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Hawthorne and His Mosses
By Herman Melville
From The Literary World,
August 17 and 24, 1850
By a Virginian Spending July in
Vermont
A papered
chamber in a fine old
farm-house--a mile from any other
dwelling, and dipped to the eaves in
foliage--surrounded by mountains, old
woods, and Indian ponds,--this, surely
is the place to write of Hawthorne.
Some charm is in this northern air,
for love and duty seem both impelling
to the task. A man of a deep and noble
nature has seized me in this
seclusion. His wild, witch voice rings
through me; or, in softer cadences, I
seem to hear it in the songs of the
hill-side birds, that sing in the
larch trees at my window.
Would that
all excellent books were
foundlings, without father or mother,
that so it might be, we could glorify
them, without including their
ostensible authors. Nor would any true
man take exception to this;--least of
all, he who writes,--"When the Artist
rises high enough to achieve the
Beautiful, the symbol by which he
makes it perceptible to mortal senses
becomes of little value in his eyes,
while his spirit possesses itself in
the enjoyment of the reality."
But more
than this, I know not what
would be the right name to put on the
title-page of an excellent book, but
this I feel, that the names of all
fine authors are fictitious ones, far
more than that of Junius,--simply
standing, as they do, for the
mystical, ever-eluding Spirit of all
Beauty, which ubiquitously possesses
men of genius. Purely imaginative as
this fancy may appear, it nevertheless
seems to receive some warranty from
the fact, that on a personal interview
no great author has ever come up to
the idea of his reader. But that dust
of which our bodies are composed, how
can it fitly express the nobler
intelligences among us? With reverence
be it spoken, that not even in the
case of one deemed more than man, not
even in our Saviour, did his visible
frame betoken anything of the
augustness of the nature within. Else,
how could those Jewish eyewitnesses
fail to see heaven in his glance.
It is
curious, how a man may travel
along a country road, and yet miss the
grandest, or sweetest of prospects, by
reason of an intervening hedge, so
like all other hedges, as in no way to
hint of the wide landscape beyond. So
has it been with me concerning the
enchanting landscape in the soul of
this Hawthorne, this most excellent
Man of Mosses. His "Old Manse" has
been written now four years, but I
never read it till a day or two since.
I had seen it in the
book-stores--heard of it often--even
had it recommended to me by a
tasteful friend, as a rare, quiet
book, perhaps too deserving of
popularity to be popular. But there
are so many books called "excellent,"
and so much unpopular merit, that amid
the thick stir of other things, the
hint of my tasteful friend was
disregarded; and for four years the
Mosses on the Old Manse never
refreshed me with their perennial
green. It may be, however, that all
this while, the book, like wine, was
only improving in flavor and body. At
any rate, it so chanced that this long
procrastination eventuated in a happy
result. At breakfast the other day, a
mountain girl, a cousin of mine, who
for the last two weeks has every
morning helped me to strawberries and
raspberries,--which like the roses and
pearls in the fairy-tale, seemed to
fall into the saucer from those
strawberry-beds her cheeks,--this
delightful crature, this charming
Cherry says to me--"I see you spend
your mornings in the hay-mow; and
yesterday I found there 'Dwight's
Travels in New England'. Now I have
something far better than
that,--something more congenial to our
summer on these hills. Take these
raspberries, and then I will give you
some moss."--"Moss!" said I--"Yes, and
you must take it to the barn with you,
and good-bye to 'Dwight.'"
With that
she left me, and soon
returned with a volume, verdantly
bound, and garnished with a curious
frontispiece in green,--nothing less,
than a fragment of real moss cunningly
pressed to a fly-leaf.--"Why this,"
said I, spilling my raspberries, "this
is the 'Mosses from an Old Manse'."
"Yes," said cousin Cherry, "yes, it is
that flowery Hawthorne."--"Hawthorne
and Mosses," said I, "no more: it is
morning: it is July in the country:
and I am off for the barn."
Stretched on
that new mown clover, the
hill-side breeze blowing over me
through the wide barn door, and
soothed by the hum of the bees in the
meadows around, how magically stole
over me this Mossy Man! And how amply,
how bountifully, did he redeem that
delicious promise to his guests in the
Old Manse, of whom it is
written--"Others could give them
pleasure, or amusement, or
instruction--these could be picked up
anywhere--but it was for me to give
them rest. Rest, in a life of trouble!
What better could be done for weary
and world-worn spirits? what better
could be done for anybody, who came
within our magic circle, than to throw
the spell of a magic spirit over
them?"--So all that day, half-buried
in the new clover, I watched this
Hawthorne's "Assyrian dawn, and
Paphian sunset and moonrise, from the
summit of our Eastern Hill."
The soft
ravishments of the man spun
me round in a web of dreams, and when
the book was closed, when the spell
was over, this wizard "dismissed me
with but misty reminiscences, as if I
had been dreaming of him."
What a
mild moonlight of contemplative
humor bathes that Old Manse!--the rich
and rare distilment of a spicy and
slowly-oozing heart. No rollicking
rudeness, no gross fun fed on fat
dinners, and bred in the lees of
wine,--but a humor so spiritually
gentle, so high, so deep, and yet so
richly relishable, that it were hardly
inappropriate in an angel. It is the
very religion of mirth; for nothing so
human but it may be advanced to that.
The orchard of the Old Manse seems the
visible type of the fine mind that has
described it. Those twisted, and
contorted old trees, "that stretch out
their crooked branches, and take such
hold of the imagination, that we
remember them as humorists and
odd-fellows." And then, as surrounded
by these grotesque forms, and hushed
in the noon-day repose of this
Hawthorne's spell, how aptly might the
still fall of his ruddy thoughts into
your soul be symbolized by "the thump
of a great apple, in the stillest
afternoon, falling without a breath of
wind, from the mere necessity of
perfect ripeness"! For no less ripe
than ruddy are the apples of the
thoughts and fancies in this sweet Man
of Mosses.
"Buds and
Bird-Voices"--What a
delicious thing is that!--"Will the
world ever be so decayed, that Spring
may not renew its greeness?"--And the
"Fire-Worship." Was ever the hearth so
glorified into an altar before? The
mere title of that piece is better
than any common work in fifty folio
volumes. How exquisite is this:--"Nor
did it lessen the charm of his soft,
familiar courtesy and helpfulness,
that the mighty spirit, were
opportunity offered him, would run
riot through the peaceful house, wrap
its inmates in his terrible embrace,
and leave nothing of them save their
whitened bones. This possibility of
mad destruction only made his domestic
kindness the more beautiful and
touching. It was so sweet of him,
being endowed with such power, to
dwell, day after day, and one long,
lonesome night after another, on the
dusky hearth, only now and then
betraying his wild nature, by
thrusting his red tongue out of the
chimney-top! True, he had done much
mischief in the world, and was pretty
certain to do more, but his warm heart
atoned for all. He was kindly to the
race of man."
But he
has still other apples, not
quite so ruddy, though full as
ripe:--apples, that have been left to
wither on the tree, after the pleasant
autumn gathering is past. The sketch
of "The Old Apple Dealer" is conceived
in the subtlest spirit of sadness; he
whose "subdued and nerveless boyhood
prefigured his abortive prime, which,
likewise, contained within itself the
prophecy and image of his lean and
torpid age." Such touches as are in
this piece can not proceed from any
common heart. They argue such a depth
of tenderness, such a boundless
sympathy with all forms of being, such
an omnipresent love, that we must
needs say, that this Hawthorne is here
almost alone in his generation,--at
least, in the artistic manisfestation
of these things. Still more. Such
touches as these,--and many, very many
similar ones, all through his
chapters--furnish clews, whereby we
enter a little way into the intricate,
profound heart where they originated.
And we see, that suffering, some time
or other and in some shape or
other,--this only can enable any man
to depict it in others. All over him,
Hawthorne's melancholy rests like an
Indian summer, which, though bathing a
whole country in one softness, still
reveals the distinctive hue of every
towering hill, and each far-winding
vale.
But it
is the least part of genius
that attracts admiration. Where
Hawthorne is known, he seems to be
deemed a pleasant writer, with a
pleasant style,--a sequestered,
harmless man, from whom any deep and
weighty thing would hardly be
anticipated:--a man who means no
meanings. But there is no man, in whom
humor and love, like mountain peaks,
soar to such a rapt height, as to
receive the irradiations of the upper
skies;--there is no man in whom humor
and love are developed in that high
form called genius; no such man can
exist without also possessing, as the
indispensable complement of these, a
great, deep intellect, which drops
down into the universe like a plummet.
Or, love and humor are only the
eyes, through which such an intellect
views this world. The great beauty in
such a mind is but the product of its
strength. What, to all readers, can be
more charming than the piece entitled
"Monsieur du Miroir"; and to a reader
at all capable of fully fathoming it,
what at the same time, can possess
more mystical depth of meaning?--Yes,
there he sits, and looks at me,--this
"shape of mystery," this "identical
Monsieur du Miroir."--"Methinks I
should tremble now, were his wizard
power of gliding through all
impediments in search of me, to place
him suddenly before my eyes."
How profound,
nay appalling, is the
moral evolved by the "Earth's
Holocaust"; where--beginning with the
hollow follies and affectations of the
world,--all vanities and empty
theories and forms, are, one after
another, and by an admirably
graduated, growing comprehensiveness,
thrown into the allegorical fire,
till, at length, nothing is left but
the all-engendering heart of man;
which remaining still unconsumed, the
great conflagration is naught.
Of a
piece with this, is the
"Intelligence Office," a wondrous
symbolizing of the secret workings in
men's souls. There are other sketches,
still more charged with ponderous
import.
"The Christmas Banquet," and "The Bosom Serpent"
would be fine subjects for a curious and elaborate analysis, touching the conjectural
parts of the mind that produced them. For spite of all the Indian-summer sunlight
on the hither side of Hawthorne's soul, the other side--like the dark half of
the physical sphere--is shrouded in a blackness, ten times black. But this darkness
but gives more effect to the evermoving dawn, that forever advances through
it, and cirumnavigates his world. Whether Hawthorne has simply availed himself
of this mystical blackness as a means to the wondrous effects he makes it to
produce in his lights and shades; or whether there really lurks in him, perhaps
unknown to himself, a touch of Puritanic gloom,--this, I cannot altogether tell.
Certain it is, however, that this grate power of blackness in him derives its
force from its appeals to that Calvinistic sense of Innate Depravity and Original
Sin, from whose visitations, in some shape or other, no deeply thinking mind
is always and wholly free. For, in certain moods, no man can weigh this world,
without throwing in something, somehow like Original Sin, to strike the uneven
balance. At all events, perhaps no writer has ever wielded this terrific thought
with greater terror than this same harmless Hawthorne. Still more: this black
conceit pervades him, through and through. You may be witched by his sunlight,--transported
by the bright gildings in the skies he builds over you;--but there is the blackness
of darkness beyond; and even his bright gildings but fringe, and play upon the
edges of thunder-clouds.--In one word, the world is mistaken in this Nathaniel
Hawthorne. He himself must often have smiled at its absurd misconceptions of
him. He is immeasurably deeper than the plummet of the mere critic. For it is
not the brain that can test such a man; it is only the heart. You cannot come
to know greatness by inspecting it; there is no glimpse to be caught of it,
except by intuition; you need not ring it, you but touch it, and you find it
is gold.
Now it
is that blackness in Hawthorne,
of which I have spoken, that so fixes
and fascinates me. It may be,
nevertheless, that it is too largely
developed in him. Perhaps he does not
give us a ray of his light for every
shade of his dark. But however this
may be, this blackness it is that
furnishes the infinite obscure of his
background,--that background, against
which Shakespeare plays his grandest
conceits, the things that have made
for Shakespeare his loftiest, but most
circumscribed renown, as the
profoundest of thinkers. For by
philosophers Shakespeare is not adored
as the great man of tragedy and
comedy.--"Off with his head! so much
for Buckingham!" this sort of rant,
interlined by another hand, brings
down the house,--those mistaken souls,
who dream of Shakespeare as a mere man
of Richard-the-Third humps, and
Macbeth daggers. But it is those deep
far-away things in him; those
occasional flashings-forth of the
intuitive Truth in him; those short,
quick probings at the very axis of
reality:--these are the things that
make Shakespeare, Shakespeare. Through
the mouths of the dark characters of
Hamlet, Timon, Lear, and Iago, he
craftily says, or sometimes insinuates
the things, which we feel to be so
terrifically true, that it were all
but madness for any good man, in his
own proper character, to utter, or
even hint of them. Tormented into
desperation, Lear the frantic King
tears off the mask, and speaks the
sane madness of vital truth. But, as I
before said, it is the least part of
genius that attracts admiration. And
so, much of the blind, unbridled
admiration that has been heaped upon
Shakespeare, has been lavished upon
the least part of him. And few of his
endless commentators and critics seem
to have remembered, or even perceived,
that the immediate products of a great
mind are not so great, as that
undeveloped, (and sometimes
undevelopable) yet dimly-discernible
greatness, to which these immediate
products are but the infallible
indices. In Shakespeare's tomb lies
infinitely more than Shakespeare ever
wrote. And if I magnify Shakespeare,
it is not so much for what he did do,
as for what he did not do, or
refrained from doing. For in this
world of lies, Truth is forced to fly
like a scared white doe in the
woodlands; and only by cunning
glimpses will she reveal herself, as
in Shakespeare and other masters of
the great Art of Telling the
Truth,--even though it be covertly,
and by snatches.
But if
this view of the all-popular
Shakespeare be seldom taken by his
readers, and if very few who extol
him, have ever read him deeply, or,
perhaps, only have seen him on the
tricky stage, (which alone made, and
is still making him his mere mob
renown)--if few men have time, or
patience, or palate, for the spiritual
truth as it is in that great
genius;--it is, then, no matter of
surprise that in a contemporaneous
age, Nathaniel Hawthorne is a man, as
yet, almost utterly mistaken among
men. Here and there, in some quiet
arm-chair in the noisy town, or some
deep nook among the noiseless
mountains, he may be appreciated for
something of what he is. But unlike
Shakespeare, who was forced to the
contrary course by circumstances,
Hawthorne (either from simple
disinclination, or else from
inaptitude) refrains from all the
popularizing noise and show of broad
farce, and blood-besmeared tragedy;
content with the still, rich
utterances of a great intellect in
repose, and which sends few thoughts
into circulation, except they be
arterialized at his large warm lungs,
and expanded in his honest heart.
Nor need
you fix upon that blackness
in him, if it suit you not. Nor,
indeed, will all readers discern it,
for it is, mostly, insinuated to those
who may best undersand it, and account
for it; it is not obtruded upon every
one alike.
Some may
start to read of Shakespeare
and Hawthorne on the same page. They
may say, that if an illustration were
needed, a lesser light might have
sufficed to elucidate this Hawthorne,
this small man of yesterday. But I am
not, willingly, one of those, who as
touching Shakespeare at least,
exemplify the maxim of Rochefoucauld,
that "we exalt the reputation of some,
in order to depress that of
others";--who, to teach all
noble-souled aspirants that there is
no hope for them, pronounce
Shakespeare absolutely unapproachable.
But Shakespeare has been approached.
There are minds that have gone as far
as Shakespeare into the universe. And
hardly a mortal man, who, at some time
or other, has not felt as great
thoughts in him as any you will find
in Hamlet. We must not inferentially
malign mankind for the sake of any one
man, whoever he may be. This is too
cheap a purchase of contentment for
consious mediocrity to make. Besides,
this absolute and unconditional
adoration of Shakespeare has grown to
be a part of our Anglo Saxon
superstitions. The Thirty-Nine
Articles are now Forty. Intolerance
has come to exist in this matter. You
must believe in Shakespeare's
unapproachability, or quit the
country. But what sort of belief is
this for an American, an man who is
bound to carry republican
progressiveness into Literature, as
well as into Life? Believe me, my
friends, that men not very much
inferior to Shakespeare, are this day
being born on the banks of the Ohio.
And the day will come, when you shall
say who reads a book by an Englishman
that is a modern? The great mistake
seems to be, that even with those
Americans who look forward to the
coming of a great literary genius
among us, they somehow fancy he will
come in the costume of Queen
Elizabeth's day,--be a writer of
dramas founded upon old English
history, or the tales of Boccaccio.
Whereas, great geniuses are parts of
the times; they themselves are the
time; and possess an correspondent
coloring. It is of a piece with the
Jews, who while their Shiloh was
meekly walking in their streets, were
still praying for his magnificent
coming; looking for him in a chariot,
who was already among them on an ass.
Nor must we forget, that, in his own
life-time, Shakespeare was not
Shakespeare, but only Master William
Shakespeare of the shrewd, thriving
business firm of Condell, Shakespeare
& Co., proprietors of the Globe
Theater in London; and by a courtly
author, of the name of Chettle, was
hooted at, as an "upstart crow"
beautfied "with other birds'
feathers." For, mark it well,
imitation is often the first charge
brought against real originality. Why
this is so, there is not space to set
forth here. You must have plenty of
sea-room to tell the Truth in;
especially, when it seems to have an
aspect of newness, as American did in
1492, though it was then just as old,
and perhaps older than Asia, only
those sagacious philosophers, the
common sailors, had never seen it
before; swearing it was all water and
moonshine there.
Now, I
do not say that Nathaniel of
Salem is a greater than William of
Avon, or as great. But the difference
between the two men is by no means
immeasurable. Not a very great deal
more, and Nathaniel were verily
William.
This too,
I mean, that if Shakespeare
has not been equalled, give the
world time, and he is sure to be
surpassed, in one hemisphere or
the other. Nor will it at all do to
say, that the world is getting grey
and grizzled now, and has lost that
fresh charm which she wore of old,
and by virtue of which the great
poets of past times made themselves
what we esteem them to be. Not so.
the world is as young today, as
when it was created, and this
Vermont morning dew is as wet to my
feet, as Eden's dew to Adam's. Nor
has Nature been all over ransacked
by our progenitors, so that no new
charms and mysteries remain for
this latter generation to find. Far
from it. The trillionth part has
not yet been said, and all that has
been said, but multiplies the
avenues to what remains to be said.
It is not so much paucity, as
superabundance of material that
seems to incapacitate modern
authors.
Let American
then prize and cherish
her writers, yea, let her glorify
them. They are not so many in
number, as to exhaust her
good-will. And while she has good
kith and kin of her own, to take to
her bosom, let her not lavish her
embraces upon the household of an
alien. For believe it or not
England, after all, is, in many
things, an alien to us. China has
more bowels of real love for us
than she. But even were there no
strong literary individualities
among us, as there are some dozen
at least, nevertheless, let America
first praise mediocrity even, in
her own children, before she
praises (for everywhere, merit
demands acknowledgment from every
one) the best excellence in the
children of any other land. Let her
own authors, I say, have the
priority of appreciation. I was
very much pleased with a hot-headed
Carolina cousin of mine, who once
said,--"If there were no other
American to stand by, in
Literature,--why, then, I would
stand by Pop Emmons and his
'Fredoniad,' and till a better epic
came along, swear it was not very
far behind the 'Iliad'." Take away
the words, and in spirit he was
sound.
Not that
American genius needs
patronage in order to expand. For
that explosive sort of stuff will
expand though screwed up in a vice,
and burst it, though it were triple
steel. It is for the nation's sake,
and not for her authors' sake, that
I would have America be heedful of
the increasing greatness among her
writers. For how great the shame,
if other nations should be before
her, in crowning her heroes of the
pen. But this is almost the case
now. American authors have received
more just and discriminating praise
(however loftily and ridiculously
given, in certain cases) even from
some Englishmen, than from their
own countrymen. There are hardly
five critics in America, and
several of them are asleep. As for
patronage, it is the American
author who now patronizes the
country, and not his country him.
And if at times some among them
appeal to the people for more
recognition, it is not always with
selfish motives, but patriotic
ones.
It is
true, that but few of them as
yet have evinced that decided
originality which merits great
praise. But that graceful writer,
who perhaps of all Americans has
received the most plaudits from his
own country for his
productions,--that very popular and
amiable writer, however good, and
self-reliant in many things,
perhaps owes his chief reputation
to the self-acknowledged imitation
of a foreign model, and to the
studied avoidance of all topics but
smooth ones. But it is better to
fail in originality, than to
succeed in imitation. He who has
never failed somewhere, that man
can not be great. Failure is the
true test of greatness. And if it
be said, that continual success is
a proof that a man wisely knows his
powers,--it is only to be added,
that, in that case, he knows them
to be small. Let us believe it,
then, once for all, that there is
no hope for us in these smooth
pleasing writers that know their
powers. Without malice, but to
speak the plain fact, they but
furnish an appendix to Goldsmith,
and other English authors. And we
want no American Goldsmiths, nay,
we want no American Miltons. It
were the vilest thing you could say
of a true American author, that he
were an American Tompkins. Call him
an American, and have done, for you
can not say a nobler thing of
him.--But it is not meant that all
American writers should studiously
cleave to nationality in their
writings; only this, no American
writer should write like an
Englishman, or a Frenchman; let him
write like a man, for then he will
be sure to write like an American.
Let us away with this leaven of
literary flunkyism towards England.
If either we must play the flunky
in this thing, let England do it,
not us. While we are rapidly
preparing for that political
supremacy among the nations, which
prophetically awaits us at the
close of the present century; in a
literary point of view, we are
deplorably unprepared for it; and
we seem studious to remain so.
Hitherto, reasons might have
existed why this should be; but no
good reason exists now. And all
that is requisite to amendment in
this matter, is simply this: that,
while freely acknowledging all
excellence, everywhere, we should
refrain from unduly lauding foreign
writers, and, at the same time,
duly recognize the meritorious
writers that are our own,--those
writers, who breathe that
unshackled, democratic spirit of
Christianity in all things, which
now takes the practical lead in the
world, though at the same time led
by ourselves--us Americans. Let us
boldly contemn all imitation,
though it comes to us graceful and
fragrant as the morning; and foster
all originality, though, at first,
it be crabbed and ugly as our own
pine knots. And if any of our
authors fail, or seem to fail,
then, in the words of my
enthusiastic Carolina cousin, let
us clap him on the shoulder, and
back him against all Europe for his
second round. The truth is, that in
our point of view, this matter of a
national literature has come to
such a pass with us, that in some
sense we must turn bullies, else
the day is lost, or superiority so
far beyond us, that we can hardly
say it will ever be ours.
And now,
my countrymen, as an
excellent author, of your own flesh
and blood,--an unimitating, and
perhaps, in his way, an inimitable
man--whom better can I commend to
you, in the first place, than
Nathaniel Hawthorne. He is one of
the new, and far better generation
of your writer. The smell of your
beeches and hemlocks is upon him;
your own broad prairies are in his
soul; and if you travel away inland
into his deep and noble nature, you
will hear the far roar of his
Niagara. Give not over to future
generations the glad duty of
acknowledging him for what he is.
Take that joy to yourself, in your
own generation; and so shall he
feel those grateful impulses in
him, that may possibly prompt him
to the full flower of some still
greater achievement in your eyes.
And by confessing him, you thereby
confess others, you brace the whole
brotherhood. For genius, all over
the world, stands hand in hand, and
one shock of recognition runs the
whole circle round.
In treating
of Hawthorne, or rather
of Hawthorne in his writings (for I
never saw the man; and in the
chances of a quiet plantation life,
remote from his haunts, perhaps
never shall) in treating of his
works, I say, I have thus far
omitted all mention of his "Twice
Told Tales," and "Scarlet Letter."
Both are excellent, but full of
such manifold, strange and
diffusive beauties, that time would
all but fail me, to point the half
of them out. But there are things
in those two books, which, had they
been written in England a century
ago, Nathaniel Hawthorne had
utterly displaced many of the
bright names we now revere on
authority. But I content to leave
Hawthorne to himself, and to the
infallible finding of posterity;
and however great may be the praise
I have bestowed upon him, I feel,
that in so doing, I have more
served and honored myself, than
him. For at bottom, great
excellence is praise enough to
itself; but the feeling of a
sincere and appreciative love and
admiration towards it, this is
relieved by utterance; and warm,
honest praise ever leaves a
pleasant flavor in the mouth; and
it is an honorable thing to confess
to what is honorable in others.
But I
cannot leave my subject yet.
No man can read a fine author, and
relish him to his very bones, while
he reads, without subsequently
fancying to himself some ideal
image of the man and his mind. And
if you rightly look for it, you
will almost always find that the
author himself has somewhere
furnished you with his own picture.
For poets (whether in prose or
verse), being painters of Nature,
are like their brethren of the
pencil, the true portrait-painters,
who, in the multitude of likenesses
to be sketched, do not invariably
omit their own; and in all high
instances, they paint them without
any vanity, though, at times, with
a lurking something, that would
take several pages to properly
define.
I submit
it, then, to those best
acquainted with the man personally,
whether the following is not
Nathaniel Hawthorne,--to to
himself, whether something involved
in it does not express the temper
of this mind,--that lasting temper
of all true, candid men--a seeker,
not a finder yet:--
A man
now entered, in neglected
attire, with the aspect of a
thinker, but somewhat too
rough-hewn and brawny for a
scholar. His face was full of
sturdy vigor, with some finer and
keener attribute beneath; though
harsh at first, it was tempered
with the glow of a large, warm
heart, which had force enough to
heat his powerful intellect
through and through. He advanced to
the Intelligencer, and looked at
him with a glance of such stern
sincerity, that perhaps few secrets
were beyond its scope.
"'I seek
for Truth,' said he."
Twenty-four hours
have elapsed
since writing the foregoing. I have
just returned from the hay mow,
charged more and more with love and
admiration of Hawthorne. For I have
just been gleaning through the
"Mosses," picking up many things
here and there that had previously
escaped me. And I found that but to
glean after this man, is better
than to be in at the harvest of
others. To be frank (though,
perhaps, rather foolish),
notwithstanding what I wrote
yesterday of these Mosses, I had
not then culled them all; but had,
nevertheless, been sufficiently
sensible of the subtle essence, in
them, as to write as I did. to what
infinite height of loving wonder
and admiration I may yet be borne,
when by repeatedly banquetting on
these Mosses, I shall have
thoroughly incorporated their whole
stuff into my being,--that, I can
not tell. But already I feel that
this Hawthorne has dropped
germinous seeds into my soul. He
expands and deepens down, the more
I contemplate him; and further, and
further, shoots his strong
New-England roots into the hot soil
of my Southern soul.
By careful
reference to the "Table
of Contents," I now find, that I
have gone through all the sketches;
but that when I yeterday wrote, I
had not at all read two particular
pieces, to which I now desire to
call special attention,--"A Select
Party," and "Young Goodman Brown."
Here, be it said to all those whom
this poor fugitive scrawl of mine
may tempt to the purusal of the
"Mosses," that they must on no
account suffer themselves to be
trifled with, disappointed, or
deceived by the triviality of many
of the titles to these Sketches.
For in more than one instance, the
title utterly belies the piece. It
is as if rustic demjohns containing
the very best and costliest of
Falernian and Tokay, were labeled
"Cider," "Perry," and "Elder-berry
Wine." The truth seems to be, that
like many other geniuses, this Man
of Mosses takes great delight in
hoodwinking the world,--at least,
with respect to himself.
Personally, I doubt not, that he
rather prefers to be generally
esteemed but a so-so sort of
author; being willing to reserve
the thorough and acute
appreciation of what he is, to that
party most qualified to judge--that
is, to himself. Besides, at the
bottom of their natures, men like
Hawthorne, in many things, deem the
plaudits of the public such strong
presumptive evidence of mediocrity
in the object of them, that it
would in some degree render them
doubtful of their own powers, did
they hear much and vociferous
braying concerning them in the
public pastures. True, I have been
braying myself (if you please to be
witty enough, to have it so) but
then I claim to be the first that
has so brayed in this particular
matter; and therefore, while
pleading guilty to the charge,
still claim all the merit due to
originality.
But with
whatever motive, playful
or profound, Nathaniel Hawthorne
has chosen to entitle his pieces in
the manner he has, it is certain,
that some of them are directly
calculated to deceive--egregiously
deceive--the superficial skimmer of
pages. To be downright and candid
once more, let me cheerfully say,
that two of these titles did
dolefully dupe no less an
eagle-eyed reader than myself, and
that, too, after I had been
impressed with a sense of the great
depth and breadth of this American
man. "Who in the name of thunder,"
(as the country-people say in this
neighborhood), "who in the name of
thunder, would anticipate any
marvel in a piece entitled "Young
Goodman Brown"? You would of course
suppose that it was a simple little
tale, intended as a supplement to
"Goody Two Shoes." Whereas, it is
deep as Dante; nor can you finish
it, without addressing the author
in his own words--"It is yours to
penetrate, in every bosom, the deep
mystery of sin." And with Young
Goodman, too, in allegorical
pursuit of his Puritan wife, you
cry out in your anguish,--
"Faith!" shouted
Goodman Brown, in
a voice of agony and desperation;
and the echoes of the forest mocked
him, crying--"Faith! Faith!" as if
bewildered wretches were seeking
her all through the wilderness.
Now this
same piece, entitled
"Young Goodman Brown," is one of
the two that I had not all read
yesterday; and I allude to it now,
because it is, in itself, such a
strong positive illustration of
that blackness in Hawthorne, which
I had assumed from the mere
occasional shadows of it, as
revealed in several of the other
sketches. But had I previously
perused "Young Goodman Brown," I
should have been at no pains to
draw the conclusion, which I came
to, at a time, when I was ignorant
that the book contained one such
direct and unqualified
manifestation of it.
The other
piece of the two referred
to, is entitled "A Select Party,"
which in my first simplicity upon
originally taking hold of the book,
I fancied must treat of some
pumpkin-pie party in Old Salem, or
some Chowder Party on Cape Cod.
Whereas, by all the gods of Peedee!
it is the sweetest and sublimest
thing that has been written since
Spenser wrote. Nay, there is
nothing in Spenser that surpasses
it, perhaps, nothing that equals
it. And the test is this: read any
canto in "The Faery Queen," and
then read "A Select Party," and
decide which pleases you the
most,--that is, if you are
qualified to judge. Do not be
frightened at this; for when
Spenser was alive, he was thought
of very much as Hawthorne is
now--was generally accounted just
such a "gentle" harmless man. It
may be, that to common eyes, the
sublimity of Hawthorne seems lost
in his sweetness,--as perhaps in
this same "Select Party" his; for
whom, he has builded so august a
dome of sunset clouds, and served
them on richer plate, than
Belshazzar's when he banquetted his
lords in Babylon.
But my
chief business now, is to
point out a particular page in this
piece, having reference to an
honored guest, who under the name
of "The Master Genius" but in the
guise "of a young man of poor
attire, with no insignia of rank or
acknowledged eminence," is
introduced to the Man of Fancy, who
is the giver of the feast. Now the
page having reference to this
"Master Genius", so happily
expresses much of what I yesterday
wrote, touching the coming of the
literary Shiloh of America, that I
cannot but be charmed by the
coincidence; especially, when it
shows such a parity of ideas, at
least, in this one point, between a
man like Hawthorne and a man like
me.
And here,
let me throw out another
conceit of mine touching this
American Shiloh, or "Master
Genius," as Hawthorne calls him.
May it not be, that this commanding
mind has not been, is not, and
never will be, individually
developed in any one man? And would
it, indeed, appear so unreasonable
to suppose, that this great
fullness and overlowing may be, or
may be destined to be, shared by a
plurality of men of genius? Surely,
to take the very greatest example
on record, Shakespeare cannot be
regarded as in himself the
concretion of all the genius of his
time; nor as so immeasurably beyond
Marlowe, Webster, Ford, Beaumont,
Johnson, that those great men can
be said to share none of his power?
For one, I conceive that there were
dramatists in Elizabeth's day,
between whom and Shakespeare the
distance was by no means great. Let
anyone, hitherto little acquainted
with those neglected old authors,
for the first time read them
thoroughly, or even read Charles
Lamb's Specimens of them, and he
will be amazed at the wondrous
ability of those Anaks of men, and
shocked at this renewed example of
the fact, that Fortune has more to
do with fame than merit,--though,
without merit, lasting fame there
can be none.
Nevertheless, it
would argue too
illy of my country were this maxim
to hold good concerning Nathaniel
Hawthorne, a man, who already, in
some minds, has shed "such a light,
as never illuminates the earth,
save when a great heart burns as
the household fire of a grand
intellect."
The words
are his,--in the "Select
Party"; and they are a magnificent
setting to a coincident sentiment
of my own, but ramblingly expressed
yesterday, in reference ot himself.
Gainsay it who will, as I now
write, I am Posterity speaking by
proxy--and after times will make it
more than good, when I
declare--that the American, who up
to the present day, has evinced, in
Literature, the largest brain with
the largest heart, that man is
Nathaniel Hawthorne. Moreover, that
whatever Nathaniel Hawthorne may
hereafter write, "The Mosses from
an Old Manse" will be ultimately
accounted his masterpiece. For
there is a sure, though a secret
sign in some works which proves the
culmination of the power (only the
developable ones, however) that
produced them. But I am by no means
desirous of the glory of a prophet.
I pray Heaven that Hawthorne may
yet prove me an impostor
in this prediciton. Especially, as
I somehow cling to the strange
fancy, that, in all men, hiddenly
reside certain wondrous, occult
properties--as in some plants and
minerals--which by some happy but
very rare accident (as bronze was
discovered by the melting of the
iron and brass in the burning of
Corinth) may chance to be called
forth here on earth, not entirely
waiting for their better discovery
in the more congenial, blessed
atmosphere of heaven.
Once more--for
it is hard to be
finite upon an infinite subject,
and all subjects are infinite. By
some people, this entire scrawl of
mine may be esteeemed altogether
unnecessary, inasmuch, "as years
ago" (they may say) "we found out
the rich and rare stuff in this
Hawthorne, whom you now parade
forth, as if only yourself
were the discoverer of this
Portuguese diamond in our
Literature."--But even granting all
this; and adding to it, the
assumption that the books of
Hawthorne have sold by the
five-thousand,--what does that
signify?--They should be sold by
the hundred-thousand, and read by
the million; and admired by every
one who is capable of Admiration.
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