slenderest and most venial kind. The Scarlet Letter has
the beauty and harmony of all original and complete conceptions, and its
weaker spots, whatever they are, are not of its essence; they are mere
light flaws and inequalities of surface. One can often return to it; it
supports familiarity and has the inexhaustible charm and mystery of great
works of art. It is admirably written. Hawthorne afterwards polished his
style to a still higher degree, but in his later productions--it is almost
always the case in a writer's later productions--there is a touch of mannerism.
In The Scarlet Letter there is a high degree of polish, and at the same
time a charming freshness; his phrase is less conscious of itself. His
biographer very justly calls attention to the fact that his style was
excellent from the beginning; that he appeared to have passed through
no phase of learning how to write, but was in possession of his means
from the first of his handling a pen. His early tales, perhaps, were not
of a character to subject his faculty of expression to a very severe test,
but a man who had not Hawthorne's natural sense of language would certainly
have contrived to write them less well. This natural sense of language--this
turn for saying things lightly and yet touchingly, picturesquely yet simply,
and for infusing a gently colloquial tone into matter of the most unfamiliar
import, he had evidently cultivated with great assiduity. I have spoken
of the anomalous character of his Note-Books--of his going to such pains
often to make a record of incidents which either were not worth remembering
or could be easily remembered without its aid. But it helps us to understand
the Note-Books if we regard them as a literary exercise. They were compositions,
as school boys say, in which the subject was only the pretext, and the
main point was to write a certain amount of excellent English. Hawthorne
must at least have written a great many of these things for practice,
and he must often have said to himself that it was better practice to
write about trifles, because it was a greater tax upon one's skill to
make them interesting. And his theory was just, for he has almost always
made his trifles interesting. In his novels his art of saying things well
is very positively tested, for here he treats of those matters among which
it is very easy for a blundering writer to go wrong--the subtleties and
mysteries of life, the moral and spiritual maze. In such a passage as
one I have marked for quotation from The Scarlet Letter there is the stamp
of the genius of style. "Hester Prynne, gazing steadfastly at the clergyman,
felt a dreary influence come over her, but wherefore or whence she knew
not, unless that he seemed so remote from her own sphere and utterly beyond
her reach. One glance of recognition she had imagined must needs pass
between them. She thought of the dim forest with its little dell of solitude,
and love, and anguish, and the mossy tree-trunk, where, sitting hand in
hand, they had mingled their sad and passionate talk with the melancholy
murmur of the brook. How deeply had they known each other then! And was
this the man? She hardly knew him now! He, moving proudly past, enveloped
as it were in the rich music, with the procession of majestic and venerable
fathers; he, so unattainable in his worldly position, and still more so
in that far vista in his unsympathising thoughts, through which she now
beheld him! Her spirit sank with the idea that all must have been a delusion,
and that vividly as she had dreamed it, there could be no real bond betwixt
the clergyman and herself. And thus much of woman there was in Hester,
that she could scarcely forgive him--least of all now, when the heavy
footstep of their approaching fate might be heard, nearer, nearer, nearer!--for
being able to withdraw himself so completely from their mutual world,
while she groped darkly, and stretched forth her cold hands, and found
him not!" The House of the Seven Gables was written at Lenox, among the
mountains of Massachusetts, a village nestling, rather loosely, in one
of the loveliest corners of New England, to which Hawthorne had betaken
himself after the success of The Scarlet Letter became conspicuous, in
the summer of 1850, and where he occupied for two years an uncomfortable
little red house which is now pointed out to the inquiring stranger. The
inquiring stranger is now a frequent figure at Lenox, for the place has
suffered the process of lionisation. It has become a prosperous watering-place,
or at least (as there are no waters). as they say in America, a summer-resort.
It is a brilliant and generous landscape, and thirty years ago a man of
fancy, desiring to apply himself, might have found both inspiration and
tranquillity there. Hawthorne found so much of both that he wrote more
during his two years of residence at Lenox than at any period of his career.
He began with The House of the Seven Gables, which was finished in the
early part of 1851. This is the longest of his three American novels,
it is the most elaborate, and in the judgment of some persons it is the
finest. It is a rich, delightful, imaginative work, larger and more various
than its companions, and full of all sorts of deep intentions, of interwoven
threads of suggestion. But it is not so rounded and complete as The Scarlet
Letter; it has always seemed to me more like a prologue to a great novel
than a great novel itself. I think this is partly owing to the fact that
the subject, the donnée, as the French say, of the story, does not quite
fill it out, and that we get at the same time an impression of certain
complicated purposes on the author's part, which seem to reach beyond
it. I call it larger and more various than its companions, and it has
indeed a greater richness of tone and density of detail. The colour, so
to speak, of The House of the Seven Gables is admirable. But the story
has a sort of expansive quality which never wholly fructifies, and as
I lately laid it down, after reading it for the third time, I had a sense
of having interested myself in a magnificent fragment. Yet the book has
a great fascination, and of all of those of its author's productions which
I have read over while writing this sketch, it is perhaps tine one that
has gained most by re-perusal. If it be true of the others that the pure,
natural quality of the imaginative strain is their great merit, this is
at least as true of The House the Seven Gables, the charm of which is
in a peculiar degree of the kind that we fail to reduce to its grounds--like
that of the sweetness of a piece of music, or the softness of fine September
weather. It is vague, indefinable, ineffable; but it is the sort of thing
we must always point to in justification of the high claim that we make
for Hawthorne. In this case of course its vagueness is a drawback, for
it is difficult to point to ethereal beauties; and if the reader whom
we have wished to inoculate with our admiration inform us after looking
a while that he perceives nothing in particular, we can only reply that,
in effect, the object is a delicate one. The House of the Seven Gables
comes nearer being a picture of contemporary American life than either
of its companions; but on this ground it would be a mistake to make a
large claim for it. It cannot be too often repeated that Hawthorne was
not a realist. He had a high sense of reality--his Note-Books super-abundantly
testify to it; and fond as he was of jotting down the items that make
it up, he never attempted to render exactly or closely the actual facts
of the society that surrounded him. I have said--I began by saying--that
his pages were full of its spirit, and of a certain reflected light that
springs from it; but I was careful to add that the reader must look for
his local and national quality between the lines of his writing and in
the indirect testimony of his tone, his accent, his temper, of his very
omissions and suppressions. The House of the Seven Gables has, however,
more literal actuality than the others, and if it were not too fancifu1
an account of it, I should say that it renders, to an initiated reader,
the impression of a summer afternoon in an elm-shadowed New England town.
It leaves upon the mind a vague correspondence to some such reminiscence,
and in stirring up the association it renders it delightful. The comparison
is to the honour of the New England town, which gains in it more than
it bestows. The shadows of the elms, in The House of the Seven Gables,
are exceptionally dense and cool; the summer afternoon is peculiarly still
and beautiful; the atmosphere has a delicious warmth, and the long daylight
seems to pause and rest. But the mild provincial quality is there, the
mixture of shabbiness and freshness, the paucity of ingredients. The end
of an old race--this is the situation that Hawthorne has depicted, and
he has been admirably inspired in the choice of the figures in whom he
seeks to interest us. They are all figures rather than characters--they
are all pictures rather than persons. But if their reality is light and
vague, it is sufficient, and it is in harmony with the low relief and
dimness of outline of the objects that surround them. They are all types,
to the author's mind, of something general, of something that is bound
up with the history, at large, of families and individuals, and each of
them is the centre of a cluster of those ingenious and meditative musings,
rather melancholy, as a general thing, than joyous, which melt into the
current and texture of the story and give it a kind of moral richness.
A grotesque old spinster, simple, childish, penniless, very humble at
heart, but rigidly conscious of her pedigree; an amiable bachelor, of
an epicurean temperament and an enfeebled intellect, who has passed twenty
years of his life in penal confinement for a crime of which he was unjustly
pronounced guilty; a sweet-natured and bright-faced young girl from the
country, a poor relation of these two ancient decrepitudes, with whose
moral mustiness her modern freshness and soundness are contrasted; a young
man still more modern, holding the latest opinions, who has sought his
fortune up and down the world, and, though he has not found it, takes
a genial and enthusiastic view of the future: these, with two or three
remarkable accessory figures, are the persons concerned in the little
drama. The drama is a small one, but as Hawthorne does not put it before
us for its own superficial sake, for the dry facts of the case, but for
something in it which he holds to be symbolic and of large application,
something that points a moral and that it behoves us to remember, the
scenes in the rusty wooden house whose gables give its name to the story
have something of the dignity both of history and of tragedy. Miss Hephzibah
Pyncheon, dragging out a disappointed life in her paternal dwelling, finds
herself obliged in her old age to open a little shop for the sale of penny
toys and ginger-bread. This is the central incident of the tale, and,
as Hawthorne relates it, it is an incident of the most impressive magnitude
and most touching interest. Her dishonoured and vague-minded brother is
released from prison at the same moment, and returns to the ancestral
roof to deepen her perplexities. But, on the other hand, to alleviate
them, and to introduce a breath of the air of the outer world into this
long unventilated interior, the little country cousin also arrives, and
proves the good angel of the feebly distracted household. All this episode
is exquisite--admirably conceived, and executed with a kind of humorous
tenderness, an equal sense of everything in it that is picturesque, touching,
ridiculous, worthy of the highest praise. Hephzibah Pyncheon, with her
near-sighted scowl, her rusty joints, her antique turban, her map of a
great territory to the eastward which ought to have belonged to her family,
her vain terrors and scruples and resentments, the inaptitude and repugnance
of an ancient gentlewoman to the vulgar little commerce which a cruel
fate has compelled her to engage in--Hephzibah Pyncheon is a masterly
picture. I repeat that she is a picture, as her companions are pictures;
she is a charming piece of descriptive writing, rather than a dramatic
exhibition. But she is described, like her companions too, so subtly and
lovingly that we enter into her virginal old heart and stand with her
behind her abominable little counter. Clifford Pyncheon is a still more
remarkable conception, though he is perhaps not so vividly depicted. It
was a figure needing a much more subtle touch, however, and it was of
the essence of his character to be vague and unemphasised. Nothing can
be more charming than the manner in which the soft, bright, active presence
of Phoebe Pyncheon is indicated, or than the account of her relations
with the poor dimly sentient kinsman for whom her light-handed sisterly
offices, in the evening of a melancholy life, are a revelation of lost
possibilities of happiness. "In her aspect," Hawthorne says of the young
girl, "there was a familiar gladness, and a holiness that you could play
with, and yet reverence it as much as ever. She was like a prayer offered
up in the homeliest beauty of one's mother-tongue. Fresh was Phoebe, moreover,
and airy, and sweet in her apparel; as if nothing that she wore--neither
her gown, nor her small straw bonnet, nor her little kerchief, any more
than her snowy stockings--had ever been put on before; or if worn, were
all the fresher for it, and with a fragrance as if they had lain among
the rose-buds." Of the influence of her maidenly salubrity upon poor Clifford,
Hawthorne gives the prettiest description, and then, breaking off suddenly,
renounces the attempt in language which, while pleading its inadequacy,
conveys an exquisite satisfaction to the reader. I quote the passage for
the sake of its extreme felicity, and of the charming image with which
it concludes. "But we strive in vain to put the idea into words. No adequate
expression of the beauty and profound pathos with which it impresses us
is attainable. This being, made only for happiness, and heretofore so
miserably failing to be happy--his tendencies so hideously thwarted that
some unknown time ago, the delicate springs of his character, never morally
or intellectually strong, had given way, and he was now imbecile--this
poor forlorn voyager from the Islands of the Blest, in a frail bark, on
a tempestuous sea, had been flung by the last mountain-wave of his shipwreck,
into a quiet harbour. There, as he lay more than half lifeless on the
strand, the fragrance of an earthly rose-bud had come to his nostrils,
and, as odours will, had summoned up reminiscences or visions of all the
living and breathing beauty amid which he should have had his home. With
his native susceptibility of happy influences, he inhales the slight ethereal
rapture into his soul, and expires!" I have not mentioned the personage
in The House of the Seven Gables upon whom Hawthorne evidently bestowed
most pains, and whose portrait is the most elaborate in the book; partly
because he is, in spite of the space he occupies, an accessory figure,
and partly because, even more than the others, he is what I have called
a picture rather than a character. Judge Pyncheon is an ironical portrait,
very richly and broadly executed, very sagaciously composed and rendered--the
portrait of a superb, full-blown hypocrite, a large-based, full-nurtured
Pharisee, bland, urbane, impressive, diffusing about him a "sultry" warmth
of benevolence, as the author calls it again and again, and basking in
the noontide of prosperity and the consideration of society; but in reality
hard, gross, and ignoble. Judge Pyncheon is an elaborate piece of description,
made up of a hundred admirable touches, in which satire is always winged
with fancy, and fancy is linked with a deep sense of reality. It is difficult
to say whether Hawthorne followed a model in describing Judge Pyncheon;
but it is tolerably obvious that the picture is an impression--a copious
impression--of an individual. It has evidently a definite starting-point
in fact, and the author is able to draw, freely and confidently, after
the image established in his mind. Holgrave, the modern young man, who
has been a Jack-of-all-trades and is at the period of the story a daguerreotypist,
is an attempt to render a kind of national type--that of the young citizen
of the United States whose fortune is simply in his lively intelligence,
and who stands naked, as it were, unbiased and unencumbered alike, in
the centre of the far-stretching level of American life. Holgrave is intended
as a contrast; his lack of traditions, his democratic stamp, his condensed
experience, are opposed to the desiccated prejudices and exhausted vitality
of the race of which poor feebly-scowling, rusty-jointed Hephzibah is
the most heroic representative. It is perhaps a pity that Hawthorne should
not have proposed to himself to give the old Pyncheon-qualities some embodiment
which would help them to balance more fairly with the elastic properties
of the young daguerreotypist--should not have painted a lusty conservative
to match his strenuous radical. As it is, the mustiness and mouldiness
of the tenants of the House of the Seven Gables crumble away rather too
easily. Evidently, however, what Hawthorne designed to represent was not
the struggle between an old society and a new, for in this case he would
have given the old one a better chance; but simply, as I have said, the
shrinkage and extinction of a family. This appealed to his imagination;
and the idea of long perpetuation and survival always appears to have
filled him with a kind of horror and disapproval. Conservative, in a certain
degree, as he was himself, and fond of retrospect and quietude and the
mellowing influences of time, it is singular how often one encounters
in his writings some expression of mistrust of old houses, old institutions,
long lines of descent. He was disposed apparently to allow a very moderate
measure in these respects, and he condemns the dwelling of the Pyncheons
disappear from the face of the earth because it has been standing a couple
of hundred years. In this he was an American of Americans; or rather he
was more American than many of his countrymen, who, though they are accustomed
to work for the short run rather than the long, have often a lurking esteem
for things that show the marks of having lasted. I will add that Holgrave
is one of the few figures, among those which Hawthorne created, with regard
to which the absence of the realistic mode of treatment is felt as a loss.
Holgrave is not sharply enough characterised; he lacks features; he is
not an individual, but a type. But my last word about this admirable novel
must not be a restrictive one. It is a large and generous production,
pervaded with that vague hum, that indefinable echo, of the whole multitudinous
life of man, which is the real sign of a great work of fiction. After
the publication of The House of the Seven Gables, which brought him great
honour, and, I believe, a tolerable share of a more ponderable substance,
he composed a couple of little volumes for children--The Wonder-Book,
and a small collection of stories entitled Tanglewood Tales. They are
not among his most serious literary titles, but if I may trust my own
early impression of them, they are among the most charming literary services
that have been rendered to children in an age (and especially in a country)
in which the exactions of the infant mind have exerted much too palpable
an influence upon literature. Hawthorne's stories are the old Greek myths,
made more vivid to the childish imagination by an infusion of details
which both deepen and explain their marvels. I have been careful not to
read them over, for I should be very sorry to risk disturbing in any degree
a recollection of them that has been at rest since the appreciative period
of life to which they are addressed. They seem at that period enchanting.
and the ideal of happiness of many American children is to lie upon the
carpet and lose themselves in The Wonder-Book. It is in its pages that
they first make the acquaintance of the heroes and heroines of the antique
mythology, and something of the nursery fairy-tale quality of interest
which Hawthorne imparts to them always remains. I have said that Lenox
was a very pretty place, and that he was able to work there Hawthorne
proved by composing The House of the Seven Gables with a good deal of
rapidity. But at the close of the year in which this novel was published
he wrote to a friend (Mr. Fields, his publisher,) that "to tell you a
secret I am sick to death of Berkshire, and hate to think of spending
another winter here. . . . The air and climate do not agree with my health
at all, and for the first time since I was a boy I have felt languid and
dispirited. . . . O that Providence would build me the merest little shanty,
and mark me out a rood or two of garden ground, near the sea-coast!" He
was at this time for a while out of health; and it is proper to remember
that though the Massachusetts Berkshire, with its mountains and lakes,
was charming during the ardent American summer, there was a reverse to
the medal, consisting of December snows prolonged into April and May.
Providence failed to provide him with a cottage by the sea; but he betook
himself for the winter of 1852 to the little town of West Newton, near
Boston, where he brought into the world The Blithedale Romance. This work,
as I have said, would not have been written if Hawthorne had not spent
a year at Brook Farm, and though it is in no sense of the word an account
of the manners or the inmates of that establishment, it will preserve
the memory of the ingenious community at West Roxbury for a generation
unconscious of other reminders. I hardly know what to say about it save
that it is very charming; this vague, unanalytic epithet is the first
that comes to one's pen in treating of Hawthorne's novels, for their extreme
amenity of form invariably suggests it; but if on the one hand it claims
to be uttered, on the other it frankly confesses its inconclusiveness.
Perhaps, however, in this case, it fills out the measure of appreciation
more completely than in others, for The Blithedale Romance is the lightest,
the brightest, the liveliest, of this company of unhumorous fictions.
The story is told from a more joyous point of view--from a point of view
comparatively humorous--and a number of objects and incidents touched
with the light of the profane world--the vulgar, many-coloured world of
actuality, as distinguished from the crepuscular realm of the writer's
own reveries--are mingled with its course. The book indeed is a mixture
of elements, and it leaves in the memory an impression analogous to that
of an April day--an alternation of brightness and shadow, of broken sun-patches
and sprinkling clouds. Its denoument is tragical--there is indeed nothing
so tragical in all Hawthorne, unless it be the murder of Miriam's persecutor
by Donatello, in Transformation, as the suicide of Zenobia; and yet on
the whole the effect of the novel is to make one think more agreeably
of life. The standpoint of the narrator has the advantage of being a concrete
one; he is no longer, as in the preceding tales, a disembodied spirit,
imprisoned in the haunted chamber of his own contemplations, but a particular
man, with a certain human grossness. Of Miles Coverdale I have already
spoken, and of its being natural to assume that in so far as we may measure
this lightly indicated identity of his, it has a great deal in common
with that of his creator. Coverdale is a picture of the contemplative,
observant, analytic nature, nursing its fancies, and yet, thanks to an
element of strong good sense, not bringing them up to be spoiled children;
having little at stake in life, at any given moment, and yet indulging,
in imagination, in a good many adventures; a portrait of a man, in a word,
whose passions are slender, whose imagination is active, and whose happiness
lies, not in doing, but in perceiving--half a poet, half a critic, and
all a spectator. He is contrasted, excellently, with the figure of Hollingworth,
the heavily treading Reformer, whose attitude with regard to the world
is that of the hammer to the anvil, and who has no patience with his friend's
indifferences and neutralities. Coverdale is a gentle sceptic, a mild
cynic; he would agree that life is a little worth living--or worth living
a little; but would remark that, unfortunately, to live little enough,
we have to live a great deal. He confesses to a want of earnestness, but
in reality he is evidently an excellent fellow, to whom one might look,
not for any personal performance on a great scale, but for a good deal
of generosity of detail. "As Hollingsworth once told me, I lack a purpose,"
he writes, at the close of his story. "How strange! He was ruined, morally,
by an overplus of the same ingredient the want of which, I occasionally
suspect, has rendered my own life all an emptiness. I by no means wish
die. Yet were there any cause in this whole chaos of human struggle, worth
a sane man's dying for, and which my death would benefit, then--provided,
however, the effort did not involve an unreasonable amount of trouble--methinks
I might be bold to offer up my life. If Kossuth, for example, would pitch
the battle-field of Hungarian rights within an easy ride of my abode,
and choose a mild sunny morning, after breakfast, for the conflict, Miles
Coverdale would gladly be his man, for one brave rush upon the levelled
bayonets. Further than that I should be loth to pledge myself." The finest
thing in The Blithedale Romance is the character of Zenobia, which I have
said elsewhere strikes me as the nearest approach that Hawthorne has made
to the complete creation of a person. She is more concrete than Hester
or Miriam, or Hilda or Phoebe; she is a more definite image, produced
by a greater multiplicity of touches. It is idle to inquire too closely
whether Hawthorne had Margaret Fuller in his mind in constructing the
figure of this brilliant specimen of the strong-minded class and endowing
her with the genius of conversation; or, on the assumption that such was
the case, to compare the image at all strictly with the model. There is
no strictness in the representation by novelists of persons who have struck
them in life, and there can in the nature of things be none. From the
moment the imagination takes a hand in the game, the inevitable tendency
is to divergence, to following what may be called new scents. The original
gives hints, but the writer does what he likes with them, and imports
new elements into the picture. If there is this amount of reason for referring
the wayward heroine of Blithedale to Hawthorne's impression of the most
distinguished woman of her day in Boston, that Margaret Fuller was the
only literary lady of eminence whom there is any sign of his having known,
that she was proud, passionate, and eloquent, that she was much connected
with the little world of Transcendentalism out of which the experiment
of Brook Farm sprung, and that she had a miserable end and a watery grave--if
these are facts to be noted on one side, I say; on the other, the beautiful
and sumptuous Zenobia, with her rich and picturesque temperament and physical
aspects, offers many points of divergence from the plain and strenuous
invalid who represented feminine culture in the suburbs of the New England
metropolis. This picturesqueness of Zenobia is very happily indicated
and maintained; she is a woman, in all the force of the term, and there
is something very vivid and powerful in her large expression of womanly
gifts and weaknesses. Hollingsworth is, I think, less successful, though
there is much reality in the conception of the type to which he belongs--the
strong-willed. narrow-hearted apostle of a special form of redemption
for society. There is nothing better in all Hawthorne than the scene between
him and Coverdale, when the two men are at work together in the field
(piling stones on a dyke), and he gives it to his companion to choose
whether he will be with him or against him. It is a pity, perhaps, to
have represented him as having begun life as a blacksmith, for one grudges
him the advantage of so logical a reason for his roughness and hardness.
"Hollingsworth scarcely said a word, unless when repeatedly and pertinaciously
addressed. Then indeed he would glare upon us from the thick shrubbery
of his meditations, like a tiger out of a jungle, make the briefest reply
possible, and betake himself back into the solitude of his heart and mind
.... His heart, I imagine, was never really interested in our socialist
scheme, but was for ever busy with his strange, and as most people thought,
impracticable plan for the reformation of criminals through an appeal
to their higher instincts. Much as I liked Hollingsworth, it cost me many
a groan to tolerate him on this point. He ought to have commenced his
investigation of the subject by committing some huge sin in his proper
person, and examining the condition of his higher instincts afterwards."
The most touching element in the novel is the history of the grasp that
this barbarous fanatic has laid upon the fastidious and high-tempered
Zenobia, who, disliking him and shrinking from him at a hundred points,
is drawn into the gulf of his omnivorous egotism. The portion of the story
that strikes me as least felicitous is that which deals with Priscilla
and with her mysterious relation to Zenobia--with her mesmeric gifts,
her clairvoyance, her identity with the Veiled Lady, her divided subjection
to Hollingsworth and Westervelt, and her numerous other graceful but fantastic
properties--her Sibylline attributes, as the author calls them. Hawthorne
is rather too fond of Sibylline attributes--a taste of the same order
as his disposition, to which I have already alluded, to talk about spheres
and sympathies. As the action advances, in The Blithedale Romance, we
get too much out of reality, and cease to feel beneath our feet the firm
ground of an appeal to our own vision of the world, our observation. I
should have liked to see the story concern itself more with the little
community in which its earlier scenes are laid, and avail itself of so
excellent an opportunity for describing unhackneyed specimens of human
nature. I have already spoken of the absence of satire in the novel, of
its not aiming in the least at satire, and of its offering no grounds
for complaint as an invidious picture. Indeed the brethren of Brook Farm
should have held themselves slighted rather than misrepresented, and have
regretted that the admirable genius who for a while was numbered among
them should have treated their institution mainly as a perch for starting
upon an imaginative flight. But when all is said about a certain want
of substance and cohesion in the latter portions of The Blithedale Romance
the book is still a delightful and beautiful one. Zenobia and Hollingsworth
live in the memory, and even Priscilla and Coverdale, who linger there
less importunately, have a great deal that touches us and that we believe
in. I said just now that Priscilla was infelicitous; but immediately afterwards
I open the volume at a page in which the author describes some of the
out-of-door amusements at Blithedale, and speaks of a foot-race across
the grass, in which some of the slim young girls of the society joined.
"Priscilla's peculiar charm in a foot-race was the weakness and irregularity
with which she ran. Growing up without exercise, except to her poor little
fingers, she had never yet acquired the perfect use of her legs. Setting
buoyantly forth therefore, as if no rival less swift than Atalanta could
compete with her, she ran falteringly, and often tumbled on the grass.
Such an incident--though it seems too slight to think of--was a thing
to laugh at, but which brought the water into one's eyes, and lingered
in the memory after far greater joys and sorrows were wept out of it,
as antiquated trash. Priscilla's life, as I beheld it, was full of trifles
that affected me in just this way." That seems to me exquisite, and the
book is full of touches as deep and delicate. After writing it, Hawthorne
went back to live in Concord, where he had bought a small house in which,
apparently, he expected to spend a large portion of his future. This was
in fact the dwelling in which he passed that part of the rest of his days
that he spent in his own country. He established himself there before
going to Europe, in 1853, and he returned to the Wayside, as he called
his house, on coming back to the United States seven years later. Though
he actually occupied the place no long time, he had made it his property,
and it was more his own home than any of his numerous provisional abodes.
I may therefore quote a little account of the house which he wrote to
a distinguished friend, Mr. George Curtis. "As for my old house, you will
understand it better after spending a day or two in it. Before Mr. Alcott
took it in hand, it was a mean-looking affair, with two peaked gables;
no suggestiveness about it, and no venerableness, although from the style
of its construction it seems to have survived beyond its first century.
He added a porch in front, and a central peak, and a piazza at each end,
and painted it a rusty olive hue, and invested the whole with a modest
picturesqueness; all which improvements, together with its situation at
the foot of a wooded hill, make it a place that one notices and remembers
for a few moments after passing. Mr. Alcott expended a good deal of taste
and some money (to no great purpose) in forming the hillside behind the
house into terraces, and building arbours and summerhouses of rough stems
and branches and trees, on a system of his own. They must have been very
pretty in their day, and are so still, although much decayed, and shattered
more and more by every breeze that blows. The hillside is covered chiefly
with locust trees, which come into luxuriant blossom in the month of June,
and look and smell very sweetly, intermixed with a few young elms, and
white pines and infant oaks--the whole forming rather a thicket than a
wood. Nevertheless, there is some very good shade to be found there. I
spend delectable hours there in the hottest part of the day, stretched
out at my lazy length, with a book in my hand, or some unwritten book
in my thoughts. There is almost always a breeze stirring along the sides
or brow of the hill. From the hill-top there is a good view along the
extensive level surfaces and gentle hilly outlines, covered with wood,
that characterise the scenery of Concord...I know nothing of the history
of the house except Thoreau's telling me that it was inhabited, a generation
or two ago, by a man who believed he should never die. I believe, however,
he is dead; at least, I hope so; else he may probably reappear and dispute
my title to his residence." As Mr. Lathrop points out, this allusion to
a man who believed he should never die is "the first intimation of the
story of Septimius Felton." The scenery of that romance, he adds, "was
evidently taken from the Wayside and its hill." Septimius Felton is in
fact a young man who, at the time of the war of the Revolution, lives
in the village of Concord, on the Boston road, at the base of a woody
hill which rises abruptly behind his house, and of which the level summit
supplies him with a promenade continually mentioned in the course of the
tale. Hawthorne used to exercise himself upon this picturesque eminence,
and, as he conceived the brooding Septimius to have done before him, to
betake himself thither when he found the limits of his dwelling too narrow.
But he had an advantage which his imaginary hero lacked; he erected a
tower as an adjunct to the house, and it was a jocular tradition among
his neighbours, in allusion to his attributive tendency to evade rather
than hasten the coming guest, that he used to ascend this structure and
scan the road for provocations to retreat. In so far, however, as Hawthorne
suffered the penalties of celebrity at the hands of intrusive fellow-citizens,
he was soon to escape from this honourable incommodity. On the 4th of
March, 1853, his old college-mate and intimate friend. Franklin Pierce,
was installed as President of the United States. He had been the candidate
of the Democratic party, and all good Democrats, accordingly, in conformity
to the beautiful and rational system under which the affairs of the great
Republic were carried on, began to open their windows to the golden sunshine
of Presidential patronage. When General Pierce was put forward by the
Democrats, Hawthorne felt a perfectly loyal and natural desire that his
good friend should be exalted to so brilliant a position, and he did what
was in him to further the good cause, by writing a little book about its
hero. His Life of Franklin Pierce belongs to that class of literature
which is known as the "campaign biography," and which consists of an attempt,
more or less successful, to persuade the many-headed monster of universal
suffrage that the gentleman on whose behalf it is addressed is a paragon
of wisdom and virtue. Of Hawthorne's little book there is nothing particular
to say, save that it is in very good taste, that he is a very fairly ingenious
advocate, and that if he claimed for the future President qualities which
rather faded in the bright light of a high office, this defect of proportion
was essential to his undertaking. He dwelt chiefly upon General Pierce's
exploits in the war with Mexico (before that, his record, as they say
in America, had been mainly that of a successful country lawyer), and
exercised his descriptive powers so far as was possible in describing
the advance of the United States troops from Vera Cruz to the city of
the Montezumas. The mouth-pieces of the Whig party spared him, I believe,
no reprobation for "prostituting" his exquisite genius; but I fail to
see anything reprehensible in Hawthorne's lending his old friend the assistance
of his graceful quill. He wished him to be President--he held afterwards
that he filled the office with admirable dignity and wisdom--and as the
only thing he could do was to write, he fell to work and wrote for him.
Hawthorne was a good lover and a very sufficient partisan' and I suspect
that if Franklin Pierce had been made even less of the stuff of a statesman,
he would still have found in the force of old associations an injunction
to hail him as a ruler. Our hero was an American of the earlier and simpler
type--the type of which it is doubtless premature to say that it has wholly
passed away, but of which it may at least be said that the circumstances
that produced it have been greatly modified. The generation to which he
belonged, that generation which grew up with the century, witnessed during
a period of fifty years the immense, uninterrupted material development
of the young Republic; and when one thinks of the scale on which it took
place, of the prosperity that walked in its train and waited on its course,
of the hopes it fostered and the blessings it conferred, of the broad
morning sunshine, in a word, in which it all went forward, there seems
to be little room for surprise that it should have implanted a kind of
superstitious faith in the grandeur of the country, its duration, its
immunity from the usual troubles of earthly empires. This faith was a
simple and uncritical one, enlivened with an element of genial optimism,
in the light of which it appeared that the great American state was not
as other human institutions are, that a special Providence watched over
it, that it would go on joyously for ever, and that a country whose vast
and blooming bosom offered a refuge to the strugglers and seekers of all
the rest of the world, must come off easily, in the battle of the ages.
From this conception of the American future the sense of its having problems
to solve was blissfully absent; there were no difficulties in the programme,
no looming complications, no rocks ahead. The indefinite multiplication
of the population, and its enjoyment of the benefits of a common-school
education and of unusual facilities for making an income--this was the
form in which, on the whole, the future most vividly presented itself,
and in which the greatness of the country was to be recognised of men.
There was indeed a faint shadow in the picture--the shadow projected by
the "peculiar institution" of the Southern States; but it was far from
sufficient to darken the rosy vision of most good Americans, and above
all, of most good Democrats. Hawthorne alludes to it in a passage of his
life of Pierce, which I will quote not only as a hint of the trouble that
was in store for a cheerful race of men, but as an example of his own
easy-going political attitude. "It was while in the lower house of Congress
that Franklin Pierce took that stand on the Slavery question from which
he has never since swerved by a hair's breadth. He fully recognised by
his votes and his voice, the rights pledged to the South by the Constitution.
This, at the period when he declared himself, was an easy thing to do.
But when it became more difficult, when the first imperceptible murmur
of agitation had grown almost to a convulsion, his course was still the
same. Nor did he ever shun the obloquy that sometimes threatened to pursue
the Northern man who dared to love that great and sacred reality--his
whole united country--better than the mistiness of a philanthropic theory."
This last invidious allusion is to the disposition, not infrequent at
the North, but by no means general, to set a decisive limit to further
legislation in favour of the cherished idiosyncrasy of the other half
of the country. Hawthorne takes the license of a sympathetic biographer
in speaking of his hero's having incurred obloquy by his conservative
attitude on the question of Slavery. The only class in the American world
that suffered in the smallest degree, at this time, from social persecution,
was the little band of Northern Abolitionists, who were as unfashionable
as they were indiscreet--which is saying much. Like most of his fellow-countrymen,
Hawthorne had no idea that the respectable institution which he contemplated
in impressive contrast to humanitarian "mistiness," was presently to cost
the nation four long years of bloodshed and misery, and a social revolution
as complete as any the world has seen. When this event occurred, he was
therefore proportionately horrified and depressed by it; it cut from beneath
his feet the familiar ground which had long felt so firm, substituting
a heaving and quaking medium in which his spirit found no rest. Such was
the bewildered sensation of that earlier and simpler generation of which
I have spoken; their illusions were rudely dispelled, and they saw the
best of all possible republics given over to fratricidal carnage. This
affair had no place in their scheme, and nothing was left for them but
to hang their heads and close their eyes. The subsidence of that great
convulsion has left a different tone from the tone it found, and one may
say that the Civil War marks an era in the history of the American mind.
It introduced into the national consciousness a certain sense of proportion
and relation, of the world being a more complicated place than it had
hitherto seemed, the future more treacherous, success more difficult.
At the rate at which things are going, it is obvious that good Americans
will be more numerous than ever; but the good American, in days to come,
will be a more critical person than his complacent and confident grandfather.
He has eaten of the tree of knowledge. He will not, I think, be a sceptic,
and still less, of course, a cynic; but he will be, without discredit
to his well-known capacity for action, an observer. He will remember that
the ways of the Lord are inscrutable, and that this is a world in which
everything happens; and eventualities, as the late Emperor of the French
used to say, will not find him intellectually unprepared. The good American
of which Hawthorne was so admirable a specimen was not critical, and it
was perhaps for this reason that Franklin Pierce seemed to him a very
proper President. The least that General Pierce could do in exchange for
so liberal a confidence was to offer his old friend one of the numerous
places in his gift. Hawthorne had a great desire to go abroad and see
something of the world, so that a consulate seemed the proper thing. He
never stirred in the matter himself, but his friends strongly urged that
something should be done; and when he accepted the post of consul at Liverpool
there was not a word of reasonable criticism to be offered on the matter.
If General Pierce, who was before all things good-natured and obliging,
had been guilty of no greater indiscretion than to confer this modest
distinction upon the most honourable and discreet of men of letters, he
would have made a more brilliant mark in the annals of American statesmanship.
Liverpool had not been immediately selected, and Hawthorne had written
to his friend and publisher, Mr. Fields, with some humorous vagueness
of allusion to his probable expatriation. "Do make some inquiries about
Portugal; as, for instance, in what part of the world it lies, and whether
it is an empire, a kingdom, or a republic. Also, and more particularly,
the expenses of living there, and whether the Minister would be likely
to be much pestered with his own countrymen. Also, any other information
about foreign countries would be acceptable to an inquiring mind." It
would seem from this that there had been a question of offering him a
small diplomatic post; but the emoluments of the place were justly taken
into account, and it is to be supposed that those of the consulate at
Liverpool were at least as great as the salary of the American representative
at Lisbon. Unfortunately, just after Hawthorne had taken possession of
the former post, the salary attached to it was reduced by Congress, in
an economical hour, to less than half the sum enjoyed by his predecessors.
It was fixed at 7,500 dollars (L1,500); but the consular fees, which were
often copious, were an added resource. At midsummer then, in 1853, Hawthorne
was established in England.
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