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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketches and Studies
+
+Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8091]
+This file was first posted on June 13, 2003
+Last Updated: December 15, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCHES AND STUDIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Tapio Riikonen and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+
+by
+
+Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Life of Franklin Pierce
+ Chiefly about War Matters
+ Alice Doane’s Appeal
+ The Ancestral Footstep
+
+
+
+
+
+LIFE OF FRANKLIN PIERCE.
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+The author of this memoir--being so little of a politician that he
+scarcely feels entitled to call himself a member of any party--would not
+voluntarily have undertaken the work here offered to the public. Neither
+can he flatter himself that he has been remarkably successful in the
+performance of his task, viewing it in the light of a political
+biography, and as a representation of the principles and acts of a public
+man, intended to operate upon the minds of multitudes during a
+presidential canvass. This species of writing is too remote from his
+customary occupations--and, he may add, from his tastes--to be very
+satisfactorily done, without more time and practice than he would be
+willing to expend for such a purpose. If this little biography have any
+value, it is probably of another kind--as the narrative of one who knew
+the individual of whom he treats, at a period of life when character
+could be read with undoubting accuracy, and who, consequently, in judging
+of the motives of his subsequent conduct, has an advantage over much more
+competent observers, whose knowledge of the man may have commenced at a
+later date. Nor can it be considered improper (at least, the author will
+never feel it so, although some foolish delicacy be sacrificed in the
+undertaking) that when a friend, dear to him almost from boyish days,
+stands up before his country, misrepresented by indiscriminate abuse on
+the one hand, and by aimless praise on the other, he should be sketched
+by one who has had opportunities of knowing him well, and who is
+certainly inclined to tell the truth.
+
+It is perhaps right to say, that while this biography is so far
+sanctioned by General Pierce, as it comprises a generally correct
+narrative of the principal events of his life, the author does not
+understand him as thereby necessarily indorsing all the sentiments put
+forth by himself in the progress of the work. These are the author’s own
+speculations upon the facts before him, and may, or may not, be in
+accordance with the ideas of the individual whose life he writes. That
+individual’s opinions, however,--so far as it is necessary to know them,
+--may be read, in his straightforward and consistent deeds, with more
+certainty than those of almost any other man now before the public.
+
+The author, while collecting his materials, has received liberal aid from
+all manner of people--Whigs and Democrats, congressmen, astute lawyers,
+grim old generals of militia, and gallant young officers of the Mexican
+war--most of whom, however, he must needs say, have rather abounded in
+eulogy of General Pierce than in such anecdotical matter as is calculated
+for a biography. Among the gentlemen to whom he is substantially
+indebted, he would mention Hon. C. G. Atherton, Hon. S. H. Ayer, Hon.
+Joseph Hall, Chief Justice Gilchrist, Isaac O. Barnes, Esq., Col. T. J.
+Whipple, and Mr. C. J. Smith. He has likewise derived much assistance
+from an able and accurate sketch, that originally appeared in the “Boston
+Post,” and was drawn up, as he believes, by the junior editor of that
+journal.
+
+CONCORD, MASS., August 27, 1852.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+HIS PARENTAGE AND EARLY LIFE.
+
+
+Franklin Pierce was born at Hillsborough, in the State of New Hampshire,
+on the 23d of November, 1804. His native county, at the period of his
+birth, covered a much more extensive territory than at present, and might
+reckon among its children many memorable men, and some illustrious ones.
+General Stark, the hero of Bennington, Daniel Webster, Levi Woodbury,
+Jeremiah Smith, the eminent jurist, and governor of the state, General
+James Miller, General McNeil, Senator Atherton, were natives of old
+Hillsborough County.
+
+General Benjamin Pierce, the father of Franklin, was one of the earliest
+settlers in the town of Hillsborough, and contributed as much as any
+other man to the growth and prosperity of the county. He was born in
+1757, at Chelmsford, now Lowell, in Massachusetts. Losing his parents
+early, he grew up under the care of an uncle, amid such circumstances of
+simple fare, hard labor, and scanty education, as usually fell to the lot
+of a New England yeoman’s family some eighty or a hundred years ago. On
+the 19th of April, 1775, being then less than eighteen years of age, the
+stripling was at the plough, when tidings reached him of the bloodshed at
+Lexington and Concord. He immediately loosened the ox chain, left the
+plough in the furrow, took his uncle’s gun and equipments, and set forth
+towards the scene of action. From that day, for more than seven years,
+he never saw his native place. He enlisted in the army, was present at
+the battle of Bunker Hill, and after serving through the whole
+Revolutionary War, and fighting his way upward from the lowest grade,
+returned, at last, a thorough soldier, and commander of a company. He
+was retained in the army as long as that body of veterans had a united
+existence; and, being finally disbanded, at West Point, in 1784, was left
+with no other reward, for nine years of toil and danger, than the nominal
+amount of his pay in the Continental currency--then so depreciated as to
+be almost worthless.
+
+In 1780, being employed as agent to explore a tract of wild land, he
+purchased a lot of fifty acres in what is now the town of Hillsborough.
+In the spring of the succeeding year, he built himself a log hut, and
+began the clearing and cultivation of his tract. Another year beheld him
+married to his first wife, Elizabeth Andrews, who died within a
+twelvemonth after their union, leaving a daughter, the present widow of
+General John McNeil. In 1789, he married Anna Kendrick, with whom he
+lived about half a century, and who bore him eight children, of whom
+Franklin was the sixth.
+
+Although the Revolutionary soldier had thus betaken himself to the
+wilderness for a subsistence, his professional merits were not forgotten
+by those who had witnessed his military career. As early as 1786, he was
+appointed brigade major of the militia of Hillsborough County, then first
+organized and formed into a brigade. And it was a still stronger
+testimonial to his character as a soldier, that, nearly fifteen years
+afterwards, during the presidency of John Adams, he was offered a high
+command in the northern division of the army which was proposed to be
+levied in anticipation of a war with the French republic. Inflexibly
+democratic in his political faith, however, Major Pierce refused to be
+implicated in a policy which he could not approve. “No, gentlemen,” said
+he to the delegates who urged his acceptance of the commission, “poor as
+I am, and acceptable as would be the position under other circumstances,
+I would sooner go to yonder mountains, dig me a cave, and live on roast
+potatoes, than be instrumental in promoting the objects for which that
+army is to be raised!” This same fidelity to his principles marked every
+public, as well as private, action of his life.
+
+In his own neighborhood, among those who knew him best he early gained an
+influence that was never lost nor diminished, but continued to spread
+wider during the whole of his long life. In 1789, he was elected to the
+state legislature and retained that position for thirteen successive
+years, until chosen a member of the council. During the same period he
+was active in his military duties, as a field officer, and finally
+general, of the militia of the county; and Miller, McNeil, and others
+learned of him, in this capacity, the soldier-like discipline which was
+afterwards displayed on the battle-fields of the northern frontier.
+
+The history, character, and circumstances of General Benjamin Pierce,
+though here but briefly touched upon, are essential parts of the
+biography of his son, both as indicating some of the native traits which
+the latter has inherited, and as showing the influences amid which he
+grew up. At Franklin Pierce’s birth, and for many years subsequent, his
+father was the most active and public-spirited man within his sphere; a
+most decided Democrat, and supporter of Jefferson and Madison; a
+practical farmer, moreover, not rich, but independent, exercising a
+liberal hospitality, and noted for the kindness and generosity of his
+character; a man of the people, but whose natural qualities inevitably
+made him a leader among them. From infancy upward, the boy had before
+his eyes, as the model on which he might instinctively form himself, one
+of the best specimens of sterling New England character, developed in a
+life of simple habits, yet of elevated action. Patriotism, such as it
+had been in Revolutionary days, was taught him by his father, as early as
+his mother taught him religion. He became early imbued, too, with the
+military spirit which the old soldier had retained from his long service,
+and which was kept active by the constant alarms and warlike preparations
+of the first twelve years of the present century. If any man is bound by
+birth and youthful training, to show himself a brave, faithful, and able
+citizen of his native country, it is the son of such a father.
+
+At the commencement of the war of 1812, Franklin Pierce was a few months
+under eight years of age. The old general, his father, sent two of his
+sons into the army; and as his eldest daughter was soon afterwards
+married to Major McNeil, there were few families that had so large a
+personal stake in the war as that of General Benjamin Pierce. He
+himself, both in his public capacity as a member of the council, and by
+his great local influence in his own county, lent a strenuous support to
+the national administration. It is attributable to his sagacity and
+energy, that New Hampshire--then under a federal governor--was saved the
+disgrace of participation in the questionable, if not treasonable,
+projects of the Hartford Convention. He identified himself with the
+cause of the country, and was doubtless as thoroughly alive with
+patriotic zeal, at this eventful period, as in the old days of Bunker
+Hill, and Saratoga, and Yorktown. The general not only took a prominent
+part at all public meetings, but was ever ready for the informal
+discussion of political affairs at all places of casual resort, where--in
+accordance with the custom of the time and country--the minds of men were
+made to operate effectually upon each other. Franklin Pierce was a
+frequent auditor of these controversies. The intentness with which he
+watched the old general, and listened to his arguments, is still
+remembered; and, at this day, in his most earnest moods, there are
+gesticulations and movements that bring up the image of his father to
+those who recollect the latter on those occasions of the display of
+homely, native eloquence. No mode of education could be conceived,
+better adapted to imbue a youth with the principles and sentiment of
+democratic institutions; it brought him into the most familiar contact
+with the popular mind, and made his own mind a part of it.
+
+Franklin’s father had felt, through life, the disadvantages of a
+defective education; although, in his peculiar sphere of action, it might
+be doubted whether he did not gain more than he lost, by being thrown on
+his own resources, and compelled to study men and their actual affairs,
+rather than books. But he determined to afford his son all the
+opportunities of improvement which he himself had lacked. Franklin,
+accordingly, was early sent to the academy at Hancock, and afterwards
+to that of Francestown, where he was received into the family of
+General Pierce’s old and steadfast friend, Peter Woodbury, father of
+the late eminent judge. It is scarcely more than a year ago, at the
+semi-centennial celebration of the academy, that Franklin Pierce, the
+mature and distinguished man, paid a beautiful tribute to the character
+of Madam Woodbury, in affectionate remembrance of the motherly kindness
+experienced at her hands by the school-boy.
+
+The old people of his neighborhood give a very delightful picture of
+Franklin at this early age. They describe him as a beautiful boy, with
+blue eyes, light curling hair, and a sweet expression of face. The
+traits presented of him indicate moral symmetry, kindliness, and a
+delicate texture of sentiment, rather than marked prominences of
+character. His instructors testify to his propriety of conduct, his
+fellow-pupils to his sweetness of disposition and cordial sympathy. One
+of the latter, being older than most of his companions, and less advanced
+in his studies, found it difficult to keep up with his class; and he
+remembers how perseveringly, while the other boys were at play, Franklin
+spent the noon recess, for many weeks together, in aiding him in his
+lessons. These attributes, proper to a generous and affectionate nature,
+have remained with him through life. Lending their color to his
+deportment, and softening his manners, they are, perhaps, even now, the
+characteristics by which most of those who casually meet him would be
+inclined to identify the man. But there are other qualities, not then
+developed, but which have subsequently attained a firm and manly growth,
+and are recognized as his leading traits among those who really know him.
+Franklin Pierce’s development, indeed, has always been the reverse of
+premature; the boy did not show the germ of all that was in the man, nor,
+perhaps, did the young man adequately foreshow the mature one.
+
+In 1820, at the age of sixteen, he became a student of Bowdoin College,
+at Brunswick, Maine. It was in the autumn of the next year that the
+author of this memoir entered the class below him; but our college
+reminiscences, however interesting to the parties concerned, are not
+exactly the material for a biography. He was then a youth, with the boy
+and man in him, vivacious, mirthful, slender, of a fair complexion, with
+light hair that had a curl in it: his bright and cheerful aspect made a
+kind of sunshine, both as regarded its radiance and its warmth; insomuch
+that no shyness of disposition, in his associates, could well resist its
+influence. We soon became acquainted, and were more especially drawn
+together as members of the same college society. There were two of these
+institutions, dividing the college between them, and typifying,
+respectively, and with singular accuracy of feature, the respectable
+conservative, and the progressive or democratic parties. Pierce’s native
+tendencies inevitably drew him to the latter.
+
+His chum was Zenas Caldwell, several years older than himself, a member
+of the Methodist persuasion, a pure-minded, studious, devoutly religious
+character; endowed thus early in life with the authority of a grave and
+sagacious turn of mind. The friendship between Pierce and him appeared
+to be mutually strong, and was of itself a pledge of correct deportment
+in the former. His chief friend, I think, was a classmate named Little,
+a young man of most estimable qualities and high intellectual promise;
+one of those fortunate characters whom an early death so canonizes in the
+remembrance of their companions, that the perfect fulfilment of a long
+life would scarcely give them a higher place. Jonathan Cilley, of my own
+class,--whose untimely fate is still mournfully remembered,--a person of
+very marked ability and great social influence, was another of Pierce’s
+friends. All these have long been dead. There are others, still alive,
+who would meet Franklin Pierce, at this day, with as warm a pressure of
+the hand, and the same confidence in his kindly feelings as when they
+parted from him nearly thirty years ago.
+
+Pierce’s class was small, but composed of individuals seriously intent on
+the duties and studies of their college life. They were not boys, but,
+for the most part, well advanced towards maturity; and, having wrought
+out their own means of education, were little inclined to neglect the
+opportunities that had been won at so much cost. They knew the value of
+time, and had a sense of the responsibilities of their position. Their
+first scholar--the present Professor Stowe--has long since established
+his rank among the first scholars of the country. It could have been no
+easy task to hold successful rivalry with students so much in earnest as
+these were. During the earlier part of his college course it may be
+doubted whether Pierce was distinguished for scholarship. But, for the
+last two years, he appeared to grow more intent on the business in hand,
+and, without losing any of his vivacious qualities as a companion, was
+evidently resolved to gain an honorable elevation in his class. His
+habits of attention and obedience to college discipline were of the
+strictest character; he rose progressively in scholarship, and took a
+highly creditable degree. [See note at close of this Life.]
+
+The first civil office, I imagine, which Franklin Pierce ever held was
+that of chairman of the standing committee of the Athenaean Society, of
+which, as above hinted, we were both members; and, having myself held a
+place on the committee, I can bear testimony to his having discharged
+not only his own share of the duties, but that of his colleagues. I
+remember, likewise, that the only military service of my life was as a
+private soldier in a college company, of which Pierce was one of the
+officers. He entered into this latter business, or pastime, with an
+earnestness with which I could not pretend to compete, and at which,
+perhaps, he would now be inclined to smile. His slender and youthful
+figure rises before my mind’s eye, at this moment, with the air and step
+of a veteran of the school of Steuben; as well became the son of a
+revolutionary hero, who had probably drilled under the old baron’s
+orders. Indeed, at this time, and for some years afterwards, Pierce’s
+ambition seemed to be of a military cast. Until reflection had tempered
+his first predilections, and other varieties of success had rewarded his
+efforts, he would have preferred, I believe, the honors of the
+battle-field to any laurels more peacefully won. And it was remarkable
+how, with all the invariable gentleness of his demeanor, he perfectly
+gave, nevertheless, the impression of a high and fearless spirit. His
+friends were as sure of his courage, while yet untried, as now, when it
+has been displayed so brilliantly in famous battles.
+
+At this early period of his life, he was distinguished by the same
+fascination of manner that has since proved so magical in winning him an
+unbounded personal popularity. It is wronging him, however, to call this
+peculiarity a mere effect of manner; its source lies deep in the
+kindliness of his nature, and in the liberal, generous, catholic
+sympathy, that embraces all who are worthy of it. Few men possess any
+thing like it; so irresistible as it is, so sure to draw forth an
+undoubting confidence, and so true to the promise which it gives. This
+frankness, this democracy of good feeling, has not been chilled by the
+society of politicians, nor polished down into mere courtesy by his
+intercourse with the most refined men of the day. It belongs to him at
+this moment, and will never leave him. A little while ago, after his
+return from Mexico, he darted across the street to exchange a hearty
+gripe of the hand with a rough countryman upon his cart--a man who used
+to “live with his father,” as the general explained the matter to his
+companions. Other men assume this manner, more or less skilfully; but
+with Frank Pierce it is an innate characteristic; nor will it ever lose
+its charm, unless his heart should grow narrower and colder--a misfortune
+not to be anticipated, even in the dangerous atmosphere of elevated rank,
+whither he seems destined to ascend.
+
+There is little else that it is worth while to relate as regards his
+college course, unless it be that, during one of his winter vacations,
+Pierce taught a country school. So many of the statesmen of New England
+have performed their first public service in the character of pedagogue,
+that it seems almost a necessary step on the ladder of advancement.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+HIS SERVICES IN THE STATE AND NATIONAL LEGISLATURES.
+
+
+After leaving college, in the year 1824, Franklin Pierce returned to
+Hillsborough. His father, now in a green old age, continued to take a
+prominent part in the affairs of the day, but likewise made his declining
+years rich and picturesque with recollections of the heroic times through
+which he had lived. On the 26th of December, 1825, it being his
+sixty-seventh birthday, General Benjamin Pierce prepared a festival for
+his comrades in arms, the survivors of the Revolution, eighteen of whom,
+all inhabitants of Hillsborough, assembled at his house. The ages of
+these veterans ranged from fifty-nine up to the patriarchal venerableness
+of nearly ninety. They spent the day in festivity, in calling up
+reminiscences of the great men whom they had known and the great deeds
+which they had helped to do, and in reviving the old sentiments of the
+era of ‘seventy-six. At nightfall, after a manly and pathetic farewell
+from their host, they separated--“prepared,” as the old general expressed
+it, “at the first tap of the shrouded drum, to move and join their
+beloved Washington, and the rest of their beloved comrades, who fought
+and bled at their sides.” A scene like this must have been profitable
+for a young man to witness, as being likely to give him a stronger sense
+than most of us can attain of the value of that Union which these old
+heroes had risked so much to consolidate--of that common country which
+they had sacrificed everything to create; and patriotism must have been
+communicated from their hearts to his, with somewhat of the warmth and
+freshness of a new-born sentiment. No youth was ever more fortunate than
+Franklin Pierce, through the whole of his early life, in this most
+desirable species of moral education.
+
+Having chosen the law as a profession, Franklin became a student in the
+office of Judge Woodbury, of Portsmouth. Allusion has already been made
+to the friendship between General Benjamin Pierce and Peter Woodbury, the
+father of the judge. The early progress of Levi Woodbury towards
+eminence had been facilitated by the powerful influence of his father’s
+friend. It was a worthy and honorable kind of patronage, and bestowed
+only as the great abilities of the recipient vindicated his claim to it.
+Few young men have met with such early success in life, or have deserved
+it so eminently, as did Judge Woodbury. At the age of twenty-seven, he
+was appointed to the bench of the Supreme Court of the state, on the
+earnest recommendation of old General Pierce. The opponents of the
+measure ridiculed him as the “baby judge;” but his conduct in that high
+office showed the prescient judgment of the friend who had known him from
+a child, and had seen in his young manhood already the wisdom of ripened
+age. It was some years afterwards when Franklin Pierce entered the
+office of Judge Woodbury as a student. In the interval, the judge had
+been elected governor, and, after a term of office that thoroughly tested
+the integrity of his democratic principles, had lost his second election,
+and returned to the profession of the law.
+
+The last two years of Pierce’s preparatory studies were spent at the law
+school of Northampton, in Massachusetts, and in the office of Judge
+Parker at Amherst. In 1827, being admitted to the bar, he began the
+practice of his profession at Hillsborough. It is an interesting fact,
+considered in reference to his subsequent splendid career as an advocate,
+that he did not, at the outset, give promise of distinguished success.
+His first case was a failure, and perhaps a somewhat marked one. But it
+is remembered that this defeat, however mortifying at the moment, did but
+serve to make him aware of the latent resources of his mind, the full
+command of which he was far from having yet attained. To a friend, an
+older practitioner, who addressed him with some expression of condolence
+and encouragement, Pierce replied,--and it was a kind of self-assertion
+which no triumph would have drawn oat,--“I do not need that. I will try
+nine hundred and ninety-nine cases, if clients will continue to trust me,
+and, if I fail just as I have today, will try the thousandth. I shall
+live to argue cases in this court house in a manner that will mortify
+neither myself nor my friends.” It is in such moments of defeat that
+character and ability are mot fairly tested; they would irremediably
+crush a youth devoid of real energy, and, being neither more nor less
+than his just desert, would be accepted as such. But a failure of this
+kind serves an opposite purpose to a mind in which the strongest and
+richest qualities lie deep, and, from their very size and mass, cannot at
+once be rendered available. It provokes an innate self-confidence,
+while, at the same time, it sternly indicates the sedulous cultivation,
+the earnest effort, the toil, the agony, which are the conditions of
+ultimate success. It is, indeed, one of the best modes of discipline
+that experience can administer, and may reasonably be counted a fortunate
+event in the life of a young man vigorous enough to overcome the
+momentary depression.
+
+Pierce’s distinction at the bar, however, did not immediately follow; nor
+did he acquire what we may designate as positive eminence until some
+years after this period. The enticements of political life--so
+especially fascinating to a young lawyer, but so irregular in its
+tendencies, and so inimical to steady professional labor--had begun to
+operate upon him. His father’s prominent position in the politics of the
+state made it almost impossible that the son should stand aloof. In
+1827, the same year when Franklin began the practice of the law, General
+Benjamin Pierce had been elected governor of New Hampshire. He was
+defeated in the election of 1828, but was again successful in that of the
+subsequent year. During these years, the contest for the presidency had
+been fought with a fervor that drew almost everybody into it, on one side
+or the other, and had terminated in the triumph of Andrew Jackson.
+Franklin Pierce, in advance of his father’s decision, though not in
+opposition to it, had declared himself for the illustrious man whose
+military renown was destined to be thrown into the shade by a civil
+administration, the most splendid and powerful that ever adorned the
+annals of our country, I love to record of the subject of this memoir
+that his first political faith was pledged to that great leader of the
+democracy.
+
+I remember meeting Pierce about this period, and catching from him some
+faint reflection of the zeal with which he was now stepping into the
+political arena. My sympathies and opinions, it is true,--so far as I
+had any in public affairs,--had, from the first, been enlisted on the
+same side with his own. But I was now made strongly sensible of an
+increased development of my friend’s mind, by means of which he possessed
+a vastly greater power than heretofore over the minds with which he came
+in contact. This progressive growth has continued to be one of his
+remarkable characteristics. Of most men you early know the mental gauge
+and measurement, and do not subsequently have much occasion to change it.
+Not so with Pierce: his tendency was not merely high, but towards a point
+which rose higher and higher as the aspirant tended upward. Since we
+parted, studious days had educated him; life, too, and his own exertions
+in it, and his native habit of close and accurate observation, had
+likewise begun to educate him.
+
+The town of Hillsborough, in 1829, gave Franklin Pierce his first public
+honor, by electing him its representative in the legislature of the
+state. His whole service in that body comprised four years, in the two
+latter of which he was elected Speaker by a vote of one hundred and
+fifty-five against fifty-eight for other candidates. This overpowering
+majority evinced the confidence which his character inspired, and which,
+during his whole career, it has invariably commanded, in advance of what
+might be termed positive proof, although the result has never failed to
+justify it. I still recollect his description of the feelings with which
+he entered on his arduous duties--the feverish night that preceded his
+taking the chair--the doubt, the struggle with himself--all ending in
+perfect calmness, full self-possession, and free power of action when the
+crisis actually came.
+
+He had all the natural gifts that adapted him for the post; courtesy,
+firmness, quickness and accuracy of judgment, and a clearness of mental
+perception that brought its own regularity into the scene of confused and
+entangled debate; and to these qualities he added whatever was to be
+attained by laborious study of parliamentary rules. His merit as a
+presiding officer was universally acknowledged. It is rare that a man
+combines so much impulse with so great a power of regulating the impulses
+of himself and others as Franklin Pierce. The faculty, here exercised
+and improved, of controlling an assembly while agitated by tumultuous
+controversy, was afterwards called into play upon a higher field; for,
+during his congressional service, Pierce was often summoned to preside in
+committee of the whole, when a turbulent debate was expected to demand
+peculiar energy in the chair.
+
+He was elected a member of Congress in 1833, being young for the station,
+as he has always been for every public station that he has filled. A
+different kind of man--a man conscious that accident alone had elevated
+him, and therefore nervously anxious to prove himself equal to his
+fortunes--would thus have been impelled to spasmodic efforts. He would
+have thrust himself forward in debate, taking the word out of the mouths
+of renowned orators, and thereby winning notoriety, as at least the
+glittering counterfeit of true celebrity. Had Pierce, with his genuine
+ability, practised this course; had he possessed even an ordinary love of
+display, and had he acted upon it with his inherent tact and skill,
+taking advantage of fair occasions to prove the power and substance that
+were in him, it would greatly have facilitated the task of his
+biographer.
+
+To aim at personal distinction, however, as an object independent of the
+public service, would have been contrary to all the foregone and
+subsequent manifestations of his life. He was never wanting to the
+occasion; but he waited for the occasion to bring him inevitably forward.
+When he spoke, it was not only because he was fully master of the
+subject, but because the exigency demanded him, and because no other and
+older man could perform the same duty as well as himself. Of the copious
+eloquence--and some of it, no doubt, of a high order--which Buncombe has
+called forth, not a paragraph, nor a period, is attributable to Franklin
+Pierce. He had no need of these devices to fortify his constituents in
+their high opinion of him; nor did he fail to perceive that such was not
+the method to acquire real weight in the body of which he was a member.
+In truth, he has no fluency of words, except when an earnest meaning and
+purpose supply their own expression. Every one of his speeches in
+Congress, and, we may say, in every other hall of oratory, or on any
+stump that he may have mounted, was drawn forth by the perception that it
+was needed, was directed to a full exposition of the subject, and (rarest
+of all) was limited by what he really had to say. Even the graces of the
+orator were never elaborated, never assumed for their own sake, but were
+legitimately derived from the force of his conceptions, and from the
+impulsive warmth which accompanies the glow of thought. Owing to these
+peculiarities,--for such, unfortunately, they may be termed, in reference
+to what are usually the characteristics of a legislative career,--his
+position before the country was less conspicuous than that of many men
+who could claim nothing like Pierce’s actual influence in the national
+councils. His speeches, in their muscular texture and close grasp of
+their subject, resembled the brief but pregnant arguments and expositions
+of the sages of the Continental Congress, rather than the immeasurable
+harangues which are now the order of the day.
+
+His congressional life, though it made comparatively so little show, was
+full of labor, directed to substantial objects. He was a member of the
+judiciary and other important committees; and the drudgery of the
+committee room, where so much of the real public business of the country
+is transacted, fell in large measure to his lot. Thus, even as a
+legislator, he may be said to have been a man of deeds, not words; and
+when he spoke upon any subject with which his duty, as chairman or member
+of a committee, had brought him in relation, his words had the weight of
+deeds, from the meaning, the directness, and the truth, that he conveyed
+into them. His merits made themselves known and felt in the sphere where
+they were exercised; and he was early appreciated by one who seldom erred
+in his estimate of men, whether in their moral or intellectual aspect.
+His intercourse with President Jackson was frequent and free, and marked
+by friendly regard on the part of the latter. In the stormiest periods
+of his administration, Pierce came frankly to his aid. The confidence
+then established was never lost; and when Jackson was on his death-bed,
+being visited by a gentleman from the North (himself formerly a
+democratic member of Congress), the old hero spoke with energy of
+Franklin Pierce’s ability and patriotism, and remarked, as with prophetic
+foresight of his young friend’s destiny, that “the interests of the
+country would be safe in such hands.”
+
+One of President Jackson’s measures, which had Pierce’s approval and
+support, was his veto of the Maysville Road Bill. This bill was part of
+a system of vast public works, principally railroads and canals, which it
+was proposed to undertake at the expense of the national treasury--a
+policy not then of recent origin, but which had been fostered by John
+Quincy Adams, and had attained a gigantic growth at the close of his
+Presidency. The estimate of works undertaken or projected, at the
+commencement of Jackson’s administration, amounted to considerably more
+than a hundred millions of dollars. The expenditure of this enormous
+sum, and doubtless other incalculable amounts, in progressive increase,
+was to be for purposes often of unascertained utility, and was to pass
+through the agents and officers of the federal government--a means of
+political corruption not safely to be trusted even in the purest hands.
+The peril to the individuality of the states, from a system tending so
+directly to consolidate the powers of government towards a common centre,
+was obvious. The result might have been, with the lapse of time and the
+increased activity of the disease, to place the capital of our federative
+Union in a position resembling that of imperial Rome, where each once
+independent state was a subject province, and all the highways of the
+world were said to meet in her forum. It was against this system, so
+dangerous to liberty and to public and private integrity, that Jackson
+declared war, by the famous Maysville veto.
+
+It would be an absurd interpretation of Pierce’s course, in regard to
+this and similar measures, to suppose him hostile either to internal or
+coastwise improvements, so far as they may legitimately be the business
+of the general government. He was aware of the immense importance of our
+internal commerce, and was ever ready to vote such appropriations as
+might be necessary for promoting it, when asked for in an honest spirit,
+and at points where they were really needed. He doubted, indeed, the
+constitutional power of Congress to undertake, by building roads through
+the wilderness, or opening unfrequented rivers, to create commerce where
+it did not yet exist; but he never denied or questioned the right and
+duty to remove obstructions in the way of inland trade, and to afford it
+every facility, when the nature and necessity of things had brought it
+into genuine existence. And he agreed with the best and wisest statesmen
+in believing that this distinction involved the true principle on which
+legislation, for the purpose here discussed, should proceed.
+
+While a member of the House of Representatives, he delivered a forcible
+speech against the bill authorizing appropriations for the Military
+Academy at West Point. He was decidedly opposed to that institution as
+then, and at present organized. We allude to the subject in illustration
+of the generous frankness with which, years afterwards, when the battle
+smoke of Mexico had baptized him also a soldier, he acknowledged himself
+in the wrong, and bore testimony to the brilliant services which the
+graduates of the Academy, trained to soldiership from boyhood, had
+rendered to their country. And if he has made no other such
+acknowledgment of past error, committed in his legislative capacity, it
+is but fair to believe that it is because his reason and conscience
+accuse him of no other wrong.
+
+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
+a hair’s breadth. He fully recognized, by his votes and by his voice,
+the rights pledged to the South by the Constitution. This, at the period
+when he so declared himself, was comparatively an easy thing to do. But
+when it became more difficult, when the first imperceptible movement of
+agitation had grown to be almost 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, native country--better than the mistiness of a
+philanthropic theory.
+
+He continued in the House of Representatives four years. If, at this
+period of his life, he rendered unobtrusive, though not unimportant,
+services to the public, it must also have been a time of vast
+intellectual advantage to himself. Amidst great national affairs, he was
+acquiring the best of all educations for future eminence and leadership.
+In the midst of statesmen, he grew to be a statesman. Studious, as all
+his speeches prove him to be, of history, he beheld it demonstrating
+itself before his eyes. As regards this sort of training, much of its
+good or ill effect depends on the natural force and depth of the man.
+Many, no doubt, by early mixture with politics, become the mere
+politicians of the moment,--a class of men sufficiently abundant among
+us,--acquiring only a knack and cunning, which guide them tolerably well
+through immediate difficulties, without instructing them in the great
+rules of higher policy. But when the actual observation of public
+measures goes hand in hand with study, when the mind is capable of
+comparing the present with its analogies in the past, and of grasping the
+principle that belongs to both, this is to have history for a living
+tutor. If the student be fit for such instruction, he will be seen to
+act afterwards with the elevation of a high ideal, and with the
+expediency, the sagacity, the instinct of what is fit and practicable,
+which make the advantage of the man of actual affairs over the mere
+theorist.
+
+And it was another advantage of his being brought early into the sphere
+of national interests, and continuing there for a series of years, that
+it enabled him to overcome any narrow and sectional prejudices. Without
+loving New England less, he loved the broad area of the country more. He
+thus retained that equal sentiment of patriotism for the whole land with
+which his father had imbued him, and which is perhaps apt to be impaired
+in the hearts of those who come late to the national legislature, after
+long training in the narrower fields of the separate states. His sense
+of the value of the Union, which had been taught him at the fireside,
+from earliest infancy, by the stories of patriotic valor that he there
+heard, was now strengthened by friendly association with its
+representatives from every quarter. It is this youthful sentiment of
+Americanism, so happily developed by after circumstances, that we see
+operating through all his public life, and making him as tender of what
+he considers due to the South as of the rights of his own land of hills.
+
+Franklin Pierce had scarcely reached the legal age for such elevation,
+when, in 1837, he was elected to the Senate of the United States. He
+took his seat at the commencement of the presidency of Mr. Van Buren.
+Never before nor since has the Senate been more venerable for the array
+of veteran and celebrated statesmen than at that time. Calhoun, Webster,
+and Clay had lost nothing of their intellectual might. Benton, Silas
+Wright, Woodbury, Buchanan, and Walker were members; and many even of the
+less eminent names were such as have gained historic place--men of
+powerful eloquence, and worthy to be leaders of the respective parties
+which they espoused. To this dignified body (composed of individuals
+some of whom were older in political experience than he in his mortal
+life) Pierce came as the youngest member of the Senate. With his usual
+tact and exquisite sense of propriety, he saw that it was not the time
+for him to step forward prominently on this highest theatre in the land.
+He beheld these great combatants doing battle before the eyes of the
+nation, and engrossing its whole regards. There was hardly an avenue to
+reputation save what was occupied by one or another of those gigantic
+figures.
+
+Modes of public service remained, however, requiring high ability, but
+with which few men of competent endowments would have been content to
+occupy themselves. Pierce had already demonstrated the possibility of
+obtaining an enviable position among his associates, without the windy
+notoriety which a member of Congress may readily manufacture for himself
+by the lavish expenditure of breath that had been better spared. In the
+more elevated field of the Senate, he pursued the same course as while a
+representative, and with more than equal results.
+
+Among other committees, he was a member of that upon revolutionary
+pensions. Of this subject he made himself thoroughly master, and was
+recognized by the Senate as an unquestionable authority. In 1840, in
+reference to several bills for the relief of claimants under the pension
+law, he delivered a speech which finely illustrates as well the
+sympathies as the justice of the man, showing how vividly he could feel,
+and, at the same time, how powerless were his feelings to turn him aside
+from the strict line of public integrity. The merits and sacrifices of
+the people of the Revolution have never been stated with more earnest
+gratitude than in the following passage:--
+
+“I am not insensible, Mr. President, of the advantages with which claims
+of this character always come before Congress. They are supposed to be
+based on services for which no man entertains a higher estimate than
+myself--services beyond all praise, and above all price. But, while warm
+and glowing with the glorious recollections which a recurrence to that
+period of our history can never fail to awaken; while we cherish with
+emotions of pride, reverence, and affection the memory of those brave men
+who are no longer with us; while we provide, with a liberal hand, for
+such as survive, and for the widows of the deceased; while we would
+accord to the heirs, whether in the second or third generation, every
+dollar to which they can establish a just claim,--I trust we shall not,
+in the strong current of our sympathies, forget what becomes us as the
+descendants of such men. They would teach us to legislate upon our
+judgment, upon our sober sense of right, and not upon our impulses or our
+sympathies. No, sir; we may act in this way, if we choose, when
+dispensing our own means, but we are not at liberty to do it when
+dispensing the means of our constituents.
+
+“If we were to legislate upon our sympathies--yet more I will admit--if
+we were to yield to that sense of just and grateful remuneration which
+presses itself upon every man’s heart, there would be scarcely a limit
+for our bounty. The whole exchequer could not answer the demand. To the
+patriotism, the courage, and the sacrifices of the people of that day, we
+owe, under Providence, all that we now most highly prize, and what we
+shall transmit to our children as the richest legacy they can inherit.
+The War of the Revolution, it has been justly remarked, was not a war of
+armies merely--it was the war of nearly a whole people, and such a people
+as the world had never before seen, in a death struggle for liberty.
+
+“The losses, sacrifices, and sufferings of that period were common to all
+classes and conditions of life. Those who remained at home suffered
+hardly less than those who entered upon the active strife. The aged
+father and another underwent not less than the son, who would have been
+the comfort and stay of their declining years, now called to perform a
+yet higher duty--to follow the standard of his bleeding country. The
+young mother, with her helpless children, excites not less deeply our
+sympathies, contending with want, and dragging out years of weary and
+toilsome days and anxious nights, than the husband in the field,
+following the fortunes of our arms without the proper habiliments to
+protect his person, or the requisite sustenance to support his strength.
+Sir, I never think of that patient, enduring, self-sacrificing army,
+which crossed the Delaware in December, 1777, marching barefooted upon
+frozen ground to encounter the foe, and leaving bloody footprints for
+miles behind then--I never think of their sufferings during that terrible
+winter without involuntarily inquiring, Where then were their families?
+Who lit up the cheerful fire upon their hearths at home? Who spoke the
+word of comfort and encouragement? Nay, sir, who furnished protection
+from the rigors of winter, and brought them the necessary means of
+subsistence?’
+
+“The true and simple answer to these questions would disclose an amount
+of suffering and anguish, mental and physical, such as might not have
+been found in the ranks of the armies--not even in the severest trial of
+that fortitude which never faltered, and that power of endurance which
+seemed to know no limit. All this no man feels more deeply than I do.
+But they were common sacrifices in a common cause, ultimately crowned
+with the reward of liberty. They have an everlasting claim upon our
+gratitude, and are destined, as I trust, by their heroic example, to
+exert an abiding influence upon our latest posterity.”
+
+With this heartfelt recognition of the debt of gratitude due to those
+excellent men, the senator enters into an analysis of the claims
+presented, and proves them to be void of justice. The whole speech is a
+good exponent of his character; full of the truest sympathy, but, above
+all things, just, and not to be misled, on the public behalf, by those
+impulses that would be most apt to sway the private man. The mere
+pecuniary amount saved to the nation by his scrutiny into affairs of this
+kind, though great, was, after all, but a minor consideration. The
+danger lay in establishing a corrupt system, and placing a wrong
+precedent upon the statute book. Instances might be adduced, on the
+other hand, which show him not less scrupulous of the just rights of the
+claimants than careful of the public interests.
+
+Another subject upon which he came forward was the military establishment
+and the natural defences of the country. In looking through the columns
+of the “Congressional Globe,” we find abundant evidences of Senator
+Pierce’s laborious and unostentatious discharge of his duties--reports of
+committees, brief remarks, and, here and there, a longer speech, always
+full of matter, and evincing a thoroughly-digested knowledge of the
+subject. Not having been written out by himself, however, these speeches
+are no fair specimens of his oratory, except as regards the train of
+argument and substantial thought; and adhering very closely to the
+business in hand, they seldom present passages that could be quoted,
+without tearing them forcibly, as it were, out of the context, and thus
+mangling the fragments which we might offer to the reader. As we have
+already remarked, he seems, as a debater, to revive the old type of the
+Revolutionary Congress, or to bring back the noble days of the Long
+Parliament of England, before eloquence had become what it is now, a
+knack, and a thing valued for itself. Like those strenuous orators, he
+speaks with the earnestness of honest conviction, and out of the fervor
+of his heart, and because the occasion and his deep sense of it constrain
+him.
+
+By the defeat of Mr. Van Buren, in the presidential election of 1840, the
+administration of government was transferred, for the first time in
+twelve years, to the Whigs. An extra session of Congress was summoned to
+assemble in June, 1841, by President Harrison, who, however, died before
+it came together. At this extra session, it was the purpose of the whig
+party, under the leadership of Henry Clay, to overthrow all the great
+measures which the successive democratic administrations had established.
+The sub-treasury was to be demolished; a national bank was to be
+incorporated; a high tariff of duties was to be imposed, for purposes of
+protection and abundant revenue. The whig administration possessed a
+majority, both in the Senate and the House. It was a dark period for the
+Democracy, so long unaccustomed to defeat, and now beholding all that
+they had won for the cause of national progress, after the arduous
+struggle of so many years, apparently about to be swept away.
+
+The sterling influence which Franklin Pierce now exercised is well
+described in the following remarks of the Hon. A. O. P. Nicholson:--
+
+“The power of an organized minority was never more clearly exhibited than
+in this contest. The democratic senators acted in strict concert,
+meeting night after night for consultation, arranging their plan of
+battle, selecting their champions for the coming day, assigning to each
+man his proper duty, and looking carefully to the popular judgment for a
+final victory. In these consultations, no man’s voice was heard with
+more profound respect than that of Franklin Pierce. His counsels were
+characterized by so thorough a knowledge of human nature, by so much
+solid common sense, by such devotion to democratic principles, that,
+although among the youngest of the senators, it was deemed important that
+all their conclusions should be submitted to his sanction.
+
+“Although known to be ardent in his temperament, he was also known to act
+with prudence and caution. His impetuosity in debate was only the result
+of the deep convictions which controlled his mind. He enjoyed the
+unbounded confidence of Calhoun, Buchanan, Wright, Woodbury, Walker,
+King, Benton, and indeed of the entire democratic portion of the Senate.
+When he rose in the Senate or in the committee room, he was heard with
+the profoundest attention; and again and again was he greeted by these
+veteran Democrats as one of our ablest champions. His speeches, during
+this session, will compare with those of any other senator. If it be
+asked why he did not receive higher distinction, I answer, that such men
+as Calhoun, Wright, Buchanan, and Woodbury were the acknowledged leaders
+of the Democracy. The eyes of the nation were on them. The hopes of
+their party were reposed in them. The brightness of these luminaries was
+too great to allow the brilliancy of so young a man to attract especial
+attention. But ask any one of these veterans how Franklin Pierce ranked
+in the Senate, and he will tell you, that, to stand in the front rank for
+talents, eloquence, and statesmanship, he only lacked a few more years.”
+
+In the course of this session he made a very powerful speech in favor of
+Mr. Buchanan’s resolution, calling on the President to furnish the names
+of persons removed from office since the 4th of March, 1841. The Whigs,
+in 1840, as in the subsequent canvass of 1848, had professed a purpose to
+abolish the system of official removals on account of political opinion,
+but, immediately on coming into power, had commenced a proscription
+infinitely beyond the example of the democratic party. This course, with
+an army of office-seekers besieging the departments, was unquestionably
+difficult to avoid, and perhaps, on the whole, not desirable to be
+avoided. But it was rendered astounding by the sturdy effrontery with
+which the gentlemen in power denied that their present practice had
+falsified any of their past professions. A few of the closing paragraphs
+of Senator Pierce’s highly effective speech, being more easily separable
+than the rest, may here be cited.
+
+“One word more, and I leave this subject,--a painful one to me, from the
+beginning to the end. The senator from North Carolina, in the course of
+his remarks the other day, asked, ‘Do gentlemen expect that their friends
+are to be retained in office against the will of the nation? Are they so
+unreasonable as to expect what the circumstances and the necessity of the
+case forbid?’ What our expectations were is not the question now; but
+what were your pledges and promises before the people. On a previous
+occasion, the distinguished senator from Kentucky made a similar remark:
+‘An ungracious task, but the nation demands it!’ Sir, this demand of the
+nation,--this plea of STATE NECESSITY,--let me tell you, gentlemen, is as
+old as the history of wrong and oppression. It has been the standing
+plea, the never-failing resort of despotism.
+
+“The great Julius found it a convenient plea when he restored the dignity
+of the Roman Senate, but destroyed its independence. It gave countenance
+to and justified all the atrocities of the Inquisition in Spain. It
+forced out the stifled groans that issued from the Black Hole of
+Calcutta. It was written in tears upon the Bridge of Sighs in Venice,
+and pointed to those dark recesses upon whose gloomy thresholds there was
+never seen a returning footprint.
+
+“It was the plea of the austere and ambitious Strafford, in the days of
+Charles I. It filled the Bastile of France, and lent its sanction to the
+terrible atrocities perpetrated there. It was this plea that snatched
+the mild, eloquent, and patriotic Camillo Desmoulins from his young and
+beautiful wife, and hurried him to the guillotine with thousands of
+others equally unoffending and innocent. It was upon this plea that the
+greatest of generals, if not men,--you cannot mistake me,--I mean him,
+the presence of whose very ashes within the last few months sufficed to
+stir the hearts of a continent,--it was upon this plea that he abjured
+the noble wife who had thrown light and gladness around his humbler days,
+and, by her own lofty energies and high intellect, had encouraged his
+aspirations. It was upon this plea that he committed that worst and most
+fatal acts of his eventful life. Upon this, too, he drew around his
+person the imperial purple. It has in all times, and in every age, been
+the foe of liberty and the indispensable stay of usurpation.
+
+“Where were the chains of despotism ever thrown around the freedom of
+speech and of the press but on this plea of STATE NECESSITY? Let the
+spirit of Charles X. and of his ministers answer.
+
+“It is cold, selfish, heartless, and has always been regardless of age,
+sex, condition, services, or any of the incidents of life that appeal to
+patriotism or humanity. Wherever its authority has been acknowledged, it
+has assailed men who stood by their country when she needed strong arms
+and bold hearts, and has assailed them when, maimed and disabled in her
+service, they could no longer brandish a weapon in her defence. It has
+afflicted the feeble and dependent wife for the imaginary faults of the
+husband. It has stricken down Innocence in its beauty, Youth in its
+freshness, Manhood in its vigor, and Age in its feebleness and
+decrepitude. Whatever other plea or apology may be set up for the
+sweeping, ruthless exercise of this civil guillotine at the present day,
+in the name of LIBERTY let us be spared this fearful one of STATE
+NECESSITY, in this early age of the Republic, upon the floor of the
+American Senate, in the face of a people yet free!”
+
+In June, 1842, he signified his purpose of retiring from the Senate.
+
+It was now more than sixteen years since the author of this sketch had
+been accustomed to meet Frank Pierce (that familiar name, which the
+nation is adopting as one of its household words) in habits of daily
+intercourse. Our modes of life had since been as different as could well
+be imagined; our culture and labor were entirely unlike; there was hardly
+a single object or aspiration in common between us. Still we had
+occasionally met, and always on the old ground of friendly confidence.
+There were sympathies that had not been suffered to die out. Had we
+lived more constantly together, it is not impossible that the relation
+might have been changed by the various accidents and attritions of life;
+but having no mutual events, and few mutual interests, the tie of early
+friendship remained the same as when we parted. The modifications which
+I saw in his character were those of growth and development; new
+qualities came out, or displayed themselves more prominently, but always
+in harmony with those heretofore known. Always I was sensible of
+progress in him; a characteristic--as, I believe, has been said in the
+foregoing pages--more perceptible in Franklin Pierce than in any other
+person with whom I have been acquainted. He widened, deepened, rose to a
+higher point, and thus ever made himself equal to the ever-heightening
+occasion. This peculiarity of intellectual growth, continued beyond the
+ordinary period, has its analogy in his physical constitution--it being a
+fact that he continued to grow in stature between his twenty-first and
+twenty-fifth years.
+
+He had not met with that misfortune, which, it is to be feared, befalls
+many men who throw their ardor into politics. The pursuit had taken
+nothing from the frankness of his nature; now, as ever, he used direct
+means to gain honorable ends; and his subtlety--for, after all, his heart
+and purpose were not such as he that runs may read--had the depth of
+wisdom, and never any quality of cunning. In great part, this
+undeteriorated manhood was due to his original nobility of nature. Yet
+it may not be unjust to attribute it, in some degree, to the singular
+good fortune of his life. He had never, in all his career, found it
+necessary to stoop. Office had sought him; he had not begged it, nor
+manoeuvred for it, nor crept towards it--arts which too frequently bring
+a man, morally bowed and degraded, to a position which should be one of
+dignity, but in which he will vainly essay to stand upright.
+
+In our earlier meetings, after Pierce had begun to come forward in public
+life, I could discern that his ambition was aroused. He felt a young
+man’s enjoyment of success, so early and so distinguished. But as years
+went on, such motives seemed to be less influential with him. He was
+cured of ambition, as, one after another, its objects came to him
+unsought. His domestic position, likewise, had contributed to direct his
+tastes and wishes towards the pursuits of private life. In 1834 he had
+married Jane Means, a daughter of the Rev. Dr. Appleton, a former
+president of Bowdoin College. Three sons, the first of whom died in
+early infancy, were born to him; and, having hitherto been kept poor by
+his public service, he no doubt became sensible of the expediency of
+making some provision for the future. Such, it may be presumed, were the
+considerations that induced his resignation of the senatorship, greatly
+to the regret of all parties. The senators gathered around him as he was
+about to quit the chamber; political opponents took leave of him as of a
+personal friend; and no departing member has ever retired from that
+dignified body amid warmer wishes for his happiness than those that
+attended Franklin Pierce.
+
+His father had died three years before, in 1839, at the mansion which he
+built, after the original log-cabin grew too narrow for his rising family
+and fortunes. The mansion was spacious, as the liberal hospitality of
+the occupant required, and stood on a little eminence, surrounded by
+verdure and abundance, and a happy population, where, half a century
+before, the revolutionary soldier had come alone into the wilderness, and
+levelled the primeval forest trees. After being spared to behold the
+distinction of his son, he departed this life at the age of eighty-one
+years, in perfect peace, and, until within a few hours of his death, in
+the full possession of his intellectual powers. His last act was one of
+charity to a poor neighbor--a fitting close to a life that had abounded
+in such deeds. Governor Pierce was a man of admirable qualities--brave,
+active, public-spirited, endowed with natural authority, courteous yet
+simple in his manners; and in his son we may perceive these same
+attributes, modified and softened by a finer texture of character,
+illuminated by higher intellectual culture, and polished by a larger
+intercourse with the world, but as substantial and sterling as in the
+good old patriot.
+
+Franklin Pierce had removed from Hillsborough in 1838, and taken up his
+residence at Concord, the capital of New Hampshire. On this occasion,
+the citizens of his native town invited him to a public dinner, in token
+of their affection and respect. In accordance with his usual taste, he
+gratefully accepted the kindly sentiment, but declined the public
+demonstration of it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HIS SUCCESS AT THE BAR.
+
+
+Franklin Pierce’s earliest effort at the bar, as we have already
+observed, was an unsuccessful one; but instead of discouraging him, the
+failure had only served to awaken the consciousness of latent power, and
+the resolution to bring it out. Since those days, he had indeed gained
+reputation as a lawyer. So much, however, was the tenor of his legal
+life broken up by the months of public service subtracted from each year,
+and such was the inevitable tendency of his thoughts towards political
+subjects, that he could but very partially avail himself of the
+opportunities of professional advancement. But on retiring from the
+Senate he appears to have started immediately into full practice. Though
+the people of New Hampshire already knew him well, yet his brilliant
+achievements as an advocate brought him more into their view, and into
+closer relations with them, than he had ever before been. He now met his
+countrymen, as represented in the jury box, face to face, and made them
+feel what manner of man he was. Their sentiment towards him soon grew to
+be nothing short of enthusiasm; love, pride, the sense of brotherhood,
+affectionate sympathy, and perfect trust, all mingled in it. It was the
+influence of a great heart pervading the general heart, and throbbing
+with it in the same pulsation.
+
+It has never been the writer’s good fortune to listen to one of Franklin
+Pierce’s public speeches, whether at the bar or elsewhere; nor, by
+diligent inquiry, has he been able to gain a very definite idea of the
+mode in which he produces his effects. To me, therefore, his forensic
+displays are in the same category with those of Patrick Henry, or any
+other orator whose tongue, beyond the memory of man, has moulded into
+dust. His power results, no doubt, in great measure, from the
+earnestness with which he imbues himself with the conception of his
+client’s cause; insomuch that he makes it entirely his own, and, never
+undertaking a case which he believes to be unjust, contends with his
+whole heart and conscience, as well as intellectual force, for victory.
+His labor in the preparation of his cases is said to be unremitting; and
+he throws himself with such energy into a trial of importance as wholly
+to exhaust his strength.
+
+Few lawyers, probably, have been interested in a wider variety of
+business than he; its scope comprehends the great causes where immense
+pecuniary interests are concerned--from which, however, he is always
+ready to turn aside, to defend the humble rights of the poor man, or give
+his protection to one unjustly accused. As one of my correspondents
+observes, “When an applicant has interested him by a recital of fraud or
+wrong, General Pierce never investigates the man’s estate before engaging
+in his business; neither does he calculate whose path he may cross. I
+have been privy to several instances of the noblest independence on his
+part, in pursuing, to the disrepute of those who stood well in the
+community, the weal of an obscure client with a good cause.”
+
+In the practice of the law, as Pierce pursued it, in one or another of
+the court houses of New Hampshire, the rumor of each successive struggle
+and success resounded over the rugged hills, and perished without a
+record. Those mighty efforts, into which he put all his strength, before
+a county court, and addressing a jury of yeomen, have necessarily been,
+as regards the evanescent memory of any particular trial, like the
+eloquence that is sometimes poured out in a dream. In other spheres of
+action, with no greater expenditure of mental energy, words have been
+spoken that endure from age to age--deeds done that harden into history.
+But this, perhaps the most earnest portion of Franklin Pierce’s life, has
+left few materials from which it can be written. There is before me only
+one report of a case in which he was engaged--the defence of the
+Wentworths, at a preliminary examination, on a charge of murder. His
+speech occupied four hours in the delivery, and handles a confused medley
+of facts with masterly skill, bringing them to bear one upon another, and
+making the entire mass, as it were, transparent, so that the truth may be
+seen through it. The whole hangs together too closely to permit the
+quotation of passages.
+
+The writer has been favored with communications from two individuals, who
+have enjoyed the best of opportunities to become acquainted with General
+Pierce’s character as a lawyer. The following is the graceful and
+generous tribute of a gentleman, who, of late, more frequently than any
+other, has been opposed to him at the bar:--
+
+“General Pierce cannot be said to have commenced his career at the bar in
+earnest until after his resignation of the office of senator, in 1842.
+And it is a convincing proof of his eminent powers that he at once placed
+himself in the very first rank at a bar so distinguished for ability as
+that of New Hampshire. It is confessed by all who have the means of
+knowledge and judgment on this subject, that in no state of the Union are
+causes tried with more industry of preparation, skill, perseverance,
+energy, or vehement effort to succeed.
+
+“During much of this time, my practice in our courts was suspended; and
+it is only within three or four years that I have had opportunities of
+intimately knowing his powers as an advocate, by being associated with
+him at the bar; and, most of all, of appreciating and feeling that power,
+by being opposed to him in the trial of causes before juries. Far more
+than any other man, whom it has been my fortune to meet, he makes himself
+felt by one who tries a case against him. From the first, he impresses
+on his opponent a consciousness of the necessity of a deadly struggle,
+not only in order to win the victory, but to avoid defeat.
+
+“His vigilance and perseverance, omitting nothing in the preparation and
+introduction of testimony, even to the minutest details, which can be
+useful to his clients; his watchful attention, seizing on every weak
+point in the opposite case; his quickness and readiness; his sound and
+excellent judgment; his keen insight into character and motives, his
+almost intuitive knowledge of men; his ingenious and powerful
+cross-examinations; his adroitness in turning aside troublesome
+testimony, and availing himself of every favorable point; his quick sense
+of the ridiculous; his pathetic appeals to the feelings; his sustained
+eloquence, and remarkably energetic declamation,--all mark him for a
+‘leader.’
+
+“From the beginning to the end of the trial of a case, nothing with him
+is neglected which can by possibility honorably conduce to success. His
+manner is always respectful and deferential to the court, captivating to
+the jury, and calculated to conciliate the good will even of those who
+would be otherwise indifferent spectators. In short, he plays the part
+of a successful actor; successful, because he always identifies himself
+with his part, and in him it is not acting.
+
+“Perhaps, as would be expected by those who know his generosity of heart,
+and his scorn of everything like oppression or extortion, he is most
+powerful in his indignant denunciations of fraud or injustice, and his
+addresses to the feelings in behalf of the poor and lowly, and the
+sufferers under wrong. I remember to have heard of his extraordinary
+power on one occasion, when a person who had offered to procure arrears
+of a pension for revolutionary services had appropriated to himself a
+most unreasonable share of the money. General Pierce spoke of the
+frequency of these instances, and, before the numerous audience, offered
+his aid, freely and gratuitously, to redress the wrongs of any widow or
+representative of a revolutionary officer or soldier who had been made
+the subject of such extortion.
+
+“The reply of the poor man, in the anecdote related by Lord Campbell of
+Harry Erskine, would be applicable, as exhibiting a feeling kindred to
+that with which General Pierce is regarded: ‘There’s no a puir man in a’
+Scotland need to want a friend or fear an enemy, sae lang as Harry
+Erskine lives!’”
+
+We next give his aspect as seen from the bench, in the following
+carefully prepared and discriminating article, from the chief justice of
+New Hampshire:--
+
+“In attempting to estimate the character and qualifications of Mr. Pierce
+as a lawyer and an advocate, we undertake a delicate, but, at the same
+time, an agreeable task. The profession of the law, practised by men of
+liberal and enlightened minds, and unstained by the sordidness which more
+or less affects all human pursuits, invariably confers honor upon and is
+honored by its followers. An integrity above suspicion, an eloquence
+alike vigorous and persuasive, and an intuitive sagacity have earned for
+Mr. Pierce the reputation that always follows them.
+
+“The last case of paramount importance in which he was engaged as counsel
+was that of Morrison v. Philbrick, tried in the month of February, 1852,
+at the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Belknap. There was on
+both sides an array of eminent professional talent, Messrs. Pierce, Bell,
+and Bellows appearing for the defendant, and Messrs. Atherton and Whipple
+for the plaintiff. The case was one of almost unequalled interest to the
+public generally, and to the inhabitants of the country lying around the
+lower part of Lake Winnipiscogee. A company, commonly called the Lake
+Company, had become the owners of many of the outlets of the streams
+supplying the lake, and by means of their works at such places, and at
+Union Bridge, a few miles below, were enabled to keep back the waters of
+the lake, and to use them as occasion should require to supply the mills
+at Lowell. The plaintiff alleged that the dam at Union Bridge had caused
+the water to rise higher than was done by the dam that existed in the
+year 1828, and that he was essentially injured thereby. The case had
+been on trial nearly seven weeks. Evidence equivalent to the testimony
+of one hundred and eighty witnesses had been laid before the jury. Upon
+this immense mass of facts, involving a great number of issues, Mr.
+Pierce was to meet his most formidable opponent in the state, Mr.
+Atherton. In that gentleman are united many of the rarest qualifications
+of an advocate. Of inimitable self-possession; with a coolness and
+clearness of intellect which no sudden emergencies can disturb; with that
+confidence in his resources which nothing but native strength, aided by
+the most thorough training, can bestow; with a felicity and fertility of
+illustration, the result alike of an exquisite natural taste and a
+cultivation of those studies which refine while they strengthen the mind
+for forensic contests,--Mr. Atherton’s argument was listened to with an
+earnestness and interest which showed the conviction of his audience that
+no ordinary man was addressing them.
+
+“No one who witnessed that memorable trial will soon forget the argument
+of Mr. Pierce on that occasion. He was the counsel for the defendant,
+and was therefore to precede Mr. Atherton. He was to analyze and unfold
+to the jury this vast body of evidence under the watchful eyes of an
+opponent at once enterprising and cautious, and before whom it was
+necessary to be both bold and skilful. He was to place himself in the
+position of the jury, to see the evidence as they would be likely to
+regard it, to understand the character of their minds and what views
+would be the most likely to impress them. He was not only to be familiar
+with his own case, but to anticipate that of his opponent, and answer as
+he best might the argument of the counsel. And most admirably did he
+discharge the duties he had assumed on behalf of his client. Eminently
+graceful and attractive in his manner at all times, his demeanor was then
+precisely what it should have been, showing a manly confidence in himself
+and his case, and a courteous deference to the tribunal he was
+addressing. His erect and manly figure, his easy and unembarrassed air,
+bespoke the favorable attention of his audience. His earnest devotion to
+his cause, his deep emotion, evidently suppressed, but for that very
+reason all the more interesting, diffused themselves like electricity
+through his hearers. And when, as often happened, in the course of his
+argument, his clear and musical accents fell upon the ear in eloquent and
+pointed sentences, gratifying the taste while they satisfied the reason,
+no man could avoid turning to his neighbor, and expressing by his looks
+that pleasure which the very depth of his interest forbade him to express
+in words. And when the long trial was over, every one remembered with
+satisfaction that these two distinguished gentlemen had met each other
+during a most exciting and exhausting trial of seven weeks, and that no
+unkind words, or captious passages, had occurred between them to diminish
+their mutual respect, or that in which they were held by their
+fellow-citizens.
+
+“In the above remarks, we have indicated a few of Mr. Pierce’s
+characteristics as an advocate; but he possesses other endowments, to
+which we have not alluded. In the first place, as he is a perfectly
+fearless man, so he is a perfectly fearless advocate; and true courage is
+as necessary to the civilian as to the soldier, and smiles and frowns Mr.
+Pierce disregards alike in the undaunted discharge of his duty. He never
+fears to uphold his client, however unpopular his cause may seem to be
+for the moment. It is this courage which kindles his eloquence, inspires
+his conduct, and gives direction and firmness to his skill. This it is
+which impels him onward, at all risks, to lay bare every ‘mystery of
+iniquity’ which he believes is threatening his case. He does not ask
+himself whether his opponent be not a man of wealth and influence, of
+whom it might be for his interest to speak with care and circumspection;
+but he devotes himself with a ready zeal to his cause, careless of aught
+but how he may best discharge his duty. His argumentative powers are of
+the highest order. He never takes before the court a position which he
+believes untenable. He has a quick and sure perception of his points,
+and the power of enforcing them by apt and pertinent illustrations. He
+sees the relative importance and weight of different views, and can
+assign to each its proper place, and brings forward the main body of his
+reasoning in prominent relief, without distracting the attention by
+unimportant particulars. And above all, he has the good sense, so rarely
+shown by many, to stop when he has said all that is necessary for the
+elucidation of his subject. With a proper confidence in his own
+perceptions, he states his views so pertinently and in such precise and
+logical terms, that they cannot but be felt and appreciated. He never
+mystifies; he never attempts to pervert words from their proper and
+legitimate meaning to answer a temporary purpose.
+
+“His demeanor at the bar nay be pronounced faultless. His courtesy in
+the court house, like his courtesy elsewhere, is that which springs from
+self-respect and from a kindly heart, disposing its owner to say and do
+kindly things. But he would be a courageous man who, presuming upon the
+affability of Mr. Pierce’s manner, would venture a second time to attack
+him; for he would long remember the rebuke that followed his first
+attack. There is a ready repartee and a quick and cutting sarcasm in his
+manner when he chooses to display it, which it requires a man of
+considerable nerve to withstand. He is peculiarly happy in the
+examination of witnesses--that art in which so few excel. He never
+browbeats, he never attempts to terrify. He is never rude or
+discourteous. But the equivocating witness soon discovers that his
+falsehood is hunted out of its recesses with an unsparing determination.
+If he is dogged and surly, he is met by a spirit as resolute as his own.
+If he is smooth and plausible, the veil is lifted from him by a firm but
+graceful hand. If he is pompous and vain, no ridicule was ever more
+perfect than that to which he listens with astonished and mortified ears.
+
+“The eloquence of Mr. Pierce is of a character not to be easily
+forgotten. He understands men, their passions and their feelings. He
+knows the way to their hearts, and can make them vibrate to his touch.
+His language always attracts the hearer. A graceful and manly carriage,
+bespeaking him at once the gentleman and the true man; a manner warmed by
+the ardent glow of an earnest belief; an enunciation ringing, distinct,
+and impressive beyond that of most men; a command of brilliant and
+expressive language; and an accurate taste, together with a sagacious and
+instinctive insight into the points of his case, are the secrets of his
+success. It is thus that audiences are moved and truth ascertained; and
+he will ever be the most successful advocate who can approach the nearest
+to this lofty and difficult position.
+
+“Mr. Pierce’s views as a constitutional lawyer are such as have been
+advocated by the ablest minds of America. They are those which, taking
+their rise in the heroic age of the country, were transmitted to him by a
+noble father, worthy of the times in which he lived, worthy of that
+Revolution which he assisted in bringing about. He believes that the
+Constitution was made, not to be subverted, but to be sacredly preserved;
+that a republic is perfectly consistent with the conservation of law, of
+rational submission to right authority, and of true self-government.
+Equally removed from that malignant hostility to order which
+characterizes the demagogues who are eager to rise upon the ruins even of
+freedom, and from that barren and bigoted narrowness which would oppose
+all rational freedom of opinion, he is, in its loftiest and most
+ennobling sense, a friend of that Union, without which the honored name
+of American citizen would become a by-word among the nations. And if, as
+we fervently pray and confidently expect he will, Mr. Pierce shall
+display before the great tribunals of the nation the courage, the
+consistency, the sagacity, and the sense of honor, which have already
+secured for him so many thousands of devoted friends, and which have
+signalized both his private and professional life, his administration
+will long be held in grateful remembrance as one of which the sense of
+right and the sagacity to perceive it, a clear insight into the true
+destinies of the country and a determination to uphold them at whatever
+sacrifice, were the predominant characteristics.”
+
+It may appear singular that Franklin Pierce has not taken up his
+residence in some metropolis, where his great forensic abilities would so
+readily find a more conspicuous theatre, and a far richer remuneration
+than heretofore. He himself, it is understood, has sometimes
+contemplated a removal, and, two or three years since, had almost
+determined on settling in Baltimore. But his native state, where he is
+known so well, and regarded with so much familiar affection, which he has
+served so faithfully, and which rewards him so generously with its
+confidence, New Hampshire, with its granite hills, must always be his
+home. He will dwell there, except when public duty for a season shall
+summon him away; he will die there, and give his dust to its soil.
+
+It was at his option, in 1846, to accept the highest legal position in
+the country, setting aside the bench, and the one which undoubtedly would
+most have gratified his professional aspirations. President Polk, with
+whom he had been associated on the most friendly terms in Congress, now
+offered him the post of attorney general of the United States. “In
+tendering to you this position in my cabinet,” writes the President, “I
+have been governed by the high estimate which I place upon your character
+and eminent qualifications to fill it.” The letter, in which this
+proposal is declined, shows so much of the writer’s real self that we
+quote a portion of it.
+
+“Although the early years of my manhood were devoted to public life, it
+was never really suited to my taste. I longed, as I am sure you must
+often have done, for the quiet and independence that belong only to the
+private citizen; and now, at forty, I feel that desire stronger than
+ever.
+
+“Coming so unexpectedly as this offer does, it would be difficult, if not
+impossible, to arrange the business of an extensive practice, between
+this and the first of November, in a manner at all satisfactory to
+myself, or to those who have committed their interests to my care, and
+who rely on my services. Besides, you know that Mrs. Pierce’s health,
+while at Washington, was very delicate. It is, I fear, even more so now;
+and the responsibilities which the proposed change would necessarily
+impose upon her ought, probably, in themselves, to constitute an
+insurmountable objection to leaving our quiet home for a public station
+at Washington.
+
+“When I resigned my seat in the Senate in 1842, I did it with the fixed
+purpose never again to be voluntarily separated from my family for any
+considerable length of time, except at the call of my country in time of
+war; and yet this consequence, for the reason before stated, and on
+account of climate, would be very likely to result from my acceptance.
+
+“These are some of the considerations which have influenced my decision.
+You will, I am sure, appreciate my motives. You will not believe that I
+have weighed my personal convenience and case against the public
+interest, especially as the office is one which, if not sought, would be
+readily accepted by gentlemen who could bring to your aid attainments and
+qualifications vastly superior to mine.”
+
+Previous to the offer of the attorney-generalship, the appointment of
+United States Senator had been tendered to Pierce by Governor Steele, and
+declined. It is unquestionable that, at this period, he hoped and
+expected to spend a life of professional toil in a private station,
+undistinguished except by the exercise of his great talents in peaceful
+pursuits. But such was not his destiny. The contingency to which he
+referred in the above letter, as the sole exception to his purpose of
+never being separated from his family, was now about to occur. Nor did
+he fail to comport himself as not only that intimation, but the whole
+tenor of his character, gave reason to anticipate.
+
+During the years embraced in this chapter,--between 1842 and 1847,--he
+had constantly taken an efficient interest in the politics of the state,
+but had uniformly declined the honors which New Hampshire was at all
+times ready to confer upon him. A democratic convention nominated him
+for governor, but could not obtain his acquiescence. One of the
+occasions on which he most strenuously exerted himself was in holding the
+democratic party loyal to its principles, in opposition to the course of
+John P. Hale. This gentleman, then a representative in Congress, had
+broken with his party on no less important a point than the annexation of
+Texas. He has never since acted with the Democracy, and has long been a
+leader of the free soil party.
+
+In 1844 died Frank Robert, son of Franklin Pierce, aged four years, a
+little boy of rare beauty and promise, and whose death was the greatest
+affliction that his father has experienced. His only surviving child is
+a son, now eleven years old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE MEXICAN WAR.
+
+
+When Franklin Pierce declined the honorable offer of the
+attorney-generalship of the United States, he intimated that there might
+be one contingency in which he would feel it his duty to give up the
+cherished purpose of spending the remainder of his life in a private
+station. That exceptional case was brought about, in 1847, by the
+Mexican War. He showed his readiness to redeem the pledge by enrolling
+himself as the earliest volunteer of a company raised in Concord, and
+went through the regular drill, with his fellow-soldiers, as a private in
+the ranks. On the passage of the bill for the increase of the army, he
+received the appointment of colonel of the Ninth Regiment, which was the
+quota of New England towards the ten that were to be raised. And shortly
+afterwards,--in March, 1847,--he was commissioned as brigadier-general in
+the army; his brigade consisting of regiments from the extreme north, the
+extreme west, and the extreme south of the Union.
+
+There is nothing in any other country similar to what we see in our own,
+when the blast of the trumpet at once converts men of peaceful pursuits
+into warriors. Every war in which America has been engaged has done
+this; the valor that wins our battles is not the trained hardihood of
+veterans, but a native and spontaneous fire; and there is surely a
+chivalrous beauty in the devotion of the citizen soldier to his country’s
+cause, which the man who makes arms his profession, and is but doing his
+regular business on the field of battle, cannot pretend to rival. Taking
+the Mexican War as a specimen, this peculiar composition of an American
+army, as well in respect to its officers as its private soldiers, seems
+to create a spirit of romantic adventure which more than supplies the
+place of disciplined courage.
+
+The author saw General Pierce in Boston, on the eve of his departure for
+Vera Cruz. He had been intensely occupied, since his appointment, in
+effecting the arrangements necessary on leaving his affairs, as well as
+by the preparations, military and personal, demanded by the expedition.
+The transports were waiting at Newport to receive the troops. He was now
+in the midst of bustle, with some of the officers of his command about
+him, mingled with the friends whom he was to leave behind. The severest
+point of the crisis was over, for he had already bidden his family
+farewell. His spirits appeared to have risen with the occasion. He was
+evidently in his element; nor, to say the truth, dangerous as was the
+path before him, could it be regretted that his life was now to have the
+opportunity of that species of success which--in his youth, at least--he
+had considered the best worth struggling for. He looked so fit to be a
+soldier, that it was impossible to doubt--not merely his good conduct,
+which was as certain before the event as afterwards, but--his good
+fortune in the field, and his fortunate return.
+
+He sailed from Newport on the 27th of May, in the bark Kepler, having on
+board three companies of the Ninth Regiment of Infantry, together with
+Colonel Ransom, its commander, and the officers belonging to the
+detachment. The passage was long and tedious, with protracted calms, and
+so smooth a sea that a sail-boat might have performed the voyage in
+safety. The Kepler arrived at Vera Cruz in precisely a month after her
+departure from the United States, without speaking a single vessel from
+the south during her passage, and, of course, receiving no intelligence
+as to the position and state of the army which these reenforcements were
+to join.
+
+From a journal kept by General Pierce, and intended only for the perusal
+of his family and friends, we present some extracts. They are mere hasty
+jottings-down in camp, and at the intervals of weary marches, but will
+doubtless bring the reader closer to the man than any narrative which we
+could substitute. [In this reprint it has been thought expedient to omit
+the passages from General Pierce’s journal.]
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+General Pierce’s journal here terminates. In its clear and simple
+narrative the reader cannot fail to see--although it was written with no
+purpose of displaying them--the native qualities of a born soldier,
+together with the sagacity of an experienced one. He had proved himself,
+moreover, physically apt for war, by his easy endurance of the fatigues
+of the march; every step of which (as was the case with few other
+officers) was performed either on horseback or on foot. Nature, indeed,
+has endowed him with a rare elasticity both of mind and body; he springs
+up from pressure like a well-tempered sword. After the severest toil, a
+single night’s rest does as much for him, in the way of refreshment, as a
+week could do for most other men.
+
+His conduct on this adventurous march received the high encomiums of
+military men, and was honored with the commendation of the great soldier
+who is now his rival in the presidential contest. He reached the main
+army at Puebla on the 7th of August, with twenty-four hundred men, in
+fine order, and without the loss of a single wagon.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+HIS SERVICES IN THE VALLEY OF MEXICO.
+
+
+General Scott, who was at Puebla with the main army awaiting this
+reenforcement, began his march towards the city of Mexico on the day
+after General Pierce’s arrival. The battle of Contreras was fought on
+the 19th of August.
+
+The enemy’s force consisted of about seven thousand men, posted in a
+strongly-intrenched camp, under General Valencia, one of the bravest and
+ablest of the Mexican commanders. The object of the commanding general
+appears to have been to cut off the communications of these detached
+troops with Santa Anna’s main army, and thus to have them entirely at his
+mercy. For this purpose a portion of the American forces were ordered to
+move against Valencia’s left flank, and, by occupying strong positions in
+the villages and on the roads towards the city, to prevent reenforcements
+from reaching him. In the mean time, to draw the enemy’s attention from
+this movement, a vigorous onset was made upon his front; and as the
+operations upon his flank were not immediately and fully carried out
+according to the plan, this front demonstration assumed the character of
+a fierce and desperate attack, upon which the fortunes of the day much
+depended. General Pierce’s brigade formed a part of the force engaged in
+this latter movement, in which four thousand newly-recruited men, unable
+to bring their artillery to bear, contended against seven thousand
+disciplined soldiers, protected by intrenchments, and showering round
+shot and shells against the assailing troops.
+
+The ground in front was of the rudest and roughest character. The troops
+made their way with difficulty over a broken tract called the Pedregal,
+bristling with sharp points of rocks, and which is represented as having
+been the crater of a now exhausted and extinct volcano. The enemy had
+thrown out skirmishers, who were posted in great force among the crevices
+and inequalities of this broken ground, and vigorously resisted the
+American advance; while the artillery of the intrenched camp played upon
+our troops, and shattered the very rocks over which they were to pass.
+
+General Pierce’s immediate command had never before been under such a
+fire of artillery. The enemy’s range was a little too high, or the havoc
+in our ranks must have been dreadful. In the midst of this fire, General
+Pierce, being the only officer mounted in the brigade, leaped his horse
+upon an abrupt eminence, and addressed the colonels and captains of the
+regiments, as they passed, in a few stirring words,--reminding them of
+the honor of their country, of the victory their steady valor would
+contribute to achieve. Pressing forward to the head of the column, he
+had nearly reached the practicable ground that lay beyond, when his horse
+slipped among the rocks, thrust his foot into a crevice, and fell,
+breaking his own leg, and crushing his rider heavily beneath him.
+
+Pierce’s mounted orderly soon came to his assistance. The general was
+stunned, and almost insensible. When partially recovered, he found
+himself suffering from severe bruises, and especially from a sprain of
+the left knee, which was undermost when the horse came down. The orderly
+assisted him to reach the shelter of a projecting rock; and as they made
+their way thither, a shell fell close beside them and exploded, covering
+them with earth. “That was a lucky miss,” said Pierce calmly. Leaving
+him in such shelter as the rock afforded, the orderly went in search of
+aid, and was fortunate to meet with Dr. Ritchie, of Virginia, who was
+attached to Pierce’s brigade, and was following in close proximity to the
+advancing column. The doctor administered to him as well as the
+circumstances would admit. Immediately on recovering his full
+consciousness, General Pierce had become anxious to rejoin his troops;
+and now, in opposition to Dr. Ritchie’s advice and remonstrances, he
+determined to proceed to the front.
+
+With pain and difficulty, and leaning on his orderly’s arm, he reached
+the battery commanded by Captain McGruder, where he found the horse of
+Lieutenant Johnson, who had just before received a mortal wound. In
+compliance with his wishes, he was assisted into the saddle; and, in
+answer to a remark that he would be unable to keep his seat, “Then,” said
+the general, “you must tie me on.” Whether his precaution was actually
+taken is a point upon which authorities differ; but at all events, with
+injuries so severe as would have sent almost any other man to the
+hospital, he rode forward into the battle.
+
+The contest was kept up until nightfall, without forcing Valencia’s
+intrenchment. General Pierce remained in the saddle until eleven o’clock
+at night. Finding himself, at nine o’clock, the senior officer in the
+field, he, in that capacity, withdrew the troops from their advanced
+position, and concentrated them at the point where they were to pass the
+night. At eleven, beneath a torrent of rain, destitute of a tent or
+other protection, and without food or refreshment, he lay down on an
+ammunition wagon, but was prevented by the pain of his injuries,
+especially that of his wounded knee, from finding any repose. At one
+o’clock came orders from General Scott to put the brigade into a new
+position, in front of the enemy’s works, preparatory to taking part in
+the contemplated operations of the next morning. During the night, the
+troops appointed for that service, under Riley, Shields, Smith, and
+Cadwallader, had occupied the villages and roads between Valencia’s
+position and the city; so that, with daylight, the commanding general’s
+scheme of the battle was ready to be carried out, as it had originally
+existed in his mind.
+
+At daylight, accordingly, Valencia’s intrenched camp was assaulted.
+General Pierce was soon in the saddle at the head of his brigade, which
+retained its position in front, thus serving to attract the enemy’s
+attention, and divert him from the true point of attack. The camp was
+stormed in the rear by the American troops, led on by Riley, Cadwallader,
+and Dimmick; and in the short space of seventeen minutes it had fallen
+into the hands of the assailants, together with a multitude of prisoners.
+The remnant of the routed enemy fled towards Churubusco. As Pierce led
+his brigade in pursuit, crossing the battle-field, and passing through
+the works that had just been stormed, he found the road and adjacent
+fields everywhere strewn with the dead and dying. The pursuit was
+continued until one o’clock, when the foremost of the Americans arrived
+in front of the strong Mexican positions at Churubusco and San Antonio,
+where Santa Alma’s army had been compelled to make a stand, and where the
+great conflict of the day commenced.
+
+General Santa Anna entertained the design of withdrawing his forces
+towards the city. In order to intercept this movement, Pierce’s brigade,
+with other troops, was ordered to pursue a route by which the enemy could
+be attacked in the rear. Colonel Noah E. Smith (a patriotic American,
+long resident in Mexico, whose local and topographical knowledge proved
+eminently serviceable) had offered to point out the road, and was sent to
+summon General Pierce to the presence of the commander-in-chief. When he
+met Pierce, near Coyacan, at the head of his brigade, the heavy fire of
+the batteries had commenced. “He was exceedingly thin,” writes Colonel
+Smith, “worn down by the fatigue and pain of the day and night before,
+and then evidently suffering severely. Still there was a glow in his
+eye, as the cannon boomed, that showed within him a spirit ready for the
+conflict.” He rode up to General Scott, who was at this time sitting on
+horseback beneath a tree, near the church of Coyacan, issuing orders to
+different individuals of his staff. Our account of this interview is
+chiefly taken from the narrative of Colonel Smith, corroborated by other
+testimony.
+
+The commander-in-chief had already heard of the accident that befell
+Pierce the day before; and as the latter approached, General Scott could
+not but notice the marks of pain and physical exhaustion against which
+only the sturdiest constancy of will could have enabled him to bear up.
+“Pierce, my dear fellow,” said he,--and that epithet of familiar kindness
+and friendship, upon the battle-field, was the highest of military
+commendation from such a man,--“you are badly injured; you are not fit to
+be in your saddle.” “Yes, general, I am,” replied Pierce, “in a case
+like this.” “You cannot touch your foot to the stirrup,” said Scott.
+“One of them I can,” answered Pierce. The general looked again at
+Pierce’s almost disabled figure, and seemed on the point of taking his
+irrevocable resolution. “You are rash, General Pierce,” said he; “we
+shall lose you, and we cannot spare you. It is my duty to order you back
+to St. Augustine.” “For God’s sake, general,” exclaimed Pierce, “don’t
+say that! This is the last great battle, and I must lead my brigade!”
+ The commander-in-chief made no further remonstrance, but gave the order
+for Pierce to advance with his brigade.
+
+The way lay through thick standing corn, and over marshy ground
+intersected with ditches, which were filled, or partially so, with water.
+Over some of the narrower of these Pierce leaped his horse. When the
+brigade had advanced about a mile, however, it found itself impeded by a
+ditch ten or twelve feet wide, and six or eight feet deep. It being
+impossible to leap it, General Pierce was lifted from his saddle, and in
+some incomprehensible way, hurt as he was, contrived to wade or scramble
+across this obstacle, leaving his horse on the hither side. The troops
+were now under fire. In the excitement of the battle he forgot his
+injury, and hurried forward, leading the brigade, a distance of two or
+three hundred yards. But the exhaustion of his frame, and particularly
+the anguish of his knee,--made more intolerable by such free use of it,--
+was greater than any strength of nerve, or any degree of mental energy,
+could struggle against. He fell, faint and almost insensible, within
+full range of the enemy’s fire. It was proposed to bear him off the
+field; but, as some of his soldiers approached to lift him, he became
+aware of their purpose, and was partially revived by his determination to
+resist it. “No,” said he, with all the strength he had left, “don’t
+carry me off! Let me lie here!” And there he lay, under the tremendous
+fire of Churubusco, until the enemy, in total rout, was driven from the
+field.
+
+Immediately after the victory, when the city of Mexico lay at the mercy
+of the American commander, and might have been entered that very night,
+Santa Anna sent a flag of truce, proposing an armistice, with a view to
+negotiation for peace. It cannot be considered in any other light than
+as a very high and signal compliment to his gallantry in the field that
+General Pierce was appointed, by the commander-in-chief, one of the
+commissioners on our part, together with General Quitman and General
+Persifer F. Smith, to arrange the terms of this armistice. Pierce was
+unable to walk, or to mount his horse without assistance, when
+intelligence of his appointment reached him. He had not taken off his
+spurs nor slept an hour, for two nights; but he immediately obeyed the
+summons, was assisted into the saddle, and rode to Tacubaya, where, at
+the house of the British consul-general, the American and Mexican
+commissioners were assembled. The conference began late in the
+afternoon, and continued till four o’clock the next morning, when the
+articles were signed. Pierce then proceeded to the quarters of General
+Worth, in the village of Tacubaya, where he obtained an hour or two of
+repose.
+
+The expectation of General Scott, that further bloodshed might be avoided
+by means of the armistice, proved deceptive. Military operations, after
+a temporary interruption, were actively renewed; and on the 8th of
+September was fought the bloody battle of Molino del Rey, one of the
+fiercest and most destructive of the war.
+
+In this conflict General Worth, with three thousand troops, attacked and
+routed fourteen thousand Mexicans, driving them under the protection of
+the Castle of Chepultepec. Perceiving the obstinacy with which the field
+was contested, the commander-in-chief dispatched an order to General
+Pierce to advance to the support of General Worth’s division. He moved
+forward with rapidity; and although the battle was won just as he reached
+the field, he interposed his brigade between Worth and the retreating
+enemy, and thus drew upon himself the fire of Chepultepec. A shell came
+streaming from the castle, and, bursting within a few feet of him,
+startled his horse, which was near plunging over an adjacent precipice.
+Continuing a long time under fire, Pierce’s brigade was engaged in
+removing the wounded and the captured ammunition. While thus occupied,
+he led a portion of his command to repel the attacks of the enemy’s
+skirmishers.
+
+There remained but one other battle,--that of Chepultepec,--which was
+fought on the 13th of September. On the preceding day (although the
+injuries and the over-exertion resulting from previous marches and
+battles had greatly enfeebled him), General Pierce had acted with his
+brigade. In obedience to orders, it had occupied the field of Molino del
+Rey. Contrary to expectation, it was found that the enemy’s force had
+been withdrawn from this position. Pierce remained in the field until
+noon, when, it being certain that the anticipated attack would not take
+place before the following day, he returned to the quarters of General
+Worth, which were near at hand. There he became extremely ill, and was
+unable to leave his bed for the thirty-six hours next ensuing. In the
+mean time, the Castle of Chepultepec was stormed by the troops under
+Generals Pillow and Quitman. Pierce’s brigade behaved itself gallantly,
+and suffered severely; and that accomplished officer, Colonel Ransom,
+leading the Ninth Regiment to the attack, was shot through the head, and
+fell, with many other brave men, in that last battle of the war.
+
+The American troops, under Quitman and Worth, had established themselves
+within the limits of the city, having possession of the gates of Belen
+and of San Cosma, but, up till nightfall, had met with a vigorous
+resistance from the Mexicans, led on by Santa Anna in person. They had
+still, apparently, a desperate task before them. It was anticipated
+that, with the next morning’s light, our troops would be ordered to storm
+the citadel, and the city of Mexico itself. When this was told to
+Pierce, upon his sick-bed, he rose, and attempted to dress himself; but
+Captain Hardcastle, who had brought the intelligence from Worth,
+prevailed upon him to remain in bed, and not to exhaust his scanty
+strength until the imminence of the occasion should require his presence.
+Pierce acquiesced for the time, but again arose, in the course of the
+night, and made his way to the trenches, where he reported himself to
+General Quitman, with whose division was a part of his brigade.
+Quitman’s share in the anticipated assault, it was supposed, owing to the
+position which his troops occupied, would be more perilous than that of
+Worth.
+
+But the last great battle had been fought. In the morning, it was
+discovered that the citadel had been abandoned, and that Santa Anna had
+withdrawn his army from the city.
+
+There never was a more gallant body of officers than those who came from
+civil life into the army on occasion of the Mexican War. All of them,
+from the rank of general downward, appear to have been animated by the
+spirit of young knights, in times of chivalry, when fighting for their
+spurs. Hitherto known only as peaceful citizens, they felt it incumbent
+on them, by daring and desperate valor, to prove their fitness to be
+intrusted with the guardianship of their country’s honor. The old and
+trained soldier, already distinguished on former fields, was free to be
+discreet as well as brave; but these untried warriors were in a different
+position, and therefore rushed on perils with a recklessness that found
+its penalty on every battle-field--not one of which was won without a
+grievous sacrifice of the best blood of America. In this band of gallant
+men, it is not too much to say, General Pierce was as distinguished for
+what we must term his temerity in personal exposure, as for the higher
+traits of leadership, wherever there was an opportunity for their
+display.
+
+He had manifested, moreover, other and better qualities than these, and
+such as it affords his biographer far greater pleasure to record. His
+tenderness of heart, his sympathy, his brotherly or paternal care for his
+men, had been displayed in a hundred instances, and had gained him the
+enthusiastic affection of all who served under his command. During the
+passage from America, under the tropics, he would go down into the
+stifling air of the hold, with a lemon, a cup of tea, and, better and
+more efficacious than all, a kind word for the sick. While encamped
+before Vera Cruz, he gave up his own tent to a sick comrade, and went
+himself to lodge in the pestilential city. On the march, and even on the
+battle-field, he found occasion to exercise those feelings of humanity
+which show most beautifully there. And, in the hospitals of Mexico, he
+went among the diseased and wounded soldiers, cheering them with his
+voice and the magic of his kindness, inquiring into their wants, and
+relieving them to the utmost of his pecuniary means. There was not a man
+of his brigade but loved him, and would have followed him to death, or
+have sacrificed his own life in his general’s defence.
+
+The officers of the old army, whose profession was war, and who well knew
+what a soldier was and ought to be, fully recognized his merit. An
+instance of their honorable testimony in his behalf may fitly be recorded
+here. It was after General Pierce had returned to the United States. At
+a dinner in the halls of Montezuma, at which forty or fifty of the brave
+men above alluded to were present, a young officer of the New England
+Regiment was called on for a toast. He made an address, in which he
+spoke with irrepressible enthusiasm of General Pierce, and begged to
+propose his health. One of the officers of the old line rose, and
+observed that none of the recently appointed generals commanded more
+unanimous and universal respect; that General Pierce had appreciated the
+scientific knowledge of the regular military men, and had acquired their
+respect by the independence, firmness, and promptitude with which he
+exercised his own judgment, and acted on the intelligence derived from
+them. In concluding this tribute of high, but well-considered praise,
+the speaker very cordially acquiesced in the health of General Pierce,
+and proposed that it should be drunk standing, with three times three.
+
+General Pierce remained in Mexico until December, when, as the warfare
+was over, and peace on the point of being concluded, he set out on his
+return. In nine months, crowded full of incident, he had seen far more
+of actual service than many professional soldiers during their whole
+lives. As soon as the treaty of peace was signed, he gave up his
+commission, and returned to the practice of the law, again proposing to
+spend the remainder of his days in the bosom of his family. All the
+dreams of his youth were now fulfilled; the military ardor, that had
+struck an hereditary root in his breast, had enjoyed its scope, and was
+satisfied; and he flattered himself that no circumstances could hereafter
+occur to draw him from the retirement of domestic peace. New Hampshire
+received him with even more enthusiastic affection than ever. At his
+departure, he had received a splendid sword at the hands of many of his
+friends, in token of their confidence; he had shown himself well worthy
+to wear and able to use a soldier’s weapon; and his native state now gave
+him another, the testimonial of approved valor and warlike conduct.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE COMPROMISE AND OTHER MATTERS.
+
+
+The intervening years, since General Pierce’s return from Mexico, and
+until the present time, have been spent in the laborious exercise of the
+legal profession,--an employment scarcely varied or interrupted, except
+by those episodes of political activity which a man of public influence
+finds it impossible to avoid, and in which, if his opinions are matter of
+conscience with him, he feels it his duty to interest himself.
+
+In the presidential canvass of 1848 he used his best efforts (and with
+success, so far as New Hampshire was concerned) in behalf of the
+candidate of his party. A truer and better speech has never been uttered
+on a similar occasion than one which he made (during a hurried half hour,
+snatched from the court rooms) in October of the above year, before the
+democratic state convention, then in session at Concord. It is an
+invariable characteristic of General Pierce’s popular addresses, that
+they evince a genuine respect for the people; he makes his appeal to
+their intelligence, their patriotism, and their integrity, and, never
+doubtful of their upright purpose, proves his faith in the great mind
+and heart of the country both by what he says and by what he refrains
+from saying. He never yet was guilty of an effort to cajole his
+fellow-citizens, to operate upon their credulity, or to trick them even
+into what was right; and therefore all the victories which he has ever
+won in popular assemblies have been triumphs doubly honored, being as
+creditable to his audiences as to himself.
+
+When the series of measures known under the collective term of The
+Compromise were passed by Congress in 1850, and put to so searching a
+test here at the North the reverence of the people for the Constitution
+and their attachment to the Union, General Pierce was true to the
+principles which he had long ago avowed. At an early period of his
+congressional service he had made known, with the perfect frankness of
+his character, those opinions upon the slavery question which he has
+never since seen occasion to change in the slightest degree. There is an
+unbroken consistency in his action with regard to this matter. It is
+entirely of a piece, from his first entrance upon public life until the
+moment when he came forward, while many were faltering, to throw the
+great weight of his character and influence into the scale in favor of
+those measures through which it was intended to redeem the pledges of the
+Constitution, and to preserve and renew the old love and harmony among
+the sisterhood of States. His approval embraced the whole series of
+these acts, as well those which bore hard upon northern views and
+sentiments as those in which the South deemed itself to have made more
+than reciprocal concessions.
+
+No friend nor enemy that know Franklin Pierce would have expected him to
+act otherwise. With his view of the whole subject, whether looking at it
+through the medium of his conscience, his feelings, or his intellect, it
+was impossible for him not to take his stand as the unshaken advocate of
+Union, and of the mutual steps of compromise which that great object
+unquestionably demanded. The fiercest, the least scrupulous, and the
+most consistent of those who battle against slavery recognize the same
+fact that he does. They see that merely human wisdom and human efforts
+cannot subvert it, except by tearing to pieces the Constitution, breaking
+the pledges which it sanctions, and severing into distracted fragments
+that common country which Providence brought into one nation, through a
+continued miracle of almost two hundred years, from the first settlement
+of the American wilderness until the Revolution. In the days when, a
+young member of Congress, he first raised his voice against agitation,
+Pierce saw these perils and their consequences. He considered, too, that
+the evil would be certain, while the good was, at best, a contingency,
+and (to the clear, practical foresight with which he looked into the
+future) scarcely so much as that, attended as the movement was and must
+be during its progress, with the aggravated injury of those whose
+condition it aimed to ameliorate, and terminating, in its possible
+triumph,--if such possibility there were,--with the ruin of two races
+which now dwelt together in greater peace and affection, it is not too
+much to say, than had ever elsewhere existed between the taskmaster and
+the serf.
+
+Of course, there is another view of all these matters. The theorist may
+take that view in his closet; the philanthropist by profession may strive
+to act upon it uncompromisingly, amid the tumult and warfare of his life.
+But the statesman of practical sagacity--who loves his country as it is,
+and evolves good from things as they exist, and who demands to feel his
+firm grasp upon a better reality before he quits the one already gained--
+will be likely here, with all the greatest statesmen of America, to stand
+in the attitude of a conservative. Such, at all events, will be the
+attitude of Franklin Pierce. We have sketched some of the influences
+amid which he grew up, inheriting his father’s love of country, mindful
+of the old patriot’s valor in so many conflicts of the Revolution, and
+having close before his eyes the example of brothers and relatives, more
+than one of whom have bled for America, both at the extremest north and
+farthest south; himself, too, in early manhood, serving the Union in its
+legislative halls, and, at a maturer age, leading his fellow-citizens,
+his brethren, from the widest-sundered states, to redden the same
+battle-fields with their kindred blood, to unite their breath into one
+shout of victory, and perhaps to sleep, side by side, with the same sod
+over them. Such a man, with such hereditary recollections, and such a
+personal experience, must not narrow himself to adopt the cause of one
+section of his native country against another. He will stand up, as he
+has always stood, among the patriots of the whole land. And if the work
+of antislavery agitation, which it is undeniable leaves most men who
+earnestly engage in it with only half a country in their affections,--if
+this work must be done, let others do it.
+
+Those northern men, therefore, who deem the great causes of human welfare
+as represented and involved in this present hostility against southern
+institutions, and who conceive that the world stands still except so far
+as that goes forward,--these, it may be allowed, can scarcely give their
+sympathy or their confidence to the subject of this memoir. But there is
+still another view, and probably as wise a one. It looks upon slavery as
+one of those evils which divine Providence does not leave to be remedied
+by human contrivances, but which, in its own good time, by some means
+impossible to be anticipated, but of the simplest and easiest operation,
+when all its uses shall have been fulfilled, it causes to vanish like a
+dream. There is no instance, in all history, of the human will and
+intellect having perfected any great moral reform by methods which it
+adapted to that end; but the progress of the world, at every step, leaves
+some evil or wrong on the path behind it, which the wisest of mankind, of
+their own set purpose, could never have found the way to rectify.
+Whatever contributes to the great cause of good, contributes to all its
+subdivisions and varieties; and, on this score, the lover of his race,
+the enthusiast, the philanthropist of whatever theory, might lend his aid
+to put a man, like the one before us, into the leadership of the world’s
+affairs.
+
+How firm and conscientious was General Pierce’s support of The Compromise
+may be estimated from his conduct in reference to the Reverend John
+Atwood. In the foregoing pages it has come oftener in our way to
+illustrate the bland and prepossessing features of General Pierce’s
+character, than the sterner ones which must necessarily form the bones,
+so to speak, the massive skeleton, of any man who retains an upright
+attitude amidst the sinister influences of public life. The transaction
+now alluded to affords a favorable opportunity for indicating some of
+these latter traits.
+
+In October, 1850, a democratic convention, held at Concord, nominated Mr.
+Atwood as the party’s regular candidate for governor. The Compromise,
+then recent, was inevitably a prominent element in the discussions of the
+convention; and a series of resolutions were adopted, bearing reference
+to this great subject, fully and unreservedly indorsing the measures
+comprehended under it, and declaring the principles on which the
+Democracy of the state was about to engage in the gubernatorial contest.
+Mr. Atwood accepted the nomination, acceding to the platform thus
+tendered him, taking exceptions to none of the individual resolutions,
+and, of course, pledging himself to the whole by the very act of assuming
+the candidacy, which was predicated upon them.
+
+The reverend candidate, we should conceive, is a well-meaning, and
+probably an amiable man. In ordinary circumstances, he would, doubtless,
+have gone through the canvass triumphantly, and have administered the
+high office to which he aspired with no discredit to the party that had
+placed him at its head. But the disturbed state of the public mind on
+the Compromise question rendered the season a very critical one; and Mr.
+Atwood, unfortunately, had that fatal weakness of character, which,
+however respectably it may pass in quiet times, is always bound to make
+itself pitiably manifest under the pressure of a crisis. A letter was
+addressed to him by a committee, representing the party opposed to The
+Compromise, and with whom, it may be supposed, were included those who
+held the more thorough-going degrees of antislavery sentiment. The
+purpose of the letter was to draw out an expression of Mr. Atwood’s
+opinion on the abolition movement generally, and with an especial
+reference to the Fugitive Slave Law, and whether, as chief magistrate of
+the state, he would favor any attempt for its repeal. In an answer of
+considerable length the candidate expressed sentiments that brought him
+unquestionably within the free soil pale, and favored his correspondents,
+moreover, with a pretty decided judgment as to the unconstitutional,
+unjust, and oppressive character of the Fugitive Slave Law.
+
+During a space of about two months, this very important document was kept
+from the public eye. Rumors of its existence, however, became gradually
+noised abroad, and necessarily attracted the attention of Mr. Atwood’s
+democratic friends. Inquiries being made, he acknowledged the existence
+of the letter, but averred that it had never been delivered, that it was
+merely a rough draught, and that he had hitherto kept it within his own
+control, with a view to more careful consideration. In accordance with
+the advice of friends, he expressed a determination, and apparently in
+good faith, to suppress the letter, and thus to sever all connection with
+the antislavery party. This, however, was now beyond his power. A copy
+of the letter had been taken; it was published, with high commendations,
+in the antislavery newspapers; and Mr. Atwood was exhibited in the
+awkward predicament of directly avowing sentiments on the one hand which
+he had implicitly disavowed on the other, of accepting a nomination based
+on principles diametrically opposite.
+
+The candidate appears to have apprehended this disclosure, and he hurried
+to Concord, and sought counsel of General Pierce, with whom he was on
+terms of personal kindness, and between whom and himself, heretofore,
+there had never been a shade of political difference. An interview with
+the general and one or two other gentlemen ensued. Mr. Atwood was
+cautioned against saying or writing a word that might be repugnant to his
+feelings or his principles; but, voluntarily, and at his own suggestion,
+he now wrote for publication a second letter, in which he retracted every
+objectionable feature of his former one, and took decided ground in favor
+of The Compromise, including all its individual measures. Had he adhered
+to this latter position, he might have come out of the affair, if not
+with the credit of consistency, yet, at least, as a successful candidate
+in the impending election. But his evil fate, or, rather, the natural
+infirmity of his character, was not so to be thrown off. The very next
+day, unhappily, he fell into the hands of some of his antislavery
+friends, to whom he avowed a constant adherence to the principles of his
+first letter, describing the second as having been drawn from him by
+importunity, in an excited state of his mind, and without a full
+realization of its purport.
+
+It would be needlessly cruel to Mr. Atwood to trace with minuteness the
+further details of this affair. It is impossible to withhold from him a
+certain sympathy, or to avoid feeling that a very worthy man, as the
+world goes, had entangled himself in an inextricable knot of duplicity
+and tergiversation, by an ill-advised effort to be two opposite things at
+once. For the sake of true manhood, we gladly turn to consider the
+course adopted by General Pierce.
+
+The election for governor was now at a distance of only a few weeks; and
+it could not be otherwise than a most hazardous movement for the
+democratic party, at so late a period, to discard a candidate with whom
+the people had become familiar. It involved nothing less than the
+imminent peril of that political supremacy which the party had so long
+enjoyed. With Mr. Atwood as candidate, success might be considered as
+certain. To a short-sighted and a weak man, it would have appeared the
+obvious policy to patch up the difficulty, and, at all events, to
+conquer, under whatever leadership, and with whatever allies. But it was
+one of those junctures which test the difference between the man of
+principle and the mere politician--the man of moral courage and him who
+yields to temporary expediency. General Pierce could not consent that
+his party should gain a nominal triumph, at the expense of what he looked
+upon as its real integrity and life. With this view of the matter, he
+had no hesitation in his course; nor could the motives which otherwise
+would have been strongest with him--pity for the situation of an
+unfortunate individual, a personal friend, a Democrat, as Mr. Atwood
+describes himself, of nearly fifty years’ standing--incline him to mercy
+where it would have been fatal to his sense of right. He took decided
+ground against Mr. Atwood. The convention met again, and satisfactory to
+all parties; and one of his political opponents (Professor Sanborn, of
+Dartmouth College) has ably sketched him, both in that aspect and as a
+debater.
+
+“In drawing the portraits of the distinguished members of the
+constitutional convention,” writes the professor, “to pass Frank Pierce
+unnoticed would be as absurd as to enact one of Shakespeare’s dramas
+without its principal hero. I give my impressions of the man as I saw
+him in the convention; for I would not undertake to vouch for the truth
+or falsehood of those veracious organs of public sentiment, at the
+capital, which have loaded him in turn with indiscriminate praise and
+abuse. As a presiding officer, it would be difficult to find his equal.
+In proposing questions to the house, he never hesitates or blunders. In
+deciding points of order, he is both prompt and impartial. His treatment
+of every member of the convention was characterized by uniform courtesy
+and kindness. The deportment of the presiding officer of a deliberative
+body usually gives tone to the debates. If he is harsh, morose, or
+abrupt in his manner, the speakers are apt to catch his spirit by the
+force of involuntary sympathy. The same is true, to some extent, of the
+principal debaters in such a body. When a man of strong prejudices and
+harsh temper rises to address a public assembly, his indwelling
+antipathies speak from every feature of his face and from every motion of
+his person. The audience at once brace themselves against his assaults,
+and condemn his opinions before they are heard. The well-known character
+of an orator persuades or dissuades quite as forcibly as the language he
+utters. Some men never rise to address a deliberative assembly without
+conciliating good will in advance. The smile that plays upon the
+speaker’s face awakens emotions of complacency in those who hear, even
+before he speaks. So does that weight of character, which is the matured
+fruit of long public services and acknowledged worth, soothe, in advance,
+the irritated and angry crowd.
+
+“Mr. Pierce possesses unquestionable ability as a public speaker. Few
+men, in our country, better understand the means of swaying a popular
+assembly, or employ them with greater success. His forte lies in moving
+the passions of those whom he addresses. He knows how to call into
+vigorous action both the sympathies and antipathies of those who listen
+to him. I do not mean to imply by these remarks that his oratory is
+deficient in argument or sound reasoning. On the contrary, he seizes
+with great power upon the strong points of his subject, and presents them
+clearly, forcibly, and eloquently. As a prompt and ready debater, always
+prepared for assault or defence, he has few equals. In these encounters,
+he appears to great advantage, from his happy faculty of turning little
+incidents, unexpectedly occurring, to his own account. A word carelessly
+dropped, or an unguarded allusion to individuals or parties by an
+opponent, is frequently converted into a powerful weapon of assault, by
+this skilful advocate. He has been so much in office that he may be said
+to have been educated in public life. He is most thoroughly versed in
+all the tactics of debate. He is not only remarkably fluent in his
+elocution, but remarkably correct. He seldom miscalls or repeats a word.
+His style is not overloaded with ornament, and yet he draws liberally
+upon the treasury of rhetoric. His figures are often beautiful and
+striking, never incongruous. He is always listened to with respectful
+attention, if he does not always command conviction. From his whole
+course in the convention, a disinterested spectator could not fail to
+form a very favorable opinion, not only of his talent and eloquence, but
+of his generosity and magnanimity.”
+
+Among other antiquated relics of the past, and mouldy types of prejudices
+that ought now to be forgotten, and of which it was the object of the
+present convention to purge the Constitution of New Hampshire, there is a
+provision that certain state offices should be held only by Protestants.
+Since General Pierce’s nomination for the presidency, the existence of
+this religious test has been brought as a charge against him, as if, in
+spite of his continued efforts to remove it, he were personally
+responsible for its remaining on the statute book.
+
+General Pierce has naturally a strong endowment of religious feeling. At
+no period of his life, as is well known to his friends, have the sacred
+relations of the human soul been a matter of indifference with him; and,
+of more recent years, whatever circumstances of good or evil fortune may
+have befallen him, they have alike served to deepen this powerful
+sentiment. Whether in sorrow or success, he has learned, in his own
+behalf, the great lesson, that religious faith is the most valuable and
+most sacred of human possessions; but, with this sense, there has come no
+narrowness or illiberality, but a wide-embracing sympathy for the modes
+of Christian worship, and a reverence for individual belief, as a matter
+between the Deity and man’s soul, and with which no other has a right to
+interfere. With the feeling here described, and with his acute
+intellectual perception of the abortive character of all intolerant
+measures, as defeating their own ends, it strikes one as nothing less
+than ludicrous that he should be charged with desiring to retain this
+obsolete enactment, standing, as it does, as a merely gratuitous and
+otherwise inoperative stigma upon the fair reputation of his native
+state. Even supposing no higher motives to have influenced him, it would
+have sufficed to secure his best efforts for the repeal of the religious
+test that so many of the Catholics have always been found in the
+advance-guard of freedom, marching onward with the progressive party; and
+that, whether in peace or war, they have performed for their adopted
+country the hard toil and the gallant services which she has a right to
+expect from her most faithful citizens.
+
+The truth is that, ever since his entrance upon public life, on all
+occasions,--and often making the occasion where he found none,--General
+Pierce has done his utmost to obliterate this obnoxious feature from the
+Constitution. He has repeatedly advocated the calling of a convention
+mainly for this purpose. In that of 1850, he both spoke and voted in
+favor of the abolition of the test, and, with the aid of Judge Woodbury
+and other democratic members, attained his purpose, so far as the
+convention possessed any power or responsibility in the matter. That the
+measure was ultimately defeated is due to other causes, either temporary
+or of long continuance; and to some of them it is attributable that the
+enlightened public sentiment of New Hampshire was not, long since, made
+to operate upon this enactment, so anomalous in the fundamental law of a
+free state.
+
+In order to the validity of the amendments passed by the convention, it
+was necessary that the people should subsequently act upon them, and pass
+a vote of two thirds in favor of their adoption. The amendments proposed
+by the convention of 1850 were numerous. The Constitution had been
+modified in many and very important particulars, in respect to which the
+popular mind had not previously been made familiar, and on which it had
+not anticipated the necessity of passing judgment. In March, 1851, when
+the vote of the people was taken upon these measures, the Atwood
+controversy was at its height, and threw all matters of less immediate
+interest into the background. During the interval since the adjournment
+of the convention, the whig newspapers had been indefatigable in their
+attempts to put its proceedings in an odious light before the people.
+There had been no period, for many years, in which sinister influences
+rendered it so difficult to draw out an efficient expression of the will
+of the Democracy as on this occasion. It was the result of all these
+obstacles that the doings of the constitutional convention were rejected
+in the mass.
+
+In the ensuing April, the convention reassembled, in order to receive the
+unfavorable verdict of the people upon its proposed amendments. At the
+suggestion of General Pierce, the amendment abolishing the religious test
+was again brought forward, and, in spite of the opposition of the leading
+whig members, was a second time submitted to the people. Nor did the
+struggle in behalf of this enlightened movement terminate here.
+
+At the democratic caucus, in Concord, preliminary to the town meeting, he
+urged upon his political friends the repeal of the test, as a party
+measure; and again, at the town meeting itself, while the balloting was
+going forward, he advocated it on the higher ground of religious freedom,
+and of reverence for what is inviolable in the human soul. Had the
+amendment passed, the credit would have belonged to no man more than to
+General Pierce; and that it failed, and that the free Constitution of New
+Hampshire is still disgraced by a provision which even monarchical
+England has cast off, is a responsibility which must rest elsewhere than
+on his head.
+
+In September, 1851, died that eminent statesman and jurist, Levi
+Woodbury, then occupying the elevated post of judge of the Supreme Court
+of the United States. The connection between him and General Pierce,
+beginning in the early youth of the latter, had been sustained through
+all the subsequent years. They sat together, with but one intervening
+chair between, in the national Senate; they were always advocates of the
+same great measures, and held, through life, a harmony of opinion and
+action, which was never more conspicuous than in the few months that
+preceded Judge Woodbury’s death. At a meeting of the bar, after his
+decease, General Pierce uttered some remarks, full of sensibility, in
+which he referred to the circumstances that had made this friendship an
+inheritance on his part. Had Judge Woodbury survived, it is not
+improbable that his more advanced age, his great public services, and
+equally distinguished zeal in behalf of the Union might have placed him
+in the position now occupied by the subject of this memoir. Fortunate
+the state which, after losing such a son, can still point to another, not
+less worthy to take upon him the charge of the nation’s welfare.
+
+We have now finished our record of Franklin Pierce’s life, and have only
+to describe the posture of affairs which, without his own purpose and
+against his wish, has placed him before the people of the United States
+as a candidate for the presidency.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+HIS NOMINATION FOR THE PRESIDENCY.
+
+
+On the 12th of June, 1852, the democratic national convention assembled
+at Baltimore, in order to select a candidate for the presidency of the
+United States. Many names, eminently distinguished in peace and war, had
+been brought before the public, during several months previous; and among
+them, though by no means occupying a very prominent place, was the name
+of Franklin Pierce. In January of this year, the Democracy of New
+Hampshire had signified its preference of General Pierce as a
+presidential candidate in the approaching canvass--a demonstration which
+drew from him the following response, addressed to his friend, Mr.
+Atherton:--
+
+“I am far from being insensible to the generous confidence so often
+manifested towards me by the people of this state; and although the
+object indicated in the resolution, having particular reference to
+myself, be not one of desire on my part, the expression is not on that
+account less gratifying.
+
+“Doubtless the spontaneous and just appreciation of an intelligent people
+is the best earthly reward for earnest and cheerful services rendered to
+one’s state and country; and while it is a matter of unfeigned regret
+that my life has been so barren of usefulness, I shall ever hold this and
+similar tributes among my most cherished recollections.
+
+“To these, my sincere and grateful acknowledgments, I desire to add that
+the same motives which induced me, several years ago, to retire from
+public life, and which since that time controlled my judgment in this
+respect, now impel me to say that the use of my name in any event, before
+the democratic national convention at Baltimore, to which you are a
+delegate, would be utterly repugnant to my taste and wishes.”
+
+The sentiments expressed in the above letter were genuine, and from his
+heart. He had looked long and closely at the effects of high public
+station on the character and happiness, and on what is the innermost and
+dearest part of a man’s possessions--his independence; and he had
+satisfied himself that office, however elevated, should be avoided for
+one’s own sake, or accepted only as a good citizen would make any other
+sacrifice, at the call and at the need of his country.
+
+As the time for the assembling of the national convention drew near,
+there were other sufficient indications of his sincerity in declining a
+stake in the great game. A circular letter was addressed, by Major
+Scott, of Virginia, to the distinguished Democrats whose claims had
+heretofore been publicly discussed, requesting a statement of their
+opinions on several points, and inquiring what would be the course of
+each of these gentlemen, in certain contingencies, in case of his
+attaining the presidency. These queries, it may be presumed, were of
+such a nature that General Pierce might have answered them, had he seen
+fit to do so, to the satisfaction of Major Scott himself, or to that of
+the southern democratic party, whom it seemed his purpose to represent.
+With not more than one exception, the other statesmen and soldiers, to
+whom the circular had been sent, made a response. General Pierce
+preserved an unbroken silence. It was equivalent to the withdrawal of
+all claims which he might be supposed to possess, in reference to the
+contemplated office; and he thereby repeated, to the delegates of the
+national party, the same avowal of distaste for public life which he had
+already made known to the Democracy of his native state. He had thus
+done everything in his power, actively or passively,--everything that he
+could have done, without showing such an estimate of his position before
+the country as was inconsistent with the modesty of his character,--to
+avoid the perilous and burdensome honor of the candidacy.
+
+The convention met, at the date above mentioned, and continued its
+sessions during four days. Thirty-five ballotings were held, with a
+continually decreasing prospect that the friends of any one of the
+gentlemen hitherto prominent before the people would succeed in obtaining
+the two-thirds vote that was requisite for a nomination. Thus far, not a
+vote had been thrown for General Pierce; but, at the thirty-sixth ballot,
+the delegation of old Virginia brought forward his name. In the course
+of several more trials, his strength increased, very gradually at first,
+but afterwards with a growing impetus, until, at the forty-ninth ballot,
+the votes were for Franklin Pierce two hundred and eighty-two, and eleven
+for all other candidates. Thus Franklin Pierce became the nominee of the
+convention; and as quickly as the lightning flash could blazon it abroad
+his name was on every tongue, from end to end of this vast country.
+Within an hour he grew to be illustrious.
+
+It would be a pretension, which we do not mean to put forward, to assert
+that, whether considering the length and amount of his public services,
+or his prominence before the country, General Pierce stood on equal
+ground with several of the distinguished men whose claims, to use the
+customary phrase, had been rejected in favor of his own. But no man, be
+his public services or sacrifices what they might, ever did or ever could
+possess, in the slightest degree, what we may term a legitimate claim to
+be elevated to the rulership of a free people. The nation would degrade
+itself, and violate every principle upon which its institutions are
+founded, by offering its majestic obedience to one of its citizens as a
+reward for whatever splendor of achievement. The conqueror may assert a
+claim, such as it is, to the sovereignty of the people whom he
+subjugates; but, with us Americans, when a statesman comes to the chief
+direction of affairs, it is at the summons of the nation, addressed to
+the servant whom it deems best fitted to spend his wisdom, his strength,
+and his life in its behalf. On this principle, which is obviously the
+correct one, a candidate’s previous services are entitled to
+consideration only as they indicate the qualities which may enable him to
+render higher services in the position which his countrymen choose that
+he shall occupy. What he has done is of no importance, except as proving
+what he can do. And it is on this score, because they see in his public
+course the irrefragable evidences of patriotism, integrity, and courage,
+and because they recognize in him the noble gift of natural authority,
+and have a prescience of the stately endowment of administrative genius,
+that his fellow-citizens are about to summon Franklin Pierce to the
+presidency. To those who know him well, the event comes, not like
+accident, but as a consummation which might have been anticipated, from
+its innate fitness, and as the final step of a career which, all along,
+has tended thitherward.
+
+It is not as a reward that he will take upon him the mighty burden of
+this office, of which the toil and awful responsibility whiten the
+statesman’s head, and in which, as in more than one instance we have
+seen, the warrior encounters a deadlier risk than in the battle-field.
+When General Pierce received the news of his nomination, it affected him
+with no thrill of joy, but a sadness, which, for many days, was
+perceptible in his deportment. It awoke in his heart the sense of
+religious dependence--a sentiment that has been growing continually
+stronger, through all the trials and experiences of his life; and there
+was nothing feigned in that passage of his beautiful letter, accepting
+the nomination, in which he expresses his reliance upon heavenly support.
+
+The committee, appointed by the Baltimore convention, conveyed to him the
+intelligence of his nomination in the following terms:--
+
+“A national convention of the democratic republican party, which met at
+Baltimore on the first Tuesday in June, unanimously nominated you as a
+candidate for the high trust of the President of the United States. We
+have been delegated to acquaint you with the nomination, and earnestly to
+request that you will accept it. Persuaded as we are that this office
+should never be pursued by an unchastened ambition, it cannot be refused
+by a dutiful patriotism.
+
+“The circumstances under which you will be presented for the canvass of
+your countrymen seem to be propitious to the interests which the
+Constitution intrusts to our Federal Union, and must be auspicious to
+your own name. You come before the people without the impulse of
+personal wishes, and free from selfish expectations. You are identified
+with none of the distractions which have recently disturbed our country,
+whilst you are known to be faithful to the Constitution--to all its
+guaranties and compromises. You will be free to exercise your tried
+abilities, within the path of duty, in protecting that repose we happily
+enjoy, and in giving efficacy and control to those cardinal principles
+that have already illustrated the party which has now selected you as its
+leader--principles that regard the security and prosperity of the whole
+country, and the paramount power of its laws, as indissolubly associated
+with the perpetuity of our civil and religious liberties.
+
+“The convention did not pretermit the duty of reiterating those
+principles, and you will find them prominently set forth in the
+resolutions it adopted. To these we respectfully invite your attention.
+
+“It is firmly believed that to your talents and patriotism the security
+of our holy Union, with its expanded and expanding interests, may be
+wisely trusted, and that, amid all the perils which may assail the
+Constitution, you will have the heart to love and the arm to defend it.”
+
+We quote likewise General Pierce’s reply:--
+
+“I have the honor to acknowledge your personal kindness in presenting me,
+this day, your letter, officially informing me of my nomination, by the
+democratic national convention, as a candidate for the presidency of the
+United States. The surprise with which I received the intelligence of my
+nomination was not unmingled with painful solicitude; and yet it is
+proper for me to say that the manner in which it was conferred was
+peculiarly gratifying.
+
+“The delegation from New Hampshire, with all the glow of state pride, and
+with all the warmth of personal regard, would not have submitted my name
+to the convention, nor would they have cast a vote for me, under
+circumstances other than those which occurred.
+
+“I shall always cherish with pride and gratitude the recollection of the
+fact that the voice which first pronounced, and pronounced alone, came
+from the Mother of States--a pride and gratitude rising above any
+consequences that can betide me personally. May I not regard it as a
+fact pointing to the overthrow of sectional jealousies, and looking to
+the permanent life and vigor of the Union, cemented by the blood of those
+who have passed to their reward?--a Union wonderful in its formation,
+boundless in its hopes, amazing in its destiny.
+
+“I accept the nomination, relying upon an abiding devotion to the
+interests, honor, and glory of the whole country, but, above and beyond
+all, upon a Power superior to all human might--a Power which, from the
+first gun of the Revolution, in every crisis through which we have
+passed, in every hour of acknowledged peril, when the dark clouds had
+shut down over us, has interposed as if to baffle human wisdom, outmarch
+human forecast, and bring out of darkness the rainbow of promise. Weak
+myself, faith and hope repose there in security.
+
+“I accept the nomination upon the platform adopted by the convention, not
+because this is expected of me as a candidate, but because the principles
+it embraces command the approbation of my judgment; and with them, I
+believe I can safely say, there has been no word or act of my life in
+conflict.”
+
+The news of his nomination went abroad over the Union, and, far and wide,
+there came a response, in which was distinguishable a truer appreciation
+of some of General Pierce’s leading traits than could have been
+anticipated, considering the unobtrusive tenor of his legislative life,
+and the lapse of time since he had entirely withdrawn himself from the
+nation’s eye. It was the marvellous and mystic influence of character,
+in regard to which the judgment of the people is so seldom found
+erroneous, and which conveys the perception of itself through some medium
+higher and deeper than the intellect. Everywhere the country knows that
+a man of steadfast will, true heart, and generous qualities has been
+brought forward, to receive the suffrages of his fellow-citizens.
+
+He comes before the people of the United States at a remarkable era in
+the history of this country and of the world. The two great parties of
+the nation appear--at least to an observer somewhat removed from both--to
+have nearly merged into one another; for they preserve the attitude of
+political antagonism rather through the effect of their old organizations
+than because any great and radical principles are at present in dispute
+between them. The measures advocated by the one party, and resisted by
+the other, through a long series of years, have now ceased to be the
+pivots on which the election turns. The prominent statesmen, so long
+identified with those measures, will henceforth relinquish their
+controlling influence over public affairs. Both parties, it may likewise
+be said, are united in one common purpose,--that of preserving our sacred
+Union, as the immovable basis from which the destinies, not of America
+alone, but of mankind at large, may be carried upward and consummated.
+And thus men stand together, in unwonted quiet and harmony, awaiting the
+new movement in advance which all these tokens indicate.
+
+It remains for the citizens of this great country to decide, within the
+next few weeks, whether they will retard the steps of human progress by
+placing at its head an illustrious soldier, indeed, a patriot, and one
+indelibly stamped into the history of the past, but who has already done
+his work, and has not in him the spirit of the present or of the coming
+time; or whether they will put their trust in a new man, whom a life of
+energy and various activity has tested, but not worn out, and advance
+with him into the auspicious epoch upon which we are about to enter.
+
+
+NOTE.
+
+We have done far less than justice to Franklin Pierce’s college standing,
+in our statement in Chapter I. Some circumstances connected with this
+matter are too characteristic not to be reported.
+
+During the first two years, Pierce was extremely inattentive to his
+college duties, bestowing only such modicum of time upon them as was
+requisite to supply the merest superficial acquaintance with the course
+of study for the recitation room. The consequence was that when the
+relative standing of the members of the class was first authoritatively
+ascertained, in the junior year, he found himself occupying precisely the
+lowest position in point of scholarship. In the first mortification of
+wounded pride, he resolved never to attend another recitation, and
+accordingly absented himself from college exercises of all kinds for
+several days, expecting and desiring that some form of punishment, such
+as suspension or expulsion, would be the result. The faculty of the
+college, however, with a wise lenity, took no notice of this behavior;
+and at last, having had time to grow cool, and moved by the grief of his
+friend Little and another classmate, Pierce determined to resume the
+routine of college duties. “But,” said he to his friends, “if I do so,
+you shall see a change!”
+
+Accordingly, from that time forward, he devoted himself to study. His
+mind, having run wild for so long a period, could be reclaimed only by
+the severest efforts of an iron resolution; and for three months
+afterwards, he rose at four in the morning, toiled all day over his
+books, and retired only at midnight, allowing himself but four hours for
+sleep. With habit and exercise, he acquired command over his
+intellectual powers, and was no longer under the necessity of application
+so intense. But from the moment when he made his resolve until the close
+of his college life, he never incurred a censure, never was absent (and
+then unavoidably) but from two college exercises, never went into the
+recitation room without a thorough acquaintance with the subject to be
+recited, and finally graduated as the third scholar of his class.
+Nothing save the low standard of his previous scholarship prevented his
+taking a yet higher rank.
+
+The moral of this little story lies in the stern and continued exercise
+of self-controlling will, which redeemed him from indolence, completely
+changed the aspect of his character, and made this the turning point of
+his life.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHIEFLY ABOUT WAR MATTERS.
+
+By a Peaceable Man.
+
+
+[This article appeared in the “Atlantic Monthly” for July, 1862, and is
+now first reprinted among Hawthorne’s collected writings. The editor of
+the magazine objected to sundry paragraphs in the manuscript, and these
+were cancelled with the consent of the author, who himself supplied all
+the foot-notes that accompanied the article when it was published. It
+has seemed best to retain them in the present reproduction. One of the
+suppressed passages, in which President Lincoln is described, has since
+been printed, and is therefore restored to its proper place in the
+following pages.--G. P. L.]
+
+
+Here is no remoteness of life and thought, no hermetically sealed
+seclusion, except possibly, that of the grave, into which the disturbing
+influences of this war do not penetrate. Of course, the general
+heart-quake of the country long ago knocked at my cottage-door, and
+compelled me, reluctantly, to suspend the contemplation of certain
+fantasies, to which, according to my harmless custom, I was endeavoring
+to give a sufficiently life-like aspect to admit of their figuring in a
+romance. As I make no pretensions to state-craft or soldiership, and
+could promote the common weal neither by valor nor counsel, it seemed, at
+first, a pity that I should be debarred from such unsubstantial business
+as I had contrived for myself, since nothing more genuine was to be
+substituted for it. But I magnanimously considered that there is a kind
+of treason in insulating one’s self from the universal fear and sorrow,
+and thinking one’s idle thoughts in the dread time of civil war; and
+could a man be so cold and hardhearted, he would better deserve to be
+sent to Fort Warren than many who have found their way thither on the
+score of violent, but misdirected sympathies. I remembered the touching
+rebuke administered by King Charles to that rural squire the echo of
+whose hunting-horn came to the poor monarch’s ear on the morning before a
+battle, where the sovereignty and constitution of England were to be set
+at a stake. So I gave myself up to reading newspapers and listening to
+the click of the telegraph, like other people; until, after a great many
+months of such pastime, it grew so abominably irksome that I determined
+to look a little more closely at matters with my own eyes.
+
+Accordingly we set out--a friend and myself--towards Washington, while it
+was still the long, dreary January of our Northern year, though March in
+name; nor were we unwilling to clip a little margin off the five months’
+winter, during which there is nothing genial in New England save the
+fireside. It was a clear, frosty morning, when we started. The sun
+shone brightly on snow-covered hills in the neighborhood of Boston, and
+burnished the surface of frozen ponds; and the wintry weather kept along
+with us while we trundled through Worcester and Springfield, and all
+those old, familiar towns, and through the village-cities of Connecticut.
+In New York the streets were afloat with liquid mud and slosh. Over New
+Jersey there was still a thin covering of snow, with the face of Nature
+visible through the rents in her white shroud, though with little or no
+symptom of reviving life. But when we reached Philadelphia, the air was
+mild and balmy; there was but a patch or two of dingy winter here and
+there, and the bare, brown fields about the city were ready to be green.
+We had met the Spring half-way, in her slow progress from the South; and
+if we kept onward at the same pace, and could get through the Rebel
+lines, we should soon come to fresh grass, fruit-blossoms, green peas,
+strawberries, and all such delights of early summer.
+
+On our way, we heard many rumors of the war, but saw few signs of it.
+The people were staid and decorous, according to their ordinary fashion;
+and business seemed about as brisk as usual,--though, I suppose, it was
+considerably diverted from its customary channels into warlike ones. In
+the cities, especially in New York, there was a rather prominent display
+of military goods at the shop windows,--such as swords with gilded
+scabbards and trappings, epaulets, carabines, revolvers, and sometimes a
+great iron cannon at the edge of the pavement, as if Mars had dropped
+one of his pocket-pistols there, while hurrying to the field. As
+railway-companions, we had now and then a volunteer in his French-gray
+great-coat, returning from furlough, or a new-made officer travelling to
+join his regiment, in his new-made uniform, which was perhaps all of the
+military character that he had about him,--but proud of his eagle-buttons
+and likely enough to do them honor before the gilt should be wholly
+dimmed. The country, in short, so far as bustle and movement went, was
+more quiet than in ordinary times, because so large a proportion of its
+restless elements had been drawn towards the seat of the conflict. But
+the air was full of a vague disturbance. To me, at least, it seemed so,
+emerging from such a solitude as has been hinted at, and the more
+impressible by rumors and indefinable presentiments, since I had not
+lived, like other men, in an atmosphere of continual talk about the war.
+A battle was momentarily expected on the Potomac; for, though our army
+was still on the hither side of the river, all of us were looking towards
+the mysterious and terrible Manassas, with the idea that somewhere in its
+neighborhood lay a ghastly battle-field, yet to be fought, but foredoomed
+of old to be bloodier than the one where we had reaped such shame. Of
+all haunted places, methinks such a destined field should be thickest
+thronged with ugly phantoms, ominous of mischief through ages beforehand.
+
+Beyond Philadelphia there was a much greater abundance of military
+people. Between Baltimore and Washington a guard seemed to hold every
+station along the railroad; and frequently, on the hill-sides, we saw a
+collection of weather-beaten tents, the peaks of which, blackened with
+smoke, indicated that they had been made comfortable by stove-heat
+throughout the winter. At several commanding positions we saw
+fortifications, with the muzzles of cannon protruding from the ramparts,
+the slopes of which were made of the yellow earth of that region, and
+still unsodded; whereas, till these troublous times, there have been no
+forts but what were grass-grown with the lapse of at least a lifetime of
+peace. Our stopping-places were thronged with soldiers, some of whom
+came through the cars asking for newspapers that contained accounts of
+the battle between the Merrimack and Monitor, which had been fought the
+day before. A railway-train met us, conveying a regiment out of
+Washington to some unknown point; and reaching the capital, we filed out
+of the station between lines of soldiers, with shouldered muskets,
+putting us in mind of similar spectacles at the gates of European cities.
+It was not without sorrow that we saw the free circulation of the
+nation’s life-blood (at the very heart, moreover) clogged with such
+strictures as these, which have caused chronic diseases in almost all
+countries save our own. Will the time ever come again, in America, when
+we may live half a score of years without once seeing the likeness of a
+soldier, except it be in the festal march of a company on its summer
+tour? Not in this generation, I fear, nor in the next, nor till the
+Millennium; and even that blessed epoch, as the prophecies seem to
+intimate, will advance to the sound of the trumpet.
+
+One terrible idea occurs in reference to this matter. Even supposing the
+war should end to-morrow, and the army melt into the mass of the
+population within the year, what an incalculable preponderance will there
+be of military titles and pretensions for at least half a century to
+come! Every country-neighborhood will have its general or two, its three
+or four colonels, half a dozen majors, and captains without end,--besides
+non-commissioned officers and privates, more than the recruiting offices
+ever knew of,--all with their campaign-stories, which will become the
+staple of fireside talk forevermore. Military merit, or rather, since
+that is not so readily estimated, military notoriety, will be the measure
+of all claims to civil distinction.--One bullet-headed general will
+succeed another in the Presidential chair; and veterans will hold the
+offices at home and abroad, and sit in Congress and the state
+legislatures, and fill all the avenues of public life. And yet I do not
+speak of this deprecatingly, since, very likely, it may substitute
+something more real and genuine, instead of the many shams on which men
+have heretofore founded their claims to public regard; but it behooves
+civilians to consider their wretched prospects in the future, and assume
+the military button before it is too late.
+
+We were not in time to see Washington as a camp. On the very day of our
+arrival sixty thousand men had crossed the Potomac on their march towards
+Manassas; and almost with their first step into the Virginia mud, the
+phantasmagory of a countless host and impregnable ramparts, before which
+they had so long remained quiescent, dissolved quite away. It was as if
+General McClellan had thrust his sword into a gigantic enemy, and,
+beholding him suddenly collapse, had discovered to himself and the world
+that he had merely punctured an enormously swollen bladder. There are
+instances of a similar character in old romances, where great armies are
+long kept at bay by the arts of necromancers, who build airy towers and
+battlements, and muster warriors of terrible aspect, and thus feign a
+defence of seeming impregnability, until some bolder champion of the
+besiegers dashes forward to try an encounter with the foremost foeman,
+and finds him melt away in the death grapple. With such heroic
+adventures let the march upon Manassas be hereafter reckoned. The whole
+business, though connected with the destinies of a nation, takes
+inevitably a tinge of the ludicrous. The vast preparation of men and
+warlike material,--the majestic patience and docility with which the
+people waited through those weary and dreary months,--the martial skill,
+courage, and caution, with which our movement was ultimately made,--and,
+at last, the tremendous shock with which we were brought suddenly up
+against nothing at all! The Southerners show little sense of humor
+nowadays, but I think they must have meant to provoke a laugh at our
+expense, when they planted those Quaker guns. At all events, no other
+Rebel artillery has played upon us with such overwhelming effect.
+
+The troops being gone, we had the better leisure and opportunity to look
+into other matters. It is natural enough to suppose that the centre and
+heart of Washington is the Capitol; and certainly, in its outward aspect,
+the world has not many statelier or more beautiful edifices, nor any, I
+should suppose, more skilfully adapted to legislative purposes, and to
+all accompanying needs. But, etc., etc. [We omit several paragraphs
+here, in which the author speaks of some prominent Members of Congress
+with a freedom that seems to have been not unkindly meant, but might be
+liable to misconstruction. As he admits that he never listened to an
+important debate, we can hardly recognize his qualifications to estimate
+these gentlemen, in their legislative and oratorical capacities.]
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+We found one man, however, at the Capitol, who was satisfactorily
+adequate to the business which brought him thither. In quest of him, we
+went through halls, galleries, and corridors, and ascended a noble
+staircase, balustraded with a dark and beautifully variegated marble from
+Tennessee, the richness of which is quite a sufficient cause for
+objecting to the secession of that State. At last we came to a barrier
+of pine boards, built right across the stairs. Knocking at a rough,
+temporary door, we thrust a card beneath; and in a minute or two it was
+opened by a person in his shirt-sleeves, a middle-aged figure, neither
+tall nor short, of Teutonic build and aspect, with an ample beard of a
+ruddy tinge and chestnut hair. He looked at us, in the first place, with
+keen and somewhat guarded eyes, as if it were not his practice to
+vouchsafe any great warmth of greeting, except upon sure ground of
+observation. Soon, however, his look grew kindly and genial (not that it
+had ever been in the least degree repulsive, but only reserved), and
+Leutze allowed us to gaze at the cartoon of his great fresco, and talked
+about it unaffectedly, as only a man of true genius can speak of his own
+works. Meanwhile the noble design spoke for itself upon the wall. A
+sketch in color, which we saw afterwards, helped us to form some distant
+and flickering notion of what the picture will be, a few months hence,
+when these bare outlines, already so rich in thought and suggestiveness,
+shall glow with a fire of their own,--a fire which, I truly believe, will
+consume every other pictorial decoration of the Capitol, or, at least,
+will compel us to banish those stiff and respectable productions to some
+less conspicuous gallery. The work will be emphatically original and
+American, embracing characteristics that neither art nor literature have
+yet dealt with, and producing new forms of artistic beauty from the
+natural features of the Rocky-Mountain region, which Leutze seems to have
+studied broadly and minutely. The garb of the hunters and wanderers of
+those deserts, too, under his free and natural management, is shown as
+the most picturesque of costumes. But it would be doing this admirable
+painter no kind office to overlay his picture with any more of my
+colorless and uncertain words; so I shall merely add that it looked full
+of energy, hope, progress, irrepressible movement onward, all represented
+in a momentary pause of triumph; and it was most cheering to feel its
+good augury at this dismal time, when our country might seem to have
+arrived at such a deadly stand-still.
+
+It was an absolute comfort, indeed, to find Leutze so quietly busy at
+this great national work, which is destined to glow for centuries on the
+walls of the Capitol, if that edifice shall stand, or must share its
+fate, if treason shall succeed in subverting it with the Union which it
+represents. It was delightful to see him so calmly elaborating his
+design, while other men doubted and feared, or hoped treacherously, and
+whispered to one another that the nation would exist only a little
+longer, or that, if a remnant still held together, its centre and seat of
+government would be far northward and westward of Washington. But the
+artist keeps right on, firm of heart and hand, drawing his outlines with
+an unwavering pencil, beautifying and idealizing our rude, material life,
+and thus manifesting that we have an indefeasible claim to a more
+enduring national existence. In honest truth, what with the
+hope-inspiring influence of the design, and what with Leutze’s
+undisturbed evolvement of it, I was exceedingly encouraged, and allowed
+these cheerful auguries to weigh against a sinister omen that was pointed
+out to me in another part of the Capitol. The freestone walls of the
+central edifice are pervaded with great cracks, and threaten to come
+thundering down, under the immense weight of the iron dome,--an
+appropriate catastrophe enough if it should occur on the day when we drop
+the Southern stars out of our flag.
+
+Everybody seems to be at Washington, and yet there is a singular dearth
+of imperatively noticeable people there. I question whether there are
+half a dozen individuals, in all kinds of eminence, at whom a stranger,
+wearied with the contact of a hundred moderate celebrities, would turn
+round to snatch a second glance. Secretary Seward, to be sure,--a pale,
+large-nosed, elderly man, of moderate stature, with a decided originality
+of gait and aspect, and a cigar in his mouth,--etc., etc.
+[We are again compelled to interfere with our friend’s license of
+personal description and criticism. Even Cabinet Ministers (to whom the
+next few pages of the article were devoted) had their private immunities,
+which ought to be conscientiously observed,--unless, indeed, the writer
+chanced to have some very piquant motives for violating them.]
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+Of course, there was one other personage, in the class of statesmen, whom
+I should have been truly mortified to leave Washington without seeing;
+since (temporarily, at least, and by force of circumstances) he was the
+man of men. But a private grief had built up a barrier about him,
+impeding the customary free intercourse of Americans with their chief
+magistrate; so that I might have come away without a glimpse of his very
+remarkable physiognomy, save for a semi-official opportunity of which I
+was glad to take advantage. The fact is, we were invited to annex
+ourselves, as supernumeraries, to a deputation that was about to wait
+upon the President, from a Massachusetts whip-factory, with a present of
+a splendid whip.
+
+Our immediate party consisted only of four or five (including Major Ben
+Perley Poore, with his note-book and pencil), but we were joined by
+several other persons, who seemed to have been lounging about the
+precincts of the White House, under the spacious porch, or within the
+hall, and who swarmed in with us to take the chances of a presentation.
+Nine o’clock had been appointed as the time for receiving the deputation,
+and we were punctual to the moment; but not so the President, who sent us
+word that he was eating his breakfast, and would come as soon as he
+could. His appetite, we were glad to think, must have been a pretty fair
+one; for we waited about half an hour in one of the antechambers, and
+then were ushered into a reception-room, in one corner of which sat the
+Secretaries of War and of the Treasury, expecting, like ourselves, the
+termination of the Presidential breakfast. During this interval there
+were several new additions to our group, one or two of whom were in a
+working-garb, so that we formed a very miscellaneous collection of
+people, mostly unknown to each other, and without any common sponsor, but
+all with an equal right to look our head-servant in the face.
+
+By and by there was a little stir on the staircase and in the
+passage-way, and in lounged a tall, loose-jointed figure, of an
+exaggerated Yankee port and demeanor, whom (as being about the homeliest
+man I ever saw, yet by no means repulsive or disagreeable) it was
+impossible not to recognize as Uncle Abe.
+
+Unquestionably, Western man though he be, and Kentuckian by birth,
+President Lincoln is the essential representative of all Yankees, and the
+veritable specimen, physically, of what the world seems determined to
+regard as our characteristic qualities. It is the strangest and yet the
+fittest thing in the jumble of human vicissitudes, that he, out of so
+many millions, unlooked for, unselected by any intelligible process that
+could be based upon his genuine qualities, unknown to those who chose
+him, and unsuspected of what endowments may adapt him for his tremendous
+responsibility, should have found the way open for him to fling his lank
+personality into the chair of state,--where, I presume, it was his first
+impulse to throw his legs on the council-table, and tell the Cabinet
+Ministers a story. There is no describing his lengthy awkwardness, nor
+the uncouthness of his movement; and yet it seemed as if I had been in
+the habit of seeing him daily, and had shaken hands with him a thousand
+times in some village street; so true was he to the aspect of the pattern
+American, though with a certain extravagance which, possibly, I
+exaggerated still further by the delighted eagerness with which I took it
+in. If put to guess his calling and livelihood, I should have taken him
+for a country schoolmaster as soon as anything else. He was dressed in a
+rusty black frock-coat and pantaloons, unbrushed, and worn so faithfully
+that the suit had adapted itself to the curves and angularities of his
+figure, and had grown to be an outer skin of the man. He had shabby
+slippers on his feet. His hair was black, still unmixed with gray,
+stiff, somewhat bushy, and had apparently been acquainted with neither
+brush nor comb that morning, after the disarrangement of the pillow; and
+as to a night-cap, Uncle Abe probably knows nothing of such effeminacies.
+His complexion is dark and sallow, betokening, I fear, an insalubrious
+atmosphere around the White House; he has thick black eyebrows and an
+impending brow; his nose is large, and the lines about his mouth are very
+strongly defined.
+
+The whole physiognomy is as coarse a one as you would meet anywhere in
+the length and breadth of the States; but, withal, it is redeemed,
+illuminated, softened, and brightened by a kindly though serious look out
+of his eyes, and an expression of homely sagacity, that seems weighted
+with rich results of village experience. A great deal of native sense;
+no bookish cultivation, no refinement; honest at heart, and thoroughly
+so, and yet, in some sort, sly,--at least, endowed with a sort of tact
+and wisdom that are akin to craft, and would impel him, I think, to take
+an antagonist in flank, rather than to make a bull-run at him right in
+front. But, on the whole, I like this sallow, queer, sagacious visage,
+with the homely human sympathies that warmed it; and, for my small share
+in the matter, would as lief have Uncle Abe for a ruler as any man whom
+it would have been practicable to put in his place.
+
+Immediately on his entrance the President accosted our member of
+Congress, who had us in charge, and, with a comical twist of his face,
+made some jocular remark about the length of his breakfast. He then
+greeted us all round, not waiting for an introduction, but shaking and
+squeezing everybody’s hand with the utmost cordiality, whether the
+individual’s name was announced to him or not. His manner towards us was
+wholly without pretence, but yet had a kind of natural dignity, quite
+sufficient to keep the forwardest of us from clapping him on the shoulder
+and asking him for a story. A mutual acquaintance being established, our
+leader took the whip out of its case, and began to read the address of
+presentation. The whip was an exceedingly long one, its handle wrought
+in ivory (by some artist in the Massachusetts State Prison, I believe),
+and ornamented with a medallion of the President, and other equally
+beautiful devices; and along its whole length there was a succession of
+golden bands and ferrules. The address was shorter than the whip, but
+equally well made, consisting chiefly of an explanatory description of
+these artistic designs, and closing with a hint that the gift was a
+suggestive and emblematic one, and that the President would recognize the
+use to which such an instrument should be put.
+
+This suggestion gave Uncle Abe rather a delicate task in his reply,
+because, slight as the matter seemed, it apparently called for some
+declaration, or intimation, or faint foreshadowing of policy in reference
+to the conduct of the war, and the final treatment of the Rebels. But
+the President’s Yankee aptness and not-to-be-caughtness stood him in good
+stead, and he jerked or wiggled himself out of the dilemma with an
+uncouth dexterity that was entirely in character; although, without his
+gesticulation of eye and month,--and especially the flourish of the whip,
+with which he imagined himself touching up a pair of fat horses,--I doubt
+whether his words would be worth recording, even if I could remember
+them. The gist of the reply was, that he accepted the whip as an emblem
+of peace; not punishment; and, this great affair over, we retired out of
+the presence in high good-humor, only regretting that we could not have
+seen the President sit down and fold up his legs (which is said to be a
+most extraordinary spectacle), or have heard him tell one of those
+delectable stories for which he is so celebrated. A good many of them
+are afloat upon the common talk of Washington, and are certainly the
+aptest, pithiest, and funniest little things imaginable; though, to be
+sure, they smack of the frontier freedom, and would not always bear
+repetition in a drawing-room, or on the immaculate page of the Atlantic.
+
+
+[The above passage relating to President Lincoln was one of those omitted
+from the article as originally published, and the following note was
+appended to explain the omission, which had been indicated by a line of
+points:--
+
+We are compelled to omit two or three pages, in which the author
+describes the interview, and gives his idea of the personal appearance
+and deportment of the President. The sketch appears to have been written
+in a benign spirit, and perhaps conveys a not inaccurate impression of
+its august subject; but it lacks reverence, and it pains us to see a
+gentleman of ripe age, and who has spent years under the corrective
+influence of foreign institutions, falling into the characteristic and
+most ominous fault of Young America.]
+
+
+Good Heavens! what liberties have I been taking with one of the
+potentates of the earth, and the man on whose conduct more important
+consequences depend than on that of any other historical personage of the
+century! But with whom is an American citizen entitled to take a
+liberty, if not with his own chief magistrate? However, lest the above
+allusions to President Lincoln’s little peculiarities (already well known
+to the country and to the world) should be misinterpreted, I deem it
+proper to say a word or two in regard to him, of unfeigned respect and
+measurable confidence. He is evidently a man of keen faculties, and,
+what is still more to the purpose, of powerful character. As to his
+integrity, the people have that intuition of it which is never deceived.
+Before he actually entered upon his great office, and for a considerable
+time afterwards, there is no reason to suppose that he adequately
+estimated the gigantic task about to be imposed on him, or, at least, had
+any distinct idea how it was to be managed; and I presume there may have
+been more than one veteran politician who proposed to himself to take the
+power out of President Lincoln’s hands into his own, leaving our honest
+friend only the public responsibility for the good or ill success of the
+career. The extremely imperfect development of his statesmanly
+qualities, at that period, may have justified such designs. But the
+President is teachable by events, and has now spent a year in a very
+arduous course of education; he has a flexible mind, capable of much
+expansion, and convertible towards far loftier studies and activities
+than those of his early life; and if he came to Washington a backwoods
+humorist, he has already transformed himself into as good a statesman (to
+speak moderately) as his prime-minister.
+
+Among other excursions to camps and places of interest in the
+neighborhood of Washington, we went, one day, to Alexandria. It is a
+little port on the Potomac, with one or two shabby wharves and docks,
+resembling those of a fishing-village in New England, and the respectable
+old brick town rising gently behind. In peaceful times it no doubt bore
+an aspect of decorous quietude and dulness; but it was now thronged with
+the Northern soldiery, whose stir and bustle contrasted strikingly with
+the many closed warehouses, the absence of citizens from their customary
+haunts, and the lack of any symptom of healthy activity, while
+army-wagons trundled heavily over the pavements, and sentinels paced the
+sidewalks, and mounted dragoons dashed to and fro on military errands. I
+tried to imagine how very disagreeable the presence of a Southern army
+would be in a sober town of Massachusetts; and the thought considerably
+lessened my wonder at the cold and shy regards that are cast upon our
+troops, the gloom, the sullen demeanor, the declared or scarcely hidden
+sympathy with rebellion, which are so frequent here. It is a strange
+thing in human life, that the greatest errors both of men and women often
+spring from their sweetest and most generous qualities; and so,
+undoubtedly, thousands of warm-hearted, sympathetic, and impulsive
+persons have joined the Rebels, not from any real zeal for the cause, but
+because, between two conflicting loyalties, they chose that which
+necessarily lay nearest the heart. There never existed any other
+government against which treason was so easy, and could defend itself by
+such plausible arguments, as against that of the United States. The
+anomaly of two allegiances (of which that of the State comes nearest home
+to a man’s feelings, and includes the altar and the hearth, while the
+General Government claims his devotion only to an airy mode of law, and
+has no symbol but a flag) is exceedingly mischievous in this point of
+view; for it has converted crowds of honest people into traitors, who
+seem to themselves not merely innocent but patriotic, and who die for a
+bad cause with as quiet a conscience as if it were the best. In the vast
+extent of our country,--too vast by far to be taken into one small human
+heart,--we inevitably limit to our own State, or, at farthest, to our own
+section, that sentiment of physical love for the soil which renders an
+Englishman, for example, so intensely sensitive to the dignity and
+well-being of his little island, that one hostile foot, treading anywhere
+upon it, would make a bruise on each individual breast. If a man loves
+his individual State, therefore, and is content to be ruined with her,
+let us shoot him if we can, but allow him an honorable burial in the soil
+he fights for.
+
+[We do not thoroughly comprehend the author’s drift in the foregoing
+paragraph, but are inclined to think its tone reprehensible, and its
+tendency impolitic in the present stage of our national difficulties.]
+
+In Alexandria we visited the tavern in which Colonel Ellsworth was
+killed, and saw the spot where he fell, and saw the stairs below, whence
+Jackson fired the fatal shot, and where he himself was slain a moment
+afterwards; so that the assassin and his victim must have met on the
+threshold of the spirit-world, and perhaps came to a better understanding
+before they had taken many steps on the other side. Ellsworth was too
+generous to bear an immortal grudge for a deed like that, done in hot
+blood, and by no skulking enemy. The memorial-hunters have completely
+cut away the original wood-work around the spot, with their
+pocket-knives; and the staircase, balustrade, and floor, as well as the
+adjacent doors and door-frames, have recently been renewed; the walls,
+moreover, are covered with new paper-hangings, the former having been
+torn off in tatters; and thus it becomes something like a metaphysical
+question whether the place of the murder actually exists.
+
+Driving out of Alexandria, we stopped on the edge of the city to inspect
+an old slave-pen, which is one of the lions of the place, but a very poor
+one; and a little farther on, we came to a brick church, where Washington
+used sometimes to attend service,--a pre-Revolutionary edifice, with ivy
+growing over its walls, though not very luxuriantly. Reaching the open
+country, we saw forts and camps on all sides; some of the tents being
+placed immediately on the ground, while others were raised over a
+basement of logs, laid lengthwise, like those of a log-hut, or driven
+vertically into the soil in a circle,--thus forming a solid wall, the
+chinks closed up with Virginia mud, and above it the pyramidal shelter of
+the tent. Here were in progress all the occupations, and all the
+idleness, of the soldier in the tented field: some were cooking the
+company-rations in pots hung over fires in the open air; some played at
+ball, or developed their muscular power by gymnastic exercise; some read
+newspapers; some smoked cigars or pipes; and many were cleaning their
+arms or accoutrements,--the more carefully, perhaps, because their
+division was to be reviewed by the Commander-in-Chief that afternoon;
+others sat on the ground, while their comrades cut their hair,--it being
+a soldierly fashion (and for excellent reasons) to crop it within an inch
+of the skull; others, finally, lay asleep in breast-high tents, with
+their legs protruding into the open air.
+
+We paid a visit to Fort Ellsworth, and from its ramparts (which have been
+heaped up out of the muddy soil within the last few months, and will
+require still a year or two to make them verdant) we had a beautiful view
+of the Potomac, a truly majestic river, and the surrounding country. The
+fortifications, so numerous in all this region, and now so unsightly with
+their bare, precipitous sides, will remain as historic monuments,
+grass-grown and picturesque memorials of an epoch of terror and
+suffering: they will serve to make our country dearer and more
+interesting to us, and afford fit soil for poetry to root itself in: for
+this is a plant which thrives best in spots where blood has been spilt
+long ago, and grows in abundant clusters in old ditches, such as the moat
+around Fort Ellsworth will be a century hence. It may seem to be paying
+dear for what many will reckon but a worthless weed; but the more
+historical associations we can link with our localities, the richer will
+be the daily life that feeds upon the past, and the more valuable the
+things that have been long established: so that our children will be less
+prodigal than their fathers in sacrificing good institutions to
+passionate impulses and impracticable theories. This herb of grace, let
+us hope, will be found in the old footprints of the war.
+
+Even in an aesthetic point of view, however, the war has done a great
+deal of enduring mischief, by causing the devastation of great tracts of
+woodland scenery, in which this part of Virginia would appear to be very
+rich. Around all the encampments, and everywhere along the road, we saw
+the bare sites of what had evidently been tracts of hard-wood forest,
+indicated by the unsightly stumps of well-grown trees, not smoothly
+felled by regular axe-men, but hacked, haggled, and unevenly amputated,
+as by a sword or other miserable tool, in an unskilful hand. Fifty years
+will not repair this desolation. An army destroys everything before and
+around it, even to the very grass; for the sites of the encampments are
+converted into barren esplanades, like those of the squares in French
+cities, where not a blade of grass is allowed to grow. As to the other
+symptoms of devastation and obstruction, such as deserted houses,
+unfenced fields, and a general aspect of nakedness and ruin, I know not
+how much may be due to a normal lack of neatness in the rural life of
+Virginia, which puts a squalid face even upon a prosperous state of
+things; but undoubtedly the war must have spoilt what was good, and made
+the bad a great deal worse. The carcasses of horses were scattered along
+the wayside.
+
+One very pregnant token of a social system thoroughly disturbed was
+presented by a party of contrabands, escaping out of the mysterious
+depths of Secessia; and its strangeness consisted in the leisurely delay
+with which they trudged forward, as dreading no pursuer, and encountering
+nobody to turn them back. They were unlike the specimens of their race
+whom we are accustomed to see at the North, and, in my judgment, were far
+more agreeable. So rudely were they attired,--as if their garb had grown
+upon them spontaneously,--so picturesquely natural in manners, and
+wearing such a crust of primeval simplicity (which is quite polished away
+from the Northern black man), that they seemed a kind of creature by
+themselves, not altogether human, but perhaps quite as good, and akin to
+the fawns and rustic deities of olden times. I wonder whether I shall
+excite anybody’s wrath by saying this. It is no great matter. At all
+events, I felt most kindly towards these poor fugitives, but knew not
+precisely what to wish in their behalf, nor in the least how to help
+them. For the sake of the manhood which is latent in them, I would not
+have turned them back; but I should have felt almost as reluctant, on
+their own account, to hasten them forward to the stranger’s land; and I
+think my prevalent idea was, that, whoever may be benefited by the
+results of this war, it will not be the present generation of negroes,
+the childhood of whose race is now gone forever, and who must henceforth
+fight a hard battle with the world, on very unequal terms. On behalf of
+my own race, I am glad and can only hope that an inscrutable Providence
+means good to both parties.
+
+There is an historical circumstance, known to few, that connects the
+children of the Puritans with these Africans of Virginia in a very
+singular way. They are our brethren, as being lineal descendants from
+the Mayflower, the fated womb of which, in her first voyage, sent forth a
+brood of Pilgrims on Plymouth Rock, and, in a subsequent one, spawned
+slaves upon the Southern soil,--a monstrous birth, but with which we have
+an instinctive sense of kindred, and so are stirred by an irresistible
+impulse to attempt their rescue, even at the cost of blood and ruin. The
+character of our sacred ship, I fear, may suffer a little by this
+revelation; but we must let her white progeny offset her dark one,--and
+two such portents never sprang from an identical source before.
+
+While we drove onward, a young officer on horseback looked earnestly into
+the carriage, and recognized some faces that he had seen before; so he
+rode along by our side, and we pestered him with queries and
+observations, to which he responded more civilly than they deserved. He
+was on General McClellan’s staff; and a gallant cavalier, high-booted,
+with a revolver in his belt, and mounted on a noble horse, which trotted
+hard and high without disturbing the rider in his accustomed seat. His
+face had a healthy hue of exposure and an expression of careless
+hardihood; and, as I looked at him, it seemed to me that the war had
+brought good fortune to the youth of this epoch, if to none beside; since
+they now make it their daily business to ride a horse and handle a sword,
+instead of lounging listlessly through the duties, occupations,
+pleasures--all tedious alike--to which the artificial state of society
+limits a peaceful generation. The atmosphere of the camp and the smoke
+of the battle-field are morally invigorating; the hardy virtues flourish
+in them, the nonsense dies like a wilted weed. The enervating effects of
+centuries of civilization vanish at once, and leave these young men to
+enjoy a life of hardship, and the exhilarating sense of danger,--to kill
+men blamelessly, or to be killed gloriously,--and to be happy in
+following out their native instincts of destruction, precisely in the
+spirit of Homer’s heroes, only with some considerable change of mode.
+One touch of Nature makes not only the whole world, but all time, akin.
+Set men face to face, with weapons in their hands, and they are as ready
+to slaughter one another now, after playing at peace and good-will for so
+many years, as in the rudest ages, that never heard of peace-societies,
+and thought no wine so delicious as what they quaffed from an enemy’s
+skull. Indeed, if the report of a Congressional committee may be
+trusted, that old-fashioned kind of goblet has again come into use at the
+expense of our Northern head-pieces,--a costly drinking-cup to him that
+furnishes it! Heaven forgive me for seeming to jest upon such a
+subject!--only, it is so odd, when we measure our advances from
+barbarism, and find ourselves just here! [We hardly expected this
+outbreak in favor of war from the Peaceable Man; but the justness of our
+cause makes us all soldiers at heart, however quiet in our outward life.
+We have heard of twenty Quakers in a single company of a Pennsylvania
+regiment.]
+
+We now approached General McClellan’s head-quarters, which, at that time,
+were established at Fairfield Seminary. The edifice was situated on a
+gentle elevation, amid very agreeable scenery, and, at a distance, looked
+like a gentleman’s seat. Preparations were going forward for reviewing a
+division of ten or twelve thousand men, the various regiments composing
+which had begun to array themselves on an extensive plain, where,
+methought, there was a more convenient place for a battle than is usually
+found in this broken and difficult country. Two thousand cavalry made a
+portion of the troops to be reviewed. By and by we saw a pretty numerous
+troop of mounted officers, who were congregated on a distant part of the
+plain, and whom we finally ascertained to be the Commander-in-Chief’s
+staff, with McClellan himself at their head. Our party managed to
+establish itself in a position conveniently close to the General, to
+whom, moreover, we had the honor of an introduction; and he bowed, on his
+horseback, with a good deal of dignity and martial courtesy, but no airs
+nor fuss nor pretension beyond what his character and rank inevitably
+gave him.
+
+Now, at that juncture, and in fact, up to the present moment, there was,
+and is, a most fierce and bitter outcry, and detraction loud and low,
+against General McClellan, accusing him of sloth, imbecility, cowardice,
+treasonable purposes, and, in short, utterly denying his ability as a
+soldier, and questioning his integrity as a man. Nor was this to be
+wondered at; for when before, in all history, do we find a general in
+command of half a million of men, and in presence of an enemy inferior in
+numbers and no better disciplined than his own troops, leaving it still
+debatable, after the better part of a year, whether he is a soldier or
+no? The question would seem to answer itself in the very asking.
+Nevertheless, being most profoundly ignorant of the art of war, like the
+majority of the General’s critics, and, on the other hand, having some
+considerable impressibility by men’s characters, I was glad of the
+opportunity to look him in the face, and to feel whatever influence might
+reach me from his sphere. So I stared at him, as the phrase goes, with
+all the eyes I had; and the reader shall have the benefit of what I saw,
+--to which he is the more welcome, because, in writing this article, I
+feel disposed to be singularly frank, and can scarcely restrain myself
+from telling truths the utterance of which I should get slender thanks
+for.
+
+The General was dressed in a simple, dark-blue uniform, without epaulets,
+booted to the knee, and with a cloth cap upon his head; and, at first
+sight, you might have taken him for a corporal of dragoons, of
+particularly neat and soldier-like aspect, and in the prime of his age
+and strength. He is only of middling stature, but his build is very
+compact and sturdy, with broad shoulders and a look of great physical
+vigor, which, in fact, he is said to possess,--he and Beauregard having
+been rivals in that particular, and both distinguished above other men.
+His complexion is dark and sanguine, with dark hair. He has a strong,
+bold, soldierly face, full of decision; a Roman nose, by no means a thin
+prominence, but very thick and firm; and if he follows it (which I should
+think likely), it may be pretty confidently trusted to guide him aright.
+His profile would make a more effective likeness than the full face,
+which, however, is much better in the real man than in any photograph
+that I have seen. His forehead is not remarkably large, but comes
+forward at the eyebrows; it is not the brow nor countenance of a
+prominently intellectual man (not a natural student, I mean, or abstract
+thinker), but of one whose office it is to handle things practically and
+to bring about tangible results. His face looked capable of being very
+stern, but wore, in its repose, when I saw it, an aspect pleasant and
+dignified; it is not, in its character, an American face, nor an English
+one. The man on whom he fixes his eye is conscious of him. In his
+natural disposition, he seems calm and self-possessed, sustaining his
+great responsibilities cheerfully, without shrinking, or weariness, or
+spasmodic effort, or damage to his health, but all with quiet, deep-drawn
+breaths; just as his broad shoulders would bear up a heavy burden without
+aching beneath it.
+
+After we had had sufficient time to peruse the man (so far as it could be
+done with one pair of very attentive eyes), the General rode off,
+followed by his cavalcade, and was lost to sight among the troops. They
+received him with loud shouts, by the eager uproar of which--now near,
+now in the centre, now on the outskirts of the division, and now sweeping
+back towards us in a great volume of sound--we could trace his progress
+through the ranks. If he is a coward, or a traitor, or a humbug, or
+anything less than a brave, true, and able man, that mass of intelligent
+soldiers, whose lives and honor he had in charge, were utterly deceived,
+and so was this present writer; for they believed in him, and so did I;
+and had I stood in the ranks, should have shouted with the lustiest of
+them. Of course I may be mistaken; my opinion on such a point is worth
+nothing, although my impression may be worth a little more; neither do I
+consider the General’s antecedents as bearing very decided testimony to
+his practical soldiership. A thorough knowledge of the science of war
+seems to be conceded to him; he is allowed to be a good military critic;
+but all this is possible without his possessing any positive qualities of
+a great general, just as a literary critic may show the profoundest
+acquaintance with the principles of epic poetry without being able to
+produce a single stanza of an epic poem. Nevertheless, I shall not give
+up my faith in General McClellan’s soldiership until he is defeated, nor
+in his courage and integrity even then.
+
+Another of our excursions was to Harper’s Ferry,--the Directors of the
+Baltimore and Ohio Railroad having kindly invited us to accompany them on
+the first trip over the newly laid track, after its breaking up by the
+Rebels. It began to rain, in the early morning, pretty soon after we
+left Washington, and continued to pour a cataract throughout the day; so
+that the aspect of the country was dreary, where it would otherwise have
+been delightful, as we entered among the hill-scenery that is formed by
+the subsiding swells of the Alleghanies. The latter part of our journey
+lay along the shore of the Potomac, in its upper course, where the margin
+of that noble river is bordered by gray, over-hanging crags, beneath
+which--and sometimes right through them--the railroad takes its way. In
+one place the Rebels had attempted to arrest a train by precipitating an
+immense mass of rock down upon the track, by the side of which it still
+lay, deeply imbedded in the ground, and looking as if it might have lain
+there since the Deluge. The scenery grew even more picturesque as we
+proceeded, the bluffs becoming very bold in their descent upon the river,
+which, at Harper’s Ferry, presents as striking a vista among the hills as
+a painter could desire to see. But a beautiful landscape is a luxury,
+and luxuries are thrown away amid discomfort; and when we alighted in the
+tenacious mud and almost fathomless puddle, on the hither side of the
+Ferry (the ultimate point to which the cars proceeded, since the railroad
+bridge had been destroyed by the Rebels), I cannot remember that any very
+rapturous emotions were awakened by the scenery.
+
+We paddled and floundered over the ruins of the track, and, scrambling
+down an embankment, crossed the Potomac by a pontoon-bridge, a thousand
+feet in length, over the narrow line of which--level with the river, and
+rising and subsiding with it--General Banks had recently led his whole
+army, with its ponderous artillery and heavy laden wagons. Yet our own
+tread made it vibrate. The broken bridge of the railroad was a little
+below us, and at the base of one of its massive piers, in the rocky bed
+of the river, lay a locomotive, which the Rebels had precipitated there.
+
+As we passed over, we looked towards the Virginia shore, and beheld the
+little town of Harper’s Ferry, gathered about the base of a round hill
+and climbing up its steep acclivity; so that it somewhat resembled the
+Etruscan cities which I have seen among the Apennines, rushing, as it
+were, down an apparently breakneck height. About midway of the ascent
+stood a shabby brick church, towards which a difficult path went
+scrambling up the precipice, indicating, one would say; a very fervent
+aspiration on the part of the worshippers, unless there was some easier
+mode of access in another direction. Immediately on the shore of the
+Potomac, and extending back towards the town, lay the dismal ruins of the
+United States arsenal and armory, consisting of piles of broken bricks
+and a waste of shapeless demolition, amid which we saw gun-barrels in
+heaps of hundreds together. They were the relics of the conflagration,
+bent with the heat of the fire, and rusted with the wintry rain to which
+they had since been exposed. The brightest sunshine could not have made
+the scene cheerful, nor have taken away the gloom from the dilapidated
+town; for, besides the natural shabbiness, and decayed, unthrifty look of
+a Virginian village, it has an inexpressible forlornness resulting from
+the devastations of war and its occupation by both armies alternately.
+Yet there would be a less striking contrast between Southern and New
+England villages, if the former were as much in the habit of using white
+paint as we are. It is prodigiously efficacious in putting a bright face
+upon a bad matter.
+
+There was one small shop which appeared to have nothing for sale. A
+single man and one or two boys were all the inhabitants in view, except
+the Yankee sentinels and soldiers, belonging to Massachusetts regiments,
+who were scattered about pretty numerously. A guard-house stood on the
+slope of the hill; and in the level street at its base were the offices
+of the Provost-Marshal and other military authorities, to whom we
+forthwith reported ourselves. The Provost-Marshal kindly sent a corporal
+to guide us to the little building which John Brown seized upon as his
+fortress, and which, after it was stormed by the United States marines,
+became his temporary prison. It is an old engine-house, rusty and
+shabby, like every other work of man’s hands in this God-forsaken town,
+and stands fronting upon the river, only a short distance from the bank,
+nearly at the point where the pontoon-bridge touches the Virginia shore.
+In its front wall, on each side of the door, are two or three ragged
+loop-holes, which John Brown perforated for his defence, knocking out
+merely a brick or two, so as to give himself and his garrison a sight
+over their rifles. Through these orifices the sturdy old man dealt a
+good deal of deadly mischief among his assailants, until they broke down
+the door by thrusting against it with a ladder, and tumbled headlong in
+upon him. I shall not pretend to be an admirer of old John Brown, any
+farther than sympathy with Whittier’s excellent ballad about him may go;
+nor did I expect ever to shrink so unutterably from any apophthegm of a
+sage, whose happy lips have uttered a hundred golden sentences, as from
+that saying (perhaps falsely attributed to so honored a source), that the
+death of this blood-stained fanatic has “made the Gallows as venerable as
+the Cross!” Nobody was ever more justly hanged. He won his martyrdom
+fairly, and took it firmly. He himself, I am persuaded (such was his
+natural integrity), would have acknowledged that Virginia had a right to
+take the life which he had staked and lost; although it would have been
+better for her, in the hour that is fast coming, if she could generously
+have forgotten the criminality of his attempt in its enormous folly. On
+the other hand, any common-sensible man, looking at the matter
+unsentimentally, must have felt a certain intellectual satisfaction in
+seeing him hanged, if it were only in requittal of his preposterous
+miscalculation of possibilities. [Can it be a son of old Massachusetts
+who utters this abominable sentiment? For shame.]
+
+But, coolly as I seem to say these things, my Yankee heart stirred
+triumphantly when I saw the use to which John Brown’s fortress and
+prison-house has now been put. What right have I to complain of any
+other man’s foolish impulses, when I cannot possibly control my own? The
+engine-house is now a place of confinement for Rebel prisoners.
+
+A Massachusetts soldier stood on guard, but readily permitted our whole
+party to enter. It was a wretched place. A room of perhaps twenty-five
+feet square occupied the whole interior of the building, having an iron
+stove in its centre, whence a rusty funnel ascended towards a hole in the
+roof, which served the purposes of ventilation, as well as for the exit
+of smoke. We found ourselves right in the midst of the Rebels, some of
+whom lay on heaps of straw, asleep, or, at all events, giving no sign of
+consciousness; others sat in the corners of the room, huddled close
+together, and staring with a lazy kind of interest at the visitors; two
+were astride of some planks, playing with the dirtiest pack of cards that
+I ever happened to see. There was only one figure in the least military
+among all these twenty prisoners of war,--a man with a dark, intelligent,
+moustached face, wearing a shabby cotton uniform, which he had contrived
+to arrange with a degree of soldierly smartness, though it had evidently
+borne the brunt of a very filthy campaign. He stood erect, and talked
+freely with those who addressed him, telling them his place of residence,
+the number of his regiment, the circumstances of his capture, and such
+other particulars as their Northern inquisitiveness prompted them to ask.
+I liked the manliness of his deportment; he was neither ashamed, nor
+afraid, nor in the slightest degree sullen, peppery, or contumacious, but
+bore himself as if whatever animosity he had felt towards his enemies was
+left upon the battle-field, and would not be resumed till he had again a
+weapon in his hand.
+
+Neither could I detect a trace of hostile feeling in the countenance,
+words, or manner of any prisoner there. Almost to a man, they were
+simple, bumpkin-like fellows, dressed in homespun clothes, with faces
+singularly vacant of meaning, but sufficiently good-humored: a breed of
+men, in short, such as I did not suppose to exist in this country,
+although I have seen their like in some other parts of the world. They
+were peasants, and of a very low order; a class of people with whom our
+Northern rural population has not a single trait in common. They were
+exceedingly respectful,--more so than a rustic New-Englander ever dreams
+of being towards anybody, except perhaps his minister; and had they worn
+any hats they would probably have been self-constrained to take them off,
+under the unusual circumstance of being permitted to hold conversation
+with well-dressed persons. It is my belief that not a single bumpkin of
+them all (the moustached soldier always excepted) had the remotest
+comprehension of what they had been fighting for, or how they had
+deserved to be shut up in that dreary hole; nor, possibly, did they care
+to inquire into this latter mystery, but took it as a godsend to be
+suffered to lie here in a heap of unwashed human bodies, well warmed and
+well foddered to-day, and without the necessity of bothering themselves
+about the possible hunger and cold of to-morrow. Their dark prison-life
+may have seemed to them the sunshine of all their lifetime.
+
+There was one poor wretch, a wild-beast of a man, at whom I gazed with
+greater interest than at his fellows; although I know not that each one
+of them, in their semi-barbarous moral state, might not have been capable
+of the same savage impulse that had made this particular individual a
+horror to all beholders. At the close of some battle or skirmish, a
+wounded Union soldier had crept on hands and knees to his feet, and
+besought his assistance,--not dreaming that any creature in human shape,
+in the Christian land where they had so recently been brethren, could
+refuse it. But this man (this fiend, if you prefer to call him so,
+though I would not advise it) flung a bitter curse at the poor
+Northerner, and absolutely trampled the soul out of his body, as he lay
+writhing beneath his feet. The fellow’s face was horribly ugly; but I am
+not quite sure that I should have noticed it if I had not known his
+story. He spoke not a word, and met nobody’s eye, but kept staring
+upward into the smoky vacancy towards the ceiling, where, it might be, he
+beheld a continual portraiture of his victim’s horror-stricken agonies.
+I rather fancy, however, that his moral sense was yet too torpid to
+trouble him with such remorseful visions, and that, for his own part, he
+might have had very agreeable reminiscences of the soldier’s death, if
+other eyes had not been bent reproachfully upon him and warned him that
+something was amiss. It was this reproach in other men’s eyes that made
+him look aside. He was a wild-beast, as I began with saying,--an
+unsophisticated wild-beast,--while the rest of us are partially tamed,
+though still the scent of blood excites some of the savage instincts of
+our nature. What this wretch needed, in order to make him capable of the
+degree of mercy and benevolence that exists in us, was simply such a
+measure of moral and intellectual development as we have received; and,
+in my mind, the present war is so well justified by no other
+consideration as by the probability that it will free this class of
+Southern whites from a thraldom in which they scarcely begin to be
+responsible beings. So far as the education of the heart is concerned,
+the negroes have apparently the advantage of them; and as to other
+schooling, it is practically unattainable by black or white.
+
+Looking round at these poor prisoners, therefore, it struck me as an
+immense absurdity that they should fancy us their enemies; since, whether
+we intend it so or no, they have a far greater stake on our success than
+we can possibly have. For ourselves, the balance of advantages between
+defeat and triumph may admit of question. For them, all truly valuable
+things are dependent on our complete success; for thence would come the
+regeneration of a people,--the removal of a foul scurf that has overgrown
+their life, and keeps then in a state of disease and decrepitude, one of
+the chief symptoms of which is, that, the more they suffer and are
+debased, the more they imagine themselves strong and beautiful. No human
+effort, on a grand scale, has ever yet resulted according to the purpose,
+of its projectors. The advantages are always incidental. Man’s
+accidents are God’s purposes. We miss the good we sought, and do the
+good we little cared for. [The author seems to imagine that he has
+compressed a great deal of meaning into these little, hard, dry pellets
+of aphoristic wisdom. We disagree with him. The counsels of wise and
+good men are often coincident with the purposes of Providence; and the
+present war promises to illustrate our remark.]
+
+Our Government evidently knows when and where to lay its finger upon its
+most available citizens; for, quite unexpectedly, we were joined by some
+other gentlemen, scarcely less competent than ourselves, in a commission
+to proceed to Fortress Monroe and examine into things in general. Of
+course, official propriety compels us to be extremely guarded in our
+description of the interesting objects which this expedition opened to
+our view. There can be no harm, however, in stating that we were
+received by the commander of the fortress with a kind of acid
+good-nature, or mild cynicism, that indicated him to be a humorist,
+characterized by certain rather pungent peculiarities, yet of no
+unamiable cast. He is a small, thin, old gentleman, set off by a large
+pair of brilliant epaulets,--the only pair, so far as my observation
+went, that adorn the shoulders of any officer in the Union army. Either
+for our inspection, or because the matter had already been arranged, he
+drew out a regiment of Zouaves that formed the principal part of his
+garrison, and appeared at their head, sitting on horseback with rigid
+perpendicularity, and affording us a vivid idea of the disciplinarian of
+Baron Steuben’s school.
+
+There can be no question of the General’s military qualities; he must
+have been especially useful in converting raw recruits into trained and
+efficient soldiers. But valor and martial skill are of so evanescent a
+character (hardly less fleeting than a woman’s beauty), that Government
+has perhaps taken the safer course in assigning to this gallant officer,
+though distinguished in former wars, no more active duty than the
+guardianship of an apparently impregnable fortress. The ideas of
+military men solidify and fossilize so fast, while military science makes
+such rapid advances, that even here there might be a difficulty. An
+active, diversified, and therefore a youthful, ingenuity is required by
+the quick exigencies of this singular war. Fortress Monroe, for example,
+in spite of the massive solidity of its ramparts, its broad and deep
+moat, and all the contrivances of defence that were known at the not very
+remote epoch of its construction, is now pronounced absolutely incapable
+of resisting the novel modes of assault which may be brought to bear upon
+it. It can only be the flexible talent of a young man that will evolve a
+new efficiency out of its obsolete strength.
+
+It is a pity that old men grow unfit for war, not only by their
+incapacity for new ideas, but by the peaceful and unadventurous
+tendencies that gradually possess themselves of the once turbulent
+disposition, which used to snuff the battle-smoke as its congenial
+atmosphere. It is a pity; because it would be such an economy of human
+existence, if time-stricken people (whose value I have the better right
+to estimate, as reckoning myself one of them) could snatch from their
+juniors the exclusive privilege of carrying on the war. In case of death
+upon the battle-field, how unequal would be the comparative sacrifice!
+On one part, a few unenjoyable years, the little remnant of a life grown
+torpid; on the other, the many fervent summers of manhood in its spring
+and prime, with all that they include of possible benefit to mankind.
+Then, too, a bullet offers such a brief and easy way, such a pretty
+little orifice, through which the weary spirit might seize the
+opportunity to be exhaled! If I had the ordering of these matters, fifty
+should be the tenderest age at which a recruit might be accepted for
+training; at fifty-five or sixty, I would consider him eligible for most
+kinds of military duty and exposure, excluding that of a forlorn hope,
+which no soldier should be permitted to volunteer upon, short of the ripe
+age of seventy. As a general rule, these venerable combatants should
+have the preference for all dangerous and honorable service in the order
+of their seniority, with a distinction in favor of those whose
+infirmities might render their lives less worth the keeping. Methinks
+there would be no more Bull Runs; a warrior with gout in his toe, or
+rheumatism in his joints, or with one foot in the grave, would make a
+sorry fugitive!
+
+On this admirable system, the productive part of the population would be
+undisturbed even by the bloodiest war; and, best of all, those thousands
+upon thousands of our Northern girls, whose proper mates will perish in
+camp-hospitals or on Southern battle-fields, would avoid their doom of
+forlorn old-maidenhood. But, no doubt, the plan will be pooh-poohed down
+by the War Department; though it could scarcely be more disastrous than
+the one on which we began the war, when a young army was struck with
+paralysis through the age of its commander.
+
+The waters around Fortress Monroe were thronged with a gallant array of
+ships of war and transports, wearing the Union flag,--“Old Glory,” as I
+hear it called in these days. A little withdrawn from our national fleet
+lay two French frigates, and, in another direction, an English sloop,
+under that banner which always makes itself visible, like a red portent
+in the air, wherever there is strife. In pursuance of our official duty
+(which had no ascertainable limits), we went on board the flag-ship, and
+were shown over every part of her, and down into her depths, inspecting
+her gallant crew, her powerful armament, her mighty engines, and her
+furnaces, where the fires are always kept burning, as well at midnight as
+at noon, so that it would require only five minutes to put the vessel
+under full steam. This vigilance has been felt necessary ever since the
+Merrimack made that terrible dash from Norfolk. Splendid as she is,
+however, and provided with all but the very latest improvements in naval
+armament, the Minnesota belongs to a class of vessels that will be built
+no more, nor ever fight another battle,--being as much a thing of the
+past as any of the ships of Queen Elizabeth’s time, which grappled with
+the galleons of the Spanish Armada.
+
+On her quarter-deck, an elderly flag-officer was pacing to and fro, with
+a self-conscious dignity to which a touch of the gout or rheumatism
+perhaps contributed a little additional stiffness. He seemed to be a
+gallant gentleman, but of the old, slow, and pompous school of naval
+worthies, who have grown up amid rules, forms, and etiquette which were
+adopted full-blown from the British navy into ours, and are somewhat too
+cumbrous for the quick spirit of to-day. This order of nautical heroes
+will probably go down, along with the ships in which they fought
+valorously and strutted most intolerably. How can an admiral condescend
+to go to sea in an iron pot? What space and elbow-room can be found for
+quarter-deck dignity in the cramped lookout of the Monitor, or even in
+the twenty-feet diameter of her cheese-box? All the pomp and splendor of
+naval warfare are gone by. Henceforth there must come up a race of
+enginemen and smoke-blackened cannoneers, who will hammer away at their
+enemies under the direction of a single pair of eyes; and even heroism--
+so deadly a gripe is Science laying on our noble possibilities--will
+become a quality of very minor importance, when its possessor cannot
+break through the iron crust of his own armament and give the world a
+glimpse of it.
+
+At no great distance from the Minnesota lay the strangest-looking craft I
+ever saw. It was a platform of iron, so nearly on a level with the water
+that the swash of the waves broke over it, under the impulse of a very
+moderate breeze; and on this platform was raised a circular structure,
+likewise of iron, and rather broad and capacious, but of no great height.
+It could not be called a vessel at all; it was a machine,--and I have
+seen one of somewhat similar appearance employed in cleaning out the
+docks; or, for lack of a better similitude, it looked like a gigantic
+rat-trap. It was ugly, questionable, suspicious, evidently mischievous,
+--nay, I will allow myself to call it devilish; for this was the new
+war-fiend, destined, along with others of the same breed, to annihilate
+whole navies and batter down old supremacies. The wooden walls of Old
+England cease to exist, and a whole history of naval renown reaches its
+period, now that the Monitor comes smoking into view; while the billows
+dash over what seems her deck, and storms bury even her turret in green
+water, as she burrows and snorts along, oftener under the surface than
+above. The singularity of the object has betrayed me into a more
+ambitious vein of description than I often indulge; and, after all, I
+might as well have contented myself with simply saying that she looked
+very queer.
+
+Going on board, we were surprised at the extent and convenience of her
+interior accommodations. There is a spacious ward-room, nine or ten feet
+in height, besides a private cabin for the commander, and sleeping
+accommodations on an ample scale; the whole well lighted and ventilated,
+though beneath the surface of the water. Forward, or aft (for it is
+impossible to tell stem from stern), the crew are relatively quite as
+well provided for as the officers. It was like finding a palace, with
+all its conveniences, under the sea. The inaccessibility, the apparent
+impregnability, of this submerged iron fortress are most satisfactory;
+the officers and crew get down through a little hole in the deck,
+hermetically seal themselves, and go below; and until they see fit to
+reappear, there would seem to be no power given to man whereby they can
+be brought to light. A storm of cannon-shot damages them no more than a
+handful of dried peas. We saw the shot-marks made by the great artillery
+of the Merrimack on the outer casing of the iron tower; they were about
+the breadth and depth of shallow saucers, almost imperceptible dents,
+with no corresponding bulge on the interior surface. In fact, the thing
+looked altogether too safe; though it may not prove quite an agreeable
+predicament to be thus boxed up in impenetrable iron, with the
+possibility, one would imagine, of being sent to the bottom of the sea,
+and, even there, not drowned, but stifled. Nothing, however, can exceed
+the confidence of the officers in this new craft. It was pleasant to see
+their benign exultation in her powers of mischief, and the delight with
+which they exhibited the circumvolutory movement of the tower, the quick
+thrusting forth of the immense guns to deliver their ponderous missiles,
+and then the immediate recoil, and the security behind the closed
+port-holes. Yet even this will not long be the last and most terrible
+improvement in the science of war. Already we hear of vessels the
+armament of which is to act entirely beneath the surface of the water; so
+that, with no other external symptoms than a great bubbling and foaming,
+and gush of smoke, and belch of smothered thunder out of the yeasty
+waves, there shall be a deadly fight going on below,--and, by and by, a
+sucking whirlpool, as one of the ships goes down.
+
+The Monitor was certainly an object of great interest; but on our way to
+Newport News, whither we next went, we saw a spectacle that affected us
+with far profounder emotion. It was the sight of the few sticks that are
+left of the frigate Congress, stranded near the shore,--and still more,
+the masts of the Cumberland rising midway out of the water, with a
+tattered rag of a pennant fluttering from one of them. The invisible
+hull of the latter ship seems to be careened over, so that the three
+masts stand slantwise; the rigging looks quite unimpaired, except that a
+few ropes dangle loosely from the yards. The flag (which never was
+struck, thank Heaven!) is entirely hidden under the waters of the bay,
+but is still doubtless waving in its old place, although it floats to and
+fro with the swell and reflex of the tide, instead of rustling on the
+breeze. A remnant of the dead crew still man the sunken ship, and
+sometimes a drowned body floats up to the surface.
+
+That was a noble fight. When was ever a better word spoken than that of
+Commodore Smith, the father of the commander of the Congress, when he
+heard that his son’s ship was surrendered? “Then Joe’s dead!” said he;
+and so it proved. Nor can any warrior be more certain of enduring renown
+than the gallant Morris, who fought so well the final battle of the old
+system of naval warfare, and won glory for his country and himself out of
+inevitable disaster and defeat. That last gun from the Cumberland, when
+her deck was half submerged, sounded the requiem of many sinking ships.
+Then went down all the navies of Europe and our own, Old Ironsides and
+all, and Trafalgar and a thousand other fights became only a memory,
+never to be acted over again; and thus our brave countrymen come last in
+the long procession of heroic sailors that includes Blake and Nelson, and
+so many mariners of England, and other mariners as brave as they, whose
+renown is our native inheritance. There will be other battles, but no
+more such tests of seamanship and manhood as the battles of the past;
+and, moreover, the Millennium is certainly approaching, because human
+strife is to be transferred from the heart and personality of man into
+cunning contrivances of machinery, which by and by will fight out our
+wars with only the clank and smash of iron, strewing the field with
+broken engines, but damaging nobody’s little finger except by accident.
+Such is obviously the tendency of modern improvement. But, in the mean
+while, so long as manhood retains any part of its pristine value, no
+country can afford to let gallantry like that of Morris and his crew, any
+more than that of the brave Worden, pass unhonored and unrewarded. If
+the Government do nothing, let the people take the matter into their own
+hands, and cities give him swords, gold boxes, festivals of triumph, and,
+if he needs it, heaps of gold. Let poets brood upon the theme, and make
+themselves sensible how much of the past and future is contained within
+its compass, till its spirit shall flash forth in the lightning of a
+song!
+
+From these various excursions, and a good many others (including one to
+Manassas), we gained a pretty lively idea of what was going on; but,
+after all, if compelled to pass a rainy day in the hall and parlors of
+Willard’s Hotel, it proved about as profitably spent as if we had
+floundered through miles of Virginia mud, in quest of interesting matter.
+This hotel, in fact, may be much more justly called the centre of
+Washington and the Union than either the Capitol, the White House, or the
+State Department. Everybody may be seen there. It is the meeting-place
+of the true representatives of the country,--not such as are chosen
+blindly and amiss by electors who take a folded ballot from the hand of a
+local politician, and thrust it into the ballot-box unread, but men who
+gravitate or are attracted hither by real business, or a native impulse
+to breathe the intensest atmosphere of the nation’s life, or a genuine
+anxiety to see how this life-and-death struggle is going to deal with us.
+Nor these only, but all manner of loafers. Never, in any other spot, was
+there such a miscellany of people. You exchange nods with governors of
+sovereign States; you elbow illustrious men, and tread on the toes of
+generals; you hear statesmen and orators speaking in their familiar
+tones. You are mixed up with office-seekers, wire-pullers, inventors,
+artists, poets, prosers (including editors, army-correspondents, attaches
+of foreign journals, and long-winded talkers), clerks, diplomatists,
+mail-contractors, railway-directors, until your own identity is lost
+among them. Occasionally you talk with a man whom you have never before
+heard of, and are struck with the brightness of a thought, and fancy that
+there is more wisdom hidden among the obscure than is anywhere revealed
+among the famous. You adopt the universal habit of the place, and call
+for mint-julep, a whiskey-skin, a gin-cocktail, a brandy smash, or a
+glass of pure Old Rye; for the conviviality of Washington sets in at an
+early hour, and, so far as I had opportunity of observing, never
+terminates at any hour, and all these drinks are continually in request
+by almost all these people. A constant atmosphere of cigar-smoke, too,
+envelops the motley crowd, and forms a sympathetic medium, in which men
+meet more closely and talk more frankly than in any other kind of air.
+If legislators would smoke in session, they might speak truer words, and
+fewer of them, and bring about more valuable results.
+
+It is curious to observe what antiquated figures and costumes sometimes
+make their appearance at Willard’s. You meet elderly men with frilled
+shirt-fronts, for example, the fashion of which adornment passed away
+from among the people of this world half a century ago. It is as if one
+of Stuart’s portraits were walking abroad. I see no way of accounting
+for this, except that the trouble of the times, the impiety of traitors,
+and the peril of our sacred Union and Constitution have disturbed, in
+their honored graves, some of the venerable fathers of the country,
+and summoned them forth to protest against the meditated and
+half-accomplished sacrilege. If it be so, their wonted fires are not
+altogether extinguished in their ashes,--in their throats, I might rather
+say,--for I beheld one of these excellent old men quaffing such a horn of
+Bourbon whiskey as a toper of the present century would be loath to
+venture upon. But, really, one would be glad to know where these strange
+figures come from. It shows, at any rate, how many remote, decaying
+villages and country-neighborhoods of the North, and forest-nooks of the
+West, and old mansion-houses in cities, are shaken by the tremor of our
+native soil, so that men long hidden in retirement put on the garments of
+their youth and hurry out to inquire what is the matter. The old men
+whom we see here have generally more marked faces than the young ones,
+and naturally enough; since it must be an extraordinary vigor and
+renewability of life that can overcome the rusty sloth of age, and keep
+the senior flexible enough to take an interest in new things; whereas
+hundreds of commonplace young men come hither to stare with eyes of
+vacant wonder, and with vague hopes of finding out what they are fit for.
+And this war (we may say so much in its favor) has been the means of
+discovering that important secret to not a few.
+
+We saw at Willard’s many who had thus found out for themselves, that,
+when Nature gives a young man no other utilizable faculty, she must be
+understood as intending him for a soldier. The bulk of the army had
+moved out of Washington before we reached the city; yet it seemed to me
+that at least two thirds of the guests and idlers at the hotel were one
+or another token of the military profession. Many of them, no doubt,
+were self-commissioned officers, and had put on the buttons and the
+shoulder-straps, and booted themselves to the knees, merely because
+captain, in these days, is so good a travelling-name. The majority,
+however, had been duly appointed by the President, but might be none the
+better warriors for that. It was pleasant, occasionally, to distinguish
+a grizzly veteran among this crowd of carpet-knights,--the trained
+soldier of a lifetime, long ago from West Point, who had spent his prime
+upon the frontier, and very likely could show an Indian bullet-mark on
+his breast,--if such decorations, won in an obscure warfare, were worth
+the showing now.
+
+The question often occurred to me,--and, to say the truth, it added an
+indefinable piquancy to the scene,--what proportion of all these people,
+whether soldiers or civilians, were true at heart to the Union, and what
+part were tainted, more or less, with treasonable sympathies and wishes,
+even if such had never blossomed into purpose. Traitors there were among
+them,--no doubt of that,--civil servants of the public, very reputable
+persons, who yet deserved to dangle from a cord; or men who buttoned
+military coats over their breasts, hiding perilous secrets there, which
+might bring the gallant officer to stand pale-faced before a file of
+musketeers, with his open grave behind him. But, without insisting upon
+such picturesque criminality and punishment as this, an observer, who
+kept both his eyes and heart open, would find it by no means difficult to
+discern that many residents and visitors of Washington so far sided with
+the South as to desire nothing more nor better than to see everything
+reestablished a little worse than its former basis. If the cabinet of
+Richmond were transferred to the Federal city, and the North awfully
+snubbed, at least, and driven back within its old political limits, they
+would deem it a happy day. It is no wonder, and, if we look at the
+matter generously, no unpardonable crime. Very excellent people
+hereabouts remember the many dynasties in which the Southern character
+has been predominant, and contrast the genial courtesy, the warm and
+graceful freedom of that region, with what they call (though I utterly
+disagree with them) the frigidity of our Northern manners, and the
+Western plainness of the President. They have a conscientious, though
+mistaken belief, that the South was driven out of the Union by
+intolerable wrong on our part, and that we are responsible for having
+compelled true patriots to love only half their country instead of the
+whole, and brave soldiers to draw their swords against the Constitution
+which they would once have died for,--to draw them, too, with a
+bitterness of animosity which is the only symptom of brotherhood (since
+brothers hate each other best) that any longer exists. They whisper
+these things with tears in their eyes, and shake their heads, and stoop
+their poor old shoulders, at the tidings of another and another Northern
+victory, which, in their opinion, puts farther off the remote, the
+already impossible, chance of a reunion.
+
+I am sorry for them, though it is by no means a sorrow without hope.
+Since the matter has gone so far, there seems to be no way but to go on
+winning victories, and establishing peace and a truer union in another
+generation, at the expense, probably, of greater trouble, in the present
+one, than any other people ever voluntarily suffered. We woo the South
+“as the Lion wooes his bride;” it is a rough courtship, but perhaps love
+and a quiet household may come of it at last. Or, if we stop short of
+that blessed consummation, heaven was heaven still, as Milton sings,
+after Lucifer and a third part of the angels had seceded from its golden
+palaces,--and perhaps all the more heavenly, because so many gloomy
+brows, and soured, vindictive hearts, had gone to plot ineffectual
+schemes of mischief elsewhere.
+
+
+[We regret the innuendo in the concluding sentence. The war can never be
+allowed to terminate, except in the complete triumph of Northern
+principles. We hold the event in our own hands, and may choose whether
+to terminate it by the methods already so successfully used, or by other
+means equally within our control, and calculated to be still more
+speedily efficacious. In truth, the work is already done.
+
+We should be sorry to cast a doubt on the Peaceable Man’s loyalty, but he
+will allow us to say that we consider him premature in his kindly
+feelings towards traitors and sympathizers with treason. As the author
+himself says of John Brown (and, so applied, we thought it an atrociously
+cold-blooded dictum), “any common-sensible man would feel an intellectual
+satisfaction in seeing them hanged, were it only for their preposterous
+miscalculation of possibilities.” There are some degrees of absurdity
+that put Reason herself into a rage, and affect us like an intolerable
+crime,--which this Rebellion is, into the bargain.]
+
+
+
+
+
+ALICE DOANE’S APPEAL.
+
+
+On a pleasant afternoon of June, it was my good fortune to be the
+companion of two young ladies in a walk. The direction of our course
+being left to me, I led them neither to Legge’s Hill, nor to the Cold
+Spring, nor to the rude shores and old batteries of the Neck, nor yet to
+Paradise; though if the latter place were rightly named, my fair friends
+would have been at home there. We reached the outskirts of the town, and
+turning aside from a street of tanners and curriers, began to ascend a
+hill, which at a distance, by its dark slope and the even line of its
+summit, resembled a green rampart along the road. It was less steep than
+its aspect threatened. The eminence formed part of an extensive tract of
+pasture land, and was traversed by cow paths in various directions; but,
+strange to tell, though the whole slope and summit were of a peculiar
+deep green, scarce a blade of grass was visible from the base upward.
+This deceitful verdure was occasioned by a plentiful crop of “wood-wax,”
+ which wears the same dark and glossy green throughout the summer, except
+at one short period, when it puts forth a profusion of yellow blossoms.
+At that season, to a distant spectator, the hill appears absolutely
+overlaid with gold, or covered with a glory of sunshine, even beneath a
+clouded sky. But the curious wanderer on the hill will perceive that all
+the grass, and everything that should nourish man or beast, has been
+destroyed by this vile and ineradicable weed: its tufted roots make the
+soil their own, and permit nothing else to vegetate among them; so that a
+physical curse may be said to have blasted the spot, where guilt and
+frenzy consummated the most execrable scene that our history blushes to
+record. For this was the field where superstition won her darkest
+triumph; the high place where our fathers set up their shame, to the
+mournful gaze of generations far remote. The dust of martyrs was beneath
+our feet. We stood on Gallows Hill.
+
+For my own part, I have often courted the historic influence of the spot.
+But it is singular how few come on pilgrimage to this famous hill; how
+many spend their lives almost at its base, and never once obey the
+summons of the shadowy past, as it beckons them to the summit. Till a
+year or two since, this portion of our history had been very imperfectly
+written, and, as we are not a people of legend or tradition, it was not
+every citizen of our ancient town that could tell, within half a century,
+so much as the date of the witchcraft delusion. Recently, indeed, an
+historian has treated the subject in a manner that will keep his name
+alive, in the only desirable connection with the errors of our ancestry,
+by converting the hill of their disgrace into an honorable monument of
+his own antiquarian lore, and of that better wisdom, which draws the
+moral while it tells the tale. But we are a people of the present, and
+have no heartfelt interest in the olden time. Every fifth of November,
+in commemoration of they know not what, or rather without an idea beyond
+the momentary blaze, the young men scare the town with bonfires on this
+haunted height, but never dream of paying funeral honors to those who
+died so wrongfully, and, without a coffin or a prayer, were buried here.
+
+Though with feminine susceptibility, my companions caught all the
+melancholy associations of the scene, yet these could but imperfectly
+overcome the gayety of girlish spirits. Their emotions came and went
+with quick vicissitude, and sometimes combined to form a peculiar and
+delicious excitement, the mirth brightening the gloom into a sunny shower
+of feeling, and a rainbow in the mind. My own more sombre mood was
+tinged by theirs. With now a merry word and next a sad one, we trod
+among the tangled weeds, and almost hoped that our feet would sink into
+the hollow of a witch’s grave. Such vestiges were to be found within the
+memory of man, but have vanished now, and with them, I believe, all
+traces of the precise spot of the executions. On the long and broad
+ridge of the eminence, there is no very decided elevation of any one
+point, nor other prominent marks, except the decayed stumps of two trees,
+standing near each other, and here and there the rocky substance of the
+hill, peeping just above the wood-wax.
+
+There are few such prospects of town and village, woodland and cultivated
+field, steeples and country seats, as we beheld from this unhappy spot.
+No blight had fallen on old Essex; all was prosperity and riches,
+healthfully distributed. Before us lay our native town, extending from
+the foot of the hill to the harbor, level as a chess board, embraced by
+two arms of the sea, and filling the whole peninsula with a close
+assemblage of wooden roofs, overtopped by many a spire, and intermixed
+with frequent heaps of verdure, where trees threw up their shade from
+unseen trunks. Beyond was the bay and its islands, almost the only
+objects, in a country unmarked by strong natural features, on which time
+and human toil had produced no change. Retaining these portions of the
+scene, and also the peaceful glory and tender gloom of the declining sun,
+we threw, in imagination, a veil of deep forest over the land, and
+pictured a few scattered villages, and this old town itself a village, as
+when the prince of hell bore sway there. The idea thus gained of its
+former aspect, its quaint edifices standing far apart, with peaked roofs
+and projecting stories, and its single meeting-house pointing up a tall
+spire in the midst; the vision, in short, of the town in 1692, served to
+introduce a wondrous tale of those old times.
+
+I had brought the manuscript in my pocket. It was one of a series
+written years ago, when my pen, now sluggish and perhaps feeble, because
+I have not munch to hope or fear, was driven by stronger external motives
+and a more passionate impulse within, than I am fated to feel again.
+Three or four of these tales had appeared in the “Token,” after a long
+time and various adventures, but had encumbered me with no troublesome
+notoriety, even in my birthplace. One great heap had met a brighter
+destiny: they had fed the flames; thoughts meant to delight the world and
+endure for ages had perished in a moment, and stirred not a single heart
+but mine. The story now to be introduced, and another, chanced to be in
+kinder custody at the time, and thus, by no conspicuous merits of their
+own, escaped destruction.
+
+The ladies, in consideration that I had never before intruded my
+performances on them, by any but the legitimate medium, through the
+press, consented to hear me read. I made them sit down on a moss-grown
+rock, close by the spot where we chose to believe that the death tree had
+stood. After a little hesitation on my part, caused by a dread of
+renewing my acquaintance with fantasies that had lost their charm in the
+ceaseless flux of mind, I began the tale, which opened darkly with the
+discovery of a murder.
+
+
+
+A hundred years, and nearly half that time, have elapsed since the body
+of a murdered man was found, at about the distance of three miles, on the
+old road to Boston. He lay in a solitary spot, on the bank of a small
+lake, which the severe frost of December had covered with a sheet of ice.
+Beneath this, it seemed to have been the intention of the murderer to
+conceal his victim in a chill and watery grave, the ice being deeply
+hacked, perhaps with the weapon that had slain him, though its solidity
+was too stubborn for the patience of a man with blood upon his hand. The
+corpse therefore reclined on the earth, but was separated from the road
+by a thick growth of dwarf pines. There had been a slight fall of snow
+during the night, and as if nature were shocked at the deed, and strove
+to hide it with her frozen tears, a little drifted heap had partly buried
+the body, and lay deepest over the pale dead face. An early traveller,
+whose dog had led him to the spot, ventured to uncover the features, but
+was affrighted by their expression. A look of evil and scornful triumph
+had hardened on them, and made death so life-like and so terrible, that
+the beholder at once took flight, as swiftly as if the stiffened corpse
+would rise up and follow.
+
+I read on, and identified the body as that of a young man, a stranger in
+the country, but resident during several preceding months in the town
+which lay at our feet. The story described, at some length, the
+excitement caused by the murder, the unavailing quest after the
+perpetrator, the funeral ceremonies, and other commonplace matters, in
+the course of which, I brought forward the personages who were to move
+among the succeeding events. They were but three. A young man and his
+sister; the former characterized by a diseased imagination and morbid
+feelings; the latter, beautiful and virtuous, and instilling something of
+her own excellence into the wild heart of her brother, but not enough to
+cure the deep taint of his nature. The third person was a wizard; a
+small, gray, withered man, with fiendish ingenuity in devising evil, and
+superhuman power to execute it, but senseless as an idiot and feebler
+than a child to all better purposes. The central scene of the story was
+an interview between this wretch and Leonard Doane, in the wizard’s hut,
+situated beneath a range of rocks at some distance from the town. They
+sat beside a smouldering fire, while a tempest of wintry rain was beating
+on the roof.
+
+The young man spoke of the closeness of the tie which united him and
+Alice, the consecrated fervor of their affection from childhood upwards,
+their sense of lonely sufficiency to each other, because they only of
+their race had escaped death, in a night attack by the Indians. He
+related his discovery or suspicion of a secret sympathy between his
+sister and Walter Brome, and told how a distempered jealousy had maddened
+him. In the following passage, I threw a glimmering light on the mystery
+of the tale.
+
+“Searching,” continued Leonard, “into the breast of Walter Brome, I at
+length found a cause why Alice must inevitably love him. For he was my
+very counterpart! I compared his mind by each individual portion, and as
+a whole, with mine. There was a resemblance from which I shrunk with
+sickness, and loathing, and horror, as if my own features had come and
+stared upon me in a solitary place, or had met me in struggling through a
+crowd. Nay! the very same thoughts would often express themselves in the
+same words from our lips, proving a hateful sympathy in our secret souls.
+His education, indeed, in the cities of the old world, and mine in the
+rude wilderness, had wrought a superficial difference. The evil of his
+character, also, had been strengthened and rendered prominent by a
+reckless and ungoverned life, while mine had been softened and purified
+by the gentle and holy nature of Alice. But my soul had been conscious
+of the germ of all the fierce and deep passions, and of all the many
+varieties of wickedness, which accident had brought to their full
+maturity in him. Nor will I deny that, in the accursed one, I could see
+the withered blossom of every virtue, which, by a happier culture, had
+been made to bring forth fruit in me. Now, here was a man whom Alice
+might love with all the strength of sisterly affection, added to that
+impure passion which alone engrosses all the heart. The stranger would
+have more than the love which had been gathered to me from the many
+graves of our household--and I be desolate!”
+
+
+Leonard Doane went on to describe the insane hatred that had kindled his
+heart into a volume of hellish flame. It appeared, indeed, that his
+jealousy had grounds, so far as that Walter Brome had actually sought the
+love of Alice, who also had betrayed an undefinable, but powerful
+interest in the unknown youth. The latter, in spite of his passion for
+Alice, seemed to return the loathful antipathy of her brother; the
+similarity of their dispositions made them like joint possessors of an
+individual nature, which could not become wholly the property of one,
+unless by the extinction of the other. At last, with the sane devil in
+each bosom, they chanced to meet, they two, on a lonely road. While
+Leonard spoke, the wizard had sat listening to what he already knew, yet
+with tokens of pleasurable interest, manifested by flashes of expression
+across his vacant features, by grisly smiles, and by a word here and
+there, mysteriously filling up some void in the narrative. But when the
+young man told how Walter Brome had taunted him with indubitable proofs
+of the shame of Alice, and, before the triumphant sneer could vanish from
+his face, had died by her brother’s hand, the wizard laughed aloud.
+Leonard started, but just then a gust of wind came down the chimney,
+forming itself into a close resemblance of the slow, unvaried laughter,
+by which he had been interrupted. “I was deceived,” thought he; and thus
+pursued his fearful story.
+
+
+“I trod out his accursed soul, and knew that he was dead; for my spirit
+bounded as if a chain had fallen from it and left me free. But the burst
+of exulting certainty soon fled, and was succeeded by a torpor over my
+brain and a dimness before my eyes, with the sensation of one who
+struggles through a dream. So I bent down over the body of Walter Brome,
+gazing into his face, and striving to make my soul glad with the thought,
+that he, in very truth, lay dead before me. I know not what space of
+time I had thus stood, nor how the vision came. But it seemed to me that
+the irrevocable years since childhood had rolled back, and a scene, that
+had long been confused and broken in my memory, arrayed itself with all
+its first distinctness. Methought I stood a weeping infant by my
+father’s hearth; by the cold and blood-stained hearth where he lay dead.
+I heard the childish wail of Alice, and my own cry arose with hers, as we
+beheld the features of our parent, fierce with the strife and distorted
+with the pain, in which his spirit had passed away. As I gazed, a cold
+wind whistled by, and waved my father’s hair. Immediately I stood again
+in the lonesome road, no more a sinless child, but a man of blood, whose
+tears were falling fast over the face of his dead enemy. But the
+delusion was not wholly gone; that face still wore a likeness of my
+father; and because my soul shrank from the fixed glare of the eyes, I
+bore the body to the lake, and would have buried it there. But before
+his icy sepulchre was hewn, I heard the voices of two travellers and
+fled.”
+
+
+Such was the dreadful confession of Leonard Doane. And now tortured by
+the idea of his sister’s guilt, yet sometimes yielding to a conviction of
+her purity; stung with remorse for the death of Walter Brome, and
+shuddering with a deeper sense of some unutterable crime, perpetrated, as
+he imagined, in madness or a dream; moved also by dark impulses, as if a
+fiend were whispering him to meditate violence against the life of Alice;
+he had sought this interview with the wizard, who, on certain conditions,
+had no power to withhold his aid in unravelling the mystery. The tale
+drew near its close.
+
+
+The moon was bright on high; the blue firmament appeared to glow with an
+inherent brightness; the greater stars were burning in their spheres; the
+northern lights threw their mysterious glare far over the horizon; the
+few small clouds aloft were burdened with radiance; but the sky, with all
+its variety of light, was scarcely so brilliant as the earth. The rain
+of the preceding night had frozen as it fell, and, by that simple magic,
+had wrought wonders. The trees were hung with diamonds and many-colored
+gems; the houses were overlaid with silver, and the streets paved with
+slippery brightness; a frigid glory was flung over all familiar things,
+from the cottage chimney to the steeple of the meeting-house, that
+gleamed upward to the sky. This living world, where we sit by our
+firesides, or go forth to meet beings like ourselves, seemed rather the
+creation of wizard power, with so much of resemblance to known objects
+that a man might shudder at the ghostly shape of his old beloved
+dwelling, and the shadow of a ghostly tree before his door. One looked
+to behold inhabitants suited to such a town, glittering in icy garments,
+with motionless features, cold, sparkling eyes, and just sensation enough
+in their frozen hearts to shiver at each other’s presence.
+
+
+By this fantastic piece of description, and more in the same style, I
+intended to throw a ghostly glimmer round the reader, so that his
+imagination might view the town through a medium that should take off its
+every-day aspect, and make it a proper theatre for so wild a scene as the
+final one. Amid this unearthly show, the wretched brother and sister
+were represented as setting forth, at midnight, through the gleaming
+streets, and directing their steps to a graveyard, where all the dead had
+been laid from the first corpse in that ancient town, to the murdered man
+who was buried three days before. As they went, they seemed to see the
+wizard gliding by their sides, or walking dimly on the path before them.
+But here I paused, and gazed into the faces of my two fair auditors, to
+judge whether, even on the hill where so many had been brought to death
+by wilder tales than this, I might venture to proceed. Their bright eyes
+were fixed on me; their lips apart. I took courage, and led the fated
+pair to a new made grave, where for a few moments, in the bright and
+silent midnight, they stood alone. But suddenly there was a multitude of
+people among the graves.
+
+
+Each family tomb had given up its inhabitants, who, one by one, through
+distant years, had been borne to its dark chamber, but now came forth and
+stood in a pale group together. There was the gray ancestor, the aged
+mother, and all their descendants, some withered and full of years, like
+themselves, and others in their prime; there, too, were the children who
+went prattling to the tomb, and there the maiden who yielded her early
+beauty to death’s embrace, before passion had polluted it. Husbands and
+wives arose, who had lain many years side by side, and young mothers who
+had forgotten to kiss their first babes, though pillowed so long on their
+bosoms. Many had been buried in the habiliments of life, and still wore
+their ancient garb; some were old defenders of the infant colony, and
+gleamed forth in their steel-caps and bright breastplates, as if starting
+up at an Indian war-cry; other venerable shapes had been pastors of the
+church, famous among the New England clergy, and now leaned with hands
+clasped over their gravestones, ready to call the congregation to prayer.
+There stood the early settlers, those old illustrious ones, the heroes of
+tradition and fireside legends, the men of history whose features had
+been so long beneath the sod that few alive could have remembered them.
+There, too, were faces of former townspeople, dimly recollected from
+childhood, and others, whom Leonard and Alice had wept in later years,
+but who now were most terrible of all, by their ghastly smile of
+recognition. All, in short, were there; the dead of other generations,
+whose moss-grown names could scarce be read upon their tombstones, and
+their successors, whose graves were not yet green; all whom black
+funerals had followed slowly thither now reappeared where the mourners
+left them. Yet none but souls accursed were there, and fiends
+counterfeiting the likeness of departed saints.
+
+The countenances of those venerable men, whose very features had been
+hallowed by lives of piety, were contorted now by intolerable pain or
+hellish passion, and now by an unearthly and derisive merriment. Had the
+pastors prayed, all saintlike as they seemed, it had been blasphemy. The
+chaste matrons, too, and the maidens with untasted lips, who had slept in
+their virgin graves apart from all other dust, now wore a look from which
+the two trembling mortals shrank, as if the unimaginable sin of twenty
+worlds were collected there. The faces of fond lovers, even of such as
+had pined into the tomb, because there their treasure was, were bent on
+one another with glances of hatred and smiles of bitter scorn, passions
+that are to devils what love is to the blest. At times, the features of
+those who had passed from a holy life to heaven would vary to and fro,
+between their assumed aspect and the fiendish lineaments whence they had
+been transformed. The whole miserable multitude, both sinful souls and
+false spectres of good men, groaned horribly and gnashed their teeth, as
+they looked upward to the calm loveliness of the midnight sky, and beheld
+those homes of bliss where they must never dwell. Such was the
+apparition, though too shadowy for language to portray; for here would be
+the moonbeams on the ice, glittering through a warrior’s breastplate, and
+there the letters of a tombstone, on the form that stood before it; and
+whenever a breeze went by, it swept the old men’s hoary heads, the
+women’s fearful beauty, and all the unreal throng, into one
+indistinguishable cloud together.
+
+
+I dare not give the remainder of the scene, except in a very brief
+epitome. This company of devils and condemned souls had come on a
+holiday, to revel in the discovery of a complicated crime; as foul a one
+as ever was imagined in their dreadful abode. In the course of the tale,
+the reader had been permitted to discover that all the incidents were
+results of the machinations of the wizard, who had cunningly devised that
+Walter Brome should tempt his unknown sister to guilt and shame, and
+himself perish by the hand of his twin-brother. I described the glee of
+the fiends at this hideous conception, and their eagerness to know if it
+were consummated. The story concluded with the Appeal of Alice to the
+spectre of Walter Brome; his reply, absolving her from every stain; and
+the trembling awe with which ghost and devil fled as from the sinless
+presence of an angel.
+
+The sun had gone down. While I held my page of wonders in the fading
+light, and read how Alice and her brother were left alone among the
+graves, my voice mingled with the sigh of a summer wind, which passed
+over the hill-top, with the broad and hollow sound as of the flight of
+unseen spirits. Not a word was spoken till I added that the wizard’s
+grave was close beside us, and that the wood-wax had sprouted originally
+from his unhallowed bones. The ladies started; perhaps their cheeks
+might have grown pale had not the crimson west been blushing on them; but
+after a moment they began to laugh, while the breeze took a livelier
+motion, as if responsive to their mirth. I kept an awful solemnity of
+visage, being, indeed, a little piqued that a narrative which had good
+authority in our ancient superstitions, and would have brought even a
+church deacon to Gallows Hill, in old witch times, should now be
+considered too grotesque and extravagant for timid maids to tremble at.
+Though it was past supper time, I detained them a while longer on the
+hill, and made a trial whether truth were more powerful than fiction.
+
+We looked again towards the town, no longer arrayed in that icy splendor
+of earth, tree, and edifice, beneath the glow of a wintry midnight, which
+shining afar through the gloom of a century had made it appear the very
+home of visions in visionary streets. An indistinctness had begun to
+creep over the mass of buildings and blend them with the intermingled
+tree-tops, except where the roof of a statelier mansion, and the steeples
+and brick towers of churches, caught the brightness of some cloud that
+yet floated in the sunshine. Twilight over the landscape was congenial
+to the obscurity of time. With such eloquence as my share of feeling and
+fancy could supply, I called back hoar antiquity, and bade my companions
+imagine an ancient multitude of people, congregated on the hillside,
+spreading far below, clustering on the steep old roofs, and climbing the
+adjacent heights, wherever a glimpse of this spot might be obtained. I
+strove to realize and faintly communicate the deep, unutterable loathing
+and horror, the indignation, the affrighted wonder, that wrinkled on
+every brow, and filled the universal heart. See! the whole crowd turns
+pale and shrinks within itself, as the virtuous emerge from yonder
+street. Keeping pace with that devoted company, I described them one by
+one; here tottered a woman in her dotage, knowing neither the crime
+imputed her, nor its punishment; there another, distracted by the
+universal madness, till feverish dreams were remembered as realities, and
+she almost believed her guilt. One, a proud man once, was so broken down
+by the intolerable hatred heaped upon him, that he seemed to hasten his
+steps, eager to hide himself in the grave hastily dug at the foot of the
+gallows. As they went slowly on, a mother looked behind, and beheld her
+peaceful dwelling; she cast her eyes elsewhere, and groaned inwardly yet
+with bitterest anguish, for there was her little son among the accusers.
+I watched the face of an ordained pastor, who walked onward to the same
+death; his lips moved in prayer; no narrow petition for himself alone,
+but embracing all his fellow-sufferers and the frenzied multitude; he
+looked to Heaven and trod lightly up the hill.
+
+Behind their victims came the afflicted, a guilty and miserable band;
+villains who had thus avenged themselves on their enemies, and viler
+wretches, whose cowardice had destroyed their friends; lunatics, whose
+ravings had chimed in with the madness of the land; and children, who had
+played a game that the imps of darkness might have envied them, since it
+disgraced an age, and dipped a people’s hands in blood. In the rear of
+the procession rode a figure on horseback, so darkly conspicuous, so
+sternly triumphant, that my hearers mistook him for the visible presence
+of the fiend himself; but it was only his good friend, Cotton Mather,
+proud of his well-won dignity, as the representative of all the hateful
+features of his time: the one blood-thirsty man, in whom were
+concentrated those vices of spirit and errors of opinion that sufficed to
+madden the whole surrounding multitude. And thus I marshalled them
+onward, the innocent who were to die, and the guilty who were to grow old
+in long remorse--tracing their every step, by rock, and shrub, and broken
+track, till their shadowy visages had circled round the hilltop, where we
+stood. I plunged into my imagination for a blacker horror, and a deeper
+woe, and pictured the scaffold----
+
+But here my companions seized an arm on each side; their nerves were
+trembling; and, sweeter victory still, I had reached the seldom trodden
+places of their hearts, and found the well-spring of their tears. And
+now the past had done all it could. We slowly descended, watching the
+lights as they twinkled gradually through the town, and listening to the
+distant mirth of boys at play, and to the voice of a young girl warbling
+somewhere in the dusk, a pleasant sound to wanderers from old witch
+times. Yet, ere we left the hill, we could not but regret that there is
+nothing on its barren summit, no relic of old, nor lettered stone of
+later days, to assist the imagination in appealing to the heart. We
+build the memorial column on the height which our fathers made sacred
+with their blood, poured out in a holy cause. And here, in dark,
+funereal stone, should rise another monument, sadly commemorative of the
+errors of an earlier race, and not to be cast down while the human heart
+has one infirmity that may result in crime.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP
+
+Outlines of an English Romance.
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+
+“Septimius Felton” was the outgrowth of a project, formed by Hawthorne
+during his residence in England, of writing a romance, the scene of which
+should be laid in that country; but this project was afterwards
+abandoned, giving place to a new conception in which the visionary search
+for means to secure an earthly immortality was to form the principal
+interest. The new conception took shape in the uncompleted “Dolliver
+Romance.” The two themes, of course, were distinct, but, by a curious
+process of thought, one grew directly out of the other: the whole history
+constitutes, in fact, a chapter in what may be called the genealogy of a
+romance. There remained, after “Septimius Felton” had been published,
+certain manuscripts connected with the scheme of an English story. One
+of these manuscripts was written in the form of a journalized narrative;
+the author merely noting the date of what he wrote, as he went along.
+The other was a more extended sketch of much greater bulk, and without
+date, but probably produced several years later. It was not originally
+intended by those who at the time had charge of Hawthorne’s papers that
+either of these incomplete writings should be laid before the public;
+because they manifestly had not been left by him in a form which he would
+have considered as warranting such a course. But since the second and
+larger manuscript has been published under the title of “Dr. Grimshawe’s
+Secret,” it has been thought best to issue the present sketch, so that
+the two documents may be examined together. Their appearance places in
+the hands of readers the entire process of development leading to the
+“Septimius” and “The Dolliver Romance.” They speak for themselves much
+more efficiently than any commentator can expect to do; and little,
+therefore, remains to be said beyond a few words of explanation in regard
+to the following pages.
+
+The Note-Books show that the plan of an English romance, turning upon the
+fact that an emigrant to America had carried away a family secret which
+should give his descendant the power to ruin the family in the mother
+country, had occurred to Hawthorne as early as April, 1855. In August of
+the same year he visited Smithell’s Hall, in Bolton le Moors, concerning
+which he had already heard its legend of “The Bloody Footstep,” and from
+that time on, the idea of this footprint on the threshold-stone of the
+ancestral mansion seems to have associated itself inextricably with the
+dreamy substance of his yet unshaped romance. Indeed, it leaves its mark
+broadly upon Sibyl Dacy’s wild legend in “Septimius Felton,” and
+reappears in the last paragraph of that story. But, so far as we can
+know at this day, nothing definite was done until after his departure for
+Italy. It was then, while staying in Rome, that he began to put upon
+paper that plot which had first occupied his thoughts three years before,
+in the scant leisure allowed him by his duties at the Liverpool
+consulate. Of leisure there was not a great deal at Rome, either; for,
+as the “French and Italian Note-Books” show, sight-seeing and social
+intercourse took up a good deal of his time, and the daily record in his
+journal likewise had to be kept up. But he set to work resolutely to
+embody, so far as he might, his stray imaginings upon the haunting
+English theme, and to give them connected form. April 1, 1858, he began;
+and then nearly two weeks passed before he found an opportunity to
+resume; April 13th being the date of the next passage. By May he gets
+fully into swing, so that day after day, with but slight breaks, he
+carries on the story, always increasing in interest for as who read as
+for him who improvised. Thus it continues until May 19th, by which time
+he has made a tolerably complete outline, filled in with a good deal of
+detail here and there. Although the sketch is cast in the form of a
+regular narrative, one or two gaps occur, indicating that the author had
+thought out certain points which he then took for granted without making
+note of them. Brief scenes, passages of conversation and of narration,
+follow one another after the manner of a finished story, alternating with
+synopses of the plot, and queries concerning particulars that needed
+further study; confidences of the romancer to himself which form
+certainly a valuable contribution to literary history. The manuscript
+closes with a rapid sketch of the conclusion, and the way in which it is
+to be executed. Succinctly, what we have is a romance in embryo; one,
+moreover, that never attained to a viable stature and constitution.
+During his lifetime it naturally would not have been put forward as
+demanding public attention; and, in consideration of that fact, it has
+since been withheld from the press by the decision of his daughter, in
+whom the title to it vests. Students of literary art, however, and many
+more general readers will, I think, be likely to discover in it a charm
+all the greater for its being in parts only indicated; since, as it
+stands, it presents the precise condition of a work of fiction in its
+first stage. The unfinished “Grimshawe” was another development of the
+same theme, and the “Septimius” a later sketch, with a new element
+introduced. But the present experimental fragment, to which it has been
+decided to give the title of “The Ancestral Footstep,” possesses a
+freshness and spontaneity recalling the peculiar fascination of those
+chalk or pencil outlines with which great masters in the graphic art have
+been wont to arrest their fleeting glimpses of a composition still
+unwrought.
+
+It would not be safe to conclude, from the large amount of preliminary
+writing done with a view to that romance, that Hawthorne always adopted
+this laborious mode of making several drafts of a book. On the contrary,
+it is understood that his habit was to mature a design so thoroughly in
+his mind before attempting to give it actual existence on paper that but
+little rewriting was needed. The circumstance that he was obliged to
+write so much that did not satisfy him in this case may account partly
+for his relinquishing the theme, as one which for him had lost its
+seductiveness through too much recasting.
+
+It need be added only that the original manuscript, from which the
+following pages are printed through the medium of an exact copy, is
+singularly clear and fluent. Not a single correction occurs throughout;
+but here and there a word is omitted obviously by mere accident, and
+these omissions have been supplied. The correction in each case is
+marked by brackets in this printed reproduction. The sketch begins
+abruptly; but there is no reason to suppose that anything preceded it
+except the unrecorded musings in the author’s mind, and one or two
+memoranda in the “English Note-Books.” We must therefore imagine the
+central figure, Middleton, who is the American descendant of an old
+English family, as having been properly introduced, and then pass at once
+to the opening sentences. The rest will explain itself. G. P. L.
+
+
+
+
+THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP.
+
+Outlines of an English Romance.
+
+
+I.
+
+April 1, 1858. Thursday.--He had now been travelling long in those rich
+portions of England where he would most have wished to find the object of
+his pursuit; and many had been the scenes which he would willingly have
+identified with that mentioned in the ancient, time-yellowed record which
+he bore about with him. It is to be observed that, undertaken at first
+half as the amusement, the unreal object of a grown man’s play-day, it
+had become more and more real to him with every step of the way that he
+followed it up; along those green English lanes it seemed as if
+everything would bring him close to the mansion that he sought; every
+morning he went on with renewed hopes, nor did the evening, though it
+brought with it no success, bring with it the gloom and heaviness of a
+real disappointment. In all his life, including its earliest and
+happiest days, he had never known such a spring and zest as now filled
+his veins, and gave lightsomeness to his limbs; this spirit gave to the
+beautiful country which he trod a still richer beauty than it had ever
+borne, and he sought his ancient home as if he had found his way into
+Paradise and were there endeavoring to trace out the sight [site] of
+Eve’s bridal bower, the birthplace of the human race and its glorious
+possibilities of happiness and high performance.
+
+In these sweet and delightful moods of mind, varying from one dream to
+another, he loved indeed the solitude of his way; but likewise he loved
+the facility which his pursuit afforded him, of coming in contact with
+many varieties of men, and he took advantage of this facility to an
+extent which it was not usually his impulse to do. But now he came forth
+from all reserves, and offered himself to whomever the chances of the way
+offered to him, with a ready sensibility that made its way through every
+barrier that even English exclusiveness, in whatever rank of life, could
+set up. The plastic character of Middleton was perhaps a variety of
+American nature only presenting itself under an individual form; he could
+throw off the man of our day, and put on a ruder nature, but then it was
+with a certain fineness, that made this only [a] distinction between it
+and the central truth. He found less variety of form in the English
+character than he had been accustomed to see at home; but perhaps this
+was in consequence of the external nature of his acquaintance with it;
+for the view of one well accustomed to a people, and of a stranger to
+them, differs in this--that the latter sees the homogeneity, the one
+universal character, the ground work of the whole, while the former sees
+a thousand little differences, which distinguish the individual men apart
+to such a degree that they seem hardly to have any resemblance among
+themselves.
+
+But just at the period of his journey when we take him up, Middleton had
+been for two or three days the companion of an old man who interested him
+more than most of his wayside companions; the more especially as he
+seemed to be wandering without an object, or with such a dreamy object as
+that which led Middleton’s own steps onward. He was a plain old man
+enough, but with a pale, strong-featured face and white hair, a certain
+picturesqueness and venerableness, which Middleton fancied might have
+befitted a richer garb than he now wore. In much of their conversation,
+too, he was sensible that, though the stranger betrayed no acquaintance
+with literature, nor seemed to have conversed with cultivated minds, yet
+the results of such acquaintance and converse were here. Middleton was
+inclined to think him, however, an old man, one of those itinerants, such
+as Wordsworth represented in the “Excursion,” who smooth themselves by
+the attrition of the world and gain a knowledge equivalent to or better
+than that of books from the actual intellect of man awake and active
+around them.
+
+Often, during the short period since their companionship originated,
+Middleton had felt impelled to disclose to the old man the object of his
+journey, and the wild tale by which, after two hundred years, he had been
+blown as it were across the ocean, and drawn onward to commence this
+search. The old man’s ordinary conversation was of a nature to draw
+forth such a confidence as this; frequently turning on the traditions of
+the wayside; the reminiscences that lingered on the battle-fields of the
+Roses, or of the Parliament, like flowers nurtured by the blood of the
+slain, and prolonging their race through the centuries for the wayfarer
+to pluck them; or the family histories of the castles, manor-houses, and
+seats which, of various epochs, had their park-gates along the roadside
+and would be seen with dark gray towers or ancient gables, or more modern
+forms of architecture, rising up among clouds of ancient oaks. Middleton
+watched earnestly to see if, in any of these tales, there were
+circumstances resembling those striking and singular ones which he had
+borne so long in his memory, and on which he was now acting in so strange
+a manner; but [though] there was a good deal of variety of incident in
+them, there never was any combination of incidents having the peculiarity
+of this.
+
+“I suppose,” said he to the old man, “the settlers in my country may have
+carried away with them traditions long since forgotten in this country,
+but which might have an interest and connection, and might even piece out
+the broken relics of family history, which have remained perhaps a
+mystery for hundreds of years. I can conceive, even, that this might be
+of importance in settling the heirships of estates; but which now, only
+the two insulated parts of the story being known, remain a riddle,
+although the solution of it is actually in the world, if only these two
+parts could be united across the sea, like the wires of an electric
+telegraph.”
+
+“It is an impressive idea,” said the old man. “Do you know any such
+tradition as you have hinted at?”
+
+April 13th.--Middleton could not but wonder at the singular chance that
+had established him in such a place, and in such society, so strangely
+adapted to the purposes with which he had been wandering through England.
+He had come hither, hoping as it were to find the past still alive and in
+action; and here it was so in this one only spot, and these few persons
+into the midst of whom he had suddenly been cast. With these reflections
+he looked forth from his window into the old-fashioned garden, and at the
+stone sun-dial, which had numbered all the hours--all the daylight and
+serene ones, at least--since his mysterious ancestor left the country.
+And [is] this, then, he thought to himself, the establishment of which
+some rumor had been preserved? Was it here that the secret had its
+hiding-place in the old coffer, in the cupboard, in the secret chamber,
+or whatever was indicated by the apparently idle words of the document
+which he had preserved? He still smiled at the idea, but it was with a
+pleasant, mysterious sense that his life had at last got out of the dusty
+real, and that strangeness had mixed itself up with his daily experience.
+
+With such feelings he prepared himself to go down to dinner with his
+host. He found him alone at table, which was placed in a dark old room
+modernized with every English comfort and the pleasant spectacle of a
+table set with the whitest of napery and the brightest of glass and
+china. The friendly old gentleman, as he had found him from the first,
+became doubly and trebly so in that position which brings out whatever
+warmth of heart an Englishman has, and gives it to him if he has none.
+The impressionable and sympathetic character of Middleton answered to the
+kindness of his host; and by the time the meal was concluded, the two
+were conversing with almost as much zest and friendship as if they were
+similar in age, even fellow-countrymen, and had known one another all
+their lifetime. Middleton’s secret, it may be supposed, came often to
+the tip of his tongue; but still he kept it within, from a natural
+repugnance to bring out the one romance of his life. The talk, however,
+necessarily ran much upon topics among which this one would have come in
+without any extra attempt to introduce it.
+
+“This decay of old families,” said the Master, “is much greater than
+would appear on the surface of things. We have such a reluctance to part
+with them, that we are content to see them continued by any fiction,
+through any indirections, rather than to dispense with old names. In
+your country, I suppose, there is no such reluctance; you are willing
+that one generation should blot out all that preceded it, and be itself
+the newest and only age of the world.”
+
+“Not quite so,” answered Middleton; “at any rate, if there be such a
+feeling in the people at large, I doubt whether, even in England, those
+who fancy themselves possessed of claims to birth, cherish them more as a
+treasure than we do. It is, of course, a thousand times more difficult
+for us to keep alive a name amid a thousand difficulties sedulously
+thrown around it by our institutions, than for you to do, where your
+institutions are anxiously calculated to promote the contrary purpose.
+It has occasionally struck me, however, that the ancient lineage might
+often be found in America, for a family which has been compelled to
+prolong itself here through the female line, and through alien stocks.”
+
+“Indeed, my young friend,” said the Master, “if that be the case, I
+should like to [speak?] further with you upon it; for, I can assure you,
+there are sometimes vicissitudes in old families that make me grieve to
+think that a man cannot be made for the occasion.”
+
+All this while, the young lady at table had remained almost silent; and
+Middleton had only occasionally been reminded of her by the necessity of
+performing some of those offices which put people at table under a
+Christian necessity of recognizing one another. He was, to say the
+truth, somewhat interested in her, yet not strongly attracted by the
+neutral tint of her dress, and the neutral character of her manners. She
+did not seem to be handsome, although, with her face full before him, he
+had not quite made up his mind on this point.
+
+April 14th.--So here was Middleton, now at length seeing indistinctly a
+thread, to which the thread that he had so long held in his hand--the
+hereditary thread that ancestor after ancestor had handed down--might
+seem ready to join on. He felt as if they were the two points of an
+electric chain, which being joined, an instantaneous effect must follow.
+Earnestly, as he would have looked forward to this moment (had he in
+sober reason ever put any real weight on the fantasy in pursuit of which
+he had wandered so far) he now, that it actually appeared to be realizing
+itself, paused with a vague sensation of alarm. The mystery was
+evidently one of sorrow, if not of crime, and he felt as if that sorrow
+and crime might not have been annihilated even by being buried out of
+human sight and remembrance so long. He remembered to have heard or
+read, how that once an old pit had been dug open, in which were found the
+remains of persons that, as the shuddering by-standers traditionally
+remembered, had died of an ancient pestilence; and out of that old grave
+had come a new plague, that slew the far-off progeny of those who had
+first died by it. Might not some fatal treasure like this, in a moral
+view, be brought to light by the secret into which he had so strangely
+been drawn? Such were the fantasies with which he awaited the return of
+Alice, whose light footsteps sounded afar along the passages of the old
+mansion; and then all was silent.
+
+At length he heard the sound, a great way off, as he concluded, of her
+returning footstep, approaching from chamber to chamber, and along the
+staircases, closing the doors behind her. At first, he paid no great
+attention to the character of these sounds, but as they drew nearer, he
+became aware that the footstep was unlike those of Alice; indeed, as
+unlike as could be, very regular, slow, yet not firm, so that it seemed
+to be that of an aged person, sauntering listlessly through the rooms.
+We have often alluded to Middleton’s sensitiveness, and the quick
+vibrations of his sympathies; and there was something in this slow
+approach that produced a strange feeling within him; so that he stood
+breathlessly, looking towards the door by which these slow footsteps were
+to enter. At last, there appeared in the doorway a venerable figure,
+clad in a rich, faded dressing-gown, and standing on the threshold looked
+fixedly at Middleton, at the same time holding up a light in his left
+hand. In his right was some object that Middleton did not distinctly
+see. But he knew the figure, and recognized the face. It was the old
+man, his long since companion on the journey hitherward.
+
+“So,” said the old man, smiling gravely, “you have thought fit, at last,
+to accept the hospitality which I offered you so long ago. It might have
+been better for both of us--for all parties--if you had accepted it
+then!”
+
+“You here!” exclaimed Middleton. “And what can be your connection with
+all the error and trouble, and involuntary wrong, through which I have
+wandered since our last meeting? And is it possible that you even then
+held the clue which I was seeking?”
+
+“No,--no,” replied Rothermel. “I was not conscious, at least, of so
+doing. And yet had we two sat down there by the wayside, or on that
+English stile, which attracted your attention so much; had we sat down
+there and thrown forth each his own dream, each his own knowledge, it
+would have saved much that we must now forever regret. Are you even now
+ready to confide wholly in me?”
+
+“Alas,” said Middleton, with a darkening brow, “there are many reasons,
+at this moment, which did not exist then, to incline me to hold my peace.
+And why has not Alice returned?--and what is your connection with her?”
+
+“Let her answer for herself,” said Rothermel; and he called her, shouting
+through the silent house as if she were at the furthest chamber, and he
+were in instant need: “Alice!--Alice!--Alice!--here is one who would know
+what is the link between a maiden and her father!”
+
+Amid the strange uproar which he made Alice came flying back, not in
+alarm but only in haste, and put her hand within his own. “Hush,
+father,” said she. “It is not time.”
+
+Here is an abstract of the plot of this story. The Middleton who
+emigrated to America, more than two hundred years ago, had been a dark
+and moody man; he came with a beautiful though not young woman for his
+wife, and left a family behind him. In this family a certain heirloom
+had been preserved, and with it a tradition that grew wilder and stranger
+with the passing generations. The tradition had lost, if it ever had,
+some of its connecting links; but it referred to a murder, to the
+expulsion of a brother from the hereditary house, in some strange way,
+and to a Bloody Footstep which he had left impressed into the threshold,
+as he turned about to make a last remonstrance. It was rumored, however,
+or vaguely understood, that the expelled brother was not altogether an
+innocent man; but that there had been wrong done as well as crime
+committed, insomuch that his reasons were strong that led him,
+subsequently, to imbibe the most gloomy religious views, and to bury
+himself in the Western wilderness. These reasons he had never fully
+imparted to his family; but had necessarily made allusions to them, which
+had been treasured up and doubtless enlarged upon. At last, one
+descendant of the family determines to go to England, with the purpose of
+searching out whatever ground there may be for these traditions, carrying
+with him certain ancient documents, and other relics; and goes about the
+country, half in earnest, and half in sport of fancy, in quest of the old
+family mansion. He makes singular discoveries, all of which bring the
+book to an end unexpected by everybody, and not satisfactory to the
+natural yearnings of novel readers. In the traditions that he brought
+over, there was a key to some family secrets that were still unsolved,
+and that controlled the descent of estates and titles. His influence
+upon these matters involves [him] in divers strange and perilous
+adventures; and at last it turns out that he himself is the rightful heir
+to the titles and estate, that had passed into another name within the
+last half-century. But he respects both, feeling that it is better to
+make a virgin soil than to try to make the old name grow in a soil that
+had been darkened with so much blood and misfortune as this.
+
+April 27th, Tuesday.--It was with a delightful feeling of release from
+ordinary rules, that Middleton found himself brought into this connection
+with Alice; and he only hoped that this play-day of his life might last
+long enough to rest him from all that he had suffered. In the enjoyment
+of his position he almost forgot the pursuit that occupied him, nor might
+he have remembered for a long space if, one evening, Alice herself had
+not alluded to it. “You are wasting precious days,” she suddenly said.
+“Why do you not renew your quest?”
+
+“To what do you allude?” said Middleton in surprise. “What object do you
+suppose me to have?”
+
+Alice smiled; nay, laughed outright. “You suppose yourself to be a
+perfect mystery, no doubt,” she replied. “But do not I know you--have
+not I known you long--as the holder of the talisman, the owner of the
+mysterious cabinet that contains the blood-stained secret?”
+
+“Nay, Alice, this is certainly a strange coincidence, that you should
+know even thus much of a foolish secret that makes me employ this little
+holiday time, which I have stolen out of a weary life, in a wild-goose
+chase. But, believe me, you allude to matters that are more a mystery to
+me than my affairs appear to be to you. Will you explain what you would
+suggest by this badinage?”
+
+Alice shook her head. “You have no claim to know what I know, even if it
+would be any addition to your own knowledge. I shall not, and must not
+enlighten you. You must burrow for the secret with your own tools, in
+your own manner, and in a place of your own choosing. I am bound not to
+assist you.”
+
+“Alice, this is wilful, wayward, unjust,” cried Middleton, with a flushed
+cheek. “I have not told you--yet you know well--the deep and real
+importance which this subject has for me. We have been together as
+friends, yet, the instant when there comes up an occasion when the
+slightest friendly feeling would induce you to do me a good office, you
+assume this altered tone.”
+
+“My tone is not in the least altered in respect to you,” said Alice.
+“All along, as you know, I have reserved myself on this very point; it
+being, I candidly tell you, impossible for me to act in your interest in
+the matter alluded to. If you choose to consider this unfriendly, as
+being less than the terms on which you conceive us to have stood give you
+a right to demand of me--you must resent it as you please. I shall not
+the less retain for you the regard due to one who has certainly
+befriended me in very untoward circumstances.”
+
+This conversation confirmed the previous idea of Middleton, that some
+mystery of a peculiarly dark and evil character was connected with the
+family secret with which he was himself entangled; but it perplexed him
+to imagine in what way this, after the lapse of so many years, should
+continue to be a matter of real importance at the present day. All the
+actors in the original guilt--if guilt it were--must have been long ago
+in their graves; some in the churchyard of the village, with those
+moss-grown letters embossing their names; some in the church itself, with
+mural tablets recording their names over the family-pew, and one, it
+might be, far over the sea, where his grave was first made under the
+forest leaves, though now a city had grown up around it. Yet here was
+he, the remote descendant of that family, setting his foot at last in the
+country, and as secretly as might be; and all at once his mere presence
+seemed to revive the buried secret, almost to awake the dead who partook
+of that secret and had acted it. There was a vibration from the other
+world, continued and prolonged into this, the instant that he stepped
+upon the mysterious and haunted ground.
+
+He knew not in what way to proceed. He could not but feel that there was
+something not exactly within the limits of propriety in being here,
+disguised--at least, not known in his true character--prying into the
+secrets of a proud and secluded Englishman. But then, as he said to
+himself on his own side of the question, the secret belonged to himself
+by exactly as ancient a tenure and by precisely as strong a claim, as to
+the Englishman. His rights here were just as powerful and well-founded
+as those of his ancestor had been, nearly three centuries ago; and here
+the same feeling came over him that he was that very personage, returned
+after all these ages, to see if his foot would fit this bloody footstep
+left of old upon the threshold. The result of all his cogitation was, as
+the reader will have foreseen, that he decided to continue his
+researches, and, his proceedings being pretty defensible, let the result
+take care of itself.
+
+For this purpose he went next day to the hospital, and ringing at the
+Master’s door, was ushered into the old-fashioned, comfortable library,
+where he had spent that well-remembered evening which threw the first ray
+of light on the pursuit that now seemed developing into such strange and
+unexpected consequences. Being admitted, he was desired by the domestic
+to wait, as his Reverence was at that moment engaged with a gentleman on
+business. Glancing through the ivy that mantled over the window,
+Middleton saw that this interview was taking place in the garden, where
+the Master and his visitor were walking to and fro in the avenue of box,
+discussing some matter, as it seemed to him, with considerable
+earnestness on both sides. He observed, too, that there was warmth,
+passion, a disturbed feeling on the stranger’s part; while, on that of
+the Master, it was a calm, serious, earnest representation of whatever
+view he was endeavoring to impress on the other. At last, the interview
+appeared to come toward a climax, the Master addressing some words to his
+guest, still with undisturbed calmness, to which the latter replied by a
+violent and even fierce gesture, as it should seem of menace, not towards
+the Master, but some unknown party; and then hastily turning, he left the
+garden and was soon heard riding away. The Master looked after him
+awhile, and then, shaking his white head, returned into the house and
+soon entered the parlor.
+
+He looked somewhat surprised, and, as it struck Middleton, a little
+startled, at finding him there; yet he welcomed him with all his former
+cordiality--indeed, with a friendship that thoroughly warmed Middleton’s
+heart even to its coldest corner.
+
+“This is strange!” said the old gentleman. “Do you remember our
+conversation on that evening when I first had the unlooked-for pleasure
+of receiving you as a guest into my house? At that time I spoke to you
+of a strange family story, of which there was no denouement, such as a
+novel-writer would desire, and which had remained in that unfinished
+posture for more than two hundred years! Well; perhaps it will gratify
+you to know that there seems a prospect of that wanting termination being
+supplied!”
+
+“Indeed!” said Middleton.
+
+“Yes,” replied the Master. “A gentleman has just parted with me who was
+indeed the representative of the family concerned in the story. He is
+the descendant of a younger son of that family, to whom the estate
+devolved about a century ago, although at that time there was search for
+the heirs of the elder son, who had disappeared after the bloody incident
+which I related to you. Now, singular as it may appear, at this late
+day, a person claiming to be the descendant and heir of that eldest son
+has appeared, and if I may credit my friend’s account, is disposed not
+only to claim the estate, but the dormant title which Eldredge himself
+has been so long preparing to claim for himself. Singularly enough, too,
+the heir is an American.”
+
+May 2d, Sunday.--“I believe,” said Middleton, “that many English secrets
+might find their solution in America, if the two threads of a story could
+be brought together, disjoined as they have been by time and the ocean.
+But are you at liberty to tell me the nature of the incidents to which
+you allude?”
+
+“I do not see any reason to the contrary,” answered the Master; “for the
+story has already come in an imperfect way before the public, and the
+full and authentic particulars are likely soon to follow. It seems that
+the younger brother was ejected from the house on account of a love
+affair; the elder having married a young woman with whom the younger was
+in love, and, it is said, the wife disappeared on the bridal night, and
+was never heard of more. The elder brother remained single during the
+rest of his life; and dying childless, and there being still no news of
+the second brother, the inheritance and representation of the family
+devolved upon the third brother and his posterity. This branch of the
+family has ever since remained in possession; and latterly the
+representation has become of more importance, on account of a claim to an
+old title, which, by the failure of another branch of this ancient
+family, has devolved upon the branch here settled. Now, just at this
+juncture, comes another heir from America, pretending that he is the
+descendant of a marriage between the second son, supposed to have been
+murdered on the threshold of the manor-house, and the missing bride! Is
+it not a singular story?”
+
+“It would seem to require very strong evidence to prove it,” said
+Middleton. “And methinks a Republican should care little for the title,
+however he might value the estate.”
+
+“Both--both,” said the Master, smiling, “would be equally attractive to
+your countryman. But there are further curious particulars in connection
+with this claim. You must know, they are a family of singular
+characteristics, humorists, sometimes developing their queer traits into
+something like insanity; though oftener, I must say, spending stupid
+hereditary lives here on their estates, rusting out and dying without
+leaving any biography whatever about them. And yet there has always been
+one very queer thing about this generally very commonplace family. It is
+that each father, on his death-bed, has had an interview with his son, at
+which he has imparted some secret that has evidently had an influence on
+the character and after life of the son, making him ever after a
+discontented man, aspiring for something he has never been able to find.
+Now the American, I am told, pretends that he has the clue which has
+always been needed to make the secret available; the key whereby the lock
+may be opened; the something that the lost son of the family carried away
+with him, and by which through these centuries he has impeded the
+progress of the race. And, wild as the story seems, he does certainly
+seem to bring something that looks very like the proof of what he says.”
+
+“And what are those proofs?” inquired Middleton, wonder-stricken at the
+strange reduplication of his own position and pursuits.
+
+“In the first place,” said the Master, “the English marriage-certificate
+by a clergyman of that day in London, after publication of the banns,
+with a reference to the register of the parish church where the marriage
+is recorded. Then, a certified genealogy of the family in New England,
+where such matters can be ascertained from town and church records, with
+at least as much certainty, it would appear, as in this country. He has
+likewise a manuscript in his ancestor’s autograph, containing a brief
+account of the events which banished him from his own country; the
+circumstances which favored the idea that he had been slain, and which he
+himself was willing should be received as a belief; the fortune that led
+him to America, where he wished to found a new race wholly disconnected
+with the past; and this manuscript he sealed up, with directions that it
+should not be opened till two hundred years after his death, by which
+time, as it was probable to conjecture, it would matter little to any
+mortal whether the story was told or not. A whole generation has passed
+since the time when the paper was at last unsealed and read, so long it
+had no operation; yet now, at last, here comes the American, to disturb
+the succession of an ancient family!”
+
+“There is something very strange in all this,” said Middleton.
+
+And indeed there was something stranger in his view of the matter than he
+had yet communicated to the Master. For, taking into consideration the
+relation in which he found himself with the present recognized
+representative of the family, the thought struck him that his coming
+hither had dug up, as it were, a buried secret that immediately assumed
+life and activity the moment that it was above ground again. For seven
+generations the family had vegetated in the quietude of English country
+gentility, doing nothing to make itself known, passing from the cradle to
+the tomb amid the same old woods that had waved over it before his
+ancestor had impressed the bloody footstep; and yet the instant that he
+came back, an influence seemed to be at work that was likely to renew the
+old history of the family. He questioned with himself whether it were
+not better to leave all as it was; to withdraw himself into the secrecy
+from which he had but half emerged, and leave the family to keep on, to
+the end of time perhaps, in its rusty innocence, rather than to interfere
+with his wild American character to disturb it. The smell of that dark
+crime--that brotherly hatred and attempted murder--seemed to breathe out
+of the ground as he dug it up. Was it not better that it should remain
+forever buried, for what to him was this old English title--what this
+estate, so far from his own native land, located amidst feelings and
+manners which would never be his own? It was late, to be sure--yet not
+too late for him to turn back: the vibration, the fear, which his
+footsteps had caused, would subside into peace! Meditating in this way,
+he took a hasty leave of the kind old Master, promising to see him again
+at an early opportunity. By chance, or however it was, his footsteps
+turned to the woods of ------ Chace, and there he wandered through its
+glades, deep in thought, yet always with a strange sense that he was
+treading on the soil where his ancestors had trodden, and where he
+himself had best right of all men to be. It was just in this state of
+feeling that he found his course arrested by a hand upon his shoulder.
+
+“What business have you here?” was the question sounded in his ear; and,
+starting, he found himself in the grasp, as his blood tingled to know, of
+a gentleman in a shooting-dress, who looked at him with a wrathful brow.
+“Are you a poacher, or what?”
+
+Be the case what it might, Middleton’s blood boiled at the grasp of that
+hand, as it never before had done in the coarse of his impulsive life.
+He shook himself free, and stood fiercely before his antagonist,
+confronting him, with his uplifted stick, while the other, likewise,
+appeared to be shaken by a strange wrath.
+
+“Fellow,” muttered he--“Yankee blackguard!--imposter--take yourself off
+these grounds. Quick, or it will be the worse for you!”
+
+Middleton restrained himself. “Mr. Eldredge,” said he, “for I believe I
+speak to the man who calls himself owner of this land on which we stand,
+--Mr. Eldredge, you are acting under a strange misapprehension of my
+character. I have come hither with no sinister purpose, and am entitled,
+at the hands of a gentleman, to the consideration of an honorable
+antagonist, even if you deem me one at all. And perhaps, if you think
+upon the blue chamber and the ebony cabinet, and the secret connected.
+with it,”--
+
+“Villain, no more!” said Eldredge; and utterly mad with rage, he
+presented his gun at Middleton; but even at the moment of doing so, he
+partly restrained himself, so far as, instead of shooting him, to raise
+the butt of his gun, and strike a blow at him. It came down heavily on
+Middleton’s shoulder, though aimed at his head; and the blow was terribly
+avenged, even by itself, for the jar caused the hammer to come down; the
+gun went off, sending the bullet downwards through the heart of the
+unfortunate man, who fell dead upon the ground. Eldredge [Evidently a
+slip of the pen; Middleton being intended.] stood stupefied, looking at
+the catastrophe which had so suddenly occurred.
+
+May 3d, Monday.--So here was the secret suddenly made safe in this so
+terrible way; its keepers reduced from two parties to one interest; the
+other who alone knew of this age-long mystery and trouble now carrying it
+into eternity, where a long line of those who partook of the knowledge,
+in each successive generation, might now be waiting to inquire of him how
+he had held his trust. He had kept it well, there was no doubt of it;
+for there he lay dead upon the ground, having betrayed it to no one,
+though by a method which none could have foreseen, the whole had come
+into the possession of him who had brought hither but half of it.
+Middleton looked down in horror upon the form that had just been so full
+of life and wrathful vigor--and now lay so quietly. Being wholly
+unconscious of any purpose to bring about the catastrophe, it had not at
+first struck him that his own position was in any manner affected by the
+violent death, under such circumstances, of the unfortunate man. But now
+it suddenly occurred to him, that there had been a train of incidents all
+calculated to make him the object of suspicion; and he felt that he could
+not, under the English administration of law, be suffered to go at large
+without rendering a strict account of himself and his relations with the
+deceased. He might, indeed, fly; he might still remain in the vicinity,
+and possibly escape notice. But was not the risk too great? Was it just
+even to be aware of this event, and not relate fully the manner of it,
+lest a suspicion of blood-guiltiness should rest upon some innocent head?
+But while he was thus cogitating, he heard footsteps approaching along
+the wood-path; and half-impulsively, half on purpose, he stept aside into
+the shrubbery, but still where he could see the dead body, and what
+passed near it.
+
+The footsteps came on, and at the turning of the path, just where
+Middleton had met Eldredge, the new-comer appeared in sight. It was
+Hoper, in his usual dress of velveteen, looking now seedy,
+poverty-stricken, and altogether in ill-case, trudging moodily along,
+with his hat pulled over his brows, so that he did not see the ghastly
+object before him till his foot absolutely trod upon the dead man’s hand.
+Being thus made aware of the proximity of the corpse, he started back a
+little, yet evincing such small emotion as did credit to his English
+reserve; then uttering a low exclamation,--cautiously low, indeed,--he
+stood looking at the corpse a moment or two, apparently in deep
+meditation. He then drew near, bent down, and without evincing any
+horror at the touch of death in this horrid shape, he opened the dead
+man’s vest, inspected the wound, satisfied himself that life was extinct,
+and then nodded his head and smiled gravely. He next proceeded to
+examine seriatim the dead man’s pockets, turning each of them inside out
+and taking the contents, where they appeared adapted to his needs: for
+instance, a silken purse, through the interstices of which some gold was
+visible; a watch, which however had been injured by the explosion, and
+had stopt just at the moment--twenty-one minutes past five--when the
+catastrophe took place. Hoper ascertained, by putting the watch to his
+ear, that this was the case; then pocketing it, he continued his
+researches. He likewise secured a note-book, on examining which he found
+several bank-notes, and some other papers. And having done this, the
+thief stood considering what to do next; nothing better occurring to him,
+he thrust the pockets back, gave the corpse as nearly as he could the
+same appearance that it had worn before he found it, and hastened away,
+leaving the horror there on the wood-path.
+
+He had been gone only a few minutes when another step, a light woman’s
+step, [was heard] coming along the pathway, and Alice appeared, having on
+her usual white mantle, straying along with that fearlessness which
+characterized her so strangely, and made her seem like one of the
+denizens of nature. She was singing in a low tone some one of those airs
+which have become so popular in England, as negro melodies; when
+suddenly, looking before her, she saw the blood-stained body on the
+grass, the face looking ghastly upward. Alice pressed her hand upon her
+heart; it was not her habit to scream, not the habit of that strong,
+wild, self-dependent nature; and the exclamation which broke from her was
+not for help, but the voice of her heart crying out to herself. For an
+instant she hesitated, as [if] not knowing what to do; then approached,
+and with her white, maiden hand felt the brow of the dead man,
+tremblingly, but yet firm, and satisfied herself that life had wholly
+departed. She pressed her hand, that had just touched the dead man’s, on
+her forehead, and gave a moment to thought.
+
+What her decision might have been, we cannot say, for while she stood in
+this attitude, Middleton stept from his seclusion, and at the noise of
+his approach she turned suddenly round, looking more frightened and
+agitated than at the moment when she had first seen the dead body. She
+faced Middleton, however, and looked him quietly in the eye. “You see
+this!” said she, gazing fixedly at him. “It is not at this moment that
+you first discover it.”
+
+“No,” said Middleton, frankly. “It is not. I was present at the
+catastrophe. In one sense, indeed, I was the cause of it; but, Alice, I
+need not tell you that I am no murderer.”
+
+“A murderer?--no,” said Alice, still looking at him with the same fixed
+gaze. “But you and this man were at deadly variance. He would have
+rejoiced at any chance that would have laid you cold and bloody on the
+earth, as he is now; nay, he would most eagerly have seized on any
+fair-looking pretext that would have given him a chance to stretch you
+there. The world will scarcely believe, when it knows all about your
+relations with him, that his blood is not on your hand. Indeed,” said
+she, with a strange smile, “I see some of it there now!”
+
+And, in very truth, so there was; a broad blood-stain that had dried on
+Middleton’s hand. He shuddered at it, but essayed vainly to rub it off.
+
+“You see,” said she. “It was foreordained that you should shed this
+man’s blood; foreordained that, by digging into that old pit of
+pestilence, you should set the contagion loose again. You should have
+left it buried forever. But now what do you mean to do?”
+
+“To proclaim this catastrophe,” replied Middleton. “It is the only
+honest and manly way. What else can I do?”
+
+“You can and ought to leave him on the wood-path, where he has fallen,”
+ said Alice, “and go yourself to take advantage of the state of things
+which Providence has brought about. Enter the old house, the hereditary
+house, where--now, at least--you alone have a right to tread. Now is the
+hour. All is within your grasp. Let the wrong of three hundred years be
+righted, and come back thus to your own, to these hereditary fields, this
+quiet, long-descended home; to title, to honor.”
+
+Yet as the wild maiden spoke thus, there was a sort of mockery in her
+eyes; on her brow; gleaming through all her face, as if she scorned what
+she thus pressed upon him, the spoils of the dead man who lay at their
+feet. Middleton, with his susceptibility, could not [but] be sensible of
+a wild and strange charm, as well as horror, in the situation; it seemed
+such a wonder that here, in formal, orderly, well-governed England, so
+wild a scene as this should have occurred; that they too [two?] should
+stand here, deciding on the descent of an estate, and the inheritance of
+a title, holding a court of their own.
+
+“Come, then,” said he, at length. “Let us leave this poor fallen
+antagonist in his blood, and go whither you will lead me. I will judge
+for myself. At all events, I will not leave my hereditary home without
+knowing what my power is.”
+
+“Come,” responded Alice; and she turned back; but then returned and threw
+a handkerchief over the dead man’s face, which while they spoke had
+assumed that quiet, ecstatic expression of joy which often is observed to
+overspread the faces of those who die of gunshot wounds, however fierce
+the passion in which their spirits took their flight. With this strange,
+grand, awful joy did the dead man gaze upward into the very eyes and
+hearts, as it were, of the two that now bent over him. They looked at
+one another.
+
+“Whence comes this expression?” said Middleton, thoughtfully. “Alice,
+methinks he is reconciled to us now; and that we are members of one
+reconciled family, all of whom are in heaven but me.”
+
+Tuesday, May 4th.--“How strange is this whole situation between you and
+me,” said Middleton, as they went up the winding pathway that led towards
+the house. “Shall I ever understand it? Do you mean ever to explain it
+to me? That I should find you here with that old man [The allusion here
+is apparently to the old man who proclaims himself Alice’s father, in the
+portion dated April 14th. He figures hereafter as the old Hospitaller,
+Hammond. The reader must not take this present passage as referring to
+the death of Eldredge, which has just taken place in he preceding
+section. The author is now beginning to elaborate the relation of
+Middleton and Alice. As will be seen, farther on, the death of Eldredge
+is ignored and abandoned; Eldredge is revived, and the story proceeds in
+another way.--G. P. L.], so mysterious, apparently so poor, yet so
+powerful! What [is] his relation to you?”
+
+“A close one,” replied Alice sadly. “He was my father!”
+
+“Your father!” repeated Middleton, starting back. “It does but heighten
+the wonder! Your father! And yet, by all the tokens that birth and
+breeding, and habits of thought and native character can show, you are my
+countrywoman. That wild, free spirit was never born in the breast of an
+Englishwoman; that slight frame, that slender beauty, that frail
+envelopment of a quick, piercing, yet stubborn and patient spirit,--are
+those the properties of an English maiden?”
+
+“Perhaps not,” replied Alice quietly. “I am your countrywoman. My
+father was an American, and one of whom you have heard--and no good,
+alas!--for many a year.”
+
+“And who then was he?” asked Middleton.
+
+“I know not whether you will hate me for telling you,” replied Alice,
+looking him sadly though firmly in the face. “There was a man--long
+years since, in your childhood--whose plotting brain proved the ruin of
+himself and many another; a man whose great designs made him a sort of
+potentate, whose schemes became of national importance, and produced
+results even upon the history of the country in which he acted. That man
+was my father; a man who sought to do great things, and, like many who
+have had similar aims, disregarded many small rights, strode over them,
+on his way to effect a gigantic purpose. Among other men, your father
+was trampled under foot, ruined, done to death, even, by the effects of
+his ambition.”
+
+“How is it possible!” exclaimed Middleton. “Was it Wentworth?”
+
+“Even so,” said Alice, still with the same sad calmness and not
+withdrawing her steady eyes from his face. “After his ruin; after the
+catastrophe that overwhelmed him and hundreds more, he took to flight;
+guilty, perhaps, but guilty as a fallen conqueror is; guilty to such an
+extent that he ceased to be a cheat, as a conqueror ceases to be a
+murderer. He came to England. My father had an original nobility of
+nature; and his life had not been such as to debase it, but rather such
+as to cherish and heighten that self-esteem which at least keeps the
+possessor of it from many meaner vices. He took nothing with him;
+nothing beyond the bare means of flight, with the world before him,
+although thousands of gold would not have been missed out of the
+scattered fragments of ruin that lay around him. He found his way
+hither, led, as you were, by a desire to reconnect himself with the place
+whence his family had originated; for he, too, was of a race which had
+something to do with the ancient story which has now been brought to a
+close. Arrived here, there were circumstances that chanced to make his
+talents and habits of business available to this Mr. Eldredge, a man
+ignorant and indolent, unknowing how to make the best of the property
+that was in his hands. By degrees, he took the estate into his
+management, acquiring necessarily a preponderating influence over such a
+man.”
+
+“And you,” said Middleton. “Have you been all along in England? For you
+must have been little more than an infant at the time.”
+
+“A mere infant,” said Alice, “and I remained in our own country under the
+care of a relative who left me much to my own keeping; much to the
+influences of that wild culture which the freedom of our country gives to
+its youth. It is only two years that I have been in England.”
+
+“This, then,” said Middleton thoughtfully, “accounts for much that has
+seemed so strange in the events through which we have passed; for the
+knowledge of my identity and my half-defined purpose which has always
+glided before me, and thrown so many strange shapes of difficulty in my
+path. But whence,--whence came that malevolence which your father’s
+conduct has so unmistakably shown? I had done him no injury, though I
+had suffered much.”
+
+“I have often thought,” replied Alice, “that my father, though retaining
+a preternatural strength and acuteness of intellect, was really not
+altogether sane. And, besides, he had made it his business to keep this
+estate, and all the complicated advantages of the representation of this
+old family, secure to the person who was deemed to have inherited them.
+A succession of ages and generations might be supposed to have blotted
+out your claims from existence; for it is not just that there should be
+no term of time which can make security for lack of fact and a few
+formalities. At all events, he had satisfied himself that his duty was
+to act as he has done.”
+
+“Be it so! I do not seek to throw blame on him,” said Middleton.
+“Besides, Alice, he was your father!”
+
+“Yes,” said she, sadly smiling; “let him [have] what protection that
+thought may give him, even though I lose what he may gain. And now here
+we are at the house. At last, come in! It is your own; there is none
+that can longer forbid you!”
+
+They entered the door of the old mansion, now a farm-house, and there
+were its old hall, its old chambers, all before them. They ascended the
+staircase, and stood on the landing-place above; while Middleton had
+again that feeling that had so often made him dizzy,--that sense of being
+in one dream and recognizing the scenery and events of a former dream.
+So overpowering was this feeling, that he laid his hand on the slender
+arm of Alice, to steady himself; and she comprehended the emotion that
+agitated him, and looked into his eyes with a tender sympathy, which she
+had never before permitted to be visible,--perhaps never before felt. He
+steadied himself and followed her till they had entered an ancient
+chamber, but one that was finished with all the comfortable luxury
+customary to be seen in English homes.
+
+“Whither have you led me now?” inquired Middleton.
+
+“Look round,” said Alice. “Is there nothing here that you ought to
+recognize?--nothing that you kept the memory of, long ago?”
+
+He looked around the room again and again, and at last, in a somewhat
+shadowy corner, he espied an old cabinet made of ebony and inlaid with
+pearl; one of those tall, stately, and elaborate pieces of furniture that
+are rather articles of architecture than upholstery; and on which a
+higher skill, feeling, and genius than now is ever employed on such
+things, was expended. Alice drew near the stately cabinet and threw wide
+the doors, which, like the portals of a palace, stood between two
+pillars; it all seemed to be unlocked, showing within some beautiful old
+pictures in the panel of the doors, and a mirror, that opened a long
+succession of mimic halls, reflection upon reflection, extending to an
+interminable nowhere.
+
+“And what is this?” said Middleton,--“a cabinet? Why do you draw my
+attention so strongly to it?”
+
+“Look at it well,” said she. “Do you recognize nothing there? Have you
+forgotten your description? The stately palace with its architecture,
+each pillar with its architecture, those pilasters, that frieze; you
+ought to know them all. Somewhat less than you imagined in size,
+perhaps; a fairy reality, inches for yards; that is the only difference.
+And you have the key?”
+
+And there then was that palace, to which tradition, so false at once and
+true, had given such magnitude and magnificence in the traditions of the
+Middleton family, around their shifting fireside in America. Looming
+afar through the mists of time, the little fact had become a gigantic
+vision. Yes, here it was in miniature, all that he had dreamed of; a
+palace of four feet high!
+
+“You have the key of this palace,” said Alice; “it has waited--that is,
+its secret and precious chamber has, for you to open it, these three
+hundred years. Do you know how to find that secret chamber?”
+
+Middleton, still in that dreamy mood, threw open an inner door of the
+cabinet, and applying the old-fashioned key at his watch-chain to a hole
+in the mimic pavement within, pressed one of the mosaics, and immediately
+the whole floor of the apartment sank, and revealed a receptacle withal.
+Alice had come forward eagerly, and they both looked into the
+hiding-place, expecting what should be there. It was empty! They looked
+into each other’s faces with blank astonishment. Everything had been so
+strangely true, and so strangely false, up to this moment, that they
+could not comprehend this failure at the last moment. It was the
+strangest, saddest jest! It brought Middleton up with such a sudden
+revulsion that he grew dizzy, and the room swam round him and the cabinet
+dazzled before his eyes. It had been magnified to a palace; it had
+dwindled down to Liliputian size; and yet, up till now, it had seemed to
+contain in its diminutiveness all the riches which he had attributed to
+its magnitude. This last moment had utterly subverted it; the whole
+great structure seemed to vanish.
+
+“See; here are the dust and ashes of it,” observed Alice, taking
+something that was indeed only a pinch of dust out of the secret
+compartment. “There is nothing else.”
+
+
+II.
+
+May 5th, Wednesday.--The father of these two sons, an aged man at the
+time, took much to heart their enmity; and after the catastrophe, he
+never held up his head again. He was not told that his son had perished,
+though such was the belief of the family; but imbibed the opinion that he
+had left his home and native land to become a wanderer on the face of the
+earth, and that some time or other he might return. In this idea he
+spent the remainder of his days; in this idea he died. It may be that
+the influence of this idea might be traced in the way in which he spent
+some of the latter years of his life, and a portion of the wealth which
+had become of little value in his eyes, since it had caused dissension
+and bloodshed between the sons of one household. It was a common mode of
+charity in those days--a common thing for rich men to do--to found an
+almshouse or a hospital, and endow it, for the support of a certain
+number of old and destitute men or women, generally such as had some
+claim of blood upon the founder, or at least were natives of the parish,
+the district, the county, where he dwelt. The Eldredge Hospital was
+founded for the benefit of twelve old men, who should have been wanderers
+upon the face of the earth; men, they should be, of some education, but
+defeated and hopeless, cast off by the world for misfortune, but not for
+crime. And this charity had subsisted, on terms varying little or
+nothing from the original ones, from that day to this; and, at this very
+time, twelve old men were not wanting, of various countries, of various
+fortunes, but all ending finally in ruin, who had centred here, to live
+on the poor pittance that had been assigned to them, three hundred years
+ago. What a series of chronicles it would have been if each of the
+beneficiaries of this charity, since its foundation, had left a record of
+the events which finally led him hither. Middleton often, as he talked
+with these old men, regretted that he himself had no turn for authorship,
+so rich a volume might he have compiled from the experience, sometimes
+sunny and triumphant, though always ending in shadow, which he gathered
+here. They were glad to talk to him, and would have been glad and
+grateful for any auditor, as they sat on one or another of the stone
+benches, in the sunshine of the garden; or at evening, around the great
+fireside, or within the chimney-corner, with their pipes and ale.
+
+There was one old man who attracted much of his attention, by the
+venerableness of his aspect; by something dignified, almost haughty and
+commanding, in his air. Whatever might have been the intentions and
+expectations of the founder, it certainly had happened in these latter
+days that there was a difficulty in finding persons of education, of good
+manners, of evident respectability, to put into the places made vacant by
+deaths of members; whether that the paths of life are surer now than they
+used to be, and that men so arrange their lives as not to be left, in any
+event, quite without resources as they draw near its close; at any rate,
+there was a little tincture of the vagabond running through these twelve
+quasi gentlemen,--through several of them, at least. But this old man
+could not well be mistaken; in his manners, in his tones, in all his
+natural language and deportment, there was evidence that he had been more
+than respectable; and, viewing him, Middleton could not help wondering
+what statesman had suddenly vanished out of public life and taken refuge
+here, for his head was of the statesman-class, and his demeanor that of
+one who had exercised influence over large numbers of men. He sometimes
+endeavored to set on foot a familiar relation with this old man, but
+there was even a sternness in the manner in which he repelled these
+advances, that gave little encouragement for their renewal. Nor did it
+seem that his companions of the Hospital were more in his confidence than
+Middleton himself. They regarded him with a kind of awe, a shyness, and
+in most cases with a certain dislike, which denoted an imperfect
+understanding of him. To say the truth, there was not generally much
+love lost between any of the members of this family; they had met with
+too much disappointment in the world to take kindly, now, to one another
+or to anything or anybody. I rather suspect that they really had more
+pleasure in burying one another, when the time came, than in any other
+office of mutual kindness and brotherly love which it was their part to
+do; not out of hardness of heart, but merely from soured temper, and
+because, when people have met disappointment and have settled down into
+final unhappiness, with no more gush and spring of good spirits, there is
+nothing any more to create amiability out of.
+
+So the old people were unamiable and cross to one another, and unamiable
+and cross to old Hammond, yet always with a certain respect; and the
+result seemed to be such as treated the old man well enough. And thus he
+moved about among them, a mystery; the histories of the others, in the
+general outline, were well enough known, and perhaps not very uncommon;
+this old man’s history was known to none, except, of course, to the
+trustees of the charity, and to the Master of the Hospital, to whom it
+had necessarily been revealed, before the beneficiary could be admitted
+as an inmate. It was judged, by the deportment of the Master, that the
+old man had once held some eminent position in society; for, though bound
+to treat them all as gentlemen, he was thought to show an especial and
+solemn courtesy to Hammond.
+
+Yet by the attraction which two strong and cultivated minds inevitably
+have for one another, there did spring up an acquaintanceship, an
+intercourse, between Middleton and this old man, which was followed up in
+many a conversation which they held together on all subjects that were
+supplied by the news of the day, or the history of the past. Middleton
+used to make the newspaper the opening for much discussion; and it seemed
+to him that the talk of his companion had much of the character of that
+of a retired statesman, on matters which, perhaps, he would look at all
+the more wisely, because it was impossible he could ever more have a
+personal agency in them. Their discussions sometimes turned upon the
+affairs of his own country, and its relations with the rest of the world,
+especially with England; and Middleton could not help being struck with
+the accuracy of the old man’s knowledge respecting that country, which so
+few Englishmen know anything about; his shrewd appreciation of the
+American character,--shrewd and caustic, yet not without a good degree of
+justice; the sagacity of his remarks on the past, and prophecies of what
+was likely to happen,--prophecies which, in one instance, were singularly
+verified, in regard to a complexity which was then arresting the
+attention of both countries.
+
+“You must have been in the United States,” said he, one day.
+
+“Certainly; my remarks imply personal knowledge,” was the reply. “But it
+was before the days of steam.”
+
+“And not, I should imagine, for a brief visit,” said Middleton. “I only
+wish the administration of this government had the benefit to-day of your
+knowledge of my countrymen. It might be better for both of these kindred
+nations.”
+
+“Not a whit,” said the old man. “England will never understand America;
+for England never does understand a foreign country; and whatever you may
+say about kindred, America is as much a foreign country as France itself.
+These two hundred years of a different climate and circumstances--of life
+on a broad continent instead of in an island, to say nothing of the
+endless intermixture of nationalities in every part of the United States,
+except New England--have created a new and decidedly original type of
+national character. It is as well for both parties that they should not
+aim at any very intimate connection. It will never do.”
+
+“I should be very sorry to think so,” said Middleton; “they are at all
+events two noble breeds of men, and ought to appreciate one another. And
+America has the breadth of idea to do this for England, whether
+reciprocated or not.”
+
+Thursday, May 6th.--Thus Middleton was established in a singular way
+among these old men, in one of the surroundings most unlike anything in
+his own country. So old it was that it seemed to him the freshest and
+newest thing that he had ever met with. The residence was made
+infinitely the more interesting to him by the sense that he was near the
+place--as all the indications warned him--which he sought, whither his
+dreams had tended from his childhood; that he could wander each day round
+the park within which were the old gables of what he believed was his
+hereditary home. He had never known anything like the dreamy enjoyment
+of these days; so quiet, such a contrast to the turbulent life from which
+he had escaped across the sea. And here he set himself, still with that
+sense of shadowiness in what he saw and in what he did, in making all the
+researches possible to him, about the neighborhood; visiting every little
+church that raised its square battlemented Norman tower of gray stone,
+for several miles round about; making himself acquainted with each little
+village and hamlet that surrounded these churches, clustering about the
+graves of those who had dwelt in the same cottages aforetime. He visited
+all the towns within a dozen miles; and probably there were few of the
+inhabitants who had so good an acquaintance with the neighborhood as this
+native American attained within a few weeks after his coming thither.
+
+In course of these excursions he had several times met with a young
+woman,--a young lady, one might term her, but in fact he was in some
+doubt what rank she might hold, in England,--who happened to be wandering
+about the country with a singular freedom. She was always alone, always
+on foot; he would see her sketching some picturesque old church, some
+ivied ruin, some fine drooping elm. She was a slight figure, much more
+so than Englishwomen generally are; and, though healthy of aspect, had
+not the ruddy complexion, which he was irreverently inclined to call the
+coarse tint, that is believed the great charm of English beauty. There
+was a freedom in her step and whole little womanhood, an elasticity, an
+irregularity, so to speak, that made her memorable from first sight; and
+when he had encountered her three or four times, he felt in a certain way
+acquainted with her. She was very simply dressed, and quite as simple in
+her deportment; there had been one or two occasions, when they had both
+smiled at the same thing; soon afterwards a little conversation had taken
+place between them; and thus, without any introduction, and in a way that
+somewhat puzzled Middleton himself, they had become acquainted. It was
+so unusual that a young English girl should be wandering about the
+country entirely alone--so much less usual that she should speak to a
+stranger--that Middleton scarcely knew how to account for it, but
+meanwhile accepted the fact readily and willingly, for in truth he found
+this mysterious personage a very likely and entertaining companion.
+There was a strange quality of boldness in her remarks, almost of
+brusqueness, that he might have expected to find in a young countrywoman
+of his own, if bred up among the strong-minded, but was astonished to
+find in a young Englishwoman. Somehow or other she made him think more
+of home than any other person or thing he met with; and he could not but
+feel that she was in strange contrast with everything about her. She was
+no beauty; very piquant; very pleasing; in some points of view and at
+some moments pretty; always good-humored, but somewhat too self-possessed
+for Middleton’s taste. It struck him that she had talked with him as if
+she had some knowledge of him and of the purposes with which he was
+there; not that this was expressed, but only implied by the fact that, on
+looking back to what had passed, he found many strange coincidences in
+what she had said with what he was thinking about.
+
+He perplexed himself much with thinking whence this young woman had come,
+where she belonged, and what might be her history; when, the next day, he
+again saw her, not this time rambling on foot, but seated in an open
+barouche with a young lady. Middleton lifted his hat to her, and she
+nodded and smiled to him; and it appeared to Middleton that a
+conversation ensued about him with the young lady, her companion. Now,
+what still more interested him was the fact that, on the panel of the
+barouche were the arms of the family now in possession of the estate of
+Smithell’s; so that the young lady, his new acquaintance, or the young
+lady, her seeming friend, one or the other, was the sister of the present
+owner of that estate. He was inclined to think that his acquaintance
+could not be the Miss Eldredge, of whose beauty he had heard many tales
+among the people of the neighborhood. The other young lady, a tall,
+reserved, fair-haired maiden, answered the description considerably
+better. He concluded, therefore, that his acquaintance must be a
+visitor, perhaps a dependent and companion; though the freedom of her
+thought, action, and way of life seemed hardly consistent with this idea.
+However, this slight incident served to give him a sort of connection
+with the family, and he could but hope that some further chance would
+introduce him within what he fondly called his hereditary walls. He had
+come to think of this as a dreamland; and it seemed even more a dreamland
+now than before it rendered itself into actual substance, an old house of
+stone and timber standing within its park, shaded about with its
+ancestral trees.
+
+But thus, at all events, he was getting himself a little wrought into the
+net-work of human life around him, secluded as his position had at first
+seemed to be, in the farm-house where he had taken up his lodgings. For,
+there was the Hospital and its old inhabitants, in whose monotonous
+existence he soon came to pass for something, with his liveliness of
+mind, his experience, his good sense, his patience as a listener, his
+comparative youth even--his power of adapting himself to these stiff and
+crusty characters, a power learned among other things in his political
+life, where he had acquired something of the faculty (good or bad as
+might be) of making himself all things to all men. But though he amused
+himself with them all, there was in truth but one man among them in whom
+he really felt much interest; and that one, we need hardly say, was
+Hammond. It was not often that he found the old gentleman in a
+conversible mood; always courteous, indeed, but generally cool and
+reserved; often engaged in his one room, to which Middleton had never yet
+been admitted, though he had more than once sent in his name, when
+Hammond was not apparent upon the bench which, by common consent of the
+Hospital, was appropriated to him.
+
+One day, however, notwithstanding that the old gentleman was confined to
+his room by indisposition, he ventured to inquire at the door, and,
+considerably to his surprise, was admitted. He found Hammond in his
+easy-chair, at a table, with writing-materials before him: and as
+Middleton entered, the old gentleman looked at him with a stern, fixed
+regard, which, however, did not seem to imply any particular displeasure
+towards this visitor, but rather a severe way of regarding mankind in
+general. Middleton looked curiously around the small apartment, to see
+what modification the character of the man had had upon the customary
+furniture of the Hospital, and how much of individuality he had given to
+that general type. There was a shelf of books, and a row of them on the
+mantel-piece; works of political economy, they appeared to be, statistics
+and things of that sort; very dry reading, with which, however,
+Middleton’s experience as a politician had made him acquainted. Besides
+there were a few works on local antiquities, a county-history borrowed
+from the Master’s library, in which Hammond appeared to have been lately
+reading.
+
+“They are delightful reading,” observed Middleton, “these old
+county-histories, with their great folio volumes and their minute account
+of the affairs of families and the genealogies, and descents of estates,
+bestowing as much blessed space on a few hundred acres as other
+historians give to a principality. I fear that in my own country we
+shall never have anything of this kind. Our space is so vast that we
+shall never come to know and love it, inch by inch, as the English
+antiquarians do the tracts of country with which they deal; and besides,
+our land is always likely to lack the interest that belongs to English
+estates; for where land changes its ownership every few years, it does
+not become imbued with the personalities of the people who live on it.
+It is but so much grass; so much dirt, where a succession of people have
+dwelt too little to make it really their own. But I have found a
+pleasure that I had no conception of before, in reading some of the
+English local histories.”
+
+“It is not a usual course of reading for a transitory visitor,” said
+Hammond. “What could induce you to undertake it?”
+
+“Simply the wish, so common and natural with Americans,” said Middleton--
+“the wish to find out something about my kindred--the local origin of my
+own family.”
+
+“You do not show your wisdom in this,” said his visitor. “America had
+better recognize the fact that it has nothing to do with England, and
+look upon itself as other nations and people do, as existing on its own
+hook. I never heard of any people looking back to the country of their
+remote origin in the way the Anglo-Americans do. For instance, England
+is made up of many alien races, German, Danish, Norman, and what not: it
+has received large, accessions of population at a later date than the
+settlement of the United States. Yet these families melt into the great
+homogeneous mass of Englishmen, and look back no more to any other
+country. There are in this vicinity many descendants of the French
+Huguenots; but they care no more for France than for Timbuctoo, reckoning
+themselves only Englishmen, as if they were descendants of the aboriginal
+Britons. Let it be so with you.”
+
+“So it might be,” replied Middleton, “only that our relations with
+England remain far more numerous than our disconnections, through the
+bonds of history, of literature, of all that makes up the memories, and
+much that makes up the present interests of a people. And therefore I
+must still continue to pore over these old folios, and hunt around these
+precincts, spending thus the little idle time I am likely to have in a
+busy life. Possibly finding little to my purpose; but that is quite a
+secondary consideration.”
+
+“If you choose to tell me precisely what your aims are,” said Hammond,
+“it is possible I might give you some little assistance.”
+
+May 7th, Friday.--Middleton was in fact more than half ashamed of the
+dreams which he had cherished before coming to England, and which since,
+at times, had been very potent with him, assuming as strong a tinge of
+reality as those [scenes?] into which he had strayed. He could not
+prevail with himself to disclose fully to this severe, and, as he
+thought, cynical old man how strong within him was the sentiment that
+impelled him to connect himself with the old life of England, to join on
+the broken thread of ancestry and descent, and feel every link well
+established. But it seemed to him that he ought not to lose this fair
+opportunity of gaining some light on the abstruse field of his
+researches; and he therefore explained to Hammond that he had reason,
+from old family traditions, to believe that he brought with him a
+fragment of a history that, if followed out, might lead to curious
+results. He told him, in a tone half serious, what he had heard
+respecting the quarrel of the two brothers, and the Bloody Footstep, the
+impress of which was said to remain, as a lasting memorial of the tragic
+termination of that enmity. At this point, Hammond interrupted him. He
+had indeed, at various points of the narrative, nodded and smiled
+mysteriously, as if looking into his mind and seeing something there
+analogous to what he was listening to. He now spoke.
+
+“This is curious,” said he. “Did you know that there is a manor-house in
+this neighborhood, the family of which prides itself on having such a
+blood-stained threshold as you have now described?”
+
+“No, indeed!” exclaimed Middleton, greatly interested. “Where?”
+
+“It is the old manor-house of Smithell’s,” replied Hammond, “one of those
+old wood and timber [plaster?] mansions, which are among the most ancient
+specimens of domestic architecture in England. The house has now passed
+into the female line, and by marriage has been for two or three
+generations in possession of another family. But the blood of the old
+inheritors is still in the family. The house itself, or portions of it,
+are thought to date back quite as far as the Conquest.”
+
+“Smithell’s?” said Middleton. “Why, I have seen that old house from a
+distance, and have felt no little interest in its antique aspect. And it
+has a Bloody Footstep! Would it be possible for a stranger to get an
+opportunity to inspect it?”
+
+“Unquestionably,” said Hammond; “nothing easier. It is but a moderate
+distance from here, and if you can moderate your young footsteps, and
+your American quick walk, to an old man’s pace, I would go there with you
+some day. In this languor and ennui of my life, I spend some time in
+local antiquarianism, and perhaps I might assist you in tracing out how
+far these traditions of yours may have any connection with reality. It
+would be curious, would it not, if you had come, after two hundred years,
+to piece out a story which may have been as much a mystery in England as
+there in America?”
+
+An engagement was made for a walk to Smithell’s the ensuing day; and
+meanwhile Middleton entered more fully into what he had received from
+family traditions and what he had thought out for himself on the matter
+in question.
+
+“Are you aware,” asked Hammond, “that there was formerly a title in this
+family, now in abeyance, and which the heirs have at various times
+claimed, and are at this moment claiming? Do you know, too,--but you can
+scarcely know it,--that it has been surmised by some that there is an
+insecurity in the title to the estate, and has always been; so that the
+possessors have lived in some apprehension, from time immemorial, that
+another heir would appear and take from them the fair inheritance? It is
+a singular coincidence.”
+
+“Very strange,” exclaimed Middleton. “No; I was not aware of it; and, to
+say the truth, I should not altogether like to come forward in the light
+of a claimant. But this is a dream, surely!”
+
+“I assure you, sir,” continued the old man, “that you come here in a very
+critical moment; and singularly enough there is a perplexity, a
+difficulty, that has endured for as long a time as when your ancestors
+emigrated, that is still rampant within the bowels, as I may say, of the
+family. Of course, it is too like a romance that you should be able to
+establish any such claim as would have a valid influence on this matter;
+but still, being here on the spot, it may be worth while, if merely as a
+matter of amusement, to make some researches into this matter.”
+
+“Surely I will,” said Middleton, with a smile, which concealed more
+earnestness than he liked to show; “as to the title, a Republican cannot
+be supposed to think twice about such a bagatelle. The estate!--that
+might be a more serious consideration.”
+
+They continued to talk on the subject; and Middleton learned that the
+present possessor of the estates was a gentleman nowise distinguished
+from hundreds of other English gentlemen; a country squire modified in
+accordance with the type of to-day, a frank, free, friendly sort of a
+person enough, who had travelled on the Continent, who employed himself
+much in field-sports, who was unmarried, and had a sister who was
+reckoned among the beauties of the county.
+
+While the conversation was thus going on, to Middleton’s astonishment
+there came a knock at the door of the room, and, without waiting for a
+response, it was opened, and there appeared at it the same young woman
+whom he had already met. She came in with perfect freedom and
+familiarity, and was received quietly by the old gentleman; who, however,
+by his manner towards Middleton, indicated that he was now to take his
+leave. He did so, after settling the hour at which the excursion of the
+next day was to take place. This arranged, he departed, with much to
+think of, and a light glimmering through the confused labyrinth of
+thoughts which had been unilluminated hitherto.
+
+To say the truth, he questioned within himself whether it were not better
+to get as quickly as he could out of the vicinity; and, at any rate, not
+to put anything of earnest in what had hitherto been nothing more than a
+romance to him. There was something very dark and sinister in the events
+of family history, which now assumed a reality that they had never before
+worn; so much tragedy, so much hatred, had been thrown into that deep
+pit, and buried under the accumulated debris, the fallen leaves, the rust
+and dust of more than two centuries, that it seemed not worth while to
+dig it up; for perhaps the deadly influences, which it had taken so much
+time to hide, might still be lurking there, and become potent if he now
+uncovered them. There was something that startled him, in the strange,
+wild light, which gleamed from the old man’s eyes, as he threw out the
+suggestions which had opened this prospect to him. What right had he--an
+American, Republican, disconnected with this country so long, alien from
+its habits of thought and life, reverencing none of the things which
+Englishmen reverenced--what right had he to come with these musty claims
+from the dim past, to disturb them in the life that belonged to them?
+There was a higher and a deeper law than any connected with ancestral
+claims which he could assert; and he had an idea that the law bade him
+keep to the country which his ancestor had chosen and to its
+institutions, and not meddle nor make with England. The roots of his
+family tree could not reach under the ocean; he was at most but a
+seedling from the parent tree. While thus meditating he found that his
+footsteps had brought him unawares within sight of the old manor-house of
+Smithell’s; and that he was wandering in a path which, if he followed it
+further, would bring him to an entrance in one of the wings of the
+mansion. With a sort of shame upon him, he went forward, and, leaning
+against a tree, looked at what he considered the home of his ancestors.
+
+May 9th, Sunday.--At the time appointed, the two companions set out on
+their little expedition, the old man in his Hospital uniform, the long
+black mantle, with the bear and ragged staff engraved in silver on the
+breast, and Middleton in the plain costume which he had adopted in these
+wanderings about the country. On their way, Hammond was not very
+communicative, occasionally dropping some shrewd remark with a good deal
+of acidity in it; now and then, too, favoring his companion with some
+reminiscence of local antiquity; but oftenest silent. Thus they went on,
+and entered the park of Pemberton Manor by a by-path, over a stile and
+one of those footways, which are always so well worth threading out in
+England, leading the pedestrian into picturesque and characteristic
+scenes, when the high-road would show him nothing except what was
+commonplace and uninteresting. Now the gables of the old manor-house
+appeared before them, rising amidst the hereditary woods, which doubtless
+dated from a time beyond the days which Middleton fondly recalled, when
+his ancestors had walked beneath their shade. On each side of them were
+thickets and copses of fern, amidst which they saw the hares peeping out
+to gaze upon them, occasionally running across the path, and comporting
+themselves like creatures that felt themselves under some sort of
+protection from the outrages of man, though they knew too much of his
+destructive character to trust him too far. Pheasants, too, rose close
+beside them, and winged but a little way before they alighted; they
+likewise knew, or seemed to know, that their hour was not yet come. On
+all sides in these woods, these wastes, these beasts and birds, there was
+a character that was neither wild nor tame. Man had laid his grasp on
+them all, and done enough to redeem them from barbarism, but had stopped
+short of domesticating them; although Nature, in the wildest thing there,
+acknowledged the powerful and pervading influence of cultivation.
+
+Arriving at a side door of the mansion, Hammond rang the bell, and a
+servant soon appeared. He seemed to know the old man, and immediately
+acceded to his request to be permitted to show his companion the house;
+although it was not precisely a show-house, nor was this the hour when
+strangers were usually admitted. They entered; and the servant did not
+give himself the trouble to act as a cicerone to the two visitants, but
+carelessly said to the old gentleman that he knew the rooms, and that he
+would leave him to discourse to his friend about them. Accordingly, they
+went into the old hall, a dark oaken-panelled room, of no great height,
+with many doors opening into it. There was a fire burning on the hearth;
+indeed, it was the custom of the house to keep it up from morning to
+night; and in the damp, chill climate of England, there is seldom a day
+in some part of which a fire is not pleasant to feel. Hammond here
+pointed out a stuffed fox, to which some story of a famous chase was
+attached; a pair of antlers of enormous size; and some old family
+pictures, so blackened with time and neglect that Middleton could not
+well distinguish their features, though curious to do so, as hoping to
+see there the lineaments of some with whom he might claim kindred. It
+was a venerable apartment, and gave a good foretaste of what they might
+hope to find in the rest of the mansion.
+
+But when they had inspected it pretty thoroughly, and were ready to
+proceed, an elderly gentleman entered the hall, and, seeing Hammond,
+addressed him in a kindly, familiar way; not indeed as an equal friend,
+but with a pleasant and not irksome conversation. “I am glad to see you
+here again,” said he. “What? I have an hour of leisure; for, to say the
+truth, the day hangs rather heavy till the shooting season begins. Come;
+as you have a friend with you, I will be your cicerone myself about the
+house, and show you whatever mouldy objects of interest it contains.”
+
+He then graciously noticed the old man’s companion, but without asking or
+seeming to expect an introduction; for, after a careless glance at him,
+he had evidently set him down as a person without social claims, a young
+man in the rank of life fitted to associate with an inmate of Pemberton’s
+Hospital. And it must be noticed that his treatment of Middleton was not
+on that account the less kind, though far from being so elaborately
+courteous as if he had met him as an equal. “You have had something of a
+walk,” said he, “and it is a rather hot day. The beer of Pemberton Manor
+has been reckoned good these hundred years; will you taste it?”
+
+Hammond accepted the offer, and the beer was brought in a foaming
+tankard; but Middleton declined it, for in truth there was a singular
+emotion in his breast, as if the old enmity, the ancient injuries, were
+not yet atoned for, and as if he must not accept the hospitality of one
+who represented his hereditary foe. He felt, too, as if there were
+something unworthy, a certain want of fairness, in entering clandestinely
+the house, and talking with its occupant under a veil, as it were; and
+had he seen clearly how to do it, he would perhaps at that moment have
+fairly told Mr. Eldredge that he brought with him the character of
+kinsman, and must be received in that grade or none. But it was not easy
+to do this; and after all, there was no clear reason why he should do it;
+so he let the matter pass, merely declining to take the refreshment, and
+keeping himself quiet and retired.
+
+Squire Eldredge seemed to be a good, ordinary sort of gentleman,
+reasonably well educated, and with few ideas beyond his estate and
+neighborhood, though he had once held a seat in Parliament for part of a
+term. Middleton could not but contrast him, with an inward smile, with
+the shrewd, alert politicians, their faculties all sharpened to the
+utmost, whom he had known and consorted with in the American Congress.
+Hammond had slightly informed him that his companion was an American; and
+Mr. Eldredge immediately gave proof of the extent of his knowledge of
+that country, by inquiring whether he came from the State of New England,
+and whether Mr. Webster was still President of the United States;
+questions to which Middleton returned answers that led to no further
+conversation.
+
+These little preliminaries over, they continued their ramble through the
+house, going through tortuous passages, up and down little flights of
+steps, and entering chambers that had all the charm of discoveries of
+hidden regions; loitering about, in short, in a labyrinth calculated to
+put the head into a delightful confusion. Some of these rooms contained
+their time-honored furniture, all in the best possible repair, heavy,
+dark, polished; beds that had been marriage beds and dying beds over and
+over again; chairs with carved backs; and all manner of old world
+curiosities; family pictures, and samplers, and embroidery; fragments of
+tapestry; an inlaid floor; everything having a story to it, though, to
+say the truth, the possessor of these curiosities made but a bungling
+piece of work in telling the legends connected with them. In one or two
+instances Hammond corrected him.
+
+By and by they came to what had once been the principal bed-room of the
+house; though its gloom, and some circumstances of family misfortune that
+had happened long ago, had caused it to fall into disrepute, in latter
+times; and it was now called the Haunted Chamber, or the Ghost’s Chamber.
+The furniture of this room, however, was particularly rich in its antique
+magnificence; and one of the principal objects was a great black cabinet
+of ebony and ivory, such as may often be seen in old English houses, and
+perhaps often in the palaces of Italy, in which country they perhaps
+originated. This present cabinet was known to have been in the house as
+long ago as the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and how much longer neither
+tradition nor record told. Hammond particularly directed Middleton’s
+attention to it.
+
+“There is nothing in this house,” said he, “better worth your attention
+than that cabinet. Consider its plan; it represents a stately mansion,
+with pillars, an entrance, with a lofty flight of steps, windows, and
+everything perfect. Examine it well.”
+
+There was such an emphasis in the old man’s way of speaking that
+Middleton turned suddenly round from all that he had been looking at, and
+fixed his whole attention on the cabinet; and strangely enough, it seemed
+to be the representative, in small, of something that he had seen in a
+dream. To say the truth, if some cunning workman had been employed to
+copy his idea of the old family mansion, on a scale of half an inch to a
+yard, and in ebony and ivory instead of stone, he could not have produced
+a closer imitation. Everything was there.
+
+“This is miraculous!” exclaimed he. “I do not understand it.”
+
+“Your friend seems to be curious in these matters,” said Mr. Eldredge
+graciously. “Perhaps he is of some trade that makes this sort of
+manufacture particularly interesting to him. You are quite at liberty,
+my friend, to open the cabinet and inspect it as minutely as you wish.
+It is an article that has a good deal to do with an obscure portion of
+our family history. Look, here is the key, and the mode of opening the
+outer door of the palace, as we may well call it.” So saying, he threw
+open the outer door, and disclosed within the mimic likeness of a stately
+entrance hall, with a floor chequered of ebony and ivory. There were
+other doors that seemed to open into apartments in the interior of the
+palace; but when Mr. Eldredge threw them likewise wide, they proved to be
+drawers and secret receptacles, where papers, jewels, money, anything
+that it was desirable to store away secretly, might be kept.
+
+“You said, sir,” said Middleton, thoughtfully, “that your family history
+contained matter of interest in reference to this cabinet. Might I
+inquire what those legends are?”
+
+“Why, yes,” said Mr. Eldredge, musing a little. “I see no reason why I
+should have any idle concealment about the matter, especially to a
+foreigner and a man whom I am never likely to see again. You must know,
+then, my friend, that there was once a time when this cabinet was known
+to contain the fate of the estate and its possessors; and if it had held
+all that it was supposed to hold, I should not now be the lord of
+Pemberton Manor, nor the claimant of an ancient title. But my father,
+and his father before him, and his father besides, have held the estate
+and prospered on it; and I think we may fairly conclude now that the
+cabinet contains nothing except what we see.”
+
+And he rapidly again threw open one after another all the numerous
+drawers and receptacles of the cabinet.
+
+“It is an interesting object,” said Middleton, after looking very closely
+and with great attention at it, being pressed thereto, indeed, by the
+owner’s good-natured satisfaction in possessing this rare article of
+vertu. “It is admirable work,” repeated he, drawing back. “That mosaic
+floor, especially, is done with an art and skill that I never saw
+equalled.”
+
+There was something strange and altered in Middleton’s tones, that
+attracted the notice of Mr. Eldredge. Looking at him, he saw that he had
+grown pale, and had a rather bewildered air.
+
+“Is your friend ill?” said he. “He has not our English ruggedness of
+look. He would have done better to take a sip of the cool tankard, and a
+slice of the cold beef. He finds no such food and drink as that in his
+own country, I warrant.”
+
+“His color has come back,” responded Hammond, briefly. “He does not need
+any refreshment, I think, except, perhaps, the open air.”
+
+In fact, Middleton, recovering himself, apologized to Mr. Hammond.
+[Eldredge?]; and as they had now seen nearly the whole of the house, the
+two visitants took their leave, with many kindly offers on Mr. Eldredge’s
+part to permit the young man to view the cabinet whenever he wished. As
+they went out of the house (it was by another door than that which gave
+them entrance), Hammond laid his hand on Middleton’s shoulder and pointed
+to a stone on the threshold, on which he was about to set his foot.
+“Take care!” said he. “It is the Bloody Footstep.”
+
+Middleton looked down and saw something, indeed, very like the shape of a
+footprint, with a hue very like that of blood. It was a twilight sort of
+a place, beneath a porch, which was much overshadowed by trees and
+shrubbery. It might have been blood; but he rather thought, in his
+wicked skepticism, that it was a natural, reddish stain in the stone. He
+measured his own foot, however, in the Bloody Footstep.
+
+May 10th, Monday.--This is the present aspect of the story: Middleton is
+the descendant of a family long settled in the United States; his
+ancestor having emigrated to New England with the Pilgrims; or, perhaps,
+at a still earlier date, to Virginia with Raleigh’s colonists. There had
+been a family dissension,--a bitter hostility between two brothers in
+England; on account, probably, of a love affair, the two both being
+attached to the same lady. By the influence of the family on both sides,
+the young lady had formed an engagement with the elder brother, although
+her affections had settled on the younger. The marriage was about to
+take place when the younger brother and the bride both disappeared, and
+were never heard of with any certainty afterwards; but it was believed at
+the time that he had been killed, and in proof of it a bloody footstep
+remained on the threshold of the ancestral mansion. There were rumors,
+afterwards, traditionally continued to the present day, that the younger
+brother and the bride were seen, and together, in England; and that some
+voyager across the sea had found them living together, husband and wife,
+on the other side of the Atlantic. But the elder brother became a moody
+and reserved man, never married, and left the inheritance to the children
+of a third brother, who then became the representative of the family in
+England; and the better authenticated story was that the second brother
+had really been slain, and that the young lady (for all the parties may
+have been Catholic) had gone to the Continent and taken the veil there.
+Such was the family history as known or surmised in England, and in the
+neighborhood of the manor-house, where the Bloody Footstep still remained
+on the threshold; and the posterity of the third brother still held the
+estate, and perhaps were claimants of an ancient baronage, long in
+abeyance.
+
+Now, on the other side of the Atlantic, the second brother and the young
+lady had really been married, and became the parents of a posterity,
+still extant, of which the Middleton of the romance is the surviving
+male. Perhaps he had changed his name, being so much tortured with the
+evil and wrong that had sprung up in his family, so remorseful, so
+outraged, that he wished to disconnect himself with all the past, and
+begin life quite anew in a new world. But both he and his wife, though
+happy in one another, had been remorsefully and sadly so; and, with such
+feelings, they had never again communicated with their respective
+families, nor had given their children the means of doing so. There
+must, I think, have been something nearly approaching to guilt on the
+second brother’s part, and the bride should have broken a solemnly
+plighted troth to the elder brother, breaking away from him when almost
+his wife. The elder brother had been known to have been wounded at the
+time of the second brother’s disappearance; and it had been the surmise
+that he had received this hurt in the personal conflict in which the
+latter was slain. But in truth the second brother had stabbed him in the
+emergency of being discovered in the act of escaping with the bride; and
+this was what weighed upon his conscience throughout life in America.
+The American family had prolonged itself through various fortunes, and
+all the ups and downs incident to our institutions, until the present
+day. They had some old family documents, which had been rather
+carelessly kept; but the present representative, being an educated man,
+had looked over them, and found one which interested him strongly. It
+was--what was it?--perhaps a copy of a letter written by his ancestor on
+his deathbed, telling his real name, and relating the above incidents.
+These incidents had come down in a vague wild way, traditionally, in the
+American family, forming a wondrous and incredible legend, which
+Middleton had often laughed at, yet been greatly interested in; and the
+discovery of this document seemed to give a certain aspect of veracity
+and reality to the tradition. Perhaps, however, the document only
+related to the change of name, and made reference to certain evidences by
+which, if any descendant of the family should deem it expedient, he might
+prove his hereditary identity. The legend must be accounted for by
+having been gathered from the talk of the first ancestor and his wife.
+There must be in existence, in the early records of the colony, an
+authenticated statement of this change of name, and satisfactory proofs
+that the American family, long known as Middleton, were really a branch
+of the English family of Eldredge, or whatever. And in the legend,
+though not in the written document, there must be an account of a certain
+magnificent, almost palatial residence, which Middleton shall presume to
+be the ancestral house; and in this palace there shall be said to be a
+certain secret chamber, or receptacle, where is reposited a document that
+shall complete the evidence of the genealogical descent.
+
+Middleton is still a young man, but already a distinguished one in his
+own country; he has entered early into politics, been sent to Congress,
+but having met with some disappointments in his ambitious hopes, and
+being disgusted with the fierceness of political contests in our country,
+he has come abroad for recreation and rest. His imagination has dwelt
+much, in his boyhood, on the legendary story of his family; and the
+discovery of the document has revived these dreams. He determines to
+search out the family mansion; and thus he arrives, bringing half of a
+story, being the only part known in America, to join it on to the other
+half, which is the only part known in England. In an introduction I must
+do the best I can to state his side of the matter to the reader, he
+having communicated it to me in a friendly way, at the Consulate; as many
+people have communicated quite as wild pretensions to English
+genealogies.
+
+He comes to the midland counties of England, where he conceives his
+claims to lie, and seeks for his ancestral home; but there are
+difficulties in the way of finding it, the estates having passed into the
+female line, though still remaining in the blood. By and by, however, he
+comes to an old town where there is one of the charitable institutions
+bearing the name of his family, by whose beneficence it had indeed been
+founded, in Queen Elizabeth’s time. He of course becomes interested in
+this Hospital; he finds it still going on, precisely as it did in the old
+days; and all the character and life of the establishment must be
+picturesquely described. Here he gets acquainted with an old man, an
+inmate of the Hospital, who (if the uncontrollable fatality of the story
+will permit) must have an active influence on the ensuing events. I
+suppose him to have been an American, but to have fled his country and
+taken refuge in England; he shall have been a man of the Nicholas Biddle
+stamp, a mighty speculator, the ruin of whose schemes had crushed
+hundreds of people, and Middleton’s father among the rest. Here he had
+quitted the activity of his mind, as well as he could, becoming a local
+antiquary, etc., and he has made himself acquainted with the family
+history of the Eldredges, knowing more about it than the members of the
+family themselves do. He had known in America (from Middleton’s father,
+who was his friend) the legends preserved in this branch of the family,
+and perhaps had been struck by the way in which they fit into the English
+legends; at any rate, this strikes him when Middleton tells him his story
+and shows him the document respecting the change of name. After various
+conversations together (in which, however, the old man keeps the secret
+of his own identity, and indeed acts as mysteriously as possible) they go
+together to visit the ancestral mansion. Perhaps it should not be in
+their first visit that the cabinet, representing the stately mansion,
+shall be seen. But the Bloody Footstep may; which shall interest
+Middleton much, both because Hammond has told him the English tradition
+respecting it, and because too the legends of the American family made
+some obscure allusions to his ancestor having left blood--a bloody
+footstep--on the ancestral threshold. This is the point to which the
+story has now been sketched out. Middleton finds a commonplace old
+English country gentleman in possession of the estate, where his
+forefathers had lived in peace for many generations; but there must be
+circumstances contrived which shall cause Middleton’s conduct to be
+attended by no end of turmoil and trouble. The old Hospitaller, I
+suppose, must be the malicious agent in this; and his malice must be
+motived in some satisfactory way. The more serious question, what shall
+be the nature of this tragic trouble, and how can it be brought about?
+
+May 11th, Tuesday.--How much better would it have been if this secret,
+which seemed so golden, had remained in the obscurity in which two
+hundred years had buried it! That deep, old, grass-grown grave being
+opened, out from it streamed into the sunshine the old fatalities, the
+old crimes, the old misfortunes, the sorrows, that seemed to have
+departed from the family forever. But it was too late now to close it
+up; he must follow out the thread that led him on,--the thread of fate,
+if you choose to call it so; but rather the impulse of an evil will, a
+stubborn self-interest, a desire for certain objects of ambition which
+were preferred to what yet were recognized as real goods. Thus reasoned,
+thus raved, Eldredge, as he considered the things that he had done, and
+still intended to do; nor did these perceptions make the slightest
+difference in his plans, nor in the activity with which he set about
+their performance. For this purpose he sent for his lawyer, and
+consulted him on the feasibility of the design which he had already
+communicated to him respecting Middleton. But the man of law shook his
+head, and, though deferentially, declined to have any active concern with
+the matter that threatened to lead him beyond the bounds which he allowed
+himself, into a seductive but perilous region.
+
+“My dear sir,” said he, with some earnestness, “you had much better
+content yourself with such assistance as I can professionally and
+consistently give you. Believe [me], I am willing to do a lawyer’s
+utmost, and to do more would be as unsafe for the client as for the legal
+adviser.”
+
+Thus left without an agent and an instrument, this unfortunate man had to
+meditate on what means he would use to gain his ends through his own
+unassisted efforts. In the struggle with himself through which he had
+passed, he had exhausted pretty much all the feelings that he had to
+bestow on this matter; and now he was ready to take hold of almost any
+temptation that might present itself, so long as it showed a good
+prospect of success and a plausible chance of impunity. While he was
+thus musing, he heard a female voice chanting some song, like a bird’s
+among the pleasant foliage of the trees, and soon he saw at the end of a
+wood-walk Alice, with her basket on her arm, passing on toward the
+village. She looked towards him as she passed, but made no pause nor yet
+hastened her steps; not seeming to think it worth her while to be
+influenced by him. He hurried forward and overtook her.
+
+So there was this poor old gentleman, his comfort utterly overthrown,
+decking his white hair and wrinkled brow with the semblance of a coronet,
+and only hoping that the reality might crown and bless him before he was
+laid in the ancestral tomb. It was a real calamity; though by no means
+the greatest that had been fished up out of the pit of domestic discord
+that had been opened anew by the advent of the American; and by the use
+which had been made of it by the cantankerous old man of the Hospital.
+Middleton, as he looked at these evil consequences, sometimes regretted
+that he had not listened to those forebodings which had warned him back
+on the eve of his enterprise; yet such was the strange entanglement and
+interest which had wound about him, that often he rejoiced that for once
+he was engaged in something that absorbed him fully, and the zeal for the
+development of which made him careless for the result in respect to its
+good or evil, but only desirous that it show itself. As for Alice, she
+seemed to skim lightly through all these matters, whether as a spirit of
+good or ill he could not satisfactorily judge. He could not think her
+wicked; yet her actions seemed unaccountable on the plea that she was
+otherwise. It was another characteristic thread in the wild web of
+madness that had spun itself about all the prominent characters of our
+story. And when Middleton thought of these things, he felt as if it
+might be his duty (supposing he had the power) to shovel the earth again
+into the pit that he had been the means of opening; but also felt that,
+whether duty or not, he would never perform it.
+
+For, you see, on the American’s arrival he had found the estate in the
+hands of one of the descendants; but some disclosures consequent on his
+arrival had thrown it into the hands of another; or, at all events, had
+seemed to make it apparent that justice required that it should be so
+disposed of. No sooner was the discovery made than the possessor put on
+a coronet; the new heir had commenced legal proceedings; the sons of the
+respective branches had come to blows and blood; and the devil knows what
+other devilish consequences had ensued. Besides this, there was much
+falling in love at cross-purposes, and a general animosity of every body
+against everybody else, in proportion to the closeness of the natural
+ties and their obligation to love one another.
+
+The moral, if any moral were to be gathered from these petty and wretched
+circumstances, was, “Let the past alone: do not seek to renew it; press
+on to higher and better things,--at all events, to other things; and be
+assured that the right way can never be that which leads you back to the
+identical shapes that you long ago left behind. Onward, onward, onward!”
+
+“What have you to do here?” said Alice. “Your lot is in another land.
+You have seen the birthplace of your forefathers, and have gratified your
+natural yearning for it; now return, and cast in your lot with your own
+people, let it be what it will. I fully believe that it is such a lot as
+the world has never yet seen, and that the faults, the weaknesses, the
+errors, of your countrymen will vanish away like morning mists before the
+rising sun. You can do nothing better than to go back.”
+
+“This is strange advice, Alice,” said Middleton, gazing at her and
+smiling. “Go back, with such a fair prospect before me; that were
+strange indeed! It is enough to keep me here, that here only I shall see
+you,--enough to make me rejoice to have come, that I have found you
+here.”
+
+“Do not speak in this foolish way,” cried Alice, panting. “I am giving
+you the best advice, and speaking in the wisest way I am capable of,--
+speaking on good grounds too,--and you turn me aside with a silly
+compliment. I tell you that this is no comedy in which we are
+performers, but a deep, sad tragedy; and that it depends most upon you
+whether or no it shall be pressed to a catastrophe. Think well of it.”
+
+“I have thought, Alice,” responded the young man, “and I must let things
+take their course; if, indeed, it depends at all upon me, which I see no
+present reason to suppose. Yet I wish you would explain to me what you
+mean.”
+
+To take up the story from the point where we left it: by the aid of the
+American’s revelations, some light is thrown upon points of family
+history, which induce the English possessor of the estate to suppose that
+the time has come for asserting his claim to a title which has long been
+in abeyance. He therefore sets about it, and engages in great expenses,
+besides contracting the enmity of many persons, with whose interests he
+interferes. A further complication is brought about by the secret
+interference of the old Hospitaller, and Alice goes singing and dancing
+through the whole, in a way that makes her seem like a beautiful devil,
+though finally it will be recognized that she is an angel of light.
+Middleton, half bewildered, can scarcely tell how much of this is due to
+his own agency; how much is independent of him and would have happened
+had he stayed on his own side of the water. By and by a further and
+unexpected development presents the singular fact that he himself is the
+heir to whatever claims there are, whether of property or rank,--all
+centring in him as the representative of the eldest brother. On this
+discovery there ensues a tragedy in the death of the present possessor of
+the estate, who has staked everything upon the issue; and Middleton,
+standing amid the ruin and desolation of which he has been the innocent
+cause, resigns all the claims which he might now assert, and retires, arm
+in arm with Alice, who has encouraged him to take this course, and to act
+up to his character. The estate takes a passage into the female line,
+and the old name becomes extinct, nor does Middleton seek to continue it
+by resuming it in place of the one long ago assumed by his ancestor.
+Thus he and his wife become the Adam and Eve of a new epoch, and the
+fitting missionaries of a new social faith, of which there must be
+continual hints through the book.
+
+A knot of characters may be introduced as gathering around Middleton,
+comprising expatriated Americans of all sorts: the wandering printer who
+came to me so often at the Consulate, who said he was a native of
+Philadelphia, and could not go home in the thirty years that he had been
+trying to do so, for lack of the money to pay his passage; the large
+banker; the consul of Leeds; the woman asserting her claims to half
+Liverpool; the gifted literary lady, maddened by Shakespeare, etc., etc.
+The Yankee who had been driven insane by the Queen’s notice, slight as it
+was, of the photographs of his two children which he had sent her. I
+have not yet struck the true key-note of this Romance, and until I do,
+and unless I do, I shall write nothing but tediousness and nonsense. I
+do not wish it to be a picture of life, but a Romance, grim, grotesque,
+quaint, of which the Hospital might be the fitting scene. It might have
+so much of the hues of life that the reader should sometimes think it was
+intended for a picture, yet the atmosphere should be such as to excuse
+all wildness. In the Introduction, I might disclaim all intention to
+draw a real picture, but say that the continual meetings I had with
+Americans bent on such errands had suggested this wild story. The
+descriptions of scenery, etc., and of the Hospital, might be correct, but
+there should be a tinge of the grotesque given to all the characters and
+events. The tragic and the gentler pathetic need not be excluded by the
+tone and treatment. If I could but write one central scene in this vein,
+all the rest of the Romance would readily arrange itself around that
+nucleus. The begging-girl would be another American character; the
+actress too; the caravan people. It must be humorous work, or nothing.
+
+
+III.
+
+May 12th, Wednesday.--Middleton found his abode here becoming daily more
+interesting; and he sometimes thought that it was the sympathies with the
+place and people, buried under the supergrowth of so many ages, but now
+coming forth with the life and vigor of a fountain, that, long hidden
+beneath earth and ruins, gushes out singing into the sunshine, as soon as
+these are removed. He wandered about the neighborhood with insatiable
+interest; sometimes, and often, lying on a hill-side and gazing at the
+gray tower of the church; sometimes coming into the village clustered
+round that same church, and looking at the old timber and plaster houses,
+the same, except that the thatch had probably been often renewed, that
+they used to be in his ancestor’s days. In those old cottages still
+dwelt the families, the ------s, the Prices, the Hopnorts, the Copleys,
+that had dwelt there when America was a scattered progeny of infant
+colonies; and in the churchyard were the graves of all the generations
+since--including the dust of those who had seen his ancestor’s face
+before his departure.
+
+The graves, outside the church walls indeed, bore no marks of this
+antiquity; for it seems not to have been an early practice in England to
+put stones over such graves; and where it has been done, the climate
+causes the inscriptions soon to become obliterated and unintelligible.
+But, within the church, there were rich words of the personages and times
+with whom Middleton’s musings held so much converse.
+
+But one of his greatest employments and pastimes was to ramble through
+the grounds of Smithell’s, making himself as well acquainted with its
+wood paths, its glens, its woods, its venerable trees, as if he had been
+bred up there from infancy. Some of those old oaks his ancestor might
+have been acquainted with, while they were already sturdy and well-grown
+trees; might have climbed them in boyhood; might have mused beneath them
+as a lover; might have flung himself at full length on the turf beneath
+them, in the bitter anguish that must have preceded his departure forever
+from the home of his forefathers. In order to secure an uninterrupted
+enjoyment of his rambles here, Middleton had secured the good-will of the
+game-keepers and other underlings whom he was likely to meet about the
+grounds, by giving them a shilling or a half-crown; and he was now free
+to wander where he would, with only the advice rather than the caution,
+to keep out of the way of their old master,--for there might be trouble,
+if he should meet a stranger on the grounds, in any of his tantrums.
+But, in fact, Mr. Eldredge was not much in the habit of walking about the
+grounds; and there were hours of every day, during which it was
+altogether improbable that he would have emerged from his own apartments
+in the manor-house. These were the hours, therefore, when Middleton most
+frequented the estate; although, to say the truth, he would gladly have
+so timed his visits as to meet and form an acquaintance with the lonely
+lord of this beautiful property, his own kinsman, though with so many
+ages of dark oblivion between. For Middleton had not that feeling of
+infinite distance in the relationship, which he would have had if his
+branch of the family had continued in England, and had not intermarried
+with the other branch, through such a long waste of years; he rather felt
+as if he were the original emigrant who, long resident on a foreign
+shore, had now returned, with a heart brimful of tenderness, to revisit
+the scenes of his youth, and renew his tender relations with those who
+shared his own blood.
+
+There was not, however, much in what he heard of the character of the
+present possessor of the estate--or indeed in the strong family
+characteristic that had become hereditary--to encourage him to attempt
+any advances. It is very probable that the religion of Mr. Eldredge, as
+a Catholic, may have excited a prejudice against him, as it certainly had
+insulated the family, in a great degree, from the sympathies of the
+neighborhood. Mr. Eldredge, moreover, had resided long on the Continent;
+long in Italy; and had come back with habits that little accorded with
+those of the gentry of the neighborhood; so that, in fact, he was almost
+as much of a stranger, and perhaps quite as little of a real Englishman,
+as Middleton himself. Be that as it might, Middleton, when he sought to
+learn something about him, heard the strangest stories of his habits of
+life, of his temper, and of his employments, from the people with whom he
+conversed. The old legend, turning upon the monomania of the family, was
+revived in full force in reference to this poor gentleman; and many a
+time Middleton’s interlocutors shook their wise heads, saying with a
+knowing look and under their breath that the old gentleman was looking
+for the track of the Bloody Footstep. They fabled--or said, for it might
+not have been a false story--that every descendant of this house had a
+certain portion of his life, during which he sought the track of that
+footstep which was left on the threshold of the mansion; that he sought
+it far and wide, over every foot of the estate; not only on the estate,
+but throughout the neighborhood; not only in the neighborhood but all
+over England; not only throughout England but all about the world. It
+was the belief of the neighborhood--at least of some old men and women in
+it--that the long period of Mr. Eldredge’s absence from England had been
+spent in the search for some trace of those departing footsteps that had
+never returned. It is very possible--probable, indeed--that there may
+have been some ground for this remarkable legend; not that it is to be
+credited that the family of Eldredge, being reckoned among sane men,
+would seriously have sought, years and generations after the fact, for
+the first track of those bloody footsteps which the first rain of drippy
+England must have washed away; to say nothing of the leaves that had
+fallen and the growth and decay of so many seasons, that covered all
+traces of them since. But nothing is more probable than that the
+continual recurrence to the family genealogy, which had been necessitated
+by the matter of the dormant peerage, had caused the Eldredges, from
+father to son, to keep alive an interest in that ancestor who had
+disappeared, and who had been supposed to carry some of the most
+important family papers with him. But yet it gave Middleton a strange
+thrill of pleasure, that had something fearful in it, to think that all
+through these ages he had been waited for, sought for, anxiously
+expected, as it were; it seemed as if the very ghosts of his kindred, a
+long shadowy line, held forth their dim arms to welcome him; a line
+stretching back to the ghosts of those who had flourished in the old, old
+times; the doubletted and beruffled knightly shades of Queen Elizabeth’s
+time; a long line, stretching from the mediaeval ages, and their
+duskiness, downward, downward, with only one vacant space, that of him
+who had left the Bloody Footstep. There was an inexpressible pleasure
+(airy and evanescent, gone in a moment if he dwelt upon it too
+thoughtfully, but very sweet) to Middleton’s imagination, in this idea.
+When he reflected, however, that his revelations, if they had any effect
+at all, might serve only to quench the hopes of these long expectants, it
+of course made him hesitate to declare himself.
+
+One afternoon, when he was in the midst of musings such as this, he saw
+at a distance through the park, in the direction of the manor-house, a
+person who seemed to be walking slowly and seeking for something upon the
+ground. He was a long way off when Middleton first perceived him; and
+there were two clumps of trees and underbrush, with interspersed tracts
+of sunny lawn, between them. The person, whoever he was, kept on, and
+plunged into the first clump of shrubbery, still keeping his eyes on the
+ground, as if intensely searching for something. When he emerged from
+the concealment of the first clump of shrubbery, Middleton saw that he
+was a tall, thin person, in a dark dress; and this was the chief
+observation that the distance enabled him to make, as the figure kept
+slowly onward, in a somewhat wavering line, and plunged into the second
+clump of shrubbery. From that, too, he emerged; and soon appeared to be
+a thin elderly figure, of a dark man with gray hair, bent, as it seemed
+to Middleton, with infirmity, for his figure still stooped even in the
+intervals when he did not appear to be tracking the ground. But
+Middleton could not but be surprised at the singular appearance the
+figure had of setting its foot, at every step, just where a previous
+footstep had been made, as if he wanted to measure his whole pathway in
+the track of somebody who had recently gone over the ground in advance of
+him. Middleton was sitting at the foot of an oak; and he began to feel
+some awkwardness in the consideration of what he would do if Mr.
+Eldredge--for he could not doubt that it was he--were to be led just to
+this spot, in pursuit of his singular occupation. And even so it proved.
+
+Middleton could not feel it manly to fly and hide himself, like a guilty
+thing; and indeed the hospitality of the English country gentleman in
+many cases gives the neighborhood and the stranger a certain degree of
+freedom in the use of the broad expanse of ground in which they and their
+forefathers have loved to sequester their residences. The figure kept
+on, showing more and more distinctly the tall, meagre, not unvenerable
+features of a gentleman in the decline of life, apparently in ill-health;
+with a dark face, that might once have been full of energy, but now
+seemed enfeebled by time, passion, and perhaps sorrow. But it was
+strange to see the earnestness with which he looked on the ground, and
+the accuracy with which he at last set his foot, apparently adjusting it
+exactly to some footprint before him; and Middleton doubted not that,
+having studied and restudied the family records and the judicial
+examinations which described exactly the track that was seen the day
+after the memorable disappearance of his ancestor, Mr. Eldredge was now,
+in some freak, or for some purpose best known to himself, practically
+following it out. And follow it out he did, until at last he lifted up
+his eyes, muttering to himself: “At this point the footsteps wholly
+disappear.”
+
+Lifting his eyes, as we have said, while thus regretfully and
+despairingly muttering these words, he saw Middleton against the oak,
+within three paces of him.
+
+May 13th, Thursday.--Mr. Eldredge (for it was he) first kept his eyes
+fixed full on Middleton’s face, with an expression as if he saw him not;
+but gradually--slowly, at first--he seemed to become aware of his
+presence; then, with a sudden flush, he took in the idea that he was
+encountered by a stranger in his secret mood. A flush of anger or shame,
+perhaps both, reddened over his face; his eyes gleamed; and he spoke
+hastily and roughly.
+
+“Who are you?” he said. “How come you here? I allow no intruders in my
+park. Begone, fellow!”
+
+“Really, sir, I did not mean to intrude upon you,” said Middleton
+blandly. “I am aware that I owe you an apology; but the beauties of your
+park must plead my excuse; and the constant kindness of [the] English
+gentleman, which admits a stranger to the privilege of enjoying so much
+of the beauty in which he himself dwells as the stranger’s taste permits
+him to enjoy.”
+
+“An artist, perhaps,” said Mr. Eldredge, somewhat less uncourteously. “I
+am told that they love to come here and sketch those old oaks and their
+vistas, and the old mansion yonder. But you are an obtrusive set, you
+artists, and think that a pencil and a sheet of paper may be your
+passport anywhere. You are mistaken, sir. My park is not open to
+strangers.”
+
+“I am sorry, then, to have intruded upon you,” said Middleton, still in
+good humor; for in truth he felt a sort of kindness, a sentiment,
+ridiculous as it may appear, of kindred towards the old gentleman, and
+besides was not unwilling in any way to prolong a conversation in which
+he found a singular interest. “I am sorry, especially as I have not even
+the excuse you kindly suggest for me. I am not an artist, only an
+American, who have strayed hither to enjoy this gentle, cultivated, tamed
+nature which I find in English parks, so contrasting with the wild,
+rugged nature of my native land. I beg your pardon, and will retire.”
+
+“An American,” repeated Mr. Eldredge, looking curiously at him. “Ah, you
+are wild men in that country, I suppose, and cannot conceive that an
+English gentleman encloses his grounds--or that his ancestors have done
+so before him--for his own pleasure and convenience, and does not
+calculate on having it infringed upon by everybody, like your own
+forests, as you say. It is a curious country, that of yours: and in
+Italy I have seen curious people from it.”
+
+“True, sir,” said Middleton, smiling. “We send queer specimens abroad;
+but Englishmen should consider that we spring from them, and that we
+present after all only a picture of their own characteristics, a little
+varied by climate and in situation.”
+
+Mr. Eldredge looked at him with a certain kind of interest, and it seemed
+to Middleton that he was not unwilling to continue the conversation, if a
+fair way to do so could only be afforded to him. A secluded man often
+grasps at any opportunity of communicating with his kind, when it is
+casually offered to him, and for the nonce is surprisingly familiar,
+running out towards his chance-companion with the gush of a dammed-up
+torrent, suddenly unlocked. As Middleton made a motion to retire, he put
+out his hand with an air of authority to restrain him.
+
+“Stay,” said he. “Now that you are here, the mischief is done, and you
+cannot repair it by hastening away. You have interrupted me in my mood
+of thought, and must pay the penalty by suggesting other thoughts. I am
+a lonely man here, having spent most of my life abroad, and am separated
+from my neighbors by various circumstances. You seem to be an
+intelligent man. I should like to ask you a few questions about your
+country.”
+
+He looked at Middleton as he spoke, and seemed to be considering in what
+rank of life he should place him; his dress being such as suited a humble
+rank. He seemed not to have come to any very certain decision on this
+point.
+
+“I remember,” said he, “you have no distinctions of rank in your country;
+a convenient thing enough, in some respects. When there are no
+gentlemen, all are gentlemen. So let it be. You speak of being
+Englishmen; and it has often occurred to me that Englishmen have left
+this country and been much missed and sought after, who might perhaps be
+sought there successfully.”
+
+“It is certainly so, Mr. Eldredge,” said Middleton, lifting his eyes to
+his face as he spoke, and then turning them aside. “Many footsteps, the
+track of which is lost in England, might be found reappearing on the
+other side of the Atlantic; ay, though it be hundreds of years since the
+track was lost here.”
+
+Middleton, though he had refrained from looking full at Mr. Eldredge as
+he spoke, was conscious that he gave a great start; and he remained
+silent for a moment or two, and when he spoke there was the tremor in his
+voice of a nerve that had been struck and still vibrated.
+
+“That is a singular idea of yours,” he at length said; “not singular in
+itself, but strangely coincident with something that happened to be
+occupying my mind. Have you ever heard any such instances as you speak
+of?”
+
+“Yes,” replied Middleton, “I have had pointed out to me the rightful heir
+to a Scottish earldom, in the person of an American farmer, in his
+shirt-sleeves. There are many Americans who believe themselves to hold
+similar claims. And I have known one family, at least, who had in their
+possession, and had had for two centuries, a secret that might have been
+worth wealth and honors if known in England. Indeed, being kindred as we
+are, it cannot but be the case.”
+
+Mr. Eldredge appeared to be much struck by these last words, and gazed
+wistfully, almost wildly, at Middleton, as if debating with himself
+whether to say more. He made a step or two aside; then returned
+abruptly, and spoke.
+
+“Can you tell me the name of the family in which this secret was kept?”
+ said he; “and the nature of the secret?”
+
+“The nature of the secret,” said Middleton, smiling, “was not likely to
+be extended to any one out of the family. The name borne by the family
+was Middleton. There is no member of it, so far as I am aware, at this
+moment remaining in America.”
+
+“And has the secret died with them?” asked Mr. Eldredge.
+
+“They communicated it to none,” said Middleton.
+
+“It is a pity! It was a villainous wrong,” said Mr. Eldredge. “And so,
+it may be, some ancient line, in the old country, is defrauded of its
+rights for want of what might have been obtained from this Yankee, whose
+democracy has demoralized them to the perception of what is due to the
+antiquity of descent, and of the bounden duty that there is, in all
+ranks, to keep up the honor of a family that has had potence enough to
+preserve itself in distinction for a thousand years.”
+
+“Yes,” said Middleton, quietly, “we have sympathy with what is strong and
+vivacious to-day; none with what was so yesterday.”
+
+The remark seemed not to please Mr. Eldredge; he frowned, and muttered
+something to himself; but recovering himself, addressed Middleton with
+more courtesy than at the commencement of their interview; and, with this
+graciousness, his face and manner grew very agreeable, almost
+fascinating: he [was] still haughty, however.
+
+“Well, sir,” said he, “I am not sorry to have met you. I am a solitary
+man, as I have said, and a little communication with a stranger is a
+refreshment, which I enjoy seldom enough to be sensible of it. Pray, are
+you staying hereabouts?”
+
+Middleton signified to him that he might probably spend some little time
+in the village.
+
+“Then, during your stay,” maid Mr. Eldredge, “make free use of the walks
+in these grounds; and though it is not probable that you will meet me in
+them again, you need apprehend no second questioning of your right to be
+here. My house has many points of curiosity that may be of interest to a
+stranger from a new country. Perhaps you have heard of some of them.”
+
+“I have heard some wild legend about a Bloody Footstep,” answered
+Middleton; “indeed, I think I remember hearing something about it in my
+own country; and having a fanciful sort of interest in such things, I
+took advantage of the hospitable custom which opens the doors of curious
+old houses to strangers, to go to see it. It seemed to me, I confess,
+only a natural stain in the old stone that forms the doorstep.”
+
+“There, sir,” said Mr. Eldredge, “let me say that you came to a very
+foolish conclusion; and so, good-by, sir.”
+
+And without further ceremony, he cast an angry glance at Middleton, who
+perceived that the old gentleman reckoned the Bloody Footstep among his
+ancestral honors, and would probably have parted with his claim to the
+peerage almost as soon as have given up the legend.
+
+Present aspect of the story: Middleton on his arrival becomes acquainted
+with the old Hospitaller, and is familiarized at the Hospital. He pays a
+visit in his company to the manor-house, but merely glimpses at its
+remarkable things, at this visit, among others at the old cabinet, which
+does not, at first view, strike him very strongly. But, on musing about
+his visit afterwards, he finds the recollection of the cabinet strangely
+identifying itself with his previous imaginary picture of the palatial
+mansion; so that at last he begins to conceive the mistake he has made.
+At this first [visit], he does not have a personal interview with the
+possessor of the estate; but, as the Hospitaller and himself go from room
+to room, he finds that the owner is preceding them, shyly flitting like a
+ghost, so as to avoid them. Then there is a chapter about the character
+of the Eldredge of the day, a Catholic, a morbid, shy man, representing
+all the peculiarities of an old family, and generally thought to be
+insane. And then comes the interview between him and Middleton, where
+the latter excites such an interest that he dwells upon the old man’s
+mind, and the latter probably takes pains to obtain further intercourse
+with him, and perhaps invites him to dinner, and [to] spend a night in
+his house. If so, this second meeting must lead to the examination of
+the cabinet, and the discovery of some family documents in it. Perhaps
+the cabinet may be in Middleton’s sleeping-chamber, and he examines it by
+himself, before going to bed; and finds out a secret which will perplex
+him how to deal with it.
+
+May 14th, Friday.--We have spoken several times already of a young girl,
+who was seen at this period about the little antiquated village of
+Smithells; a girl in manners and in aspect unlike those of the cottages
+amid which she dwelt. Middleton had now so often met her, and in
+solitary places, that an acquaintance had inevitably established itself
+between them. He had ascertained that she had lodgings at a farm-house
+near by, and that she was connected in some way with the old Hospitaller,
+whose acquaintance had proved of such interest to him; but more than this
+he could not learn either from her or others. But he was greatly
+attracted and interested by the free spirit and fearlessness of this
+young woman; nor could he conceive where, in staid and formal England,
+she had grown up to be such as she was, so without manner, so without
+art, yet so capable of doing and thinking for herself. She had no
+reserve, apparently, yet never seemed to sin against decorum; it never
+appeared to restrain her that anything she might wish to do was contrary
+to custom; she had nothing of what could be called shyness in her
+intercourse with him; and yet he was conscious of an unapproachableness
+in Alice. Often, in the old man’s presence, she mingled in the
+conversation that went on between him and Middleton, and with an
+acuteness that betokened a sphere of thought much beyond what could be
+customary with young English maidens; and Middleton was often reminded of
+the theories of those in our own country, who believe that the
+amelioration of society depends greatly on the part that women shall
+hereafter take, according to their individual capacity, in all the
+various pursuits of life. These deeper thoughts, these higher qualities,
+surprised him as they showed themselves, whenever occasion called them
+forth, under the light, gay, and frivolous exterior which she had at
+first seemed to present. Middleton often amused himself with surmises in
+what rank of life Alice could have been bred, being so free of all
+conventional rule, yet so nice and delicate in her perception of the true
+proprieties that she never shocked him.
+
+One morning, when they had met in one of Middleton’s rambles about the
+neighborhood, they began to talk of America; and Middleton described to
+Alice the stir that was being made in behalf of women’s rights; and he
+said that whatever cause was generous and disinterested always, in that
+country, derived much of its power from the sympathy of women, and that
+the advocates of every such cause were in favor of yielding the whole
+field of human effort to be shared with women.
+
+“I have been surprised,” said he, “in the little I have seen and heard of
+Englishwomen, to discover what a difference there is between them and my
+own countrywomen.”
+
+“I have heard,” said Alice, with a smile, “that your countrywomen are a
+far more delicate and fragile race than Englishwomen; pale, feeble
+hot-house plants, unfit for the wear and tear of life, without energy of
+character, or any slightest degree of physical strength to base it upon.
+If, now, you had these large-framed Englishwomen, you might, I should
+imagine, with better hopes, set about changing the system of society, so
+as to allow them to struggle in the strife of politics, or any other
+strife, hand to hand, or side by side, with men.”
+
+“If any countryman of mine has said this of our women,” exclaimed
+Middleton, indignantly, “he is a slanderous villain, unworthy to have
+been borne by an American mother; if an Englishman has said it--as I know
+many of them have and do--let it pass as one of the many prejudices only
+half believed, with which they strive to console themselves for the
+inevitable sense that the American race is destined to higher purposes
+than their own. But pardon me; I forgot that I was speaking to an
+Englishwoman, for indeed you do not remind me of them. But, I assure
+you, the world has not seen such women as make up, I had almost said the
+mass of womanhood in my own country; slight in aspect, slender in frame,
+as you suggest, but yet capable of bringing forth stalwart men; they
+themselves being of inexhaustible courage, patience, energy; soft and
+tender, deep of heart, but high of purpose. Gentle, refined, but bold in
+every good cause.”
+
+“Oh, you have said quite enough,” replied Alice, who had seemed ready to
+laugh outright, during this encomium. “I think I see one of those
+paragons now, in a Bloomer, I think you call it, swaggering along with a
+Bowie knife at her girdle, smoking a cigar, no doubt, and tippling
+sherry-cobblers and mint-juleps. It must be a pleasant life.”
+
+“I should think you, at least, might form a more just idea of what women
+become,” said Middleton, considerably piqued, “in a country where the
+roles of conventionalism are somewhat relaxed; where woman, whatever you
+may think, is far more profoundly educated than in England, where a few
+ill-taught accomplishments, a little geography, a catechism of science,
+make up the sum, under the superintendence of a governess; the mind being
+kept entirely inert as to any capacity for thought. They are cowards,
+except within certain rules and forms; they spend a life of old
+proprieties, and die, and if their souls do not die with them, it is
+Heaven’s mercy.”
+
+Alice did not appear in the least moved to anger, though considerably to
+mirth, by this description of the character of English females. She
+laughed as she replied, “I see there is little danger of your leaving
+your heart in England.” She added more seriously, “And permit me to say,
+I trust, Mr. Middleton, that you remain as much American in other
+respects as in your preference of your own race of women. The American
+who comes hither and persuades himself that he is one with Englishmen, it
+seems to me, makes a great mistake; at least, if he is correct in such an
+idea he is not worthy of his own country, and the high development that
+awaits it. There is much that is seductive in our life, but I think it
+is not upon the higher impulses of our nature that such seductions act.
+I should think ill of the American who, for any causes of ambition,--any
+hope of wealth or rank,--or even for the sake of any of those old,
+delightful ideas of the past, the associations of ancestry, the
+loveliness of an age-long home,--the old poetry and romance that haunt
+these ancient villages and estates of England,--would give up the chance
+of acting upon the unmoulded future of America.”
+
+“And you, an Englishwoman, speak thus!” exclaimed Middleton. “You
+perhaps speak truly; and it may be that your words go to a point where
+they are especially applicable at this moment. But where have you
+learned these ideas? And how is it that you know how to awake these
+sympathies, that have slept perhaps too long?”
+
+“Think only if what I have said be the truth,” replied Alice. “It is no
+matter who or what I am that speak it.”
+
+“Do you speak,” asked Middleton, from a sudden impulse, “with any secret
+knowledge affecting a matter now in my mind?”
+
+Alice shook her head, as she turned away; but Middleton could not
+determine whether the gesture was meant as a negative to his question, or
+merely as declining to answer it. She left him; and he found himself
+strangely disturbed with thoughts of his own country, of the life that he
+ought to be leading there, the struggles in which he ought to be taking
+part; and, with these motives in his impressible mind, the motives that
+had hitherto kept him in England seemed unworthy to influence him.
+
+May 15th, Saturday.--It was not long after Middleton’s meeting with Mr.
+Eldredge in the park of Smithell’s, that he received--what it is
+precisely the most common thing to receive--an invitation to dine at the
+manor-house and spend the night. The note was written with much
+appearance of cordiality, as well as in a respectful style; and Middleton
+could not but perceive that Mr. Eldredge must have been making some
+inquiries as to his social status, in order to feel him justified in
+putting him on this footing of equality. He had no hesitation in
+accepting the invitation, and on the appointed day was received in the
+old house of his forefathers as a guest. The owner met him, not quite on
+the frank and friendly footing expressed in his note, but still with a
+perfect and polished courtesy, which however could not hide from the
+sensitive Middleton a certain coldness, a something that seemed to him
+Italian rather than English; a symbol of a condition of things between
+them, undecided, suspicious, doubtful very likely. Middleton’s own
+manner corresponded to that of his host, and they made few advances
+towards more intimate acquaintance. Middleton was however recompensed
+for his host’s unapproachableness by the society of his daughter, a young
+lady born indeed in Italy, but who had been educated in a Catholic family
+in England; so that here was another relation--the first female one--to
+whoa he had been introduced. She was a quiet, shy, undemonstrative young
+woman, with a fine bloom and other charms which she kept as much in the
+background as possible, with maiden reserve. (There is a Catholic priest
+at table.)
+
+Mr. Eldredge talked chiefly, during dinner, of art, with which his long
+residence in Italy had made him thoroughly acquainted, and for which he
+seemed to have a genuine taste and enjoyment. It was a subject on which
+Middleton knew little; but he felt the interest in it which appears to be
+not uncharacteristic of Americans, among the earliest of their
+developments of cultivation; nor had he failed to use such few
+opportunities as the English public or private galleries offered him to
+acquire the rudiments of a taste. He was surprised at the depth of some
+of Mr. Eldredge’s remarks on the topics thus brought up, and at the
+sensibility which appeared to be disclosed by his delicate appreciation
+of some of the excellencies of those great masters who wrote their epics,
+their tender sonnets, or their simple ballads, upon canvas; and Middleton
+conceived a respect for him which he had not hitherto felt, and which
+possibly Mr. Eldredge did not quite deserve. Taste seems to be a
+department of moral sense; and yet it is so little identical with it, and
+so little implies conscience, that some of the worst men in the world
+have been the most refined.
+
+After Miss Eldredge had retired, the host appeared to desire to make the
+dinner a little more social than it had hitherto been; he called for a
+peculiar species of wine from Southern Italy, which he said was the most
+delicious production of the grape, and had very seldom, if ever before,
+been imported pure into England. A delicious perfume came from the
+cradled bottle, and bore an ethereal, evanescent testimony to the truth
+of what he said: and the taste, though too delicate for wine quaffed in
+England, was nevertheless delicious, when minutely dwelt upon.
+
+“It gives me pleasure to drink your health, Mr. Middleton,” said the
+host. “We might well meet as friends in England, for I am hardly more an
+Englishman than yourself; bred up, as I have been, in Italy, and coming
+back hither at my age, unaccustomed to the manners of the country, with
+few friends, and insulated from society by a faith which makes most
+people regard me as an enemy. I seldom welcome people here, Mr.
+Middleton; but you are welcome.”
+
+“I thank you, Mr. Eldredge, and may fairly say that the circumstances to
+which you allude make me accept your hospitality with a warmer feeling
+than I otherwise might. Strangers, meeting in a strange land, have a
+sort of tie in their foreignness to those around them, though there be no
+positive relation between themselves.”
+
+“We are friends, then?” said Mr. Eldredge, looking keenly at Middleton,
+as if to discover exactly how much was meant by the compact. He
+continued, “You know, I suppose, Mr. Middleton, the situation in which I
+find myself on returning to my hereditary estate; which has devolved to
+me somewhat unexpectedly by the death of a younger man than myself.
+There is an old flaw here, as perhaps you have been told, which keeps me
+out of a property long kept in the guardianship of the crown, and of a
+barony, one of the oldest in England. There is an idea--a tradition--a
+legend, founded, however, on evidence of some weight, that there is still
+in existence the possibility of finding the proof which we need, to
+confirm our cause.”
+
+“I am most happy to hear it, Mr. Eldredge,” said Middleton.
+
+“But,” continued his host, “I am bound to remember and to consider that
+for several generations there seems to have been the same idea, and the
+same expectation; whereas nothing has ever come of it. Now, among other
+suppositions--perhaps wild ones--it has occurred to me that this
+testimony, the desirable proof, may exist on your side of the Atlantic;
+for it has long enough been sought here in vain.”
+
+“As I said in our meeting in your park, Mr. Eldredge,” replied Middleton,
+“such a suggestion may very possibly be true; yet let me point out that
+the long lapse of years, and the continual melting and dissolving of
+family institutions--the consequent scattering of family documents, and
+the annihilation of traditions from memory, all conspire against its
+probability.”
+
+“And yet, Mr. Middleton,” said his host, “when we talked together at our
+first singular interview, you made use of an expression--of one
+remarkable phrase--which dwelt upon my memory and now recurs to it.”
+
+“And what was that, Mr. Eldredge?” asked Middleton.
+
+“You spoke,” replied his host, “of the Bloody Footstep reappearing on the
+threshold of the old palace of S------. Now where, let me ask you, did
+you ever hear this strange name, which you then spoke, and which I have
+since spoken?”
+
+“From my father’s lips, when a child, in America,” responded Middleton.
+
+“It is very strange,” said Mr. Eldredge, in a hasty, dissatisfied tone.
+“I do not see my way through this.”
+
+May 16th, Sunday.--Middleton had been put into a chamber in the oldest
+part of the house, the furniture of which was of antique splendor, well
+befitting to have come down for ages, well befitting the hospitality
+shown to noble and even royal guests. It was the same room in which, at
+his first visit to the house, Middleton’s attention had been drawn to the
+cabinet, which he had subsequently remembered as the palatial residence
+in which he had harbored so many dreams. It still stood in the chamber,
+making the principal object in it, indeed; and when Middleton was left
+alone, he contemplated it not without a certain awe, which at the same
+time he felt to be ridiculous. He advanced towards it, and stood
+contemplating the mimic facade, wondering at the singular fact of this
+piece of furniture having been preserved in traditionary history, when so
+much had been forgotten,--when even the features and architectural
+characteristics of the mansion in which it was merely a piece of
+furniture had been forgotten. And, as he gazed at it, he half thought
+himself an actor in a fairy portal [tale?]; and would not have been
+surprised--at least, he would have taken it with the composure of a
+dream--if the mimic portal had unclosed, and a form of pigmy majesty had
+appeared within, beckoning him to enter and find the revelation of what
+had so long perplexed him. The key of the cabinet was in the lock, and
+knowing that it was not now the receptacle of anything in the shape of
+family papers, he threw it open; and there appeared the mosaic floor, the
+representation of a stately, pillared hall, with the doors on either side
+opening, as would seem, into various apartments. And here should have
+stood the visionary figures of his ancestry, waiting to welcome the
+descendant of their race, who had so long delayed his coming. After
+looking and musing a considerable time,--even till the old clock from the
+turret of the house told twelve, he turned away with a sigh, and went to
+bed. The wind moaned through the ancestral trees; the old house creaked
+as with ghostly footsteps; the curtains of his bed seemed to waver. He
+was now at home; yes, he had found his home, and was sheltered at last
+under the ancestral roof after all those long, long wanderings,--after
+the little log-built hut of the early settlement, after the straight roof
+of the American house, after all the many roofs of two hundred years,
+here he was at last under the one which he had left, on that fatal night,
+when the Bloody Footstep was so mysteriously impressed on the threshold.
+As he drew nearer and nearer towards sleep, it seemed more and more to
+him as if he were the very individual--the self-same one throughout the
+whole--who had done, seen, suffered, all these long toils and
+vicissitudes, and were now come back to rest, and found his weariness so
+great that there could be no rest.
+
+Nevertheless, he did sleep; and it may be that his dreams went on, and
+grew vivid, and perhaps became truer in proportion to their vividness.
+When he awoke he had a perception, an intuition, that he had been
+dreaming about the cabinet, which, in his sleeping imagination, had again
+assumed the magnitude and proportions of a stately mansion, even as he
+had seen it afar from the other side of the Atlantic. Some dim
+associations remained lingering behind, the dying shadows of very vivid
+ones which had just filled his mind; but as he looked at the cabinet,
+there was some idea that still seemed to come so near his consciousness
+that, every moment, he felt on the point of grasping it. During the
+process of dressing, he still kept his eyes turned involuntarily towards
+the cabinet, and at last he approached it, and looked within the mimic
+portal, still endeavoring to recollect what it was that he had heard or
+dreamed about it,--what half obliterated remembrance from childhood, what
+fragmentary last night’s dream it was, that thus haunted him. It must
+have been some association of one or the other nature that led him to
+press his finger on one particular square of the mosaic pavement; and as
+he did so, the thin plate of polished marble slipt aside. It disclosed,
+indeed, no hollow receptacle, but only another leaf of marble, in the
+midst of which appeared to be a key-hole: to this Middleton applied the
+little antique key to which we have several times alluded, and found it
+fit precisely. The instant it was turned, the whole mimic floor of the
+hall rose, by the action of a secret spring, and discovered a shallow
+recess beneath. Middleton looked eagerly in, and saw that it contained
+documents, with antique seals of wax appended; he took but one glance at
+them, and closed the receptacle as it was before.
+
+Why did he do so? He felt that there would be a meanness and wrong in
+inspecting these family papers, coming to the knowledge of them, as he
+had, through the opportunities offered by the hospitality of the owner of
+the estate; nor, on the other hand, did he feel such confidence in his
+host, as to make him willing to trust these papers in his hands, with any
+certainty that they would be put to an honorable use. The case was one
+demanding consideration, and he put a strong curb upon his impatient
+curiosity, conscious that, at all events, his first impulsive feeling was
+that he ought not to examine these papers without the presence of his
+host or some other authorized witness. Had he exercised any casuistry
+about the point, however, he might have argued that these papers,
+according to all appearance, dated from a period to which his own
+hereditary claims ascended, and to circumstances in which his own
+rightful interest was as strong as that of Mr. Eldredge. But he had
+acted on his first impulse, closed the secret receptacle, and hastening
+his toilet descended from his room; and, it being still too early for
+breakfast, resolved to ramble about the immediate vicinity of the house.
+As he passed the little chapel, he heard within the voice of the priest
+performing mass, and felt how strange was this sign of mediaeval religion
+and foreign manners in homely England.
+
+As the story looks now: Eldredge, bred, and perhaps born, in Italy, and a
+Catholic, with views to the church before he inherited the estate, has
+not the English moral sense and simple honor; can scarcely be called an
+Englishman at all. Dark suspicions of past crime, and of the possibility
+of future crime, may be thrown around him; an atmosphere of doubt shall
+envelop him, though, as regards manners, he may be highly refined.
+Middleton shall find in the house a priest; and at his first visit he
+shall have seen a small chapel, adorned with the richness, as to marbles,
+pictures, and frescoes, of those that we see in the churches at Rome; and
+here the Catholic forms of worship shall be kept up. Eldredge shall have
+had an Italian mother, and shall have the personal characteristics of an
+Italian. There shall be something sinister about him, the more apparent
+when Middleton’s visit draws to a conclusion; and the latter shall feel
+convinced that they part in enmity, so far as Eldredge is concerned. He
+shall not speak of his discovery in the cabinet.
+
+May 17th, Monday.--Unquestionably, the appointment of Middleton as
+minister to one of the minor Continental courts must take place in the
+interval between Eldredge’s meeting him in the park, and his inviting him
+to his house. After Middleton’s appointment, the two encounter each
+other at the Mayor’s dinner in St. Mary’s Hall, and Eldredge, startled at
+meeting the vagrant, as he deemed him, under such a character, remembers
+the hints of some secret knowledge of the family history, which Middleton
+had thrown out. He endeavors, both in person and by the priest, to make
+out what Middleton really is, and what he knows, and what he intends; but
+Middleton is on his guard, yet cannot help arousing Eldredge’s suspicions
+that he has views upon the estate and title. It is possible, too, that
+Middleton may have come to the knowledge--may have had some knowledge--of
+some shameful or criminal fact connected with Mr. Eldredge’s life on the
+Continent; the old Hospitaller, possibly, may have told him this, from
+some secret malignity hereafter to be accounted for. Supposing Eldredge
+to attempt his murder, by poison for instance, bringing back into modern
+life his old hereditary Italian plots; and into English life a sort of
+crime which does not belong to it,--which did not, at least, although at
+this very period there have been fresh and numerous instances of it.
+There might be a scene in which Middleton and Eldredge come to a fierce
+and bitter explanation; for in Eldredge’s character there must be the
+English surly boldness as well as the Italian subtlety; and here,
+Middleton shall tell him what he knows of his past character and life,
+and also what he knows of his own hereditary claims. Eldredge might have
+committed a murder in Italy; might have been a patriot and betrayed his
+friends to death for a bribe, bearing another name than his own in Italy;
+indeed, he might have joined them only as an informer. All this he had
+tried to sink, when he came to England in the character of a gentleman of
+ancient name and large estate. But this infamy of his previous character
+must be foreboded from the first by the manner in which Eldredge is
+introduced; and it must make his evil designs on Middleton appear natural
+and probable. It may be, that Middleton has learned Eldredge’s previous
+character through some Italian patriot who had taken refuge in America,
+and there become intimate with him; and it should be a piece of secret
+history, not known to the world in general, so that Middleton might seem
+to Eldredge the sole depositary of the secret then in England. He feels
+a necessity of getting rid of him; and thenceforth Middleton’s path lies
+always among pitfalls; indeed, the first attempt should follow promptly
+and immediately on his rupture with Eldredge. The utmost pains must be
+taken with this incident to give it an air of reality; or else it must be
+quite removed out of the sphere of reality by an intensified atmosphere
+of romance. I think the old Hospitaller must interfere to prevent the
+success of this attempt, perhaps through the means of Alice.
+
+The result of Eldredge’s criminal and treacherous designs is, somehow or
+other, that he comes to his death; and Middleton and Alice are left to
+administer on the remains of the story; perhaps, the Mayor being his
+friend, he may be brought into play here. The foreign ecclesiastic shall
+likewise come forward, and he shall prove to be a man of subtile policy
+perhaps, yet a man of religion and honor; with a Jesuit’s principles, but
+a Jesuit’s devotion and self-sacrifice. The old Hospitaller must die in
+his bed, or some other how; or perhaps not--we shall see. He may just as
+well be left in the Hospital. Eldredge’s attempt on Middleton must be in
+some way peculiar to Italy, and which he shall have learned there; and,
+by the way, at his dinner-table there shall be a Venice glass, one of the
+kind that were supposed to be shattered when poison was put into them.
+When Eldredge produces his rare wine, he shall pour it into this, with a
+jesting allusion to the legend. Perhaps the mode of Eldredge’s attempt
+on Middleton’s life shall be a reproduction of the attempt made two
+hundred years before; and Middleton’s knowledge of that incident shall be
+the means of his salvation. That would be a good idea; in fact, I think
+it must be done so and no otherwise. It is not to be forgotten that
+there is a taint of insanity in Eldredge’s blood, accounting for much
+that is wild and absurd, at the same time that it must be subtile, in his
+conduct; one of those perplexing mad people, whose lunacy you are
+continually mistaking for wickedness or vice versa. This shall be the
+priest’s explanation and apology for him, after his death. I wish I
+could get hold of the Newgate Calendar, the older volumes, or any other
+book of murders--the Causes Celebres, for instance. The legendary
+murder, or attempt at it, will bring its own imaginative probability with
+it, when repeated by Eldredge; and at the same time it will have a
+dreamlike effect; so that Middleton shall hardly know whether he is awake
+or not. This incident is very essential towards bringing together the
+past time and the present, and the two ends of the story.
+
+May 18th, Tuesday.--All down through the ages since Edward had
+disappeared from home, leaving that bloody footstep on the threshold,
+there had been legends and strange stories of the murder and the manner
+of it. These legends differed very much among themselves. According to
+some, his brother had awaited him there, and stabbed him on the
+threshold. According to others, he had been murdered in his chamber, and
+dragged out. A third story told, that he was escaping with his lady
+love, when they were overtaken on the threshold, and the young man slain.
+It was impossible at this distance of time to ascertain which of these
+legends was the true one, or whether either of them had any portion of
+truth, further than that the young man had actually disappeared from that
+night, and that it never was certainly known to the public that any
+intelligence had ever afterwards been received from him. Now, Middleton
+may have communicated to Eldredge the truth in regard to the matter; as,
+for instance, that he had stabbed him with a certain dagger that was
+still kept among the curiosities of the manor-house. Of course, that
+will not do. It must be some very ingenious and artificially natural
+thing, an artistic affair in its way, that should strike the fancy of
+such a man as Eldredge, and appear to him altogether fit, mutatis
+mutandis, to be applied to his own requirements and purposes. I do not
+at present see in the least how this is to be wrought out. There shall
+be everything to make Eldredge look with the utmost horror and alarm at
+any chance that he may be superseded and ousted from his possession of
+the estate; for he shall only recently have established his claim to it,
+tracing out his pedigree, when the family was supposed to be extinct.
+And he is come to these comfortable quarters after a life of poverty,
+uncertainty, difficulty, hanging loose on society; and therefore he shall
+be willing to risk soul and body both, rather than return to his former
+state. Perhaps his daughter shall be introduced as a young Italian girl,
+to whom Middleton shall decide to leave the estate.
+
+On the failure of his design, Eldredge may commit suicide, and be found
+dead in the wood; at any rate, some suitable end shall be contrived,
+adapted to his wants. This character must not be so represented as to
+shut him out completely from the reader’s sympathies; he shall have
+taste, sentiment, even a capacity for affection, nor, I think, ought he
+to have any hatred or bitter feeling against the man whom he resolves to
+murder. In the closing scenes, when he thinks the fate of Middleton
+approaching, there might even be a certain tenderness towards him, a
+desire to make the last drops of life delightful; if well done, this
+would produce a certain sort of horror, that I do not remember to have
+seen effected in literature. Possibly the ancient emigrant might be
+supposed to have fallen into an ancient mine, down a precipice, into some
+pitfall; no, not so. Into a river; into a moat. As Middleton’s
+pretensions to birth are not publicly known, there will be no reason why,
+at his sudden death, suspicion should fix on Eldredge as the murderer;
+and it shall be his object so to contrive his death as that it shall
+appear the result of accident. Having failed in effecting Middleton’s
+death by this excellent way, he shall perhaps think that he cannot do
+better them to make his own exit in precisely the same manner. It might
+be easy, and as delightful as any death could be; no ugliness in it, no
+blood; for the Bloody Footstep of old times might be the result of the
+failure of the old plot, not of its success. Poison seems to be the only
+elegant method; but poison is vulgar, and in many respects unfit for my
+purpose. It won’t do. Whatever it may be, it must not come upon the
+reader as a sudden and new thing, but as one that might have been
+foreseen from afar, though he shall not actually have foreseen it until
+it is about to happen. It must be prevented through the agency of Alice.
+Alice may have been an artist in Rome, and there have known Eldredge and
+his daughter, and thus she may have become their guest in England; or he
+may be patronizing her now--at all events she shall be the friend of the
+daughter, and shall have a just appreciation of the father’s character.
+It shall be partly due to her high counsel that Middleton foregoes his
+claim to the estate, and prefers the life of an American, with its lofty
+possibilities for himself and his race, to the position of an Englishman
+of property and title; and she, for her part, shall choose the condition
+and prospects of woman in America, to the emptiness of the life of a
+woman of rank in England. So they shall depart, lofty and poor, out of
+the home which might be their own, if they would stoop to make it so.
+Possibly the daughter of Eldredge may be a girl not yet in her teens, for
+whom Alice has the affection of an elder sister.
+
+It should be a very carefully and highly wrought scene, occurring just
+before Eldredge’s actual attempt on Middleton’s life, in which all the
+brilliancy of his character--which shall before have gleamed upon the
+reader--shall come out, with pathos, with wit, with insight, with
+knowledge of life. Middleton shall be inspired by this, and shall vie
+with him in exhilaration of spirits; but the ecclesiastic shall look on
+with singular attention, and some appearance of alarm; and the suspicion
+of Alice shall likewise be aroused. The old Hospitaller may have gained
+his situation partly by proving himself a man of the neighborhood, by
+right of descent; so that he, too, shall have a hereditary claim to be in
+the Romance.
+
+Eldredge’s own position as a foreigner in the midst of English home life,
+insulated and dreary, shall represent to Middleton, in some degree, what
+his own would be, were he to accept the estate. But Middleton shall not
+come to the decision to resign it, without having to repress a deep
+yearning for that sense of long, long rest in an age-consecrated home,
+which he had felt so deeply to be the happy lot of Englishmen. But this
+ought to be rejected, as not belonging to his country, nor to the age,
+nor any longer possible.
+
+May 19th, Wednesday.--The connection of the old Hospitaller with the
+story is not at all clear. He is an American by birth, but deriving his
+English origin from the neighborhood of the Hospital, where he has
+finally established himself. Some one of his ancestors may have been
+somehow connected with the ancient portion of the story. He has been a
+friend of Middleton’s father, who reposed entire confidence in him,
+trusting him with all his fortune, which the Hospitaller risked in his
+enormous speculations, and lost it all. His fame had been great in the
+financial world. There were circumstances that made it dangerous for his
+whereabouts to be known, and so he had come hither and found refuge in
+this institution, where Middleton finds him, but does not know who he is.
+In the vacancy of a mind formerly so active, he has taken to the study of
+local antiquities; and from his former intimacy with Middleton’s father,
+he has a knowledge of the American part of the story, which he connects
+with the English portion, disclosed by his researches here; so that he is
+quite aware that Middleton has claims to the estate, which might be urged
+successfully against the present possessor. He is kindly disposed
+towards the son of his friend, whom he had so greatly injured; but he is
+now very old, and ------. Middleton has been directed to this old man,
+by a friend in America, as one likely to afford him all possible
+assistance in his researches; and so he seeks him out and forms an
+acquaintance with him, which the old man encourages to a certain extent,
+taking an evident interest in him, but does not disclose himself; nor
+does Middleton suspect him to be an American. The characteristic life of
+the Hospital is brought out, and the individual character of this old
+man, vegetating here after an active career, melancholy and miserable;
+sometimes torpid with the slow approach of utmost age; sometimes feeble,
+peevish, wavering; sometimes shining out with a wisdom resulting from
+originally bright faculties, ripened by experience. The character must
+not be allowed to get vague, but, with gleams of romance, must yet be
+kept homely and natural by little touches of his daily life.
+
+As for Alice, I see no necessity for her being anywise related to or
+connected with the old Hospitaller. As originally conceived, I think she
+may be an artist--a sculptress--whom Eldredge had known in Rome. No; she
+might be a granddaughter of the old Hospitaller, born and bred in
+America, but who had resided two or three years in Rome in the study of
+her art, and have there acquired a knowledge of the Eldredges and have
+become fond of the little Italian girl his daughter. She has lodgings in
+the village, and of course is often at the Hospital, and often at the
+Hall; she makes busts and little statues, and is free, wild, tender,
+proud, domestic, strange, natural, artistic; and has at bottom the
+characteristics of the American woman, with the principles of the
+strong-minded sect; and Middleton shall be continually puzzled at meeting
+such a phenomenon in England. By and by, the internal influence
+[evidence?] of her sentiments (though there shall be nothing to confirm
+it in her manner) shall lead him to charge her with being an American.
+
+Now, as to the arrangement of the Romance;--it begins as an integral and
+essential part, with my introduction, giving a pleasant and familiar
+summary of my life in the Consulate at Liverpool; the strange species of
+Americans, with strange purposes, in England, whom I used to meet there;
+and, especially, how my countrymen used to be put out of their senses by
+the idea of inheritances of English property. Then I shall particularly
+instance one gentleman who called on me on first coming over; a
+description of him must be given, with touches that shall puzzle the
+reader to decide whether it is not an actual portrait. And then this
+Romance shall be offered, half seriously, as the account of the fortunes
+that he met with in his search for his hereditary home. Enough of his
+ancestral story may be given to explain what is to follow in the Romance;
+or perhaps this may be left to the scenes of his intercourse with the old
+Hospitaller.
+
+The Romance proper opens with Middleton’s arrival at what he has reason
+to think is the neighborhood of his ancestral home, and here he makes
+application to the old Hospitaller. Middleton shall be described as
+approaching the Hospital, which shall be pretty literally copied after
+Leicester’s, although the surrounding village must be on a much smaller
+scale of course. Much elaborateness may be given to this portion of the
+book. Middleton shall have assumed a plain dress, and shall seek to make
+no acquaintances except that of the old Hospitaller; the acquaintance of
+Alice naturally following. The old Hospitaller and he go together to the
+old Hall, where, as they pass through the rooms, they find that the
+proprietor is flitting like a ghost before them from chamber to chamber;
+they catch his reflection in a glass, etc., etc. When these have been
+wrought up sufficiently, shall come the scene in the wood, where Eldredge
+is seen yielding to the superstition that he has inherited, respecting
+the old secret of the family, on the discovery of which depends the
+enforcement of his claim to a title. All this while, Middleton has
+appeared in the character of a man of no note; and now, through some
+political change, not necessarily told, he receives a packet addressed to
+him as an ambassador, and containing a notice of his appointment to that
+dignity. A paragraph in the “Times” confirms the fact, and makes it
+known in the neighborhood. Middleton immediately becomes an object of
+attention; the gentry call upon him; the Mayor of the neighboring
+county-town invites him to dinner, which shall be described with all its
+antique formalities. Here he meets Eldredge, who is surprised,
+remembering the encounter in the wood; but passes it all off, like a man
+of the world, makes his acquaintance, and invites him to the Hall.
+Perhaps he may make a visit of some time here, and become intimate, to a
+certain degree, with all parties; and here things shall ripen themselves
+for Eldredge’s attempt upon his life.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg’s Sketches and Studies, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
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+ <title>
+ Sketches and Studies, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+ </title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketches and Studies
+
+Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8091]
+This file was first posted on June 13, 2003
+Last Updated: December 15, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCHES AND STUDIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Tapio Riikonen and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> LIFE OF FRANKLIN PIERCE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> CHIEFLY ABOUT WAR MATTERS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> ALICE DOANE&rsquo;S APPEAL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LIFE OF FRANKLIN PIERCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The author of this memoir&mdash;being so little of a politician that he
+ scarcely feels entitled to call himself a member of any party&mdash;would
+ not voluntarily have undertaken the work here offered to the public.
+ Neither can he flatter himself that he has been remarkably successful in
+ the performance of his task, viewing it in the light of a political
+ biography, and as a representation of the principles and acts of a public
+ man, intended to operate upon the minds of multitudes during a
+ presidential canvass. This species of writing is too remote from his
+ customary occupations&mdash;and, he may add, from his tastes&mdash;to be
+ very satisfactorily done, without more time and practice than he would be
+ willing to expend for such a purpose. If this little biography have any
+ value, it is probably of another kind&mdash;as the narrative of one who
+ knew the individual of whom he treats, at a period of life when character
+ could be read with undoubting accuracy, and who, consequently, in judging
+ of the motives of his subsequent conduct, has an advantage over much more
+ competent observers, whose knowledge of the man may have commenced at a
+ later date. Nor can it be considered improper (at least, the author will
+ never feel it so, although some foolish delicacy be sacrificed in the
+ undertaking) that when a friend, dear to him almost from boyish days,
+ stands up before his country, misrepresented by indiscriminate abuse on
+ the one hand, and by aimless praise on the other, he should be sketched by
+ one who has had opportunities of knowing him well, and who is certainly
+ inclined to tell the truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is perhaps right to say, that while this biography is so far sanctioned
+ by General Pierce, as it comprises a generally correct narrative of the
+ principal events of his life, the author does not understand him as
+ thereby necessarily indorsing all the sentiments put forth by himself in
+ the progress of the work. These are the author&rsquo;s own speculations upon the
+ facts before him, and may, or may not, be in accordance with the ideas of
+ the individual whose life he writes. That individual&rsquo;s opinions, however,&mdash;so
+ far as it is necessary to know them, &mdash;may be read, in his
+ straightforward and consistent deeds, with more certainty than those of
+ almost any other man now before the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author, while collecting his materials, has received liberal aid from
+ all manner of people&mdash;Whigs and Democrats, congressmen, astute
+ lawyers, grim old generals of militia, and gallant young officers of the
+ Mexican war&mdash;most of whom, however, he must needs say, have rather
+ abounded in eulogy of General Pierce than in such anecdotical matter as is
+ calculated for a biography. Among the gentlemen to whom he is
+ substantially indebted, he would mention Hon. C. G. Atherton, Hon. S. H.
+ Ayer, Hon. Joseph Hall, Chief Justice Gilchrist, Isaac O. Barnes, Esq.,
+ Col. T. J. Whipple, and Mr. C. J. Smith. He has likewise derived much
+ assistance from an able and accurate sketch, that originally appeared in
+ the &ldquo;Boston Post,&rdquo; and was drawn up, as he believes, by the junior editor
+ of that journal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONCORD, MASS., August 27, 1852.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HIS PARENTAGE AND EARLY LIFE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Franklin Pierce was born at Hillsborough, in the State of New Hampshire,
+ on the 23d of November, 1804. His native county, at the period of his
+ birth, covered a much more extensive territory than at present, and might
+ reckon among its children many memorable men, and some illustrious ones.
+ General Stark, the hero of Bennington, Daniel Webster, Levi Woodbury,
+ Jeremiah Smith, the eminent jurist, and governor of the state, General
+ James Miller, General McNeil, Senator Atherton, were natives of old
+ Hillsborough County.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Benjamin Pierce, the father of Franklin, was one of the earliest
+ settlers in the town of Hillsborough, and contributed as much as any other
+ man to the growth and prosperity of the county. He was born in 1757, at
+ Chelmsford, now Lowell, in Massachusetts. Losing his parents early, he
+ grew up under the care of an uncle, amid such circumstances of simple
+ fare, hard labor, and scanty education, as usually fell to the lot of a
+ New England yeoman&rsquo;s family some eighty or a hundred years ago. On the
+ 19th of April, 1775, being then less than eighteen years of age, the
+ stripling was at the plough, when tidings reached him of the bloodshed at
+ Lexington and Concord. He immediately loosened the ox chain, left the
+ plough in the furrow, took his uncle&rsquo;s gun and equipments, and set forth
+ towards the scene of action. From that day, for more than seven years, he
+ never saw his native place. He enlisted in the army, was present at the
+ battle of Bunker Hill, and after serving through the whole Revolutionary
+ War, and fighting his way upward from the lowest grade, returned, at last,
+ a thorough soldier, and commander of a company. He was retained in the
+ army as long as that body of veterans had a united existence; and, being
+ finally disbanded, at West Point, in 1784, was left with no other reward,
+ for nine years of toil and danger, than the nominal amount of his pay in
+ the Continental currency&mdash;then so depreciated as to be almost
+ worthless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1780, being employed as agent to explore a tract of wild land, he
+ purchased a lot of fifty acres in what is now the town of Hillsborough. In
+ the spring of the succeeding year, he built himself a log hut, and began
+ the clearing and cultivation of his tract. Another year beheld him married
+ to his first wife, Elizabeth Andrews, who died within a twelvemonth after
+ their union, leaving a daughter, the present widow of General John McNeil.
+ In 1789, he married Anna Kendrick, with whom he lived about half a
+ century, and who bore him eight children, of whom Franklin was the sixth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the Revolutionary soldier had thus betaken himself to the
+ wilderness for a subsistence, his professional merits were not forgotten
+ by those who had witnessed his military career. As early as 1786, he was
+ appointed brigade major of the militia of Hillsborough County, then first
+ organized and formed into a brigade. And it was a still stronger
+ testimonial to his character as a soldier, that, nearly fifteen years
+ afterwards, during the presidency of John Adams, he was offered a high
+ command in the northern division of the army which was proposed to be
+ levied in anticipation of a war with the French republic. Inflexibly
+ democratic in his political faith, however, Major Pierce refused to be
+ implicated in a policy which he could not approve. &ldquo;No, gentlemen,&rdquo; said
+ he to the delegates who urged his acceptance of the commission, &ldquo;poor as I
+ am, and acceptable as would be the position under other circumstances, I
+ would sooner go to yonder mountains, dig me a cave, and live on roast
+ potatoes, than be instrumental in promoting the objects for which that
+ army is to be raised!&rdquo; This same fidelity to his principles marked every
+ public, as well as private, action of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his own neighborhood, among those who knew him best he early gained an
+ influence that was never lost nor diminished, but continued to spread
+ wider during the whole of his long life. In 1789, he was elected to the
+ state legislature and retained that position for thirteen successive
+ years, until chosen a member of the council. During the same period he was
+ active in his military duties, as a field officer, and finally general, of
+ the militia of the county; and Miller, McNeil, and others learned of him,
+ in this capacity, the soldier-like discipline which was afterwards
+ displayed on the battle-fields of the northern frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history, character, and circumstances of General Benjamin Pierce,
+ though here but briefly touched upon, are essential parts of the biography
+ of his son, both as indicating some of the native traits which the latter
+ has inherited, and as showing the influences amid which he grew up. At
+ Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s birth, and for many years subsequent, his father was the
+ most active and public-spirited man within his sphere; a most decided
+ Democrat, and supporter of Jefferson and Madison; a practical farmer,
+ moreover, not rich, but independent, exercising a liberal hospitality, and
+ noted for the kindness and generosity of his character; a man of the
+ people, but whose natural qualities inevitably made him a leader among
+ them. From infancy upward, the boy had before his eyes, as the model on
+ which he might instinctively form himself, one of the best specimens of
+ sterling New England character, developed in a life of simple habits, yet
+ of elevated action. Patriotism, such as it had been in Revolutionary days,
+ was taught him by his father, as early as his mother taught him religion.
+ He became early imbued, too, with the military spirit which the old
+ soldier had retained from his long service, and which was kept active by
+ the constant alarms and warlike preparations of the first twelve years of
+ the present century. If any man is bound by birth and youthful training,
+ to show himself a brave, faithful, and able citizen of his native country,
+ it is the son of such a father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the commencement of the war of 1812, Franklin Pierce was a few months
+ under eight years of age. The old general, his father, sent two of his
+ sons into the army; and as his eldest daughter was soon afterwards married
+ to Major McNeil, there were few families that had so large a personal
+ stake in the war as that of General Benjamin Pierce. He himself, both in
+ his public capacity as a member of the council, and by his great local
+ influence in his own county, lent a strenuous support to the national
+ administration. It is attributable to his sagacity and energy, that New
+ Hampshire&mdash;then under a federal governor&mdash;was saved the disgrace
+ of participation in the questionable, if not treasonable, projects of the
+ Hartford Convention. He identified himself with the cause of the country,
+ and was doubtless as thoroughly alive with patriotic zeal, at this
+ eventful period, as in the old days of Bunker Hill, and Saratoga, and
+ Yorktown. The general not only took a prominent part at all public
+ meetings, but was ever ready for the informal discussion of political
+ affairs at all places of casual resort, where&mdash;in accordance with the
+ custom of the time and country&mdash;the minds of men were made to operate
+ effectually upon each other. Franklin Pierce was a frequent auditor of
+ these controversies. The intentness with which he watched the old general,
+ and listened to his arguments, is still remembered; and, at this day, in
+ his most earnest moods, there are gesticulations and movements that bring
+ up the image of his father to those who recollect the latter on those
+ occasions of the display of homely, native eloquence. No mode of education
+ could be conceived, better adapted to imbue a youth with the principles
+ and sentiment of democratic institutions; it brought him into the most
+ familiar contact with the popular mind, and made his own mind a part of
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Franklin&rsquo;s father had felt, through life, the disadvantages of a defective
+ education; although, in his peculiar sphere of action, it might be doubted
+ whether he did not gain more than he lost, by being thrown on his own
+ resources, and compelled to study men and their actual affairs, rather
+ than books. But he determined to afford his son all the opportunities of
+ improvement which he himself had lacked. Franklin, accordingly, was early
+ sent to the academy at Hancock, and afterwards to that of Francestown,
+ where he was received into the family of General Pierce&rsquo;s old and
+ steadfast friend, Peter Woodbury, father of the late eminent judge. It is
+ scarcely more than a year ago, at the semi-centennial celebration of the
+ academy, that Franklin Pierce, the mature and distinguished man, paid a
+ beautiful tribute to the character of Madam Woodbury, in affectionate
+ remembrance of the motherly kindness experienced at her hands by the
+ school-boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old people of his neighborhood give a very delightful picture of
+ Franklin at this early age. They describe him as a beautiful boy, with
+ blue eyes, light curling hair, and a sweet expression of face. The traits
+ presented of him indicate moral symmetry, kindliness, and a delicate
+ texture of sentiment, rather than marked prominences of character. His
+ instructors testify to his propriety of conduct, his fellow-pupils to his
+ sweetness of disposition and cordial sympathy. One of the latter, being
+ older than most of his companions, and less advanced in his studies, found
+ it difficult to keep up with his class; and he remembers how
+ perseveringly, while the other boys were at play, Franklin spent the noon
+ recess, for many weeks together, in aiding him in his lessons. These
+ attributes, proper to a generous and affectionate nature, have remained
+ with him through life. Lending their color to his deportment, and
+ softening his manners, they are, perhaps, even now, the characteristics by
+ which most of those who casually meet him would be inclined to identify
+ the man. But there are other qualities, not then developed, but which have
+ subsequently attained a firm and manly growth, and are recognized as his
+ leading traits among those who really know him. Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s
+ development, indeed, has always been the reverse of premature; the boy did
+ not show the germ of all that was in the man, nor, perhaps, did the young
+ man adequately foreshow the mature one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1820, at the age of sixteen, he became a student of Bowdoin College, at
+ Brunswick, Maine. It was in the autumn of the next year that the author of
+ this memoir entered the class below him; but our college reminiscences,
+ however interesting to the parties concerned, are not exactly the material
+ for a biography. He was then a youth, with the boy and man in him,
+ vivacious, mirthful, slender, of a fair complexion, with light hair that
+ had a curl in it: his bright and cheerful aspect made a kind of sunshine,
+ both as regarded its radiance and its warmth; insomuch that no shyness of
+ disposition, in his associates, could well resist its influence. We soon
+ became acquainted, and were more especially drawn together as members of
+ the same college society. There were two of these institutions, dividing
+ the college between them, and typifying, respectively, and with singular
+ accuracy of feature, the respectable conservative, and the progressive or
+ democratic parties. Pierce&rsquo;s native tendencies inevitably drew him to the
+ latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His chum was Zenas Caldwell, several years older than himself, a member of
+ the Methodist persuasion, a pure-minded, studious, devoutly religious
+ character; endowed thus early in life with the authority of a grave and
+ sagacious turn of mind. The friendship between Pierce and him appeared to
+ be mutually strong, and was of itself a pledge of correct deportment in
+ the former. His chief friend, I think, was a classmate named Little, a
+ young man of most estimable qualities and high intellectual promise; one
+ of those fortunate characters whom an early death so canonizes in the
+ remembrance of their companions, that the perfect fulfilment of a long
+ life would scarcely give them a higher place. Jonathan Cilley, of my own
+ class,&mdash;whose untimely fate is still mournfully remembered,&mdash;a
+ person of very marked ability and great social influence, was another of
+ Pierce&rsquo;s friends. All these have long been dead. There are others, still
+ alive, who would meet Franklin Pierce, at this day, with as warm a
+ pressure of the hand, and the same confidence in his kindly feelings as
+ when they parted from him nearly thirty years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pierce&rsquo;s class was small, but composed of individuals seriously intent on
+ the duties and studies of their college life. They were not boys, but, for
+ the most part, well advanced towards maturity; and, having wrought out
+ their own means of education, were little inclined to neglect the
+ opportunities that had been won at so much cost. They knew the value of
+ time, and had a sense of the responsibilities of their position. Their
+ first scholar&mdash;the present Professor Stowe&mdash;has long since
+ established his rank among the first scholars of the country. It could
+ have been no easy task to hold successful rivalry with students so much in
+ earnest as these were. During the earlier part of his college course it
+ may be doubted whether Pierce was distinguished for scholarship. But, for
+ the last two years, he appeared to grow more intent on the business in
+ hand, and, without losing any of his vivacious qualities as a companion,
+ was evidently resolved to gain an honorable elevation in his class. His
+ habits of attention and obedience to college discipline were of the
+ strictest character; he rose progressively in scholarship, and took a
+ highly creditable degree. [See note at close of this Life.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first civil office, I imagine, which Franklin Pierce ever held was
+ that of chairman of the standing committee of the Athenaean Society, of
+ which, as above hinted, we were both members; and, having myself held a
+ place on the committee, I can bear testimony to his having discharged not
+ only his own share of the duties, but that of his colleagues. I remember,
+ likewise, that the only military service of my life was as a private
+ soldier in a college company, of which Pierce was one of the officers. He
+ entered into this latter business, or pastime, with an earnestness with
+ which I could not pretend to compete, and at which, perhaps, he would now
+ be inclined to smile. His slender and youthful figure rises before my
+ mind&rsquo;s eye, at this moment, with the air and step of a veteran of the
+ school of Steuben; as well became the son of a revolutionary hero, who had
+ probably drilled under the old baron&rsquo;s orders. Indeed, at this time, and
+ for some years afterwards, Pierce&rsquo;s ambition seemed to be of a military
+ cast. Until reflection had tempered his first predilections, and other
+ varieties of success had rewarded his efforts, he would have preferred, I
+ believe, the honors of the battle-field to any laurels more peacefully
+ won. And it was remarkable how, with all the invariable gentleness of his
+ demeanor, he perfectly gave, nevertheless, the impression of a high and
+ fearless spirit. His friends were as sure of his courage, while yet
+ untried, as now, when it has been displayed so brilliantly in famous
+ battles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this early period of his life, he was distinguished by the same
+ fascination of manner that has since proved so magical in winning him an
+ unbounded personal popularity. It is wronging him, however, to call this
+ peculiarity a mere effect of manner; its source lies deep in the
+ kindliness of his nature, and in the liberal, generous, catholic sympathy,
+ that embraces all who are worthy of it. Few men possess any thing like it;
+ so irresistible as it is, so sure to draw forth an undoubting confidence,
+ and so true to the promise which it gives. This frankness, this democracy
+ of good feeling, has not been chilled by the society of politicians, nor
+ polished down into mere courtesy by his intercourse with the most refined
+ men of the day. It belongs to him at this moment, and will never leave
+ him. A little while ago, after his return from Mexico, he darted across
+ the street to exchange a hearty gripe of the hand with a rough countryman
+ upon his cart&mdash;a man who used to &ldquo;live with his father,&rdquo; as the
+ general explained the matter to his companions. Other men assume this
+ manner, more or less skilfully; but with Frank Pierce it is an innate
+ characteristic; nor will it ever lose its charm, unless his heart should
+ grow narrower and colder&mdash;a misfortune not to be anticipated, even in
+ the dangerous atmosphere of elevated rank, whither he seems destined to
+ ascend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is little else that it is worth while to relate as regards his
+ college course, unless it be that, during one of his winter vacations,
+ Pierce taught a country school. So many of the statesmen of New England
+ have performed their first public service in the character of pedagogue,
+ that it seems almost a necessary step on the ladder of advancement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HIS SERVICES IN THE STATE AND NATIONAL LEGISLATURES.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ After leaving college, in the year 1824, Franklin Pierce returned to
+ Hillsborough. His father, now in a green old age, continued to take a
+ prominent part in the affairs of the day, but likewise made his declining
+ years rich and picturesque with recollections of the heroic times through
+ which he had lived. On the 26th of December, 1825, it being his
+ sixty-seventh birthday, General Benjamin Pierce prepared a festival for
+ his comrades in arms, the survivors of the Revolution, eighteen of whom,
+ all inhabitants of Hillsborough, assembled at his house. The ages of these
+ veterans ranged from fifty-nine up to the patriarchal venerableness of
+ nearly ninety. They spent the day in festivity, in calling up
+ reminiscences of the great men whom they had known and the great deeds
+ which they had helped to do, and in reviving the old sentiments of the era
+ of &lsquo;seventy-six. At nightfall, after a manly and pathetic farewell from
+ their host, they separated&mdash;&ldquo;prepared,&rdquo; as the old general expressed
+ it, &ldquo;at the first tap of the shrouded drum, to move and join their beloved
+ Washington, and the rest of their beloved comrades, who fought and bled at
+ their sides.&rdquo; A scene like this must have been profitable for a young man
+ to witness, as being likely to give him a stronger sense than most of us
+ can attain of the value of that Union which these old heroes had risked so
+ much to consolidate&mdash;of that common country which they had sacrificed
+ everything to create; and patriotism must have been communicated from
+ their hearts to his, with somewhat of the warmth and freshness of a
+ new-born sentiment. No youth was ever more fortunate than Franklin Pierce,
+ through the whole of his early life, in this most desirable species of
+ moral education.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having chosen the law as a profession, Franklin became a student in the
+ office of Judge Woodbury, of Portsmouth. Allusion has already been made to
+ the friendship between General Benjamin Pierce and Peter Woodbury, the
+ father of the judge. The early progress of Levi Woodbury towards eminence
+ had been facilitated by the powerful influence of his father&rsquo;s friend. It
+ was a worthy and honorable kind of patronage, and bestowed only as the
+ great abilities of the recipient vindicated his claim to it. Few young men
+ have met with such early success in life, or have deserved it so
+ eminently, as did Judge Woodbury. At the age of twenty-seven, he was
+ appointed to the bench of the Supreme Court of the state, on the earnest
+ recommendation of old General Pierce. The opponents of the measure
+ ridiculed him as the &ldquo;baby judge;&rdquo; but his conduct in that high office
+ showed the prescient judgment of the friend who had known him from a
+ child, and had seen in his young manhood already the wisdom of ripened
+ age. It was some years afterwards when Franklin Pierce entered the office
+ of Judge Woodbury as a student. In the interval, the judge had been
+ elected governor, and, after a term of office that thoroughly tested the
+ integrity of his democratic principles, had lost his second election, and
+ returned to the profession of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last two years of Pierce&rsquo;s preparatory studies were spent at the law
+ school of Northampton, in Massachusetts, and in the office of Judge Parker
+ at Amherst. In 1827, being admitted to the bar, he began the practice of
+ his profession at Hillsborough. It is an interesting fact, considered in
+ reference to his subsequent splendid career as an advocate, that he did
+ not, at the outset, give promise of distinguished success. His first case
+ was a failure, and perhaps a somewhat marked one. But it is remembered
+ that this defeat, however mortifying at the moment, did but serve to make
+ him aware of the latent resources of his mind, the full command of which
+ he was far from having yet attained. To a friend, an older practitioner,
+ who addressed him with some expression of condolence and encouragement,
+ Pierce replied,&mdash;and it was a kind of self-assertion which no triumph
+ would have drawn oat,&mdash;&ldquo;I do not need that. I will try nine hundred
+ and ninety-nine cases, if clients will continue to trust me, and, if I
+ fail just as I have today, will try the thousandth. I shall live to argue
+ cases in this court house in a manner that will mortify neither myself nor
+ my friends.&rdquo; It is in such moments of defeat that character and ability
+ are mot fairly tested; they would irremediably crush a youth devoid of
+ real energy, and, being neither more nor less than his just desert, would
+ be accepted as such. But a failure of this kind serves an opposite purpose
+ to a mind in which the strongest and richest qualities lie deep, and, from
+ their very size and mass, cannot at once be rendered available. It
+ provokes an innate self-confidence, while, at the same time, it sternly
+ indicates the sedulous cultivation, the earnest effort, the toil, the
+ agony, which are the conditions of ultimate success. It is, indeed, one of
+ the best modes of discipline that experience can administer, and may
+ reasonably be counted a fortunate event in the life of a young man
+ vigorous enough to overcome the momentary depression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pierce&rsquo;s distinction at the bar, however, did not immediately follow; nor
+ did he acquire what we may designate as positive eminence until some years
+ after this period. The enticements of political life&mdash;so especially
+ fascinating to a young lawyer, but so irregular in its tendencies, and so
+ inimical to steady professional labor&mdash;had begun to operate upon him.
+ His father&rsquo;s prominent position in the politics of the state made it
+ almost impossible that the son should stand aloof. In 1827, the same year
+ when Franklin began the practice of the law, General Benjamin Pierce had
+ been elected governor of New Hampshire. He was defeated in the election of
+ 1828, but was again successful in that of the subsequent year. During
+ these years, the contest for the presidency had been fought with a fervor
+ that drew almost everybody into it, on one side or the other, and had
+ terminated in the triumph of Andrew Jackson. Franklin Pierce, in advance
+ of his father&rsquo;s decision, though not in opposition to it, had declared
+ himself for the illustrious man whose military renown was destined to be
+ thrown into the shade by a civil administration, the most splendid and
+ powerful that ever adorned the annals of our country, I love to record of
+ the subject of this memoir that his first political faith was pledged to
+ that great leader of the democracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remember meeting Pierce about this period, and catching from him some
+ faint reflection of the zeal with which he was now stepping into the
+ political arena. My sympathies and opinions, it is true,&mdash;so far as I
+ had any in public affairs,&mdash;had, from the first, been enlisted on the
+ same side with his own. But I was now made strongly sensible of an
+ increased development of my friend&rsquo;s mind, by means of which he possessed
+ a vastly greater power than heretofore over the minds with which he came
+ in contact. This progressive growth has continued to be one of his
+ remarkable characteristics. Of most men you early know the mental gauge
+ and measurement, and do not subsequently have much occasion to change it.
+ Not so with Pierce: his tendency was not merely high, but towards a point
+ which rose higher and higher as the aspirant tended upward. Since we
+ parted, studious days had educated him; life, too, and his own exertions
+ in it, and his native habit of close and accurate observation, had
+ likewise begun to educate him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town of Hillsborough, in 1829, gave Franklin Pierce his first public
+ honor, by electing him its representative in the legislature of the state.
+ His whole service in that body comprised four years, in the two latter of
+ which he was elected Speaker by a vote of one hundred and fifty-five
+ against fifty-eight for other candidates. This overpowering majority
+ evinced the confidence which his character inspired, and which, during his
+ whole career, it has invariably commanded, in advance of what might be
+ termed positive proof, although the result has never failed to justify it.
+ I still recollect his description of the feelings with which he entered on
+ his arduous duties&mdash;the feverish night that preceded his taking the
+ chair&mdash;the doubt, the struggle with himself&mdash;all ending in
+ perfect calmness, full self-possession, and free power of action when the
+ crisis actually came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had all the natural gifts that adapted him for the post; courtesy,
+ firmness, quickness and accuracy of judgment, and a clearness of mental
+ perception that brought its own regularity into the scene of confused and
+ entangled debate; and to these qualities he added whatever was to be
+ attained by laborious study of parliamentary rules. His merit as a
+ presiding officer was universally acknowledged. It is rare that a man
+ combines so much impulse with so great a power of regulating the impulses
+ of himself and others as Franklin Pierce. The faculty, here exercised and
+ improved, of controlling an assembly while agitated by tumultuous
+ controversy, was afterwards called into play upon a higher field; for,
+ during his congressional service, Pierce was often summoned to preside in
+ committee of the whole, when a turbulent debate was expected to demand
+ peculiar energy in the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was elected a member of Congress in 1833, being young for the station,
+ as he has always been for every public station that he has filled. A
+ different kind of man&mdash;a man conscious that accident alone had
+ elevated him, and therefore nervously anxious to prove himself equal to
+ his fortunes&mdash;would thus have been impelled to spasmodic efforts. He
+ would have thrust himself forward in debate, taking the word out of the
+ mouths of renowned orators, and thereby winning notoriety, as at least the
+ glittering counterfeit of true celebrity. Had Pierce, with his genuine
+ ability, practised this course; had he possessed even an ordinary love of
+ display, and had he acted upon it with his inherent tact and skill, taking
+ advantage of fair occasions to prove the power and substance that were in
+ him, it would greatly have facilitated the task of his biographer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To aim at personal distinction, however, as an object independent of the
+ public service, would have been contrary to all the foregone and
+ subsequent manifestations of his life. He was never wanting to the
+ occasion; but he waited for the occasion to bring him inevitably forward.
+ When he spoke, it was not only because he was fully master of the subject,
+ but because the exigency demanded him, and because no other and older man
+ could perform the same duty as well as himself. Of the copious eloquence&mdash;and
+ some of it, no doubt, of a high order&mdash;which Buncombe has called
+ forth, not a paragraph, nor a period, is attributable to Franklin Pierce.
+ He had no need of these devices to fortify his constituents in their high
+ opinion of him; nor did he fail to perceive that such was not the method
+ to acquire real weight in the body of which he was a member. In truth, he
+ has no fluency of words, except when an earnest meaning and purpose supply
+ their own expression. Every one of his speeches in Congress, and, we may
+ say, in every other hall of oratory, or on any stump that he may have
+ mounted, was drawn forth by the perception that it was needed, was
+ directed to a full exposition of the subject, and (rarest of all) was
+ limited by what he really had to say. Even the graces of the orator were
+ never elaborated, never assumed for their own sake, but were legitimately
+ derived from the force of his conceptions, and from the impulsive warmth
+ which accompanies the glow of thought. Owing to these peculiarities,&mdash;for
+ such, unfortunately, they may be termed, in reference to what are usually
+ the characteristics of a legislative career,&mdash;his position before the
+ country was less conspicuous than that of many men who could claim nothing
+ like Pierce&rsquo;s actual influence in the national councils. His speeches, in
+ their muscular texture and close grasp of their subject, resembled the
+ brief but pregnant arguments and expositions of the sages of the
+ Continental Congress, rather than the immeasurable harangues which are now
+ the order of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His congressional life, though it made comparatively so little show, was
+ full of labor, directed to substantial objects. He was a member of the
+ judiciary and other important committees; and the drudgery of the
+ committee room, where so much of the real public business of the country
+ is transacted, fell in large measure to his lot. Thus, even as a
+ legislator, he may be said to have been a man of deeds, not words; and
+ when he spoke upon any subject with which his duty, as chairman or member
+ of a committee, had brought him in relation, his words had the weight of
+ deeds, from the meaning, the directness, and the truth, that he conveyed
+ into them. His merits made themselves known and felt in the sphere where
+ they were exercised; and he was early appreciated by one who seldom erred
+ in his estimate of men, whether in their moral or intellectual aspect. His
+ intercourse with President Jackson was frequent and free, and marked by
+ friendly regard on the part of the latter. In the stormiest periods of his
+ administration, Pierce came frankly to his aid. The confidence then
+ established was never lost; and when Jackson was on his death-bed, being
+ visited by a gentleman from the North (himself formerly a democratic
+ member of Congress), the old hero spoke with energy of Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s
+ ability and patriotism, and remarked, as with prophetic foresight of his
+ young friend&rsquo;s destiny, that &ldquo;the interests of the country would be safe
+ in such hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of President Jackson&rsquo;s measures, which had Pierce&rsquo;s approval and
+ support, was his veto of the Maysville Road Bill. This bill was part of a
+ system of vast public works, principally railroads and canals, which it
+ was proposed to undertake at the expense of the national treasury&mdash;a
+ policy not then of recent origin, but which had been fostered by John
+ Quincy Adams, and had attained a gigantic growth at the close of his
+ Presidency. The estimate of works undertaken or projected, at the
+ commencement of Jackson&rsquo;s administration, amounted to considerably more
+ than a hundred millions of dollars. The expenditure of this enormous sum,
+ and doubtless other incalculable amounts, in progressive increase, was to
+ be for purposes often of unascertained utility, and was to pass through
+ the agents and officers of the federal government&mdash;a means of
+ political corruption not safely to be trusted even in the purest hands.
+ The peril to the individuality of the states, from a system tending so
+ directly to consolidate the powers of government towards a common centre,
+ was obvious. The result might have been, with the lapse of time and the
+ increased activity of the disease, to place the capital of our federative
+ Union in a position resembling that of imperial Rome, where each once
+ independent state was a subject province, and all the highways of the
+ world were said to meet in her forum. It was against this system, so
+ dangerous to liberty and to public and private integrity, that Jackson
+ declared war, by the famous Maysville veto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be an absurd interpretation of Pierce&rsquo;s course, in regard to this
+ and similar measures, to suppose him hostile either to internal or
+ coastwise improvements, so far as they may legitimately be the business of
+ the general government. He was aware of the immense importance of our
+ internal commerce, and was ever ready to vote such appropriations as might
+ be necessary for promoting it, when asked for in an honest spirit, and at
+ points where they were really needed. He doubted, indeed, the
+ constitutional power of Congress to undertake, by building roads through
+ the wilderness, or opening unfrequented rivers, to create commerce where
+ it did not yet exist; but he never denied or questioned the right and duty
+ to remove obstructions in the way of inland trade, and to afford it every
+ facility, when the nature and necessity of things had brought it into
+ genuine existence. And he agreed with the best and wisest statesmen in
+ believing that this distinction involved the true principle on which
+ legislation, for the purpose here discussed, should proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While a member of the House of Representatives, he delivered a forcible
+ speech against the bill authorizing appropriations for the Military
+ Academy at West Point. He was decidedly opposed to that institution as
+ then, and at present organized. We allude to the subject in illustration
+ of the generous frankness with which, years afterwards, when the battle
+ smoke of Mexico had baptized him also a soldier, he acknowledged himself
+ in the wrong, and bore testimony to the brilliant services which the
+ graduates of the Academy, trained to soldiership from boyhood, had
+ rendered to their country. And if he has made no other such acknowledgment
+ of past error, committed in his legislative capacity, it is but fair to
+ believe that it is because his reason and conscience accuse him of no
+ other wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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 a
+ hair&rsquo;s breadth. He fully recognized, by his votes and by his voice, the
+ rights pledged to the South by the Constitution. This, at the period when
+ he so declared himself, was comparatively an easy thing to do. But when it
+ became more difficult, when the first imperceptible movement of agitation
+ had grown to be almost 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&mdash; his
+ whole, united, native country&mdash;better than the mistiness of a
+ philanthropic theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He continued in the House of Representatives four years. If, at this
+ period of his life, he rendered unobtrusive, though not unimportant,
+ services to the public, it must also have been a time of vast intellectual
+ advantage to himself. Amidst great national affairs, he was acquiring the
+ best of all educations for future eminence and leadership. In the midst of
+ statesmen, he grew to be a statesman. Studious, as all his speeches prove
+ him to be, of history, he beheld it demonstrating itself before his eyes.
+ As regards this sort of training, much of its good or ill effect depends
+ on the natural force and depth of the man. Many, no doubt, by early
+ mixture with politics, become the mere politicians of the moment,&mdash;a
+ class of men sufficiently abundant among us,&mdash;acquiring only a knack
+ and cunning, which guide them tolerably well through immediate
+ difficulties, without instructing them in the great rules of higher
+ policy. But when the actual observation of public measures goes hand in
+ hand with study, when the mind is capable of comparing the present with
+ its analogies in the past, and of grasping the principle that belongs to
+ both, this is to have history for a living tutor. If the student be fit
+ for such instruction, he will be seen to act afterwards with the elevation
+ of a high ideal, and with the expediency, the sagacity, the instinct of
+ what is fit and practicable, which make the advantage of the man of actual
+ affairs over the mere theorist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was another advantage of his being brought early into the sphere of
+ national interests, and continuing there for a series of years, that it
+ enabled him to overcome any narrow and sectional prejudices. Without
+ loving New England less, he loved the broad area of the country more. He
+ thus retained that equal sentiment of patriotism for the whole land with
+ which his father had imbued him, and which is perhaps apt to be impaired
+ in the hearts of those who come late to the national legislature, after
+ long training in the narrower fields of the separate states. His sense of
+ the value of the Union, which had been taught him at the fireside, from
+ earliest infancy, by the stories of patriotic valor that he there heard,
+ was now strengthened by friendly association with its representatives from
+ every quarter. It is this youthful sentiment of Americanism, so happily
+ developed by after circumstances, that we see operating through all his
+ public life, and making him as tender of what he considers due to the
+ South as of the rights of his own land of hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Franklin Pierce had scarcely reached the legal age for such elevation,
+ when, in 1837, he was elected to the Senate of the United States. He took
+ his seat at the commencement of the presidency of Mr. Van Buren. Never
+ before nor since has the Senate been more venerable for the array of
+ veteran and celebrated statesmen than at that time. Calhoun, Webster, and
+ Clay had lost nothing of their intellectual might. Benton, Silas Wright,
+ Woodbury, Buchanan, and Walker were members; and many even of the less
+ eminent names were such as have gained historic place&mdash;men of
+ powerful eloquence, and worthy to be leaders of the respective parties
+ which they espoused. To this dignified body (composed of individuals some
+ of whom were older in political experience than he in his mortal life)
+ Pierce came as the youngest member of the Senate. With his usual tact and
+ exquisite sense of propriety, he saw that it was not the time for him to
+ step forward prominently on this highest theatre in the land. He beheld
+ these great combatants doing battle before the eyes of the nation, and
+ engrossing its whole regards. There was hardly an avenue to reputation
+ save what was occupied by one or another of those gigantic figures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Modes of public service remained, however, requiring high ability, but
+ with which few men of competent endowments would have been content to
+ occupy themselves. Pierce had already demonstrated the possibility of
+ obtaining an enviable position among his associates, without the windy
+ notoriety which a member of Congress may readily manufacture for himself
+ by the lavish expenditure of breath that had been better spared. In the
+ more elevated field of the Senate, he pursued the same course as while a
+ representative, and with more than equal results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other committees, he was a member of that upon revolutionary
+ pensions. Of this subject he made himself thoroughly master, and was
+ recognized by the Senate as an unquestionable authority. In 1840, in
+ reference to several bills for the relief of claimants under the pension
+ law, he delivered a speech which finely illustrates as well the sympathies
+ as the justice of the man, showing how vividly he could feel, and, at the
+ same time, how powerless were his feelings to turn him aside from the
+ strict line of public integrity. The merits and sacrifices of the people
+ of the Revolution have never been stated with more earnest gratitude than
+ in the following passage:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not insensible, Mr. President, of the advantages with which claims
+ of this character always come before Congress. They are supposed to be
+ based on services for which no man entertains a higher estimate than
+ myself&mdash;services beyond all praise, and above all price. But, while
+ warm and glowing with the glorious recollections which a recurrence to
+ that period of our history can never fail to awaken; while we cherish with
+ emotions of pride, reverence, and affection the memory of those brave men
+ who are no longer with us; while we provide, with a liberal hand, for such
+ as survive, and for the widows of the deceased; while we would accord to
+ the heirs, whether in the second or third generation, every dollar to
+ which they can establish a just claim,&mdash;I trust we shall not, in the
+ strong current of our sympathies, forget what becomes us as the
+ descendants of such men. They would teach us to legislate upon our
+ judgment, upon our sober sense of right, and not upon our impulses or our
+ sympathies. No, sir; we may act in this way, if we choose, when dispensing
+ our own means, but we are not at liberty to do it when dispensing the
+ means of our constituents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we were to legislate upon our sympathies&mdash;yet more I will admit&mdash;if
+ we were to yield to that sense of just and grateful remuneration which
+ presses itself upon every man&rsquo;s heart, there would be scarcely a limit for
+ our bounty. The whole exchequer could not answer the demand. To the
+ patriotism, the courage, and the sacrifices of the people of that day, we
+ owe, under Providence, all that we now most highly prize, and what we
+ shall transmit to our children as the richest legacy they can inherit. The
+ War of the Revolution, it has been justly remarked, was not a war of
+ armies merely&mdash;it was the war of nearly a whole people, and such a
+ people as the world had never before seen, in a death struggle for
+ liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The losses, sacrifices, and sufferings of that period were common to all
+ classes and conditions of life. Those who remained at home suffered hardly
+ less than those who entered upon the active strife. The aged father and
+ another underwent not less than the son, who would have been the comfort
+ and stay of their declining years, now called to perform a yet higher duty&mdash;to
+ follow the standard of his bleeding country. The young mother, with her
+ helpless children, excites not less deeply our sympathies, contending with
+ want, and dragging out years of weary and toilsome days and anxious
+ nights, than the husband in the field, following the fortunes of our arms
+ without the proper habiliments to protect his person, or the requisite
+ sustenance to support his strength. Sir, I never think of that patient,
+ enduring, self-sacrificing army, which crossed the Delaware in December,
+ 1777, marching barefooted upon frozen ground to encounter the foe, and
+ leaving bloody footprints for miles behind then&mdash;I never think of
+ their sufferings during that terrible winter without involuntarily
+ inquiring, Where then were their families? Who lit up the cheerful fire
+ upon their hearths at home? Who spoke the word of comfort and
+ encouragement? Nay, sir, who furnished protection from the rigors of
+ winter, and brought them the necessary means of subsistence?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The true and simple answer to these questions would disclose an amount of
+ suffering and anguish, mental and physical, such as might not have been
+ found in the ranks of the armies&mdash;not even in the severest trial of
+ that fortitude which never faltered, and that power of endurance which
+ seemed to know no limit. All this no man feels more deeply than I do. But
+ they were common sacrifices in a common cause, ultimately crowned with the
+ reward of liberty. They have an everlasting claim upon our gratitude, and
+ are destined, as I trust, by their heroic example, to exert an abiding
+ influence upon our latest posterity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this heartfelt recognition of the debt of gratitude due to those
+ excellent men, the senator enters into an analysis of the claims
+ presented, and proves them to be void of justice. The whole speech is a
+ good exponent of his character; full of the truest sympathy, but, above
+ all things, just, and not to be misled, on the public behalf, by those
+ impulses that would be most apt to sway the private man. The mere
+ pecuniary amount saved to the nation by his scrutiny into affairs of this
+ kind, though great, was, after all, but a minor consideration. The danger
+ lay in establishing a corrupt system, and placing a wrong precedent upon
+ the statute book. Instances might be adduced, on the other hand, which
+ show him not less scrupulous of the just rights of the claimants than
+ careful of the public interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another subject upon which he came forward was the military establishment
+ and the natural defences of the country. In looking through the columns of
+ the &ldquo;Congressional Globe,&rdquo; we find abundant evidences of Senator Pierce&rsquo;s
+ laborious and unostentatious discharge of his duties&mdash;reports of
+ committees, brief remarks, and, here and there, a longer speech, always
+ full of matter, and evincing a thoroughly-digested knowledge of the
+ subject. Not having been written out by himself, however, these speeches
+ are no fair specimens of his oratory, except as regards the train of
+ argument and substantial thought; and adhering very closely to the
+ business in hand, they seldom present passages that could be quoted,
+ without tearing them forcibly, as it were, out of the context, and thus
+ mangling the fragments which we might offer to the reader. As we have
+ already remarked, he seems, as a debater, to revive the old type of the
+ Revolutionary Congress, or to bring back the noble days of the Long
+ Parliament of England, before eloquence had become what it is now, a
+ knack, and a thing valued for itself. Like those strenuous orators, he
+ speaks with the earnestness of honest conviction, and out of the fervor of
+ his heart, and because the occasion and his deep sense of it constrain
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the defeat of Mr. Van Buren, in the presidential election of 1840, the
+ administration of government was transferred, for the first time in twelve
+ years, to the Whigs. An extra session of Congress was summoned to assemble
+ in June, 1841, by President Harrison, who, however, died before it came
+ together. At this extra session, it was the purpose of the whig party,
+ under the leadership of Henry Clay, to overthrow all the great measures
+ which the successive democratic administrations had established. The
+ sub-treasury was to be demolished; a national bank was to be incorporated;
+ a high tariff of duties was to be imposed, for purposes of protection and
+ abundant revenue. The whig administration possessed a majority, both in
+ the Senate and the House. It was a dark period for the Democracy, so long
+ unaccustomed to defeat, and now beholding all that they had won for the
+ cause of national progress, after the arduous struggle of so many years,
+ apparently about to be swept away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sterling influence which Franklin Pierce now exercised is well
+ described in the following remarks of the Hon. A. O. P. Nicholson:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The power of an organized minority was never more clearly exhibited than
+ in this contest. The democratic senators acted in strict concert, meeting
+ night after night for consultation, arranging their plan of battle,
+ selecting their champions for the coming day, assigning to each man his
+ proper duty, and looking carefully to the popular judgment for a final
+ victory. In these consultations, no man&rsquo;s voice was heard with more
+ profound respect than that of Franklin Pierce. His counsels were
+ characterized by so thorough a knowledge of human nature, by so much solid
+ common sense, by such devotion to democratic principles, that, although
+ among the youngest of the senators, it was deemed important that all their
+ conclusions should be submitted to his sanction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Although known to be ardent in his temperament, he was also known to act
+ with prudence and caution. His impetuosity in debate was only the result
+ of the deep convictions which controlled his mind. He enjoyed the
+ unbounded confidence of Calhoun, Buchanan, Wright, Woodbury, Walker, King,
+ Benton, and indeed of the entire democratic portion of the Senate. When he
+ rose in the Senate or in the committee room, he was heard with the
+ profoundest attention; and again and again was he greeted by these veteran
+ Democrats as one of our ablest champions. His speeches, during this
+ session, will compare with those of any other senator. If it be asked why
+ he did not receive higher distinction, I answer, that such men as Calhoun,
+ Wright, Buchanan, and Woodbury were the acknowledged leaders of the
+ Democracy. The eyes of the nation were on them. The hopes of their party
+ were reposed in them. The brightness of these luminaries was too great to
+ allow the brilliancy of so young a man to attract especial attention. But
+ ask any one of these veterans how Franklin Pierce ranked in the Senate,
+ and he will tell you, that, to stand in the front rank for talents,
+ eloquence, and statesmanship, he only lacked a few more years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of this session he made a very powerful speech in favor of
+ Mr. Buchanan&rsquo;s resolution, calling on the President to furnish the names
+ of persons removed from office since the 4th of March, 1841. The Whigs, in
+ 1840, as in the subsequent canvass of 1848, had professed a purpose to
+ abolish the system of official removals on account of political opinion,
+ but, immediately on coming into power, had commenced a proscription
+ infinitely beyond the example of the democratic party. This course, with
+ an army of office-seekers besieging the departments, was unquestionably
+ difficult to avoid, and perhaps, on the whole, not desirable to be
+ avoided. But it was rendered astounding by the sturdy effrontery with
+ which the gentlemen in power denied that their present practice had
+ falsified any of their past professions. A few of the closing paragraphs
+ of Senator Pierce&rsquo;s highly effective speech, being more easily separable
+ than the rest, may here be cited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One word more, and I leave this subject,&mdash;a painful one to me, from
+ the beginning to the end. The senator from North Carolina, in the course
+ of his remarks the other day, asked, &lsquo;Do gentlemen expect that their
+ friends are to be retained in office against the will of the nation? Are
+ they so unreasonable as to expect what the circumstances and the necessity
+ of the case forbid?&rsquo; What our expectations were is not the question now;
+ but what were your pledges and promises before the people. On a previous
+ occasion, the distinguished senator from Kentucky made a similar remark:
+ &lsquo;An ungracious task, but the nation demands it!&rsquo; Sir, this demand of the
+ nation,&mdash;this plea of STATE NECESSITY,&mdash;let me tell you,
+ gentlemen, is as old as the history of wrong and oppression. It has been
+ the standing plea, the never-failing resort of despotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The great Julius found it a convenient plea when he restored the dignity
+ of the Roman Senate, but destroyed its independence. It gave countenance
+ to and justified all the atrocities of the Inquisition in Spain. It forced
+ out the stifled groans that issued from the Black Hole of Calcutta. It was
+ written in tears upon the Bridge of Sighs in Venice, and pointed to those
+ dark recesses upon whose gloomy thresholds there was never seen a
+ returning footprint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the plea of the austere and ambitious Strafford, in the days of
+ Charles I. It filled the Bastile of France, and lent its sanction to the
+ terrible atrocities perpetrated there. It was this plea that snatched the
+ mild, eloquent, and patriotic Camillo Desmoulins from his young and
+ beautiful wife, and hurried him to the guillotine with thousands of others
+ equally unoffending and innocent. It was upon this plea that the greatest
+ of generals, if not men,&mdash;you cannot mistake me,&mdash;I mean him,
+ the presence of whose very ashes within the last few months sufficed to
+ stir the hearts of a continent,&mdash;it was upon this plea that he
+ abjured the noble wife who had thrown light and gladness around his
+ humbler days, and, by her own lofty energies and high intellect, had
+ encouraged his aspirations. It was upon this plea that he committed that
+ worst and most fatal acts of his eventful life. Upon this, too, he drew
+ around his person the imperial purple. It has in all times, and in every
+ age, been the foe of liberty and the indispensable stay of usurpation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where were the chains of despotism ever thrown around the freedom of
+ speech and of the press but on this plea of STATE NECESSITY? Let the
+ spirit of Charles X. and of his ministers answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is cold, selfish, heartless, and has always been regardless of age,
+ sex, condition, services, or any of the incidents of life that appeal to
+ patriotism or humanity. Wherever its authority has been acknowledged, it
+ has assailed men who stood by their country when she needed strong arms
+ and bold hearts, and has assailed them when, maimed and disabled in her
+ service, they could no longer brandish a weapon in her defence. It has
+ afflicted the feeble and dependent wife for the imaginary faults of the
+ husband. It has stricken down Innocence in its beauty, Youth in its
+ freshness, Manhood in its vigor, and Age in its feebleness and
+ decrepitude. Whatever other plea or apology may be set up for the
+ sweeping, ruthless exercise of this civil guillotine at the present day,
+ in the name of LIBERTY let us be spared this fearful one of STATE
+ NECESSITY, in this early age of the Republic, upon the floor of the
+ American Senate, in the face of a people yet free!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In June, 1842, he signified his purpose of retiring from the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now more than sixteen years since the author of this sketch had
+ been accustomed to meet Frank Pierce (that familiar name, which the nation
+ is adopting as one of its household words) in habits of daily intercourse.
+ Our modes of life had since been as different as could well be imagined;
+ our culture and labor were entirely unlike; there was hardly a single
+ object or aspiration in common between us. Still we had occasionally met,
+ and always on the old ground of friendly confidence. There were sympathies
+ that had not been suffered to die out. Had we lived more constantly
+ together, it is not impossible that the relation might have been changed
+ by the various accidents and attritions of life; but having no mutual
+ events, and few mutual interests, the tie of early friendship remained the
+ same as when we parted. The modifications which I saw in his character
+ were those of growth and development; new qualities came out, or displayed
+ themselves more prominently, but always in harmony with those heretofore
+ known. Always I was sensible of progress in him; a characteristic&mdash;as,
+ I believe, has been said in the foregoing pages&mdash;more perceptible in
+ Franklin Pierce than in any other person with whom I have been acquainted.
+ He widened, deepened, rose to a higher point, and thus ever made himself
+ equal to the ever-heightening occasion. This peculiarity of intellectual
+ growth, continued beyond the ordinary period, has its analogy in his
+ physical constitution&mdash;it being a fact that he continued to grow in
+ stature between his twenty-first and twenty-fifth years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not met with that misfortune, which, it is to be feared, befalls
+ many men who throw their ardor into politics. The pursuit had taken
+ nothing from the frankness of his nature; now, as ever, he used direct
+ means to gain honorable ends; and his subtlety&mdash;for, after all, his
+ heart and purpose were not such as he that runs may read&mdash;had the
+ depth of wisdom, and never any quality of cunning. In great part, this
+ undeteriorated manhood was due to his original nobility of nature. Yet it
+ may not be unjust to attribute it, in some degree, to the singular good
+ fortune of his life. He had never, in all his career, found it necessary
+ to stoop. Office had sought him; he had not begged it, nor manoeuvred for
+ it, nor crept towards it&mdash;arts which too frequently bring a man,
+ morally bowed and degraded, to a position which should be one of dignity,
+ but in which he will vainly essay to stand upright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our earlier meetings, after Pierce had begun to come forward in public
+ life, I could discern that his ambition was aroused. He felt a young man&rsquo;s
+ enjoyment of success, so early and so distinguished. But as years went on,
+ such motives seemed to be less influential with him. He was cured of
+ ambition, as, one after another, its objects came to him unsought. His
+ domestic position, likewise, had contributed to direct his tastes and
+ wishes towards the pursuits of private life. In 1834 he had married Jane
+ Means, a daughter of the Rev. Dr. Appleton, a former president of Bowdoin
+ College. Three sons, the first of whom died in early infancy, were born to
+ him; and, having hitherto been kept poor by his public service, he no
+ doubt became sensible of the expediency of making some provision for the
+ future. Such, it may be presumed, were the considerations that induced his
+ resignation of the senatorship, greatly to the regret of all parties. The
+ senators gathered around him as he was about to quit the chamber;
+ political opponents took leave of him as of a personal friend; and no
+ departing member has ever retired from that dignified body amid warmer
+ wishes for his happiness than those that attended Franklin Pierce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His father had died three years before, in 1839, at the mansion which he
+ built, after the original log-cabin grew too narrow for his rising family
+ and fortunes. The mansion was spacious, as the liberal hospitality of the
+ occupant required, and stood on a little eminence, surrounded by verdure
+ and abundance, and a happy population, where, half a century before, the
+ revolutionary soldier had come alone into the wilderness, and levelled the
+ primeval forest trees. After being spared to behold the distinction of his
+ son, he departed this life at the age of eighty-one years, in perfect
+ peace, and, until within a few hours of his death, in the full possession
+ of his intellectual powers. His last act was one of charity to a poor
+ neighbor&mdash;a fitting close to a life that had abounded in such deeds.
+ Governor Pierce was a man of admirable qualities&mdash;brave, active,
+ public-spirited, endowed with natural authority, courteous yet simple in
+ his manners; and in his son we may perceive these same attributes,
+ modified and softened by a finer texture of character, illuminated by
+ higher intellectual culture, and polished by a larger intercourse with the
+ world, but as substantial and sterling as in the good old patriot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Franklin Pierce had removed from Hillsborough in 1838, and taken up his
+ residence at Concord, the capital of New Hampshire. On this occasion, the
+ citizens of his native town invited him to a public dinner, in token of
+ their affection and respect. In accordance with his usual taste, he
+ gratefully accepted the kindly sentiment, but declined the public
+ demonstration of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HIS SUCCESS AT THE BAR.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s earliest effort at the bar, as we have already observed,
+ was an unsuccessful one; but instead of discouraging him, the failure had
+ only served to awaken the consciousness of latent power, and the
+ resolution to bring it out. Since those days, he had indeed gained
+ reputation as a lawyer. So much, however, was the tenor of his legal life
+ broken up by the months of public service subtracted from each year, and
+ such was the inevitable tendency of his thoughts towards political
+ subjects, that he could but very partially avail himself of the
+ opportunities of professional advancement. But on retiring from the Senate
+ he appears to have started immediately into full practice. Though the
+ people of New Hampshire already knew him well, yet his brilliant
+ achievements as an advocate brought him more into their view, and into
+ closer relations with them, than he had ever before been. He now met his
+ countrymen, as represented in the jury box, face to face, and made them
+ feel what manner of man he was. Their sentiment towards him soon grew to
+ be nothing short of enthusiasm; love, pride, the sense of brotherhood,
+ affectionate sympathy, and perfect trust, all mingled in it. It was the
+ influence of a great heart pervading the general heart, and throbbing with
+ it in the same pulsation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has never been the writer&rsquo;s good fortune to listen to one of Franklin
+ Pierce&rsquo;s public speeches, whether at the bar or elsewhere; nor, by
+ diligent inquiry, has he been able to gain a very definite idea of the
+ mode in which he produces his effects. To me, therefore, his forensic
+ displays are in the same category with those of Patrick Henry, or any
+ other orator whose tongue, beyond the memory of man, has moulded into
+ dust. His power results, no doubt, in great measure, from the earnestness
+ with which he imbues himself with the conception of his client&rsquo;s cause;
+ insomuch that he makes it entirely his own, and, never undertaking a case
+ which he believes to be unjust, contends with his whole heart and
+ conscience, as well as intellectual force, for victory. His labor in the
+ preparation of his cases is said to be unremitting; and he throws himself
+ with such energy into a trial of importance as wholly to exhaust his
+ strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few lawyers, probably, have been interested in a wider variety of business
+ than he; its scope comprehends the great causes where immense pecuniary
+ interests are concerned&mdash;from which, however, he is always ready to
+ turn aside, to defend the humble rights of the poor man, or give his
+ protection to one unjustly accused. As one of my correspondents observes,
+ &ldquo;When an applicant has interested him by a recital of fraud or wrong,
+ General Pierce never investigates the man&rsquo;s estate before engaging in his
+ business; neither does he calculate whose path he may cross. I have been
+ privy to several instances of the noblest independence on his part, in
+ pursuing, to the disrepute of those who stood well in the community, the
+ weal of an obscure client with a good cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the practice of the law, as Pierce pursued it, in one or another of the
+ court houses of New Hampshire, the rumor of each successive struggle and
+ success resounded over the rugged hills, and perished without a record.
+ Those mighty efforts, into which he put all his strength, before a county
+ court, and addressing a jury of yeomen, have necessarily been, as regards
+ the evanescent memory of any particular trial, like the eloquence that is
+ sometimes poured out in a dream. In other spheres of action, with no
+ greater expenditure of mental energy, words have been spoken that endure
+ from age to age&mdash;deeds done that harden into history. But this,
+ perhaps the most earnest portion of Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s life, has left few
+ materials from which it can be written. There is before me only one report
+ of a case in which he was engaged&mdash;the defence of the Wentworths, at
+ a preliminary examination, on a charge of murder. His speech occupied four
+ hours in the delivery, and handles a confused medley of facts with
+ masterly skill, bringing them to bear one upon another, and making the
+ entire mass, as it were, transparent, so that the truth may be seen
+ through it. The whole hangs together too closely to permit the quotation
+ of passages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writer has been favored with communications from two individuals, who
+ have enjoyed the best of opportunities to become acquainted with General
+ Pierce&rsquo;s character as a lawyer. The following is the graceful and generous
+ tribute of a gentleman, who, of late, more frequently than any other, has
+ been opposed to him at the bar:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;General Pierce cannot be said to have commenced his career at the bar in
+ earnest until after his resignation of the office of senator, in 1842. And
+ it is a convincing proof of his eminent powers that he at once placed
+ himself in the very first rank at a bar so distinguished for ability as
+ that of New Hampshire. It is confessed by all who have the means of
+ knowledge and judgment on this subject, that in no state of the Union are
+ causes tried with more industry of preparation, skill, perseverance,
+ energy, or vehement effort to succeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;During much of this time, my practice in our courts was suspended; and it
+ is only within three or four years that I have had opportunities of
+ intimately knowing his powers as an advocate, by being associated with him
+ at the bar; and, most of all, of appreciating and feeling that power, by
+ being opposed to him in the trial of causes before juries. Far more than
+ any other man, whom it has been my fortune to meet, he makes himself felt
+ by one who tries a case against him. From the first, he impresses on his
+ opponent a consciousness of the necessity of a deadly struggle, not only
+ in order to win the victory, but to avoid defeat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His vigilance and perseverance, omitting nothing in the preparation and
+ introduction of testimony, even to the minutest details, which can be
+ useful to his clients; his watchful attention, seizing on every weak point
+ in the opposite case; his quickness and readiness; his sound and excellent
+ judgment; his keen insight into character and motives, his almost
+ intuitive knowledge of men; his ingenious and powerful cross-examinations;
+ his adroitness in turning aside troublesome testimony, and availing
+ himself of every favorable point; his quick sense of the ridiculous; his
+ pathetic appeals to the feelings; his sustained eloquence, and remarkably
+ energetic declamation,&mdash;all mark him for a &lsquo;leader.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From the beginning to the end of the trial of a case, nothing with him is
+ neglected which can by possibility honorably conduce to success. His
+ manner is always respectful and deferential to the court, captivating to
+ the jury, and calculated to conciliate the good will even of those who
+ would be otherwise indifferent spectators. In short, he plays the part of
+ a successful actor; successful, because he always identifies himself with
+ his part, and in him it is not acting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps, as would be expected by those who know his generosity of heart,
+ and his scorn of everything like oppression or extortion, he is most
+ powerful in his indignant denunciations of fraud or injustice, and his
+ addresses to the feelings in behalf of the poor and lowly, and the
+ sufferers under wrong. I remember to have heard of his extraordinary power
+ on one occasion, when a person who had offered to procure arrears of a
+ pension for revolutionary services had appropriated to himself a most
+ unreasonable share of the money. General Pierce spoke of the frequency of
+ these instances, and, before the numerous audience, offered his aid,
+ freely and gratuitously, to redress the wrongs of any widow or
+ representative of a revolutionary officer or soldier who had been made the
+ subject of such extortion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The reply of the poor man, in the anecdote related by Lord Campbell of
+ Harry Erskine, would be applicable, as exhibiting a feeling kindred to
+ that with which General Pierce is regarded: &lsquo;There&rsquo;s no a puir man in a&rsquo;
+ Scotland need to want a friend or fear an enemy, sae lang as Harry Erskine
+ lives!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We next give his aspect as seen from the bench, in the following carefully
+ prepared and discriminating article, from the chief justice of New
+ Hampshire:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In attempting to estimate the character and qualifications of Mr. Pierce
+ as a lawyer and an advocate, we undertake a delicate, but, at the same
+ time, an agreeable task. The profession of the law, practised by men of
+ liberal and enlightened minds, and unstained by the sordidness which more
+ or less affects all human pursuits, invariably confers honor upon and is
+ honored by its followers. An integrity above suspicion, an eloquence alike
+ vigorous and persuasive, and an intuitive sagacity have earned for Mr.
+ Pierce the reputation that always follows them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The last case of paramount importance in which he was engaged as counsel
+ was that of Morrison v. Philbrick, tried in the month of February, 1852,
+ at the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Belknap. There was on both
+ sides an array of eminent professional talent, Messrs. Pierce, Bell, and
+ Bellows appearing for the defendant, and Messrs. Atherton and Whipple for
+ the plaintiff. The case was one of almost unequalled interest to the
+ public generally, and to the inhabitants of the country lying around the
+ lower part of Lake Winnipiscogee. A company, commonly called the Lake
+ Company, had become the owners of many of the outlets of the streams
+ supplying the lake, and by means of their works at such places, and at
+ Union Bridge, a few miles below, were enabled to keep back the waters of
+ the lake, and to use them as occasion should require to supply the mills
+ at Lowell. The plaintiff alleged that the dam at Union Bridge had caused
+ the water to rise higher than was done by the dam that existed in the year
+ 1828, and that he was essentially injured thereby. The case had been on
+ trial nearly seven weeks. Evidence equivalent to the testimony of one
+ hundred and eighty witnesses had been laid before the jury. Upon this
+ immense mass of facts, involving a great number of issues, Mr. Pierce was
+ to meet his most formidable opponent in the state, Mr. Atherton. In that
+ gentleman are united many of the rarest qualifications of an advocate. Of
+ inimitable self-possession; with a coolness and clearness of intellect
+ which no sudden emergencies can disturb; with that confidence in his
+ resources which nothing but native strength, aided by the most thorough
+ training, can bestow; with a felicity and fertility of illustration, the
+ result alike of an exquisite natural taste and a cultivation of those
+ studies which refine while they strengthen the mind for forensic contests,&mdash;Mr.
+ Atherton&rsquo;s argument was listened to with an earnestness and interest which
+ showed the conviction of his audience that no ordinary man was addressing
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No one who witnessed that memorable trial will soon forget the argument
+ of Mr. Pierce on that occasion. He was the counsel for the defendant, and
+ was therefore to precede Mr. Atherton. He was to analyze and unfold to the
+ jury this vast body of evidence under the watchful eyes of an opponent at
+ once enterprising and cautious, and before whom it was necessary to be
+ both bold and skilful. He was to place himself in the position of the
+ jury, to see the evidence as they would be likely to regard it, to
+ understand the character of their minds and what views would be the most
+ likely to impress them. He was not only to be familiar with his own case,
+ but to anticipate that of his opponent, and answer as he best might the
+ argument of the counsel. And most admirably did he discharge the duties he
+ had assumed on behalf of his client. Eminently graceful and attractive in
+ his manner at all times, his demeanor was then precisely what it should
+ have been, showing a manly confidence in himself and his case, and a
+ courteous deference to the tribunal he was addressing. His erect and manly
+ figure, his easy and unembarrassed air, bespoke the favorable attention of
+ his audience. His earnest devotion to his cause, his deep emotion,
+ evidently suppressed, but for that very reason all the more interesting,
+ diffused themselves like electricity through his hearers. And when, as
+ often happened, in the course of his argument, his clear and musical
+ accents fell upon the ear in eloquent and pointed sentences, gratifying
+ the taste while they satisfied the reason, no man could avoid turning to
+ his neighbor, and expressing by his looks that pleasure which the very
+ depth of his interest forbade him to express in words. And when the long
+ trial was over, every one remembered with satisfaction that these two
+ distinguished gentlemen had met each other during a most exciting and
+ exhausting trial of seven weeks, and that no unkind words, or captious
+ passages, had occurred between them to diminish their mutual respect, or
+ that in which they were held by their fellow-citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the above remarks, we have indicated a few of Mr. Pierce&rsquo;s
+ characteristics as an advocate; but he possesses other endowments, to
+ which we have not alluded. In the first place, as he is a perfectly
+ fearless man, so he is a perfectly fearless advocate; and true courage is
+ as necessary to the civilian as to the soldier, and smiles and frowns Mr.
+ Pierce disregards alike in the undaunted discharge of his duty. He never
+ fears to uphold his client, however unpopular his cause may seem to be for
+ the moment. It is this courage which kindles his eloquence, inspires his
+ conduct, and gives direction and firmness to his skill. This it is which
+ impels him onward, at all risks, to lay bare every &lsquo;mystery of iniquity&rsquo;
+ which he believes is threatening his case. He does not ask himself whether
+ his opponent be not a man of wealth and influence, of whom it might be for
+ his interest to speak with care and circumspection; but he devotes himself
+ with a ready zeal to his cause, careless of aught but how he may best
+ discharge his duty. His argumentative powers are of the highest order. He
+ never takes before the court a position which he believes untenable. He
+ has a quick and sure perception of his points, and the power of enforcing
+ them by apt and pertinent illustrations. He sees the relative importance
+ and weight of different views, and can assign to each its proper place,
+ and brings forward the main body of his reasoning in prominent relief,
+ without distracting the attention by unimportant particulars. And above
+ all, he has the good sense, so rarely shown by many, to stop when he has
+ said all that is necessary for the elucidation of his subject. With a
+ proper confidence in his own perceptions, he states his views so
+ pertinently and in such precise and logical terms, that they cannot but be
+ felt and appreciated. He never mystifies; he never attempts to pervert
+ words from their proper and legitimate meaning to answer a temporary
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His demeanor at the bar nay be pronounced faultless. His courtesy in the
+ court house, like his courtesy elsewhere, is that which springs from
+ self-respect and from a kindly heart, disposing its owner to say and do
+ kindly things. But he would be a courageous man who, presuming upon the
+ affability of Mr. Pierce&rsquo;s manner, would venture a second time to attack
+ him; for he would long remember the rebuke that followed his first attack.
+ There is a ready repartee and a quick and cutting sarcasm in his manner
+ when he chooses to display it, which it requires a man of considerable
+ nerve to withstand. He is peculiarly happy in the examination of witnesses&mdash;that
+ art in which so few excel. He never browbeats, he never attempts to
+ terrify. He is never rude or discourteous. But the equivocating witness
+ soon discovers that his falsehood is hunted out of its recesses with an
+ unsparing determination. If he is dogged and surly, he is met by a spirit
+ as resolute as his own. If he is smooth and plausible, the veil is lifted
+ from him by a firm but graceful hand. If he is pompous and vain, no
+ ridicule was ever more perfect than that to which he listens with
+ astonished and mortified ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The eloquence of Mr. Pierce is of a character not to be easily forgotten.
+ He understands men, their passions and their feelings. He knows the way to
+ their hearts, and can make them vibrate to his touch. His language always
+ attracts the hearer. A graceful and manly carriage, bespeaking him at once
+ the gentleman and the true man; a manner warmed by the ardent glow of an
+ earnest belief; an enunciation ringing, distinct, and impressive beyond
+ that of most men; a command of brilliant and expressive language; and an
+ accurate taste, together with a sagacious and instinctive insight into the
+ points of his case, are the secrets of his success. It is thus that
+ audiences are moved and truth ascertained; and he will ever be the most
+ successful advocate who can approach the nearest to this lofty and
+ difficult position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Pierce&rsquo;s views as a constitutional lawyer are such as have been
+ advocated by the ablest minds of America. They are those which, taking
+ their rise in the heroic age of the country, were transmitted to him by a
+ noble father, worthy of the times in which he lived, worthy of that
+ Revolution which he assisted in bringing about. He believes that the
+ Constitution was made, not to be subverted, but to be sacredly preserved;
+ that a republic is perfectly consistent with the conservation of law, of
+ rational submission to right authority, and of true self-government.
+ Equally removed from that malignant hostility to order which characterizes
+ the demagogues who are eager to rise upon the ruins even of freedom, and
+ from that barren and bigoted narrowness which would oppose all rational
+ freedom of opinion, he is, in its loftiest and most ennobling sense, a
+ friend of that Union, without which the honored name of American citizen
+ would become a by-word among the nations. And if, as we fervently pray and
+ confidently expect he will, Mr. Pierce shall display before the great
+ tribunals of the nation the courage, the consistency, the sagacity, and
+ the sense of honor, which have already secured for him so many thousands
+ of devoted friends, and which have signalized both his private and
+ professional life, his administration will long be held in grateful
+ remembrance as one of which the sense of right and the sagacity to
+ perceive it, a clear insight into the true destinies of the country and a
+ determination to uphold them at whatever sacrifice, were the predominant
+ characteristics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may appear singular that Franklin Pierce has not taken up his residence
+ in some metropolis, where his great forensic abilities would so readily
+ find a more conspicuous theatre, and a far richer remuneration than
+ heretofore. He himself, it is understood, has sometimes contemplated a
+ removal, and, two or three years since, had almost determined on settling
+ in Baltimore. But his native state, where he is known so well, and
+ regarded with so much familiar affection, which he has served so
+ faithfully, and which rewards him so generously with its confidence, New
+ Hampshire, with its granite hills, must always be his home. He will dwell
+ there, except when public duty for a season shall summon him away; he will
+ die there, and give his dust to its soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at his option, in 1846, to accept the highest legal position in the
+ country, setting aside the bench, and the one which undoubtedly would most
+ have gratified his professional aspirations. President Polk, with whom he
+ had been associated on the most friendly terms in Congress, now offered
+ him the post of attorney general of the United States. &ldquo;In tendering to
+ you this position in my cabinet,&rdquo; writes the President, &ldquo;I have been
+ governed by the high estimate which I place upon your character and
+ eminent qualifications to fill it.&rdquo; The letter, in which this proposal is
+ declined, shows so much of the writer&rsquo;s real self that we quote a portion
+ of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Although the early years of my manhood were devoted to public life, it
+ was never really suited to my taste. I longed, as I am sure you must often
+ have done, for the quiet and independence that belong only to the private
+ citizen; and now, at forty, I feel that desire stronger than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Coming so unexpectedly as this offer does, it would be difficult, if not
+ impossible, to arrange the business of an extensive practice, between this
+ and the first of November, in a manner at all satisfactory to myself, or
+ to those who have committed their interests to my care, and who rely on my
+ services. Besides, you know that Mrs. Pierce&rsquo;s health, while at
+ Washington, was very delicate. It is, I fear, even more so now; and the
+ responsibilities which the proposed change would necessarily impose upon
+ her ought, probably, in themselves, to constitute an insurmountable
+ objection to leaving our quiet home for a public station at Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I resigned my seat in the Senate in 1842, I did it with the fixed
+ purpose never again to be voluntarily separated from my family for any
+ considerable length of time, except at the call of my country in time of
+ war; and yet this consequence, for the reason before stated, and on
+ account of climate, would be very likely to result from my acceptance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These are some of the considerations which have influenced my decision.
+ You will, I am sure, appreciate my motives. You will not believe that I
+ have weighed my personal convenience and case against the public interest,
+ especially as the office is one which, if not sought, would be readily
+ accepted by gentlemen who could bring to your aid attainments and
+ qualifications vastly superior to mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Previous to the offer of the attorney-generalship, the appointment of
+ United States Senator had been tendered to Pierce by Governor Steele, and
+ declined. It is unquestionable that, at this period, he hoped and expected
+ to spend a life of professional toil in a private station, undistinguished
+ except by the exercise of his great talents in peaceful pursuits. But such
+ was not his destiny. The contingency to which he referred in the above
+ letter, as the sole exception to his purpose of never being separated from
+ his family, was now about to occur. Nor did he fail to comport himself as
+ not only that intimation, but the whole tenor of his character, gave
+ reason to anticipate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the years embraced in this chapter,&mdash;between 1842 and 1847,&mdash;he
+ had constantly taken an efficient interest in the politics of the state,
+ but had uniformly declined the honors which New Hampshire was at all times
+ ready to confer upon him. A democratic convention nominated him for
+ governor, but could not obtain his acquiescence. One of the occasions on
+ which he most strenuously exerted himself was in holding the democratic
+ party loyal to its principles, in opposition to the course of John P.
+ Hale. This gentleman, then a representative in Congress, had broken with
+ his party on no less important a point than the annexation of Texas. He
+ has never since acted with the Democracy, and has long been a leader of
+ the free soil party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1844 died Frank Robert, son of Franklin Pierce, aged four years, a
+ little boy of rare beauty and promise, and whose death was the greatest
+ affliction that his father has experienced. His only surviving child is a
+ son, now eleven years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE MEXICAN WAR.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When Franklin Pierce declined the honorable offer of the
+ attorney-generalship of the United States, he intimated that there might
+ be one contingency in which he would feel it his duty to give up the
+ cherished purpose of spending the remainder of his life in a private
+ station. That exceptional case was brought about, in 1847, by the Mexican
+ War. He showed his readiness to redeem the pledge by enrolling himself as
+ the earliest volunteer of a company raised in Concord, and went through
+ the regular drill, with his fellow-soldiers, as a private in the ranks. On
+ the passage of the bill for the increase of the army, he received the
+ appointment of colonel of the Ninth Regiment, which was the quota of New
+ England towards the ten that were to be raised. And shortly afterwards,&mdash;in
+ March, 1847,&mdash;he was commissioned as brigadier-general in the army;
+ his brigade consisting of regiments from the extreme north, the extreme
+ west, and the extreme south of the Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing in any other country similar to what we see in our own,
+ when the blast of the trumpet at once converts men of peaceful pursuits
+ into warriors. Every war in which America has been engaged has done this;
+ the valor that wins our battles is not the trained hardihood of veterans,
+ but a native and spontaneous fire; and there is surely a chivalrous beauty
+ in the devotion of the citizen soldier to his country&rsquo;s cause, which the
+ man who makes arms his profession, and is but doing his regular business
+ on the field of battle, cannot pretend to rival. Taking the Mexican War as
+ a specimen, this peculiar composition of an American army, as well in
+ respect to its officers as its private soldiers, seems to create a spirit
+ of romantic adventure which more than supplies the place of disciplined
+ courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author saw General Pierce in Boston, on the eve of his departure for
+ Vera Cruz. He had been intensely occupied, since his appointment, in
+ effecting the arrangements necessary on leaving his affairs, as well as by
+ the preparations, military and personal, demanded by the expedition. The
+ transports were waiting at Newport to receive the troops. He was now in
+ the midst of bustle, with some of the officers of his command about him,
+ mingled with the friends whom he was to leave behind. The severest point
+ of the crisis was over, for he had already bidden his family farewell. His
+ spirits appeared to have risen with the occasion. He was evidently in his
+ element; nor, to say the truth, dangerous as was the path before him,
+ could it be regretted that his life was now to have the opportunity of
+ that species of success which&mdash;in his youth, at least&mdash;he had
+ considered the best worth struggling for. He looked so fit to be a
+ soldier, that it was impossible to doubt&mdash;not merely his good
+ conduct, which was as certain before the event as afterwards, but&mdash;his
+ good fortune in the field, and his fortunate return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sailed from Newport on the 27th of May, in the bark Kepler, having on
+ board three companies of the Ninth Regiment of Infantry, together with
+ Colonel Ransom, its commander, and the officers belonging to the
+ detachment. The passage was long and tedious, with protracted calms, and
+ so smooth a sea that a sail-boat might have performed the voyage in
+ safety. The Kepler arrived at Vera Cruz in precisely a month after her
+ departure from the United States, without speaking a single vessel from
+ the south during her passage, and, of course, receiving no intelligence as
+ to the position and state of the army which these reenforcements were to
+ join.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a journal kept by General Pierce, and intended only for the perusal
+ of his family and friends, we present some extracts. They are mere hasty
+ jottings-down in camp, and at the intervals of weary marches, but will
+ doubtless bring the reader closer to the man than any narrative which we
+ could substitute. [In this reprint it has been thought expedient to omit
+ the passages from General Pierce&rsquo;s journal.]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * * * * * *
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ General Pierce&rsquo;s journal here terminates. In its clear and simple
+ narrative the reader cannot fail to see&mdash;although it was written with
+ no purpose of displaying them&mdash;the native qualities of a born
+ soldier, together with the sagacity of an experienced one. He had proved
+ himself, moreover, physically apt for war, by his easy endurance of the
+ fatigues of the march; every step of which (as was the case with few other
+ officers) was performed either on horseback or on foot. Nature, indeed,
+ has endowed him with a rare elasticity both of mind and body; he springs
+ up from pressure like a well-tempered sword. After the severest toil, a
+ single night&rsquo;s rest does as much for him, in the way of refreshment, as a
+ week could do for most other men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His conduct on this adventurous march received the high encomiums of
+ military men, and was honored with the commendation of the great soldier
+ who is now his rival in the presidential contest. He reached the main army
+ at Puebla on the 7th of August, with twenty-four hundred men, in fine
+ order, and without the loss of a single wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HIS SERVICES IN THE VALLEY OF MEXICO.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ General Scott, who was at Puebla with the main army awaiting this
+ reenforcement, began his march towards the city of Mexico on the day after
+ General Pierce&rsquo;s arrival. The battle of Contreras was fought on the 19th
+ of August.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enemy&rsquo;s force consisted of about seven thousand men, posted in a
+ strongly-intrenched camp, under General Valencia, one of the bravest and
+ ablest of the Mexican commanders. The object of the commanding general
+ appears to have been to cut off the communications of these detached
+ troops with Santa Anna&rsquo;s main army, and thus to have them entirely at his
+ mercy. For this purpose a portion of the American forces were ordered to
+ move against Valencia&rsquo;s left flank, and, by occupying strong positions in
+ the villages and on the roads towards the city, to prevent reenforcements
+ from reaching him. In the mean time, to draw the enemy&rsquo;s attention from
+ this movement, a vigorous onset was made upon his front; and as the
+ operations upon his flank were not immediately and fully carried out
+ according to the plan, this front demonstration assumed the character of a
+ fierce and desperate attack, upon which the fortunes of the day much
+ depended. General Pierce&rsquo;s brigade formed a part of the force engaged in
+ this latter movement, in which four thousand newly-recruited men, unable
+ to bring their artillery to bear, contended against seven thousand
+ disciplined soldiers, protected by intrenchments, and showering round shot
+ and shells against the assailing troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ground in front was of the rudest and roughest character. The troops
+ made their way with difficulty over a broken tract called the Pedregal,
+ bristling with sharp points of rocks, and which is represented as having
+ been the crater of a now exhausted and extinct volcano. The enemy had
+ thrown out skirmishers, who were posted in great force among the crevices
+ and inequalities of this broken ground, and vigorously resisted the
+ American advance; while the artillery of the intrenched camp played upon
+ our troops, and shattered the very rocks over which they were to pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Pierce&rsquo;s immediate command had never before been under such a fire
+ of artillery. The enemy&rsquo;s range was a little too high, or the havoc in our
+ ranks must have been dreadful. In the midst of this fire, General Pierce,
+ being the only officer mounted in the brigade, leaped his horse upon an
+ abrupt eminence, and addressed the colonels and captains of the regiments,
+ as they passed, in a few stirring words,&mdash;reminding them of the honor
+ of their country, of the victory their steady valor would contribute to
+ achieve. Pressing forward to the head of the column, he had nearly reached
+ the practicable ground that lay beyond, when his horse slipped among the
+ rocks, thrust his foot into a crevice, and fell, breaking his own leg, and
+ crushing his rider heavily beneath him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pierce&rsquo;s mounted orderly soon came to his assistance. The general was
+ stunned, and almost insensible. When partially recovered, he found himself
+ suffering from severe bruises, and especially from a sprain of the left
+ knee, which was undermost when the horse came down. The orderly assisted
+ him to reach the shelter of a projecting rock; and as they made their way
+ thither, a shell fell close beside them and exploded, covering them with
+ earth. &ldquo;That was a lucky miss,&rdquo; said Pierce calmly. Leaving him in such
+ shelter as the rock afforded, the orderly went in search of aid, and was
+ fortunate to meet with Dr. Ritchie, of Virginia, who was attached to
+ Pierce&rsquo;s brigade, and was following in close proximity to the advancing
+ column. The doctor administered to him as well as the circumstances would
+ admit. Immediately on recovering his full consciousness, General Pierce
+ had become anxious to rejoin his troops; and now, in opposition to Dr.
+ Ritchie&rsquo;s advice and remonstrances, he determined to proceed to the front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With pain and difficulty, and leaning on his orderly&rsquo;s arm, he reached the
+ battery commanded by Captain McGruder, where he found the horse of
+ Lieutenant Johnson, who had just before received a mortal wound. In
+ compliance with his wishes, he was assisted into the saddle; and, in
+ answer to a remark that he would be unable to keep his seat, &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said
+ the general, &ldquo;you must tie me on.&rdquo; Whether his precaution was actually
+ taken is a point upon which authorities differ; but at all events, with
+ injuries so severe as would have sent almost any other man to the
+ hospital, he rode forward into the battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contest was kept up until nightfall, without forcing Valencia&rsquo;s
+ intrenchment. General Pierce remained in the saddle until eleven o&rsquo;clock
+ at night. Finding himself, at nine o&rsquo;clock, the senior officer in the
+ field, he, in that capacity, withdrew the troops from their advanced
+ position, and concentrated them at the point where they were to pass the
+ night. At eleven, beneath a torrent of rain, destitute of a tent or other
+ protection, and without food or refreshment, he lay down on an ammunition
+ wagon, but was prevented by the pain of his injuries, especially that of
+ his wounded knee, from finding any repose. At one o&rsquo;clock came orders from
+ General Scott to put the brigade into a new position, in front of the
+ enemy&rsquo;s works, preparatory to taking part in the contemplated operations
+ of the next morning. During the night, the troops appointed for that
+ service, under Riley, Shields, Smith, and Cadwallader, had occupied the
+ villages and roads between Valencia&rsquo;s position and the city; so that, with
+ daylight, the commanding general&rsquo;s scheme of the battle was ready to be
+ carried out, as it had originally existed in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At daylight, accordingly, Valencia&rsquo;s intrenched camp was assaulted.
+ General Pierce was soon in the saddle at the head of his brigade, which
+ retained its position in front, thus serving to attract the enemy&rsquo;s
+ attention, and divert him from the true point of attack. The camp was
+ stormed in the rear by the American troops, led on by Riley, Cadwallader,
+ and Dimmick; and in the short space of seventeen minutes it had fallen
+ into the hands of the assailants, together with a multitude of prisoners.
+ The remnant of the routed enemy fled towards Churubusco. As Pierce led his
+ brigade in pursuit, crossing the battle-field, and passing through the
+ works that had just been stormed, he found the road and adjacent fields
+ everywhere strewn with the dead and dying. The pursuit was continued until
+ one o&rsquo;clock, when the foremost of the Americans arrived in front of the
+ strong Mexican positions at Churubusco and San Antonio, where Santa Alma&rsquo;s
+ army had been compelled to make a stand, and where the great conflict of
+ the day commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Santa Anna entertained the design of withdrawing his forces
+ towards the city. In order to intercept this movement, Pierce&rsquo;s brigade,
+ with other troops, was ordered to pursue a route by which the enemy could
+ be attacked in the rear. Colonel Noah E. Smith (a patriotic American, long
+ resident in Mexico, whose local and topographical knowledge proved
+ eminently serviceable) had offered to point out the road, and was sent to
+ summon General Pierce to the presence of the commander-in-chief. When he
+ met Pierce, near Coyacan, at the head of his brigade, the heavy fire of
+ the batteries had commenced. &ldquo;He was exceedingly thin,&rdquo; writes Colonel
+ Smith, &ldquo;worn down by the fatigue and pain of the day and night before, and
+ then evidently suffering severely. Still there was a glow in his eye, as
+ the cannon boomed, that showed within him a spirit ready for the
+ conflict.&rdquo; He rode up to General Scott, who was at this time sitting on
+ horseback beneath a tree, near the church of Coyacan, issuing orders to
+ different individuals of his staff. Our account of this interview is
+ chiefly taken from the narrative of Colonel Smith, corroborated by other
+ testimony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commander-in-chief had already heard of the accident that befell
+ Pierce the day before; and as the latter approached, General Scott could
+ not but notice the marks of pain and physical exhaustion against which
+ only the sturdiest constancy of will could have enabled him to bear up.
+ &ldquo;Pierce, my dear fellow,&rdquo; said he,&mdash;and that epithet of familiar
+ kindness and friendship, upon the battle-field, was the highest of
+ military commendation from such a man,&mdash;&ldquo;you are badly injured; you
+ are not fit to be in your saddle.&rdquo; &ldquo;Yes, general, I am,&rdquo; replied Pierce,
+ &ldquo;in a case like this.&rdquo; &ldquo;You cannot touch your foot to the stirrup,&rdquo; said
+ Scott. &ldquo;One of them I can,&rdquo; answered Pierce. The general looked again at
+ Pierce&rsquo;s almost disabled figure, and seemed on the point of taking his
+ irrevocable resolution. &ldquo;You are rash, General Pierce,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;we shall
+ lose you, and we cannot spare you. It is my duty to order you back to St.
+ Augustine.&rdquo; &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, general,&rdquo; exclaimed Pierce, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t say that!
+ This is the last great battle, and I must lead my brigade!&rdquo; The
+ commander-in-chief made no further remonstrance, but gave the order for
+ Pierce to advance with his brigade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The way lay through thick standing corn, and over marshy ground
+ intersected with ditches, which were filled, or partially so, with water.
+ Over some of the narrower of these Pierce leaped his horse. When the
+ brigade had advanced about a mile, however, it found itself impeded by a
+ ditch ten or twelve feet wide, and six or eight feet deep. It being
+ impossible to leap it, General Pierce was lifted from his saddle, and in
+ some incomprehensible way, hurt as he was, contrived to wade or scramble
+ across this obstacle, leaving his horse on the hither side. The troops
+ were now under fire. In the excitement of the battle he forgot his injury,
+ and hurried forward, leading the brigade, a distance of two or three
+ hundred yards. But the exhaustion of his frame, and particularly the
+ anguish of his knee,&mdash;made more intolerable by such free use of it,&mdash;
+ was greater than any strength of nerve, or any degree of mental energy,
+ could struggle against. He fell, faint and almost insensible, within full
+ range of the enemy&rsquo;s fire. It was proposed to bear him off the field; but,
+ as some of his soldiers approached to lift him, he became aware of their
+ purpose, and was partially revived by his determination to resist it.
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, with all the strength he had left, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t carry me off! Let
+ me lie here!&rdquo; And there he lay, under the tremendous fire of Churubusco,
+ until the enemy, in total rout, was driven from the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately after the victory, when the city of Mexico lay at the mercy of
+ the American commander, and might have been entered that very night, Santa
+ Anna sent a flag of truce, proposing an armistice, with a view to
+ negotiation for peace. It cannot be considered in any other light than as
+ a very high and signal compliment to his gallantry in the field that
+ General Pierce was appointed, by the commander-in-chief, one of the
+ commissioners on our part, together with General Quitman and General
+ Persifer F. Smith, to arrange the terms of this armistice. Pierce was
+ unable to walk, or to mount his horse without assistance, when
+ intelligence of his appointment reached him. He had not taken off his
+ spurs nor slept an hour, for two nights; but he immediately obeyed the
+ summons, was assisted into the saddle, and rode to Tacubaya, where, at the
+ house of the British consul-general, the American and Mexican
+ commissioners were assembled. The conference began late in the afternoon,
+ and continued till four o&rsquo;clock the next morning, when the articles were
+ signed. Pierce then proceeded to the quarters of General Worth, in the
+ village of Tacubaya, where he obtained an hour or two of repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expectation of General Scott, that further bloodshed might be avoided
+ by means of the armistice, proved deceptive. Military operations, after a
+ temporary interruption, were actively renewed; and on the 8th of September
+ was fought the bloody battle of Molino del Rey, one of the fiercest and
+ most destructive of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this conflict General Worth, with three thousand troops, attacked and
+ routed fourteen thousand Mexicans, driving them under the protection of
+ the Castle of Chepultepec. Perceiving the obstinacy with which the field
+ was contested, the commander-in-chief dispatched an order to General
+ Pierce to advance to the support of General Worth&rsquo;s division. He moved
+ forward with rapidity; and although the battle was won just as he reached
+ the field, he interposed his brigade between Worth and the retreating
+ enemy, and thus drew upon himself the fire of Chepultepec. A shell came
+ streaming from the castle, and, bursting within a few feet of him,
+ startled his horse, which was near plunging over an adjacent precipice.
+ Continuing a long time under fire, Pierce&rsquo;s brigade was engaged in
+ removing the wounded and the captured ammunition. While thus occupied, he
+ led a portion of his command to repel the attacks of the enemy&rsquo;s
+ skirmishers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There remained but one other battle,&mdash;that of Chepultepec,&mdash;which
+ was fought on the 13th of September. On the preceding day (although the
+ injuries and the over-exertion resulting from previous marches and battles
+ had greatly enfeebled him), General Pierce had acted with his brigade. In
+ obedience to orders, it had occupied the field of Molino del Rey. Contrary
+ to expectation, it was found that the enemy&rsquo;s force had been withdrawn
+ from this position. Pierce remained in the field until noon, when, it
+ being certain that the anticipated attack would not take place before the
+ following day, he returned to the quarters of General Worth, which were
+ near at hand. There he became extremely ill, and was unable to leave his
+ bed for the thirty-six hours next ensuing. In the mean time, the Castle of
+ Chepultepec was stormed by the troops under Generals Pillow and Quitman.
+ Pierce&rsquo;s brigade behaved itself gallantly, and suffered severely; and that
+ accomplished officer, Colonel Ransom, leading the Ninth Regiment to the
+ attack, was shot through the head, and fell, with many other brave men, in
+ that last battle of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American troops, under Quitman and Worth, had established themselves
+ within the limits of the city, having possession of the gates of Belen and
+ of San Cosma, but, up till nightfall, had met with a vigorous resistance
+ from the Mexicans, led on by Santa Anna in person. They had still,
+ apparently, a desperate task before them. It was anticipated that, with
+ the next morning&rsquo;s light, our troops would be ordered to storm the
+ citadel, and the city of Mexico itself. When this was told to Pierce, upon
+ his sick-bed, he rose, and attempted to dress himself; but Captain
+ Hardcastle, who had brought the intelligence from Worth, prevailed upon
+ him to remain in bed, and not to exhaust his scanty strength until the
+ imminence of the occasion should require his presence. Pierce acquiesced
+ for the time, but again arose, in the course of the night, and made his
+ way to the trenches, where he reported himself to General Quitman, with
+ whose division was a part of his brigade. Quitman&rsquo;s share in the
+ anticipated assault, it was supposed, owing to the position which his
+ troops occupied, would be more perilous than that of Worth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the last great battle had been fought. In the morning, it was
+ discovered that the citadel had been abandoned, and that Santa Anna had
+ withdrawn his army from the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There never was a more gallant body of officers than those who came from
+ civil life into the army on occasion of the Mexican War. All of them, from
+ the rank of general downward, appear to have been animated by the spirit
+ of young knights, in times of chivalry, when fighting for their spurs.
+ Hitherto known only as peaceful citizens, they felt it incumbent on them,
+ by daring and desperate valor, to prove their fitness to be intrusted with
+ the guardianship of their country&rsquo;s honor. The old and trained soldier,
+ already distinguished on former fields, was free to be discreet as well as
+ brave; but these untried warriors were in a different position, and
+ therefore rushed on perils with a recklessness that found its penalty on
+ every battle-field&mdash;not one of which was won without a grievous
+ sacrifice of the best blood of America. In this band of gallant men, it is
+ not too much to say, General Pierce was as distinguished for what we must
+ term his temerity in personal exposure, as for the higher traits of
+ leadership, wherever there was an opportunity for their display.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had manifested, moreover, other and better qualities than these, and
+ such as it affords his biographer far greater pleasure to record. His
+ tenderness of heart, his sympathy, his brotherly or paternal care for his
+ men, had been displayed in a hundred instances, and had gained him the
+ enthusiastic affection of all who served under his command. During the
+ passage from America, under the tropics, he would go down into the
+ stifling air of the hold, with a lemon, a cup of tea, and, better and more
+ efficacious than all, a kind word for the sick. While encamped before Vera
+ Cruz, he gave up his own tent to a sick comrade, and went himself to lodge
+ in the pestilential city. On the march, and even on the battle-field, he
+ found occasion to exercise those feelings of humanity which show most
+ beautifully there. And, in the hospitals of Mexico, he went among the
+ diseased and wounded soldiers, cheering them with his voice and the magic
+ of his kindness, inquiring into their wants, and relieving them to the
+ utmost of his pecuniary means. There was not a man of his brigade but
+ loved him, and would have followed him to death, or have sacrificed his
+ own life in his general&rsquo;s defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers of the old army, whose profession was war, and who well knew
+ what a soldier was and ought to be, fully recognized his merit. An
+ instance of their honorable testimony in his behalf may fitly be recorded
+ here. It was after General Pierce had returned to the United States. At a
+ dinner in the halls of Montezuma, at which forty or fifty of the brave men
+ above alluded to were present, a young officer of the New England Regiment
+ was called on for a toast. He made an address, in which he spoke with
+ irrepressible enthusiasm of General Pierce, and begged to propose his
+ health. One of the officers of the old line rose, and observed that none
+ of the recently appointed generals commanded more unanimous and universal
+ respect; that General Pierce had appreciated the scientific knowledge of
+ the regular military men, and had acquired their respect by the
+ independence, firmness, and promptitude with which he exercised his own
+ judgment, and acted on the intelligence derived from them. In concluding
+ this tribute of high, but well-considered praise, the speaker very
+ cordially acquiesced in the health of General Pierce, and proposed that it
+ should be drunk standing, with three times three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Pierce remained in Mexico until December, when, as the warfare was
+ over, and peace on the point of being concluded, he set out on his return.
+ In nine months, crowded full of incident, he had seen far more of actual
+ service than many professional soldiers during their whole lives. As soon
+ as the treaty of peace was signed, he gave up his commission, and returned
+ to the practice of the law, again proposing to spend the remainder of his
+ days in the bosom of his family. All the dreams of his youth were now
+ fulfilled; the military ardor, that had struck an hereditary root in his
+ breast, had enjoyed its scope, and was satisfied; and he flattered himself
+ that no circumstances could hereafter occur to draw him from the
+ retirement of domestic peace. New Hampshire received him with even more
+ enthusiastic affection than ever. At his departure, he had received a
+ splendid sword at the hands of many of his friends, in token of their
+ confidence; he had shown himself well worthy to wear and able to use a
+ soldier&rsquo;s weapon; and his native state now gave him another, the
+ testimonial of approved valor and warlike conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE COMPROMISE AND OTHER MATTERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The intervening years, since General Pierce&rsquo;s return from Mexico, and
+ until the present time, have been spent in the laborious exercise of the
+ legal profession,&mdash;an employment scarcely varied or interrupted,
+ except by those episodes of political activity which a man of public
+ influence finds it impossible to avoid, and in which, if his opinions are
+ matter of conscience with him, he feels it his duty to interest himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the presidential canvass of 1848 he used his best efforts (and with
+ success, so far as New Hampshire was concerned) in behalf of the candidate
+ of his party. A truer and better speech has never been uttered on a
+ similar occasion than one which he made (during a hurried half hour,
+ snatched from the court rooms) in October of the above year, before the
+ democratic state convention, then in session at Concord. It is an
+ invariable characteristic of General Pierce&rsquo;s popular addresses, that they
+ evince a genuine respect for the people; he makes his appeal to their
+ intelligence, their patriotism, and their integrity, and, never doubtful
+ of their upright purpose, proves his faith in the great mind and heart of
+ the country both by what he says and by what he refrains from saying. He
+ never yet was guilty of an effort to cajole his fellow-citizens, to
+ operate upon their credulity, or to trick them even into what was right;
+ and therefore all the victories which he has ever won in popular
+ assemblies have been triumphs doubly honored, being as creditable to his
+ audiences as to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the series of measures known under the collective term of The
+ Compromise were passed by Congress in 1850, and put to so searching a test
+ here at the North the reverence of the people for the Constitution and
+ their attachment to the Union, General Pierce was true to the principles
+ which he had long ago avowed. At an early period of his congressional
+ service he had made known, with the perfect frankness of his character,
+ those opinions upon the slavery question which he has never since seen
+ occasion to change in the slightest degree. There is an unbroken
+ consistency in his action with regard to this matter. It is entirely of a
+ piece, from his first entrance upon public life until the moment when he
+ came forward, while many were faltering, to throw the great weight of his
+ character and influence into the scale in favor of those measures through
+ which it was intended to redeem the pledges of the Constitution, and to
+ preserve and renew the old love and harmony among the sisterhood of
+ States. His approval embraced the whole series of these acts, as well
+ those which bore hard upon northern views and sentiments as those in which
+ the South deemed itself to have made more than reciprocal concessions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No friend nor enemy that know Franklin Pierce would have expected him to
+ act otherwise. With his view of the whole subject, whether looking at it
+ through the medium of his conscience, his feelings, or his intellect, it
+ was impossible for him not to take his stand as the unshaken advocate of
+ Union, and of the mutual steps of compromise which that great object
+ unquestionably demanded. The fiercest, the least scrupulous, and the most
+ consistent of those who battle against slavery recognize the same fact
+ that he does. They see that merely human wisdom and human efforts cannot
+ subvert it, except by tearing to pieces the Constitution, breaking the
+ pledges which it sanctions, and severing into distracted fragments that
+ common country which Providence brought into one nation, through a
+ continued miracle of almost two hundred years, from the first settlement
+ of the American wilderness until the Revolution. In the days when, a young
+ member of Congress, he first raised his voice against agitation, Pierce
+ saw these perils and their consequences. He considered, too, that the evil
+ would be certain, while the good was, at best, a contingency, and (to the
+ clear, practical foresight with which he looked into the future) scarcely
+ so much as that, attended as the movement was and must be during its
+ progress, with the aggravated injury of those whose condition it aimed to
+ ameliorate, and terminating, in its possible triumph,&mdash;if such
+ possibility there were,&mdash;with the ruin of two races which now dwelt
+ together in greater peace and affection, it is not too much to say, than
+ had ever elsewhere existed between the taskmaster and the serf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, there is another view of all these matters. The theorist may
+ take that view in his closet; the philanthropist by profession may strive
+ to act upon it uncompromisingly, amid the tumult and warfare of his life.
+ But the statesman of practical sagacity&mdash;who loves his country as it
+ is, and evolves good from things as they exist, and who demands to feel
+ his firm grasp upon a better reality before he quits the one already
+ gained&mdash; will be likely here, with all the greatest statesmen of
+ America, to stand in the attitude of a conservative. Such, at all events,
+ will be the attitude of Franklin Pierce. We have sketched some of the
+ influences amid which he grew up, inheriting his father&rsquo;s love of country,
+ mindful of the old patriot&rsquo;s valor in so many conflicts of the Revolution,
+ and having close before his eyes the example of brothers and relatives,
+ more than one of whom have bled for America, both at the extremest north
+ and farthest south; himself, too, in early manhood, serving the Union in
+ its legislative halls, and, at a maturer age, leading his fellow-citizens,
+ his brethren, from the widest-sundered states, to redden the same
+ battle-fields with their kindred blood, to unite their breath into one
+ shout of victory, and perhaps to sleep, side by side, with the same sod
+ over them. Such a man, with such hereditary recollections, and such a
+ personal experience, must not narrow himself to adopt the cause of one
+ section of his native country against another. He will stand up, as he has
+ always stood, among the patriots of the whole land. And if the work of
+ antislavery agitation, which it is undeniable leaves most men who
+ earnestly engage in it with only half a country in their affections,&mdash;if
+ this work must be done, let others do it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those northern men, therefore, who deem the great causes of human welfare
+ as represented and involved in this present hostility against southern
+ institutions, and who conceive that the world stands still except so far
+ as that goes forward,&mdash;these, it may be allowed, can scarcely give
+ their sympathy or their confidence to the subject of this memoir. But
+ there is still another view, and probably as wise a one. It looks upon
+ slavery as one of those evils which divine Providence does not leave to be
+ remedied by human contrivances, but which, in its own good time, by some
+ means impossible to be anticipated, but of the simplest and easiest
+ operation, when all its uses shall have been fulfilled, it causes to
+ vanish like a dream. There is no instance, in all history, of the human
+ will and intellect having perfected any great moral reform by methods
+ which it adapted to that end; but the progress of the world, at every
+ step, leaves some evil or wrong on the path behind it, which the wisest of
+ mankind, of their own set purpose, could never have found the way to
+ rectify. Whatever contributes to the great cause of good, contributes to
+ all its subdivisions and varieties; and, on this score, the lover of his
+ race, the enthusiast, the philanthropist of whatever theory, might lend
+ his aid to put a man, like the one before us, into the leadership of the
+ world&rsquo;s affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How firm and conscientious was General Pierce&rsquo;s support of The Compromise
+ may be estimated from his conduct in reference to the Reverend John
+ Atwood. In the foregoing pages it has come oftener in our way to
+ illustrate the bland and prepossessing features of General Pierce&rsquo;s
+ character, than the sterner ones which must necessarily form the bones, so
+ to speak, the massive skeleton, of any man who retains an upright attitude
+ amidst the sinister influences of public life. The transaction now alluded
+ to affords a favorable opportunity for indicating some of these latter
+ traits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In October, 1850, a democratic convention, held at Concord, nominated Mr.
+ Atwood as the party&rsquo;s regular candidate for governor. The Compromise, then
+ recent, was inevitably a prominent element in the discussions of the
+ convention; and a series of resolutions were adopted, bearing reference to
+ this great subject, fully and unreservedly indorsing the measures
+ comprehended under it, and declaring the principles on which the Democracy
+ of the state was about to engage in the gubernatorial contest. Mr. Atwood
+ accepted the nomination, acceding to the platform thus tendered him,
+ taking exceptions to none of the individual resolutions, and, of course,
+ pledging himself to the whole by the very act of assuming the candidacy,
+ which was predicated upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reverend candidate, we should conceive, is a well-meaning, and
+ probably an amiable man. In ordinary circumstances, he would, doubtless,
+ have gone through the canvass triumphantly, and have administered the high
+ office to which he aspired with no discredit to the party that had placed
+ him at its head. But the disturbed state of the public mind on the
+ Compromise question rendered the season a very critical one; and Mr.
+ Atwood, unfortunately, had that fatal weakness of character, which,
+ however respectably it may pass in quiet times, is always bound to make
+ itself pitiably manifest under the pressure of a crisis. A letter was
+ addressed to him by a committee, representing the party opposed to The
+ Compromise, and with whom, it may be supposed, were included those who
+ held the more thorough-going degrees of antislavery sentiment. The purpose
+ of the letter was to draw out an expression of Mr. Atwood&rsquo;s opinion on the
+ abolition movement generally, and with an especial reference to the
+ Fugitive Slave Law, and whether, as chief magistrate of the state, he
+ would favor any attempt for its repeal. In an answer of considerable
+ length the candidate expressed sentiments that brought him unquestionably
+ within the free soil pale, and favored his correspondents, moreover, with
+ a pretty decided judgment as to the unconstitutional, unjust, and
+ oppressive character of the Fugitive Slave Law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During a space of about two months, this very important document was kept
+ from the public eye. Rumors of its existence, however, became gradually
+ noised abroad, and necessarily attracted the attention of Mr. Atwood&rsquo;s
+ democratic friends. Inquiries being made, he acknowledged the existence of
+ the letter, but averred that it had never been delivered, that it was
+ merely a rough draught, and that he had hitherto kept it within his own
+ control, with a view to more careful consideration. In accordance with the
+ advice of friends, he expressed a determination, and apparently in good
+ faith, to suppress the letter, and thus to sever all connection with the
+ antislavery party. This, however, was now beyond his power. A copy of the
+ letter had been taken; it was published, with high commendations, in the
+ antislavery newspapers; and Mr. Atwood was exhibited in the awkward
+ predicament of directly avowing sentiments on the one hand which he had
+ implicitly disavowed on the other, of accepting a nomination based on
+ principles diametrically opposite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The candidate appears to have apprehended this disclosure, and he hurried
+ to Concord, and sought counsel of General Pierce, with whom he was on
+ terms of personal kindness, and between whom and himself, heretofore,
+ there had never been a shade of political difference. An interview with
+ the general and one or two other gentlemen ensued. Mr. Atwood was
+ cautioned against saying or writing a word that might be repugnant to his
+ feelings or his principles; but, voluntarily, and at his own suggestion,
+ he now wrote for publication a second letter, in which he retracted every
+ objectionable feature of his former one, and took decided ground in favor
+ of The Compromise, including all its individual measures. Had he adhered
+ to this latter position, he might have come out of the affair, if not with
+ the credit of consistency, yet, at least, as a successful candidate in the
+ impending election. But his evil fate, or, rather, the natural infirmity
+ of his character, was not so to be thrown off. The very next day,
+ unhappily, he fell into the hands of some of his antislavery friends, to
+ whom he avowed a constant adherence to the principles of his first letter,
+ describing the second as having been drawn from him by importunity, in an
+ excited state of his mind, and without a full realization of its purport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be needlessly cruel to Mr. Atwood to trace with minuteness the
+ further details of this affair. It is impossible to withhold from him a
+ certain sympathy, or to avoid feeling that a very worthy man, as the world
+ goes, had entangled himself in an inextricable knot of duplicity and
+ tergiversation, by an ill-advised effort to be two opposite things at
+ once. For the sake of true manhood, we gladly turn to consider the course
+ adopted by General Pierce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The election for governor was now at a distance of only a few weeks; and
+ it could not be otherwise than a most hazardous movement for the
+ democratic party, at so late a period, to discard a candidate with whom
+ the people had become familiar. It involved nothing less than the imminent
+ peril of that political supremacy which the party had so long enjoyed.
+ With Mr. Atwood as candidate, success might be considered as certain. To a
+ short-sighted and a weak man, it would have appeared the obvious policy to
+ patch up the difficulty, and, at all events, to conquer, under whatever
+ leadership, and with whatever allies. But it was one of those junctures
+ which test the difference between the man of principle and the mere
+ politician&mdash;the man of moral courage and him who yields to temporary
+ expediency. General Pierce could not consent that his party should gain a
+ nominal triumph, at the expense of what he looked upon as its real
+ integrity and life. With this view of the matter, he had no hesitation in
+ his course; nor could the motives which otherwise would have been
+ strongest with him&mdash;pity for the situation of an unfortunate
+ individual, a personal friend, a Democrat, as Mr. Atwood describes
+ himself, of nearly fifty years&rsquo; standing&mdash;incline him to mercy where
+ it would have been fatal to his sense of right. He took decided ground
+ against Mr. Atwood. The convention met again, and satisfactory to all
+ parties; and one of his political opponents (Professor Sanborn, of
+ Dartmouth College) has ably sketched him, both in that aspect and as a
+ debater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In drawing the portraits of the distinguished members of the
+ constitutional convention,&rdquo; writes the professor, &ldquo;to pass Frank Pierce
+ unnoticed would be as absurd as to enact one of Shakespeare&rsquo;s dramas
+ without its principal hero. I give my impressions of the man as I saw him
+ in the convention; for I would not undertake to vouch for the truth or
+ falsehood of those veracious organs of public sentiment, at the capital,
+ which have loaded him in turn with indiscriminate praise and abuse. As a
+ presiding officer, it would be difficult to find his equal. In proposing
+ questions to the house, he never hesitates or blunders. In deciding points
+ of order, he is both prompt and impartial. His treatment of every member
+ of the convention was characterized by uniform courtesy and kindness. The
+ deportment of the presiding officer of a deliberative body usually gives
+ tone to the debates. If he is harsh, morose, or abrupt in his manner, the
+ speakers are apt to catch his spirit by the force of involuntary sympathy.
+ The same is true, to some extent, of the principal debaters in such a
+ body. When a man of strong prejudices and harsh temper rises to address a
+ public assembly, his indwelling antipathies speak from every feature of
+ his face and from every motion of his person. The audience at once brace
+ themselves against his assaults, and condemn his opinions before they are
+ heard. The well-known character of an orator persuades or dissuades quite
+ as forcibly as the language he utters. Some men never rise to address a
+ deliberative assembly without conciliating good will in advance. The smile
+ that plays upon the speaker&rsquo;s face awakens emotions of complacency in
+ those who hear, even before he speaks. So does that weight of character,
+ which is the matured fruit of long public services and acknowledged worth,
+ soothe, in advance, the irritated and angry crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Pierce possesses unquestionable ability as a public speaker. Few men,
+ in our country, better understand the means of swaying a popular assembly,
+ or employ them with greater success. His forte lies in moving the passions
+ of those whom he addresses. He knows how to call into vigorous action both
+ the sympathies and antipathies of those who listen to him. I do not mean
+ to imply by these remarks that his oratory is deficient in argument or
+ sound reasoning. On the contrary, he seizes with great power upon the
+ strong points of his subject, and presents them clearly, forcibly, and
+ eloquently. As a prompt and ready debater, always prepared for assault or
+ defence, he has few equals. In these encounters, he appears to great
+ advantage, from his happy faculty of turning little incidents,
+ unexpectedly occurring, to his own account. A word carelessly dropped, or
+ an unguarded allusion to individuals or parties by an opponent, is
+ frequently converted into a powerful weapon of assault, by this skilful
+ advocate. He has been so much in office that he may be said to have been
+ educated in public life. He is most thoroughly versed in all the tactics
+ of debate. He is not only remarkably fluent in his elocution, but
+ remarkably correct. He seldom miscalls or repeats a word. His style is not
+ overloaded with ornament, and yet he draws liberally upon the treasury of
+ rhetoric. His figures are often beautiful and striking, never incongruous.
+ He is always listened to with respectful attention, if he does not always
+ command conviction. From his whole course in the convention, a
+ disinterested spectator could not fail to form a very favorable opinion,
+ not only of his talent and eloquence, but of his generosity and
+ magnanimity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other antiquated relics of the past, and mouldy types of prejudices
+ that ought now to be forgotten, and of which it was the object of the
+ present convention to purge the Constitution of New Hampshire, there is a
+ provision that certain state offices should be held only by Protestants.
+ Since General Pierce&rsquo;s nomination for the presidency, the existence of
+ this religious test has been brought as a charge against him, as if, in
+ spite of his continued efforts to remove it, he were personally
+ responsible for its remaining on the statute book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Pierce has naturally a strong endowment of religious feeling. At
+ no period of his life, as is well known to his friends, have the sacred
+ relations of the human soul been a matter of indifference with him; and,
+ of more recent years, whatever circumstances of good or evil fortune may
+ have befallen him, they have alike served to deepen this powerful
+ sentiment. Whether in sorrow or success, he has learned, in his own
+ behalf, the great lesson, that religious faith is the most valuable and
+ most sacred of human possessions; but, with this sense, there has come no
+ narrowness or illiberality, but a wide-embracing sympathy for the modes of
+ Christian worship, and a reverence for individual belief, as a matter
+ between the Deity and man&rsquo;s soul, and with which no other has a right to
+ interfere. With the feeling here described, and with his acute
+ intellectual perception of the abortive character of all intolerant
+ measures, as defeating their own ends, it strikes one as nothing less than
+ ludicrous that he should be charged with desiring to retain this obsolete
+ enactment, standing, as it does, as a merely gratuitous and otherwise
+ inoperative stigma upon the fair reputation of his native state. Even
+ supposing no higher motives to have influenced him, it would have sufficed
+ to secure his best efforts for the repeal of the religious test that so
+ many of the Catholics have always been found in the advance-guard of
+ freedom, marching onward with the progressive party; and that, whether in
+ peace or war, they have performed for their adopted country the hard toil
+ and the gallant services which she has a right to expect from her most
+ faithful citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth is that, ever since his entrance upon public life, on all
+ occasions,&mdash;and often making the occasion where he found none,&mdash;General
+ Pierce has done his utmost to obliterate this obnoxious feature from the
+ Constitution. He has repeatedly advocated the calling of a convention
+ mainly for this purpose. In that of 1850, he both spoke and voted in favor
+ of the abolition of the test, and, with the aid of Judge Woodbury and
+ other democratic members, attained his purpose, so far as the convention
+ possessed any power or responsibility in the matter. That the measure was
+ ultimately defeated is due to other causes, either temporary or of long
+ continuance; and to some of them it is attributable that the enlightened
+ public sentiment of New Hampshire was not, long since, made to operate
+ upon this enactment, so anomalous in the fundamental law of a free state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to the validity of the amendments passed by the convention, it
+ was necessary that the people should subsequently act upon them, and pass
+ a vote of two thirds in favor of their adoption. The amendments proposed
+ by the convention of 1850 were numerous. The Constitution had been
+ modified in many and very important particulars, in respect to which the
+ popular mind had not previously been made familiar, and on which it had
+ not anticipated the necessity of passing judgment. In March, 1851, when
+ the vote of the people was taken upon these measures, the Atwood
+ controversy was at its height, and threw all matters of less immediate
+ interest into the background. During the interval since the adjournment of
+ the convention, the whig newspapers had been indefatigable in their
+ attempts to put its proceedings in an odious light before the people.
+ There had been no period, for many years, in which sinister influences
+ rendered it so difficult to draw out an efficient expression of the will
+ of the Democracy as on this occasion. It was the result of all these
+ obstacles that the doings of the constitutional convention were rejected
+ in the mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the ensuing April, the convention reassembled, in order to receive the
+ unfavorable verdict of the people upon its proposed amendments. At the
+ suggestion of General Pierce, the amendment abolishing the religious test
+ was again brought forward, and, in spite of the opposition of the leading
+ whig members, was a second time submitted to the people. Nor did the
+ struggle in behalf of this enlightened movement terminate here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the democratic caucus, in Concord, preliminary to the town meeting, he
+ urged upon his political friends the repeal of the test, as a party
+ measure; and again, at the town meeting itself, while the balloting was
+ going forward, he advocated it on the higher ground of religious freedom,
+ and of reverence for what is inviolable in the human soul. Had the
+ amendment passed, the credit would have belonged to no man more than to
+ General Pierce; and that it failed, and that the free Constitution of New
+ Hampshire is still disgraced by a provision which even monarchical England
+ has cast off, is a responsibility which must rest elsewhere than on his
+ head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In September, 1851, died that eminent statesman and jurist, Levi Woodbury,
+ then occupying the elevated post of judge of the Supreme Court of the
+ United States. The connection between him and General Pierce, beginning in
+ the early youth of the latter, had been sustained through all the
+ subsequent years. They sat together, with but one intervening chair
+ between, in the national Senate; they were always advocates of the same
+ great measures, and held, through life, a harmony of opinion and action,
+ which was never more conspicuous than in the few months that preceded
+ Judge Woodbury&rsquo;s death. At a meeting of the bar, after his decease,
+ General Pierce uttered some remarks, full of sensibility, in which he
+ referred to the circumstances that had made this friendship an inheritance
+ on his part. Had Judge Woodbury survived, it is not improbable that his
+ more advanced age, his great public services, and equally distinguished
+ zeal in behalf of the Union might have placed him in the position now
+ occupied by the subject of this memoir. Fortunate the state which, after
+ losing such a son, can still point to another, not less worthy to take
+ upon him the charge of the nation&rsquo;s welfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have now finished our record of Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s life, and have only
+ to describe the posture of affairs which, without his own purpose and
+ against his wish, has placed him before the people of the United States as
+ a candidate for the presidency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HIS NOMINATION FOR THE PRESIDENCY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ On the 12th of June, 1852, the democratic national convention assembled at
+ Baltimore, in order to select a candidate for the presidency of the United
+ States. Many names, eminently distinguished in peace and war, had been
+ brought before the public, during several months previous; and among them,
+ though by no means occupying a very prominent place, was the name of
+ Franklin Pierce. In January of this year, the Democracy of New Hampshire
+ had signified its preference of General Pierce as a presidential candidate
+ in the approaching canvass&mdash;a demonstration which drew from him the
+ following response, addressed to his friend, Mr. Atherton:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am far from being insensible to the generous confidence so often
+ manifested towards me by the people of this state; and although the object
+ indicated in the resolution, having particular reference to myself, be not
+ one of desire on my part, the expression is not on that account less
+ gratifying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doubtless the spontaneous and just appreciation of an intelligent people
+ is the best earthly reward for earnest and cheerful services rendered to
+ one&rsquo;s state and country; and while it is a matter of unfeigned regret that
+ my life has been so barren of usefulness, I shall ever hold this and
+ similar tributes among my most cherished recollections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To these, my sincere and grateful acknowledgments, I desire to add that
+ the same motives which induced me, several years ago, to retire from
+ public life, and which since that time controlled my judgment in this
+ respect, now impel me to say that the use of my name in any event, before
+ the democratic national convention at Baltimore, to which you are a
+ delegate, would be utterly repugnant to my taste and wishes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentiments expressed in the above letter were genuine, and from his
+ heart. He had looked long and closely at the effects of high public
+ station on the character and happiness, and on what is the innermost and
+ dearest part of a man&rsquo;s possessions&mdash;his independence; and he had
+ satisfied himself that office, however elevated, should be avoided for
+ one&rsquo;s own sake, or accepted only as a good citizen would make any other
+ sacrifice, at the call and at the need of his country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the time for the assembling of the national convention drew near, there
+ were other sufficient indications of his sincerity in declining a stake in
+ the great game. A circular letter was addressed, by Major Scott, of
+ Virginia, to the distinguished Democrats whose claims had heretofore been
+ publicly discussed, requesting a statement of their opinions on several
+ points, and inquiring what would be the course of each of these gentlemen,
+ in certain contingencies, in case of his attaining the presidency. These
+ queries, it may be presumed, were of such a nature that General Pierce
+ might have answered them, had he seen fit to do so, to the satisfaction of
+ Major Scott himself, or to that of the southern democratic party, whom it
+ seemed his purpose to represent. With not more than one exception, the
+ other statesmen and soldiers, to whom the circular had been sent, made a
+ response. General Pierce preserved an unbroken silence. It was equivalent
+ to the withdrawal of all claims which he might be supposed to possess, in
+ reference to the contemplated office; and he thereby repeated, to the
+ delegates of the national party, the same avowal of distaste for public
+ life which he had already made known to the Democracy of his native state.
+ He had thus done everything in his power, actively or passively,&mdash;everything
+ that he could have done, without showing such an estimate of his position
+ before the country as was inconsistent with the modesty of his character,&mdash;to
+ avoid the perilous and burdensome honor of the candidacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The convention met, at the date above mentioned, and continued its
+ sessions during four days. Thirty-five ballotings were held, with a
+ continually decreasing prospect that the friends of any one of the
+ gentlemen hitherto prominent before the people would succeed in obtaining
+ the two-thirds vote that was requisite for a nomination. Thus far, not a
+ vote had been thrown for General Pierce; but, at the thirty-sixth ballot,
+ the delegation of old Virginia brought forward his name. In the course of
+ several more trials, his strength increased, very gradually at first, but
+ afterwards with a growing impetus, until, at the forty-ninth ballot, the
+ votes were for Franklin Pierce two hundred and eighty-two, and eleven for
+ all other candidates. Thus Franklin Pierce became the nominee of the
+ convention; and as quickly as the lightning flash could blazon it abroad
+ his name was on every tongue, from end to end of this vast country. Within
+ an hour he grew to be illustrious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be a pretension, which we do not mean to put forward, to assert
+ that, whether considering the length and amount of his public services, or
+ his prominence before the country, General Pierce stood on equal ground
+ with several of the distinguished men whose claims, to use the customary
+ phrase, had been rejected in favor of his own. But no man, be his public
+ services or sacrifices what they might, ever did or ever could possess, in
+ the slightest degree, what we may term a legitimate claim to be elevated
+ to the rulership of a free people. The nation would degrade itself, and
+ violate every principle upon which its institutions are founded, by
+ offering its majestic obedience to one of its citizens as a reward for
+ whatever splendor of achievement. The conqueror may assert a claim, such
+ as it is, to the sovereignty of the people whom he subjugates; but, with
+ us Americans, when a statesman comes to the chief direction of affairs, it
+ is at the summons of the nation, addressed to the servant whom it deems
+ best fitted to spend his wisdom, his strength, and his life in its behalf.
+ On this principle, which is obviously the correct one, a candidate&rsquo;s
+ previous services are entitled to consideration only as they indicate the
+ qualities which may enable him to render higher services in the position
+ which his countrymen choose that he shall occupy. What he has done is of
+ no importance, except as proving what he can do. And it is on this score,
+ because they see in his public course the irrefragable evidences of
+ patriotism, integrity, and courage, and because they recognize in him the
+ noble gift of natural authority, and have a prescience of the stately
+ endowment of administrative genius, that his fellow-citizens are about to
+ summon Franklin Pierce to the presidency. To those who know him well, the
+ event comes, not like accident, but as a consummation which might have
+ been anticipated, from its innate fitness, and as the final step of a
+ career which, all along, has tended thitherward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not as a reward that he will take upon him the mighty burden of this
+ office, of which the toil and awful responsibility whiten the statesman&rsquo;s
+ head, and in which, as in more than one instance we have seen, the warrior
+ encounters a deadlier risk than in the battle-field. When General Pierce
+ received the news of his nomination, it affected him with no thrill of
+ joy, but a sadness, which, for many days, was perceptible in his
+ deportment. It awoke in his heart the sense of religious dependence&mdash;a
+ sentiment that has been growing continually stronger, through all the
+ trials and experiences of his life; and there was nothing feigned in that
+ passage of his beautiful letter, accepting the nomination, in which he
+ expresses his reliance upon heavenly support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The committee, appointed by the Baltimore convention, conveyed to him the
+ intelligence of his nomination in the following terms:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A national convention of the democratic republican party, which met at
+ Baltimore on the first Tuesday in June, unanimously nominated you as a
+ candidate for the high trust of the President of the United States. We
+ have been delegated to acquaint you with the nomination, and earnestly to
+ request that you will accept it. Persuaded as we are that this office
+ should never be pursued by an unchastened ambition, it cannot be refused
+ by a dutiful patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The circumstances under which you will be presented for the canvass of
+ your countrymen seem to be propitious to the interests which the
+ Constitution intrusts to our Federal Union, and must be auspicious to your
+ own name. You come before the people without the impulse of personal
+ wishes, and free from selfish expectations. You are identified with none
+ of the distractions which have recently disturbed our country, whilst you
+ are known to be faithful to the Constitution&mdash;to all its guaranties
+ and compromises. You will be free to exercise your tried abilities, within
+ the path of duty, in protecting that repose we happily enjoy, and in
+ giving efficacy and control to those cardinal principles that have already
+ illustrated the party which has now selected you as its leader&mdash;principles
+ that regard the security and prosperity of the whole country, and the
+ paramount power of its laws, as indissolubly associated with the
+ perpetuity of our civil and religious liberties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The convention did not pretermit the duty of reiterating those
+ principles, and you will find them prominently set forth in the
+ resolutions it adopted. To these we respectfully invite your attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is firmly believed that to your talents and patriotism the security of
+ our holy Union, with its expanded and expanding interests, may be wisely
+ trusted, and that, amid all the perils which may assail the Constitution,
+ you will have the heart to love and the arm to defend it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We quote likewise General Pierce&rsquo;s reply:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have the honor to acknowledge your personal kindness in presenting me,
+ this day, your letter, officially informing me of my nomination, by the
+ democratic national convention, as a candidate for the presidency of the
+ United States. The surprise with which I received the intelligence of my
+ nomination was not unmingled with painful solicitude; and yet it is proper
+ for me to say that the manner in which it was conferred was peculiarly
+ gratifying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The delegation from New Hampshire, with all the glow of state pride, and
+ with all the warmth of personal regard, would not have submitted my name
+ to the convention, nor would they have cast a vote for me, under
+ circumstances other than those which occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall always cherish with pride and gratitude the recollection of the
+ fact that the voice which first pronounced, and pronounced alone, came
+ from the Mother of States&mdash;a pride and gratitude rising above any
+ consequences that can betide me personally. May I not regard it as a fact
+ pointing to the overthrow of sectional jealousies, and looking to the
+ permanent life and vigor of the Union, cemented by the blood of those who
+ have passed to their reward?&mdash;a Union wonderful in its formation,
+ boundless in its hopes, amazing in its destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept the nomination, relying upon an abiding devotion to the
+ interests, honor, and glory of the whole country, but, above and beyond
+ all, upon a Power superior to all human might&mdash;a Power which, from
+ the first gun of the Revolution, in every crisis through which we have
+ passed, in every hour of acknowledged peril, when the dark clouds had shut
+ down over us, has interposed as if to baffle human wisdom, outmarch human
+ forecast, and bring out of darkness the rainbow of promise. Weak myself,
+ faith and hope repose there in security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept the nomination upon the platform adopted by the convention, not
+ because this is expected of me as a candidate, but because the principles
+ it embraces command the approbation of my judgment; and with them, I
+ believe I can safely say, there has been no word or act of my life in
+ conflict.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of his nomination went abroad over the Union, and, far and wide,
+ there came a response, in which was distinguishable a truer appreciation
+ of some of General Pierce&rsquo;s leading traits than could have been
+ anticipated, considering the unobtrusive tenor of his legislative life,
+ and the lapse of time since he had entirely withdrawn himself from the
+ nation&rsquo;s eye. It was the marvellous and mystic influence of character, in
+ regard to which the judgment of the people is so seldom found erroneous,
+ and which conveys the perception of itself through some medium higher and
+ deeper than the intellect. Everywhere the country knows that a man of
+ steadfast will, true heart, and generous qualities has been brought
+ forward, to receive the suffrages of his fellow-citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He comes before the people of the United States at a remarkable era in the
+ history of this country and of the world. The two great parties of the
+ nation appear&mdash;at least to an observer somewhat removed from both&mdash;to
+ have nearly merged into one another; for they preserve the attitude of
+ political antagonism rather through the effect of their old organizations
+ than because any great and radical principles are at present in dispute
+ between them. The measures advocated by the one party, and resisted by the
+ other, through a long series of years, have now ceased to be the pivots on
+ which the election turns. The prominent statesmen, so long identified with
+ those measures, will henceforth relinquish their controlling influence
+ over public affairs. Both parties, it may likewise be said, are united in
+ one common purpose,&mdash;that of preserving our sacred Union, as the
+ immovable basis from which the destinies, not of America alone, but of
+ mankind at large, may be carried upward and consummated. And thus men
+ stand together, in unwonted quiet and harmony, awaiting the new movement
+ in advance which all these tokens indicate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It remains for the citizens of this great country to decide, within the
+ next few weeks, whether they will retard the steps of human progress by
+ placing at its head an illustrious soldier, indeed, a patriot, and one
+ indelibly stamped into the history of the past, but who has already done
+ his work, and has not in him the spirit of the present or of the coming
+ time; or whether they will put their trust in a new man, whom a life of
+ energy and various activity has tested, but not worn out, and advance with
+ him into the auspicious epoch upon which we are about to enter.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ NOTE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We have done far less than justice to Franklin Pierce&rsquo;s college standing,
+ in our statement in Chapter I. Some circumstances connected with this
+ matter are too characteristic not to be reported.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first two years, Pierce was extremely inattentive to his
+ college duties, bestowing only such modicum of time upon them as was
+ requisite to supply the merest superficial acquaintance with the course of
+ study for the recitation room. The consequence was that when the relative
+ standing of the members of the class was first authoritatively
+ ascertained, in the junior year, he found himself occupying precisely the
+ lowest position in point of scholarship. In the first mortification of
+ wounded pride, he resolved never to attend another recitation, and
+ accordingly absented himself from college exercises of all kinds for
+ several days, expecting and desiring that some form of punishment, such as
+ suspension or expulsion, would be the result. The faculty of the college,
+ however, with a wise lenity, took no notice of this behavior; and at last,
+ having had time to grow cool, and moved by the grief of his friend Little
+ and another classmate, Pierce determined to resume the routine of college
+ duties. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said he to his friends, &ldquo;if I do so, you shall see a
+ change!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, from that time forward, he devoted himself to study. His
+ mind, having run wild for so long a period, could be reclaimed only by the
+ severest efforts of an iron resolution; and for three months afterwards,
+ he rose at four in the morning, toiled all day over his books, and retired
+ only at midnight, allowing himself but four hours for sleep. With habit
+ and exercise, he acquired command over his intellectual powers, and was no
+ longer under the necessity of application so intense. But from the moment
+ when he made his resolve until the close of his college life, he never
+ incurred a censure, never was absent (and then unavoidably) but from two
+ college exercises, never went into the recitation room without a thorough
+ acquaintance with the subject to be recited, and finally graduated as the
+ third scholar of his class. Nothing save the low standard of his previous
+ scholarship prevented his taking a yet higher rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moral of this little story lies in the stern and continued exercise of
+ self-controlling will, which redeemed him from indolence, completely
+ changed the aspect of his character, and made this the turning point of
+ his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHIEFLY ABOUT WAR MATTERS.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ By a Peaceable Man.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ [This article appeared in the &ldquo;Atlantic Monthly&rdquo; for July, 1862, and is
+ now first reprinted among Hawthorne&rsquo;s collected writings. The editor of
+ the magazine objected to sundry paragraphs in the manuscript, and these
+ were cancelled with the consent of the author, who himself supplied all
+ the foot-notes that accompanied the article when it was published. It has
+ seemed best to retain them in the present reproduction. One of the
+ suppressed passages, in which President Lincoln is described, has since
+ been printed, and is therefore restored to its proper place in the
+ following pages.&mdash;G. P. L.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is no remoteness of life and thought, no hermetically sealed
+ seclusion, except possibly, that of the grave, into which the disturbing
+ influences of this war do not penetrate. Of course, the general
+ heart-quake of the country long ago knocked at my cottage-door, and
+ compelled me, reluctantly, to suspend the contemplation of certain
+ fantasies, to which, according to my harmless custom, I was endeavoring to
+ give a sufficiently life-like aspect to admit of their figuring in a
+ romance. As I make no pretensions to state-craft or soldiership, and could
+ promote the common weal neither by valor nor counsel, it seemed, at first,
+ a pity that I should be debarred from such unsubstantial business as I had
+ contrived for myself, since nothing more genuine was to be substituted for
+ it. But I magnanimously considered that there is a kind of treason in
+ insulating one&rsquo;s self from the universal fear and sorrow, and thinking
+ one&rsquo;s idle thoughts in the dread time of civil war; and could a man be so
+ cold and hardhearted, he would better deserve to be sent to Fort Warren
+ than many who have found their way thither on the score of violent, but
+ misdirected sympathies. I remembered the touching rebuke administered by
+ King Charles to that rural squire the echo of whose hunting-horn came to
+ the poor monarch&rsquo;s ear on the morning before a battle, where the
+ sovereignty and constitution of England were to be set at a stake. So I
+ gave myself up to reading newspapers and listening to the click of the
+ telegraph, like other people; until, after a great many months of such
+ pastime, it grew so abominably irksome that I determined to look a little
+ more closely at matters with my own eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly we set out&mdash;a friend and myself&mdash;towards Washington,
+ while it was still the long, dreary January of our Northern year, though
+ March in name; nor were we unwilling to clip a little margin off the five
+ months&rsquo; winter, during which there is nothing genial in New England save
+ the fireside. It was a clear, frosty morning, when we started. The sun
+ shone brightly on snow-covered hills in the neighborhood of Boston, and
+ burnished the surface of frozen ponds; and the wintry weather kept along
+ with us while we trundled through Worcester and Springfield, and all those
+ old, familiar towns, and through the village-cities of Connecticut. In New
+ York the streets were afloat with liquid mud and slosh. Over New Jersey
+ there was still a thin covering of snow, with the face of Nature visible
+ through the rents in her white shroud, though with little or no symptom of
+ reviving life. But when we reached Philadelphia, the air was mild and
+ balmy; there was but a patch or two of dingy winter here and there, and
+ the bare, brown fields about the city were ready to be green. We had met
+ the Spring half-way, in her slow progress from the South; and if we kept
+ onward at the same pace, and could get through the Rebel lines, we should
+ soon come to fresh grass, fruit-blossoms, green peas, strawberries, and
+ all such delights of early summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On our way, we heard many rumors of the war, but saw few signs of it. The
+ people were staid and decorous, according to their ordinary fashion; and
+ business seemed about as brisk as usual,&mdash;though, I suppose, it was
+ considerably diverted from its customary channels into warlike ones. In
+ the cities, especially in New York, there was a rather prominent display
+ of military goods at the shop windows,&mdash;such as swords with gilded
+ scabbards and trappings, epaulets, carabines, revolvers, and sometimes a
+ great iron cannon at the edge of the pavement, as if Mars had dropped one
+ of his pocket-pistols there, while hurrying to the field. As
+ railway-companions, we had now and then a volunteer in his French-gray
+ great-coat, returning from furlough, or a new-made officer travelling to
+ join his regiment, in his new-made uniform, which was perhaps all of the
+ military character that he had about him,&mdash;but proud of his
+ eagle-buttons and likely enough to do them honor before the gilt should be
+ wholly dimmed. The country, in short, so far as bustle and movement went,
+ was more quiet than in ordinary times, because so large a proportion of
+ its restless elements had been drawn towards the seat of the conflict. But
+ the air was full of a vague disturbance. To me, at least, it seemed so,
+ emerging from such a solitude as has been hinted at, and the more
+ impressible by rumors and indefinable presentiments, since I had not
+ lived, like other men, in an atmosphere of continual talk about the war. A
+ battle was momentarily expected on the Potomac; for, though our army was
+ still on the hither side of the river, all of us were looking towards the
+ mysterious and terrible Manassas, with the idea that somewhere in its
+ neighborhood lay a ghastly battle-field, yet to be fought, but foredoomed
+ of old to be bloodier than the one where we had reaped such shame. Of all
+ haunted places, methinks such a destined field should be thickest thronged
+ with ugly phantoms, ominous of mischief through ages beforehand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond Philadelphia there was a much greater abundance of military people.
+ Between Baltimore and Washington a guard seemed to hold every station
+ along the railroad; and frequently, on the hill-sides, we saw a collection
+ of weather-beaten tents, the peaks of which, blackened with smoke,
+ indicated that they had been made comfortable by stove-heat throughout the
+ winter. At several commanding positions we saw fortifications, with the
+ muzzles of cannon protruding from the ramparts, the slopes of which were
+ made of the yellow earth of that region, and still unsodded; whereas, till
+ these troublous times, there have been no forts but what were grass-grown
+ with the lapse of at least a lifetime of peace. Our stopping-places were
+ thronged with soldiers, some of whom came through the cars asking for
+ newspapers that contained accounts of the battle between the Merrimack and
+ Monitor, which had been fought the day before. A railway-train met us,
+ conveying a regiment out of Washington to some unknown point; and reaching
+ the capital, we filed out of the station between lines of soldiers, with
+ shouldered muskets, putting us in mind of similar spectacles at the gates
+ of European cities. It was not without sorrow that we saw the free
+ circulation of the nation&rsquo;s life-blood (at the very heart, moreover)
+ clogged with such strictures as these, which have caused chronic diseases
+ in almost all countries save our own. Will the time ever come again, in
+ America, when we may live half a score of years without once seeing the
+ likeness of a soldier, except it be in the festal march of a company on
+ its summer tour? Not in this generation, I fear, nor in the next, nor till
+ the Millennium; and even that blessed epoch, as the prophecies seem to
+ intimate, will advance to the sound of the trumpet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One terrible idea occurs in reference to this matter. Even supposing the
+ war should end to-morrow, and the army melt into the mass of the
+ population within the year, what an incalculable preponderance will there
+ be of military titles and pretensions for at least half a century to come!
+ Every country-neighborhood will have its general or two, its three or four
+ colonels, half a dozen majors, and captains without end,&mdash;besides
+ non-commissioned officers and privates, more than the recruiting offices
+ ever knew of,&mdash;all with their campaign-stories, which will become the
+ staple of fireside talk forevermore. Military merit, or rather, since that
+ is not so readily estimated, military notoriety, will be the measure of
+ all claims to civil distinction.&mdash;One bullet-headed general will
+ succeed another in the Presidential chair; and veterans will hold the
+ offices at home and abroad, and sit in Congress and the state
+ legislatures, and fill all the avenues of public life. And yet I do not
+ speak of this deprecatingly, since, very likely, it may substitute
+ something more real and genuine, instead of the many shams on which men
+ have heretofore founded their claims to public regard; but it behooves
+ civilians to consider their wretched prospects in the future, and assume
+ the military button before it is too late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were not in time to see Washington as a camp. On the very day of our
+ arrival sixty thousand men had crossed the Potomac on their march towards
+ Manassas; and almost with their first step into the Virginia mud, the
+ phantasmagory of a countless host and impregnable ramparts, before which
+ they had so long remained quiescent, dissolved quite away. It was as if
+ General McClellan had thrust his sword into a gigantic enemy, and,
+ beholding him suddenly collapse, had discovered to himself and the world
+ that he had merely punctured an enormously swollen bladder. There are
+ instances of a similar character in old romances, where great armies are
+ long kept at bay by the arts of necromancers, who build airy towers and
+ battlements, and muster warriors of terrible aspect, and thus feign a
+ defence of seeming impregnability, until some bolder champion of the
+ besiegers dashes forward to try an encounter with the foremost foeman, and
+ finds him melt away in the death grapple. With such heroic adventures let
+ the march upon Manassas be hereafter reckoned. The whole business, though
+ connected with the destinies of a nation, takes inevitably a tinge of the
+ ludicrous. The vast preparation of men and warlike material,&mdash;the
+ majestic patience and docility with which the people waited through those
+ weary and dreary months,&mdash;the martial skill, courage, and caution,
+ with which our movement was ultimately made,&mdash;and, at last, the
+ tremendous shock with which we were brought suddenly up against nothing at
+ all! The Southerners show little sense of humor nowadays, but I think they
+ must have meant to provoke a laugh at our expense, when they planted those
+ Quaker guns. At all events, no other Rebel artillery has played upon us
+ with such overwhelming effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troops being gone, we had the better leisure and opportunity to look
+ into other matters. It is natural enough to suppose that the centre and
+ heart of Washington is the Capitol; and certainly, in its outward aspect,
+ the world has not many statelier or more beautiful edifices, nor any, I
+ should suppose, more skilfully adapted to legislative purposes, and to all
+ accompanying needs. But, etc., etc. [We omit several paragraphs here, in
+ which the author speaks of some prominent Members of Congress with a
+ freedom that seems to have been not unkindly meant, but might be liable to
+ misconstruction. As he admits that he never listened to an important
+ debate, we can hardly recognize his qualifications to estimate these
+ gentlemen, in their legislative and oratorical capacities.]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * * * * * *
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We found one man, however, at the Capitol, who was satisfactorily adequate
+ to the business which brought him thither. In quest of him, we went
+ through halls, galleries, and corridors, and ascended a noble staircase,
+ balustraded with a dark and beautifully variegated marble from Tennessee,
+ the richness of which is quite a sufficient cause for objecting to the
+ secession of that State. At last we came to a barrier of pine boards,
+ built right across the stairs. Knocking at a rough, temporary door, we
+ thrust a card beneath; and in a minute or two it was opened by a person in
+ his shirt-sleeves, a middle-aged figure, neither tall nor short, of
+ Teutonic build and aspect, with an ample beard of a ruddy tinge and
+ chestnut hair. He looked at us, in the first place, with keen and somewhat
+ guarded eyes, as if it were not his practice to vouchsafe any great warmth
+ of greeting, except upon sure ground of observation. Soon, however, his
+ look grew kindly and genial (not that it had ever been in the least degree
+ repulsive, but only reserved), and Leutze allowed us to gaze at the
+ cartoon of his great fresco, and talked about it unaffectedly, as only a
+ man of true genius can speak of his own works. Meanwhile the noble design
+ spoke for itself upon the wall. A sketch in color, which we saw
+ afterwards, helped us to form some distant and flickering notion of what
+ the picture will be, a few months hence, when these bare outlines, already
+ so rich in thought and suggestiveness, shall glow with a fire of their
+ own,&mdash;a fire which, I truly believe, will consume every other
+ pictorial decoration of the Capitol, or, at least, will compel us to
+ banish those stiff and respectable productions to some less conspicuous
+ gallery. The work will be emphatically original and American, embracing
+ characteristics that neither art nor literature have yet dealt with, and
+ producing new forms of artistic beauty from the natural features of the
+ Rocky-Mountain region, which Leutze seems to have studied broadly and
+ minutely. The garb of the hunters and wanderers of those deserts, too,
+ under his free and natural management, is shown as the most picturesque of
+ costumes. But it would be doing this admirable painter no kind office to
+ overlay his picture with any more of my colorless and uncertain words; so
+ I shall merely add that it looked full of energy, hope, progress,
+ irrepressible movement onward, all represented in a momentary pause of
+ triumph; and it was most cheering to feel its good augury at this dismal
+ time, when our country might seem to have arrived at such a deadly
+ stand-still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an absolute comfort, indeed, to find Leutze so quietly busy at this
+ great national work, which is destined to glow for centuries on the walls
+ of the Capitol, if that edifice shall stand, or must share its fate, if
+ treason shall succeed in subverting it with the Union which it represents.
+ It was delightful to see him so calmly elaborating his design, while other
+ men doubted and feared, or hoped treacherously, and whispered to one
+ another that the nation would exist only a little longer, or that, if a
+ remnant still held together, its centre and seat of government would be
+ far northward and westward of Washington. But the artist keeps right on,
+ firm of heart and hand, drawing his outlines with an unwavering pencil,
+ beautifying and idealizing our rude, material life, and thus manifesting
+ that we have an indefeasible claim to a more enduring national existence.
+ In honest truth, what with the hope-inspiring influence of the design, and
+ what with Leutze&rsquo;s undisturbed evolvement of it, I was exceedingly
+ encouraged, and allowed these cheerful auguries to weigh against a
+ sinister omen that was pointed out to me in another part of the Capitol.
+ The freestone walls of the central edifice are pervaded with great cracks,
+ and threaten to come thundering down, under the immense weight of the iron
+ dome,&mdash;an appropriate catastrophe enough if it should occur on the
+ day when we drop the Southern stars out of our flag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody seems to be at Washington, and yet there is a singular dearth of
+ imperatively noticeable people there. I question whether there are half a
+ dozen individuals, in all kinds of eminence, at whom a stranger, wearied
+ with the contact of a hundred moderate celebrities, would turn round to
+ snatch a second glance. Secretary Seward, to be sure,&mdash;a pale,
+ large-nosed, elderly man, of moderate stature, with a decided originality
+ of gait and aspect, and a cigar in his mouth,&mdash;etc., etc. [We are
+ again compelled to interfere with our friend&rsquo;s license of personal
+ description and criticism. Even Cabinet Ministers (to whom the next few
+ pages of the article were devoted) had their private immunities, which
+ ought to be conscientiously observed,&mdash;unless, indeed, the writer
+ chanced to have some very piquant motives for violating them.]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * * * * * *
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of course, there was one other personage, in the class of statesmen, whom
+ I should have been truly mortified to leave Washington without seeing;
+ since (temporarily, at least, and by force of circumstances) he was the
+ man of men. But a private grief had built up a barrier about him, impeding
+ the customary free intercourse of Americans with their chief magistrate;
+ so that I might have come away without a glimpse of his very remarkable
+ physiognomy, save for a semi-official opportunity of which I was glad to
+ take advantage. The fact is, we were invited to annex ourselves, as
+ supernumeraries, to a deputation that was about to wait upon the
+ President, from a Massachusetts whip-factory, with a present of a splendid
+ whip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our immediate party consisted only of four or five (including Major Ben
+ Perley Poore, with his note-book and pencil), but we were joined by
+ several other persons, who seemed to have been lounging about the
+ precincts of the White House, under the spacious porch, or within the
+ hall, and who swarmed in with us to take the chances of a presentation.
+ Nine o&rsquo;clock had been appointed as the time for receiving the deputation,
+ and we were punctual to the moment; but not so the President, who sent us
+ word that he was eating his breakfast, and would come as soon as he could.
+ His appetite, we were glad to think, must have been a pretty fair one; for
+ we waited about half an hour in one of the antechambers, and then were
+ ushered into a reception-room, in one corner of which sat the Secretaries
+ of War and of the Treasury, expecting, like ourselves, the termination of
+ the Presidential breakfast. During this interval there were several new
+ additions to our group, one or two of whom were in a working-garb, so that
+ we formed a very miscellaneous collection of people, mostly unknown to
+ each other, and without any common sponsor, but all with an equal right to
+ look our head-servant in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by there was a little stir on the staircase and in the passage-way,
+ and in lounged a tall, loose-jointed figure, of an exaggerated Yankee port
+ and demeanor, whom (as being about the homeliest man I ever saw, yet by no
+ means repulsive or disagreeable) it was impossible not to recognize as
+ Uncle Abe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unquestionably, Western man though he be, and Kentuckian by birth,
+ President Lincoln is the essential representative of all Yankees, and the
+ veritable specimen, physically, of what the world seems determined to
+ regard as our characteristic qualities. It is the strangest and yet the
+ fittest thing in the jumble of human vicissitudes, that he, out of so many
+ millions, unlooked for, unselected by any intelligible process that could
+ be based upon his genuine qualities, unknown to those who chose him, and
+ unsuspected of what endowments may adapt him for his tremendous
+ responsibility, should have found the way open for him to fling his lank
+ personality into the chair of state,&mdash;where, I presume, it was his
+ first impulse to throw his legs on the council-table, and tell the Cabinet
+ Ministers a story. There is no describing his lengthy awkwardness, nor the
+ uncouthness of his movement; and yet it seemed as if I had been in the
+ habit of seeing him daily, and had shaken hands with him a thousand times
+ in some village street; so true was he to the aspect of the pattern
+ American, though with a certain extravagance which, possibly, I
+ exaggerated still further by the delighted eagerness with which I took it
+ in. If put to guess his calling and livelihood, I should have taken him
+ for a country schoolmaster as soon as anything else. He was dressed in a
+ rusty black frock-coat and pantaloons, unbrushed, and worn so faithfully
+ that the suit had adapted itself to the curves and angularities of his
+ figure, and had grown to be an outer skin of the man. He had shabby
+ slippers on his feet. His hair was black, still unmixed with gray, stiff,
+ somewhat bushy, and had apparently been acquainted with neither brush nor
+ comb that morning, after the disarrangement of the pillow; and as to a
+ night-cap, Uncle Abe probably knows nothing of such effeminacies. His
+ complexion is dark and sallow, betokening, I fear, an insalubrious
+ atmosphere around the White House; he has thick black eyebrows and an
+ impending brow; his nose is large, and the lines about his mouth are very
+ strongly defined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole physiognomy is as coarse a one as you would meet anywhere in the
+ length and breadth of the States; but, withal, it is redeemed,
+ illuminated, softened, and brightened by a kindly though serious look out
+ of his eyes, and an expression of homely sagacity, that seems weighted
+ with rich results of village experience. A great deal of native sense; no
+ bookish cultivation, no refinement; honest at heart, and thoroughly so,
+ and yet, in some sort, sly,&mdash;at least, endowed with a sort of tact
+ and wisdom that are akin to craft, and would impel him, I think, to take
+ an antagonist in flank, rather than to make a bull-run at him right in
+ front. But, on the whole, I like this sallow, queer, sagacious visage,
+ with the homely human sympathies that warmed it; and, for my small share
+ in the matter, would as lief have Uncle Abe for a ruler as any man whom it
+ would have been practicable to put in his place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately on his entrance the President accosted our member of Congress,
+ who had us in charge, and, with a comical twist of his face, made some
+ jocular remark about the length of his breakfast. He then greeted us all
+ round, not waiting for an introduction, but shaking and squeezing
+ everybody&rsquo;s hand with the utmost cordiality, whether the individual&rsquo;s name
+ was announced to him or not. His manner towards us was wholly without
+ pretence, but yet had a kind of natural dignity, quite sufficient to keep
+ the forwardest of us from clapping him on the shoulder and asking him for
+ a story. A mutual acquaintance being established, our leader took the whip
+ out of its case, and began to read the address of presentation. The whip
+ was an exceedingly long one, its handle wrought in ivory (by some artist
+ in the Massachusetts State Prison, I believe), and ornamented with a
+ medallion of the President, and other equally beautiful devices; and along
+ its whole length there was a succession of golden bands and ferrules. The
+ address was shorter than the whip, but equally well made, consisting
+ chiefly of an explanatory description of these artistic designs, and
+ closing with a hint that the gift was a suggestive and emblematic one, and
+ that the President would recognize the use to which such an instrument
+ should be put.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This suggestion gave Uncle Abe rather a delicate task in his reply,
+ because, slight as the matter seemed, it apparently called for some
+ declaration, or intimation, or faint foreshadowing of policy in reference
+ to the conduct of the war, and the final treatment of the Rebels. But the
+ President&rsquo;s Yankee aptness and not-to-be-caughtness stood him in good
+ stead, and he jerked or wiggled himself out of the dilemma with an uncouth
+ dexterity that was entirely in character; although, without his
+ gesticulation of eye and month,&mdash;and especially the flourish of the
+ whip, with which he imagined himself touching up a pair of fat horses,&mdash;I
+ doubt whether his words would be worth recording, even if I could remember
+ them. The gist of the reply was, that he accepted the whip as an emblem of
+ peace; not punishment; and, this great affair over, we retired out of the
+ presence in high good-humor, only regretting that we could not have seen
+ the President sit down and fold up his legs (which is said to be a most
+ extraordinary spectacle), or have heard him tell one of those delectable
+ stories for which he is so celebrated. A good many of them are afloat upon
+ the common talk of Washington, and are certainly the aptest, pithiest, and
+ funniest little things imaginable; though, to be sure, they smack of the
+ frontier freedom, and would not always bear repetition in a drawing-room,
+ or on the immaculate page of the Atlantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The above passage relating to President Lincoln was one of those omitted
+ from the article as originally published, and the following note was
+ appended to explain the omission, which had been indicated by a line of
+ points:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are compelled to omit two or three pages, in which the author describes
+ the interview, and gives his idea of the personal appearance and
+ deportment of the President. The sketch appears to have been written in a
+ benign spirit, and perhaps conveys a not inaccurate impression of its
+ august subject; but it lacks reverence, and it pains us to see a gentleman
+ of ripe age, and who has spent years under the corrective influence of
+ foreign institutions, falling into the characteristic and most ominous
+ fault of Young America.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good Heavens! what liberties have I been taking with one of the potentates
+ of the earth, and the man on whose conduct more important consequences
+ depend than on that of any other historical personage of the century! But
+ with whom is an American citizen entitled to take a liberty, if not with
+ his own chief magistrate? However, lest the above allusions to President
+ Lincoln&rsquo;s little peculiarities (already well known to the country and to
+ the world) should be misinterpreted, I deem it proper to say a word or two
+ in regard to him, of unfeigned respect and measurable confidence. He is
+ evidently a man of keen faculties, and, what is still more to the purpose,
+ of powerful character. As to his integrity, the people have that intuition
+ of it which is never deceived. Before he actually entered upon his great
+ office, and for a considerable time afterwards, there is no reason to
+ suppose that he adequately estimated the gigantic task about to be imposed
+ on him, or, at least, had any distinct idea how it was to be managed; and
+ I presume there may have been more than one veteran politician who
+ proposed to himself to take the power out of President Lincoln&rsquo;s hands
+ into his own, leaving our honest friend only the public responsibility for
+ the good or ill success of the career. The extremely imperfect development
+ of his statesmanly qualities, at that period, may have justified such
+ designs. But the President is teachable by events, and has now spent a
+ year in a very arduous course of education; he has a flexible mind,
+ capable of much expansion, and convertible towards far loftier studies and
+ activities than those of his early life; and if he came to Washington a
+ backwoods humorist, he has already transformed himself into as good a
+ statesman (to speak moderately) as his prime-minister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other excursions to camps and places of interest in the neighborhood
+ of Washington, we went, one day, to Alexandria. It is a little port on the
+ Potomac, with one or two shabby wharves and docks, resembling those of a
+ fishing-village in New England, and the respectable old brick town rising
+ gently behind. In peaceful times it no doubt bore an aspect of decorous
+ quietude and dulness; but it was now thronged with the Northern soldiery,
+ whose stir and bustle contrasted strikingly with the many closed
+ warehouses, the absence of citizens from their customary haunts, and the
+ lack of any symptom of healthy activity, while army-wagons trundled
+ heavily over the pavements, and sentinels paced the sidewalks, and mounted
+ dragoons dashed to and fro on military errands. I tried to imagine how
+ very disagreeable the presence of a Southern army would be in a sober town
+ of Massachusetts; and the thought considerably lessened my wonder at the
+ cold and shy regards that are cast upon our troops, the gloom, the sullen
+ demeanor, the declared or scarcely hidden sympathy with rebellion, which
+ are so frequent here. It is a strange thing in human life, that the
+ greatest errors both of men and women often spring from their sweetest and
+ most generous qualities; and so, undoubtedly, thousands of warm-hearted,
+ sympathetic, and impulsive persons have joined the Rebels, not from any
+ real zeal for the cause, but because, between two conflicting loyalties,
+ they chose that which necessarily lay nearest the heart. There never
+ existed any other government against which treason was so easy, and could
+ defend itself by such plausible arguments, as against that of the United
+ States. The anomaly of two allegiances (of which that of the State comes
+ nearest home to a man&rsquo;s feelings, and includes the altar and the hearth,
+ while the General Government claims his devotion only to an airy mode of
+ law, and has no symbol but a flag) is exceedingly mischievous in this
+ point of view; for it has converted crowds of honest people into traitors,
+ who seem to themselves not merely innocent but patriotic, and who die for
+ a bad cause with as quiet a conscience as if it were the best. In the vast
+ extent of our country,&mdash;too vast by far to be taken into one small
+ human heart,&mdash;we inevitably limit to our own State, or, at farthest,
+ to our own section, that sentiment of physical love for the soil which
+ renders an Englishman, for example, so intensely sensitive to the dignity
+ and well-being of his little island, that one hostile foot, treading
+ anywhere upon it, would make a bruise on each individual breast. If a man
+ loves his individual State, therefore, and is content to be ruined with
+ her, let us shoot him if we can, but allow him an honorable burial in the
+ soil he fights for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [We do not thoroughly comprehend the author&rsquo;s drift in the foregoing
+ paragraph, but are inclined to think its tone reprehensible, and its
+ tendency impolitic in the present stage of our national difficulties.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Alexandria we visited the tavern in which Colonel Ellsworth was killed,
+ and saw the spot where he fell, and saw the stairs below, whence Jackson
+ fired the fatal shot, and where he himself was slain a moment afterwards;
+ so that the assassin and his victim must have met on the threshold of the
+ spirit-world, and perhaps came to a better understanding before they had
+ taken many steps on the other side. Ellsworth was too generous to bear an
+ immortal grudge for a deed like that, done in hot blood, and by no
+ skulking enemy. The memorial-hunters have completely cut away the original
+ wood-work around the spot, with their pocket-knives; and the staircase,
+ balustrade, and floor, as well as the adjacent doors and door-frames, have
+ recently been renewed; the walls, moreover, are covered with new
+ paper-hangings, the former having been torn off in tatters; and thus it
+ becomes something like a metaphysical question whether the place of the
+ murder actually exists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Driving out of Alexandria, we stopped on the edge of the city to inspect
+ an old slave-pen, which is one of the lions of the place, but a very poor
+ one; and a little farther on, we came to a brick church, where Washington
+ used sometimes to attend service,&mdash;a pre-Revolutionary edifice, with
+ ivy growing over its walls, though not very luxuriantly. Reaching the open
+ country, we saw forts and camps on all sides; some of the tents being
+ placed immediately on the ground, while others were raised over a basement
+ of logs, laid lengthwise, like those of a log-hut, or driven vertically
+ into the soil in a circle,&mdash;thus forming a solid wall, the chinks
+ closed up with Virginia mud, and above it the pyramidal shelter of the
+ tent. Here were in progress all the occupations, and all the idleness, of
+ the soldier in the tented field: some were cooking the company-rations in
+ pots hung over fires in the open air; some played at ball, or developed
+ their muscular power by gymnastic exercise; some read newspapers; some
+ smoked cigars or pipes; and many were cleaning their arms or
+ accoutrements,&mdash;the more carefully, perhaps, because their division
+ was to be reviewed by the Commander-in-Chief that afternoon; others sat on
+ the ground, while their comrades cut their hair,&mdash;it being a
+ soldierly fashion (and for excellent reasons) to crop it within an inch of
+ the skull; others, finally, lay asleep in breast-high tents, with their
+ legs protruding into the open air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We paid a visit to Fort Ellsworth, and from its ramparts (which have been
+ heaped up out of the muddy soil within the last few months, and will
+ require still a year or two to make them verdant) we had a beautiful view
+ of the Potomac, a truly majestic river, and the surrounding country. The
+ fortifications, so numerous in all this region, and now so unsightly with
+ their bare, precipitous sides, will remain as historic monuments,
+ grass-grown and picturesque memorials of an epoch of terror and suffering:
+ they will serve to make our country dearer and more interesting to us, and
+ afford fit soil for poetry to root itself in: for this is a plant which
+ thrives best in spots where blood has been spilt long ago, and grows in
+ abundant clusters in old ditches, such as the moat around Fort Ellsworth
+ will be a century hence. It may seem to be paying dear for what many will
+ reckon but a worthless weed; but the more historical associations we can
+ link with our localities, the richer will be the daily life that feeds
+ upon the past, and the more valuable the things that have been long
+ established: so that our children will be less prodigal than their fathers
+ in sacrificing good institutions to passionate impulses and impracticable
+ theories. This herb of grace, let us hope, will be found in the old
+ footprints of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in an aesthetic point of view, however, the war has done a great deal
+ of enduring mischief, by causing the devastation of great tracts of
+ woodland scenery, in which this part of Virginia would appear to be very
+ rich. Around all the encampments, and everywhere along the road, we saw
+ the bare sites of what had evidently been tracts of hard-wood forest,
+ indicated by the unsightly stumps of well-grown trees, not smoothly felled
+ by regular axe-men, but hacked, haggled, and unevenly amputated, as by a
+ sword or other miserable tool, in an unskilful hand. Fifty years will not
+ repair this desolation. An army destroys everything before and around it,
+ even to the very grass; for the sites of the encampments are converted
+ into barren esplanades, like those of the squares in French cities, where
+ not a blade of grass is allowed to grow. As to the other symptoms of
+ devastation and obstruction, such as deserted houses, unfenced fields, and
+ a general aspect of nakedness and ruin, I know not how much may be due to
+ a normal lack of neatness in the rural life of Virginia, which puts a
+ squalid face even upon a prosperous state of things; but undoubtedly the
+ war must have spoilt what was good, and made the bad a great deal worse.
+ The carcasses of horses were scattered along the wayside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One very pregnant token of a social system thoroughly disturbed was
+ presented by a party of contrabands, escaping out of the mysterious depths
+ of Secessia; and its strangeness consisted in the leisurely delay with
+ which they trudged forward, as dreading no pursuer, and encountering
+ nobody to turn them back. They were unlike the specimens of their race
+ whom we are accustomed to see at the North, and, in my judgment, were far
+ more agreeable. So rudely were they attired,&mdash;as if their garb had
+ grown upon them spontaneously,&mdash;so picturesquely natural in manners,
+ and wearing such a crust of primeval simplicity (which is quite polished
+ away from the Northern black man), that they seemed a kind of creature by
+ themselves, not altogether human, but perhaps quite as good, and akin to
+ the fawns and rustic deities of olden times. I wonder whether I shall
+ excite anybody&rsquo;s wrath by saying this. It is no great matter. At all
+ events, I felt most kindly towards these poor fugitives, but knew not
+ precisely what to wish in their behalf, nor in the least how to help them.
+ For the sake of the manhood which is latent in them, I would not have
+ turned them back; but I should have felt almost as reluctant, on their own
+ account, to hasten them forward to the stranger&rsquo;s land; and I think my
+ prevalent idea was, that, whoever may be benefited by the results of this
+ war, it will not be the present generation of negroes, the childhood of
+ whose race is now gone forever, and who must henceforth fight a hard
+ battle with the world, on very unequal terms. On behalf of my own race, I
+ am glad and can only hope that an inscrutable Providence means good to
+ both parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is an historical circumstance, known to few, that connects the
+ children of the Puritans with these Africans of Virginia in a very
+ singular way. They are our brethren, as being lineal descendants from the
+ Mayflower, the fated womb of which, in her first voyage, sent forth a
+ brood of Pilgrims on Plymouth Rock, and, in a subsequent one, spawned
+ slaves upon the Southern soil,&mdash;a monstrous birth, but with which we
+ have an instinctive sense of kindred, and so are stirred by an
+ irresistible impulse to attempt their rescue, even at the cost of blood
+ and ruin. The character of our sacred ship, I fear, may suffer a little by
+ this revelation; but we must let her white progeny offset her dark one,&mdash;and
+ two such portents never sprang from an identical source before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While we drove onward, a young officer on horseback looked earnestly into
+ the carriage, and recognized some faces that he had seen before; so he
+ rode along by our side, and we pestered him with queries and observations,
+ to which he responded more civilly than they deserved. He was on General
+ McClellan&rsquo;s staff; and a gallant cavalier, high-booted, with a revolver in
+ his belt, and mounted on a noble horse, which trotted hard and high
+ without disturbing the rider in his accustomed seat. His face had a
+ healthy hue of exposure and an expression of careless hardihood; and, as I
+ looked at him, it seemed to me that the war had brought good fortune to
+ the youth of this epoch, if to none beside; since they now make it their
+ daily business to ride a horse and handle a sword, instead of lounging
+ listlessly through the duties, occupations, pleasures&mdash;all tedious
+ alike&mdash;to which the artificial state of society limits a peaceful
+ generation. The atmosphere of the camp and the smoke of the battle-field
+ are morally invigorating; the hardy virtues flourish in them, the nonsense
+ dies like a wilted weed. The enervating effects of centuries of
+ civilization vanish at once, and leave these young men to enjoy a life of
+ hardship, and the exhilarating sense of danger,&mdash;to kill men
+ blamelessly, or to be killed gloriously,&mdash;and to be happy in
+ following out their native instincts of destruction, precisely in the
+ spirit of Homer&rsquo;s heroes, only with some considerable change of mode. One
+ touch of Nature makes not only the whole world, but all time, akin. Set
+ men face to face, with weapons in their hands, and they are as ready to
+ slaughter one another now, after playing at peace and good-will for so
+ many years, as in the rudest ages, that never heard of peace-societies,
+ and thought no wine so delicious as what they quaffed from an enemy&rsquo;s
+ skull. Indeed, if the report of a Congressional committee may be trusted,
+ that old-fashioned kind of goblet has again come into use at the expense
+ of our Northern head-pieces,&mdash;a costly drinking-cup to him that
+ furnishes it! Heaven forgive me for seeming to jest upon such a subject!&mdash;only,
+ it is so odd, when we measure our advances from barbarism, and find
+ ourselves just here! [We hardly expected this outbreak in favor of war
+ from the Peaceable Man; but the justness of our cause makes us all
+ soldiers at heart, however quiet in our outward life. We have heard of
+ twenty Quakers in a single company of a Pennsylvania regiment.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We now approached General McClellan&rsquo;s head-quarters, which, at that time,
+ were established at Fairfield Seminary. The edifice was situated on a
+ gentle elevation, amid very agreeable scenery, and, at a distance, looked
+ like a gentleman&rsquo;s seat. Preparations were going forward for reviewing a
+ division of ten or twelve thousand men, the various regiments composing
+ which had begun to array themselves on an extensive plain, where,
+ methought, there was a more convenient place for a battle than is usually
+ found in this broken and difficult country. Two thousand cavalry made a
+ portion of the troops to be reviewed. By and by we saw a pretty numerous
+ troop of mounted officers, who were congregated on a distant part of the
+ plain, and whom we finally ascertained to be the Commander-in-Chief&rsquo;s
+ staff, with McClellan himself at their head. Our party managed to
+ establish itself in a position conveniently close to the General, to whom,
+ moreover, we had the honor of an introduction; and he bowed, on his
+ horseback, with a good deal of dignity and martial courtesy, but no airs
+ nor fuss nor pretension beyond what his character and rank inevitably gave
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at that juncture, and in fact, up to the present moment, there was,
+ and is, a most fierce and bitter outcry, and detraction loud and low,
+ against General McClellan, accusing him of sloth, imbecility, cowardice,
+ treasonable purposes, and, in short, utterly denying his ability as a
+ soldier, and questioning his integrity as a man. Nor was this to be
+ wondered at; for when before, in all history, do we find a general in
+ command of half a million of men, and in presence of an enemy inferior in
+ numbers and no better disciplined than his own troops, leaving it still
+ debatable, after the better part of a year, whether he is a soldier or no?
+ The question would seem to answer itself in the very asking. Nevertheless,
+ being most profoundly ignorant of the art of war, like the majority of the
+ General&rsquo;s critics, and, on the other hand, having some considerable
+ impressibility by men&rsquo;s characters, I was glad of the opportunity to look
+ him in the face, and to feel whatever influence might reach me from his
+ sphere. So I stared at him, as the phrase goes, with all the eyes I had;
+ and the reader shall have the benefit of what I saw, &mdash;to which he is
+ the more welcome, because, in writing this article, I feel disposed to be
+ singularly frank, and can scarcely restrain myself from telling truths the
+ utterance of which I should get slender thanks for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The General was dressed in a simple, dark-blue uniform, without epaulets,
+ booted to the knee, and with a cloth cap upon his head; and, at first
+ sight, you might have taken him for a corporal of dragoons, of
+ particularly neat and soldier-like aspect, and in the prime of his age and
+ strength. He is only of middling stature, but his build is very compact
+ and sturdy, with broad shoulders and a look of great physical vigor,
+ which, in fact, he is said to possess,&mdash;he and Beauregard having been
+ rivals in that particular, and both distinguished above other men. His
+ complexion is dark and sanguine, with dark hair. He has a strong, bold,
+ soldierly face, full of decision; a Roman nose, by no means a thin
+ prominence, but very thick and firm; and if he follows it (which I should
+ think likely), it may be pretty confidently trusted to guide him aright.
+ His profile would make a more effective likeness than the full face,
+ which, however, is much better in the real man than in any photograph that
+ I have seen. His forehead is not remarkably large, but comes forward at
+ the eyebrows; it is not the brow nor countenance of a prominently
+ intellectual man (not a natural student, I mean, or abstract thinker), but
+ of one whose office it is to handle things practically and to bring about
+ tangible results. His face looked capable of being very stern, but wore,
+ in its repose, when I saw it, an aspect pleasant and dignified; it is not,
+ in its character, an American face, nor an English one. The man on whom he
+ fixes his eye is conscious of him. In his natural disposition, he seems
+ calm and self-possessed, sustaining his great responsibilities cheerfully,
+ without shrinking, or weariness, or spasmodic effort, or damage to his
+ health, but all with quiet, deep-drawn breaths; just as his broad
+ shoulders would bear up a heavy burden without aching beneath it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After we had had sufficient time to peruse the man (so far as it could be
+ done with one pair of very attentive eyes), the General rode off, followed
+ by his cavalcade, and was lost to sight among the troops. They received
+ him with loud shouts, by the eager uproar of which&mdash;now near, now in
+ the centre, now on the outskirts of the division, and now sweeping back
+ towards us in a great volume of sound&mdash;we could trace his progress
+ through the ranks. If he is a coward, or a traitor, or a humbug, or
+ anything less than a brave, true, and able man, that mass of intelligent
+ soldiers, whose lives and honor he had in charge, were utterly deceived,
+ and so was this present writer; for they believed in him, and so did I;
+ and had I stood in the ranks, should have shouted with the lustiest of
+ them. Of course I may be mistaken; my opinion on such a point is worth
+ nothing, although my impression may be worth a little more; neither do I
+ consider the General&rsquo;s antecedents as bearing very decided testimony to
+ his practical soldiership. A thorough knowledge of the science of war
+ seems to be conceded to him; he is allowed to be a good military critic;
+ but all this is possible without his possessing any positive qualities of
+ a great general, just as a literary critic may show the profoundest
+ acquaintance with the principles of epic poetry without being able to
+ produce a single stanza of an epic poem. Nevertheless, I shall not give up
+ my faith in General McClellan&rsquo;s soldiership until he is defeated, nor in
+ his courage and integrity even then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of our excursions was to Harper&rsquo;s Ferry,&mdash;the Directors of
+ the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad having kindly invited us to accompany them
+ on the first trip over the newly laid track, after its breaking up by the
+ Rebels. It began to rain, in the early morning, pretty soon after we left
+ Washington, and continued to pour a cataract throughout the day; so that
+ the aspect of the country was dreary, where it would otherwise have been
+ delightful, as we entered among the hill-scenery that is formed by the
+ subsiding swells of the Alleghanies. The latter part of our journey lay
+ along the shore of the Potomac, in its upper course, where the margin of
+ that noble river is bordered by gray, over-hanging crags, beneath which&mdash;and
+ sometimes right through them&mdash;the railroad takes its way. In one
+ place the Rebels had attempted to arrest a train by precipitating an
+ immense mass of rock down upon the track, by the side of which it still
+ lay, deeply imbedded in the ground, and looking as if it might have lain
+ there since the Deluge. The scenery grew even more picturesque as we
+ proceeded, the bluffs becoming very bold in their descent upon the river,
+ which, at Harper&rsquo;s Ferry, presents as striking a vista among the hills as
+ a painter could desire to see. But a beautiful landscape is a luxury, and
+ luxuries are thrown away amid discomfort; and when we alighted in the
+ tenacious mud and almost fathomless puddle, on the hither side of the
+ Ferry (the ultimate point to which the cars proceeded, since the railroad
+ bridge had been destroyed by the Rebels), I cannot remember that any very
+ rapturous emotions were awakened by the scenery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We paddled and floundered over the ruins of the track, and, scrambling
+ down an embankment, crossed the Potomac by a pontoon-bridge, a thousand
+ feet in length, over the narrow line of which&mdash;level with the river,
+ and rising and subsiding with it&mdash;General Banks had recently led his
+ whole army, with its ponderous artillery and heavy laden wagons. Yet our
+ own tread made it vibrate. The broken bridge of the railroad was a little
+ below us, and at the base of one of its massive piers, in the rocky bed of
+ the river, lay a locomotive, which the Rebels had precipitated there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we passed over, we looked towards the Virginia shore, and beheld the
+ little town of Harper&rsquo;s Ferry, gathered about the base of a round hill and
+ climbing up its steep acclivity; so that it somewhat resembled the
+ Etruscan cities which I have seen among the Apennines, rushing, as it
+ were, down an apparently breakneck height. About midway of the ascent
+ stood a shabby brick church, towards which a difficult path went
+ scrambling up the precipice, indicating, one would say; a very fervent
+ aspiration on the part of the worshippers, unless there was some easier
+ mode of access in another direction. Immediately on the shore of the
+ Potomac, and extending back towards the town, lay the dismal ruins of the
+ United States arsenal and armory, consisting of piles of broken bricks and
+ a waste of shapeless demolition, amid which we saw gun-barrels in heaps of
+ hundreds together. They were the relics of the conflagration, bent with
+ the heat of the fire, and rusted with the wintry rain to which they had
+ since been exposed. The brightest sunshine could not have made the scene
+ cheerful, nor have taken away the gloom from the dilapidated town; for,
+ besides the natural shabbiness, and decayed, unthrifty look of a Virginian
+ village, it has an inexpressible forlornness resulting from the
+ devastations of war and its occupation by both armies alternately. Yet
+ there would be a less striking contrast between Southern and New England
+ villages, if the former were as much in the habit of using white paint as
+ we are. It is prodigiously efficacious in putting a bright face upon a bad
+ matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one small shop which appeared to have nothing for sale. A single
+ man and one or two boys were all the inhabitants in view, except the
+ Yankee sentinels and soldiers, belonging to Massachusetts regiments, who
+ were scattered about pretty numerously. A guard-house stood on the slope
+ of the hill; and in the level street at its base were the offices of the
+ Provost-Marshal and other military authorities, to whom we forthwith
+ reported ourselves. The Provost-Marshal kindly sent a corporal to guide us
+ to the little building which John Brown seized upon as his fortress, and
+ which, after it was stormed by the United States marines, became his
+ temporary prison. It is an old engine-house, rusty and shabby, like every
+ other work of man&rsquo;s hands in this God-forsaken town, and stands fronting
+ upon the river, only a short distance from the bank, nearly at the point
+ where the pontoon-bridge touches the Virginia shore. In its front wall, on
+ each side of the door, are two or three ragged loop-holes, which John
+ Brown perforated for his defence, knocking out merely a brick or two, so
+ as to give himself and his garrison a sight over their rifles. Through
+ these orifices the sturdy old man dealt a good deal of deadly mischief
+ among his assailants, until they broke down the door by thrusting against
+ it with a ladder, and tumbled headlong in upon him. I shall not pretend to
+ be an admirer of old John Brown, any farther than sympathy with Whittier&rsquo;s
+ excellent ballad about him may go; nor did I expect ever to shrink so
+ unutterably from any apophthegm of a sage, whose happy lips have uttered a
+ hundred golden sentences, as from that saying (perhaps falsely attributed
+ to so honored a source), that the death of this blood-stained fanatic has
+ &ldquo;made the Gallows as venerable as the Cross!&rdquo; Nobody was ever more justly
+ hanged. He won his martyrdom fairly, and took it firmly. He himself, I am
+ persuaded (such was his natural integrity), would have acknowledged that
+ Virginia had a right to take the life which he had staked and lost;
+ although it would have been better for her, in the hour that is fast
+ coming, if she could generously have forgotten the criminality of his
+ attempt in its enormous folly. On the other hand, any common-sensible man,
+ looking at the matter unsentimentally, must have felt a certain
+ intellectual satisfaction in seeing him hanged, if it were only in
+ requittal of his preposterous miscalculation of possibilities. [Can it be
+ a son of old Massachusetts who utters this abominable sentiment? For
+ shame.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, coolly as I seem to say these things, my Yankee heart stirred
+ triumphantly when I saw the use to which John Brown&rsquo;s fortress and
+ prison-house has now been put. What right have I to complain of any other
+ man&rsquo;s foolish impulses, when I cannot possibly control my own? The
+ engine-house is now a place of confinement for Rebel prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Massachusetts soldier stood on guard, but readily permitted our whole
+ party to enter. It was a wretched place. A room of perhaps twenty-five
+ feet square occupied the whole interior of the building, having an iron
+ stove in its centre, whence a rusty funnel ascended towards a hole in the
+ roof, which served the purposes of ventilation, as well as for the exit of
+ smoke. We found ourselves right in the midst of the Rebels, some of whom
+ lay on heaps of straw, asleep, or, at all events, giving no sign of
+ consciousness; others sat in the corners of the room, huddled close
+ together, and staring with a lazy kind of interest at the visitors; two
+ were astride of some planks, playing with the dirtiest pack of cards that
+ I ever happened to see. There was only one figure in the least military
+ among all these twenty prisoners of war,&mdash;a man with a dark,
+ intelligent, moustached face, wearing a shabby cotton uniform, which he
+ had contrived to arrange with a degree of soldierly smartness, though it
+ had evidently borne the brunt of a very filthy campaign. He stood erect,
+ and talked freely with those who addressed him, telling them his place of
+ residence, the number of his regiment, the circumstances of his capture,
+ and such other particulars as their Northern inquisitiveness prompted them
+ to ask. I liked the manliness of his deportment; he was neither ashamed,
+ nor afraid, nor in the slightest degree sullen, peppery, or contumacious,
+ but bore himself as if whatever animosity he had felt towards his enemies
+ was left upon the battle-field, and would not be resumed till he had again
+ a weapon in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither could I detect a trace of hostile feeling in the countenance,
+ words, or manner of any prisoner there. Almost to a man, they were simple,
+ bumpkin-like fellows, dressed in homespun clothes, with faces singularly
+ vacant of meaning, but sufficiently good-humored: a breed of men, in
+ short, such as I did not suppose to exist in this country, although I have
+ seen their like in some other parts of the world. They were peasants, and
+ of a very low order; a class of people with whom our Northern rural
+ population has not a single trait in common. They were exceedingly
+ respectful,&mdash;more so than a rustic New-Englander ever dreams of being
+ towards anybody, except perhaps his minister; and had they worn any hats
+ they would probably have been self-constrained to take them off, under the
+ unusual circumstance of being permitted to hold conversation with
+ well-dressed persons. It is my belief that not a single bumpkin of them
+ all (the moustached soldier always excepted) had the remotest
+ comprehension of what they had been fighting for, or how they had deserved
+ to be shut up in that dreary hole; nor, possibly, did they care to inquire
+ into this latter mystery, but took it as a godsend to be suffered to lie
+ here in a heap of unwashed human bodies, well warmed and well foddered
+ to-day, and without the necessity of bothering themselves about the
+ possible hunger and cold of to-morrow. Their dark prison-life may have
+ seemed to them the sunshine of all their lifetime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one poor wretch, a wild-beast of a man, at whom I gazed with
+ greater interest than at his fellows; although I know not that each one of
+ them, in their semi-barbarous moral state, might not have been capable of
+ the same savage impulse that had made this particular individual a horror
+ to all beholders. At the close of some battle or skirmish, a wounded Union
+ soldier had crept on hands and knees to his feet, and besought his
+ assistance,&mdash;not dreaming that any creature in human shape, in the
+ Christian land where they had so recently been brethren, could refuse it.
+ But this man (this fiend, if you prefer to call him so, though I would not
+ advise it) flung a bitter curse at the poor Northerner, and absolutely
+ trampled the soul out of his body, as he lay writhing beneath his feet.
+ The fellow&rsquo;s face was horribly ugly; but I am not quite sure that I should
+ have noticed it if I had not known his story. He spoke not a word, and met
+ nobody&rsquo;s eye, but kept staring upward into the smoky vacancy towards the
+ ceiling, where, it might be, he beheld a continual portraiture of his
+ victim&rsquo;s horror-stricken agonies. I rather fancy, however, that his moral
+ sense was yet too torpid to trouble him with such remorseful visions, and
+ that, for his own part, he might have had very agreeable reminiscences of
+ the soldier&rsquo;s death, if other eyes had not been bent reproachfully upon
+ him and warned him that something was amiss. It was this reproach in other
+ men&rsquo;s eyes that made him look aside. He was a wild-beast, as I began with
+ saying,&mdash;an unsophisticated wild-beast,&mdash;while the rest of us
+ are partially tamed, though still the scent of blood excites some of the
+ savage instincts of our nature. What this wretch needed, in order to make
+ him capable of the degree of mercy and benevolence that exists in us, was
+ simply such a measure of moral and intellectual development as we have
+ received; and, in my mind, the present war is so well justified by no
+ other consideration as by the probability that it will free this class of
+ Southern whites from a thraldom in which they scarcely begin to be
+ responsible beings. So far as the education of the heart is concerned, the
+ negroes have apparently the advantage of them; and as to other schooling,
+ it is practically unattainable by black or white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Looking round at these poor prisoners, therefore, it struck me as an
+ immense absurdity that they should fancy us their enemies; since, whether
+ we intend it so or no, they have a far greater stake on our success than
+ we can possibly have. For ourselves, the balance of advantages between
+ defeat and triumph may admit of question. For them, all truly valuable
+ things are dependent on our complete success; for thence would come the
+ regeneration of a people,&mdash;the removal of a foul scurf that has
+ overgrown their life, and keeps then in a state of disease and
+ decrepitude, one of the chief symptoms of which is, that, the more they
+ suffer and are debased, the more they imagine themselves strong and
+ beautiful. No human effort, on a grand scale, has ever yet resulted
+ according to the purpose, of its projectors. The advantages are always
+ incidental. Man&rsquo;s accidents are God&rsquo;s purposes. We miss the good we
+ sought, and do the good we little cared for. [The author seems to imagine
+ that he has compressed a great deal of meaning into these little, hard,
+ dry pellets of aphoristic wisdom. We disagree with him. The counsels of
+ wise and good men are often coincident with the purposes of Providence;
+ and the present war promises to illustrate our remark.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Government evidently knows when and where to lay its finger upon its
+ most available citizens; for, quite unexpectedly, we were joined by some
+ other gentlemen, scarcely less competent than ourselves, in a commission
+ to proceed to Fortress Monroe and examine into things in general. Of
+ course, official propriety compels us to be extremely guarded in our
+ description of the interesting objects which this expedition opened to our
+ view. There can be no harm, however, in stating that we were received by
+ the commander of the fortress with a kind of acid good-nature, or mild
+ cynicism, that indicated him to be a humorist, characterized by certain
+ rather pungent peculiarities, yet of no unamiable cast. He is a small,
+ thin, old gentleman, set off by a large pair of brilliant epaulets,&mdash;the
+ only pair, so far as my observation went, that adorn the shoulders of any
+ officer in the Union army. Either for our inspection, or because the
+ matter had already been arranged, he drew out a regiment of Zouaves that
+ formed the principal part of his garrison, and appeared at their head,
+ sitting on horseback with rigid perpendicularity, and affording us a vivid
+ idea of the disciplinarian of Baron Steuben&rsquo;s school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no question of the General&rsquo;s military qualities; he must have
+ been especially useful in converting raw recruits into trained and
+ efficient soldiers. But valor and martial skill are of so evanescent a
+ character (hardly less fleeting than a woman&rsquo;s beauty), that Government
+ has perhaps taken the safer course in assigning to this gallant officer,
+ though distinguished in former wars, no more active duty than the
+ guardianship of an apparently impregnable fortress. The ideas of military
+ men solidify and fossilize so fast, while military science makes such
+ rapid advances, that even here there might be a difficulty. An active,
+ diversified, and therefore a youthful, ingenuity is required by the quick
+ exigencies of this singular war. Fortress Monroe, for example, in spite of
+ the massive solidity of its ramparts, its broad and deep moat, and all the
+ contrivances of defence that were known at the not very remote epoch of
+ its construction, is now pronounced absolutely incapable of resisting the
+ novel modes of assault which may be brought to bear upon it. It can only
+ be the flexible talent of a young man that will evolve a new efficiency
+ out of its obsolete strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pity that old men grow unfit for war, not only by their incapacity
+ for new ideas, but by the peaceful and unadventurous tendencies that
+ gradually possess themselves of the once turbulent disposition, which used
+ to snuff the battle-smoke as its congenial atmosphere. It is a pity;
+ because it would be such an economy of human existence, if time-stricken
+ people (whose value I have the better right to estimate, as reckoning
+ myself one of them) could snatch from their juniors the exclusive
+ privilege of carrying on the war. In case of death upon the battle-field,
+ how unequal would be the comparative sacrifice! On one part, a few
+ unenjoyable years, the little remnant of a life grown torpid; on the
+ other, the many fervent summers of manhood in its spring and prime, with
+ all that they include of possible benefit to mankind. Then, too, a bullet
+ offers such a brief and easy way, such a pretty little orifice, through
+ which the weary spirit might seize the opportunity to be exhaled! If I had
+ the ordering of these matters, fifty should be the tenderest age at which
+ a recruit might be accepted for training; at fifty-five or sixty, I would
+ consider him eligible for most kinds of military duty and exposure,
+ excluding that of a forlorn hope, which no soldier should be permitted to
+ volunteer upon, short of the ripe age of seventy. As a general rule, these
+ venerable combatants should have the preference for all dangerous and
+ honorable service in the order of their seniority, with a distinction in
+ favor of those whose infirmities might render their lives less worth the
+ keeping. Methinks there would be no more Bull Runs; a warrior with gout in
+ his toe, or rheumatism in his joints, or with one foot in the grave, would
+ make a sorry fugitive!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this admirable system, the productive part of the population would be
+ undisturbed even by the bloodiest war; and, best of all, those thousands
+ upon thousands of our Northern girls, whose proper mates will perish in
+ camp-hospitals or on Southern battle-fields, would avoid their doom of
+ forlorn old-maidenhood. But, no doubt, the plan will be pooh-poohed down
+ by the War Department; though it could scarcely be more disastrous than
+ the one on which we began the war, when a young army was struck with
+ paralysis through the age of its commander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The waters around Fortress Monroe were thronged with a gallant array of
+ ships of war and transports, wearing the Union flag,&mdash;&ldquo;Old Glory,&rdquo; as
+ I hear it called in these days. A little withdrawn from our national fleet
+ lay two French frigates, and, in another direction, an English sloop,
+ under that banner which always makes itself visible, like a red portent in
+ the air, wherever there is strife. In pursuance of our official duty
+ (which had no ascertainable limits), we went on board the flag-ship, and
+ were shown over every part of her, and down into her depths, inspecting
+ her gallant crew, her powerful armament, her mighty engines, and her
+ furnaces, where the fires are always kept burning, as well at midnight as
+ at noon, so that it would require only five minutes to put the vessel
+ under full steam. This vigilance has been felt necessary ever since the
+ Merrimack made that terrible dash from Norfolk. Splendid as she is,
+ however, and provided with all but the very latest improvements in naval
+ armament, the Minnesota belongs to a class of vessels that will be built
+ no more, nor ever fight another battle,&mdash;being as much a thing of the
+ past as any of the ships of Queen Elizabeth&rsquo;s time, which grappled with
+ the galleons of the Spanish Armada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On her quarter-deck, an elderly flag-officer was pacing to and fro, with a
+ self-conscious dignity to which a touch of the gout or rheumatism perhaps
+ contributed a little additional stiffness. He seemed to be a gallant
+ gentleman, but of the old, slow, and pompous school of naval worthies, who
+ have grown up amid rules, forms, and etiquette which were adopted
+ full-blown from the British navy into ours, and are somewhat too cumbrous
+ for the quick spirit of to-day. This order of nautical heroes will
+ probably go down, along with the ships in which they fought valorously and
+ strutted most intolerably. How can an admiral condescend to go to sea in
+ an iron pot? What space and elbow-room can be found for quarter-deck
+ dignity in the cramped lookout of the Monitor, or even in the twenty-feet
+ diameter of her cheese-box? All the pomp and splendor of naval warfare are
+ gone by. Henceforth there must come up a race of enginemen and
+ smoke-blackened cannoneers, who will hammer away at their enemies under
+ the direction of a single pair of eyes; and even heroism&mdash; so deadly
+ a gripe is Science laying on our noble possibilities&mdash;will become a
+ quality of very minor importance, when its possessor cannot break through
+ the iron crust of his own armament and give the world a glimpse of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At no great distance from the Minnesota lay the strangest-looking craft I
+ ever saw. It was a platform of iron, so nearly on a level with the water
+ that the swash of the waves broke over it, under the impulse of a very
+ moderate breeze; and on this platform was raised a circular structure,
+ likewise of iron, and rather broad and capacious, but of no great height.
+ It could not be called a vessel at all; it was a machine,&mdash;and I have
+ seen one of somewhat similar appearance employed in cleaning out the
+ docks; or, for lack of a better similitude, it looked like a gigantic
+ rat-trap. It was ugly, questionable, suspicious, evidently mischievous,
+ &mdash;nay, I will allow myself to call it devilish; for this was the new
+ war-fiend, destined, along with others of the same breed, to annihilate
+ whole navies and batter down old supremacies. The wooden walls of Old
+ England cease to exist, and a whole history of naval renown reaches its
+ period, now that the Monitor comes smoking into view; while the billows
+ dash over what seems her deck, and storms bury even her turret in green
+ water, as she burrows and snorts along, oftener under the surface than
+ above. The singularity of the object has betrayed me into a more ambitious
+ vein of description than I often indulge; and, after all, I might as well
+ have contented myself with simply saying that she looked very queer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Going on board, we were surprised at the extent and convenience of her
+ interior accommodations. There is a spacious ward-room, nine or ten feet
+ in height, besides a private cabin for the commander, and sleeping
+ accommodations on an ample scale; the whole well lighted and ventilated,
+ though beneath the surface of the water. Forward, or aft (for it is
+ impossible to tell stem from stern), the crew are relatively quite as well
+ provided for as the officers. It was like finding a palace, with all its
+ conveniences, under the sea. The inaccessibility, the apparent
+ impregnability, of this submerged iron fortress are most satisfactory; the
+ officers and crew get down through a little hole in the deck, hermetically
+ seal themselves, and go below; and until they see fit to reappear, there
+ would seem to be no power given to man whereby they can be brought to
+ light. A storm of cannon-shot damages them no more than a handful of dried
+ peas. We saw the shot-marks made by the great artillery of the Merrimack
+ on the outer casing of the iron tower; they were about the breadth and
+ depth of shallow saucers, almost imperceptible dents, with no
+ corresponding bulge on the interior surface. In fact, the thing looked
+ altogether too safe; though it may not prove quite an agreeable
+ predicament to be thus boxed up in impenetrable iron, with the
+ possibility, one would imagine, of being sent to the bottom of the sea,
+ and, even there, not drowned, but stifled. Nothing, however, can exceed
+ the confidence of the officers in this new craft. It was pleasant to see
+ their benign exultation in her powers of mischief, and the delight with
+ which they exhibited the circumvolutory movement of the tower, the quick
+ thrusting forth of the immense guns to deliver their ponderous missiles,
+ and then the immediate recoil, and the security behind the closed
+ port-holes. Yet even this will not long be the last and most terrible
+ improvement in the science of war. Already we hear of vessels the armament
+ of which is to act entirely beneath the surface of the water; so that,
+ with no other external symptoms than a great bubbling and foaming, and
+ gush of smoke, and belch of smothered thunder out of the yeasty waves,
+ there shall be a deadly fight going on below,&mdash;and, by and by, a
+ sucking whirlpool, as one of the ships goes down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Monitor was certainly an object of great interest; but on our way to
+ Newport News, whither we next went, we saw a spectacle that affected us
+ with far profounder emotion. It was the sight of the few sticks that are
+ left of the frigate Congress, stranded near the shore,&mdash;and still
+ more, the masts of the Cumberland rising midway out of the water, with a
+ tattered rag of a pennant fluttering from one of them. The invisible hull
+ of the latter ship seems to be careened over, so that the three masts
+ stand slantwise; the rigging looks quite unimpaired, except that a few
+ ropes dangle loosely from the yards. The flag (which never was struck,
+ thank Heaven!) is entirely hidden under the waters of the bay, but is
+ still doubtless waving in its old place, although it floats to and fro
+ with the swell and reflex of the tide, instead of rustling on the breeze.
+ A remnant of the dead crew still man the sunken ship, and sometimes a
+ drowned body floats up to the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was a noble fight. When was ever a better word spoken than that of
+ Commodore Smith, the father of the commander of the Congress, when he
+ heard that his son&rsquo;s ship was surrendered? &ldquo;Then Joe&rsquo;s dead!&rdquo; said he; and
+ so it proved. Nor can any warrior be more certain of enduring renown than
+ the gallant Morris, who fought so well the final battle of the old system
+ of naval warfare, and won glory for his country and himself out of
+ inevitable disaster and defeat. That last gun from the Cumberland, when
+ her deck was half submerged, sounded the requiem of many sinking ships.
+ Then went down all the navies of Europe and our own, Old Ironsides and
+ all, and Trafalgar and a thousand other fights became only a memory, never
+ to be acted over again; and thus our brave countrymen come last in the
+ long procession of heroic sailors that includes Blake and Nelson, and so
+ many mariners of England, and other mariners as brave as they, whose
+ renown is our native inheritance. There will be other battles, but no more
+ such tests of seamanship and manhood as the battles of the past; and,
+ moreover, the Millennium is certainly approaching, because human strife is
+ to be transferred from the heart and personality of man into cunning
+ contrivances of machinery, which by and by will fight out our wars with
+ only the clank and smash of iron, strewing the field with broken engines,
+ but damaging nobody&rsquo;s little finger except by accident. Such is obviously
+ the tendency of modern improvement. But, in the mean while, so long as
+ manhood retains any part of its pristine value, no country can afford to
+ let gallantry like that of Morris and his crew, any more than that of the
+ brave Worden, pass unhonored and unrewarded. If the Government do nothing,
+ let the people take the matter into their own hands, and cities give him
+ swords, gold boxes, festivals of triumph, and, if he needs it, heaps of
+ gold. Let poets brood upon the theme, and make themselves sensible how
+ much of the past and future is contained within its compass, till its
+ spirit shall flash forth in the lightning of a song!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these various excursions, and a good many others (including one to
+ Manassas), we gained a pretty lively idea of what was going on; but, after
+ all, if compelled to pass a rainy day in the hall and parlors of Willard&rsquo;s
+ Hotel, it proved about as profitably spent as if we had floundered through
+ miles of Virginia mud, in quest of interesting matter. This hotel, in
+ fact, may be much more justly called the centre of Washington and the
+ Union than either the Capitol, the White House, or the State Department.
+ Everybody may be seen there. It is the meeting-place of the true
+ representatives of the country,&mdash;not such as are chosen blindly and
+ amiss by electors who take a folded ballot from the hand of a local
+ politician, and thrust it into the ballot-box unread, but men who
+ gravitate or are attracted hither by real business, or a native impulse to
+ breathe the intensest atmosphere of the nation&rsquo;s life, or a genuine
+ anxiety to see how this life-and-death struggle is going to deal with us.
+ Nor these only, but all manner of loafers. Never, in any other spot, was
+ there such a miscellany of people. You exchange nods with governors of
+ sovereign States; you elbow illustrious men, and tread on the toes of
+ generals; you hear statesmen and orators speaking in their familiar tones.
+ You are mixed up with office-seekers, wire-pullers, inventors, artists,
+ poets, prosers (including editors, army-correspondents, attaches of
+ foreign journals, and long-winded talkers), clerks, diplomatists,
+ mail-contractors, railway-directors, until your own identity is lost among
+ them. Occasionally you talk with a man whom you have never before heard
+ of, and are struck with the brightness of a thought, and fancy that there
+ is more wisdom hidden among the obscure than is anywhere revealed among
+ the famous. You adopt the universal habit of the place, and call for
+ mint-julep, a whiskey-skin, a gin-cocktail, a brandy smash, or a glass of
+ pure Old Rye; for the conviviality of Washington sets in at an early hour,
+ and, so far as I had opportunity of observing, never terminates at any
+ hour, and all these drinks are continually in request by almost all these
+ people. A constant atmosphere of cigar-smoke, too, envelops the motley
+ crowd, and forms a sympathetic medium, in which men meet more closely and
+ talk more frankly than in any other kind of air. If legislators would
+ smoke in session, they might speak truer words, and fewer of them, and
+ bring about more valuable results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is curious to observe what antiquated figures and costumes sometimes
+ make their appearance at Willard&rsquo;s. You meet elderly men with frilled
+ shirt-fronts, for example, the fashion of which adornment passed away from
+ among the people of this world half a century ago. It is as if one of
+ Stuart&rsquo;s portraits were walking abroad. I see no way of accounting for
+ this, except that the trouble of the times, the impiety of traitors, and
+ the peril of our sacred Union and Constitution have disturbed, in their
+ honored graves, some of the venerable fathers of the country, and summoned
+ them forth to protest against the meditated and half-accomplished
+ sacrilege. If it be so, their wonted fires are not altogether extinguished
+ in their ashes,&mdash;in their throats, I might rather say,&mdash;for I
+ beheld one of these excellent old men quaffing such a horn of Bourbon
+ whiskey as a toper of the present century would be loath to venture upon.
+ But, really, one would be glad to know where these strange figures come
+ from. It shows, at any rate, how many remote, decaying villages and
+ country-neighborhoods of the North, and forest-nooks of the West, and old
+ mansion-houses in cities, are shaken by the tremor of our native soil, so
+ that men long hidden in retirement put on the garments of their youth and
+ hurry out to inquire what is the matter. The old men whom we see here have
+ generally more marked faces than the young ones, and naturally enough;
+ since it must be an extraordinary vigor and renewability of life that can
+ overcome the rusty sloth of age, and keep the senior flexible enough to
+ take an interest in new things; whereas hundreds of commonplace young men
+ come hither to stare with eyes of vacant wonder, and with vague hopes of
+ finding out what they are fit for. And this war (we may say so much in its
+ favor) has been the means of discovering that important secret to not a
+ few.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We saw at Willard&rsquo;s many who had thus found out for themselves, that, when
+ Nature gives a young man no other utilizable faculty, she must be
+ understood as intending him for a soldier. The bulk of the army had moved
+ out of Washington before we reached the city; yet it seemed to me that at
+ least two thirds of the guests and idlers at the hotel were one or another
+ token of the military profession. Many of them, no doubt, were
+ self-commissioned officers, and had put on the buttons and the
+ shoulder-straps, and booted themselves to the knees, merely because
+ captain, in these days, is so good a travelling-name. The majority,
+ however, had been duly appointed by the President, but might be none the
+ better warriors for that. It was pleasant, occasionally, to distinguish a
+ grizzly veteran among this crowd of carpet-knights,&mdash;the trained
+ soldier of a lifetime, long ago from West Point, who had spent his prime
+ upon the frontier, and very likely could show an Indian bullet-mark on his
+ breast,&mdash;if such decorations, won in an obscure warfare, were worth
+ the showing now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question often occurred to me,&mdash;and, to say the truth, it added
+ an indefinable piquancy to the scene,&mdash;what proportion of all these
+ people, whether soldiers or civilians, were true at heart to the Union,
+ and what part were tainted, more or less, with treasonable sympathies and
+ wishes, even if such had never blossomed into purpose. Traitors there were
+ among them,&mdash;no doubt of that,&mdash;civil servants of the public,
+ very reputable persons, who yet deserved to dangle from a cord; or men who
+ buttoned military coats over their breasts, hiding perilous secrets there,
+ which might bring the gallant officer to stand pale-faced before a file of
+ musketeers, with his open grave behind him. But, without insisting upon
+ such picturesque criminality and punishment as this, an observer, who kept
+ both his eyes and heart open, would find it by no means difficult to
+ discern that many residents and visitors of Washington so far sided with
+ the South as to desire nothing more nor better than to see everything
+ reestablished a little worse than its former basis. If the cabinet of
+ Richmond were transferred to the Federal city, and the North awfully
+ snubbed, at least, and driven back within its old political limits, they
+ would deem it a happy day. It is no wonder, and, if we look at the matter
+ generously, no unpardonable crime. Very excellent people hereabouts
+ remember the many dynasties in which the Southern character has been
+ predominant, and contrast the genial courtesy, the warm and graceful
+ freedom of that region, with what they call (though I utterly disagree
+ with them) the frigidity of our Northern manners, and the Western
+ plainness of the President. They have a conscientious, though mistaken
+ belief, that the South was driven out of the Union by intolerable wrong on
+ our part, and that we are responsible for having compelled true patriots
+ to love only half their country instead of the whole, and brave soldiers
+ to draw their swords against the Constitution which they would once have
+ died for,&mdash;to draw them, too, with a bitterness of animosity which is
+ the only symptom of brotherhood (since brothers hate each other best) that
+ any longer exists. They whisper these things with tears in their eyes, and
+ shake their heads, and stoop their poor old shoulders, at the tidings of
+ another and another Northern victory, which, in their opinion, puts
+ farther off the remote, the already impossible, chance of a reunion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am sorry for them, though it is by no means a sorrow without hope. Since
+ the matter has gone so far, there seems to be no way but to go on winning
+ victories, and establishing peace and a truer union in another generation,
+ at the expense, probably, of greater trouble, in the present one, than any
+ other people ever voluntarily suffered. We woo the South &ldquo;as the Lion
+ wooes his bride;&rdquo; it is a rough courtship, but perhaps love and a quiet
+ household may come of it at last. Or, if we stop short of that blessed
+ consummation, heaven was heaven still, as Milton sings, after Lucifer and
+ a third part of the angels had seceded from its golden palaces,&mdash;and
+ perhaps all the more heavenly, because so many gloomy brows, and soured,
+ vindictive hearts, had gone to plot ineffectual schemes of mischief
+ elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [We regret the innuendo in the concluding sentence. The war can never be
+ allowed to terminate, except in the complete triumph of Northern
+ principles. We hold the event in our own hands, and may choose whether to
+ terminate it by the methods already so successfully used, or by other
+ means equally within our control, and calculated to be still more speedily
+ efficacious. In truth, the work is already done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We should be sorry to cast a doubt on the Peaceable Man&rsquo;s loyalty, but he
+ will allow us to say that we consider him premature in his kindly feelings
+ towards traitors and sympathizers with treason. As the author himself says
+ of John Brown (and, so applied, we thought it an atrociously cold-blooded
+ dictum), &ldquo;any common-sensible man would feel an intellectual satisfaction
+ in seeing them hanged, were it only for their preposterous miscalculation
+ of possibilities.&rdquo; There are some degrees of absurdity that put Reason
+ herself into a rage, and affect us like an intolerable crime,&mdash;which
+ this Rebellion is, into the bargain.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ALICE DOANE&rsquo;S APPEAL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On a pleasant afternoon of June, it was my good fortune to be the
+ companion of two young ladies in a walk. The direction of our course being
+ left to me, I led them neither to Legge&rsquo;s Hill, nor to the Cold Spring,
+ nor to the rude shores and old batteries of the Neck, nor yet to Paradise;
+ though if the latter place were rightly named, my fair friends would have
+ been at home there. We reached the outskirts of the town, and turning
+ aside from a street of tanners and curriers, began to ascend a hill, which
+ at a distance, by its dark slope and the even line of its summit,
+ resembled a green rampart along the road. It was less steep than its
+ aspect threatened. The eminence formed part of an extensive tract of
+ pasture land, and was traversed by cow paths in various directions; but,
+ strange to tell, though the whole slope and summit were of a peculiar deep
+ green, scarce a blade of grass was visible from the base upward. This
+ deceitful verdure was occasioned by a plentiful crop of &ldquo;wood-wax,&rdquo; which
+ wears the same dark and glossy green throughout the summer, except at one
+ short period, when it puts forth a profusion of yellow blossoms. At that
+ season, to a distant spectator, the hill appears absolutely overlaid with
+ gold, or covered with a glory of sunshine, even beneath a clouded sky. But
+ the curious wanderer on the hill will perceive that all the grass, and
+ everything that should nourish man or beast, has been destroyed by this
+ vile and ineradicable weed: its tufted roots make the soil their own, and
+ permit nothing else to vegetate among them; so that a physical curse may
+ be said to have blasted the spot, where guilt and frenzy consummated the
+ most execrable scene that our history blushes to record. For this was the
+ field where superstition won her darkest triumph; the high place where our
+ fathers set up their shame, to the mournful gaze of generations far
+ remote. The dust of martyrs was beneath our feet. We stood on Gallows
+ Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my own part, I have often courted the historic influence of the spot.
+ But it is singular how few come on pilgrimage to this famous hill; how
+ many spend their lives almost at its base, and never once obey the summons
+ of the shadowy past, as it beckons them to the summit. Till a year or two
+ since, this portion of our history had been very imperfectly written, and,
+ as we are not a people of legend or tradition, it was not every citizen of
+ our ancient town that could tell, within half a century, so much as the
+ date of the witchcraft delusion. Recently, indeed, an historian has
+ treated the subject in a manner that will keep his name alive, in the only
+ desirable connection with the errors of our ancestry, by converting the
+ hill of their disgrace into an honorable monument of his own antiquarian
+ lore, and of that better wisdom, which draws the moral while it tells the
+ tale. But we are a people of the present, and have no heartfelt interest
+ in the olden time. Every fifth of November, in commemoration of they know
+ not what, or rather without an idea beyond the momentary blaze, the young
+ men scare the town with bonfires on this haunted height, but never dream
+ of paying funeral honors to those who died so wrongfully, and, without a
+ coffin or a prayer, were buried here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though with feminine susceptibility, my companions caught all the
+ melancholy associations of the scene, yet these could but imperfectly
+ overcome the gayety of girlish spirits. Their emotions came and went with
+ quick vicissitude, and sometimes combined to form a peculiar and delicious
+ excitement, the mirth brightening the gloom into a sunny shower of
+ feeling, and a rainbow in the mind. My own more sombre mood was tinged by
+ theirs. With now a merry word and next a sad one, we trod among the
+ tangled weeds, and almost hoped that our feet would sink into the hollow
+ of a witch&rsquo;s grave. Such vestiges were to be found within the memory of
+ man, but have vanished now, and with them, I believe, all traces of the
+ precise spot of the executions. On the long and broad ridge of the
+ eminence, there is no very decided elevation of any one point, nor other
+ prominent marks, except the decayed stumps of two trees, standing near
+ each other, and here and there the rocky substance of the hill, peeping
+ just above the wood-wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are few such prospects of town and village, woodland and cultivated
+ field, steeples and country seats, as we beheld from this unhappy spot. No
+ blight had fallen on old Essex; all was prosperity and riches, healthfully
+ distributed. Before us lay our native town, extending from the foot of the
+ hill to the harbor, level as a chess board, embraced by two arms of the
+ sea, and filling the whole peninsula with a close assemblage of wooden
+ roofs, overtopped by many a spire, and intermixed with frequent heaps of
+ verdure, where trees threw up their shade from unseen trunks. Beyond was
+ the bay and its islands, almost the only objects, in a country unmarked by
+ strong natural features, on which time and human toil had produced no
+ change. Retaining these portions of the scene, and also the peaceful glory
+ and tender gloom of the declining sun, we threw, in imagination, a veil of
+ deep forest over the land, and pictured a few scattered villages, and this
+ old town itself a village, as when the prince of hell bore sway there. The
+ idea thus gained of its former aspect, its quaint edifices standing far
+ apart, with peaked roofs and projecting stories, and its single
+ meeting-house pointing up a tall spire in the midst; the vision, in short,
+ of the town in 1692, served to introduce a wondrous tale of those old
+ times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had brought the manuscript in my pocket. It was one of a series written
+ years ago, when my pen, now sluggish and perhaps feeble, because I have
+ not munch to hope or fear, was driven by stronger external motives and a
+ more passionate impulse within, than I am fated to feel again. Three or
+ four of these tales had appeared in the &ldquo;Token,&rdquo; after a long time and
+ various adventures, but had encumbered me with no troublesome notoriety,
+ even in my birthplace. One great heap had met a brighter destiny: they had
+ fed the flames; thoughts meant to delight the world and endure for ages
+ had perished in a moment, and stirred not a single heart but mine. The
+ story now to be introduced, and another, chanced to be in kinder custody
+ at the time, and thus, by no conspicuous merits of their own, escaped
+ destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies, in consideration that I had never before intruded my
+ performances on them, by any but the legitimate medium, through the press,
+ consented to hear me read. I made them sit down on a moss-grown rock,
+ close by the spot where we chose to believe that the death tree had stood.
+ After a little hesitation on my part, caused by a dread of renewing my
+ acquaintance with fantasies that had lost their charm in the ceaseless
+ flux of mind, I began the tale, which opened darkly with the discovery of
+ a murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hundred years, and nearly half that time, have elapsed since the body of
+ a murdered man was found, at about the distance of three miles, on the old
+ road to Boston. He lay in a solitary spot, on the bank of a small lake,
+ which the severe frost of December had covered with a sheet of ice.
+ Beneath this, it seemed to have been the intention of the murderer to
+ conceal his victim in a chill and watery grave, the ice being deeply
+ hacked, perhaps with the weapon that had slain him, though its solidity
+ was too stubborn for the patience of a man with blood upon his hand. The
+ corpse therefore reclined on the earth, but was separated from the road by
+ a thick growth of dwarf pines. There had been a slight fall of snow during
+ the night, and as if nature were shocked at the deed, and strove to hide
+ it with her frozen tears, a little drifted heap had partly buried the
+ body, and lay deepest over the pale dead face. An early traveller, whose
+ dog had led him to the spot, ventured to uncover the features, but was
+ affrighted by their expression. A look of evil and scornful triumph had
+ hardened on them, and made death so life-like and so terrible, that the
+ beholder at once took flight, as swiftly as if the stiffened corpse would
+ rise up and follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I read on, and identified the body as that of a young man, a stranger in
+ the country, but resident during several preceding months in the town
+ which lay at our feet. The story described, at some length, the excitement
+ caused by the murder, the unavailing quest after the perpetrator, the
+ funeral ceremonies, and other commonplace matters, in the course of which,
+ I brought forward the personages who were to move among the succeeding
+ events. They were but three. A young man and his sister; the former
+ characterized by a diseased imagination and morbid feelings; the latter,
+ beautiful and virtuous, and instilling something of her own excellence
+ into the wild heart of her brother, but not enough to cure the deep taint
+ of his nature. The third person was a wizard; a small, gray, withered man,
+ with fiendish ingenuity in devising evil, and superhuman power to execute
+ it, but senseless as an idiot and feebler than a child to all better
+ purposes. The central scene of the story was an interview between this
+ wretch and Leonard Doane, in the wizard&rsquo;s hut, situated beneath a range of
+ rocks at some distance from the town. They sat beside a smouldering fire,
+ while a tempest of wintry rain was beating on the roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man spoke of the closeness of the tie which united him and
+ Alice, the consecrated fervor of their affection from childhood upwards,
+ their sense of lonely sufficiency to each other, because they only of
+ their race had escaped death, in a night attack by the Indians. He related
+ his discovery or suspicion of a secret sympathy between his sister and
+ Walter Brome, and told how a distempered jealousy had maddened him. In the
+ following passage, I threw a glimmering light on the mystery of the tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Searching,&rdquo; continued Leonard, &ldquo;into the breast of Walter Brome, I at
+ length found a cause why Alice must inevitably love him. For he was my
+ very counterpart! I compared his mind by each individual portion, and as a
+ whole, with mine. There was a resemblance from which I shrunk with
+ sickness, and loathing, and horror, as if my own features had come and
+ stared upon me in a solitary place, or had met me in struggling through a
+ crowd. Nay! the very same thoughts would often express themselves in the
+ same words from our lips, proving a hateful sympathy in our secret souls.
+ His education, indeed, in the cities of the old world, and mine in the
+ rude wilderness, had wrought a superficial difference. The evil of his
+ character, also, had been strengthened and rendered prominent by a
+ reckless and ungoverned life, while mine had been softened and purified by
+ the gentle and holy nature of Alice. But my soul had been conscious of the
+ germ of all the fierce and deep passions, and of all the many varieties of
+ wickedness, which accident had brought to their full maturity in him. Nor
+ will I deny that, in the accursed one, I could see the withered blossom of
+ every virtue, which, by a happier culture, had been made to bring forth
+ fruit in me. Now, here was a man whom Alice might love with all the
+ strength of sisterly affection, added to that impure passion which alone
+ engrosses all the heart. The stranger would have more than the love which
+ had been gathered to me from the many graves of our household&mdash;and I
+ be desolate!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leonard Doane went on to describe the insane hatred that had kindled his
+ heart into a volume of hellish flame. It appeared, indeed, that his
+ jealousy had grounds, so far as that Walter Brome had actually sought the
+ love of Alice, who also had betrayed an undefinable, but powerful interest
+ in the unknown youth. The latter, in spite of his passion for Alice,
+ seemed to return the loathful antipathy of her brother; the similarity of
+ their dispositions made them like joint possessors of an individual
+ nature, which could not become wholly the property of one, unless by the
+ extinction of the other. At last, with the sane devil in each bosom, they
+ chanced to meet, they two, on a lonely road. While Leonard spoke, the
+ wizard had sat listening to what he already knew, yet with tokens of
+ pleasurable interest, manifested by flashes of expression across his
+ vacant features, by grisly smiles, and by a word here and there,
+ mysteriously filling up some void in the narrative. But when the young man
+ told how Walter Brome had taunted him with indubitable proofs of the shame
+ of Alice, and, before the triumphant sneer could vanish from his face, had
+ died by her brother&rsquo;s hand, the wizard laughed aloud. Leonard started, but
+ just then a gust of wind came down the chimney, forming itself into a
+ close resemblance of the slow, unvaried laughter, by which he had been
+ interrupted. &ldquo;I was deceived,&rdquo; thought he; and thus pursued his fearful
+ story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trod out his accursed soul, and knew that he was dead; for my spirit
+ bounded as if a chain had fallen from it and left me free. But the burst
+ of exulting certainty soon fled, and was succeeded by a torpor over my
+ brain and a dimness before my eyes, with the sensation of one who
+ struggles through a dream. So I bent down over the body of Walter Brome,
+ gazing into his face, and striving to make my soul glad with the thought,
+ that he, in very truth, lay dead before me. I know not what space of time
+ I had thus stood, nor how the vision came. But it seemed to me that the
+ irrevocable years since childhood had rolled back, and a scene, that had
+ long been confused and broken in my memory, arrayed itself with all its
+ first distinctness. Methought I stood a weeping infant by my father&rsquo;s
+ hearth; by the cold and blood-stained hearth where he lay dead. I heard
+ the childish wail of Alice, and my own cry arose with hers, as we beheld
+ the features of our parent, fierce with the strife and distorted with the
+ pain, in which his spirit had passed away. As I gazed, a cold wind
+ whistled by, and waved my father&rsquo;s hair. Immediately I stood again in the
+ lonesome road, no more a sinless child, but a man of blood, whose tears
+ were falling fast over the face of his dead enemy. But the delusion was
+ not wholly gone; that face still wore a likeness of my father; and because
+ my soul shrank from the fixed glare of the eyes, I bore the body to the
+ lake, and would have buried it there. But before his icy sepulchre was
+ hewn, I heard the voices of two travellers and fled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the dreadful confession of Leonard Doane. And now tortured by the
+ idea of his sister&rsquo;s guilt, yet sometimes yielding to a conviction of her
+ purity; stung with remorse for the death of Walter Brome, and shuddering
+ with a deeper sense of some unutterable crime, perpetrated, as he
+ imagined, in madness or a dream; moved also by dark impulses, as if a
+ fiend were whispering him to meditate violence against the life of Alice;
+ he had sought this interview with the wizard, who, on certain conditions,
+ had no power to withhold his aid in unravelling the mystery. The tale drew
+ near its close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon was bright on high; the blue firmament appeared to glow with an
+ inherent brightness; the greater stars were burning in their spheres; the
+ northern lights threw their mysterious glare far over the horizon; the few
+ small clouds aloft were burdened with radiance; but the sky, with all its
+ variety of light, was scarcely so brilliant as the earth. The rain of the
+ preceding night had frozen as it fell, and, by that simple magic, had
+ wrought wonders. The trees were hung with diamonds and many-colored gems;
+ the houses were overlaid with silver, and the streets paved with slippery
+ brightness; a frigid glory was flung over all familiar things, from the
+ cottage chimney to the steeple of the meeting-house, that gleamed upward
+ to the sky. This living world, where we sit by our firesides, or go forth
+ to meet beings like ourselves, seemed rather the creation of wizard power,
+ with so much of resemblance to known objects that a man might shudder at
+ the ghostly shape of his old beloved dwelling, and the shadow of a ghostly
+ tree before his door. One looked to behold inhabitants suited to such a
+ town, glittering in icy garments, with motionless features, cold,
+ sparkling eyes, and just sensation enough in their frozen hearts to shiver
+ at each other&rsquo;s presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this fantastic piece of description, and more in the same style, I
+ intended to throw a ghostly glimmer round the reader, so that his
+ imagination might view the town through a medium that should take off its
+ every-day aspect, and make it a proper theatre for so wild a scene as the
+ final one. Amid this unearthly show, the wretched brother and sister were
+ represented as setting forth, at midnight, through the gleaming streets,
+ and directing their steps to a graveyard, where all the dead had been laid
+ from the first corpse in that ancient town, to the murdered man who was
+ buried three days before. As they went, they seemed to see the wizard
+ gliding by their sides, or walking dimly on the path before them. But here
+ I paused, and gazed into the faces of my two fair auditors, to judge
+ whether, even on the hill where so many had been brought to death by
+ wilder tales than this, I might venture to proceed. Their bright eyes were
+ fixed on me; their lips apart. I took courage, and led the fated pair to a
+ new made grave, where for a few moments, in the bright and silent
+ midnight, they stood alone. But suddenly there was a multitude of people
+ among the graves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each family tomb had given up its inhabitants, who, one by one, through
+ distant years, had been borne to its dark chamber, but now came forth and
+ stood in a pale group together. There was the gray ancestor, the aged
+ mother, and all their descendants, some withered and full of years, like
+ themselves, and others in their prime; there, too, were the children who
+ went prattling to the tomb, and there the maiden who yielded her early
+ beauty to death&rsquo;s embrace, before passion had polluted it. Husbands and
+ wives arose, who had lain many years side by side, and young mothers who
+ had forgotten to kiss their first babes, though pillowed so long on their
+ bosoms. Many had been buried in the habiliments of life, and still wore
+ their ancient garb; some were old defenders of the infant colony, and
+ gleamed forth in their steel-caps and bright breastplates, as if starting
+ up at an Indian war-cry; other venerable shapes had been pastors of the
+ church, famous among the New England clergy, and now leaned with hands
+ clasped over their gravestones, ready to call the congregation to prayer.
+ There stood the early settlers, those old illustrious ones, the heroes of
+ tradition and fireside legends, the men of history whose features had been
+ so long beneath the sod that few alive could have remembered them. There,
+ too, were faces of former townspeople, dimly recollected from childhood,
+ and others, whom Leonard and Alice had wept in later years, but who now
+ were most terrible of all, by their ghastly smile of recognition. All, in
+ short, were there; the dead of other generations, whose moss-grown names
+ could scarce be read upon their tombstones, and their successors, whose
+ graves were not yet green; all whom black funerals had followed slowly
+ thither now reappeared where the mourners left them. Yet none but souls
+ accursed were there, and fiends counterfeiting the likeness of departed
+ saints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countenances of those venerable men, whose very features had been
+ hallowed by lives of piety, were contorted now by intolerable pain or
+ hellish passion, and now by an unearthly and derisive merriment. Had the
+ pastors prayed, all saintlike as they seemed, it had been blasphemy. The
+ chaste matrons, too, and the maidens with untasted lips, who had slept in
+ their virgin graves apart from all other dust, now wore a look from which
+ the two trembling mortals shrank, as if the unimaginable sin of twenty
+ worlds were collected there. The faces of fond lovers, even of such as had
+ pined into the tomb, because there their treasure was, were bent on one
+ another with glances of hatred and smiles of bitter scorn, passions that
+ are to devils what love is to the blest. At times, the features of those
+ who had passed from a holy life to heaven would vary to and fro, between
+ their assumed aspect and the fiendish lineaments whence they had been
+ transformed. The whole miserable multitude, both sinful souls and false
+ spectres of good men, groaned horribly and gnashed their teeth, as they
+ looked upward to the calm loveliness of the midnight sky, and beheld those
+ homes of bliss where they must never dwell. Such was the apparition,
+ though too shadowy for language to portray; for here would be the
+ moonbeams on the ice, glittering through a warrior&rsquo;s breastplate, and
+ there the letters of a tombstone, on the form that stood before it; and
+ whenever a breeze went by, it swept the old men&rsquo;s hoary heads, the women&rsquo;s
+ fearful beauty, and all the unreal throng, into one indistinguishable
+ cloud together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I dare not give the remainder of the scene, except in a very brief
+ epitome. This company of devils and condemned souls had come on a holiday,
+ to revel in the discovery of a complicated crime; as foul a one as ever
+ was imagined in their dreadful abode. In the course of the tale, the
+ reader had been permitted to discover that all the incidents were results
+ of the machinations of the wizard, who had cunningly devised that Walter
+ Brome should tempt his unknown sister to guilt and shame, and himself
+ perish by the hand of his twin-brother. I described the glee of the fiends
+ at this hideous conception, and their eagerness to know if it were
+ consummated. The story concluded with the Appeal of Alice to the spectre
+ of Walter Brome; his reply, absolving her from every stain; and the
+ trembling awe with which ghost and devil fled as from the sinless presence
+ of an angel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun had gone down. While I held my page of wonders in the fading
+ light, and read how Alice and her brother were left alone among the
+ graves, my voice mingled with the sigh of a summer wind, which passed over
+ the hill-top, with the broad and hollow sound as of the flight of unseen
+ spirits. Not a word was spoken till I added that the wizard&rsquo;s grave was
+ close beside us, and that the wood-wax had sprouted originally from his
+ unhallowed bones. The ladies started; perhaps their cheeks might have
+ grown pale had not the crimson west been blushing on them; but after a
+ moment they began to laugh, while the breeze took a livelier motion, as if
+ responsive to their mirth. I kept an awful solemnity of visage, being,
+ indeed, a little piqued that a narrative which had good authority in our
+ ancient superstitions, and would have brought even a church deacon to
+ Gallows Hill, in old witch times, should now be considered too grotesque
+ and extravagant for timid maids to tremble at. Though it was past supper
+ time, I detained them a while longer on the hill, and made a trial whether
+ truth were more powerful than fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked again towards the town, no longer arrayed in that icy splendor
+ of earth, tree, and edifice, beneath the glow of a wintry midnight, which
+ shining afar through the gloom of a century had made it appear the very
+ home of visions in visionary streets. An indistinctness had begun to creep
+ over the mass of buildings and blend them with the intermingled tree-tops,
+ except where the roof of a statelier mansion, and the steeples and brick
+ towers of churches, caught the brightness of some cloud that yet floated
+ in the sunshine. Twilight over the landscape was congenial to the
+ obscurity of time. With such eloquence as my share of feeling and fancy
+ could supply, I called back hoar antiquity, and bade my companions imagine
+ an ancient multitude of people, congregated on the hillside, spreading far
+ below, clustering on the steep old roofs, and climbing the adjacent
+ heights, wherever a glimpse of this spot might be obtained. I strove to
+ realize and faintly communicate the deep, unutterable loathing and horror,
+ the indignation, the affrighted wonder, that wrinkled on every brow, and
+ filled the universal heart. See! the whole crowd turns pale and shrinks
+ within itself, as the virtuous emerge from yonder street. Keeping pace
+ with that devoted company, I described them one by one; here tottered a
+ woman in her dotage, knowing neither the crime imputed her, nor its
+ punishment; there another, distracted by the universal madness, till
+ feverish dreams were remembered as realities, and she almost believed her
+ guilt. One, a proud man once, was so broken down by the intolerable hatred
+ heaped upon him, that he seemed to hasten his steps, eager to hide himself
+ in the grave hastily dug at the foot of the gallows. As they went slowly
+ on, a mother looked behind, and beheld her peaceful dwelling; she cast her
+ eyes elsewhere, and groaned inwardly yet with bitterest anguish, for there
+ was her little son among the accusers. I watched the face of an ordained
+ pastor, who walked onward to the same death; his lips moved in prayer; no
+ narrow petition for himself alone, but embracing all his fellow-sufferers
+ and the frenzied multitude; he looked to Heaven and trod lightly up the
+ hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind their victims came the afflicted, a guilty and miserable band;
+ villains who had thus avenged themselves on their enemies, and viler
+ wretches, whose cowardice had destroyed their friends; lunatics, whose
+ ravings had chimed in with the madness of the land; and children, who had
+ played a game that the imps of darkness might have envied them, since it
+ disgraced an age, and dipped a people&rsquo;s hands in blood. In the rear of the
+ procession rode a figure on horseback, so darkly conspicuous, so sternly
+ triumphant, that my hearers mistook him for the visible presence of the
+ fiend himself; but it was only his good friend, Cotton Mather, proud of
+ his well-won dignity, as the representative of all the hateful features of
+ his time: the one blood-thirsty man, in whom were concentrated those vices
+ of spirit and errors of opinion that sufficed to madden the whole
+ surrounding multitude. And thus I marshalled them onward, the innocent who
+ were to die, and the guilty who were to grow old in long remorse&mdash;tracing
+ their every step, by rock, and shrub, and broken track, till their shadowy
+ visages had circled round the hilltop, where we stood. I plunged into my
+ imagination for a blacker horror, and a deeper woe, and pictured the
+ scaffold&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here my companions seized an arm on each side; their nerves were
+ trembling; and, sweeter victory still, I had reached the seldom trodden
+ places of their hearts, and found the well-spring of their tears. And now
+ the past had done all it could. We slowly descended, watching the lights
+ as they twinkled gradually through the town, and listening to the distant
+ mirth of boys at play, and to the voice of a young girl warbling somewhere
+ in the dusk, a pleasant sound to wanderers from old witch times. Yet, ere
+ we left the hill, we could not but regret that there is nothing on its
+ barren summit, no relic of old, nor lettered stone of later days, to
+ assist the imagination in appealing to the heart. We build the memorial
+ column on the height which our fathers made sacred with their blood,
+ poured out in a holy cause. And here, in dark, funereal stone, should rise
+ another monument, sadly commemorative of the errors of an earlier race,
+ and not to be cast down while the human heart has one infirmity that may
+ result in crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Outlines of an English Romance.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Septimius Felton&rdquo; was the outgrowth of a project, formed by Hawthorne
+ during his residence in England, of writing a romance, the scene of which
+ should be laid in that country; but this project was afterwards abandoned,
+ giving place to a new conception in which the visionary search for means
+ to secure an earthly immortality was to form the principal interest. The
+ new conception took shape in the uncompleted &ldquo;Dolliver Romance.&rdquo; The two
+ themes, of course, were distinct, but, by a curious process of thought,
+ one grew directly out of the other: the whole history constitutes, in
+ fact, a chapter in what may be called the genealogy of a romance. There
+ remained, after &ldquo;Septimius Felton&rdquo; had been published, certain manuscripts
+ connected with the scheme of an English story. One of these manuscripts
+ was written in the form of a journalized narrative; the author merely
+ noting the date of what he wrote, as he went along. The other was a more
+ extended sketch of much greater bulk, and without date, but probably
+ produced several years later. It was not originally intended by those who
+ at the time had charge of Hawthorne&rsquo;s papers that either of these
+ incomplete writings should be laid before the public; because they
+ manifestly had not been left by him in a form which he would have
+ considered as warranting such a course. But since the second and larger
+ manuscript has been published under the title of &ldquo;Dr. Grimshawe&rsquo;s Secret,&rdquo;
+ it has been thought best to issue the present sketch, so that the two
+ documents may be examined together. Their appearance places in the hands
+ of readers the entire process of development leading to the &ldquo;Septimius&rdquo;
+ and &ldquo;The Dolliver Romance.&rdquo; They speak for themselves much more
+ efficiently than any commentator can expect to do; and little, therefore,
+ remains to be said beyond a few words of explanation in regard to the
+ following pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Note-Books show that the plan of an English romance, turning upon the
+ fact that an emigrant to America had carried away a family secret which
+ should give his descendant the power to ruin the family in the mother
+ country, had occurred to Hawthorne as early as April, 1855. In August of
+ the same year he visited Smithell&rsquo;s Hall, in Bolton le Moors, concerning
+ which he had already heard its legend of &ldquo;The Bloody Footstep,&rdquo; and from
+ that time on, the idea of this footprint on the threshold-stone of the
+ ancestral mansion seems to have associated itself inextricably with the
+ dreamy substance of his yet unshaped romance. Indeed, it leaves its mark
+ broadly upon Sibyl Dacy&rsquo;s wild legend in &ldquo;Septimius Felton,&rdquo; and reappears
+ in the last paragraph of that story. But, so far as we can know at this
+ day, nothing definite was done until after his departure for Italy. It was
+ then, while staying in Rome, that he began to put upon paper that plot
+ which had first occupied his thoughts three years before, in the scant
+ leisure allowed him by his duties at the Liverpool consulate. Of leisure
+ there was not a great deal at Rome, either; for, as the &ldquo;French and
+ Italian Note-Books&rdquo; show, sight-seeing and social intercourse took up a
+ good deal of his time, and the daily record in his journal likewise had to
+ be kept up. But he set to work resolutely to embody, so far as he might,
+ his stray imaginings upon the haunting English theme, and to give them
+ connected form. April 1, 1858, he began; and then nearly two weeks passed
+ before he found an opportunity to resume; April 13th being the date of the
+ next passage. By May he gets fully into swing, so that day after day, with
+ but slight breaks, he carries on the story, always increasing in interest
+ for as who read as for him who improvised. Thus it continues until May
+ 19th, by which time he has made a tolerably complete outline, filled in
+ with a good deal of detail here and there. Although the sketch is cast in
+ the form of a regular narrative, one or two gaps occur, indicating that
+ the author had thought out certain points which he then took for granted
+ without making note of them. Brief scenes, passages of conversation and of
+ narration, follow one another after the manner of a finished story,
+ alternating with synopses of the plot, and queries concerning particulars
+ that needed further study; confidences of the romancer to himself which
+ form certainly a valuable contribution to literary history. The manuscript
+ closes with a rapid sketch of the conclusion, and the way in which it is
+ to be executed. Succinctly, what we have is a romance in embryo; one,
+ moreover, that never attained to a viable stature and constitution. During
+ his lifetime it naturally would not have been put forward as demanding
+ public attention; and, in consideration of that fact, it has since been
+ withheld from the press by the decision of his daughter, in whom the title
+ to it vests. Students of literary art, however, and many more general
+ readers will, I think, be likely to discover in it a charm all the greater
+ for its being in parts only indicated; since, as it stands, it presents
+ the precise condition of a work of fiction in its first stage. The
+ unfinished &ldquo;Grimshawe&rdquo; was another development of the same theme, and the
+ &ldquo;Septimius&rdquo; a later sketch, with a new element introduced. But the present
+ experimental fragment, to which it has been decided to give the title of
+ &ldquo;The Ancestral Footstep,&rdquo; possesses a freshness and spontaneity recalling
+ the peculiar fascination of those chalk or pencil outlines with which
+ great masters in the graphic art have been wont to arrest their fleeting
+ glimpses of a composition still unwrought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would not be safe to conclude, from the large amount of preliminary
+ writing done with a view to that romance, that Hawthorne always adopted
+ this laborious mode of making several drafts of a book. On the contrary,
+ it is understood that his habit was to mature a design so thoroughly in
+ his mind before attempting to give it actual existence on paper that but
+ little rewriting was needed. The circumstance that he was obliged to write
+ so much that did not satisfy him in this case may account partly for his
+ relinquishing the theme, as one which for him had lost its seductiveness
+ through too much recasting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It need be added only that the original manuscript, from which the
+ following pages are printed through the medium of an exact copy, is
+ singularly clear and fluent. Not a single correction occurs throughout;
+ but here and there a word is omitted obviously by mere accident, and these
+ omissions have been supplied. The correction in each case is marked by
+ brackets in this printed reproduction. The sketch begins abruptly; but
+ there is no reason to suppose that anything preceded it except the
+ unrecorded musings in the author&rsquo;s mind, and one or two memoranda in the
+ &ldquo;English Note-Books.&rdquo; We must therefore imagine the central figure,
+ Middleton, who is the American descendant of an old English family, as
+ having been properly introduced, and then pass at once to the opening
+ sentences. The rest will explain itself. G. P. L.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Outlines of an English Romance.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ April 1, 1858. Thursday.&mdash;He had now been travelling long in those
+ rich portions of England where he would most have wished to find the
+ object of his pursuit; and many had been the scenes which he would
+ willingly have identified with that mentioned in the ancient,
+ time-yellowed record which he bore about with him. It is to be observed
+ that, undertaken at first half as the amusement, the unreal object of a
+ grown man&rsquo;s play-day, it had become more and more real to him with every
+ step of the way that he followed it up; along those green English lanes it
+ seemed as if everything would bring him close to the mansion that he
+ sought; every morning he went on with renewed hopes, nor did the evening,
+ though it brought with it no success, bring with it the gloom and
+ heaviness of a real disappointment. In all his life, including its
+ earliest and happiest days, he had never known such a spring and zest as
+ now filled his veins, and gave lightsomeness to his limbs; this spirit
+ gave to the beautiful country which he trod a still richer beauty than it
+ had ever borne, and he sought his ancient home as if he had found his way
+ into Paradise and were there endeavoring to trace out the sight [site] of
+ Eve&rsquo;s bridal bower, the birthplace of the human race and its glorious
+ possibilities of happiness and high performance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these sweet and delightful moods of mind, varying from one dream to
+ another, he loved indeed the solitude of his way; but likewise he loved
+ the facility which his pursuit afforded him, of coming in contact with
+ many varieties of men, and he took advantage of this facility to an extent
+ which it was not usually his impulse to do. But now he came forth from all
+ reserves, and offered himself to whomever the chances of the way offered
+ to him, with a ready sensibility that made its way through every barrier
+ that even English exclusiveness, in whatever rank of life, could set up.
+ The plastic character of Middleton was perhaps a variety of American
+ nature only presenting itself under an individual form; he could throw off
+ the man of our day, and put on a ruder nature, but then it was with a
+ certain fineness, that made this only [a] distinction between it and the
+ central truth. He found less variety of form in the English character than
+ he had been accustomed to see at home; but perhaps this was in consequence
+ of the external nature of his acquaintance with it; for the view of one
+ well accustomed to a people, and of a stranger to them, differs in this&mdash;that
+ the latter sees the homogeneity, the one universal character, the ground
+ work of the whole, while the former sees a thousand little differences,
+ which distinguish the individual men apart to such a degree that they seem
+ hardly to have any resemblance among themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just at the period of his journey when we take him up, Middleton had
+ been for two or three days the companion of an old man who interested him
+ more than most of his wayside companions; the more especially as he seemed
+ to be wandering without an object, or with such a dreamy object as that
+ which led Middleton&rsquo;s own steps onward. He was a plain old man enough, but
+ with a pale, strong-featured face and white hair, a certain
+ picturesqueness and venerableness, which Middleton fancied might have
+ befitted a richer garb than he now wore. In much of their conversation,
+ too, he was sensible that, though the stranger betrayed no acquaintance
+ with literature, nor seemed to have conversed with cultivated minds, yet
+ the results of such acquaintance and converse were here. Middleton was
+ inclined to think him, however, an old man, one of those itinerants, such
+ as Wordsworth represented in the &ldquo;Excursion,&rdquo; who smooth themselves by the
+ attrition of the world and gain a knowledge equivalent to or better than
+ that of books from the actual intellect of man awake and active around
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, during the short period since their companionship originated,
+ Middleton had felt impelled to disclose to the old man the object of his
+ journey, and the wild tale by which, after two hundred years, he had been
+ blown as it were across the ocean, and drawn onward to commence this
+ search. The old man&rsquo;s ordinary conversation was of a nature to draw forth
+ such a confidence as this; frequently turning on the traditions of the
+ wayside; the reminiscences that lingered on the battle-fields of the
+ Roses, or of the Parliament, like flowers nurtured by the blood of the
+ slain, and prolonging their race through the centuries for the wayfarer to
+ pluck them; or the family histories of the castles, manor-houses, and
+ seats which, of various epochs, had their park-gates along the roadside
+ and would be seen with dark gray towers or ancient gables, or more modern
+ forms of architecture, rising up among clouds of ancient oaks. Middleton
+ watched earnestly to see if, in any of these tales, there were
+ circumstances resembling those striking and singular ones which he had
+ borne so long in his memory, and on which he was now acting in so strange
+ a manner; but [though] there was a good deal of variety of incident in
+ them, there never was any combination of incidents having the peculiarity
+ of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; said he to the old man, &ldquo;the settlers in my country may have
+ carried away with them traditions long since forgotten in this country,
+ but which might have an interest and connection, and might even piece out
+ the broken relics of family history, which have remained perhaps a mystery
+ for hundreds of years. I can conceive, even, that this might be of
+ importance in settling the heirships of estates; but which now, only the
+ two insulated parts of the story being known, remain a riddle, although
+ the solution of it is actually in the world, if only these two parts could
+ be united across the sea, like the wires of an electric telegraph.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is an impressive idea,&rdquo; said the old man. &ldquo;Do you know any such
+ tradition as you have hinted at?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ April 13th.&mdash;Middleton could not but wonder at the singular chance
+ that had established him in such a place, and in such society, so
+ strangely adapted to the purposes with which he had been wandering through
+ England. He had come hither, hoping as it were to find the past still
+ alive and in action; and here it was so in this one only spot, and these
+ few persons into the midst of whom he had suddenly been cast. With these
+ reflections he looked forth from his window into the old-fashioned garden,
+ and at the stone sun-dial, which had numbered all the hours&mdash;all the
+ daylight and serene ones, at least&mdash;since his mysterious ancestor
+ left the country. And [is] this, then, he thought to himself, the
+ establishment of which some rumor had been preserved? Was it here that the
+ secret had its hiding-place in the old coffer, in the cupboard, in the
+ secret chamber, or whatever was indicated by the apparently idle words of
+ the document which he had preserved? He still smiled at the idea, but it
+ was with a pleasant, mysterious sense that his life had at last got out of
+ the dusty real, and that strangeness had mixed itself up with his daily
+ experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such feelings he prepared himself to go down to dinner with his host.
+ He found him alone at table, which was placed in a dark old room
+ modernized with every English comfort and the pleasant spectacle of a
+ table set with the whitest of napery and the brightest of glass and china.
+ The friendly old gentleman, as he had found him from the first, became
+ doubly and trebly so in that position which brings out whatever warmth of
+ heart an Englishman has, and gives it to him if he has none. The
+ impressionable and sympathetic character of Middleton answered to the
+ kindness of his host; and by the time the meal was concluded, the two were
+ conversing with almost as much zest and friendship as if they were similar
+ in age, even fellow-countrymen, and had known one another all their
+ lifetime. Middleton&rsquo;s secret, it may be supposed, came often to the tip of
+ his tongue; but still he kept it within, from a natural repugnance to
+ bring out the one romance of his life. The talk, however, necessarily ran
+ much upon topics among which this one would have come in without any extra
+ attempt to introduce it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This decay of old families,&rdquo; said the Master, &ldquo;is much greater than would
+ appear on the surface of things. We have such a reluctance to part with
+ them, that we are content to see them continued by any fiction, through
+ any indirections, rather than to dispense with old names. In your country,
+ I suppose, there is no such reluctance; you are willing that one
+ generation should blot out all that preceded it, and be itself the newest
+ and only age of the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not quite so,&rdquo; answered Middleton; &ldquo;at any rate, if there be such a
+ feeling in the people at large, I doubt whether, even in England, those
+ who fancy themselves possessed of claims to birth, cherish them more as a
+ treasure than we do. It is, of course, a thousand times more difficult for
+ us to keep alive a name amid a thousand difficulties sedulously thrown
+ around it by our institutions, than for you to do, where your institutions
+ are anxiously calculated to promote the contrary purpose. It has
+ occasionally struck me, however, that the ancient lineage might often be
+ found in America, for a family which has been compelled to prolong itself
+ here through the female line, and through alien stocks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, my young friend,&rdquo; said the Master, &ldquo;if that be the case, I should
+ like to [speak?] further with you upon it; for, I can assure you, there
+ are sometimes vicissitudes in old families that make me grieve to think
+ that a man cannot be made for the occasion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this while, the young lady at table had remained almost silent; and
+ Middleton had only occasionally been reminded of her by the necessity of
+ performing some of those offices which put people at table under a
+ Christian necessity of recognizing one another. He was, to say the truth,
+ somewhat interested in her, yet not strongly attracted by the neutral tint
+ of her dress, and the neutral character of her manners. She did not seem
+ to be handsome, although, with her face full before him, he had not quite
+ made up his mind on this point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ April 14th.&mdash;So here was Middleton, now at length seeing indistinctly
+ a thread, to which the thread that he had so long held in his hand&mdash;the
+ hereditary thread that ancestor after ancestor had handed down&mdash;might
+ seem ready to join on. He felt as if they were the two points of an
+ electric chain, which being joined, an instantaneous effect must follow.
+ Earnestly, as he would have looked forward to this moment (had he in sober
+ reason ever put any real weight on the fantasy in pursuit of which he had
+ wandered so far) he now, that it actually appeared to be realizing itself,
+ paused with a vague sensation of alarm. The mystery was evidently one of
+ sorrow, if not of crime, and he felt as if that sorrow and crime might not
+ have been annihilated even by being buried out of human sight and
+ remembrance so long. He remembered to have heard or read, how that once an
+ old pit had been dug open, in which were found the remains of persons
+ that, as the shuddering by-standers traditionally remembered, had died of
+ an ancient pestilence; and out of that old grave had come a new plague,
+ that slew the far-off progeny of those who had first died by it. Might not
+ some fatal treasure like this, in a moral view, be brought to light by the
+ secret into which he had so strangely been drawn? Such were the fantasies
+ with which he awaited the return of Alice, whose light footsteps sounded
+ afar along the passages of the old mansion; and then all was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length he heard the sound, a great way off, as he concluded, of her
+ returning footstep, approaching from chamber to chamber, and along the
+ staircases, closing the doors behind her. At first, he paid no great
+ attention to the character of these sounds, but as they drew nearer, he
+ became aware that the footstep was unlike those of Alice; indeed, as
+ unlike as could be, very regular, slow, yet not firm, so that it seemed to
+ be that of an aged person, sauntering listlessly through the rooms. We
+ have often alluded to Middleton&rsquo;s sensitiveness, and the quick vibrations
+ of his sympathies; and there was something in this slow approach that
+ produced a strange feeling within him; so that he stood breathlessly,
+ looking towards the door by which these slow footsteps were to enter. At
+ last, there appeared in the doorway a venerable figure, clad in a rich,
+ faded dressing-gown, and standing on the threshold looked fixedly at
+ Middleton, at the same time holding up a light in his left hand. In his
+ right was some object that Middleton did not distinctly see. But he knew
+ the figure, and recognized the face. It was the old man, his long since
+ companion on the journey hitherward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So,&rdquo; said the old man, smiling gravely, &ldquo;you have thought fit, at last,
+ to accept the hospitality which I offered you so long ago. It might have
+ been better for both of us&mdash;for all parties&mdash;if you had accepted
+ it then!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You here!&rdquo; exclaimed Middleton. &ldquo;And what can be your connection with all
+ the error and trouble, and involuntary wrong, through which I have
+ wandered since our last meeting? And is it possible that you even then
+ held the clue which I was seeking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&mdash;no,&rdquo; replied Rothermel. &ldquo;I was not conscious, at least, of so
+ doing. And yet had we two sat down there by the wayside, or on that
+ English stile, which attracted your attention so much; had we sat down
+ there and thrown forth each his own dream, each his own knowledge, it
+ would have saved much that we must now forever regret. Are you even now
+ ready to confide wholly in me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said Middleton, with a darkening brow, &ldquo;there are many reasons, at
+ this moment, which did not exist then, to incline me to hold my peace. And
+ why has not Alice returned?&mdash;and what is your connection with her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let her answer for herself,&rdquo; said Rothermel; and he called her, shouting
+ through the silent house as if she were at the furthest chamber, and he
+ were in instant need: &ldquo;Alice!&mdash;Alice!&mdash;Alice!&mdash;here is one
+ who would know what is the link between a maiden and her father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the strange uproar which he made Alice came flying back, not in alarm
+ but only in haste, and put her hand within his own. &ldquo;Hush, father,&rdquo; said
+ she. &ldquo;It is not time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is an abstract of the plot of this story. The Middleton who emigrated
+ to America, more than two hundred years ago, had been a dark and moody
+ man; he came with a beautiful though not young woman for his wife, and
+ left a family behind him. In this family a certain heirloom had been
+ preserved, and with it a tradition that grew wilder and stranger with the
+ passing generations. The tradition had lost, if it ever had, some of its
+ connecting links; but it referred to a murder, to the expulsion of a
+ brother from the hereditary house, in some strange way, and to a Bloody
+ Footstep which he had left impressed into the threshold, as he turned
+ about to make a last remonstrance. It was rumored, however, or vaguely
+ understood, that the expelled brother was not altogether an innocent man;
+ but that there had been wrong done as well as crime committed, insomuch
+ that his reasons were strong that led him, subsequently, to imbibe the
+ most gloomy religious views, and to bury himself in the Western
+ wilderness. These reasons he had never fully imparted to his family; but
+ had necessarily made allusions to them, which had been treasured up and
+ doubtless enlarged upon. At last, one descendant of the family determines
+ to go to England, with the purpose of searching out whatever ground there
+ may be for these traditions, carrying with him certain ancient documents,
+ and other relics; and goes about the country, half in earnest, and half in
+ sport of fancy, in quest of the old family mansion. He makes singular
+ discoveries, all of which bring the book to an end unexpected by
+ everybody, and not satisfactory to the natural yearnings of novel readers.
+ In the traditions that he brought over, there was a key to some family
+ secrets that were still unsolved, and that controlled the descent of
+ estates and titles. His influence upon these matters involves [him] in
+ divers strange and perilous adventures; and at last it turns out that he
+ himself is the rightful heir to the titles and estate, that had passed
+ into another name within the last half-century. But he respects both,
+ feeling that it is better to make a virgin soil than to try to make the
+ old name grow in a soil that had been darkened with so much blood and
+ misfortune as this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ April 27th, Tuesday.&mdash;It was with a delightful feeling of release
+ from ordinary rules, that Middleton found himself brought into this
+ connection with Alice; and he only hoped that this play-day of his life
+ might last long enough to rest him from all that he had suffered. In the
+ enjoyment of his position he almost forgot the pursuit that occupied him,
+ nor might he have remembered for a long space if, one evening, Alice
+ herself had not alluded to it. &ldquo;You are wasting precious days,&rdquo; she
+ suddenly said. &ldquo;Why do you not renew your quest?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To what do you allude?&rdquo; said Middleton in surprise. &ldquo;What object do you
+ suppose me to have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice smiled; nay, laughed outright. &ldquo;You suppose yourself to be a perfect
+ mystery, no doubt,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;But do not I know you&mdash;have not I
+ known you long&mdash;as the holder of the talisman, the owner of the
+ mysterious cabinet that contains the blood-stained secret?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Alice, this is certainly a strange coincidence, that you should know
+ even thus much of a foolish secret that makes me employ this little
+ holiday time, which I have stolen out of a weary life, in a wild-goose
+ chase. But, believe me, you allude to matters that are more a mystery to
+ me than my affairs appear to be to you. Will you explain what you would
+ suggest by this badinage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head. &ldquo;You have no claim to know what I know, even if it
+ would be any addition to your own knowledge. I shall not, and must not
+ enlighten you. You must burrow for the secret with your own tools, in your
+ own manner, and in a place of your own choosing. I am bound not to assist
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alice, this is wilful, wayward, unjust,&rdquo; cried Middleton, with a flushed
+ cheek. &ldquo;I have not told you&mdash;yet you know well&mdash;the deep and
+ real importance which this subject has for me. We have been together as
+ friends, yet, the instant when there comes up an occasion when the
+ slightest friendly feeling would induce you to do me a good office, you
+ assume this altered tone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My tone is not in the least altered in respect to you,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;All
+ along, as you know, I have reserved myself on this very point; it being, I
+ candidly tell you, impossible for me to act in your interest in the matter
+ alluded to. If you choose to consider this unfriendly, as being less than
+ the terms on which you conceive us to have stood give you a right to
+ demand of me&mdash;you must resent it as you please. I shall not the less
+ retain for you the regard due to one who has certainly befriended me in
+ very untoward circumstances.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conversation confirmed the previous idea of Middleton, that some
+ mystery of a peculiarly dark and evil character was connected with the
+ family secret with which he was himself entangled; but it perplexed him to
+ imagine in what way this, after the lapse of so many years, should
+ continue to be a matter of real importance at the present day. All the
+ actors in the original guilt&mdash;if guilt it were&mdash;must have been
+ long ago in their graves; some in the churchyard of the village, with
+ those moss-grown letters embossing their names; some in the church itself,
+ with mural tablets recording their names over the family-pew, and one, it
+ might be, far over the sea, where his grave was first made under the
+ forest leaves, though now a city had grown up around it. Yet here was he,
+ the remote descendant of that family, setting his foot at last in the
+ country, and as secretly as might be; and all at once his mere presence
+ seemed to revive the buried secret, almost to awake the dead who partook
+ of that secret and had acted it. There was a vibration from the other
+ world, continued and prolonged into this, the instant that he stepped upon
+ the mysterious and haunted ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew not in what way to proceed. He could not but feel that there was
+ something not exactly within the limits of propriety in being here,
+ disguised&mdash;at least, not known in his true character&mdash;prying
+ into the secrets of a proud and secluded Englishman. But then, as he said
+ to himself on his own side of the question, the secret belonged to himself
+ by exactly as ancient a tenure and by precisely as strong a claim, as to
+ the Englishman. His rights here were just as powerful and well-founded as
+ those of his ancestor had been, nearly three centuries ago; and here the
+ same feeling came over him that he was that very personage, returned after
+ all these ages, to see if his foot would fit this bloody footstep left of
+ old upon the threshold. The result of all his cogitation was, as the
+ reader will have foreseen, that he decided to continue his researches,
+ and, his proceedings being pretty defensible, let the result take care of
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this purpose he went next day to the hospital, and ringing at the
+ Master&rsquo;s door, was ushered into the old-fashioned, comfortable library,
+ where he had spent that well-remembered evening which threw the first ray
+ of light on the pursuit that now seemed developing into such strange and
+ unexpected consequences. Being admitted, he was desired by the domestic to
+ wait, as his Reverence was at that moment engaged with a gentleman on
+ business. Glancing through the ivy that mantled over the window, Middleton
+ saw that this interview was taking place in the garden, where the Master
+ and his visitor were walking to and fro in the avenue of box, discussing
+ some matter, as it seemed to him, with considerable earnestness on both
+ sides. He observed, too, that there was warmth, passion, a disturbed
+ feeling on the stranger&rsquo;s part; while, on that of the Master, it was a
+ calm, serious, earnest representation of whatever view he was endeavoring
+ to impress on the other. At last, the interview appeared to come toward a
+ climax, the Master addressing some words to his guest, still with
+ undisturbed calmness, to which the latter replied by a violent and even
+ fierce gesture, as it should seem of menace, not towards the Master, but
+ some unknown party; and then hastily turning, he left the garden and was
+ soon heard riding away. The Master looked after him awhile, and then,
+ shaking his white head, returned into the house and soon entered the
+ parlor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked somewhat surprised, and, as it struck Middleton, a little
+ startled, at finding him there; yet he welcomed him with all his former
+ cordiality&mdash;indeed, with a friendship that thoroughly warmed
+ Middleton&rsquo;s heart even to its coldest corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is strange!&rdquo; said the old gentleman. &ldquo;Do you remember our
+ conversation on that evening when I first had the unlooked-for pleasure of
+ receiving you as a guest into my house? At that time I spoke to you of a
+ strange family story, of which there was no denouement, such as a
+ novel-writer would desire, and which had remained in that unfinished
+ posture for more than two hundred years! Well; perhaps it will gratify you
+ to know that there seems a prospect of that wanting termination being
+ supplied!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the Master. &ldquo;A gentleman has just parted with me who was
+ indeed the representative of the family concerned in the story. He is the
+ descendant of a younger son of that family, to whom the estate devolved
+ about a century ago, although at that time there was search for the heirs
+ of the elder son, who had disappeared after the bloody incident which I
+ related to you. Now, singular as it may appear, at this late day, a person
+ claiming to be the descendant and heir of that eldest son has appeared,
+ and if I may credit my friend&rsquo;s account, is disposed not only to claim the
+ estate, but the dormant title which Eldredge himself has been so long
+ preparing to claim for himself. Singularly enough, too, the heir is an
+ American.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 2d, Sunday.&mdash;&ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; said Middleton, &ldquo;that many English
+ secrets might find their solution in America, if the two threads of a
+ story could be brought together, disjoined as they have been by time and
+ the ocean. But are you at liberty to tell me the nature of the incidents
+ to which you allude?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not see any reason to the contrary,&rdquo; answered the Master; &ldquo;for the
+ story has already come in an imperfect way before the public, and the full
+ and authentic particulars are likely soon to follow. It seems that the
+ younger brother was ejected from the house on account of a love affair;
+ the elder having married a young woman with whom the younger was in love,
+ and, it is said, the wife disappeared on the bridal night, and was never
+ heard of more. The elder brother remained single during the rest of his
+ life; and dying childless, and there being still no news of the second
+ brother, the inheritance and representation of the family devolved upon
+ the third brother and his posterity. This branch of the family has ever
+ since remained in possession; and latterly the representation has become
+ of more importance, on account of a claim to an old title, which, by the
+ failure of another branch of this ancient family, has devolved upon the
+ branch here settled. Now, just at this juncture, comes another heir from
+ America, pretending that he is the descendant of a marriage between the
+ second son, supposed to have been murdered on the threshold of the
+ manor-house, and the missing bride! Is it not a singular story?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would seem to require very strong evidence to prove it,&rdquo; said
+ Middleton. &ldquo;And methinks a Republican should care little for the title,
+ however he might value the estate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Both&mdash;both,&rdquo; said the Master, smiling, &ldquo;would be equally attractive
+ to your countryman. But there are further curious particulars in
+ connection with this claim. You must know, they are a family of singular
+ characteristics, humorists, sometimes developing their queer traits into
+ something like insanity; though oftener, I must say, spending stupid
+ hereditary lives here on their estates, rusting out and dying without
+ leaving any biography whatever about them. And yet there has always been
+ one very queer thing about this generally very commonplace family. It is
+ that each father, on his death-bed, has had an interview with his son, at
+ which he has imparted some secret that has evidently had an influence on
+ the character and after life of the son, making him ever after a
+ discontented man, aspiring for something he has never been able to find.
+ Now the American, I am told, pretends that he has the clue which has
+ always been needed to make the secret available; the key whereby the lock
+ may be opened; the something that the lost son of the family carried away
+ with him, and by which through these centuries he has impeded the progress
+ of the race. And, wild as the story seems, he does certainly seem to bring
+ something that looks very like the proof of what he says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what are those proofs?&rdquo; inquired Middleton, wonder-stricken at the
+ strange reduplication of his own position and pursuits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the first place,&rdquo; said the Master, &ldquo;the English marriage-certificate
+ by a clergyman of that day in London, after publication of the banns, with
+ a reference to the register of the parish church where the marriage is
+ recorded. Then, a certified genealogy of the family in New England, where
+ such matters can be ascertained from town and church records, with at
+ least as much certainty, it would appear, as in this country. He has
+ likewise a manuscript in his ancestor&rsquo;s autograph, containing a brief
+ account of the events which banished him from his own country; the
+ circumstances which favored the idea that he had been slain, and which he
+ himself was willing should be received as a belief; the fortune that led
+ him to America, where he wished to found a new race wholly disconnected
+ with the past; and this manuscript he sealed up, with directions that it
+ should not be opened till two hundred years after his death, by which
+ time, as it was probable to conjecture, it would matter little to any
+ mortal whether the story was told or not. A whole generation has passed
+ since the time when the paper was at last unsealed and read, so long it
+ had no operation; yet now, at last, here comes the American, to disturb
+ the succession of an ancient family!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is something very strange in all this,&rdquo; said Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed there was something stranger in his view of the matter than he
+ had yet communicated to the Master. For, taking into consideration the
+ relation in which he found himself with the present recognized
+ representative of the family, the thought struck him that his coming
+ hither had dug up, as it were, a buried secret that immediately assumed
+ life and activity the moment that it was above ground again. For seven
+ generations the family had vegetated in the quietude of English country
+ gentility, doing nothing to make itself known, passing from the cradle to
+ the tomb amid the same old woods that had waved over it before his
+ ancestor had impressed the bloody footstep; and yet the instant that he
+ came back, an influence seemed to be at work that was likely to renew the
+ old history of the family. He questioned with himself whether it were not
+ better to leave all as it was; to withdraw himself into the secrecy from
+ which he had but half emerged, and leave the family to keep on, to the end
+ of time perhaps, in its rusty innocence, rather than to interfere with his
+ wild American character to disturb it. The smell of that dark crime&mdash;that
+ brotherly hatred and attempted murder&mdash;seemed to breathe out of the
+ ground as he dug it up. Was it not better that it should remain forever
+ buried, for what to him was this old English title&mdash;what this estate,
+ so far from his own native land, located amidst feelings and manners which
+ would never be his own? It was late, to be sure&mdash;yet not too late for
+ him to turn back: the vibration, the fear, which his footsteps had caused,
+ would subside into peace! Meditating in this way, he took a hasty leave of
+ the kind old Master, promising to see him again at an early opportunity.
+ By chance, or however it was, his footsteps turned to the woods of &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ Chace, and there he wandered through its glades, deep in thought, yet
+ always with a strange sense that he was treading on the soil where his
+ ancestors had trodden, and where he himself had best right of all men to
+ be. It was just in this state of feeling that he found his course arrested
+ by a hand upon his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What business have you here?&rdquo; was the question sounded in his ear; and,
+ starting, he found himself in the grasp, as his blood tingled to know, of
+ a gentleman in a shooting-dress, who looked at him with a wrathful brow.
+ &ldquo;Are you a poacher, or what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be the case what it might, Middleton&rsquo;s blood boiled at the grasp of that
+ hand, as it never before had done in the coarse of his impulsive life. He
+ shook himself free, and stood fiercely before his antagonist, confronting
+ him, with his uplifted stick, while the other, likewise, appeared to be
+ shaken by a strange wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow,&rdquo; muttered he&mdash;&ldquo;Yankee blackguard!&mdash;imposter&mdash;take
+ yourself off these grounds. Quick, or it will be the worse for you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton restrained himself. &ldquo;Mr. Eldredge,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for I believe I
+ speak to the man who calls himself owner of this land on which we stand,
+ &mdash;Mr. Eldredge, you are acting under a strange misapprehension of my
+ character. I have come hither with no sinister purpose, and am entitled,
+ at the hands of a gentleman, to the consideration of an honorable
+ antagonist, even if you deem me one at all. And perhaps, if you think upon
+ the blue chamber and the ebony cabinet, and the secret connected. with
+ it,&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villain, no more!&rdquo; said Eldredge; and utterly mad with rage, he presented
+ his gun at Middleton; but even at the moment of doing so, he partly
+ restrained himself, so far as, instead of shooting him, to raise the butt
+ of his gun, and strike a blow at him. It came down heavily on Middleton&rsquo;s
+ shoulder, though aimed at his head; and the blow was terribly avenged,
+ even by itself, for the jar caused the hammer to come down; the gun went
+ off, sending the bullet downwards through the heart of the unfortunate
+ man, who fell dead upon the ground. Eldredge [Evidently a slip of the pen;
+ Middleton being intended.] stood stupefied, looking at the catastrophe
+ which had so suddenly occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 3d, Monday.&mdash;So here was the secret suddenly made safe in this so
+ terrible way; its keepers reduced from two parties to one interest; the
+ other who alone knew of this age-long mystery and trouble now carrying it
+ into eternity, where a long line of those who partook of the knowledge, in
+ each successive generation, might now be waiting to inquire of him how he
+ had held his trust. He had kept it well, there was no doubt of it; for
+ there he lay dead upon the ground, having betrayed it to no one, though by
+ a method which none could have foreseen, the whole had come into the
+ possession of him who had brought hither but half of it. Middleton looked
+ down in horror upon the form that had just been so full of life and
+ wrathful vigor&mdash;and now lay so quietly. Being wholly unconscious of
+ any purpose to bring about the catastrophe, it had not at first struck him
+ that his own position was in any manner affected by the violent death,
+ under such circumstances, of the unfortunate man. But now it suddenly
+ occurred to him, that there had been a train of incidents all calculated
+ to make him the object of suspicion; and he felt that he could not, under
+ the English administration of law, be suffered to go at large without
+ rendering a strict account of himself and his relations with the deceased.
+ He might, indeed, fly; he might still remain in the vicinity, and possibly
+ escape notice. But was not the risk too great? Was it just even to be
+ aware of this event, and not relate fully the manner of it, lest a
+ suspicion of blood-guiltiness should rest upon some innocent head? But
+ while he was thus cogitating, he heard footsteps approaching along the
+ wood-path; and half-impulsively, half on purpose, he stept aside into the
+ shrubbery, but still where he could see the dead body, and what passed
+ near it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The footsteps came on, and at the turning of the path, just where
+ Middleton had met Eldredge, the new-comer appeared in sight. It was Hoper,
+ in his usual dress of velveteen, looking now seedy, poverty-stricken, and
+ altogether in ill-case, trudging moodily along, with his hat pulled over
+ his brows, so that he did not see the ghastly object before him till his
+ foot absolutely trod upon the dead man&rsquo;s hand. Being thus made aware of
+ the proximity of the corpse, he started back a little, yet evincing such
+ small emotion as did credit to his English reserve; then uttering a low
+ exclamation,&mdash;cautiously low, indeed,&mdash;he stood looking at the
+ corpse a moment or two, apparently in deep meditation. He then drew near,
+ bent down, and without evincing any horror at the touch of death in this
+ horrid shape, he opened the dead man&rsquo;s vest, inspected the wound,
+ satisfied himself that life was extinct, and then nodded his head and
+ smiled gravely. He next proceeded to examine seriatim the dead man&rsquo;s
+ pockets, turning each of them inside out and taking the contents, where
+ they appeared adapted to his needs: for instance, a silken purse, through
+ the interstices of which some gold was visible; a watch, which however had
+ been injured by the explosion, and had stopt just at the moment&mdash;twenty-one
+ minutes past five&mdash;when the catastrophe took place. Hoper
+ ascertained, by putting the watch to his ear, that this was the case; then
+ pocketing it, he continued his researches. He likewise secured a
+ note-book, on examining which he found several bank-notes, and some other
+ papers. And having done this, the thief stood considering what to do next;
+ nothing better occurring to him, he thrust the pockets back, gave the
+ corpse as nearly as he could the same appearance that it had worn before
+ he found it, and hastened away, leaving the horror there on the wood-path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been gone only a few minutes when another step, a light woman&rsquo;s
+ step, [was heard] coming along the pathway, and Alice appeared, having on
+ her usual white mantle, straying along with that fearlessness which
+ characterized her so strangely, and made her seem like one of the denizens
+ of nature. She was singing in a low tone some one of those airs which have
+ become so popular in England, as negro melodies; when suddenly, looking
+ before her, she saw the blood-stained body on the grass, the face looking
+ ghastly upward. Alice pressed her hand upon her heart; it was not her
+ habit to scream, not the habit of that strong, wild, self-dependent
+ nature; and the exclamation which broke from her was not for help, but the
+ voice of her heart crying out to herself. For an instant she hesitated, as
+ [if] not knowing what to do; then approached, and with her white, maiden
+ hand felt the brow of the dead man, tremblingly, but yet firm, and
+ satisfied herself that life had wholly departed. She pressed her hand,
+ that had just touched the dead man&rsquo;s, on her forehead, and gave a moment
+ to thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What her decision might have been, we cannot say, for while she stood in
+ this attitude, Middleton stept from his seclusion, and at the noise of his
+ approach she turned suddenly round, looking more frightened and agitated
+ than at the moment when she had first seen the dead body. She faced
+ Middleton, however, and looked him quietly in the eye. &ldquo;You see this!&rdquo;
+ said she, gazing fixedly at him. &ldquo;It is not at this moment that you first
+ discover it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Middleton, frankly. &ldquo;It is not. I was present at the
+ catastrophe. In one sense, indeed, I was the cause of it; but, Alice, I
+ need not tell you that I am no murderer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A murderer?&mdash;no,&rdquo; said Alice, still looking at him with the same
+ fixed gaze. &ldquo;But you and this man were at deadly variance. He would have
+ rejoiced at any chance that would have laid you cold and bloody on the
+ earth, as he is now; nay, he would most eagerly have seized on any
+ fair-looking pretext that would have given him a chance to stretch you
+ there. The world will scarcely believe, when it knows all about your
+ relations with him, that his blood is not on your hand. Indeed,&rdquo; said she,
+ with a strange smile, &ldquo;I see some of it there now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, in very truth, so there was; a broad blood-stain that had dried on
+ Middleton&rsquo;s hand. He shuddered at it, but essayed vainly to rub it off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;It was foreordained that you should shed this man&rsquo;s
+ blood; foreordained that, by digging into that old pit of pestilence, you
+ should set the contagion loose again. You should have left it buried
+ forever. But now what do you mean to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To proclaim this catastrophe,&rdquo; replied Middleton. &ldquo;It is the only honest
+ and manly way. What else can I do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can and ought to leave him on the wood-path, where he has fallen,&rdquo;
+ said Alice, &ldquo;and go yourself to take advantage of the state of things
+ which Providence has brought about. Enter the old house, the hereditary
+ house, where&mdash;now, at least&mdash;you alone have a right to tread.
+ Now is the hour. All is within your grasp. Let the wrong of three hundred
+ years be righted, and come back thus to your own, to these hereditary
+ fields, this quiet, long-descended home; to title, to honor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet as the wild maiden spoke thus, there was a sort of mockery in her
+ eyes; on her brow; gleaming through all her face, as if she scorned what
+ she thus pressed upon him, the spoils of the dead man who lay at their
+ feet. Middleton, with his susceptibility, could not [but] be sensible of a
+ wild and strange charm, as well as horror, in the situation; it seemed
+ such a wonder that here, in formal, orderly, well-governed England, so
+ wild a scene as this should have occurred; that they too [two?] should
+ stand here, deciding on the descent of an estate, and the inheritance of a
+ title, holding a court of their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, then,&rdquo; said he, at length. &ldquo;Let us leave this poor fallen
+ antagonist in his blood, and go whither you will lead me. I will judge for
+ myself. At all events, I will not leave my hereditary home without knowing
+ what my power is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; responded Alice; and she turned back; but then returned and threw
+ a handkerchief over the dead man&rsquo;s face, which while they spoke had
+ assumed that quiet, ecstatic expression of joy which often is observed to
+ overspread the faces of those who die of gunshot wounds, however fierce
+ the passion in which their spirits took their flight. With this strange,
+ grand, awful joy did the dead man gaze upward into the very eyes and
+ hearts, as it were, of the two that now bent over him. They looked at one
+ another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whence comes this expression?&rdquo; said Middleton, thoughtfully. &ldquo;Alice,
+ methinks he is reconciled to us now; and that we are members of one
+ reconciled family, all of whom are in heaven but me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tuesday, May 4th.&mdash;&ldquo;How strange is this whole situation between you
+ and me,&rdquo; said Middleton, as they went up the winding pathway that led
+ towards the house. &ldquo;Shall I ever understand it? Do you mean ever to
+ explain it to me? That I should find you here with that old man [The
+ allusion here is apparently to the old man who proclaims himself Alice&rsquo;s
+ father, in the portion dated April 14th. He figures hereafter as the old
+ Hospitaller, Hammond. The reader must not take this present passage as
+ referring to the death of Eldredge, which has just taken place in he
+ preceding section. The author is now beginning to elaborate the relation
+ of Middleton and Alice. As will be seen, farther on, the death of Eldredge
+ is ignored and abandoned; Eldredge is revived, and the story proceeds in
+ another way.&mdash;G. P. L.], so mysterious, apparently so poor, yet so
+ powerful! What [is] his relation to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A close one,&rdquo; replied Alice sadly. &ldquo;He was my father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father!&rdquo; repeated Middleton, starting back. &ldquo;It does but heighten
+ the wonder! Your father! And yet, by all the tokens that birth and
+ breeding, and habits of thought and native character can show, you are my
+ countrywoman. That wild, free spirit was never born in the breast of an
+ Englishwoman; that slight frame, that slender beauty, that frail
+ envelopment of a quick, piercing, yet stubborn and patient spirit,&mdash;are
+ those the properties of an English maiden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps not,&rdquo; replied Alice quietly. &ldquo;I am your countrywoman. My father
+ was an American, and one of whom you have heard&mdash;and no good, alas!&mdash;for
+ many a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who then was he?&rdquo; asked Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not whether you will hate me for telling you,&rdquo; replied Alice,
+ looking him sadly though firmly in the face. &ldquo;There was a man&mdash;long
+ years since, in your childhood&mdash;whose plotting brain proved the ruin
+ of himself and many another; a man whose great designs made him a sort of
+ potentate, whose schemes became of national importance, and produced
+ results even upon the history of the country in which he acted. That man
+ was my father; a man who sought to do great things, and, like many who
+ have had similar aims, disregarded many small rights, strode over them, on
+ his way to effect a gigantic purpose. Among other men, your father was
+ trampled under foot, ruined, done to death, even, by the effects of his
+ ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is it possible!&rdquo; exclaimed Middleton. &ldquo;Was it Wentworth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even so,&rdquo; said Alice, still with the same sad calmness and not
+ withdrawing her steady eyes from his face. &ldquo;After his ruin; after the
+ catastrophe that overwhelmed him and hundreds more, he took to flight;
+ guilty, perhaps, but guilty as a fallen conqueror is; guilty to such an
+ extent that he ceased to be a cheat, as a conqueror ceases to be a
+ murderer. He came to England. My father had an original nobility of
+ nature; and his life had not been such as to debase it, but rather such as
+ to cherish and heighten that self-esteem which at least keeps the
+ possessor of it from many meaner vices. He took nothing with him; nothing
+ beyond the bare means of flight, with the world before him, although
+ thousands of gold would not have been missed out of the scattered
+ fragments of ruin that lay around him. He found his way hither, led, as
+ you were, by a desire to reconnect himself with the place whence his
+ family had originated; for he, too, was of a race which had something to
+ do with the ancient story which has now been brought to a close. Arrived
+ here, there were circumstances that chanced to make his talents and habits
+ of business available to this Mr. Eldredge, a man ignorant and indolent,
+ unknowing how to make the best of the property that was in his hands. By
+ degrees, he took the estate into his management, acquiring necessarily a
+ preponderating influence over such a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you,&rdquo; said Middleton. &ldquo;Have you been all along in England? For you
+ must have been little more than an infant at the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mere infant,&rdquo; said Alice, &ldquo;and I remained in our own country under the
+ care of a relative who left me much to my own keeping; much to the
+ influences of that wild culture which the freedom of our country gives to
+ its youth. It is only two years that I have been in England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, then,&rdquo; said Middleton thoughtfully, &ldquo;accounts for much that has
+ seemed so strange in the events through which we have passed; for the
+ knowledge of my identity and my half-defined purpose which has always
+ glided before me, and thrown so many strange shapes of difficulty in my
+ path. But whence,&mdash;whence came that malevolence which your father&rsquo;s
+ conduct has so unmistakably shown? I had done him no injury, though I had
+ suffered much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have often thought,&rdquo; replied Alice, &ldquo;that my father, though retaining a
+ preternatural strength and acuteness of intellect, was really not
+ altogether sane. And, besides, he had made it his business to keep this
+ estate, and all the complicated advantages of the representation of this
+ old family, secure to the person who was deemed to have inherited them. A
+ succession of ages and generations might be supposed to have blotted out
+ your claims from existence; for it is not just that there should be no
+ term of time which can make security for lack of fact and a few
+ formalities. At all events, he had satisfied himself that his duty was to
+ act as he has done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so! I do not seek to throw blame on him,&rdquo; said Middleton. &ldquo;Besides,
+ Alice, he was your father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said she, sadly smiling; &ldquo;let him [have] what protection that
+ thought may give him, even though I lose what he may gain. And now here we
+ are at the house. At last, come in! It is your own; there is none that can
+ longer forbid you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They entered the door of the old mansion, now a farm-house, and there were
+ its old hall, its old chambers, all before them. They ascended the
+ staircase, and stood on the landing-place above; while Middleton had again
+ that feeling that had so often made him dizzy,&mdash;that sense of being
+ in one dream and recognizing the scenery and events of a former dream. So
+ overpowering was this feeling, that he laid his hand on the slender arm of
+ Alice, to steady himself; and she comprehended the emotion that agitated
+ him, and looked into his eyes with a tender sympathy, which she had never
+ before permitted to be visible,&mdash;perhaps never before felt. He
+ steadied himself and followed her till they had entered an ancient
+ chamber, but one that was finished with all the comfortable luxury
+ customary to be seen in English homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither have you led me now?&rdquo; inquired Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look round,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;Is there nothing here that you ought to
+ recognize?&mdash;nothing that you kept the memory of, long ago?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked around the room again and again, and at last, in a somewhat
+ shadowy corner, he espied an old cabinet made of ebony and inlaid with
+ pearl; one of those tall, stately, and elaborate pieces of furniture that
+ are rather articles of architecture than upholstery; and on which a higher
+ skill, feeling, and genius than now is ever employed on such things, was
+ expended. Alice drew near the stately cabinet and threw wide the doors,
+ which, like the portals of a palace, stood between two pillars; it all
+ seemed to be unlocked, showing within some beautiful old pictures in the
+ panel of the doors, and a mirror, that opened a long succession of mimic
+ halls, reflection upon reflection, extending to an interminable nowhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is this?&rdquo; said Middleton,&mdash;&ldquo;a cabinet? Why do you draw my
+ attention so strongly to it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look at it well,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Do you recognize nothing there? Have you
+ forgotten your description? The stately palace with its architecture, each
+ pillar with its architecture, those pilasters, that frieze; you ought to
+ know them all. Somewhat less than you imagined in size, perhaps; a fairy
+ reality, inches for yards; that is the only difference. And you have the
+ key?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there then was that palace, to which tradition, so false at once and
+ true, had given such magnitude and magnificence in the traditions of the
+ Middleton family, around their shifting fireside in America. Looming afar
+ through the mists of time, the little fact had become a gigantic vision.
+ Yes, here it was in miniature, all that he had dreamed of; a palace of
+ four feet high!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have the key of this palace,&rdquo; said Alice; &ldquo;it has waited&mdash;that
+ is, its secret and precious chamber has, for you to open it, these three
+ hundred years. Do you know how to find that secret chamber?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton, still in that dreamy mood, threw open an inner door of the
+ cabinet, and applying the old-fashioned key at his watch-chain to a hole
+ in the mimic pavement within, pressed one of the mosaics, and immediately
+ the whole floor of the apartment sank, and revealed a receptacle withal.
+ Alice had come forward eagerly, and they both looked into the
+ hiding-place, expecting what should be there. It was empty! They looked
+ into each other&rsquo;s faces with blank astonishment. Everything had been so
+ strangely true, and so strangely false, up to this moment, that they could
+ not comprehend this failure at the last moment. It was the strangest,
+ saddest jest! It brought Middleton up with such a sudden revulsion that he
+ grew dizzy, and the room swam round him and the cabinet dazzled before his
+ eyes. It had been magnified to a palace; it had dwindled down to
+ Liliputian size; and yet, up till now, it had seemed to contain in its
+ diminutiveness all the riches which he had attributed to its magnitude.
+ This last moment had utterly subverted it; the whole great structure
+ seemed to vanish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See; here are the dust and ashes of it,&rdquo; observed Alice, taking something
+ that was indeed only a pinch of dust out of the secret compartment. &ldquo;There
+ is nothing else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ II.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ May 5th, Wednesday.&mdash;The father of these two sons, an aged man at the
+ time, took much to heart their enmity; and after the catastrophe, he never
+ held up his head again. He was not told that his son had perished, though
+ such was the belief of the family; but imbibed the opinion that he had
+ left his home and native land to become a wanderer on the face of the
+ earth, and that some time or other he might return. In this idea he spent
+ the remainder of his days; in this idea he died. It may be that the
+ influence of this idea might be traced in the way in which he spent some
+ of the latter years of his life, and a portion of the wealth which had
+ become of little value in his eyes, since it had caused dissension and
+ bloodshed between the sons of one household. It was a common mode of
+ charity in those days&mdash;a common thing for rich men to do&mdash;to
+ found an almshouse or a hospital, and endow it, for the support of a
+ certain number of old and destitute men or women, generally such as had
+ some claim of blood upon the founder, or at least were natives of the
+ parish, the district, the county, where he dwelt. The Eldredge Hospital
+ was founded for the benefit of twelve old men, who should have been
+ wanderers upon the face of the earth; men, they should be, of some
+ education, but defeated and hopeless, cast off by the world for
+ misfortune, but not for crime. And this charity had subsisted, on terms
+ varying little or nothing from the original ones, from that day to this;
+ and, at this very time, twelve old men were not wanting, of various
+ countries, of various fortunes, but all ending finally in ruin, who had
+ centred here, to live on the poor pittance that had been assigned to them,
+ three hundred years ago. What a series of chronicles it would have been if
+ each of the beneficiaries of this charity, since its foundation, had left
+ a record of the events which finally led him hither. Middleton often, as
+ he talked with these old men, regretted that he himself had no turn for
+ authorship, so rich a volume might he have compiled from the experience,
+ sometimes sunny and triumphant, though always ending in shadow, which he
+ gathered here. They were glad to talk to him, and would have been glad and
+ grateful for any auditor, as they sat on one or another of the stone
+ benches, in the sunshine of the garden; or at evening, around the great
+ fireside, or within the chimney-corner, with their pipes and ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one old man who attracted much of his attention, by the
+ venerableness of his aspect; by something dignified, almost haughty and
+ commanding, in his air. Whatever might have been the intentions and
+ expectations of the founder, it certainly had happened in these latter
+ days that there was a difficulty in finding persons of education, of good
+ manners, of evident respectability, to put into the places made vacant by
+ deaths of members; whether that the paths of life are surer now than they
+ used to be, and that men so arrange their lives as not to be left, in any
+ event, quite without resources as they draw near its close; at any rate,
+ there was a little tincture of the vagabond running through these twelve
+ quasi gentlemen,&mdash;through several of them, at least. But this old man
+ could not well be mistaken; in his manners, in his tones, in all his
+ natural language and deportment, there was evidence that he had been more
+ than respectable; and, viewing him, Middleton could not help wondering
+ what statesman had suddenly vanished out of public life and taken refuge
+ here, for his head was of the statesman-class, and his demeanor that of
+ one who had exercised influence over large numbers of men. He sometimes
+ endeavored to set on foot a familiar relation with this old man, but there
+ was even a sternness in the manner in which he repelled these advances,
+ that gave little encouragement for their renewal. Nor did it seem that his
+ companions of the Hospital were more in his confidence than Middleton
+ himself. They regarded him with a kind of awe, a shyness, and in most
+ cases with a certain dislike, which denoted an imperfect understanding of
+ him. To say the truth, there was not generally much love lost between any
+ of the members of this family; they had met with too much disappointment
+ in the world to take kindly, now, to one another or to anything or
+ anybody. I rather suspect that they really had more pleasure in burying
+ one another, when the time came, than in any other office of mutual
+ kindness and brotherly love which it was their part to do; not out of
+ hardness of heart, but merely from soured temper, and because, when people
+ have met disappointment and have settled down into final unhappiness, with
+ no more gush and spring of good spirits, there is nothing any more to
+ create amiability out of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the old people were unamiable and cross to one another, and unamiable
+ and cross to old Hammond, yet always with a certain respect; and the
+ result seemed to be such as treated the old man well enough. And thus he
+ moved about among them, a mystery; the histories of the others, in the
+ general outline, were well enough known, and perhaps not very uncommon;
+ this old man&rsquo;s history was known to none, except, of course, to the
+ trustees of the charity, and to the Master of the Hospital, to whom it had
+ necessarily been revealed, before the beneficiary could be admitted as an
+ inmate. It was judged, by the deportment of the Master, that the old man
+ had once held some eminent position in society; for, though bound to treat
+ them all as gentlemen, he was thought to show an especial and solemn
+ courtesy to Hammond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet by the attraction which two strong and cultivated minds inevitably
+ have for one another, there did spring up an acquaintanceship, an
+ intercourse, between Middleton and this old man, which was followed up in
+ many a conversation which they held together on all subjects that were
+ supplied by the news of the day, or the history of the past. Middleton
+ used to make the newspaper the opening for much discussion; and it seemed
+ to him that the talk of his companion had much of the character of that of
+ a retired statesman, on matters which, perhaps, he would look at all the
+ more wisely, because it was impossible he could ever more have a personal
+ agency in them. Their discussions sometimes turned upon the affairs of his
+ own country, and its relations with the rest of the world, especially with
+ England; and Middleton could not help being struck with the accuracy of
+ the old man&rsquo;s knowledge respecting that country, which so few Englishmen
+ know anything about; his shrewd appreciation of the American character,&mdash;shrewd
+ and caustic, yet not without a good degree of justice; the sagacity of his
+ remarks on the past, and prophecies of what was likely to happen,&mdash;prophecies
+ which, in one instance, were singularly verified, in regard to a
+ complexity which was then arresting the attention of both countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must have been in the United States,&rdquo; said he, one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly; my remarks imply personal knowledge,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;But it
+ was before the days of steam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And not, I should imagine, for a brief visit,&rdquo; said Middleton. &ldquo;I only
+ wish the administration of this government had the benefit to-day of your
+ knowledge of my countrymen. It might be better for both of these kindred
+ nations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a whit,&rdquo; said the old man. &ldquo;England will never understand America;
+ for England never does understand a foreign country; and whatever you may
+ say about kindred, America is as much a foreign country as France itself.
+ These two hundred years of a different climate and circumstances&mdash;of
+ life on a broad continent instead of in an island, to say nothing of the
+ endless intermixture of nationalities in every part of the United States,
+ except New England&mdash;have created a new and decidedly original type of
+ national character. It is as well for both parties that they should not
+ aim at any very intimate connection. It will never do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be very sorry to think so,&rdquo; said Middleton; &ldquo;they are at all
+ events two noble breeds of men, and ought to appreciate one another. And
+ America has the breadth of idea to do this for England, whether
+ reciprocated or not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thursday, May 6th.&mdash;Thus Middleton was established in a singular way
+ among these old men, in one of the surroundings most unlike anything in
+ his own country. So old it was that it seemed to him the freshest and
+ newest thing that he had ever met with. The residence was made infinitely
+ the more interesting to him by the sense that he was near the place&mdash;as
+ all the indications warned him&mdash;which he sought, whither his dreams
+ had tended from his childhood; that he could wander each day round the
+ park within which were the old gables of what he believed was his
+ hereditary home. He had never known anything like the dreamy enjoyment of
+ these days; so quiet, such a contrast to the turbulent life from which he
+ had escaped across the sea. And here he set himself, still with that sense
+ of shadowiness in what he saw and in what he did, in making all the
+ researches possible to him, about the neighborhood; visiting every little
+ church that raised its square battlemented Norman tower of gray stone, for
+ several miles round about; making himself acquainted with each little
+ village and hamlet that surrounded these churches, clustering about the
+ graves of those who had dwelt in the same cottages aforetime. He visited
+ all the towns within a dozen miles; and probably there were few of the
+ inhabitants who had so good an acquaintance with the neighborhood as this
+ native American attained within a few weeks after his coming thither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In course of these excursions he had several times met with a young woman,&mdash;a
+ young lady, one might term her, but in fact he was in some doubt what rank
+ she might hold, in England,&mdash;who happened to be wandering about the
+ country with a singular freedom. She was always alone, always on foot; he
+ would see her sketching some picturesque old church, some ivied ruin, some
+ fine drooping elm. She was a slight figure, much more so than Englishwomen
+ generally are; and, though healthy of aspect, had not the ruddy
+ complexion, which he was irreverently inclined to call the coarse tint,
+ that is believed the great charm of English beauty. There was a freedom in
+ her step and whole little womanhood, an elasticity, an irregularity, so to
+ speak, that made her memorable from first sight; and when he had
+ encountered her three or four times, he felt in a certain way acquainted
+ with her. She was very simply dressed, and quite as simple in her
+ deportment; there had been one or two occasions, when they had both smiled
+ at the same thing; soon afterwards a little conversation had taken place
+ between them; and thus, without any introduction, and in a way that
+ somewhat puzzled Middleton himself, they had become acquainted. It was so
+ unusual that a young English girl should be wandering about the country
+ entirely alone&mdash;so much less usual that she should speak to a
+ stranger&mdash;that Middleton scarcely knew how to account for it, but
+ meanwhile accepted the fact readily and willingly, for in truth he found
+ this mysterious personage a very likely and entertaining companion. There
+ was a strange quality of boldness in her remarks, almost of brusqueness,
+ that he might have expected to find in a young countrywoman of his own, if
+ bred up among the strong-minded, but was astonished to find in a young
+ Englishwoman. Somehow or other she made him think more of home than any
+ other person or thing he met with; and he could not but feel that she was
+ in strange contrast with everything about her. She was no beauty; very
+ piquant; very pleasing; in some points of view and at some moments pretty;
+ always good-humored, but somewhat too self-possessed for Middleton&rsquo;s
+ taste. It struck him that she had talked with him as if she had some
+ knowledge of him and of the purposes with which he was there; not that
+ this was expressed, but only implied by the fact that, on looking back to
+ what had passed, he found many strange coincidences in what she had said
+ with what he was thinking about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He perplexed himself much with thinking whence this young woman had come,
+ where she belonged, and what might be her history; when, the next day, he
+ again saw her, not this time rambling on foot, but seated in an open
+ barouche with a young lady. Middleton lifted his hat to her, and she
+ nodded and smiled to him; and it appeared to Middleton that a conversation
+ ensued about him with the young lady, her companion. Now, what still more
+ interested him was the fact that, on the panel of the barouche were the
+ arms of the family now in possession of the estate of Smithell&rsquo;s; so that
+ the young lady, his new acquaintance, or the young lady, her seeming
+ friend, one or the other, was the sister of the present owner of that
+ estate. He was inclined to think that his acquaintance could not be the
+ Miss Eldredge, of whose beauty he had heard many tales among the people of
+ the neighborhood. The other young lady, a tall, reserved, fair-haired
+ maiden, answered the description considerably better. He concluded,
+ therefore, that his acquaintance must be a visitor, perhaps a dependent
+ and companion; though the freedom of her thought, action, and way of life
+ seemed hardly consistent with this idea. However, this slight incident
+ served to give him a sort of connection with the family, and he could but
+ hope that some further chance would introduce him within what he fondly
+ called his hereditary walls. He had come to think of this as a dreamland;
+ and it seemed even more a dreamland now than before it rendered itself
+ into actual substance, an old house of stone and timber standing within
+ its park, shaded about with its ancestral trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But thus, at all events, he was getting himself a little wrought into the
+ net-work of human life around him, secluded as his position had at first
+ seemed to be, in the farm-house where he had taken up his lodgings. For,
+ there was the Hospital and its old inhabitants, in whose monotonous
+ existence he soon came to pass for something, with his liveliness of mind,
+ his experience, his good sense, his patience as a listener, his
+ comparative youth even&mdash;his power of adapting himself to these stiff
+ and crusty characters, a power learned among other things in his political
+ life, where he had acquired something of the faculty (good or bad as might
+ be) of making himself all things to all men. But though he amused himself
+ with them all, there was in truth but one man among them in whom he really
+ felt much interest; and that one, we need hardly say, was Hammond. It was
+ not often that he found the old gentleman in a conversible mood; always
+ courteous, indeed, but generally cool and reserved; often engaged in his
+ one room, to which Middleton had never yet been admitted, though he had
+ more than once sent in his name, when Hammond was not apparent upon the
+ bench which, by common consent of the Hospital, was appropriated to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, however, notwithstanding that the old gentleman was confined to
+ his room by indisposition, he ventured to inquire at the door, and,
+ considerably to his surprise, was admitted. He found Hammond in his
+ easy-chair, at a table, with writing-materials before him: and as
+ Middleton entered, the old gentleman looked at him with a stern, fixed
+ regard, which, however, did not seem to imply any particular displeasure
+ towards this visitor, but rather a severe way of regarding mankind in
+ general. Middleton looked curiously around the small apartment, to see
+ what modification the character of the man had had upon the customary
+ furniture of the Hospital, and how much of individuality he had given to
+ that general type. There was a shelf of books, and a row of them on the
+ mantel-piece; works of political economy, they appeared to be, statistics
+ and things of that sort; very dry reading, with which, however,
+ Middleton&rsquo;s experience as a politician had made him acquainted. Besides
+ there were a few works on local antiquities, a county-history borrowed
+ from the Master&rsquo;s library, in which Hammond appeared to have been lately
+ reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are delightful reading,&rdquo; observed Middleton, &ldquo;these old
+ county-histories, with their great folio volumes and their minute account
+ of the affairs of families and the genealogies, and descents of estates,
+ bestowing as much blessed space on a few hundred acres as other historians
+ give to a principality. I fear that in my own country we shall never have
+ anything of this kind. Our space is so vast that we shall never come to
+ know and love it, inch by inch, as the English antiquarians do the tracts
+ of country with which they deal; and besides, our land is always likely to
+ lack the interest that belongs to English estates; for where land changes
+ its ownership every few years, it does not become imbued with the
+ personalities of the people who live on it. It is but so much grass; so
+ much dirt, where a succession of people have dwelt too little to make it
+ really their own. But I have found a pleasure that I had no conception of
+ before, in reading some of the English local histories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not a usual course of reading for a transitory visitor,&rdquo; said
+ Hammond. &ldquo;What could induce you to undertake it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Simply the wish, so common and natural with Americans,&rdquo; said Middleton&mdash;
+ &ldquo;the wish to find out something about my kindred&mdash;the local origin of
+ my own family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not show your wisdom in this,&rdquo; said his visitor. &ldquo;America had
+ better recognize the fact that it has nothing to do with England, and look
+ upon itself as other nations and people do, as existing on its own hook. I
+ never heard of any people looking back to the country of their remote
+ origin in the way the Anglo-Americans do. For instance, England is made up
+ of many alien races, German, Danish, Norman, and what not: it has received
+ large, accessions of population at a later date than the settlement of the
+ United States. Yet these families melt into the great homogeneous mass of
+ Englishmen, and look back no more to any other country. There are in this
+ vicinity many descendants of the French Huguenots; but they care no more
+ for France than for Timbuctoo, reckoning themselves only Englishmen, as if
+ they were descendants of the aboriginal Britons. Let it be so with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it might be,&rdquo; replied Middleton, &ldquo;only that our relations with England
+ remain far more numerous than our disconnections, through the bonds of
+ history, of literature, of all that makes up the memories, and much that
+ makes up the present interests of a people. And therefore I must still
+ continue to pore over these old folios, and hunt around these precincts,
+ spending thus the little idle time I am likely to have in a busy life.
+ Possibly finding little to my purpose; but that is quite a secondary
+ consideration.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you choose to tell me precisely what your aims are,&rdquo; said Hammond, &ldquo;it
+ is possible I might give you some little assistance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 7th, Friday.&mdash;Middleton was in fact more than half ashamed of the
+ dreams which he had cherished before coming to England, and which since,
+ at times, had been very potent with him, assuming as strong a tinge of
+ reality as those [scenes?] into which he had strayed. He could not prevail
+ with himself to disclose fully to this severe, and, as he thought, cynical
+ old man how strong within him was the sentiment that impelled him to
+ connect himself with the old life of England, to join on the broken thread
+ of ancestry and descent, and feel every link well established. But it
+ seemed to him that he ought not to lose this fair opportunity of gaining
+ some light on the abstruse field of his researches; and he therefore
+ explained to Hammond that he had reason, from old family traditions, to
+ believe that he brought with him a fragment of a history that, if followed
+ out, might lead to curious results. He told him, in a tone half serious,
+ what he had heard respecting the quarrel of the two brothers, and the
+ Bloody Footstep, the impress of which was said to remain, as a lasting
+ memorial of the tragic termination of that enmity. At this point, Hammond
+ interrupted him. He had indeed, at various points of the narrative, nodded
+ and smiled mysteriously, as if looking into his mind and seeing something
+ there analogous to what he was listening to. He now spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is curious,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Did you know that there is a manor-house in
+ this neighborhood, the family of which prides itself on having such a
+ blood-stained threshold as you have now described?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed!&rdquo; exclaimed Middleton, greatly interested. &ldquo;Where?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the old manor-house of Smithell&rsquo;s,&rdquo; replied Hammond, &ldquo;one of those
+ old wood and timber [plaster?] mansions, which are among the most ancient
+ specimens of domestic architecture in England. The house has now passed
+ into the female line, and by marriage has been for two or three
+ generations in possession of another family. But the blood of the old
+ inheritors is still in the family. The house itself, or portions of it,
+ are thought to date back quite as far as the Conquest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Smithell&rsquo;s?&rdquo; said Middleton. &ldquo;Why, I have seen that old house from a
+ distance, and have felt no little interest in its antique aspect. And it
+ has a Bloody Footstep! Would it be possible for a stranger to get an
+ opportunity to inspect it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unquestionably,&rdquo; said Hammond; &ldquo;nothing easier. It is but a moderate
+ distance from here, and if you can moderate your young footsteps, and your
+ American quick walk, to an old man&rsquo;s pace, I would go there with you some
+ day. In this languor and ennui of my life, I spend some time in local
+ antiquarianism, and perhaps I might assist you in tracing out how far
+ these traditions of yours may have any connection with reality. It would
+ be curious, would it not, if you had come, after two hundred years, to
+ piece out a story which may have been as much a mystery in England as
+ there in America?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An engagement was made for a walk to Smithell&rsquo;s the ensuing day; and
+ meanwhile Middleton entered more fully into what he had received from
+ family traditions and what he had thought out for himself on the matter in
+ question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you aware,&rdquo; asked Hammond, &ldquo;that there was formerly a title in this
+ family, now in abeyance, and which the heirs have at various times
+ claimed, and are at this moment claiming? Do you know, too,&mdash;but you
+ can scarcely know it,&mdash;that it has been surmised by some that there
+ is an insecurity in the title to the estate, and has always been; so that
+ the possessors have lived in some apprehension, from time immemorial, that
+ another heir would appear and take from them the fair inheritance? It is a
+ singular coincidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very strange,&rdquo; exclaimed Middleton. &ldquo;No; I was not aware of it; and, to
+ say the truth, I should not altogether like to come forward in the light
+ of a claimant. But this is a dream, surely!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I assure you, sir,&rdquo; continued the old man, &ldquo;that you come here in a very
+ critical moment; and singularly enough there is a perplexity, a
+ difficulty, that has endured for as long a time as when your ancestors
+ emigrated, that is still rampant within the bowels, as I may say, of the
+ family. Of course, it is too like a romance that you should be able to
+ establish any such claim as would have a valid influence on this matter;
+ but still, being here on the spot, it may be worth while, if merely as a
+ matter of amusement, to make some researches into this matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely I will,&rdquo; said Middleton, with a smile, which concealed more
+ earnestness than he liked to show; &ldquo;as to the title, a Republican cannot
+ be supposed to think twice about such a bagatelle. The estate!&mdash;that
+ might be a more serious consideration.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They continued to talk on the subject; and Middleton learned that the
+ present possessor of the estates was a gentleman nowise distinguished from
+ hundreds of other English gentlemen; a country squire modified in
+ accordance with the type of to-day, a frank, free, friendly sort of a
+ person enough, who had travelled on the Continent, who employed himself
+ much in field-sports, who was unmarried, and had a sister who was reckoned
+ among the beauties of the county.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the conversation was thus going on, to Middleton&rsquo;s astonishment
+ there came a knock at the door of the room, and, without waiting for a
+ response, it was opened, and there appeared at it the same young woman
+ whom he had already met. She came in with perfect freedom and familiarity,
+ and was received quietly by the old gentleman; who, however, by his manner
+ towards Middleton, indicated that he was now to take his leave. He did so,
+ after settling the hour at which the excursion of the next day was to take
+ place. This arranged, he departed, with much to think of, and a light
+ glimmering through the confused labyrinth of thoughts which had been
+ unilluminated hitherto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To say the truth, he questioned within himself whether it were not better
+ to get as quickly as he could out of the vicinity; and, at any rate, not
+ to put anything of earnest in what had hitherto been nothing more than a
+ romance to him. There was something very dark and sinister in the events
+ of family history, which now assumed a reality that they had never before
+ worn; so much tragedy, so much hatred, had been thrown into that deep pit,
+ and buried under the accumulated debris, the fallen leaves, the rust and
+ dust of more than two centuries, that it seemed not worth while to dig it
+ up; for perhaps the deadly influences, which it had taken so much time to
+ hide, might still be lurking there, and become potent if he now uncovered
+ them. There was something that startled him, in the strange, wild light,
+ which gleamed from the old man&rsquo;s eyes, as he threw out the suggestions
+ which had opened this prospect to him. What right had he&mdash;an
+ American, Republican, disconnected with this country so long, alien from
+ its habits of thought and life, reverencing none of the things which
+ Englishmen reverenced&mdash;what right had he to come with these musty
+ claims from the dim past, to disturb them in the life that belonged to
+ them? There was a higher and a deeper law than any connected with
+ ancestral claims which he could assert; and he had an idea that the law
+ bade him keep to the country which his ancestor had chosen and to its
+ institutions, and not meddle nor make with England. The roots of his
+ family tree could not reach under the ocean; he was at most but a seedling
+ from the parent tree. While thus meditating he found that his footsteps
+ had brought him unawares within sight of the old manor-house of
+ Smithell&rsquo;s; and that he was wandering in a path which, if he followed it
+ further, would bring him to an entrance in one of the wings of the
+ mansion. With a sort of shame upon him, he went forward, and, leaning
+ against a tree, looked at what he considered the home of his ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 9th, Sunday.&mdash;At the time appointed, the two companions set out
+ on their little expedition, the old man in his Hospital uniform, the long
+ black mantle, with the bear and ragged staff engraved in silver on the
+ breast, and Middleton in the plain costume which he had adopted in these
+ wanderings about the country. On their way, Hammond was not very
+ communicative, occasionally dropping some shrewd remark with a good deal
+ of acidity in it; now and then, too, favoring his companion with some
+ reminiscence of local antiquity; but oftenest silent. Thus they went on,
+ and entered the park of Pemberton Manor by a by-path, over a stile and one
+ of those footways, which are always so well worth threading out in
+ England, leading the pedestrian into picturesque and characteristic
+ scenes, when the high-road would show him nothing except what was
+ commonplace and uninteresting. Now the gables of the old manor-house
+ appeared before them, rising amidst the hereditary woods, which doubtless
+ dated from a time beyond the days which Middleton fondly recalled, when
+ his ancestors had walked beneath their shade. On each side of them were
+ thickets and copses of fern, amidst which they saw the hares peeping out
+ to gaze upon them, occasionally running across the path, and comporting
+ themselves like creatures that felt themselves under some sort of
+ protection from the outrages of man, though they knew too much of his
+ destructive character to trust him too far. Pheasants, too, rose close
+ beside them, and winged but a little way before they alighted; they
+ likewise knew, or seemed to know, that their hour was not yet come. On all
+ sides in these woods, these wastes, these beasts and birds, there was a
+ character that was neither wild nor tame. Man had laid his grasp on them
+ all, and done enough to redeem them from barbarism, but had stopped short
+ of domesticating them; although Nature, in the wildest thing there,
+ acknowledged the powerful and pervading influence of cultivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving at a side door of the mansion, Hammond rang the bell, and a
+ servant soon appeared. He seemed to know the old man, and immediately
+ acceded to his request to be permitted to show his companion the house;
+ although it was not precisely a show-house, nor was this the hour when
+ strangers were usually admitted. They entered; and the servant did not
+ give himself the trouble to act as a cicerone to the two visitants, but
+ carelessly said to the old gentleman that he knew the rooms, and that he
+ would leave him to discourse to his friend about them. Accordingly, they
+ went into the old hall, a dark oaken-panelled room, of no great height,
+ with many doors opening into it. There was a fire burning on the hearth;
+ indeed, it was the custom of the house to keep it up from morning to
+ night; and in the damp, chill climate of England, there is seldom a day in
+ some part of which a fire is not pleasant to feel. Hammond here pointed
+ out a stuffed fox, to which some story of a famous chase was attached; a
+ pair of antlers of enormous size; and some old family pictures, so
+ blackened with time and neglect that Middleton could not well distinguish
+ their features, though curious to do so, as hoping to see there the
+ lineaments of some with whom he might claim kindred. It was a venerable
+ apartment, and gave a good foretaste of what they might hope to find in
+ the rest of the mansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when they had inspected it pretty thoroughly, and were ready to
+ proceed, an elderly gentleman entered the hall, and, seeing Hammond,
+ addressed him in a kindly, familiar way; not indeed as an equal friend,
+ but with a pleasant and not irksome conversation. &ldquo;I am glad to see you
+ here again,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;What? I have an hour of leisure; for, to say the
+ truth, the day hangs rather heavy till the shooting season begins. Come;
+ as you have a friend with you, I will be your cicerone myself about the
+ house, and show you whatever mouldy objects of interest it contains.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then graciously noticed the old man&rsquo;s companion, but without asking or
+ seeming to expect an introduction; for, after a careless glance at him, he
+ had evidently set him down as a person without social claims, a young man
+ in the rank of life fitted to associate with an inmate of Pemberton&rsquo;s
+ Hospital. And it must be noticed that his treatment of Middleton was not
+ on that account the less kind, though far from being so elaborately
+ courteous as if he had met him as an equal. &ldquo;You have had something of a
+ walk,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and it is a rather hot day. The beer of Pemberton Manor
+ has been reckoned good these hundred years; will you taste it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hammond accepted the offer, and the beer was brought in a foaming tankard;
+ but Middleton declined it, for in truth there was a singular emotion in
+ his breast, as if the old enmity, the ancient injuries, were not yet
+ atoned for, and as if he must not accept the hospitality of one who
+ represented his hereditary foe. He felt, too, as if there were something
+ unworthy, a certain want of fairness, in entering clandestinely the house,
+ and talking with its occupant under a veil, as it were; and had he seen
+ clearly how to do it, he would perhaps at that moment have fairly told Mr.
+ Eldredge that he brought with him the character of kinsman, and must be
+ received in that grade or none. But it was not easy to do this; and after
+ all, there was no clear reason why he should do it; so he let the matter
+ pass, merely declining to take the refreshment, and keeping himself quiet
+ and retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Squire Eldredge seemed to be a good, ordinary sort of gentleman,
+ reasonably well educated, and with few ideas beyond his estate and
+ neighborhood, though he had once held a seat in Parliament for part of a
+ term. Middleton could not but contrast him, with an inward smile, with the
+ shrewd, alert politicians, their faculties all sharpened to the utmost,
+ whom he had known and consorted with in the American Congress. Hammond had
+ slightly informed him that his companion was an American; and Mr. Eldredge
+ immediately gave proof of the extent of his knowledge of that country, by
+ inquiring whether he came from the State of New England, and whether Mr.
+ Webster was still President of the United States; questions to which
+ Middleton returned answers that led to no further conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These little preliminaries over, they continued their ramble through the
+ house, going through tortuous passages, up and down little flights of
+ steps, and entering chambers that had all the charm of discoveries of
+ hidden regions; loitering about, in short, in a labyrinth calculated to
+ put the head into a delightful confusion. Some of these rooms contained
+ their time-honored furniture, all in the best possible repair, heavy,
+ dark, polished; beds that had been marriage beds and dying beds over and
+ over again; chairs with carved backs; and all manner of old world
+ curiosities; family pictures, and samplers, and embroidery; fragments of
+ tapestry; an inlaid floor; everything having a story to it, though, to say
+ the truth, the possessor of these curiosities made but a bungling piece of
+ work in telling the legends connected with them. In one or two instances
+ Hammond corrected him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by they came to what had once been the principal bed-room of the
+ house; though its gloom, and some circumstances of family misfortune that
+ had happened long ago, had caused it to fall into disrepute, in latter
+ times; and it was now called the Haunted Chamber, or the Ghost&rsquo;s Chamber.
+ The furniture of this room, however, was particularly rich in its antique
+ magnificence; and one of the principal objects was a great black cabinet
+ of ebony and ivory, such as may often be seen in old English houses, and
+ perhaps often in the palaces of Italy, in which country they perhaps
+ originated. This present cabinet was known to have been in the house as
+ long ago as the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and how much longer neither
+ tradition nor record told. Hammond particularly directed Middleton&rsquo;s
+ attention to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is nothing in this house,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;better worth your attention
+ than that cabinet. Consider its plan; it represents a stately mansion,
+ with pillars, an entrance, with a lofty flight of steps, windows, and
+ everything perfect. Examine it well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was such an emphasis in the old man&rsquo;s way of speaking that Middleton
+ turned suddenly round from all that he had been looking at, and fixed his
+ whole attention on the cabinet; and strangely enough, it seemed to be the
+ representative, in small, of something that he had seen in a dream. To say
+ the truth, if some cunning workman had been employed to copy his idea of
+ the old family mansion, on a scale of half an inch to a yard, and in ebony
+ and ivory instead of stone, he could not have produced a closer imitation.
+ Everything was there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is miraculous!&rdquo; exclaimed he. &ldquo;I do not understand it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your friend seems to be curious in these matters,&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge
+ graciously. &ldquo;Perhaps he is of some trade that makes this sort of
+ manufacture particularly interesting to him. You are quite at liberty, my
+ friend, to open the cabinet and inspect it as minutely as you wish. It is
+ an article that has a good deal to do with an obscure portion of our
+ family history. Look, here is the key, and the mode of opening the outer
+ door of the palace, as we may well call it.&rdquo; So saying, he threw open the
+ outer door, and disclosed within the mimic likeness of a stately entrance
+ hall, with a floor chequered of ebony and ivory. There were other doors
+ that seemed to open into apartments in the interior of the palace; but
+ when Mr. Eldredge threw them likewise wide, they proved to be drawers and
+ secret receptacles, where papers, jewels, money, anything that it was
+ desirable to store away secretly, might be kept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You said, sir,&rdquo; said Middleton, thoughtfully, &ldquo;that your family history
+ contained matter of interest in reference to this cabinet. Might I inquire
+ what those legends are?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge, musing a little. &ldquo;I see no reason why I
+ should have any idle concealment about the matter, especially to a
+ foreigner and a man whom I am never likely to see again. You must know,
+ then, my friend, that there was once a time when this cabinet was known to
+ contain the fate of the estate and its possessors; and if it had held all
+ that it was supposed to hold, I should not now be the lord of Pemberton
+ Manor, nor the claimant of an ancient title. But my father, and his father
+ before him, and his father besides, have held the estate and prospered on
+ it; and I think we may fairly conclude now that the cabinet contains
+ nothing except what we see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he rapidly again threw open one after another all the numerous drawers
+ and receptacles of the cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is an interesting object,&rdquo; said Middleton, after looking very closely
+ and with great attention at it, being pressed thereto, indeed, by the
+ owner&rsquo;s good-natured satisfaction in possessing this rare article of
+ vertu. &ldquo;It is admirable work,&rdquo; repeated he, drawing back. &ldquo;That mosaic
+ floor, especially, is done with an art and skill that I never saw
+ equalled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something strange and altered in Middleton&rsquo;s tones, that
+ attracted the notice of Mr. Eldredge. Looking at him, he saw that he had
+ grown pale, and had a rather bewildered air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is your friend ill?&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;He has not our English ruggedness of look.
+ He would have done better to take a sip of the cool tankard, and a slice
+ of the cold beef. He finds no such food and drink as that in his own
+ country, I warrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His color has come back,&rdquo; responded Hammond, briefly. &ldquo;He does not need
+ any refreshment, I think, except, perhaps, the open air.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, Middleton, recovering himself, apologized to Mr. Hammond.
+ [Eldredge?]; and as they had now seen nearly the whole of the house, the
+ two visitants took their leave, with many kindly offers on Mr. Eldredge&rsquo;s
+ part to permit the young man to view the cabinet whenever he wished. As
+ they went out of the house (it was by another door than that which gave
+ them entrance), Hammond laid his hand on Middleton&rsquo;s shoulder and pointed
+ to a stone on the threshold, on which he was about to set his foot. &ldquo;Take
+ care!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;It is the Bloody Footstep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton looked down and saw something, indeed, very like the shape of a
+ footprint, with a hue very like that of blood. It was a twilight sort of a
+ place, beneath a porch, which was much overshadowed by trees and
+ shrubbery. It might have been blood; but he rather thought, in his wicked
+ skepticism, that it was a natural, reddish stain in the stone. He measured
+ his own foot, however, in the Bloody Footstep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 10th, Monday.&mdash;This is the present aspect of the story: Middleton
+ is the descendant of a family long settled in the United States; his
+ ancestor having emigrated to New England with the Pilgrims; or, perhaps,
+ at a still earlier date, to Virginia with Raleigh&rsquo;s colonists. There had
+ been a family dissension,&mdash;a bitter hostility between two brothers in
+ England; on account, probably, of a love affair, the two both being
+ attached to the same lady. By the influence of the family on both sides,
+ the young lady had formed an engagement with the elder brother, although
+ her affections had settled on the younger. The marriage was about to take
+ place when the younger brother and the bride both disappeared, and were
+ never heard of with any certainty afterwards; but it was believed at the
+ time that he had been killed, and in proof of it a bloody footstep
+ remained on the threshold of the ancestral mansion. There were rumors,
+ afterwards, traditionally continued to the present day, that the younger
+ brother and the bride were seen, and together, in England; and that some
+ voyager across the sea had found them living together, husband and wife,
+ on the other side of the Atlantic. But the elder brother became a moody
+ and reserved man, never married, and left the inheritance to the children
+ of a third brother, who then became the representative of the family in
+ England; and the better authenticated story was that the second brother
+ had really been slain, and that the young lady (for all the parties may
+ have been Catholic) had gone to the Continent and taken the veil there.
+ Such was the family history as known or surmised in England, and in the
+ neighborhood of the manor-house, where the Bloody Footstep still remained
+ on the threshold; and the posterity of the third brother still held the
+ estate, and perhaps were claimants of an ancient baronage, long in
+ abeyance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, on the other side of the Atlantic, the second brother and the young
+ lady had really been married, and became the parents of a posterity, still
+ extant, of which the Middleton of the romance is the surviving male.
+ Perhaps he had changed his name, being so much tortured with the evil and
+ wrong that had sprung up in his family, so remorseful, so outraged, that
+ he wished to disconnect himself with all the past, and begin life quite
+ anew in a new world. But both he and his wife, though happy in one
+ another, had been remorsefully and sadly so; and, with such feelings, they
+ had never again communicated with their respective families, nor had given
+ their children the means of doing so. There must, I think, have been
+ something nearly approaching to guilt on the second brother&rsquo;s part, and
+ the bride should have broken a solemnly plighted troth to the elder
+ brother, breaking away from him when almost his wife. The elder brother
+ had been known to have been wounded at the time of the second brother&rsquo;s
+ disappearance; and it had been the surmise that he had received this hurt
+ in the personal conflict in which the latter was slain. But in truth the
+ second brother had stabbed him in the emergency of being discovered in the
+ act of escaping with the bride; and this was what weighed upon his
+ conscience throughout life in America. The American family had prolonged
+ itself through various fortunes, and all the ups and downs incident to our
+ institutions, until the present day. They had some old family documents,
+ which had been rather carelessly kept; but the present representative,
+ being an educated man, had looked over them, and found one which
+ interested him strongly. It was&mdash;what was it?&mdash;perhaps a copy of
+ a letter written by his ancestor on his deathbed, telling his real name,
+ and relating the above incidents. These incidents had come down in a vague
+ wild way, traditionally, in the American family, forming a wondrous and
+ incredible legend, which Middleton had often laughed at, yet been greatly
+ interested in; and the discovery of this document seemed to give a certain
+ aspect of veracity and reality to the tradition. Perhaps, however, the
+ document only related to the change of name, and made reference to certain
+ evidences by which, if any descendant of the family should deem it
+ expedient, he might prove his hereditary identity. The legend must be
+ accounted for by having been gathered from the talk of the first ancestor
+ and his wife. There must be in existence, in the early records of the
+ colony, an authenticated statement of this change of name, and
+ satisfactory proofs that the American family, long known as Middleton,
+ were really a branch of the English family of Eldredge, or whatever. And
+ in the legend, though not in the written document, there must be an
+ account of a certain magnificent, almost palatial residence, which
+ Middleton shall presume to be the ancestral house; and in this palace
+ there shall be said to be a certain secret chamber, or receptacle, where
+ is reposited a document that shall complete the evidence of the
+ genealogical descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton is still a young man, but already a distinguished one in his own
+ country; he has entered early into politics, been sent to Congress, but
+ having met with some disappointments in his ambitious hopes, and being
+ disgusted with the fierceness of political contests in our country, he has
+ come abroad for recreation and rest. His imagination has dwelt much, in
+ his boyhood, on the legendary story of his family; and the discovery of
+ the document has revived these dreams. He determines to search out the
+ family mansion; and thus he arrives, bringing half of a story, being the
+ only part known in America, to join it on to the other half, which is the
+ only part known in England. In an introduction I must do the best I can to
+ state his side of the matter to the reader, he having communicated it to
+ me in a friendly way, at the Consulate; as many people have communicated
+ quite as wild pretensions to English genealogies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He comes to the midland counties of England, where he conceives his claims
+ to lie, and seeks for his ancestral home; but there are difficulties in
+ the way of finding it, the estates having passed into the female line,
+ though still remaining in the blood. By and by, however, he comes to an
+ old town where there is one of the charitable institutions bearing the
+ name of his family, by whose beneficence it had indeed been founded, in
+ Queen Elizabeth&rsquo;s time. He of course becomes interested in this Hospital;
+ he finds it still going on, precisely as it did in the old days; and all
+ the character and life of the establishment must be picturesquely
+ described. Here he gets acquainted with an old man, an inmate of the
+ Hospital, who (if the uncontrollable fatality of the story will permit)
+ must have an active influence on the ensuing events. I suppose him to have
+ been an American, but to have fled his country and taken refuge in
+ England; he shall have been a man of the Nicholas Biddle stamp, a mighty
+ speculator, the ruin of whose schemes had crushed hundreds of people, and
+ Middleton&rsquo;s father among the rest. Here he had quitted the activity of his
+ mind, as well as he could, becoming a local antiquary, etc., and he has
+ made himself acquainted with the family history of the Eldredges, knowing
+ more about it than the members of the family themselves do. He had known
+ in America (from Middleton&rsquo;s father, who was his friend) the legends
+ preserved in this branch of the family, and perhaps had been struck by the
+ way in which they fit into the English legends; at any rate, this strikes
+ him when Middleton tells him his story and shows him the document
+ respecting the change of name. After various conversations together (in
+ which, however, the old man keeps the secret of his own identity, and
+ indeed acts as mysteriously as possible) they go together to visit the
+ ancestral mansion. Perhaps it should not be in their first visit that the
+ cabinet, representing the stately mansion, shall be seen. But the Bloody
+ Footstep may; which shall interest Middleton much, both because Hammond
+ has told him the English tradition respecting it, and because too the
+ legends of the American family made some obscure allusions to his ancestor
+ having left blood&mdash;a bloody footstep&mdash;on the ancestral
+ threshold. This is the point to which the story has now been sketched out.
+ Middleton finds a commonplace old English country gentleman in possession
+ of the estate, where his forefathers had lived in peace for many
+ generations; but there must be circumstances contrived which shall cause
+ Middleton&rsquo;s conduct to be attended by no end of turmoil and trouble. The
+ old Hospitaller, I suppose, must be the malicious agent in this; and his
+ malice must be motived in some satisfactory way. The more serious
+ question, what shall be the nature of this tragic trouble, and how can it
+ be brought about?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 11th, Tuesday.&mdash;How much better would it have been if this
+ secret, which seemed so golden, had remained in the obscurity in which two
+ hundred years had buried it! That deep, old, grass-grown grave being
+ opened, out from it streamed into the sunshine the old fatalities, the old
+ crimes, the old misfortunes, the sorrows, that seemed to have departed
+ from the family forever. But it was too late now to close it up; he must
+ follow out the thread that led him on,&mdash;the thread of fate, if you
+ choose to call it so; but rather the impulse of an evil will, a stubborn
+ self-interest, a desire for certain objects of ambition which were
+ preferred to what yet were recognized as real goods. Thus reasoned, thus
+ raved, Eldredge, as he considered the things that he had done, and still
+ intended to do; nor did these perceptions make the slightest difference in
+ his plans, nor in the activity with which he set about their performance.
+ For this purpose he sent for his lawyer, and consulted him on the
+ feasibility of the design which he had already communicated to him
+ respecting Middleton. But the man of law shook his head, and, though
+ deferentially, declined to have any active concern with the matter that
+ threatened to lead him beyond the bounds which he allowed himself, into a
+ seductive but perilous region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; said he, with some earnestness, &ldquo;you had much better
+ content yourself with such assistance as I can professionally and
+ consistently give you. Believe [me], I am willing to do a lawyer&rsquo;s utmost,
+ and to do more would be as unsafe for the client as for the legal
+ adviser.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus left without an agent and an instrument, this unfortunate man had to
+ meditate on what means he would use to gain his ends through his own
+ unassisted efforts. In the struggle with himself through which he had
+ passed, he had exhausted pretty much all the feelings that he had to
+ bestow on this matter; and now he was ready to take hold of almost any
+ temptation that might present itself, so long as it showed a good prospect
+ of success and a plausible chance of impunity. While he was thus musing,
+ he heard a female voice chanting some song, like a bird&rsquo;s among the
+ pleasant foliage of the trees, and soon he saw at the end of a wood-walk
+ Alice, with her basket on her arm, passing on toward the village. She
+ looked towards him as she passed, but made no pause nor yet hastened her
+ steps; not seeming to think it worth her while to be influenced by him. He
+ hurried forward and overtook her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So there was this poor old gentleman, his comfort utterly overthrown,
+ decking his white hair and wrinkled brow with the semblance of a coronet,
+ and only hoping that the reality might crown and bless him before he was
+ laid in the ancestral tomb. It was a real calamity; though by no means the
+ greatest that had been fished up out of the pit of domestic discord that
+ had been opened anew by the advent of the American; and by the use which
+ had been made of it by the cantankerous old man of the Hospital.
+ Middleton, as he looked at these evil consequences, sometimes regretted
+ that he had not listened to those forebodings which had warned him back on
+ the eve of his enterprise; yet such was the strange entanglement and
+ interest which had wound about him, that often he rejoiced that for once
+ he was engaged in something that absorbed him fully, and the zeal for the
+ development of which made him careless for the result in respect to its
+ good or evil, but only desirous that it show itself. As for Alice, she
+ seemed to skim lightly through all these matters, whether as a spirit of
+ good or ill he could not satisfactorily judge. He could not think her
+ wicked; yet her actions seemed unaccountable on the plea that she was
+ otherwise. It was another characteristic thread in the wild web of madness
+ that had spun itself about all the prominent characters of our story. And
+ when Middleton thought of these things, he felt as if it might be his duty
+ (supposing he had the power) to shovel the earth again into the pit that
+ he had been the means of opening; but also felt that, whether duty or not,
+ he would never perform it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, you see, on the American&rsquo;s arrival he had found the estate in the
+ hands of one of the descendants; but some disclosures consequent on his
+ arrival had thrown it into the hands of another; or, at all events, had
+ seemed to make it apparent that justice required that it should be so
+ disposed of. No sooner was the discovery made than the possessor put on a
+ coronet; the new heir had commenced legal proceedings; the sons of the
+ respective branches had come to blows and blood; and the devil knows what
+ other devilish consequences had ensued. Besides this, there was much
+ falling in love at cross-purposes, and a general animosity of every body
+ against everybody else, in proportion to the closeness of the natural ties
+ and their obligation to love one another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moral, if any moral were to be gathered from these petty and wretched
+ circumstances, was, &ldquo;Let the past alone: do not seek to renew it; press on
+ to higher and better things,&mdash;at all events, to other things; and be
+ assured that the right way can never be that which leads you back to the
+ identical shapes that you long ago left behind. Onward, onward, onward!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What have you to do here?&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;Your lot is in another land. You
+ have seen the birthplace of your forefathers, and have gratified your
+ natural yearning for it; now return, and cast in your lot with your own
+ people, let it be what it will. I fully believe that it is such a lot as
+ the world has never yet seen, and that the faults, the weaknesses, the
+ errors, of your countrymen will vanish away like morning mists before the
+ rising sun. You can do nothing better than to go back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is strange advice, Alice,&rdquo; said Middleton, gazing at her and
+ smiling. &ldquo;Go back, with such a fair prospect before me; that were strange
+ indeed! It is enough to keep me here, that here only I shall see you,&mdash;enough
+ to make me rejoice to have come, that I have found you here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not speak in this foolish way,&rdquo; cried Alice, panting. &ldquo;I am giving you
+ the best advice, and speaking in the wisest way I am capable of,&mdash;
+ speaking on good grounds too,&mdash;and you turn me aside with a silly
+ compliment. I tell you that this is no comedy in which we are performers,
+ but a deep, sad tragedy; and that it depends most upon you whether or no
+ it shall be pressed to a catastrophe. Think well of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have thought, Alice,&rdquo; responded the young man, &ldquo;and I must let things
+ take their course; if, indeed, it depends at all upon me, which I see no
+ present reason to suppose. Yet I wish you would explain to me what you
+ mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To take up the story from the point where we left it: by the aid of the
+ American&rsquo;s revelations, some light is thrown upon points of family
+ history, which induce the English possessor of the estate to suppose that
+ the time has come for asserting his claim to a title which has long been
+ in abeyance. He therefore sets about it, and engages in great expenses,
+ besides contracting the enmity of many persons, with whose interests he
+ interferes. A further complication is brought about by the secret
+ interference of the old Hospitaller, and Alice goes singing and dancing
+ through the whole, in a way that makes her seem like a beautiful devil,
+ though finally it will be recognized that she is an angel of light.
+ Middleton, half bewildered, can scarcely tell how much of this is due to
+ his own agency; how much is independent of him and would have happened had
+ he stayed on his own side of the water. By and by a further and unexpected
+ development presents the singular fact that he himself is the heir to
+ whatever claims there are, whether of property or rank,&mdash;all centring
+ in him as the representative of the eldest brother. On this discovery
+ there ensues a tragedy in the death of the present possessor of the
+ estate, who has staked everything upon the issue; and Middleton, standing
+ amid the ruin and desolation of which he has been the innocent cause,
+ resigns all the claims which he might now assert, and retires, arm in arm
+ with Alice, who has encouraged him to take this course, and to act up to
+ his character. The estate takes a passage into the female line, and the
+ old name becomes extinct, nor does Middleton seek to continue it by
+ resuming it in place of the one long ago assumed by his ancestor. Thus he
+ and his wife become the Adam and Eve of a new epoch, and the fitting
+ missionaries of a new social faith, of which there must be continual hints
+ through the book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A knot of characters may be introduced as gathering around Middleton,
+ comprising expatriated Americans of all sorts: the wandering printer who
+ came to me so often at the Consulate, who said he was a native of
+ Philadelphia, and could not go home in the thirty years that he had been
+ trying to do so, for lack of the money to pay his passage; the large
+ banker; the consul of Leeds; the woman asserting her claims to half
+ Liverpool; the gifted literary lady, maddened by Shakespeare, etc., etc.
+ The Yankee who had been driven insane by the Queen&rsquo;s notice, slight as it
+ was, of the photographs of his two children which he had sent her. I have
+ not yet struck the true key-note of this Romance, and until I do, and
+ unless I do, I shall write nothing but tediousness and nonsense. I do not
+ wish it to be a picture of life, but a Romance, grim, grotesque, quaint,
+ of which the Hospital might be the fitting scene. It might have so much of
+ the hues of life that the reader should sometimes think it was intended
+ for a picture, yet the atmosphere should be such as to excuse all
+ wildness. In the Introduction, I might disclaim all intention to draw a
+ real picture, but say that the continual meetings I had with Americans
+ bent on such errands had suggested this wild story. The descriptions of
+ scenery, etc., and of the Hospital, might be correct, but there should be
+ a tinge of the grotesque given to all the characters and events. The
+ tragic and the gentler pathetic need not be excluded by the tone and
+ treatment. If I could but write one central scene in this vein, all the
+ rest of the Romance would readily arrange itself around that nucleus. The
+ begging-girl would be another American character; the actress too; the
+ caravan people. It must be humorous work, or nothing.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ III.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ May 12th, Wednesday.&mdash;Middleton found his abode here becoming daily
+ more interesting; and he sometimes thought that it was the sympathies with
+ the place and people, buried under the supergrowth of so many ages, but
+ now coming forth with the life and vigor of a fountain, that, long hidden
+ beneath earth and ruins, gushes out singing into the sunshine, as soon as
+ these are removed. He wandered about the neighborhood with insatiable
+ interest; sometimes, and often, lying on a hill-side and gazing at the
+ gray tower of the church; sometimes coming into the village clustered
+ round that same church, and looking at the old timber and plaster houses,
+ the same, except that the thatch had probably been often renewed, that
+ they used to be in his ancestor&rsquo;s days. In those old cottages still dwelt
+ the families, the &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;s, the Prices, the Hopnorts, the
+ Copleys, that had dwelt there when America was a scattered progeny of
+ infant colonies; and in the churchyard were the graves of all the
+ generations since&mdash;including the dust of those who had seen his
+ ancestor&rsquo;s face before his departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The graves, outside the church walls indeed, bore no marks of this
+ antiquity; for it seems not to have been an early practice in England to
+ put stones over such graves; and where it has been done, the climate
+ causes the inscriptions soon to become obliterated and unintelligible.
+ But, within the church, there were rich words of the personages and times
+ with whom Middleton&rsquo;s musings held so much converse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one of his greatest employments and pastimes was to ramble through the
+ grounds of Smithell&rsquo;s, making himself as well acquainted with its wood
+ paths, its glens, its woods, its venerable trees, as if he had been bred
+ up there from infancy. Some of those old oaks his ancestor might have been
+ acquainted with, while they were already sturdy and well-grown trees;
+ might have climbed them in boyhood; might have mused beneath them as a
+ lover; might have flung himself at full length on the turf beneath them,
+ in the bitter anguish that must have preceded his departure forever from
+ the home of his forefathers. In order to secure an uninterrupted enjoyment
+ of his rambles here, Middleton had secured the good-will of the
+ game-keepers and other underlings whom he was likely to meet about the
+ grounds, by giving them a shilling or a half-crown; and he was now free to
+ wander where he would, with only the advice rather than the caution, to
+ keep out of the way of their old master,&mdash;for there might be trouble,
+ if he should meet a stranger on the grounds, in any of his tantrums. But,
+ in fact, Mr. Eldredge was not much in the habit of walking about the
+ grounds; and there were hours of every day, during which it was altogether
+ improbable that he would have emerged from his own apartments in the
+ manor-house. These were the hours, therefore, when Middleton most
+ frequented the estate; although, to say the truth, he would gladly have so
+ timed his visits as to meet and form an acquaintance with the lonely lord
+ of this beautiful property, his own kinsman, though with so many ages of
+ dark oblivion between. For Middleton had not that feeling of infinite
+ distance in the relationship, which he would have had if his branch of the
+ family had continued in England, and had not intermarried with the other
+ branch, through such a long waste of years; he rather felt as if he were
+ the original emigrant who, long resident on a foreign shore, had now
+ returned, with a heart brimful of tenderness, to revisit the scenes of his
+ youth, and renew his tender relations with those who shared his own blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not, however, much in what he heard of the character of the
+ present possessor of the estate&mdash;or indeed in the strong family
+ characteristic that had become hereditary&mdash;to encourage him to
+ attempt any advances. It is very probable that the religion of Mr.
+ Eldredge, as a Catholic, may have excited a prejudice against him, as it
+ certainly had insulated the family, in a great degree, from the sympathies
+ of the neighborhood. Mr. Eldredge, moreover, had resided long on the
+ Continent; long in Italy; and had come back with habits that little
+ accorded with those of the gentry of the neighborhood; so that, in fact,
+ he was almost as much of a stranger, and perhaps quite as little of a real
+ Englishman, as Middleton himself. Be that as it might, Middleton, when he
+ sought to learn something about him, heard the strangest stories of his
+ habits of life, of his temper, and of his employments, from the people
+ with whom he conversed. The old legend, turning upon the monomania of the
+ family, was revived in full force in reference to this poor gentleman; and
+ many a time Middleton&rsquo;s interlocutors shook their wise heads, saying with
+ a knowing look and under their breath that the old gentleman was looking
+ for the track of the Bloody Footstep. They fabled&mdash;or said, for it
+ might not have been a false story&mdash;that every descendant of this
+ house had a certain portion of his life, during which he sought the track
+ of that footstep which was left on the threshold of the mansion; that he
+ sought it far and wide, over every foot of the estate; not only on the
+ estate, but throughout the neighborhood; not only in the neighborhood but
+ all over England; not only throughout England but all about the world. It
+ was the belief of the neighborhood&mdash;at least of some old men and
+ women in it&mdash;that the long period of Mr. Eldredge&rsquo;s absence from
+ England had been spent in the search for some trace of those departing
+ footsteps that had never returned. It is very possible&mdash;probable,
+ indeed&mdash;that there may have been some ground for this remarkable
+ legend; not that it is to be credited that the family of Eldredge, being
+ reckoned among sane men, would seriously have sought, years and
+ generations after the fact, for the first track of those bloody footsteps
+ which the first rain of drippy England must have washed away; to say
+ nothing of the leaves that had fallen and the growth and decay of so many
+ seasons, that covered all traces of them since. But nothing is more
+ probable than that the continual recurrence to the family genealogy, which
+ had been necessitated by the matter of the dormant peerage, had caused the
+ Eldredges, from father to son, to keep alive an interest in that ancestor
+ who had disappeared, and who had been supposed to carry some of the most
+ important family papers with him. But yet it gave Middleton a strange
+ thrill of pleasure, that had something fearful in it, to think that all
+ through these ages he had been waited for, sought for, anxiously expected,
+ as it were; it seemed as if the very ghosts of his kindred, a long shadowy
+ line, held forth their dim arms to welcome him; a line stretching back to
+ the ghosts of those who had flourished in the old, old times; the
+ doubletted and beruffled knightly shades of Queen Elizabeth&rsquo;s time; a long
+ line, stretching from the mediaeval ages, and their duskiness, downward,
+ downward, with only one vacant space, that of him who had left the Bloody
+ Footstep. There was an inexpressible pleasure (airy and evanescent, gone
+ in a moment if he dwelt upon it too thoughtfully, but very sweet) to
+ Middleton&rsquo;s imagination, in this idea. When he reflected, however, that
+ his revelations, if they had any effect at all, might serve only to quench
+ the hopes of these long expectants, it of course made him hesitate to
+ declare himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One afternoon, when he was in the midst of musings such as this, he saw at
+ a distance through the park, in the direction of the manor-house, a person
+ who seemed to be walking slowly and seeking for something upon the ground.
+ He was a long way off when Middleton first perceived him; and there were
+ two clumps of trees and underbrush, with interspersed tracts of sunny
+ lawn, between them. The person, whoever he was, kept on, and plunged into
+ the first clump of shrubbery, still keeping his eyes on the ground, as if
+ intensely searching for something. When he emerged from the concealment of
+ the first clump of shrubbery, Middleton saw that he was a tall, thin
+ person, in a dark dress; and this was the chief observation that the
+ distance enabled him to make, as the figure kept slowly onward, in a
+ somewhat wavering line, and plunged into the second clump of shrubbery.
+ From that, too, he emerged; and soon appeared to be a thin elderly figure,
+ of a dark man with gray hair, bent, as it seemed to Middleton, with
+ infirmity, for his figure still stooped even in the intervals when he did
+ not appear to be tracking the ground. But Middleton could not but be
+ surprised at the singular appearance the figure had of setting its foot,
+ at every step, just where a previous footstep had been made, as if he
+ wanted to measure his whole pathway in the track of somebody who had
+ recently gone over the ground in advance of him. Middleton was sitting at
+ the foot of an oak; and he began to feel some awkwardness in the
+ consideration of what he would do if Mr. Eldredge&mdash;for he could not
+ doubt that it was he&mdash;were to be led just to this spot, in pursuit of
+ his singular occupation. And even so it proved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton could not feel it manly to fly and hide himself, like a guilty
+ thing; and indeed the hospitality of the English country gentleman in many
+ cases gives the neighborhood and the stranger a certain degree of freedom
+ in the use of the broad expanse of ground in which they and their
+ forefathers have loved to sequester their residences. The figure kept on,
+ showing more and more distinctly the tall, meagre, not unvenerable
+ features of a gentleman in the decline of life, apparently in ill-health;
+ with a dark face, that might once have been full of energy, but now seemed
+ enfeebled by time, passion, and perhaps sorrow. But it was strange to see
+ the earnestness with which he looked on the ground, and the accuracy with
+ which he at last set his foot, apparently adjusting it exactly to some
+ footprint before him; and Middleton doubted not that, having studied and
+ restudied the family records and the judicial examinations which described
+ exactly the track that was seen the day after the memorable disappearance
+ of his ancestor, Mr. Eldredge was now, in some freak, or for some purpose
+ best known to himself, practically following it out. And follow it out he
+ did, until at last he lifted up his eyes, muttering to himself: &ldquo;At this
+ point the footsteps wholly disappear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lifting his eyes, as we have said, while thus regretfully and despairingly
+ muttering these words, he saw Middleton against the oak, within three
+ paces of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 13th, Thursday.&mdash;Mr. Eldredge (for it was he) first kept his eyes
+ fixed full on Middleton&rsquo;s face, with an expression as if he saw him not;
+ but gradually&mdash;slowly, at first&mdash;he seemed to become aware of
+ his presence; then, with a sudden flush, he took in the idea that he was
+ encountered by a stranger in his secret mood. A flush of anger or shame,
+ perhaps both, reddened over his face; his eyes gleamed; and he spoke
+ hastily and roughly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;How come you here? I allow no intruders in my
+ park. Begone, fellow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really, sir, I did not mean to intrude upon you,&rdquo; said Middleton blandly.
+ &ldquo;I am aware that I owe you an apology; but the beauties of your park must
+ plead my excuse; and the constant kindness of [the] English gentleman,
+ which admits a stranger to the privilege of enjoying so much of the beauty
+ in which he himself dwells as the stranger&rsquo;s taste permits him to enjoy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An artist, perhaps,&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge, somewhat less uncourteously. &ldquo;I
+ am told that they love to come here and sketch those old oaks and their
+ vistas, and the old mansion yonder. But you are an obtrusive set, you
+ artists, and think that a pencil and a sheet of paper may be your passport
+ anywhere. You are mistaken, sir. My park is not open to strangers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry, then, to have intruded upon you,&rdquo; said Middleton, still in
+ good humor; for in truth he felt a sort of kindness, a sentiment,
+ ridiculous as it may appear, of kindred towards the old gentleman, and
+ besides was not unwilling in any way to prolong a conversation in which he
+ found a singular interest. &ldquo;I am sorry, especially as I have not even the
+ excuse you kindly suggest for me. I am not an artist, only an American,
+ who have strayed hither to enjoy this gentle, cultivated, tamed nature
+ which I find in English parks, so contrasting with the wild, rugged nature
+ of my native land. I beg your pardon, and will retire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An American,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Eldredge, looking curiously at him. &ldquo;Ah, you
+ are wild men in that country, I suppose, and cannot conceive that an
+ English gentleman encloses his grounds&mdash;or that his ancestors have
+ done so before him&mdash;for his own pleasure and convenience, and does
+ not calculate on having it infringed upon by everybody, like your own
+ forests, as you say. It is a curious country, that of yours: and in Italy
+ I have seen curious people from it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, sir,&rdquo; said Middleton, smiling. &ldquo;We send queer specimens abroad; but
+ Englishmen should consider that we spring from them, and that we present
+ after all only a picture of their own characteristics, a little varied by
+ climate and in situation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Eldredge looked at him with a certain kind of interest, and it seemed
+ to Middleton that he was not unwilling to continue the conversation, if a
+ fair way to do so could only be afforded to him. A secluded man often
+ grasps at any opportunity of communicating with his kind, when it is
+ casually offered to him, and for the nonce is surprisingly familiar,
+ running out towards his chance-companion with the gush of a dammed-up
+ torrent, suddenly unlocked. As Middleton made a motion to retire, he put
+ out his hand with an air of authority to restrain him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Now that you are here, the mischief is done, and you
+ cannot repair it by hastening away. You have interrupted me in my mood of
+ thought, and must pay the penalty by suggesting other thoughts. I am a
+ lonely man here, having spent most of my life abroad, and am separated
+ from my neighbors by various circumstances. You seem to be an intelligent
+ man. I should like to ask you a few questions about your country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at Middleton as he spoke, and seemed to be considering in what
+ rank of life he should place him; his dress being such as suited a humble
+ rank. He seemed not to have come to any very certain decision on this
+ point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you have no distinctions of rank in your country;
+ a convenient thing enough, in some respects. When there are no gentlemen,
+ all are gentlemen. So let it be. You speak of being Englishmen; and it has
+ often occurred to me that Englishmen have left this country and been much
+ missed and sought after, who might perhaps be sought there successfully.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is certainly so, Mr. Eldredge,&rdquo; said Middleton, lifting his eyes to
+ his face as he spoke, and then turning them aside. &ldquo;Many footsteps, the
+ track of which is lost in England, might be found reappearing on the other
+ side of the Atlantic; ay, though it be hundreds of years since the track
+ was lost here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton, though he had refrained from looking full at Mr. Eldredge as he
+ spoke, was conscious that he gave a great start; and he remained silent
+ for a moment or two, and when he spoke there was the tremor in his voice
+ of a nerve that had been struck and still vibrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a singular idea of yours,&rdquo; he at length said; &ldquo;not singular in
+ itself, but strangely coincident with something that happened to be
+ occupying my mind. Have you ever heard any such instances as you speak
+ of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Middleton, &ldquo;I have had pointed out to me the rightful heir
+ to a Scottish earldom, in the person of an American farmer, in his
+ shirt-sleeves. There are many Americans who believe themselves to hold
+ similar claims. And I have known one family, at least, who had in their
+ possession, and had had for two centuries, a secret that might have been
+ worth wealth and honors if known in England. Indeed, being kindred as we
+ are, it cannot but be the case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Eldredge appeared to be much struck by these last words, and gazed
+ wistfully, almost wildly, at Middleton, as if debating with himself
+ whether to say more. He made a step or two aside; then returned abruptly,
+ and spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you tell me the name of the family in which this secret was kept?&rdquo;
+ said he; &ldquo;and the nature of the secret?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The nature of the secret,&rdquo; said Middleton, smiling, &ldquo;was not likely to be
+ extended to any one out of the family. The name borne by the family was
+ Middleton. There is no member of it, so far as I am aware, at this moment
+ remaining in America.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And has the secret died with them?&rdquo; asked Mr. Eldredge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They communicated it to none,&rdquo; said Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a pity! It was a villainous wrong,&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge. &ldquo;And so, it
+ may be, some ancient line, in the old country, is defrauded of its rights
+ for want of what might have been obtained from this Yankee, whose
+ democracy has demoralized them to the perception of what is due to the
+ antiquity of descent, and of the bounden duty that there is, in all ranks,
+ to keep up the honor of a family that has had potence enough to preserve
+ itself in distinction for a thousand years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Middleton, quietly, &ldquo;we have sympathy with what is strong and
+ vivacious to-day; none with what was so yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remark seemed not to please Mr. Eldredge; he frowned, and muttered
+ something to himself; but recovering himself, addressed Middleton with
+ more courtesy than at the commencement of their interview; and, with this
+ graciousness, his face and manner grew very agreeable, almost fascinating:
+ he [was] still haughty, however.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I am not sorry to have met you. I am a solitary
+ man, as I have said, and a little communication with a stranger is a
+ refreshment, which I enjoy seldom enough to be sensible of it. Pray, are
+ you staying hereabouts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middleton signified to him that he might probably spend some little time
+ in the village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, during your stay,&rdquo; maid Mr. Eldredge, &ldquo;make free use of the walks
+ in these grounds; and though it is not probable that you will meet me in
+ them again, you need apprehend no second questioning of your right to be
+ here. My house has many points of curiosity that may be of interest to a
+ stranger from a new country. Perhaps you have heard of some of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard some wild legend about a Bloody Footstep,&rdquo; answered
+ Middleton; &ldquo;indeed, I think I remember hearing something about it in my
+ own country; and having a fanciful sort of interest in such things, I took
+ advantage of the hospitable custom which opens the doors of curious old
+ houses to strangers, to go to see it. It seemed to me, I confess, only a
+ natural stain in the old stone that forms the doorstep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge, &ldquo;let me say that you came to a very
+ foolish conclusion; and so, good-by, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And without further ceremony, he cast an angry glance at Middleton, who
+ perceived that the old gentleman reckoned the Bloody Footstep among his
+ ancestral honors, and would probably have parted with his claim to the
+ peerage almost as soon as have given up the legend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Present aspect of the story: Middleton on his arrival becomes acquainted
+ with the old Hospitaller, and is familiarized at the Hospital. He pays a
+ visit in his company to the manor-house, but merely glimpses at its
+ remarkable things, at this visit, among others at the old cabinet, which
+ does not, at first view, strike him very strongly. But, on musing about
+ his visit afterwards, he finds the recollection of the cabinet strangely
+ identifying itself with his previous imaginary picture of the palatial
+ mansion; so that at last he begins to conceive the mistake he has made. At
+ this first [visit], he does not have a personal interview with the
+ possessor of the estate; but, as the Hospitaller and himself go from room
+ to room, he finds that the owner is preceding them, shyly flitting like a
+ ghost, so as to avoid them. Then there is a chapter about the character of
+ the Eldredge of the day, a Catholic, a morbid, shy man, representing all
+ the peculiarities of an old family, and generally thought to be insane.
+ And then comes the interview between him and Middleton, where the latter
+ excites such an interest that he dwells upon the old man&rsquo;s mind, and the
+ latter probably takes pains to obtain further intercourse with him, and
+ perhaps invites him to dinner, and [to] spend a night in his house. If so,
+ this second meeting must lead to the examination of the cabinet, and the
+ discovery of some family documents in it. Perhaps the cabinet may be in
+ Middleton&rsquo;s sleeping-chamber, and he examines it by himself, before going
+ to bed; and finds out a secret which will perplex him how to deal with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 14th, Friday.&mdash;We have spoken several times already of a young
+ girl, who was seen at this period about the little antiquated village of
+ Smithells; a girl in manners and in aspect unlike those of the cottages
+ amid which she dwelt. Middleton had now so often met her, and in solitary
+ places, that an acquaintance had inevitably established itself between
+ them. He had ascertained that she had lodgings at a farm-house near by,
+ and that she was connected in some way with the old Hospitaller, whose
+ acquaintance had proved of such interest to him; but more than this he
+ could not learn either from her or others. But he was greatly attracted
+ and interested by the free spirit and fearlessness of this young woman;
+ nor could he conceive where, in staid and formal England, she had grown up
+ to be such as she was, so without manner, so without art, yet so capable
+ of doing and thinking for herself. She had no reserve, apparently, yet
+ never seemed to sin against decorum; it never appeared to restrain her
+ that anything she might wish to do was contrary to custom; she had nothing
+ of what could be called shyness in her intercourse with him; and yet he
+ was conscious of an unapproachableness in Alice. Often, in the old man&rsquo;s
+ presence, she mingled in the conversation that went on between him and
+ Middleton, and with an acuteness that betokened a sphere of thought much
+ beyond what could be customary with young English maidens; and Middleton
+ was often reminded of the theories of those in our own country, who
+ believe that the amelioration of society depends greatly on the part that
+ women shall hereafter take, according to their individual capacity, in all
+ the various pursuits of life. These deeper thoughts, these higher
+ qualities, surprised him as they showed themselves, whenever occasion
+ called them forth, under the light, gay, and frivolous exterior which she
+ had at first seemed to present. Middleton often amused himself with
+ surmises in what rank of life Alice could have been bred, being so free of
+ all conventional rule, yet so nice and delicate in her perception of the
+ true proprieties that she never shocked him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning, when they had met in one of Middleton&rsquo;s rambles about the
+ neighborhood, they began to talk of America; and Middleton described to
+ Alice the stir that was being made in behalf of women&rsquo;s rights; and he
+ said that whatever cause was generous and disinterested always, in that
+ country, derived much of its power from the sympathy of women, and that
+ the advocates of every such cause were in favor of yielding the whole
+ field of human effort to be shared with women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been surprised,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;in the little I have seen and heard of
+ Englishwomen, to discover what a difference there is between them and my
+ own countrywomen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard,&rdquo; said Alice, with a smile, &ldquo;that your countrywomen are a
+ far more delicate and fragile race than Englishwomen; pale, feeble
+ hot-house plants, unfit for the wear and tear of life, without energy of
+ character, or any slightest degree of physical strength to base it upon.
+ If, now, you had these large-framed Englishwomen, you might, I should
+ imagine, with better hopes, set about changing the system of society, so
+ as to allow them to struggle in the strife of politics, or any other
+ strife, hand to hand, or side by side, with men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If any countryman of mine has said this of our women,&rdquo; exclaimed
+ Middleton, indignantly, &ldquo;he is a slanderous villain, unworthy to have been
+ borne by an American mother; if an Englishman has said it&mdash;as I know
+ many of them have and do&mdash;let it pass as one of the many prejudices
+ only half believed, with which they strive to console themselves for the
+ inevitable sense that the American race is destined to higher purposes
+ than their own. But pardon me; I forgot that I was speaking to an
+ Englishwoman, for indeed you do not remind me of them. But, I assure you,
+ the world has not seen such women as make up, I had almost said the mass
+ of womanhood in my own country; slight in aspect, slender in frame, as you
+ suggest, but yet capable of bringing forth stalwart men; they themselves
+ being of inexhaustible courage, patience, energy; soft and tender, deep of
+ heart, but high of purpose. Gentle, refined, but bold in every good
+ cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you have said quite enough,&rdquo; replied Alice, who had seemed ready to
+ laugh outright, during this encomium. &ldquo;I think I see one of those paragons
+ now, in a Bloomer, I think you call it, swaggering along with a Bowie
+ knife at her girdle, smoking a cigar, no doubt, and tippling
+ sherry-cobblers and mint-juleps. It must be a pleasant life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think you, at least, might form a more just idea of what women
+ become,&rdquo; said Middleton, considerably piqued, &ldquo;in a country where the
+ roles of conventionalism are somewhat relaxed; where woman, whatever you
+ may think, is far more profoundly educated than in England, where a few
+ ill-taught accomplishments, a little geography, a catechism of science,
+ make up the sum, under the superintendence of a governess; the mind being
+ kept entirely inert as to any capacity for thought. They are cowards,
+ except within certain rules and forms; they spend a life of old
+ proprieties, and die, and if their souls do not die with them, it is
+ Heaven&rsquo;s mercy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice did not appear in the least moved to anger, though considerably to
+ mirth, by this description of the character of English females. She
+ laughed as she replied, &ldquo;I see there is little danger of your leaving your
+ heart in England.&rdquo; She added more seriously, &ldquo;And permit me to say, I
+ trust, Mr. Middleton, that you remain as much American in other respects
+ as in your preference of your own race of women. The American who comes
+ hither and persuades himself that he is one with Englishmen, it seems to
+ me, makes a great mistake; at least, if he is correct in such an idea he
+ is not worthy of his own country, and the high development that awaits it.
+ There is much that is seductive in our life, but I think it is not upon
+ the higher impulses of our nature that such seductions act. I should think
+ ill of the American who, for any causes of ambition,&mdash;any hope of
+ wealth or rank,&mdash;or even for the sake of any of those old, delightful
+ ideas of the past, the associations of ancestry, the loveliness of an
+ age-long home,&mdash;the old poetry and romance that haunt these ancient
+ villages and estates of England,&mdash;would give up the chance of acting
+ upon the unmoulded future of America.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you, an Englishwoman, speak thus!&rdquo; exclaimed Middleton. &ldquo;You perhaps
+ speak truly; and it may be that your words go to a point where they are
+ especially applicable at this moment. But where have you learned these
+ ideas? And how is it that you know how to awake these sympathies, that
+ have slept perhaps too long?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think only if what I have said be the truth,&rdquo; replied Alice. &ldquo;It is no
+ matter who or what I am that speak it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you speak,&rdquo; asked Middleton, from a sudden impulse, &ldquo;with any secret
+ knowledge affecting a matter now in my mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice shook her head, as she turned away; but Middleton could not
+ determine whether the gesture was meant as a negative to his question, or
+ merely as declining to answer it. She left him; and he found himself
+ strangely disturbed with thoughts of his own country, of the life that he
+ ought to be leading there, the struggles in which he ought to be taking
+ part; and, with these motives in his impressible mind, the motives that
+ had hitherto kept him in England seemed unworthy to influence him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 15th, Saturday.&mdash;It was not long after Middleton&rsquo;s meeting with
+ Mr. Eldredge in the park of Smithell&rsquo;s, that he received&mdash;what it is
+ precisely the most common thing to receive&mdash;an invitation to dine at
+ the manor-house and spend the night. The note was written with much
+ appearance of cordiality, as well as in a respectful style; and Middleton
+ could not but perceive that Mr. Eldredge must have been making some
+ inquiries as to his social status, in order to feel him justified in
+ putting him on this footing of equality. He had no hesitation in accepting
+ the invitation, and on the appointed day was received in the old house of
+ his forefathers as a guest. The owner met him, not quite on the frank and
+ friendly footing expressed in his note, but still with a perfect and
+ polished courtesy, which however could not hide from the sensitive
+ Middleton a certain coldness, a something that seemed to him Italian
+ rather than English; a symbol of a condition of things between them,
+ undecided, suspicious, doubtful very likely. Middleton&rsquo;s own manner
+ corresponded to that of his host, and they made few advances towards more
+ intimate acquaintance. Middleton was however recompensed for his host&rsquo;s
+ unapproachableness by the society of his daughter, a young lady born
+ indeed in Italy, but who had been educated in a Catholic family in
+ England; so that here was another relation&mdash;the first female one&mdash;to
+ whoa he had been introduced. She was a quiet, shy, undemonstrative young
+ woman, with a fine bloom and other charms which she kept as much in the
+ background as possible, with maiden reserve. (There is a Catholic priest
+ at table.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Eldredge talked chiefly, during dinner, of art, with which his long
+ residence in Italy had made him thoroughly acquainted, and for which he
+ seemed to have a genuine taste and enjoyment. It was a subject on which
+ Middleton knew little; but he felt the interest in it which appears to be
+ not uncharacteristic of Americans, among the earliest of their
+ developments of cultivation; nor had he failed to use such few
+ opportunities as the English public or private galleries offered him to
+ acquire the rudiments of a taste. He was surprised at the depth of some of
+ Mr. Eldredge&rsquo;s remarks on the topics thus brought up, and at the
+ sensibility which appeared to be disclosed by his delicate appreciation of
+ some of the excellencies of those great masters who wrote their epics,
+ their tender sonnets, or their simple ballads, upon canvas; and Middleton
+ conceived a respect for him which he had not hitherto felt, and which
+ possibly Mr. Eldredge did not quite deserve. Taste seems to be a
+ department of moral sense; and yet it is so little identical with it, and
+ so little implies conscience, that some of the worst men in the world have
+ been the most refined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Miss Eldredge had retired, the host appeared to desire to make the
+ dinner a little more social than it had hitherto been; he called for a
+ peculiar species of wine from Southern Italy, which he said was the most
+ delicious production of the grape, and had very seldom, if ever before,
+ been imported pure into England. A delicious perfume came from the cradled
+ bottle, and bore an ethereal, evanescent testimony to the truth of what he
+ said: and the taste, though too delicate for wine quaffed in England, was
+ nevertheless delicious, when minutely dwelt upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It gives me pleasure to drink your health, Mr. Middleton,&rdquo; said the host.
+ &ldquo;We might well meet as friends in England, for I am hardly more an
+ Englishman than yourself; bred up, as I have been, in Italy, and coming
+ back hither at my age, unaccustomed to the manners of the country, with
+ few friends, and insulated from society by a faith which makes most people
+ regard me as an enemy. I seldom welcome people here, Mr. Middleton; but
+ you are welcome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you, Mr. Eldredge, and may fairly say that the circumstances to
+ which you allude make me accept your hospitality with a warmer feeling
+ than I otherwise might. Strangers, meeting in a strange land, have a sort
+ of tie in their foreignness to those around them, though there be no
+ positive relation between themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are friends, then?&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge, looking keenly at Middleton, as
+ if to discover exactly how much was meant by the compact. He continued,
+ &ldquo;You know, I suppose, Mr. Middleton, the situation in which I find myself
+ on returning to my hereditary estate; which has devolved to me somewhat
+ unexpectedly by the death of a younger man than myself. There is an old
+ flaw here, as perhaps you have been told, which keeps me out of a property
+ long kept in the guardianship of the crown, and of a barony, one of the
+ oldest in England. There is an idea&mdash;a tradition&mdash;a legend,
+ founded, however, on evidence of some weight, that there is still in
+ existence the possibility of finding the proof which we need, to confirm
+ our cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am most happy to hear it, Mr. Eldredge,&rdquo; said Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; continued his host, &ldquo;I am bound to remember and to consider that
+ for several generations there seems to have been the same idea, and the
+ same expectation; whereas nothing has ever come of it. Now, among other
+ suppositions&mdash;perhaps wild ones&mdash;it has occurred to me that this
+ testimony, the desirable proof, may exist on your side of the Atlantic;
+ for it has long enough been sought here in vain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I said in our meeting in your park, Mr. Eldredge,&rdquo; replied Middleton,
+ &ldquo;such a suggestion may very possibly be true; yet let me point out that
+ the long lapse of years, and the continual melting and dissolving of
+ family institutions&mdash;the consequent scattering of family documents,
+ and the annihilation of traditions from memory, all conspire against its
+ probability.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet, Mr. Middleton,&rdquo; said his host, &ldquo;when we talked together at our
+ first singular interview, you made use of an expression&mdash;of one
+ remarkable phrase&mdash;which dwelt upon my memory and now recurs to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what was that, Mr. Eldredge?&rdquo; asked Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You spoke,&rdquo; replied his host, &ldquo;of the Bloody Footstep reappearing on the
+ threshold of the old palace of S&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;. Now where, let me
+ ask you, did you ever hear this strange name, which you then spoke, and
+ which I have since spoken?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From my father&rsquo;s lips, when a child, in America,&rdquo; responded Middleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is very strange,&rdquo; said Mr. Eldredge, in a hasty, dissatisfied tone. &ldquo;I
+ do not see my way through this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 16th, Sunday.&mdash;Middleton had been put into a chamber in the
+ oldest part of the house, the furniture of which was of antique splendor,
+ well befitting to have come down for ages, well befitting the hospitality
+ shown to noble and even royal guests. It was the same room in which, at
+ his first visit to the house, Middleton&rsquo;s attention had been drawn to the
+ cabinet, which he had subsequently remembered as the palatial residence in
+ which he had harbored so many dreams. It still stood in the chamber,
+ making the principal object in it, indeed; and when Middleton was left
+ alone, he contemplated it not without a certain awe, which at the same
+ time he felt to be ridiculous. He advanced towards it, and stood
+ contemplating the mimic facade, wondering at the singular fact of this
+ piece of furniture having been preserved in traditionary history, when so
+ much had been forgotten,&mdash;when even the features and architectural
+ characteristics of the mansion in which it was merely a piece of furniture
+ had been forgotten. And, as he gazed at it, he half thought himself an
+ actor in a fairy portal [tale?]; and would not have been surprised&mdash;at
+ least, he would have taken it with the composure of a dream&mdash;if the
+ mimic portal had unclosed, and a form of pigmy majesty had appeared
+ within, beckoning him to enter and find the revelation of what had so long
+ perplexed him. The key of the cabinet was in the lock, and knowing that it
+ was not now the receptacle of anything in the shape of family papers, he
+ threw it open; and there appeared the mosaic floor, the representation of
+ a stately, pillared hall, with the doors on either side opening, as would
+ seem, into various apartments. And here should have stood the visionary
+ figures of his ancestry, waiting to welcome the descendant of their race,
+ who had so long delayed his coming. After looking and musing a
+ considerable time,&mdash;even till the old clock from the turret of the
+ house told twelve, he turned away with a sigh, and went to bed. The wind
+ moaned through the ancestral trees; the old house creaked as with ghostly
+ footsteps; the curtains of his bed seemed to waver. He was now at home;
+ yes, he had found his home, and was sheltered at last under the ancestral
+ roof after all those long, long wanderings,&mdash;after the little
+ log-built hut of the early settlement, after the straight roof of the
+ American house, after all the many roofs of two hundred years, here he was
+ at last under the one which he had left, on that fatal night, when the
+ Bloody Footstep was so mysteriously impressed on the threshold. As he drew
+ nearer and nearer towards sleep, it seemed more and more to him as if he
+ were the very individual&mdash;the self-same one throughout the whole&mdash;who
+ had done, seen, suffered, all these long toils and vicissitudes, and were
+ now come back to rest, and found his weariness so great that there could
+ be no rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, he did sleep; and it may be that his dreams went on, and
+ grew vivid, and perhaps became truer in proportion to their vividness.
+ When he awoke he had a perception, an intuition, that he had been dreaming
+ about the cabinet, which, in his sleeping imagination, had again assumed
+ the magnitude and proportions of a stately mansion, even as he had seen it
+ afar from the other side of the Atlantic. Some dim associations remained
+ lingering behind, the dying shadows of very vivid ones which had just
+ filled his mind; but as he looked at the cabinet, there was some idea that
+ still seemed to come so near his consciousness that, every moment, he felt
+ on the point of grasping it. During the process of dressing, he still kept
+ his eyes turned involuntarily towards the cabinet, and at last he
+ approached it, and looked within the mimic portal, still endeavoring to
+ recollect what it was that he had heard or dreamed about it,&mdash;what
+ half obliterated remembrance from childhood, what fragmentary last night&rsquo;s
+ dream it was, that thus haunted him. It must have been some association of
+ one or the other nature that led him to press his finger on one particular
+ square of the mosaic pavement; and as he did so, the thin plate of
+ polished marble slipt aside. It disclosed, indeed, no hollow receptacle,
+ but only another leaf of marble, in the midst of which appeared to be a
+ key-hole: to this Middleton applied the little antique key to which we
+ have several times alluded, and found it fit precisely. The instant it was
+ turned, the whole mimic floor of the hall rose, by the action of a secret
+ spring, and discovered a shallow recess beneath. Middleton looked eagerly
+ in, and saw that it contained documents, with antique seals of wax
+ appended; he took but one glance at them, and closed the receptacle as it
+ was before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did he do so? He felt that there would be a meanness and wrong in
+ inspecting these family papers, coming to the knowledge of them, as he
+ had, through the opportunities offered by the hospitality of the owner of
+ the estate; nor, on the other hand, did he feel such confidence in his
+ host, as to make him willing to trust these papers in his hands, with any
+ certainty that they would be put to an honorable use. The case was one
+ demanding consideration, and he put a strong curb upon his impatient
+ curiosity, conscious that, at all events, his first impulsive feeling was
+ that he ought not to examine these papers without the presence of his host
+ or some other authorized witness. Had he exercised any casuistry about the
+ point, however, he might have argued that these papers, according to all
+ appearance, dated from a period to which his own hereditary claims
+ ascended, and to circumstances in which his own rightful interest was as
+ strong as that of Mr. Eldredge. But he had acted on his first impulse,
+ closed the secret receptacle, and hastening his toilet descended from his
+ room; and, it being still too early for breakfast, resolved to ramble
+ about the immediate vicinity of the house. As he passed the little chapel,
+ he heard within the voice of the priest performing mass, and felt how
+ strange was this sign of mediaeval religion and foreign manners in homely
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the story looks now: Eldredge, bred, and perhaps born, in Italy, and a
+ Catholic, with views to the church before he inherited the estate, has not
+ the English moral sense and simple honor; can scarcely be called an
+ Englishman at all. Dark suspicions of past crime, and of the possibility
+ of future crime, may be thrown around him; an atmosphere of doubt shall
+ envelop him, though, as regards manners, he may be highly refined.
+ Middleton shall find in the house a priest; and at his first visit he
+ shall have seen a small chapel, adorned with the richness, as to marbles,
+ pictures, and frescoes, of those that we see in the churches at Rome; and
+ here the Catholic forms of worship shall be kept up. Eldredge shall have
+ had an Italian mother, and shall have the personal characteristics of an
+ Italian. There shall be something sinister about him, the more apparent
+ when Middleton&rsquo;s visit draws to a conclusion; and the latter shall feel
+ convinced that they part in enmity, so far as Eldredge is concerned. He
+ shall not speak of his discovery in the cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 17th, Monday.&mdash;Unquestionably, the appointment of Middleton as
+ minister to one of the minor Continental courts must take place in the
+ interval between Eldredge&rsquo;s meeting him in the park, and his inviting him
+ to his house. After Middleton&rsquo;s appointment, the two encounter each other
+ at the Mayor&rsquo;s dinner in St. Mary&rsquo;s Hall, and Eldredge, startled at
+ meeting the vagrant, as he deemed him, under such a character, remembers
+ the hints of some secret knowledge of the family history, which Middleton
+ had thrown out. He endeavors, both in person and by the priest, to make
+ out what Middleton really is, and what he knows, and what he intends; but
+ Middleton is on his guard, yet cannot help arousing Eldredge&rsquo;s suspicions
+ that he has views upon the estate and title. It is possible, too, that
+ Middleton may have come to the knowledge&mdash;may have had some knowledge&mdash;of
+ some shameful or criminal fact connected with Mr. Eldredge&rsquo;s life on the
+ Continent; the old Hospitaller, possibly, may have told him this, from
+ some secret malignity hereafter to be accounted for. Supposing Eldredge to
+ attempt his murder, by poison for instance, bringing back into modern life
+ his old hereditary Italian plots; and into English life a sort of crime
+ which does not belong to it,&mdash;which did not, at least, although at
+ this very period there have been fresh and numerous instances of it. There
+ might be a scene in which Middleton and Eldredge come to a fierce and
+ bitter explanation; for in Eldredge&rsquo;s character there must be the English
+ surly boldness as well as the Italian subtlety; and here, Middleton shall
+ tell him what he knows of his past character and life, and also what he
+ knows of his own hereditary claims. Eldredge might have committed a murder
+ in Italy; might have been a patriot and betrayed his friends to death for
+ a bribe, bearing another name than his own in Italy; indeed, he might have
+ joined them only as an informer. All this he had tried to sink, when he
+ came to England in the character of a gentleman of ancient name and large
+ estate. But this infamy of his previous character must be foreboded from
+ the first by the manner in which Eldredge is introduced; and it must make
+ his evil designs on Middleton appear natural and probable. It may be, that
+ Middleton has learned Eldredge&rsquo;s previous character through some Italian
+ patriot who had taken refuge in America, and there become intimate with
+ him; and it should be a piece of secret history, not known to the world in
+ general, so that Middleton might seem to Eldredge the sole depositary of
+ the secret then in England. He feels a necessity of getting rid of him;
+ and thenceforth Middleton&rsquo;s path lies always among pitfalls; indeed, the
+ first attempt should follow promptly and immediately on his rupture with
+ Eldredge. The utmost pains must be taken with this incident to give it an
+ air of reality; or else it must be quite removed out of the sphere of
+ reality by an intensified atmosphere of romance. I think the old
+ Hospitaller must interfere to prevent the success of this attempt, perhaps
+ through the means of Alice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of Eldredge&rsquo;s criminal and treacherous designs is, somehow or
+ other, that he comes to his death; and Middleton and Alice are left to
+ administer on the remains of the story; perhaps, the Mayor being his
+ friend, he may be brought into play here. The foreign ecclesiastic shall
+ likewise come forward, and he shall prove to be a man of subtile policy
+ perhaps, yet a man of religion and honor; with a Jesuit&rsquo;s principles, but
+ a Jesuit&rsquo;s devotion and self-sacrifice. The old Hospitaller must die in
+ his bed, or some other how; or perhaps not&mdash;we shall see. He may just
+ as well be left in the Hospital. Eldredge&rsquo;s attempt on Middleton must be
+ in some way peculiar to Italy, and which he shall have learned there; and,
+ by the way, at his dinner-table there shall be a Venice glass, one of the
+ kind that were supposed to be shattered when poison was put into them.
+ When Eldredge produces his rare wine, he shall pour it into this, with a
+ jesting allusion to the legend. Perhaps the mode of Eldredge&rsquo;s attempt on
+ Middleton&rsquo;s life shall be a reproduction of the attempt made two hundred
+ years before; and Middleton&rsquo;s knowledge of that incident shall be the
+ means of his salvation. That would be a good idea; in fact, I think it
+ must be done so and no otherwise. It is not to be forgotten that there is
+ a taint of insanity in Eldredge&rsquo;s blood, accounting for much that is wild
+ and absurd, at the same time that it must be subtile, in his conduct; one
+ of those perplexing mad people, whose lunacy you are continually mistaking
+ for wickedness or vice versa. This shall be the priest&rsquo;s explanation and
+ apology for him, after his death. I wish I could get hold of the Newgate
+ Calendar, the older volumes, or any other book of murders&mdash;the Causes
+ Celebres, for instance. The legendary murder, or attempt at it, will bring
+ its own imaginative probability with it, when repeated by Eldredge; and at
+ the same time it will have a dreamlike effect; so that Middleton shall
+ hardly know whether he is awake or not. This incident is very essential
+ towards bringing together the past time and the present, and the two ends
+ of the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 18th, Tuesday.&mdash;All down through the ages since Edward had
+ disappeared from home, leaving that bloody footstep on the threshold,
+ there had been legends and strange stories of the murder and the manner of
+ it. These legends differed very much among themselves. According to some,
+ his brother had awaited him there, and stabbed him on the threshold.
+ According to others, he had been murdered in his chamber, and dragged out.
+ A third story told, that he was escaping with his lady love, when they
+ were overtaken on the threshold, and the young man slain. It was
+ impossible at this distance of time to ascertain which of these legends
+ was the true one, or whether either of them had any portion of truth,
+ further than that the young man had actually disappeared from that night,
+ and that it never was certainly known to the public that any intelligence
+ had ever afterwards been received from him. Now, Middleton may have
+ communicated to Eldredge the truth in regard to the matter; as, for
+ instance, that he had stabbed him with a certain dagger that was still
+ kept among the curiosities of the manor-house. Of course, that will not
+ do. It must be some very ingenious and artificially natural thing, an
+ artistic affair in its way, that should strike the fancy of such a man as
+ Eldredge, and appear to him altogether fit, mutatis mutandis, to be
+ applied to his own requirements and purposes. I do not at present see in
+ the least how this is to be wrought out. There shall be everything to make
+ Eldredge look with the utmost horror and alarm at any chance that he may
+ be superseded and ousted from his possession of the estate; for he shall
+ only recently have established his claim to it, tracing out his pedigree,
+ when the family was supposed to be extinct. And he is come to these
+ comfortable quarters after a life of poverty, uncertainty, difficulty,
+ hanging loose on society; and therefore he shall be willing to risk soul
+ and body both, rather than return to his former state. Perhaps his
+ daughter shall be introduced as a young Italian girl, to whom Middleton
+ shall decide to leave the estate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the failure of his design, Eldredge may commit suicide, and be found
+ dead in the wood; at any rate, some suitable end shall be contrived,
+ adapted to his wants. This character must not be so represented as to shut
+ him out completely from the reader&rsquo;s sympathies; he shall have taste,
+ sentiment, even a capacity for affection, nor, I think, ought he to have
+ any hatred or bitter feeling against the man whom he resolves to murder.
+ In the closing scenes, when he thinks the fate of Middleton approaching,
+ there might even be a certain tenderness towards him, a desire to make the
+ last drops of life delightful; if well done, this would produce a certain
+ sort of horror, that I do not remember to have seen effected in
+ literature. Possibly the ancient emigrant might be supposed to have fallen
+ into an ancient mine, down a precipice, into some pitfall; no, not so.
+ Into a river; into a moat. As Middleton&rsquo;s pretensions to birth are not
+ publicly known, there will be no reason why, at his sudden death,
+ suspicion should fix on Eldredge as the murderer; and it shall be his
+ object so to contrive his death as that it shall appear the result of
+ accident. Having failed in effecting Middleton&rsquo;s death by this excellent
+ way, he shall perhaps think that he cannot do better them to make his own
+ exit in precisely the same manner. It might be easy, and as delightful as
+ any death could be; no ugliness in it, no blood; for the Bloody Footstep
+ of old times might be the result of the failure of the old plot, not of
+ its success. Poison seems to be the only elegant method; but poison is
+ vulgar, and in many respects unfit for my purpose. It won&rsquo;t do. Whatever
+ it may be, it must not come upon the reader as a sudden and new thing, but
+ as one that might have been foreseen from afar, though he shall not
+ actually have foreseen it until it is about to happen. It must be
+ prevented through the agency of Alice. Alice may have been an artist in
+ Rome, and there have known Eldredge and his daughter, and thus she may
+ have become their guest in England; or he may be patronizing her now&mdash;at
+ all events she shall be the friend of the daughter, and shall have a just
+ appreciation of the father&rsquo;s character. It shall be partly due to her high
+ counsel that Middleton foregoes his claim to the estate, and prefers the
+ life of an American, with its lofty possibilities for himself and his
+ race, to the position of an Englishman of property and title; and she, for
+ her part, shall choose the condition and prospects of woman in America, to
+ the emptiness of the life of a woman of rank in England. So they shall
+ depart, lofty and poor, out of the home which might be their own, if they
+ would stoop to make it so. Possibly the daughter of Eldredge may be a girl
+ not yet in her teens, for whom Alice has the affection of an elder sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should be a very carefully and highly wrought scene, occurring just
+ before Eldredge&rsquo;s actual attempt on Middleton&rsquo;s life, in which all the
+ brilliancy of his character&mdash;which shall before have gleamed upon the
+ reader&mdash;shall come out, with pathos, with wit, with insight, with
+ knowledge of life. Middleton shall be inspired by this, and shall vie with
+ him in exhilaration of spirits; but the ecclesiastic shall look on with
+ singular attention, and some appearance of alarm; and the suspicion of
+ Alice shall likewise be aroused. The old Hospitaller may have gained his
+ situation partly by proving himself a man of the neighborhood, by right of
+ descent; so that he, too, shall have a hereditary claim to be in the
+ Romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eldredge&rsquo;s own position as a foreigner in the midst of English home life,
+ insulated and dreary, shall represent to Middleton, in some degree, what
+ his own would be, were he to accept the estate. But Middleton shall not
+ come to the decision to resign it, without having to repress a deep
+ yearning for that sense of long, long rest in an age-consecrated home,
+ which he had felt so deeply to be the happy lot of Englishmen. But this
+ ought to be rejected, as not belonging to his country, nor to the age, nor
+ any longer possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 19th, Wednesday.&mdash;The connection of the old Hospitaller with the
+ story is not at all clear. He is an American by birth, but deriving his
+ English origin from the neighborhood of the Hospital, where he has finally
+ established himself. Some one of his ancestors may have been somehow
+ connected with the ancient portion of the story. He has been a friend of
+ Middleton&rsquo;s father, who reposed entire confidence in him, trusting him
+ with all his fortune, which the Hospitaller risked in his enormous
+ speculations, and lost it all. His fame had been great in the financial
+ world. There were circumstances that made it dangerous for his whereabouts
+ to be known, and so he had come hither and found refuge in this
+ institution, where Middleton finds him, but does not know who he is. In
+ the vacancy of a mind formerly so active, he has taken to the study of
+ local antiquities; and from his former intimacy with Middleton&rsquo;s father,
+ he has a knowledge of the American part of the story, which he connects
+ with the English portion, disclosed by his researches here; so that he is
+ quite aware that Middleton has claims to the estate, which might be urged
+ successfully against the present possessor. He is kindly disposed towards
+ the son of his friend, whom he had so greatly injured; but he is now very
+ old, and &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;. Middleton has been directed to this old
+ man, by a friend in America, as one likely to afford him all possible
+ assistance in his researches; and so he seeks him out and forms an
+ acquaintance with him, which the old man encourages to a certain extent,
+ taking an evident interest in him, but does not disclose himself; nor does
+ Middleton suspect him to be an American. The characteristic life of the
+ Hospital is brought out, and the individual character of this old man,
+ vegetating here after an active career, melancholy and miserable;
+ sometimes torpid with the slow approach of utmost age; sometimes feeble,
+ peevish, wavering; sometimes shining out with a wisdom resulting from
+ originally bright faculties, ripened by experience. The character must not
+ be allowed to get vague, but, with gleams of romance, must yet be kept
+ homely and natural by little touches of his daily life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Alice, I see no necessity for her being anywise related to or
+ connected with the old Hospitaller. As originally conceived, I think she
+ may be an artist&mdash;a sculptress&mdash;whom Eldredge had known in Rome.
+ No; she might be a granddaughter of the old Hospitaller, born and bred in
+ America, but who had resided two or three years in Rome in the study of
+ her art, and have there acquired a knowledge of the Eldredges and have
+ become fond of the little Italian girl his daughter. She has lodgings in
+ the village, and of course is often at the Hospital, and often at the
+ Hall; she makes busts and little statues, and is free, wild, tender,
+ proud, domestic, strange, natural, artistic; and has at bottom the
+ characteristics of the American woman, with the principles of the
+ strong-minded sect; and Middleton shall be continually puzzled at meeting
+ such a phenomenon in England. By and by, the internal influence
+ [evidence?] of her sentiments (though there shall be nothing to confirm it
+ in her manner) shall lead him to charge her with being an American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as to the arrangement of the Romance;&mdash;it begins as an integral
+ and essential part, with my introduction, giving a pleasant and familiar
+ summary of my life in the Consulate at Liverpool; the strange species of
+ Americans, with strange purposes, in England, whom I used to meet there;
+ and, especially, how my countrymen used to be put out of their senses by
+ the idea of inheritances of English property. Then I shall particularly
+ instance one gentleman who called on me on first coming over; a
+ description of him must be given, with touches that shall puzzle the
+ reader to decide whether it is not an actual portrait. And then this
+ Romance shall be offered, half seriously, as the account of the fortunes
+ that he met with in his search for his hereditary home. Enough of his
+ ancestral story may be given to explain what is to follow in the Romance;
+ or perhaps this may be left to the scenes of his intercourse with the old
+ Hospitaller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romance proper opens with Middleton&rsquo;s arrival at what he has reason to
+ think is the neighborhood of his ancestral home, and here he makes
+ application to the old Hospitaller. Middleton shall be described as
+ approaching the Hospital, which shall be pretty literally copied after
+ Leicester&rsquo;s, although the surrounding village must be on a much smaller
+ scale of course. Much elaborateness may be given to this portion of the
+ book. Middleton shall have assumed a plain dress, and shall seek to make
+ no acquaintances except that of the old Hospitaller; the acquaintance of
+ Alice naturally following. The old Hospitaller and he go together to the
+ old Hall, where, as they pass through the rooms, they find that the
+ proprietor is flitting like a ghost before them from chamber to chamber;
+ they catch his reflection in a glass, etc., etc. When these have been
+ wrought up sufficiently, shall come the scene in the wood, where Eldredge
+ is seen yielding to the superstition that he has inherited, respecting the
+ old secret of the family, on the discovery of which depends the
+ enforcement of his claim to a title. All this while, Middleton has
+ appeared in the character of a man of no note; and now, through some
+ political change, not necessarily told, he receives a packet addressed to
+ him as an ambassador, and containing a notice of his appointment to that
+ dignity. A paragraph in the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; confirms the fact, and makes it known
+ in the neighborhood. Middleton immediately becomes an object of attention;
+ the gentry call upon him; the Mayor of the neighboring county-town invites
+ him to dinner, which shall be described with all its antique formalities.
+ Here he meets Eldredge, who is surprised, remembering the encounter in the
+ wood; but passes it all off, like a man of the world, makes his
+ acquaintance, and invites him to the Hall. Perhaps he may make a visit of
+ some time here, and become intimate, to a certain degree, with all
+ parties; and here things shall ripen themselves for Eldredge&rsquo;s attempt
+ upon his life.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE END
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
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+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketches and Studies, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketches and Studies
+
+Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8091]
+[This file was first posted on June 13, 2003]
+[Last updated on December 17, 2011]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCHES AND STUDIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Tapio Riikonen and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SKETCHES AND STUDIES
+
+by
+
+Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Life of Franklin Pierce
+ Chiefly about War Matters
+ Alice Doane's Appeal
+ The Ancestral Footstep
+
+
+
+
+
+LIFE OF FRANKLIN PIERCE.
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+The author of this memoir--being so little of a politician that he
+scarcely feels entitled to call himself a member of any party--would not
+voluntarily have undertaken the work here offered to the public. Neither
+can he flatter himself that he has been remarkably successful in the
+performance of his task, viewing it in the light of a political
+biography, and as a representation of the principles and acts of a public
+man, intended to operate upon the minds of multitudes during a
+presidential canvass. This species of writing is too remote from his
+customary occupations--and, he may add, from his tastes--to be very
+satisfactorily done, without more time and practice than he would be
+willing to expend for such a purpose. If this little biography have any
+value, it is probably of another kind--as the narrative of one who knew
+the individual of whom he treats, at a period of life when character
+could be read with undoubting accuracy, and who, consequently, in judging
+of the motives of his subsequent conduct, has an advantage over much more
+competent observers, whose knowledge of the man may have commenced at a
+later date. Nor can it be considered improper (at least, the author will
+never feel it so, although some foolish delicacy be sacrificed in the
+undertaking) that when a friend, dear to him almost from boyish days,
+stands up before his country, misrepresented by indiscriminate abuse on
+the one hand, and by aimless praise on the other, he should be sketched
+by one who has had opportunities of knowing him well, and who is
+certainly inclined to tell the truth.
+
+It is perhaps right to say, that while this biography is so far
+sanctioned by General Pierce, as it comprises a generally correct
+narrative of the principal events of his life, the author does not
+understand him as thereby necessarily indorsing all the sentiments put
+forth by himself in the progress of the work. These are the author's own
+speculations upon the facts before him, and may, or may not, be in
+accordance with the ideas of the individual whose life he writes. That
+individual's opinions, however,--so far as it is necessary to know them,
+--may be read, in his straightforward and consistent deeds, with more
+certainty than those of almost any other man now before the public.
+
+The author, while collecting his materials, has received liberal aid from
+all manner of people--Whigs and Democrats, congressmen, astute lawyers,
+grim old generals of militia, and gallant young officers of the Mexican
+war--most of whom, however, he must needs say, have rather abounded in
+eulogy of General Pierce than in such anecdotical matter as is calculated
+for a biography. Among the gentlemen to whom he is substantially
+indebted, he would mention Hon. C. G. Atherton, Hon. S. H. Ayer, Hon.
+Joseph Hall, Chief Justice Gilchrist, Isaac O. Barnes, Esq., Col. T. J.
+Whipple, and Mr. C. J. Smith. He has likewise derived much assistance
+from an able and accurate sketch, that originally appeared in the "Boston
+Post," and was drawn up, as he believes, by the junior editor of that
+journal.
+
+CONCORD, MASS., August 27, 1852.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+HIS PARENTAGE AND EARLY LIFE.
+
+
+Franklin Pierce was born at Hillsborough, in the State of New Hampshire,
+on the 23d of November, 1804. His native county, at the period of his
+birth, covered a much more extensive territory than at present, and might
+reckon among its children many memorable men, and some illustrious ones.
+General Stark, the hero of Bennington, Daniel Webster, Levi Woodbury,
+Jeremiah Smith, the eminent jurist, and governor of the state, General
+James Miller, General McNeil, Senator Atherton, were natives of old
+Hillsborough County.
+
+General Benjamin Pierce, the father of Franklin, was one of the earliest
+settlers in the town of Hillsborough, and contributed as much as any
+other man to the growth and prosperity of the county. He was born in
+1757, at Chelmsford, now Lowell, in Massachusetts. Losing his parents
+early, he grew up under the care of an uncle, amid such circumstances of
+simple fare, hard labor, and scanty education, as usually fell to the lot
+of a New England yeoman's family some eighty or a hundred years ago. On
+the 19th of April, 1775, being then less than eighteen years of age, the
+stripling was at the plough, when tidings reached him of the bloodshed at
+Lexington and Concord. He immediately loosened the ox chain, left the
+plough in the furrow, took his uncle's gun and equipments, and set forth
+towards the scene of action. From that day, for more than seven years,
+he never saw his native place. He enlisted in the army, was present at
+the battle of Bunker Hill, and after serving through the whole
+Revolutionary War, and fighting his way upward from the lowest grade,
+returned, at last, a thorough soldier, and commander of a company. He
+was retained in the army as long as that body of veterans had a united
+existence; and, being finally disbanded, at West Point, in 1784, was left
+with no other reward, for nine years of toil and danger, than the nominal
+amount of his pay in the Continental currency--then so depreciated as to
+be almost worthless.
+
+In 1780, being employed as agent to explore a tract of wild land, he
+purchased a lot of fifty acres in what is now the town of Hillsborough.
+In the spring of the succeeding year, he built himself a log hut, and
+began the clearing and cultivation of his tract. Another year beheld him
+married to his first wife, Elizabeth Andrews, who died within a
+twelvemonth after their union, leaving a daughter, the present widow of
+General John McNeil. In 1789, he married Anna Kendrick, with whom he
+lived about half a century, and who bore him eight children, of whom
+Franklin was the sixth.
+
+Although the Revolutionary soldier had thus betaken himself to the
+wilderness for a subsistence, his professional merits were not forgotten
+by those who had witnessed his military career. As early as 1786, he was
+appointed brigade major of the militia of Hillsborough County, then first
+organized and formed into a brigade. And it was a still stronger
+testimonial to his character as a soldier, that, nearly fifteen years
+afterwards, during the presidency of John Adams, he was offered a high
+command in the northern division of the army which was proposed to be
+levied in anticipation of a war with the French republic. Inflexibly
+democratic in his political faith, however, Major Pierce refused to be
+implicated in a policy which he could not approve. "No, gentlemen," said
+he to the delegates who urged his acceptance of the commission, "poor as
+I am, and acceptable as would be the position under other circumstances,
+I would sooner go to yonder mountains, dig me a cave, and live on roast
+potatoes, than be instrumental in promoting the objects for which that
+army is to be raised!" This same fidelity to his principles marked every
+public, as well as private, action of his life.
+
+In his own neighborhood, among those who knew him best he early gained an
+influence that was never lost nor diminished, but continued to spread
+wider during the whole of his long life. In 1789, he was elected to the
+state legislature and retained that position for thirteen successive
+years, until chosen a member of the council. During the same period he
+was active in his military duties, as a field officer, and finally
+general, of the militia of the county; and Miller, McNeil, and others
+learned of him, in this capacity, the soldier-like discipline which was
+afterwards displayed on the battle-fields of the northern frontier.
+
+The history, character, and circumstances of General Benjamin Pierce,
+though here but briefly touched upon, are essential parts of the
+biography of his son, both as indicating some of the native traits which
+the latter has inherited, and as showing the influences amid which he
+grew up. At Franklin Pierce's birth, and for many years subsequent, his
+father was the most active and public-spirited man within his sphere; a
+most decided Democrat, and supporter of Jefferson and Madison; a
+practical farmer, moreover, not rich, but independent, exercising a
+liberal hospitality, and noted for the kindness and generosity of his
+character; a man of the people, but whose natural qualities inevitably
+made him a leader among them. From infancy upward, the boy had before
+his eyes, as the model on which he might instinctively form himself, one
+of the best specimens of sterling New England character, developed in a
+life of simple habits, yet of elevated action. Patriotism, such as it
+had been in Revolutionary days, was taught him by his father, as early as
+his mother taught him religion. He became early imbued, too, with the
+military spirit which the old soldier had retained from his long service,
+and which was kept active by the constant alarms and warlike preparations
+of the first twelve years of the present century. If any man is bound by
+birth and youthful training, to show himself a brave, faithful, and able
+citizen of his native country, it is the son of such a father.
+
+At the commencement of the war of 1812, Franklin Pierce was a few months
+under eight years of age. The old general, his father, sent two of his
+sons into the army; and as his eldest daughter was soon afterwards
+married to Major McNeil, there were few families that had so large a
+personal stake in the war as that of General Benjamin Pierce. He
+himself, both in his public capacity as a member of the council, and by
+his great local influence in his own county, lent a strenuous support to
+the national administration. It is attributable to his sagacity and
+energy, that New Hampshire--then under a federal governor--was saved the
+disgrace of participation in the questionable, if not treasonable,
+projects of the Hartford Convention. He identified himself with the
+cause of the country, and was doubtless as thoroughly alive with
+patriotic zeal, at this eventful period, as in the old days of Bunker
+Hill, and Saratoga, and Yorktown. The general not only took a prominent
+part at all public meetings, but was ever ready for the informal
+discussion of political affairs at all places of casual resort, where--in
+accordance with the custom of the time and country--the minds of men were
+made to operate effectually upon each other. Franklin Pierce was a
+frequent auditor of these controversies. The intentness with which he
+watched the old general, and listened to his arguments, is still
+remembered; and, at this day, in his most earnest moods, there are
+gesticulations and movements that bring up the image of his father to
+those who recollect the latter on those occasions of the display of
+homely, native eloquence. No mode of education could be conceived,
+better adapted to imbue a youth with the principles and sentiment of
+democratic institutions; it brought him into the most familiar contact
+with the popular mind, and made his own mind a part of it.
+
+Franklin's father had felt, through life, the disadvantages of a
+defective education; although, in his peculiar sphere of action, it might
+be doubted whether he did not gain more than he lost, by being thrown on
+his own resources, and compelled to study men and their actual affairs,
+rather than books. But he determined to afford his son all the
+opportunities of improvement which he himself had lacked. Franklin,
+accordingly, was early sent to the academy at Hancock, and afterwards
+to that of Francestown, where he was received into the family of
+General Pierce's old and steadfast friend, Peter Woodbury, father of
+the late eminent judge. It is scarcely more than a year ago, at the
+semi-centennial celebration of the academy, that Franklin Pierce, the
+mature and distinguished man, paid a beautiful tribute to the character
+of Madam Woodbury, in affectionate remembrance of the motherly kindness
+experienced at her hands by the school-boy.
+
+The old people of his neighborhood give a very delightful picture of
+Franklin at this early age. They describe him as a beautiful boy, with
+blue eyes, light curling hair, and a sweet expression of face. The
+traits presented of him indicate moral symmetry, kindliness, and a
+delicate texture of sentiment, rather than marked prominences of
+character. His instructors testify to his propriety of conduct, his
+fellow-pupils to his sweetness of disposition and cordial sympathy. One
+of the latter, being older than most of his companions, and less advanced
+in his studies, found it difficult to keep up with his class; and he
+remembers how perseveringly, while the other boys were at play, Franklin
+spent the noon recess, for many weeks together, in aiding him in his
+lessons. These attributes, proper to a generous and affectionate nature,
+have remained with him through life. Lending their color to his
+deportment, and softening his manners, they are, perhaps, even now, the
+characteristics by which most of those who casually meet him would be
+inclined to identify the man. But there are other qualities, not then
+developed, but which have subsequently attained a firm and manly growth,
+and are recognized as his leading traits among those who really know him.
+Franklin Pierce's development, indeed, has always been the reverse of
+premature; the boy did not show the germ of all that was in the man, nor,
+perhaps, did the young man adequately foreshow the mature one.
+
+In 1820, at the age of sixteen, he became a student of Bowdoin College,
+at Brunswick, Maine. It was in the autumn of the next year that the
+author of this memoir entered the class below him; but our college
+reminiscences, however interesting to the parties concerned, are not
+exactly the material for a biography. He was then a youth, with the boy
+and man in him, vivacious, mirthful, slender, of a fair complexion, with
+light hair that had a curl in it: his bright and cheerful aspect made a
+kind of sunshine, both as regarded its radiance and its warmth; insomuch
+that no shyness of disposition, in his associates, could well resist its
+influence. We soon became acquainted, and were more especially drawn
+together as members of the same college society. There were two of these
+institutions, dividing the college between them, and typifying,
+respectively, and with singular accuracy of feature, the respectable
+conservative, and the progressive or democratic parties. Pierce's native
+tendencies inevitably drew him to the latter.
+
+His chum was Zenas Caldwell, several years older than himself, a member
+of the Methodist persuasion, a pure-minded, studious, devoutly religious
+character; endowed thus early in life with the authority of a grave and
+sagacious turn of mind. The friendship between Pierce and him appeared
+to be mutually strong, and was of itself a pledge of correct deportment
+in the former. His chief friend, I think, was a classmate named Little,
+a young man of most estimable qualities and high intellectual promise;
+one of those fortunate characters whom an early death so canonizes in the
+remembrance of their companions, that the perfect fulfilment of a long
+life would scarcely give them a higher place. Jonathan Cilley, of my own
+class,--whose untimely fate is still mournfully remembered,--a person of
+very marked ability and great social influence, was another of Pierce's
+friends. All these have long been dead. There are others, still alive,
+who would meet Franklin Pierce, at this day, with as warm a pressure of
+the hand, and the same confidence in his kindly feelings as when they
+parted from him nearly thirty years ago.
+
+Pierce's class was small, but composed of individuals seriously intent on
+the duties and studies of their college life. They were not boys, but,
+for the most part, well advanced towards maturity; and, having wrought
+out their own means of education, were little inclined to neglect the
+opportunities that had been won at so much cost. They knew the value of
+time, and had a sense of the responsibilities of their position. Their
+first scholar--the present Professor Stowe--has long since established
+his rank among the first scholars of the country. It could have been no
+easy task to hold successful rivalry with students so much in earnest as
+these were. During the earlier part of his college course it may be
+doubted whether Pierce was distinguished for scholarship. But, for the
+last two years, he appeared to grow more intent on the business in hand,
+and, without losing any of his vivacious qualities as a companion, was
+evidently resolved to gain an honorable elevation in his class. His
+habits of attention and obedience to college discipline were of the
+strictest character; he rose progressively in scholarship, and took a
+highly creditable degree. [See note at close of this Life.]
+
+The first civil office, I imagine, which Franklin Pierce ever held was
+that of chairman of the standing committee of the Athenaean Society, of
+which, as above hinted, we were both members; and, having myself held a
+place on the committee, I can bear testimony to his having discharged
+not only his own share of the duties, but that of his colleagues. I
+remember, likewise, that the only military service of my life was as a
+private soldier in a college company, of which Pierce was one of the
+officers. He entered into this latter business, or pastime, with an
+earnestness with which I could not pretend to compete, and at which,
+perhaps, he would now be inclined to smile. His slender and youthful
+figure rises before my mind's eye, at this moment, with the air and step
+of a veteran of the school of Steuben; as well became the son of a
+revolutionary hero, who had probably drilled under the old baron's
+orders. Indeed, at this time, and for some years afterwards, Pierce's
+ambition seemed to be of a military cast. Until reflection had tempered
+his first predilections, and other varieties of success had rewarded his
+efforts, he would have preferred, I believe, the honors of the
+battle-field to any laurels more peacefully won. And it was remarkable
+how, with all the invariable gentleness of his demeanor, he perfectly
+gave, nevertheless, the impression of a high and fearless spirit. His
+friends were as sure of his courage, while yet untried, as now, when it
+has been displayed so brilliantly in famous battles.
+
+At this early period of his life, he was distinguished by the same
+fascination of manner that has since proved so magical in winning him an
+unbounded personal popularity. It is wronging him, however, to call this
+peculiarity a mere effect of manner; its source lies deep in the
+kindliness of his nature, and in the liberal, generous, catholic
+sympathy, that embraces all who are worthy of it. Few men possess any
+thing like it; so irresistible as it is, so sure to draw forth an
+undoubting confidence, and so true to the promise which it gives. This
+frankness, this democracy of good feeling, has not been chilled by the
+society of politicians, nor polished down into mere courtesy by his
+intercourse with the most refined men of the day. It belongs to him at
+this moment, and will never leave him. A little while ago, after his
+return from Mexico, he darted across the street to exchange a hearty
+gripe of the hand with a rough countryman upon his cart--a man who used
+to "live with his father," as the general explained the matter to his
+companions. Other men assume this manner, more or less skilfully; but
+with Frank Pierce it is an innate characteristic; nor will it ever lose
+its charm, unless his heart should grow narrower and colder--a misfortune
+not to be anticipated, even in the dangerous atmosphere of elevated rank,
+whither he seems destined to ascend.
+
+There is little else that it is worth while to relate as regards his
+college course, unless it be that, during one of his winter vacations,
+Pierce taught a country school. So many of the statesmen of New England
+have performed their first public service in the character of pedagogue,
+that it seems almost a necessary step on the ladder of advancement.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+HIS SERVICES IN THE STATE AND NATIONAL LEGISLATURES.
+
+
+After leaving college, in the year 1824, Franklin Pierce returned to
+Hillsborough. His father, now in a green old age, continued to take a
+prominent part in the affairs of the day, but likewise made his declining
+years rich and picturesque with recollections of the heroic times through
+which he had lived. On the 26th of December, 1825, it being his
+sixty-seventh birthday, General Benjamin Pierce prepared a festival for
+his comrades in arms, the survivors of the Revolution, eighteen of whom,
+all inhabitants of Hillsborough, assembled at his house. The ages of
+these veterans ranged from fifty-nine up to the patriarchal venerableness
+of nearly ninety. They spent the day in festivity, in calling up
+reminiscences of the great men whom they had known and the great deeds
+which they had helped to do, and in reviving the old sentiments of the
+era of 'seventy-six. At nightfall, after a manly and pathetic farewell
+from their host, they separated--"prepared," as the old general expressed
+it, "at the first tap of the shrouded drum, to move and join their
+beloved Washington, and the rest of their beloved comrades, who fought
+and bled at their sides." A scene like this must have been profitable
+for a young man to witness, as being likely to give him a stronger sense
+than most of us can attain of the value of that Union which these old
+heroes had risked so much to consolidate--of that common country which
+they had sacrificed everything to create; and patriotism must have been
+communicated from their hearts to his, with somewhat of the warmth and
+freshness of a new-born sentiment. No youth was ever more fortunate than
+Franklin Pierce, through the whole of his early life, in this most
+desirable species of moral education.
+
+Having chosen the law as a profession, Franklin became a student in the
+office of Judge Woodbury, of Portsmouth. Allusion has already been made
+to the friendship between General Benjamin Pierce and Peter Woodbury, the
+father of the judge. The early progress of Levi Woodbury towards
+eminence had been facilitated by the powerful influence of his father's
+friend. It was a worthy and honorable kind of patronage, and bestowed
+only as the great abilities of the recipient vindicated his claim to it.
+Few young men have met with such early success in life, or have deserved
+it so eminently, as did Judge Woodbury. At the age of twenty-seven, he
+was appointed to the bench of the Supreme Court of the state, on the
+earnest recommendation of old General Pierce. The opponents of the
+measure ridiculed him as the "baby judge;" but his conduct in that high
+office showed the prescient judgment of the friend who had known him from
+a child, and had seen in his young manhood already the wisdom of ripened
+age. It was some years afterwards when Franklin Pierce entered the
+office of Judge Woodbury as a student. In the interval, the judge had
+been elected governor, and, after a term of office that thoroughly tested
+the integrity of his democratic principles, had lost his second election,
+and returned to the profession of the law.
+
+The last two years of Pierce's preparatory studies were spent at the law
+school of Northampton, in Massachusetts, and in the office of Judge
+Parker at Amherst. In 1827, being admitted to the bar, he began the
+practice of his profession at Hillsborough. It is an interesting fact,
+considered in reference to his subsequent splendid career as an advocate,
+that he did not, at the outset, give promise of distinguished success.
+His first case was a failure, and perhaps a somewhat marked one. But it
+is remembered that this defeat, however mortifying at the moment, did but
+serve to make him aware of the latent resources of his mind, the full
+command of which he was far from having yet attained. To a friend, an
+older practitioner, who addressed him with some expression of condolence
+and encouragement, Pierce replied,--and it was a kind of self-assertion
+which no triumph would have drawn oat,--"I do not need that. I will try
+nine hundred and ninety-nine cases, if clients will continue to trust me,
+and, if I fail just as I have today, will try the thousandth. I shall
+live to argue cases in this court house in a manner that will mortify
+neither myself nor my friends." It is in such moments of defeat that
+character and ability are mot fairly tested; they would irremediably
+crush a youth devoid of real energy, and, being neither more nor less
+than his just desert, would be accepted as such. But a failure of this
+kind serves an opposite purpose to a mind in which the strongest and
+richest qualities lie deep, and, from their very size and mass, cannot at
+once be rendered available. It provokes an innate self-confidence,
+while, at the same time, it sternly indicates the sedulous cultivation,
+the earnest effort, the toil, the agony, which are the conditions of
+ultimate success. It is, indeed, one of the best modes of discipline
+that experience can administer, and may reasonably be counted a fortunate
+event in the life of a young man vigorous enough to overcome the
+momentary depression.
+
+Pierce's distinction at the bar, however, did not immediately follow; nor
+did he acquire what we may designate as positive eminence until some
+years after this period. The enticements of political life--so
+especially fascinating to a young lawyer, but so irregular in its
+tendencies, and so inimical to steady professional labor--had begun to
+operate upon him. His father's prominent position in the politics of the
+state made it almost impossible that the son should stand aloof. In
+1827, the same year when Franklin began the practice of the law, General
+Benjamin Pierce had been elected governor of New Hampshire. He was
+defeated in the election of 1828, but was again successful in that of the
+subsequent year. During these years, the contest for the presidency had
+been fought with a fervor that drew almost everybody into it, on one side
+or the other, and had terminated in the triumph of Andrew Jackson.
+Franklin Pierce, in advance of his father's decision, though not in
+opposition to it, had declared himself for the illustrious man whose
+military renown was destined to be thrown into the shade by a civil
+administration, the most splendid and powerful that ever adorned the
+annals of our country, I love to record of the subject of this memoir
+that his first political faith was pledged to that great leader of the
+democracy.
+
+I remember meeting Pierce about this period, and catching from him some
+faint reflection of the zeal with which he was now stepping into the
+political arena. My sympathies and opinions, it is true,--so far as I
+had any in public affairs,--had, from the first, been enlisted on the
+same side with his own. But I was now made strongly sensible of an
+increased development of my friend's mind, by means of which he possessed
+a vastly greater power than heretofore over the minds with which he came
+in contact. This progressive growth has continued to be one of his
+remarkable characteristics. Of most men you early know the mental gauge
+and measurement, and do not subsequently have much occasion to change it.
+Not so with Pierce: his tendency was not merely high, but towards a point
+which rose higher and higher as the aspirant tended upward. Since we
+parted, studious days had educated him; life, too, and his own exertions
+in it, and his native habit of close and accurate observation, had
+likewise begun to educate him.
+
+The town of Hillsborough, in 1829, gave Franklin Pierce his first public
+honor, by electing him its representative in the legislature of the
+state. His whole service in that body comprised four years, in the two
+latter of which he was elected Speaker by a vote of one hundred and
+fifty-five against fifty-eight for other candidates. This overpowering
+majority evinced the confidence which his character inspired, and which,
+during his whole career, it has invariably commanded, in advance of what
+might be termed positive proof, although the result has never failed to
+justify it. I still recollect his description of the feelings with which
+he entered on his arduous duties--the feverish night that preceded his
+taking the chair--the doubt, the struggle with himself--all ending in
+perfect calmness, full self-possession, and free power of action when the
+crisis actually came.
+
+He had all the natural gifts that adapted him for the post; courtesy,
+firmness, quickness and accuracy of judgment, and a clearness of mental
+perception that brought its own regularity into the scene of confused and
+entangled debate; and to these qualities he added whatever was to be
+attained by laborious study of parliamentary rules. His merit as a
+presiding officer was universally acknowledged. It is rare that a man
+combines so much impulse with so great a power of regulating the impulses
+of himself and others as Franklin Pierce. The faculty, here exercised
+and improved, of controlling an assembly while agitated by tumultuous
+controversy, was afterwards called into play upon a higher field; for,
+during his congressional service, Pierce was often summoned to preside in
+committee of the whole, when a turbulent debate was expected to demand
+peculiar energy in the chair.
+
+He was elected a member of Congress in 1833, being young for the station,
+as he has always been for every public station that he has filled. A
+different kind of man--a man conscious that accident alone had elevated
+him, and therefore nervously anxious to prove himself equal to his
+fortunes--would thus have been impelled to spasmodic efforts. He would
+have thrust himself forward in debate, taking the word out of the mouths
+of renowned orators, and thereby winning notoriety, as at least the
+glittering counterfeit of true celebrity. Had Pierce, with his genuine
+ability, practised this course; had he possessed even an ordinary love of
+display, and had he acted upon it with his inherent tact and skill,
+taking advantage of fair occasions to prove the power and substance that
+were in him, it would greatly have facilitated the task of his
+biographer.
+
+To aim at personal distinction, however, as an object independent of the
+public service, would have been contrary to all the foregone and
+subsequent manifestations of his life. He was never wanting to the
+occasion; but he waited for the occasion to bring him inevitably forward.
+When he spoke, it was not only because he was fully master of the
+subject, but because the exigency demanded him, and because no other and
+older man could perform the same duty as well as himself. Of the copious
+eloquence--and some of it, no doubt, of a high order--which Buncombe has
+called forth, not a paragraph, nor a period, is attributable to Franklin
+Pierce. He had no need of these devices to fortify his constituents in
+their high opinion of him; nor did he fail to perceive that such was not
+the method to acquire real weight in the body of which he was a member.
+In truth, he has no fluency of words, except when an earnest meaning and
+purpose supply their own expression. Every one of his speeches in
+Congress, and, we may say, in every other hall of oratory, or on any
+stump that he may have mounted, was drawn forth by the perception that it
+was needed, was directed to a full exposition of the subject, and (rarest
+of all) was limited by what he really had to say. Even the graces of the
+orator were never elaborated, never assumed for their own sake, but were
+legitimately derived from the force of his conceptions, and from the
+impulsive warmth which accompanies the glow of thought. Owing to these
+peculiarities,--for such, unfortunately, they may be termed, in reference
+to what are usually the characteristics of a legislative career,--his
+position before the country was less conspicuous than that of many men
+who could claim nothing like Pierce's actual influence in the national
+councils. His speeches, in their muscular texture and close grasp of
+their subject, resembled the brief but pregnant arguments and expositions
+of the sages of the Continental Congress, rather than the immeasurable
+harangues which are now the order of the day.
+
+His congressional life, though it made comparatively so little show, was
+full of labor, directed to substantial objects. He was a member of the
+judiciary and other important committees; and the drudgery of the
+committee room, where so much of the real public business of the country
+is transacted, fell in large measure to his lot. Thus, even as a
+legislator, he may be said to have been a man of deeds, not words; and
+when he spoke upon any subject with which his duty, as chairman or member
+of a committee, had brought him in relation, his words had the weight of
+deeds, from the meaning, the directness, and the truth, that he conveyed
+into them. His merits made themselves known and felt in the sphere where
+they were exercised; and he was early appreciated by one who seldom erred
+in his estimate of men, whether in their moral or intellectual aspect.
+His intercourse with President Jackson was frequent and free, and marked
+by friendly regard on the part of the latter. In the stormiest periods
+of his administration, Pierce came frankly to his aid. The confidence
+then established was never lost; and when Jackson was on his death-bed,
+being visited by a gentleman from the North (himself formerly a
+democratic member of Congress), the old hero spoke with energy of
+Franklin Pierce's ability and patriotism, and remarked, as with prophetic
+foresight of his young friend's destiny, that "the interests of the
+country would be safe in such hands."
+
+One of President Jackson's measures, which had Pierce's approval and
+support, was his veto of the Maysville Road Bill. This bill was part of
+a system of vast public works, principally railroads and canals, which it
+was proposed to undertake at the expense of the national treasury--a
+policy not then of recent origin, but which had been fostered by John
+Quincy Adams, and had attained a gigantic growth at the close of his
+Presidency. The estimate of works undertaken or projected, at the
+commencement of Jackson's administration, amounted to considerably more
+than a hundred millions of dollars. The expenditure of this enormous
+sum, and doubtless other incalculable amounts, in progressive increase,
+was to be for purposes often of unascertained utility, and was to pass
+through the agents and officers of the federal government--a means of
+political corruption not safely to be trusted even in the purest hands.
+The peril to the individuality of the states, from a system tending so
+directly to consolidate the powers of government towards a common centre,
+was obvious. The result might have been, with the lapse of time and the
+increased activity of the disease, to place the capital of our federative
+Union in a position resembling that of imperial Rome, where each once
+independent state was a subject province, and all the highways of the
+world were said to meet in her forum. It was against this system, so
+dangerous to liberty and to public and private integrity, that Jackson
+declared war, by the famous Maysville veto.
+
+It would be an absurd interpretation of Pierce's course, in regard to
+this and similar measures, to suppose him hostile either to internal or
+coastwise improvements, so far as they may legitimately be the business
+of the general government. He was aware of the immense importance of our
+internal commerce, and was ever ready to vote such appropriations as
+might be necessary for promoting it, when asked for in an honest spirit,
+and at points where they were really needed. He doubted, indeed, the
+constitutional power of Congress to undertake, by building roads through
+the wilderness, or opening unfrequented rivers, to create commerce where
+it did not yet exist; but he never denied or questioned the right and
+duty to remove obstructions in the way of inland trade, and to afford it
+every facility, when the nature and necessity of things had brought it
+into genuine existence. And he agreed with the best and wisest statesmen
+in believing that this distinction involved the true principle on which
+legislation, for the purpose here discussed, should proceed.
+
+While a member of the House of Representatives, he delivered a forcible
+speech against the bill authorizing appropriations for the Military
+Academy at West Point. He was decidedly opposed to that institution as
+then, and at present organized. We allude to the subject in illustration
+of the generous frankness with which, years afterwards, when the battle
+smoke of Mexico had baptized him also a soldier, he acknowledged himself
+in the wrong, and bore testimony to the brilliant services which the
+graduates of the Academy, trained to soldiership from boyhood, had
+rendered to their country. And if he has made no other such
+acknowledgment of past error, committed in his legislative capacity, it
+is but fair to believe that it is because his reason and conscience
+accuse him of no other wrong.
+
+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
+a hair's breadth. He fully recognized, by his votes and by his voice,
+the rights pledged to the South by the Constitution. This, at the period
+when he so declared himself, was comparatively an easy thing to do. But
+when it became more difficult, when the first imperceptible movement of
+agitation had grown to be almost 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, native country--better than the mistiness of a
+philanthropic theory.
+
+He continued in the House of Representatives four years. If, at this
+period of his life, he rendered unobtrusive, though not unimportant,
+services to the public, it must also have been a time of vast
+intellectual advantage to himself. Amidst great national affairs, he was
+acquiring the best of all educations for future eminence and leadership.
+In the midst of statesmen, he grew to be a statesman. Studious, as all
+his speeches prove him to be, of history, he beheld it demonstrating
+itself before his eyes. As regards this sort of training, much of its
+good or ill effect depends on the natural force and depth of the man.
+Many, no doubt, by early mixture with politics, become the mere
+politicians of the moment,--a class of men sufficiently abundant among
+us,--acquiring only a knack and cunning, which guide them tolerably well
+through immediate difficulties, without instructing them in the great
+rules of higher policy. But when the actual observation of public
+measures goes hand in hand with study, when the mind is capable of
+comparing the present with its analogies in the past, and of grasping the
+principle that belongs to both, this is to have history for a living
+tutor. If the student be fit for such instruction, he will be seen to
+act afterwards with the elevation of a high ideal, and with the
+expediency, the sagacity, the instinct of what is fit and practicable,
+which make the advantage of the man of actual affairs over the mere
+theorist.
+
+And it was another advantage of his being brought early into the sphere
+of national interests, and continuing there for a series of years, that
+it enabled him to overcome any narrow and sectional prejudices. Without
+loving New England less, he loved the broad area of the country more. He
+thus retained that equal sentiment of patriotism for the whole land with
+which his father had imbued him, and which is perhaps apt to be impaired
+in the hearts of those who come late to the national legislature, after
+long training in the narrower fields of the separate states. His sense
+of the value of the Union, which had been taught him at the fireside,
+from earliest infancy, by the stories of patriotic valor that he there
+heard, was now strengthened by friendly association with its
+representatives from every quarter. It is this youthful sentiment of
+Americanism, so happily developed by after circumstances, that we see
+operating through all his public life, and making him as tender of what
+he considers due to the South as of the rights of his own land of hills.
+
+Franklin Pierce had scarcely reached the legal age for such elevation,
+when, in 1837, he was elected to the Senate of the United States. He
+took his seat at the commencement of the presidency of Mr. Van Buren.
+Never before nor since has the Senate been more venerable for the array
+of veteran and celebrated statesmen than at that time. Calhoun, Webster,
+and Clay had lost nothing of their intellectual might. Benton, Silas
+Wright, Woodbury, Buchanan, and Walker were members; and many even of the
+less eminent names were such as have gained historic place--men of
+powerful eloquence, and worthy to be leaders of the respective parties
+which they espoused. To this dignified body (composed of individuals
+some of whom were older in political experience than he in his mortal
+life) Pierce came as the youngest member of the Senate. With his usual
+tact and exquisite sense of propriety, he saw that it was not the time
+for him to step forward prominently on this highest theatre in the land.
+He beheld these great combatants doing battle before the eyes of the
+nation, and engrossing its whole regards. There was hardly an avenue to
+reputation save what was occupied by one or another of those gigantic
+figures.
+
+Modes of public service remained, however, requiring high ability, but
+with which few men of competent endowments would have been content to
+occupy themselves. Pierce had already demonstrated the possibility of
+obtaining an enviable position among his associates, without the windy
+notoriety which a member of Congress may readily manufacture for himself
+by the lavish expenditure of breath that had been better spared. In the
+more elevated field of the Senate, he pursued the same course as while a
+representative, and with more than equal results.
+
+Among other committees, he was a member of that upon revolutionary
+pensions. Of this subject he made himself thoroughly master, and was
+recognized by the Senate as an unquestionable authority. In 1840, in
+reference to several bills for the relief of claimants under the pension
+law, he delivered a speech which finely illustrates as well the
+sympathies as the justice of the man, showing how vividly he could feel,
+and, at the same time, how powerless were his feelings to turn him aside
+from the strict line of public integrity. The merits and sacrifices of
+the people of the Revolution have never been stated with more earnest
+gratitude than in the following passage:--
+
+"I am not insensible, Mr. President, of the advantages with which claims
+of this character always come before Congress. They are supposed to be
+based on services for which no man entertains a higher estimate than
+myself--services beyond all praise, and above all price. But, while warm
+and glowing with the glorious recollections which a recurrence to that
+period of our history can never fail to awaken; while we cherish with
+emotions of pride, reverence, and affection the memory of those brave men
+who are no longer with us; while we provide, with a liberal hand, for
+such as survive, and for the widows of the deceased; while we would
+accord to the heirs, whether in the second or third generation, every
+dollar to which they can establish a just claim,--I trust we shall not,
+in the strong current of our sympathies, forget what becomes us as the
+descendants of such men. They would teach us to legislate upon our
+judgment, upon our sober sense of right, and not upon our impulses or our
+sympathies. No, sir; we may act in this way, if we choose, when
+dispensing our own means, but we are not at liberty to do it when
+dispensing the means of our constituents.
+
+"If we were to legislate upon our sympathies--yet more I will admit--if
+we were to yield to that sense of just and grateful remuneration which
+presses itself upon every man's heart, there would be scarcely a limit
+for our bounty. The whole exchequer could not answer the demand. To the
+patriotism, the courage, and the sacrifices of the people of that day, we
+owe, under Providence, all that we now most highly prize, and what we
+shall transmit to our children as the richest legacy they can inherit.
+The War of the Revolution, it has been justly remarked, was not a war of
+armies merely--it was the war of nearly a whole people, and such a people
+as the world had never before seen, in a death struggle for liberty.
+
+"The losses, sacrifices, and sufferings of that period were common to all
+classes and conditions of life. Those who remained at home suffered
+hardly less than those who entered upon the active strife. The aged
+father and another underwent not less than the son, who would have been
+the comfort and stay of their declining years, now called to perform a
+yet higher duty--to follow the standard of his bleeding country. The
+young mother, with her helpless children, excites not less deeply our
+sympathies, contending with want, and dragging out years of weary and
+toilsome days and anxious nights, than the husband in the field,
+following the fortunes of our arms without the proper habiliments to
+protect his person, or the requisite sustenance to support his strength.
+Sir, I never think of that patient, enduring, self-sacrificing army,
+which crossed the Delaware in December, 1777, marching barefooted upon
+frozen ground to encounter the foe, and leaving bloody footprints for
+miles behind then--I never think of their sufferings during that terrible
+winter without involuntarily inquiring, Where then were their families?
+Who lit up the cheerful fire upon their hearths at home? Who spoke the
+word of comfort and encouragement? Nay, sir, who furnished protection
+from the rigors of winter, and brought them the necessary means of
+subsistence?'
+
+"The true and simple answer to these questions would disclose an amount
+of suffering and anguish, mental and physical, such as might not have
+been found in the ranks of the armies--not even in the severest trial of
+that fortitude which never faltered, and that power of endurance which
+seemed to know no limit. All this no man feels more deeply than I do.
+But they were common sacrifices in a common cause, ultimately crowned
+with the reward of liberty. They have an everlasting claim upon our
+gratitude, and are destined, as I trust, by their heroic example, to
+exert an abiding influence upon our latest posterity."
+
+With this heartfelt recognition of the debt of gratitude due to those
+excellent men, the senator enters into an analysis of the claims
+presented, and proves them to be void of justice. The whole speech is a
+good exponent of his character; full of the truest sympathy, but, above
+all things, just, and not to be misled, on the public behalf, by those
+impulses that would be most apt to sway the private man. The mere
+pecuniary amount saved to the nation by his scrutiny into affairs of this
+kind, though great, was, after all, but a minor consideration. The
+danger lay in establishing a corrupt system, and placing a wrong
+precedent upon the statute book. Instances might be adduced, on the
+other hand, which show him not less scrupulous of the just rights of the
+claimants than careful of the public interests.
+
+Another subject upon which he came forward was the military establishment
+and the natural defences of the country. In looking through the columns
+of the "Congressional Globe," we find abundant evidences of Senator
+Pierce's laborious and unostentatious discharge of his duties--reports of
+committees, brief remarks, and, here and there, a longer speech, always
+full of matter, and evincing a thoroughly-digested knowledge of the
+subject. Not having been written out by himself, however, these speeches
+are no fair specimens of his oratory, except as regards the train of
+argument and substantial thought; and adhering very closely to the
+business in hand, they seldom present passages that could be quoted,
+without tearing them forcibly, as it were, out of the context, and thus
+mangling the fragments which we might offer to the reader. As we have
+already remarked, he seems, as a debater, to revive the old type of the
+Revolutionary Congress, or to bring back the noble days of the Long
+Parliament of England, before eloquence had become what it is now, a
+knack, and a thing valued for itself. Like those strenuous orators, he
+speaks with the earnestness of honest conviction, and out of the fervor
+of his heart, and because the occasion and his deep sense of it constrain
+him.
+
+By the defeat of Mr. Van Buren, in the presidential election of 1840, the
+administration of government was transferred, for the first time in
+twelve years, to the Whigs. An extra session of Congress was summoned to
+assemble in June, 1841, by President Harrison, who, however, died before
+it came together. At this extra session, it was the purpose of the whig
+party, under the leadership of Henry Clay, to overthrow all the great
+measures which the successive democratic administrations had established.
+The sub-treasury was to be demolished; a national bank was to be
+incorporated; a high tariff of duties was to be imposed, for purposes of
+protection and abundant revenue. The whig administration possessed a
+majority, both in the Senate and the House. It was a dark period for the
+Democracy, so long unaccustomed to defeat, and now beholding all that
+they had won for the cause of national progress, after the arduous
+struggle of so many years, apparently about to be swept away.
+
+The sterling influence which Franklin Pierce now exercised is well
+described in the following remarks of the Hon. A. O. P. Nicholson:--
+
+"The power of an organized minority was never more clearly exhibited than
+in this contest. The democratic senators acted in strict concert,
+meeting night after night for consultation, arranging their plan of
+battle, selecting their champions for the coming day, assigning to each
+man his proper duty, and looking carefully to the popular judgment for a
+final victory. In these consultations, no man's voice was heard with
+more profound respect than that of Franklin Pierce. His counsels were
+characterized by so thorough a knowledge of human nature, by so much
+solid common sense, by such devotion to democratic principles, that,
+although among the youngest of the senators, it was deemed important that
+all their conclusions should be submitted to his sanction.
+
+"Although known to be ardent in his temperament, he was also known to act
+with prudence and caution. His impetuosity in debate was only the result
+of the deep convictions which controlled his mind. He enjoyed the
+unbounded confidence of Calhoun, Buchanan, Wright, Woodbury, Walker,
+King, Benton, and indeed of the entire democratic portion of the Senate.
+When he rose in the Senate or in the committee room, he was heard with
+the profoundest attention; and again and again was he greeted by these
+veteran Democrats as one of our ablest champions. His speeches, during
+this session, will compare with those of any other senator. If it be
+asked why he did not receive higher distinction, I answer, that such men
+as Calhoun, Wright, Buchanan, and Woodbury were the acknowledged leaders
+of the Democracy. The eyes of the nation were on them. The hopes of
+their party were reposed in them. The brightness of these luminaries was
+too great to allow the brilliancy of so young a man to attract especial
+attention. But ask any one of these veterans how Franklin Pierce ranked
+in the Senate, and he will tell you, that, to stand in the front rank for
+talents, eloquence, and statesmanship, he only lacked a few more years."
+
+In the course of this session he made a very powerful speech in favor of
+Mr. Buchanan's resolution, calling on the President to furnish the names
+of persons removed from office since the 4th of March, 1841. The Whigs,
+in 1840, as in the subsequent canvass of 1848, had professed a purpose to
+abolish the system of official removals on account of political opinion,
+but, immediately on coming into power, had commenced a proscription
+infinitely beyond the example of the democratic party. This course, with
+an army of office-seekers besieging the departments, was unquestionably
+difficult to avoid, and perhaps, on the whole, not desirable to be
+avoided. But it was rendered astounding by the sturdy effrontery with
+which the gentlemen in power denied that their present practice had
+falsified any of their past professions. A few of the closing paragraphs
+of Senator Pierce's highly effective speech, being more easily separable
+than the rest, may here be cited.
+
+"One word more, and I leave this subject,--a painful one to me, from the
+beginning to the end. The senator from North Carolina, in the course of
+his remarks the other day, asked, 'Do gentlemen expect that their friends
+are to be retained in office against the will of the nation? Are they so
+unreasonable as to expect what the circumstances and the necessity of the
+case forbid?' What our expectations were is not the question now; but
+what were your pledges and promises before the people. On a previous
+occasion, the distinguished senator from Kentucky made a similar remark:
+'An ungracious task, but the nation demands it!' Sir, this demand of the
+nation,--this plea of STATE NECESSITY,--let me tell you, gentlemen, is as
+old as the history of wrong and oppression. It has been the standing
+plea, the never-failing resort of despotism.
+
+"The great Julius found it a convenient plea when he restored the dignity
+of the Roman Senate, but destroyed its independence. It gave countenance
+to and justified all the atrocities of the Inquisition in Spain. It
+forced out the stifled groans that issued from the Black Hole of
+Calcutta. It was written in tears upon the Bridge of Sighs in Venice,
+and pointed to those dark recesses upon whose gloomy thresholds there was
+never seen a returning footprint.
+
+"It was the plea of the austere and ambitious Strafford, in the days of
+Charles I. It filled the Bastile of France, and lent its sanction to the
+terrible atrocities perpetrated there. It was this plea that snatched
+the mild, eloquent, and patriotic Camillo Desmoulins from his young and
+beautiful wife, and hurried him to the guillotine with thousands of
+others equally unoffending and innocent. It was upon this plea that the
+greatest of generals, if not men,--you cannot mistake me,--I mean him,
+the presence of whose very ashes within the last few months sufficed to
+stir the hearts of a continent,--it was upon this plea that he abjured
+the noble wife who had thrown light and gladness around his humbler days,
+and, by her own lofty energies and high intellect, had encouraged his
+aspirations. It was upon this plea that he committed that worst and most
+fatal acts of his eventful life. Upon this, too, he drew around his
+person the imperial purple. It has in all times, and in every age, been
+the foe of liberty and the indispensable stay of usurpation.
+
+"Where were the chains of despotism ever thrown around the freedom of
+speech and of the press but on this plea of STATE NECESSITY? Let the
+spirit of Charles X. and of his ministers answer.
+
+"It is cold, selfish, heartless, and has always been regardless of age,
+sex, condition, services, or any of the incidents of life that appeal to
+patriotism or humanity. Wherever its authority has been acknowledged, it
+has assailed men who stood by their country when she needed strong arms
+and bold hearts, and has assailed them when, maimed and disabled in her
+service, they could no longer brandish a weapon in her defence. It has
+afflicted the feeble and dependent wife for the imaginary faults of the
+husband. It has stricken down Innocence in its beauty, Youth in its
+freshness, Manhood in its vigor, and Age in its feebleness and
+decrepitude. Whatever other plea or apology may be set up for the
+sweeping, ruthless exercise of this civil guillotine at the present day,
+in the name of LIBERTY let us be spared this fearful one of STATE
+NECESSITY, in this early age of the Republic, upon the floor of the
+American Senate, in the face of a people yet free!"
+
+In June, 1842, he signified his purpose of retiring from the Senate.
+
+It was now more than sixteen years since the author of this sketch had
+been accustomed to meet Frank Pierce (that familiar name, which the
+nation is adopting as one of its household words) in habits of daily
+intercourse. Our modes of life had since been as different as could well
+be imagined; our culture and labor were entirely unlike; there was hardly
+a single object or aspiration in common between us. Still we had
+occasionally met, and always on the old ground of friendly confidence.
+There were sympathies that had not been suffered to die out. Had we
+lived more constantly together, it is not impossible that the relation
+might have been changed by the various accidents and attritions of life;
+but having no mutual events, and few mutual interests, the tie of early
+friendship remained the same as when we parted. The modifications which
+I saw in his character were those of growth and development; new
+qualities came out, or displayed themselves more prominently, but always
+in harmony with those heretofore known. Always I was sensible of
+progress in him; a characteristic--as, I believe, has been said in the
+foregoing pages--more perceptible in Franklin Pierce than in any other
+person with whom I have been acquainted. He widened, deepened, rose to a
+higher point, and thus ever made himself equal to the ever-heightening
+occasion. This peculiarity of intellectual growth, continued beyond the
+ordinary period, has its analogy in his physical constitution--it being a
+fact that he continued to grow in stature between his twenty-first and
+twenty-fifth years.
+
+He had not met with that misfortune, which, it is to be feared, befalls
+many men who throw their ardor into politics. The pursuit had taken
+nothing from the frankness of his nature; now, as ever, he used direct
+means to gain honorable ends; and his subtlety--for, after all, his heart
+and purpose were not such as he that runs may read--had the depth of
+wisdom, and never any quality of cunning. In great part, this
+undeteriorated manhood was due to his original nobility of nature. Yet
+it may not be unjust to attribute it, in some degree, to the singular
+good fortune of his life. He had never, in all his career, found it
+necessary to stoop. Office had sought him; he had not begged it, nor
+manoeuvred for it, nor crept towards it--arts which too frequently bring
+a man, morally bowed and degraded, to a position which should be one of
+dignity, but in which he will vainly essay to stand upright.
+
+In our earlier meetings, after Pierce had begun to come forward in public
+life, I could discern that his ambition was aroused. He felt a young
+man's enjoyment of success, so early and so distinguished. But as years
+went on, such motives seemed to be less influential with him. He was
+cured of ambition, as, one after another, its objects came to him
+unsought. His domestic position, likewise, had contributed to direct his
+tastes and wishes towards the pursuits of private life. In 1834 he had
+married Jane Means, a daughter of the Rev. Dr. Appleton, a former
+president of Bowdoin College. Three sons, the first of whom died in
+early infancy, were born to him; and, having hitherto been kept poor by
+his public service, he no doubt became sensible of the expediency of
+making some provision for the future. Such, it may be presumed, were the
+considerations that induced his resignation of the senatorship, greatly
+to the regret of all parties. The senators gathered around him as he was
+about to quit the chamber; political opponents took leave of him as of a
+personal friend; and no departing member has ever retired from that
+dignified body amid warmer wishes for his happiness than those that
+attended Franklin Pierce.
+
+His father had died three years before, in 1839, at the mansion which he
+built, after the original log-cabin grew too narrow for his rising family
+and fortunes. The mansion was spacious, as the liberal hospitality of
+the occupant required, and stood on a little eminence, surrounded by
+verdure and abundance, and a happy population, where, half a century
+before, the revolutionary soldier had come alone into the wilderness, and
+levelled the primeval forest trees. After being spared to behold the
+distinction of his son, he departed this life at the age of eighty-one
+years, in perfect peace, and, until within a few hours of his death, in
+the full possession of his intellectual powers. His last act was one of
+charity to a poor neighbor--a fitting close to a life that had abounded
+in such deeds. Governor Pierce was a man of admirable qualities--brave,
+active, public-spirited, endowed with natural authority, courteous yet
+simple in his manners; and in his son we may perceive these same
+attributes, modified and softened by a finer texture of character,
+illuminated by higher intellectual culture, and polished by a larger
+intercourse with the world, but as substantial and sterling as in the
+good old patriot.
+
+Franklin Pierce had removed from Hillsborough in 1838, and taken up his
+residence at Concord, the capital of New Hampshire. On this occasion,
+the citizens of his native town invited him to a public dinner, in token
+of their affection and respect. In accordance with his usual taste, he
+gratefully accepted the kindly sentiment, but declined the public
+demonstration of it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HIS SUCCESS AT THE BAR.
+
+
+Franklin Pierce's earliest effort at the bar, as we have already
+observed, was an unsuccessful one; but instead of discouraging him, the
+failure had only served to awaken the consciousness of latent power, and
+the resolution to bring it out. Since those days, he had indeed gained
+reputation as a lawyer. So much, however, was the tenor of his legal
+life broken up by the months of public service subtracted from each year,
+and such was the inevitable tendency of his thoughts towards political
+subjects, that he could but very partially avail himself of the
+opportunities of professional advancement. But on retiring from the
+Senate he appears to have started immediately into full practice. Though
+the people of New Hampshire already knew him well, yet his brilliant
+achievements as an advocate brought him more into their view, and into
+closer relations with them, than he had ever before been. He now met his
+countrymen, as represented in the jury box, face to face, and made them
+feel what manner of man he was. Their sentiment towards him soon grew to
+be nothing short of enthusiasm; love, pride, the sense of brotherhood,
+affectionate sympathy, and perfect trust, all mingled in it. It was the
+influence of a great heart pervading the general heart, and throbbing
+with it in the same pulsation.
+
+It has never been the writer's good fortune to listen to one of Franklin
+Pierce's public speeches, whether at the bar or elsewhere; nor, by
+diligent inquiry, has he been able to gain a very definite idea of the
+mode in which he produces his effects. To me, therefore, his forensic
+displays are in the same category with those of Patrick Henry, or any
+other orator whose tongue, beyond the memory of man, has moulded into
+dust. His power results, no doubt, in great measure, from the
+earnestness with which he imbues himself with the conception of his
+client's cause; insomuch that he makes it entirely his own, and, never
+undertaking a case which he believes to be unjust, contends with his
+whole heart and conscience, as well as intellectual force, for victory.
+His labor in the preparation of his cases is said to be unremitting; and
+he throws himself with such energy into a trial of importance as wholly
+to exhaust his strength.
+
+Few lawyers, probably, have been interested in a wider variety of
+business than he; its scope comprehends the great causes where immense
+pecuniary interests are concerned--from which, however, he is always
+ready to turn aside, to defend the humble rights of the poor man, or give
+his protection to one unjustly accused. As one of my correspondents
+observes, "When an applicant has interested him by a recital of fraud or
+wrong, General Pierce never investigates the man's estate before engaging
+in his business; neither does he calculate whose path he may cross. I
+have been privy to several instances of the noblest independence on his
+part, in pursuing, to the disrepute of those who stood well in the
+community, the weal of an obscure client with a good cause."
+
+In the practice of the law, as Pierce pursued it, in one or another of
+the court houses of New Hampshire, the rumor of each successive struggle
+and success resounded over the rugged hills, and perished without a
+record. Those mighty efforts, into which he put all his strength, before
+a county court, and addressing a jury of yeomen, have necessarily been,
+as regards the evanescent memory of any particular trial, like the
+eloquence that is sometimes poured out in a dream. In other spheres of
+action, with no greater expenditure of mental energy, words have been
+spoken that endure from age to age--deeds done that harden into history.
+But this, perhaps the most earnest portion of Franklin Pierce's life, has
+left few materials from which it can be written. There is before me only
+one report of a case in which he was engaged--the defence of the
+Wentworths, at a preliminary examination, on a charge of murder. His
+speech occupied four hours in the delivery, and handles a confused medley
+of facts with masterly skill, bringing them to bear one upon another, and
+making the entire mass, as it were, transparent, so that the truth may be
+seen through it. The whole hangs together too closely to permit the
+quotation of passages.
+
+The writer has been favored with communications from two individuals, who
+have enjoyed the best of opportunities to become acquainted with General
+Pierce's character as a lawyer. The following is the graceful and
+generous tribute of a gentleman, who, of late, more frequently than any
+other, has been opposed to him at the bar:--
+
+"General Pierce cannot be said to have commenced his career at the bar in
+earnest until after his resignation of the office of senator, in 1842.
+And it is a convincing proof of his eminent powers that he at once placed
+himself in the very first rank at a bar so distinguished for ability as
+that of New Hampshire. It is confessed by all who have the means of
+knowledge and judgment on this subject, that in no state of the Union are
+causes tried with more industry of preparation, skill, perseverance,
+energy, or vehement effort to succeed.
+
+"During much of this time, my practice in our courts was suspended; and
+it is only within three or four years that I have had opportunities of
+intimately knowing his powers as an advocate, by being associated with
+him at the bar; and, most of all, of appreciating and feeling that power,
+by being opposed to him in the trial of causes before juries. Far more
+than any other man, whom it has been my fortune to meet, he makes himself
+felt by one who tries a case against him. From the first, he impresses
+on his opponent a consciousness of the necessity of a deadly struggle,
+not only in order to win the victory, but to avoid defeat.
+
+"His vigilance and perseverance, omitting nothing in the preparation and
+introduction of testimony, even to the minutest details, which can be
+useful to his clients; his watchful attention, seizing on every weak
+point in the opposite case; his quickness and readiness; his sound and
+excellent judgment; his keen insight into character and motives, his
+almost intuitive knowledge of men; his ingenious and powerful
+cross-examinations; his adroitness in turning aside troublesome
+testimony, and availing himself of every favorable point; his quick sense
+of the ridiculous; his pathetic appeals to the feelings; his sustained
+eloquence, and remarkably energetic declamation,--all mark him for a
+'leader.'
+
+"From the beginning to the end of the trial of a case, nothing with him
+is neglected which can by possibility honorably conduce to success. His
+manner is always respectful and deferential to the court, captivating to
+the jury, and calculated to conciliate the good will even of those who
+would be otherwise indifferent spectators. In short, he plays the part
+of a successful actor; successful, because he always identifies himself
+with his part, and in him it is not acting.
+
+"Perhaps, as would be expected by those who know his generosity of heart,
+and his scorn of everything like oppression or extortion, he is most
+powerful in his indignant denunciations of fraud or injustice, and his
+addresses to the feelings in behalf of the poor and lowly, and the
+sufferers under wrong. I remember to have heard of his extraordinary
+power on one occasion, when a person who had offered to procure arrears
+of a pension for revolutionary services had appropriated to himself a
+most unreasonable share of the money. General Pierce spoke of the
+frequency of these instances, and, before the numerous audience, offered
+his aid, freely and gratuitously, to redress the wrongs of any widow or
+representative of a revolutionary officer or soldier who had been made
+the subject of such extortion.
+
+"The reply of the poor man, in the anecdote related by Lord Campbell of
+Harry Erskine, would be applicable, as exhibiting a feeling kindred to
+that with which General Pierce is regarded: 'There's no a puir man in a'
+Scotland need to want a friend or fear an enemy, sae lang as Harry
+Erskine lives!'"
+
+We next give his aspect as seen from the bench, in the following
+carefully prepared and discriminating article, from the chief justice of
+New Hampshire:--
+
+"In attempting to estimate the character and qualifications of Mr. Pierce
+as a lawyer and an advocate, we undertake a delicate, but, at the same
+time, an agreeable task. The profession of the law, practised by men of
+liberal and enlightened minds, and unstained by the sordidness which more
+or less affects all human pursuits, invariably confers honor upon and is
+honored by its followers. An integrity above suspicion, an eloquence
+alike vigorous and persuasive, and an intuitive sagacity have earned for
+Mr. Pierce the reputation that always follows them.
+
+"The last case of paramount importance in which he was engaged as counsel
+was that of Morrison v. Philbrick, tried in the month of February, 1852,
+at the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Belknap. There was on
+both sides an array of eminent professional talent, Messrs. Pierce, Bell,
+and Bellows appearing for the defendant, and Messrs. Atherton and Whipple
+for the plaintiff. The case was one of almost unequalled interest to the
+public generally, and to the inhabitants of the country lying around the
+lower part of Lake Winnipiscogee. A company, commonly called the Lake
+Company, had become the owners of many of the outlets of the streams
+supplying the lake, and by means of their works at such places, and at
+Union Bridge, a few miles below, were enabled to keep back the waters of
+the lake, and to use them as occasion should require to supply the mills
+at Lowell. The plaintiff alleged that the dam at Union Bridge had caused
+the water to rise higher than was done by the dam that existed in the
+year 1828, and that he was essentially injured thereby. The case had
+been on trial nearly seven weeks. Evidence equivalent to the testimony
+of one hundred and eighty witnesses had been laid before the jury. Upon
+this immense mass of facts, involving a great number of issues, Mr.
+Pierce was to meet his most formidable opponent in the state, Mr.
+Atherton. In that gentleman are united many of the rarest qualifications
+of an advocate. Of inimitable self-possession; with a coolness and
+clearness of intellect which no sudden emergencies can disturb; with that
+confidence in his resources which nothing but native strength, aided by
+the most thorough training, can bestow; with a felicity and fertility of
+illustration, the result alike of an exquisite natural taste and a
+cultivation of those studies which refine while they strengthen the mind
+for forensic contests,--Mr. Atherton's argument was listened to with an
+earnestness and interest which showed the conviction of his audience that
+no ordinary man was addressing them.
+
+"No one who witnessed that memorable trial will soon forget the argument
+of Mr. Pierce on that occasion. He was the counsel for the defendant,
+and was therefore to precede Mr. Atherton. He was to analyze and unfold
+to the jury this vast body of evidence under the watchful eyes of an
+opponent at once enterprising and cautious, and before whom it was
+necessary to be both bold and skilful. He was to place himself in the
+position of the jury, to see the evidence as they would be likely to
+regard it, to understand the character of their minds and what views
+would be the most likely to impress them. He was not only to be familiar
+with his own case, but to anticipate that of his opponent, and answer as
+he best might the argument of the counsel. And most admirably did he
+discharge the duties he had assumed on behalf of his client. Eminently
+graceful and attractive in his manner at all times, his demeanor was then
+precisely what it should have been, showing a manly confidence in himself
+and his case, and a courteous deference to the tribunal he was
+addressing. His erect and manly figure, his easy and unembarrassed air,
+bespoke the favorable attention of his audience. His earnest devotion to
+his cause, his deep emotion, evidently suppressed, but for that very
+reason all the more interesting, diffused themselves like electricity
+through his hearers. And when, as often happened, in the course of his
+argument, his clear and musical accents fell upon the ear in eloquent and
+pointed sentences, gratifying the taste while they satisfied the reason,
+no man could avoid turning to his neighbor, and expressing by his looks
+that pleasure which the very depth of his interest forbade him to express
+in words. And when the long trial was over, every one remembered with
+satisfaction that these two distinguished gentlemen had met each other
+during a most exciting and exhausting trial of seven weeks, and that no
+unkind words, or captious passages, had occurred between them to diminish
+their mutual respect, or that in which they were held by their
+fellow-citizens.
+
+"In the above remarks, we have indicated a few of Mr. Pierce's
+characteristics as an advocate; but he possesses other endowments, to
+which we have not alluded. In the first place, as he is a perfectly
+fearless man, so he is a perfectly fearless advocate; and true courage is
+as necessary to the civilian as to the soldier, and smiles and frowns Mr.
+Pierce disregards alike in the undaunted discharge of his duty. He never
+fears to uphold his client, however unpopular his cause may seem to be
+for the moment. It is this courage which kindles his eloquence, inspires
+his conduct, and gives direction and firmness to his skill. This it is
+which impels him onward, at all risks, to lay bare every 'mystery of
+iniquity' which he believes is threatening his case. He does not ask
+himself whether his opponent be not a man of wealth and influence, of
+whom it might be for his interest to speak with care and circumspection;
+but he devotes himself with a ready zeal to his cause, careless of aught
+but how he may best discharge his duty. His argumentative powers are of
+the highest order. He never takes before the court a position which he
+believes untenable. He has a quick and sure perception of his points,
+and the power of enforcing them by apt and pertinent illustrations. He
+sees the relative importance and weight of different views, and can
+assign to each its proper place, and brings forward the main body of his
+reasoning in prominent relief, without distracting the attention by
+unimportant particulars. And above all, he has the good sense, so rarely
+shown by many, to stop when he has said all that is necessary for the
+elucidation of his subject. With a proper confidence in his own
+perceptions, he states his views so pertinently and in such precise and
+logical terms, that they cannot but be felt and appreciated. He never
+mystifies; he never attempts to pervert words from their proper and
+legitimate meaning to answer a temporary purpose.
+
+"His demeanor at the bar nay be pronounced faultless. His courtesy in
+the court house, like his courtesy elsewhere, is that which springs from
+self-respect and from a kindly heart, disposing its owner to say and do
+kindly things. But he would be a courageous man who, presuming upon the
+affability of Mr. Pierce's manner, would venture a second time to attack
+him; for he would long remember the rebuke that followed his first
+attack. There is a ready repartee and a quick and cutting sarcasm in his
+manner when he chooses to display it, which it requires a man of
+considerable nerve to withstand. He is peculiarly happy in the
+examination of witnesses--that art in which so few excel. He never
+browbeats, he never attempts to terrify. He is never rude or
+discourteous. But the equivocating witness soon discovers that his
+falsehood is hunted out of its recesses with an unsparing determination.
+If he is dogged and surly, he is met by a spirit as resolute as his own.
+If he is smooth and plausible, the veil is lifted from him by a firm but
+graceful hand. If he is pompous and vain, no ridicule was ever more
+perfect than that to which he listens with astonished and mortified ears.
+
+"The eloquence of Mr. Pierce is of a character not to be easily
+forgotten. He understands men, their passions and their feelings. He
+knows the way to their hearts, and can make them vibrate to his touch.
+His language always attracts the hearer. A graceful and manly carriage,
+bespeaking him at once the gentleman and the true man; a manner warmed by
+the ardent glow of an earnest belief; an enunciation ringing, distinct,
+and impressive beyond that of most men; a command of brilliant and
+expressive language; and an accurate taste, together with a sagacious and
+instinctive insight into the points of his case, are the secrets of his
+success. It is thus that audiences are moved and truth ascertained; and
+he will ever be the most successful advocate who can approach the nearest
+to this lofty and difficult position.
+
+"Mr. Pierce's views as a constitutional lawyer are such as have been
+advocated by the ablest minds of America. They are those which, taking
+their rise in the heroic age of the country, were transmitted to him by a
+noble father, worthy of the times in which he lived, worthy of that
+Revolution which he assisted in bringing about. He believes that the
+Constitution was made, not to be subverted, but to be sacredly preserved;
+that a republic is perfectly consistent with the conservation of law, of
+rational submission to right authority, and of true self-government.
+Equally removed from that malignant hostility to order which
+characterizes the demagogues who are eager to rise upon the ruins even of
+freedom, and from that barren and bigoted narrowness which would oppose
+all rational freedom of opinion, he is, in its loftiest and most
+ennobling sense, a friend of that Union, without which the honored name
+of American citizen would become a by-word among the nations. And if, as
+we fervently pray and confidently expect he will, Mr. Pierce shall
+display before the great tribunals of the nation the courage, the
+consistency, the sagacity, and the sense of honor, which have already
+secured for him so many thousands of devoted friends, and which have
+signalized both his private and professional life, his administration
+will long be held in grateful remembrance as one of which the sense of
+right and the sagacity to perceive it, a clear insight into the true
+destinies of the country and a determination to uphold them at whatever
+sacrifice, were the predominant characteristics."
+
+It may appear singular that Franklin Pierce has not taken up his
+residence in some metropolis, where his great forensic abilities would so
+readily find a more conspicuous theatre, and a far richer remuneration
+than heretofore. He himself, it is understood, has sometimes
+contemplated a removal, and, two or three years since, had almost
+determined on settling in Baltimore. But his native state, where he is
+known so well, and regarded with so much familiar affection, which he has
+served so faithfully, and which rewards him so generously with its
+confidence, New Hampshire, with its granite hills, must always be his
+home. He will dwell there, except when public duty for a season shall
+summon him away; he will die there, and give his dust to its soil.
+
+It was at his option, in 1846, to accept the highest legal position in
+the country, setting aside the bench, and the one which undoubtedly would
+most have gratified his professional aspirations. President Polk, with
+whom he had been associated on the most friendly terms in Congress, now
+offered him the post of attorney general of the United States. "In
+tendering to you this position in my cabinet," writes the President, "I
+have been governed by the high estimate which I place upon your character
+and eminent qualifications to fill it." The letter, in which this
+proposal is declined, shows so much of the writer's real self that we
+quote a portion of it.
+
+"Although the early years of my manhood were devoted to public life, it
+was never really suited to my taste. I longed, as I am sure you must
+often have done, for the quiet and independence that belong only to the
+private citizen; and now, at forty, I feel that desire stronger than
+ever.
+
+"Coming so unexpectedly as this offer does, it would be difficult, if not
+impossible, to arrange the business of an extensive practice, between
+this and the first of November, in a manner at all satisfactory to
+myself, or to those who have committed their interests to my care, and
+who rely on my services. Besides, you know that Mrs. Pierce's health,
+while at Washington, was very delicate. It is, I fear, even more so now;
+and the responsibilities which the proposed change would necessarily
+impose upon her ought, probably, in themselves, to constitute an
+insurmountable objection to leaving our quiet home for a public station
+at Washington.
+
+"When I resigned my seat in the Senate in 1842, I did it with the fixed
+purpose never again to be voluntarily separated from my family for any
+considerable length of time, except at the call of my country in time of
+war; and yet this consequence, for the reason before stated, and on
+account of climate, would be very likely to result from my acceptance.
+
+"These are some of the considerations which have influenced my decision.
+You will, I am sure, appreciate my motives. You will not believe that I
+have weighed my personal convenience and case against the public
+interest, especially as the office is one which, if not sought, would be
+readily accepted by gentlemen who could bring to your aid attainments and
+qualifications vastly superior to mine."
+
+Previous to the offer of the attorney-generalship, the appointment of
+United States Senator had been tendered to Pierce by Governor Steele, and
+declined. It is unquestionable that, at this period, he hoped and
+expected to spend a life of professional toil in a private station,
+undistinguished except by the exercise of his great talents in peaceful
+pursuits. But such was not his destiny. The contingency to which he
+referred in the above letter, as the sole exception to his purpose of
+never being separated from his family, was now about to occur. Nor did
+he fail to comport himself as not only that intimation, but the whole
+tenor of his character, gave reason to anticipate.
+
+During the years embraced in this chapter,--between 1842 and 1847,--he
+had constantly taken an efficient interest in the politics of the state,
+but had uniformly declined the honors which New Hampshire was at all
+times ready to confer upon him. A democratic convention nominated him
+for governor, but could not obtain his acquiescence. One of the
+occasions on which he most strenuously exerted himself was in holding the
+democratic party loyal to its principles, in opposition to the course of
+John P. Hale. This gentleman, then a representative in Congress, had
+broken with his party on no less important a point than the annexation of
+Texas. He has never since acted with the Democracy, and has long been a
+leader of the free soil party.
+
+In 1844 died Frank Robert, son of Franklin Pierce, aged four years, a
+little boy of rare beauty and promise, and whose death was the greatest
+affliction that his father has experienced. His only surviving child is
+a son, now eleven years old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE MEXICAN WAR.
+
+
+When Franklin Pierce declined the honorable offer of the
+attorney-generalship of the United States, he intimated that there might
+be one contingency in which he would feel it his duty to give up the
+cherished purpose of spending the remainder of his life in a private
+station. That exceptional case was brought about, in 1847, by the
+Mexican War. He showed his readiness to redeem the pledge by enrolling
+himself as the earliest volunteer of a company raised in Concord, and
+went through the regular drill, with his fellow-soldiers, as a private in
+the ranks. On the passage of the bill for the increase of the army, he
+received the appointment of colonel of the Ninth Regiment, which was the
+quota of New England towards the ten that were to be raised. And shortly
+afterwards,--in March, 1847,--he was commissioned as brigadier-general in
+the army; his brigade consisting of regiments from the extreme north, the
+extreme west, and the extreme south of the Union.
+
+There is nothing in any other country similar to what we see in our own,
+when the blast of the trumpet at once converts men of peaceful pursuits
+into warriors. Every war in which America has been engaged has done
+this; the valor that wins our battles is not the trained hardihood of
+veterans, but a native and spontaneous fire; and there is surely a
+chivalrous beauty in the devotion of the citizen soldier to his country's
+cause, which the man who makes arms his profession, and is but doing his
+regular business on the field of battle, cannot pretend to rival. Taking
+the Mexican War as a specimen, this peculiar composition of an American
+army, as well in respect to its officers as its private soldiers, seems
+to create a spirit of romantic adventure which more than supplies the
+place of disciplined courage.
+
+The author saw General Pierce in Boston, on the eve of his departure for
+Vera Cruz. He had been intensely occupied, since his appointment, in
+effecting the arrangements necessary on leaving his affairs, as well as
+by the preparations, military and personal, demanded by the expedition.
+The transports were waiting at Newport to receive the troops. He was now
+in the midst of bustle, with some of the officers of his command about
+him, mingled with the friends whom he was to leave behind. The severest
+point of the crisis was over, for he had already bidden his family
+farewell. His spirits appeared to have risen with the occasion. He was
+evidently in his element; nor, to say the truth, dangerous as was the
+path before him, could it be regretted that his life was now to have the
+opportunity of that species of success which--in his youth, at least--he
+had considered the best worth struggling for. He looked so fit to be a
+soldier, that it was impossible to doubt--not merely his good conduct,
+which was as certain before the event as afterwards, but--his good
+fortune in the field, and his fortunate return.
+
+He sailed from Newport on the 27th of May, in the bark Kepler, having on
+board three companies of the Ninth Regiment of Infantry, together with
+Colonel Ransom, its commander, and the officers belonging to the
+detachment. The passage was long and tedious, with protracted calms, and
+so smooth a sea that a sail-boat might have performed the voyage in
+safety. The Kepler arrived at Vera Cruz in precisely a month after her
+departure from the United States, without speaking a single vessel from
+the south during her passage, and, of course, receiving no intelligence
+as to the position and state of the army which these reenforcements were
+to join.
+
+From a journal kept by General Pierce, and intended only for the perusal
+of his family and friends, we present some extracts. They are mere hasty
+jottings-down in camp, and at the intervals of weary marches, but will
+doubtless bring the reader closer to the man than any narrative which we
+could substitute. [In this reprint it has been thought expedient to omit
+the passages from General Pierce's journal.]
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+General Pierce's journal here terminates. In its clear and simple
+narrative the reader cannot fail to see--although it was written with no
+purpose of displaying them--the native qualities of a born soldier,
+together with the sagacity of an experienced one. He had proved himself,
+moreover, physically apt for war, by his easy endurance of the fatigues
+of the march; every step of which (as was the case with few other
+officers) was performed either on horseback or on foot. Nature, indeed,
+has endowed him with a rare elasticity both of mind and body; he springs
+up from pressure like a well-tempered sword. After the severest toil, a
+single night's rest does as much for him, in the way of refreshment, as a
+week could do for most other men.
+
+His conduct on this adventurous march received the high encomiums of
+military men, and was honored with the commendation of the great soldier
+who is now his rival in the presidential contest. He reached the main
+army at Puebla on the 7th of August, with twenty-four hundred men, in
+fine order, and without the loss of a single wagon.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+HIS SERVICES IN THE VALLEY OF MEXICO.
+
+
+General Scott, who was at Puebla with the main army awaiting this
+reenforcement, began his march towards the city of Mexico on the day
+after General Pierce's arrival. The battle of Contreras was fought on
+the 19th of August.
+
+The enemy's force consisted of about seven thousand men, posted in a
+strongly-intrenched camp, under General Valencia, one of the bravest and
+ablest of the Mexican commanders. The object of the commanding general
+appears to have been to cut off the communications of these detached
+troops with Santa Anna's main army, and thus to have them entirely at his
+mercy. For this purpose a portion of the American forces were ordered to
+move against Valencia's left flank, and, by occupying strong positions in
+the villages and on the roads towards the city, to prevent reenforcements
+from reaching him. In the mean time, to draw the enemy's attention from
+this movement, a vigorous onset was made upon his front; and as the
+operations upon his flank were not immediately and fully carried out
+according to the plan, this front demonstration assumed the character of
+a fierce and desperate attack, upon which the fortunes of the day much
+depended. General Pierce's brigade formed a part of the force engaged in
+this latter movement, in which four thousand newly-recruited men, unable
+to bring their artillery to bear, contended against seven thousand
+disciplined soldiers, protected by intrenchments, and showering round
+shot and shells against the assailing troops.
+
+The ground in front was of the rudest and roughest character. The troops
+made their way with difficulty over a broken tract called the Pedregal,
+bristling with sharp points of rocks, and which is represented as having
+been the crater of a now exhausted and extinct volcano. The enemy had
+thrown out skirmishers, who were posted in great force among the crevices
+and inequalities of this broken ground, and vigorously resisted the
+American advance; while the artillery of the intrenched camp played upon
+our troops, and shattered the very rocks over which they were to pass.
+
+General Pierce's immediate command had never before been under such a
+fire of artillery. The enemy's range was a little too high, or the havoc
+in our ranks must have been dreadful. In the midst of this fire, General
+Pierce, being the only officer mounted in the brigade, leaped his horse
+upon an abrupt eminence, and addressed the colonels and captains of the
+regiments, as they passed, in a few stirring words,--reminding them of
+the honor of their country, of the victory their steady valor would
+contribute to achieve. Pressing forward to the head of the column, he
+had nearly reached the practicable ground that lay beyond, when his horse
+slipped among the rocks, thrust his foot into a crevice, and fell,
+breaking his own leg, and crushing his rider heavily beneath him.
+
+Pierce's mounted orderly soon came to his assistance. The general was
+stunned, and almost insensible. When partially recovered, he found
+himself suffering from severe bruises, and especially from a sprain of
+the left knee, which was undermost when the horse came down. The orderly
+assisted him to reach the shelter of a projecting rock; and as they made
+their way thither, a shell fell close beside them and exploded, covering
+them with earth. "That was a lucky miss," said Pierce calmly. Leaving
+him in such shelter as the rock afforded, the orderly went in search of
+aid, and was fortunate to meet with Dr. Ritchie, of Virginia, who was
+attached to Pierce's brigade, and was following in close proximity to the
+advancing column. The doctor administered to him as well as the
+circumstances would admit. Immediately on recovering his full
+consciousness, General Pierce had become anxious to rejoin his troops;
+and now, in opposition to Dr. Ritchie's advice and remonstrances, he
+determined to proceed to the front.
+
+With pain and difficulty, and leaning on his orderly's arm, he reached
+the battery commanded by Captain McGruder, where he found the horse of
+Lieutenant Johnson, who had just before received a mortal wound. In
+compliance with his wishes, he was assisted into the saddle; and, in
+answer to a remark that he would be unable to keep his seat, "Then," said
+the general, "you must tie me on." Whether his precaution was actually
+taken is a point upon which authorities differ; but at all events, with
+injuries so severe as would have sent almost any other man to the
+hospital, he rode forward into the battle.
+
+The contest was kept up until nightfall, without forcing Valencia's
+intrenchment. General Pierce remained in the saddle until eleven o'clock
+at night. Finding himself, at nine o'clock, the senior officer in the
+field, he, in that capacity, withdrew the troops from their advanced
+position, and concentrated them at the point where they were to pass the
+night. At eleven, beneath a torrent of rain, destitute of a tent or
+other protection, and without food or refreshment, he lay down on an
+ammunition wagon, but was prevented by the pain of his injuries,
+especially that of his wounded knee, from finding any repose. At one
+o'clock came orders from General Scott to put the brigade into a new
+position, in front of the enemy's works, preparatory to taking part in
+the contemplated operations of the next morning. During the night, the
+troops appointed for that service, under Riley, Shields, Smith, and
+Cadwallader, had occupied the villages and roads between Valencia's
+position and the city; so that, with daylight, the commanding general's
+scheme of the battle was ready to be carried out, as it had originally
+existed in his mind.
+
+At daylight, accordingly, Valencia's intrenched camp was assaulted.
+General Pierce was soon in the saddle at the head of his brigade, which
+retained its position in front, thus serving to attract the enemy's
+attention, and divert him from the true point of attack. The camp was
+stormed in the rear by the American troops, led on by Riley, Cadwallader,
+and Dimmick; and in the short space of seventeen minutes it had fallen
+into the hands of the assailants, together with a multitude of prisoners.
+The remnant of the routed enemy fled towards Churubusco. As Pierce led
+his brigade in pursuit, crossing the battle-field, and passing through
+the works that had just been stormed, he found the road and adjacent
+fields everywhere strewn with the dead and dying. The pursuit was
+continued until one o'clock, when the foremost of the Americans arrived
+in front of the strong Mexican positions at Churubusco and San Antonio,
+where Santa Alma's army had been compelled to make a stand, and where the
+great conflict of the day commenced.
+
+General Santa Anna entertained the design of withdrawing his forces
+towards the city. In order to intercept this movement, Pierce's brigade,
+with other troops, was ordered to pursue a route by which the enemy could
+be attacked in the rear. Colonel Noah E. Smith (a patriotic American,
+long resident in Mexico, whose local and topographical knowledge proved
+eminently serviceable) had offered to point out the road, and was sent to
+summon General Pierce to the presence of the commander-in-chief. When he
+met Pierce, near Coyacan, at the head of his brigade, the heavy fire of
+the batteries had commenced. "He was exceedingly thin," writes Colonel
+Smith, "worn down by the fatigue and pain of the day and night before,
+and then evidently suffering severely. Still there was a glow in his
+eye, as the cannon boomed, that showed within him a spirit ready for the
+conflict." He rode up to General Scott, who was at this time sitting on
+horseback beneath a tree, near the church of Coyacan, issuing orders to
+different individuals of his staff. Our account of this interview is
+chiefly taken from the narrative of Colonel Smith, corroborated by other
+testimony.
+
+The commander-in-chief had already heard of the accident that befell
+Pierce the day before; and as the latter approached, General Scott could
+not but notice the marks of pain and physical exhaustion against which
+only the sturdiest constancy of will could have enabled him to bear up.
+"Pierce, my dear fellow," said he,--and that epithet of familiar kindness
+and friendship, upon the battle-field, was the highest of military
+commendation from such a man,--"you are badly injured; you are not fit to
+be in your saddle." "Yes, general, I am," replied Pierce, "in a case
+like this." "You cannot touch your foot to the stirrup," said Scott.
+"One of them I can," answered Pierce. The general looked again at
+Pierce's almost disabled figure, and seemed on the point of taking his
+irrevocable resolution. "You are rash, General Pierce," said he; "we
+shall lose you, and we cannot spare you. It is my duty to order you back
+to St. Augustine." "For God's sake, general," exclaimed Pierce, "don't
+say that! This is the last great battle, and I must lead my brigade!"
+The commander-in-chief made no further remonstrance, but gave the order
+for Pierce to advance with his brigade.
+
+The way lay through thick standing corn, and over marshy ground
+intersected with ditches, which were filled, or partially so, with water.
+Over some of the narrower of these Pierce leaped his horse. When the
+brigade had advanced about a mile, however, it found itself impeded by a
+ditch ten or twelve feet wide, and six or eight feet deep. It being
+impossible to leap it, General Pierce was lifted from his saddle, and in
+some incomprehensible way, hurt as he was, contrived to wade or scramble
+across this obstacle, leaving his horse on the hither side. The troops
+were now under fire. In the excitement of the battle he forgot his
+injury, and hurried forward, leading the brigade, a distance of two or
+three hundred yards. But the exhaustion of his frame, and particularly
+the anguish of his knee,--made more intolerable by such free use of it,--
+was greater than any strength of nerve, or any degree of mental energy,
+could struggle against. He fell, faint and almost insensible, within
+full range of the enemy's fire. It was proposed to bear him off the
+field; but, as some of his soldiers approached to lift him, he became
+aware of their purpose, and was partially revived by his determination to
+resist it. "No," said he, with all the strength he had left, "don't
+carry me off! Let me lie here!" And there he lay, under the tremendous
+fire of Churubusco, until the enemy, in total rout, was driven from the
+field.
+
+Immediately after the victory, when the city of Mexico lay at the mercy
+of the American commander, and might have been entered that very night,
+Santa Anna sent a flag of truce, proposing an armistice, with a view to
+negotiation for peace. It cannot be considered in any other light than
+as a very high and signal compliment to his gallantry in the field that
+General Pierce was appointed, by the commander-in-chief, one of the
+commissioners on our part, together with General Quitman and General
+Persifer F. Smith, to arrange the terms of this armistice. Pierce was
+unable to walk, or to mount his horse without assistance, when
+intelligence of his appointment reached him. He had not taken off his
+spurs nor slept an hour, for two nights; but he immediately obeyed the
+summons, was assisted into the saddle, and rode to Tacubaya, where, at
+the house of the British consul-general, the American and Mexican
+commissioners were assembled. The conference began late in the
+afternoon, and continued till four o'clock the next morning, when the
+articles were signed. Pierce then proceeded to the quarters of General
+Worth, in the village of Tacubaya, where he obtained an hour or two of
+repose.
+
+The expectation of General Scott, that further bloodshed might be avoided
+by means of the armistice, proved deceptive. Military operations, after
+a temporary interruption, were actively renewed; and on the 8th of
+September was fought the bloody battle of Molino del Rey, one of the
+fiercest and most destructive of the war.
+
+In this conflict General Worth, with three thousand troops, attacked and
+routed fourteen thousand Mexicans, driving them under the protection of
+the Castle of Chepultepec. Perceiving the obstinacy with which the field
+was contested, the commander-in-chief dispatched an order to General
+Pierce to advance to the support of General Worth's division. He moved
+forward with rapidity; and although the battle was won just as he reached
+the field, he interposed his brigade between Worth and the retreating
+enemy, and thus drew upon himself the fire of Chepultepec. A shell came
+streaming from the castle, and, bursting within a few feet of him,
+startled his horse, which was near plunging over an adjacent precipice.
+Continuing a long time under fire, Pierce's brigade was engaged in
+removing the wounded and the captured ammunition. While thus occupied,
+he led a portion of his command to repel the attacks of the enemy's
+skirmishers.
+
+There remained but one other battle,--that of Chepultepec,--which was
+fought on the 13th of September. On the preceding day (although the
+injuries and the over-exertion resulting from previous marches and
+battles had greatly enfeebled him), General Pierce had acted with his
+brigade. In obedience to orders, it had occupied the field of Molino del
+Rey. Contrary to expectation, it was found that the enemy's force had
+been withdrawn from this position. Pierce remained in the field until
+noon, when, it being certain that the anticipated attack would not take
+place before the following day, he returned to the quarters of General
+Worth, which were near at hand. There he became extremely ill, and was
+unable to leave his bed for the thirty-six hours next ensuing. In the
+mean time, the Castle of Chepultepec was stormed by the troops under
+Generals Pillow and Quitman. Pierce's brigade behaved itself gallantly,
+and suffered severely; and that accomplished officer, Colonel Ransom,
+leading the Ninth Regiment to the attack, was shot through the head, and
+fell, with many other brave men, in that last battle of the war.
+
+The American troops, under Quitman and Worth, had established themselves
+within the limits of the city, having possession of the gates of Belen
+and of San Cosma, but, up till nightfall, had met with a vigorous
+resistance from the Mexicans, led on by Santa Anna in person. They had
+still, apparently, a desperate task before them. It was anticipated
+that, with the next morning's light, our troops would be ordered to storm
+the citadel, and the city of Mexico itself. When this was told to
+Pierce, upon his sick-bed, he rose, and attempted to dress himself; but
+Captain Hardcastle, who had brought the intelligence from Worth,
+prevailed upon him to remain in bed, and not to exhaust his scanty
+strength until the imminence of the occasion should require his presence.
+Pierce acquiesced for the time, but again arose, in the course of the
+night, and made his way to the trenches, where he reported himself to
+General Quitman, with whose division was a part of his brigade.
+Quitman's share in the anticipated assault, it was supposed, owing to the
+position which his troops occupied, would be more perilous than that of
+Worth.
+
+But the last great battle had been fought. In the morning, it was
+discovered that the citadel had been abandoned, and that Santa Anna had
+withdrawn his army from the city.
+
+There never was a more gallant body of officers than those who came from
+civil life into the army on occasion of the Mexican War. All of them,
+from the rank of general downward, appear to have been animated by the
+spirit of young knights, in times of chivalry, when fighting for their
+spurs. Hitherto known only as peaceful citizens, they felt it incumbent
+on them, by daring and desperate valor, to prove their fitness to be
+intrusted with the guardianship of their country's honor. The old and
+trained soldier, already distinguished on former fields, was free to be
+discreet as well as brave; but these untried warriors were in a different
+position, and therefore rushed on perils with a recklessness that found
+its penalty on every battle-field--not one of which was won without a
+grievous sacrifice of the best blood of America. In this band of gallant
+men, it is not too much to say, General Pierce was as distinguished for
+what we must term his temerity in personal exposure, as for the higher
+traits of leadership, wherever there was an opportunity for their
+display.
+
+He had manifested, moreover, other and better qualities than these, and
+such as it affords his biographer far greater pleasure to record. His
+tenderness of heart, his sympathy, his brotherly or paternal care for his
+men, had been displayed in a hundred instances, and had gained him the
+enthusiastic affection of all who served under his command. During the
+passage from America, under the tropics, he would go down into the
+stifling air of the hold, with a lemon, a cup of tea, and, better and
+more efficacious than all, a kind word for the sick. While encamped
+before Vera Cruz, he gave up his own tent to a sick comrade, and went
+himself to lodge in the pestilential city. On the march, and even on the
+battle-field, he found occasion to exercise those feelings of humanity
+which show most beautifully there. And, in the hospitals of Mexico, he
+went among the diseased and wounded soldiers, cheering them with his
+voice and the magic of his kindness, inquiring into their wants, and
+relieving them to the utmost of his pecuniary means. There was not a man
+of his brigade but loved him, and would have followed him to death, or
+have sacrificed his own life in his general's defence.
+
+The officers of the old army, whose profession was war, and who well knew
+what a soldier was and ought to be, fully recognized his merit. An
+instance of their honorable testimony in his behalf may fitly be recorded
+here. It was after General Pierce had returned to the United States. At
+a dinner in the halls of Montezuma, at which forty or fifty of the brave
+men above alluded to were present, a young officer of the New England
+Regiment was called on for a toast. He made an address, in which he
+spoke with irrepressible enthusiasm of General Pierce, and begged to
+propose his health. One of the officers of the old line rose, and
+observed that none of the recently appointed generals commanded more
+unanimous and universal respect; that General Pierce had appreciated the
+scientific knowledge of the regular military men, and had acquired their
+respect by the independence, firmness, and promptitude with which he
+exercised his own judgment, and acted on the intelligence derived from
+them. In concluding this tribute of high, but well-considered praise,
+the speaker very cordially acquiesced in the health of General Pierce,
+and proposed that it should be drunk standing, with three times three.
+
+General Pierce remained in Mexico until December, when, as the warfare
+was over, and peace on the point of being concluded, he set out on his
+return. In nine months, crowded full of incident, he had seen far more
+of actual service than many professional soldiers during their whole
+lives. As soon as the treaty of peace was signed, he gave up his
+commission, and returned to the practice of the law, again proposing to
+spend the remainder of his days in the bosom of his family. All the
+dreams of his youth were now fulfilled; the military ardor, that had
+struck an hereditary root in his breast, had enjoyed its scope, and was
+satisfied; and he flattered himself that no circumstances could hereafter
+occur to draw him from the retirement of domestic peace. New Hampshire
+received him with even more enthusiastic affection than ever. At his
+departure, he had received a splendid sword at the hands of many of his
+friends, in token of their confidence; he had shown himself well worthy
+to wear and able to use a soldier's weapon; and his native state now gave
+him another, the testimonial of approved valor and warlike conduct.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE COMPROMISE AND OTHER MATTERS.
+
+
+The intervening years, since General Pierce's return from Mexico, and
+until the present time, have been spent in the laborious exercise of the
+legal profession,--an employment scarcely varied or interrupted, except
+by those episodes of political activity which a man of public influence
+finds it impossible to avoid, and in which, if his opinions are matter of
+conscience with him, he feels it his duty to interest himself.
+
+In the presidential canvass of 1848 he used his best efforts (and with
+success, so far as New Hampshire was concerned) in behalf of the
+candidate of his party. A truer and better speech has never been uttered
+on a similar occasion than one which he made (during a hurried half hour,
+snatched from the court rooms) in October of the above year, before the
+democratic state convention, then in session at Concord. It is an
+invariable characteristic of General Pierce's popular addresses, that
+they evince a genuine respect for the people; he makes his appeal to
+their intelligence, their patriotism, and their integrity, and, never
+doubtful of their upright purpose, proves his faith in the great mind
+and heart of the country both by what he says and by what he refrains
+from saying. He never yet was guilty of an effort to cajole his
+fellow-citizens, to operate upon their credulity, or to trick them even
+into what was right; and therefore all the victories which he has ever
+won in popular assemblies have been triumphs doubly honored, being as
+creditable to his audiences as to himself.
+
+When the series of measures known under the collective term of The
+Compromise were passed by Congress in 1850, and put to so searching a
+test here at the North the reverence of the people for the Constitution
+and their attachment to the Union, General Pierce was true to the
+principles which he had long ago avowed. At an early period of his
+congressional service he had made known, with the perfect frankness of
+his character, those opinions upon the slavery question which he has
+never since seen occasion to change in the slightest degree. There is an
+unbroken consistency in his action with regard to this matter. It is
+entirely of a piece, from his first entrance upon public life until the
+moment when he came forward, while many were faltering, to throw the
+great weight of his character and influence into the scale in favor of
+those measures through which it was intended to redeem the pledges of the
+Constitution, and to preserve and renew the old love and harmony among
+the sisterhood of States. His approval embraced the whole series of
+these acts, as well those which bore hard upon northern views and
+sentiments as those in which the South deemed itself to have made more
+than reciprocal concessions.
+
+No friend nor enemy that know Franklin Pierce would have expected him to
+act otherwise. With his view of the whole subject, whether looking at it
+through the medium of his conscience, his feelings, or his intellect, it
+was impossible for him not to take his stand as the unshaken advocate of
+Union, and of the mutual steps of compromise which that great object
+unquestionably demanded. The fiercest, the least scrupulous, and the
+most consistent of those who battle against slavery recognize the same
+fact that he does. They see that merely human wisdom and human efforts
+cannot subvert it, except by tearing to pieces the Constitution, breaking
+the pledges which it sanctions, and severing into distracted fragments
+that common country which Providence brought into one nation, through a
+continued miracle of almost two hundred years, from the first settlement
+of the American wilderness until the Revolution. In the days when, a
+young member of Congress, he first raised his voice against agitation,
+Pierce saw these perils and their consequences. He considered, too, that
+the evil would be certain, while the good was, at best, a contingency,
+and (to the clear, practical foresight with which he looked into the
+future) scarcely so much as that, attended as the movement was and must
+be during its progress, with the aggravated injury of those whose
+condition it aimed to ameliorate, and terminating, in its possible
+triumph,--if such possibility there were,--with the ruin of two races
+which now dwelt together in greater peace and affection, it is not too
+much to say, than had ever elsewhere existed between the taskmaster and
+the serf.
+
+Of course, there is another view of all these matters. The theorist may
+take that view in his closet; the philanthropist by profession may strive
+to act upon it uncompromisingly, amid the tumult and warfare of his life.
+But the statesman of practical sagacity--who loves his country as it is,
+and evolves good from things as they exist, and who demands to feel his
+firm grasp upon a better reality before he quits the one already gained--
+will be likely here, with all the greatest statesmen of America, to stand
+in the attitude of a conservative. Such, at all events, will be the
+attitude of Franklin Pierce. We have sketched some of the influences
+amid which he grew up, inheriting his father's love of country, mindful
+of the old patriot's valor in so many conflicts of the Revolution, and
+having close before his eyes the example of brothers and relatives, more
+than one of whom have bled for America, both at the extremest north and
+farthest south; himself, too, in early manhood, serving the Union in its
+legislative halls, and, at a maturer age, leading his fellow-citizens,
+his brethren, from the widest-sundered states, to redden the same
+battle-fields with their kindred blood, to unite their breath into one
+shout of victory, and perhaps to sleep, side by side, with the same sod
+over them. Such a man, with such hereditary recollections, and such a
+personal experience, must not narrow himself to adopt the cause of one
+section of his native country against another. He will stand up, as he
+has always stood, among the patriots of the whole land. And if the work
+of antislavery agitation, which it is undeniable leaves most men who
+earnestly engage in it with only half a country in their affections,--if
+this work must be done, let others do it.
+
+Those northern men, therefore, who deem the great causes of human welfare
+as represented and involved in this present hostility against southern
+institutions, and who conceive that the world stands still except so far
+as that goes forward,--these, it may be allowed, can scarcely give their
+sympathy or their confidence to the subject of this memoir. But there is
+still another view, and probably as wise a one. It looks upon slavery as
+one of those evils which divine Providence does not leave to be remedied
+by human contrivances, but which, in its own good time, by some means
+impossible to be anticipated, but of the simplest and easiest operation,
+when all its uses shall have been fulfilled, it causes to vanish like a
+dream. There is no instance, in all history, of the human will and
+intellect having perfected any great moral reform by methods which it
+adapted to that end; but the progress of the world, at every step, leaves
+some evil or wrong on the path behind it, which the wisest of mankind, of
+their own set purpose, could never have found the way to rectify.
+Whatever contributes to the great cause of good, contributes to all its
+subdivisions and varieties; and, on this score, the lover of his race,
+the enthusiast, the philanthropist of whatever theory, might lend his aid
+to put a man, like the one before us, into the leadership of the world's
+affairs.
+
+How firm and conscientious was General Pierce's support of The Compromise
+may be estimated from his conduct in reference to the Reverend John
+Atwood. In the foregoing pages it has come oftener in our way to
+illustrate the bland and prepossessing features of General Pierce's
+character, than the sterner ones which must necessarily form the bones,
+so to speak, the massive skeleton, of any man who retains an upright
+attitude amidst the sinister influences of public life. The transaction
+now alluded to affords a favorable opportunity for indicating some of
+these latter traits.
+
+In October, 1850, a democratic convention, held at Concord, nominated Mr.
+Atwood as the party's regular candidate for governor. The Compromise,
+then recent, was inevitably a prominent element in the discussions of the
+convention; and a series of resolutions were adopted, bearing reference
+to this great subject, fully and unreservedly indorsing the measures
+comprehended under it, and declaring the principles on which the
+Democracy of the state was about to engage in the gubernatorial contest.
+Mr. Atwood accepted the nomination, acceding to the platform thus
+tendered him, taking exceptions to none of the individual resolutions,
+and, of course, pledging himself to the whole by the very act of assuming
+the candidacy, which was predicated upon them.
+
+The reverend candidate, we should conceive, is a well-meaning, and
+probably an amiable man. In ordinary circumstances, he would, doubtless,
+have gone through the canvass triumphantly, and have administered the
+high office to which he aspired with no discredit to the party that had
+placed him at its head. But the disturbed state of the public mind on
+the Compromise question rendered the season a very critical one; and Mr.
+Atwood, unfortunately, had that fatal weakness of character, which,
+however respectably it may pass in quiet times, is always bound to make
+itself pitiably manifest under the pressure of a crisis. A letter was
+addressed to him by a committee, representing the party opposed to The
+Compromise, and with whom, it may be supposed, were included those who
+held the more thorough-going degrees of antislavery sentiment. The
+purpose of the letter was to draw out an expression of Mr. Atwood's
+opinion on the abolition movement generally, and with an especial
+reference to the Fugitive Slave Law, and whether, as chief magistrate of
+the state, he would favor any attempt for its repeal. In an answer of
+considerable length the candidate expressed sentiments that brought him
+unquestionably within the free soil pale, and favored his correspondents,
+moreover, with a pretty decided judgment as to the unconstitutional,
+unjust, and oppressive character of the Fugitive Slave Law.
+
+During a space of about two months, this very important document was kept
+from the public eye. Rumors of its existence, however, became gradually
+noised abroad, and necessarily attracted the attention of Mr. Atwood's
+democratic friends. Inquiries being made, he acknowledged the existence
+of the letter, but averred that it had never been delivered, that it was
+merely a rough draught, and that he had hitherto kept it within his own
+control, with a view to more careful consideration. In accordance with
+the advice of friends, he expressed a determination, and apparently in
+good faith, to suppress the letter, and thus to sever all connection with
+the antislavery party. This, however, was now beyond his power. A copy
+of the letter had been taken; it was published, with high commendations,
+in the antislavery newspapers; and Mr. Atwood was exhibited in the
+awkward predicament of directly avowing sentiments on the one hand which
+he had implicitly disavowed on the other, of accepting a nomination based
+on principles diametrically opposite.
+
+The candidate appears to have apprehended this disclosure, and he hurried
+to Concord, and sought counsel of General Pierce, with whom he was on
+terms of personal kindness, and between whom and himself, heretofore,
+there had never been a shade of political difference. An interview with
+the general and one or two other gentlemen ensued. Mr. Atwood was
+cautioned against saying or writing a word that might be repugnant to his
+feelings or his principles; but, voluntarily, and at his own suggestion,
+he now wrote for publication a second letter, in which he retracted every
+objectionable feature of his former one, and took decided ground in favor
+of The Compromise, including all its individual measures. Had he adhered
+to this latter position, he might have come out of the affair, if not
+with the credit of consistency, yet, at least, as a successful candidate
+in the impending election. But his evil fate, or, rather, the natural
+infirmity of his character, was not so to be thrown off. The very next
+day, unhappily, he fell into the hands of some of his antislavery
+friends, to whom he avowed a constant adherence to the principles of his
+first letter, describing the second as having been drawn from him by
+importunity, in an excited state of his mind, and without a full
+realization of its purport.
+
+It would be needlessly cruel to Mr. Atwood to trace with minuteness the
+further details of this affair. It is impossible to withhold from him a
+certain sympathy, or to avoid feeling that a very worthy man, as the
+world goes, had entangled himself in an inextricable knot of duplicity
+and tergiversation, by an ill-advised effort to be two opposite things at
+once. For the sake of true manhood, we gladly turn to consider the
+course adopted by General Pierce.
+
+The election for governor was now at a distance of only a few weeks; and
+it could not be otherwise than a most hazardous movement for the
+democratic party, at so late a period, to discard a candidate with whom
+the people had become familiar. It involved nothing less than the
+imminent peril of that political supremacy which the party had so long
+enjoyed. With Mr. Atwood as candidate, success might be considered as
+certain. To a short-sighted and a weak man, it would have appeared the
+obvious policy to patch up the difficulty, and, at all events, to
+conquer, under whatever leadership, and with whatever allies. But it was
+one of those junctures which test the difference between the man of
+principle and the mere politician--the man of moral courage and him who
+yields to temporary expediency. General Pierce could not consent that
+his party should gain a nominal triumph, at the expense of what he looked
+upon as its real integrity and life. With this view of the matter, he
+had no hesitation in his course; nor could the motives which otherwise
+would have been strongest with him--pity for the situation of an
+unfortunate individual, a personal friend, a Democrat, as Mr. Atwood
+describes himself, of nearly fifty years' standing--incline him to mercy
+where it would have been fatal to his sense of right. He took decided
+ground against Mr. Atwood. The convention met again, and satisfactory to
+all parties; and one of his political opponents (Professor Sanborn, of
+Dartmouth College) has ably sketched him, both in that aspect and as a
+debater.
+
+"In drawing the portraits of the distinguished members of the
+constitutional convention," writes the professor, "to pass Frank Pierce
+unnoticed would be as absurd as to enact one of Shakespeare's dramas
+without its principal hero. I give my impressions of the man as I saw
+him in the convention; for I would not undertake to vouch for the truth
+or falsehood of those veracious organs of public sentiment, at the
+capital, which have loaded him in turn with indiscriminate praise and
+abuse. As a presiding officer, it would be difficult to find his equal.
+In proposing questions to the house, he never hesitates or blunders. In
+deciding points of order, he is both prompt and impartial. His treatment
+of every member of the convention was characterized by uniform courtesy
+and kindness. The deportment of the presiding officer of a deliberative
+body usually gives tone to the debates. If he is harsh, morose, or
+abrupt in his manner, the speakers are apt to catch his spirit by the
+force of involuntary sympathy. The same is true, to some extent, of the
+principal debaters in such a body. When a man of strong prejudices and
+harsh temper rises to address a public assembly, his indwelling
+antipathies speak from every feature of his face and from every motion of
+his person. The audience at once brace themselves against his assaults,
+and condemn his opinions before they are heard. The well-known character
+of an orator persuades or dissuades quite as forcibly as the language he
+utters. Some men never rise to address a deliberative assembly without
+conciliating good will in advance. The smile that plays upon the
+speaker's face awakens emotions of complacency in those who hear, even
+before he speaks. So does that weight of character, which is the matured
+fruit of long public services and acknowledged worth, soothe, in advance,
+the irritated and angry crowd.
+
+"Mr. Pierce possesses unquestionable ability as a public speaker. Few
+men, in our country, better understand the means of swaying a popular
+assembly, or employ them with greater success. His forte lies in moving
+the passions of those whom he addresses. He knows how to call into
+vigorous action both the sympathies and antipathies of those who listen
+to him. I do not mean to imply by these remarks that his oratory is
+deficient in argument or sound reasoning. On the contrary, he seizes
+with great power upon the strong points of his subject, and presents them
+clearly, forcibly, and eloquently. As a prompt and ready debater, always
+prepared for assault or defence, he has few equals. In these encounters,
+he appears to great advantage, from his happy faculty of turning little
+incidents, unexpectedly occurring, to his own account. A word carelessly
+dropped, or an unguarded allusion to individuals or parties by an
+opponent, is frequently converted into a powerful weapon of assault, by
+this skilful advocate. He has been so much in office that he may be said
+to have been educated in public life. He is most thoroughly versed in
+all the tactics of debate. He is not only remarkably fluent in his
+elocution, but remarkably correct. He seldom miscalls or repeats a word.
+His style is not overloaded with ornament, and yet he draws liberally
+upon the treasury of rhetoric. His figures are often beautiful and
+striking, never incongruous. He is always listened to with respectful
+attention, if he does not always command conviction. From his whole
+course in the convention, a disinterested spectator could not fail to
+form a very favorable opinion, not only of his talent and eloquence, but
+of his generosity and magnanimity."
+
+Among other antiquated relics of the past, and mouldy types of prejudices
+that ought now to be forgotten, and of which it was the object of the
+present convention to purge the Constitution of New Hampshire, there is a
+provision that certain state offices should be held only by Protestants.
+Since General Pierce's nomination for the presidency, the existence of
+this religious test has been brought as a charge against him, as if, in
+spite of his continued efforts to remove it, he were personally
+responsible for its remaining on the statute book.
+
+General Pierce has naturally a strong endowment of religious feeling. At
+no period of his life, as is well known to his friends, have the sacred
+relations of the human soul been a matter of indifference with him; and,
+of more recent years, whatever circumstances of good or evil fortune may
+have befallen him, they have alike served to deepen this powerful
+sentiment. Whether in sorrow or success, he has learned, in his own
+behalf, the great lesson, that religious faith is the most valuable and
+most sacred of human possessions; but, with this sense, there has come no
+narrowness or illiberality, but a wide-embracing sympathy for the modes
+of Christian worship, and a reverence for individual belief, as a matter
+between the Deity and man's soul, and with which no other has a right to
+interfere. With the feeling here described, and with his acute
+intellectual perception of the abortive character of all intolerant
+measures, as defeating their own ends, it strikes one as nothing less
+than ludicrous that he should be charged with desiring to retain this
+obsolete enactment, standing, as it does, as a merely gratuitous and
+otherwise inoperative stigma upon the fair reputation of his native
+state. Even supposing no higher motives to have influenced him, it would
+have sufficed to secure his best efforts for the repeal of the religious
+test that so many of the Catholics have always been found in the
+advance-guard of freedom, marching onward with the progressive party; and
+that, whether in peace or war, they have performed for their adopted
+country the hard toil and the gallant services which she has a right to
+expect from her most faithful citizens.
+
+The truth is that, ever since his entrance upon public life, on all
+occasions,--and often making the occasion where he found none,--General
+Pierce has done his utmost to obliterate this obnoxious feature from the
+Constitution. He has repeatedly advocated the calling of a convention
+mainly for this purpose. In that of 1850, he both spoke and voted in
+favor of the abolition of the test, and, with the aid of Judge Woodbury
+and other democratic members, attained his purpose, so far as the
+convention possessed any power or responsibility in the matter. That the
+measure was ultimately defeated is due to other causes, either temporary
+or of long continuance; and to some of them it is attributable that the
+enlightened public sentiment of New Hampshire was not, long since, made
+to operate upon this enactment, so anomalous in the fundamental law of a
+free state.
+
+In order to the validity of the amendments passed by the convention, it
+was necessary that the people should subsequently act upon them, and pass
+a vote of two thirds in favor of their adoption. The amendments proposed
+by the convention of 1850 were numerous. The Constitution had been
+modified in many and very important particulars, in respect to which the
+popular mind had not previously been made familiar, and on which it had
+not anticipated the necessity of passing judgment. In March, 1851, when
+the vote of the people was taken upon these measures, the Atwood
+controversy was at its height, and threw all matters of less immediate
+interest into the background. During the interval since the adjournment
+of the convention, the whig newspapers had been indefatigable in their
+attempts to put its proceedings in an odious light before the people.
+There had been no period, for many years, in which sinister influences
+rendered it so difficult to draw out an efficient expression of the will
+of the Democracy as on this occasion. It was the result of all these
+obstacles that the doings of the constitutional convention were rejected
+in the mass.
+
+In the ensuing April, the convention reassembled, in order to receive the
+unfavorable verdict of the people upon its proposed amendments. At the
+suggestion of General Pierce, the amendment abolishing the religious test
+was again brought forward, and, in spite of the opposition of the leading
+whig members, was a second time submitted to the people. Nor did the
+struggle in behalf of this enlightened movement terminate here.
+
+At the democratic caucus, in Concord, preliminary to the town meeting, he
+urged upon his political friends the repeal of the test, as a party
+measure; and again, at the town meeting itself, while the balloting was
+going forward, he advocated it on the higher ground of religious freedom,
+and of reverence for what is inviolable in the human soul. Had the
+amendment passed, the credit would have belonged to no man more than to
+General Pierce; and that it failed, and that the free Constitution of New
+Hampshire is still disgraced by a provision which even monarchical
+England has cast off, is a responsibility which must rest elsewhere than
+on his head.
+
+In September, 1851, died that eminent statesman and jurist, Levi
+Woodbury, then occupying the elevated post of judge of the Supreme Court
+of the United States. The connection between him and General Pierce,
+beginning in the early youth of the latter, had been sustained through
+all the subsequent years. They sat together, with but one intervening
+chair between, in the national Senate; they were always advocates of the
+same great measures, and held, through life, a harmony of opinion and
+action, which was never more conspicuous than in the few months that
+preceded Judge Woodbury's death. At a meeting of the bar, after his
+decease, General Pierce uttered some remarks, full of sensibility, in
+which he referred to the circumstances that had made this friendship an
+inheritance on his part. Had Judge Woodbury survived, it is not
+improbable that his more advanced age, his great public services, and
+equally distinguished zeal in behalf of the Union might have placed him
+in the position now occupied by the subject of this memoir. Fortunate
+the state which, after losing such a son, can still point to another, not
+less worthy to take upon him the charge of the nation's welfare.
+
+We have now finished our record of Franklin Pierce's life, and have only
+to describe the posture of affairs which, without his own purpose and
+against his wish, has placed him before the people of the United States
+as a candidate for the presidency.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+HIS NOMINATION FOR THE PRESIDENCY.
+
+
+On the 12th of June, 1852, the democratic national convention assembled
+at Baltimore, in order to select a candidate for the presidency of the
+United States. Many names, eminently distinguished in peace and war, had
+been brought before the public, during several months previous; and among
+them, though by no means occupying a very prominent place, was the name
+of Franklin Pierce. In January of this year, the Democracy of New
+Hampshire had signified its preference of General Pierce as a
+presidential candidate in the approaching canvass--a demonstration which
+drew from him the following response, addressed to his friend, Mr.
+Atherton:--
+
+"I am far from being insensible to the generous confidence so often
+manifested towards me by the people of this state; and although the
+object indicated in the resolution, having particular reference to
+myself, be not one of desire on my part, the expression is not on that
+account less gratifying.
+
+"Doubtless the spontaneous and just appreciation of an intelligent people
+is the best earthly reward for earnest and cheerful services rendered to
+one's state and country; and while it is a matter of unfeigned regret
+that my life has been so barren of usefulness, I shall ever hold this and
+similar tributes among my most cherished recollections.
+
+"To these, my sincere and grateful acknowledgments, I desire to add that
+the same motives which induced me, several years ago, to retire from
+public life, and which since that time controlled my judgment in this
+respect, now impel me to say that the use of my name in any event, before
+the democratic national convention at Baltimore, to which you are a
+delegate, would be utterly repugnant to my taste and wishes."
+
+The sentiments expressed in the above letter were genuine, and from his
+heart. He had looked long and closely at the effects of high public
+station on the character and happiness, and on what is the innermost and
+dearest part of a man's possessions--his independence; and he had
+satisfied himself that office, however elevated, should be avoided for
+one's own sake, or accepted only as a good citizen would make any other
+sacrifice, at the call and at the need of his country.
+
+As the time for the assembling of the national convention drew near,
+there were other sufficient indications of his sincerity in declining a
+stake in the great game. A circular letter was addressed, by Major
+Scott, of Virginia, to the distinguished Democrats whose claims had
+heretofore been publicly discussed, requesting a statement of their
+opinions on several points, and inquiring what would be the course of
+each of these gentlemen, in certain contingencies, in case of his
+attaining the presidency. These queries, it may be presumed, were of
+such a nature that General Pierce might have answered them, had he seen
+fit to do so, to the satisfaction of Major Scott himself, or to that of
+the southern democratic party, whom it seemed his purpose to represent.
+With not more than one exception, the other statesmen and soldiers, to
+whom the circular had been sent, made a response. General Pierce
+preserved an unbroken silence. It was equivalent to the withdrawal of
+all claims which he might be supposed to possess, in reference to the
+contemplated office; and he thereby repeated, to the delegates of the
+national party, the same avowal of distaste for public life which he had
+already made known to the Democracy of his native state. He had thus
+done everything in his power, actively or passively,--everything that he
+could have done, without showing such an estimate of his position before
+the country as was inconsistent with the modesty of his character,--to
+avoid the perilous and burdensome honor of the candidacy.
+
+The convention met, at the date above mentioned, and continued its
+sessions during four days. Thirty-five ballotings were held, with a
+continually decreasing prospect that the friends of any one of the
+gentlemen hitherto prominent before the people would succeed in obtaining
+the two-thirds vote that was requisite for a nomination. Thus far, not a
+vote had been thrown for General Pierce; but, at the thirty-sixth ballot,
+the delegation of old Virginia brought forward his name. In the course
+of several more trials, his strength increased, very gradually at first,
+but afterwards with a growing impetus, until, at the forty-ninth ballot,
+the votes were for Franklin Pierce two hundred and eighty-two, and eleven
+for all other candidates. Thus Franklin Pierce became the nominee of the
+convention; and as quickly as the lightning flash could blazon it abroad
+his name was on every tongue, from end to end of this vast country.
+Within an hour he grew to be illustrious.
+
+It would be a pretension, which we do not mean to put forward, to assert
+that, whether considering the length and amount of his public services,
+or his prominence before the country, General Pierce stood on equal
+ground with several of the distinguished men whose claims, to use the
+customary phrase, had been rejected in favor of his own. But no man, be
+his public services or sacrifices what they might, ever did or ever could
+possess, in the slightest degree, what we may term a legitimate claim to
+be elevated to the rulership of a free people. The nation would degrade
+itself, and violate every principle upon which its institutions are
+founded, by offering its majestic obedience to one of its citizens as a
+reward for whatever splendor of achievement. The conqueror may assert a
+claim, such as it is, to the sovereignty of the people whom he
+subjugates; but, with us Americans, when a statesman comes to the chief
+direction of affairs, it is at the summons of the nation, addressed to
+the servant whom it deems best fitted to spend his wisdom, his strength,
+and his life in its behalf. On this principle, which is obviously the
+correct one, a candidate's previous services are entitled to
+consideration only as they indicate the qualities which may enable him to
+render higher services in the position which his countrymen choose that
+he shall occupy. What he has done is of no importance, except as proving
+what he can do. And it is on this score, because they see in his public
+course the irrefragable evidences of patriotism, integrity, and courage,
+and because they recognize in him the noble gift of natural authority,
+and have a prescience of the stately endowment of administrative genius,
+that his fellow-citizens are about to summon Franklin Pierce to the
+presidency. To those who know him well, the event comes, not like
+accident, but as a consummation which might have been anticipated, from
+its innate fitness, and as the final step of a career which, all along,
+has tended thitherward.
+
+It is not as a reward that he will take upon him the mighty burden of
+this office, of which the toil and awful responsibility whiten the
+statesman's head, and in which, as in more than one instance we have
+seen, the warrior encounters a deadlier risk than in the battle-field.
+When General Pierce received the news of his nomination, it affected him
+with no thrill of joy, but a sadness, which, for many days, was
+perceptible in his deportment. It awoke in his heart the sense of
+religious dependence--a sentiment that has been growing continually
+stronger, through all the trials and experiences of his life; and there
+was nothing feigned in that passage of his beautiful letter, accepting
+the nomination, in which he expresses his reliance upon heavenly support.
+
+The committee, appointed by the Baltimore convention, conveyed to him the
+intelligence of his nomination in the following terms:--
+
+"A national convention of the democratic republican party, which met at
+Baltimore on the first Tuesday in June, unanimously nominated you as a
+candidate for the high trust of the President of the United States. We
+have been delegated to acquaint you with the nomination, and earnestly to
+request that you will accept it. Persuaded as we are that this office
+should never be pursued by an unchastened ambition, it cannot be refused
+by a dutiful patriotism.
+
+"The circumstances under which you will be presented for the canvass of
+your countrymen seem to be propitious to the interests which the
+Constitution intrusts to our Federal Union, and must be auspicious to
+your own name. You come before the people without the impulse of
+personal wishes, and free from selfish expectations. You are identified
+with none of the distractions which have recently disturbed our country,
+whilst you are known to be faithful to the Constitution--to all its
+guaranties and compromises. You will be free to exercise your tried
+abilities, within the path of duty, in protecting that repose we happily
+enjoy, and in giving efficacy and control to those cardinal principles
+that have already illustrated the party which has now selected you as its
+leader--principles that regard the security and prosperity of the whole
+country, and the paramount power of its laws, as indissolubly associated
+with the perpetuity of our civil and religious liberties.
+
+"The convention did not pretermit the duty of reiterating those
+principles, and you will find them prominently set forth in the
+resolutions it adopted. To these we respectfully invite your attention.
+
+"It is firmly believed that to your talents and patriotism the security
+of our holy Union, with its expanded and expanding interests, may be
+wisely trusted, and that, amid all the perils which may assail the
+Constitution, you will have the heart to love and the arm to defend it."
+
+We quote likewise General Pierce's reply:--
+
+"I have the honor to acknowledge your personal kindness in presenting me,
+this day, your letter, officially informing me of my nomination, by the
+democratic national convention, as a candidate for the presidency of the
+United States. The surprise with which I received the intelligence of my
+nomination was not unmingled with painful solicitude; and yet it is
+proper for me to say that the manner in which it was conferred was
+peculiarly gratifying.
+
+"The delegation from New Hampshire, with all the glow of state pride, and
+with all the warmth of personal regard, would not have submitted my name
+to the convention, nor would they have cast a vote for me, under
+circumstances other than those which occurred.
+
+"I shall always cherish with pride and gratitude the recollection of the
+fact that the voice which first pronounced, and pronounced alone, came
+from the Mother of States--a pride and gratitude rising above any
+consequences that can betide me personally. May I not regard it as a
+fact pointing to the overthrow of sectional jealousies, and looking to
+the permanent life and vigor of the Union, cemented by the blood of those
+who have passed to their reward?--a Union wonderful in its formation,
+boundless in its hopes, amazing in its destiny.
+
+"I accept the nomination, relying upon an abiding devotion to the
+interests, honor, and glory of the whole country, but, above and beyond
+all, upon a Power superior to all human might--a Power which, from the
+first gun of the Revolution, in every crisis through which we have
+passed, in every hour of acknowledged peril, when the dark clouds had
+shut down over us, has interposed as if to baffle human wisdom, outmarch
+human forecast, and bring out of darkness the rainbow of promise. Weak
+myself, faith and hope repose there in security.
+
+"I accept the nomination upon the platform adopted by the convention, not
+because this is expected of me as a candidate, but because the principles
+it embraces command the approbation of my judgment; and with them, I
+believe I can safely say, there has been no word or act of my life in
+conflict."
+
+The news of his nomination went abroad over the Union, and, far and wide,
+there came a response, in which was distinguishable a truer appreciation
+of some of General Pierce's leading traits than could have been
+anticipated, considering the unobtrusive tenor of his legislative life,
+and the lapse of time since he had entirely withdrawn himself from the
+nation's eye. It was the marvellous and mystic influence of character,
+in regard to which the judgment of the people is so seldom found
+erroneous, and which conveys the perception of itself through some medium
+higher and deeper than the intellect. Everywhere the country knows that
+a man of steadfast will, true heart, and generous qualities has been
+brought forward, to receive the suffrages of his fellow-citizens.
+
+He comes before the people of the United States at a remarkable era in
+the history of this country and of the world. The two great parties of
+the nation appear--at least to an observer somewhat removed from both--to
+have nearly merged into one another; for they preserve the attitude of
+political antagonism rather through the effect of their old organizations
+than because any great and radical principles are at present in dispute
+between them. The measures advocated by the one party, and resisted by
+the other, through a long series of years, have now ceased to be the
+pivots on which the election turns. The prominent statesmen, so long
+identified with those measures, will henceforth relinquish their
+controlling influence over public affairs. Both parties, it may likewise
+be said, are united in one common purpose,--that of preserving our sacred
+Union, as the immovable basis from which the destinies, not of America
+alone, but of mankind at large, may be carried upward and consummated.
+And thus men stand together, in unwonted quiet and harmony, awaiting the
+new movement in advance which all these tokens indicate.
+
+It remains for the citizens of this great country to decide, within the
+next few weeks, whether they will retard the steps of human progress by
+placing at its head an illustrious soldier, indeed, a patriot, and one
+indelibly stamped into the history of the past, but who has already done
+his work, and has not in him the spirit of the present or of the coming
+time; or whether they will put their trust in a new man, whom a life of
+energy and various activity has tested, but not worn out, and advance
+with him into the auspicious epoch upon which we are about to enter.
+
+
+NOTE.
+
+We have done far less than justice to Franklin Pierce's college standing,
+in our statement in Chapter I. Some circumstances connected with this
+matter are too characteristic not to be reported.
+
+During the first two years, Pierce was extremely inattentive to his
+college duties, bestowing only such modicum of time upon them as was
+requisite to supply the merest superficial acquaintance with the course
+of study for the recitation room. The consequence was that when the
+relative standing of the members of the class was first authoritatively
+ascertained, in the junior year, he found himself occupying precisely the
+lowest position in point of scholarship. In the first mortification of
+wounded pride, he resolved never to attend another recitation, and
+accordingly absented himself from college exercises of all kinds for
+several days, expecting and desiring that some form of punishment, such
+as suspension or expulsion, would be the result. The faculty of the
+college, however, with a wise lenity, took no notice of this behavior;
+and at last, having had time to grow cool, and moved by the grief of his
+friend Little and another classmate, Pierce determined to resume the
+routine of college duties. "But," said he to his friends, "if I do so,
+you shall see a change!"
+
+Accordingly, from that time forward, he devoted himself to study. His
+mind, having run wild for so long a period, could be reclaimed only by
+the severest efforts of an iron resolution; and for three months
+afterwards, he rose at four in the morning, toiled all day over his
+books, and retired only at midnight, allowing himself but four hours for
+sleep. With habit and exercise, he acquired command over his
+intellectual powers, and was no longer under the necessity of application
+so intense. But from the moment when he made his resolve until the close
+of his college life, he never incurred a censure, never was absent (and
+then unavoidably) but from two college exercises, never went into the
+recitation room without a thorough acquaintance with the subject to be
+recited, and finally graduated as the third scholar of his class.
+Nothing save the low standard of his previous scholarship prevented his
+taking a yet higher rank.
+
+The moral of this little story lies in the stern and continued exercise
+of self-controlling will, which redeemed him from indolence, completely
+changed the aspect of his character, and made this the turning point of
+his life.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHIEFLY ABOUT WAR MATTERS.
+
+By a Peaceable Man.
+
+
+[This article appeared in the "Atlantic Monthly" for July, 1862, and is
+now first reprinted among Hawthorne's collected writings. The editor of
+the magazine objected to sundry paragraphs in the manuscript, and these
+were cancelled with the consent of the author, who himself supplied all
+the foot-notes that accompanied the article when it was published. It
+has seemed best to retain them in the present reproduction. One of the
+suppressed passages, in which President Lincoln is described, has since
+been printed, and is therefore restored to its proper place in the
+following pages.--G. P. L.]
+
+
+Here is no remoteness of life and thought, no hermetically sealed
+seclusion, except possibly, that of the grave, into which the disturbing
+influences of this war do not penetrate. Of course, the general
+heart-quake of the country long ago knocked at my cottage-door, and
+compelled me, reluctantly, to suspend the contemplation of certain
+fantasies, to which, according to my harmless custom, I was endeavoring
+to give a sufficiently life-like aspect to admit of their figuring in a
+romance. As I make no pretensions to state-craft or soldiership, and
+could promote the common weal neither by valor nor counsel, it seemed, at
+first, a pity that I should be debarred from such unsubstantial business
+as I had contrived for myself, since nothing more genuine was to be
+substituted for it. But I magnanimously considered that there is a kind
+of treason in insulating one's self from the universal fear and sorrow,
+and thinking one's idle thoughts in the dread time of civil war; and
+could a man be so cold and hardhearted, he would better deserve to be
+sent to Fort Warren than many who have found their way thither on the
+score of violent, but misdirected sympathies. I remembered the touching
+rebuke administered by King Charles to that rural squire the echo of
+whose hunting-horn came to the poor monarch's ear on the morning before a
+battle, where the sovereignty and constitution of England were to be set
+at a stake. So I gave myself up to reading newspapers and listening to
+the click of the telegraph, like other people; until, after a great many
+months of such pastime, it grew so abominably irksome that I determined
+to look a little more closely at matters with my own eyes.
+
+Accordingly we set out--a friend and myself--towards Washington, while it
+was still the long, dreary January of our Northern year, though March in
+name; nor were we unwilling to clip a little margin off the five months'
+winter, during which there is nothing genial in New England save the
+fireside. It was a clear, frosty morning, when we started. The sun
+shone brightly on snow-covered hills in the neighborhood of Boston, and
+burnished the surface of frozen ponds; and the wintry weather kept along
+with us while we trundled through Worcester and Springfield, and all
+those old, familiar towns, and through the village-cities of Connecticut.
+In New York the streets were afloat with liquid mud and slosh. Over New
+Jersey there was still a thin covering of snow, with the face of Nature
+visible through the rents in her white shroud, though with little or no
+symptom of reviving life. But when we reached Philadelphia, the air was
+mild and balmy; there was but a patch or two of dingy winter here and
+there, and the bare, brown fields about the city were ready to be green.
+We had met the Spring half-way, in her slow progress from the South; and
+if we kept onward at the same pace, and could get through the Rebel
+lines, we should soon come to fresh grass, fruit-blossoms, green peas,
+strawberries, and all such delights of early summer.
+
+On our way, we heard many rumors of the war, but saw few signs of it.
+The people were staid and decorous, according to their ordinary fashion;
+and business seemed about as brisk as usual,--though, I suppose, it was
+considerably diverted from its customary channels into warlike ones. In
+the cities, especially in New York, there was a rather prominent display
+of military goods at the shop windows,--such as swords with gilded
+scabbards and trappings, epaulets, carabines, revolvers, and sometimes a
+great iron cannon at the edge of the pavement, as if Mars had dropped
+one of his pocket-pistols there, while hurrying to the field. As
+railway-companions, we had now and then a volunteer in his French-gray
+great-coat, returning from furlough, or a new-made officer travelling to
+join his regiment, in his new-made uniform, which was perhaps all of the
+military character that he had about him,--but proud of his eagle-buttons
+and likely enough to do them honor before the gilt should be wholly
+dimmed. The country, in short, so far as bustle and movement went, was
+more quiet than in ordinary times, because so large a proportion of its
+restless elements had been drawn towards the seat of the conflict. But
+the air was full of a vague disturbance. To me, at least, it seemed so,
+emerging from such a solitude as has been hinted at, and the more
+impressible by rumors and indefinable presentiments, since I had not
+lived, like other men, in an atmosphere of continual talk about the war.
+A battle was momentarily expected on the Potomac; for, though our army
+was still on the hither side of the river, all of us were looking towards
+the mysterious and terrible Manassas, with the idea that somewhere in its
+neighborhood lay a ghastly battle-field, yet to be fought, but foredoomed
+of old to be bloodier than the one where we had reaped such shame. Of
+all haunted places, methinks such a destined field should be thickest
+thronged with ugly phantoms, ominous of mischief through ages beforehand.
+
+Beyond Philadelphia there was a much greater abundance of military
+people. Between Baltimore and Washington a guard seemed to hold every
+station along the railroad; and frequently, on the hill-sides, we saw a
+collection of weather-beaten tents, the peaks of which, blackened with
+smoke, indicated that they had been made comfortable by stove-heat
+throughout the winter. At several commanding positions we saw
+fortifications, with the muzzles of cannon protruding from the ramparts,
+the slopes of which were made of the yellow earth of that region, and
+still unsodded; whereas, till these troublous times, there have been no
+forts but what were grass-grown with the lapse of at least a lifetime of
+peace. Our stopping-places were thronged with soldiers, some of whom
+came through the cars asking for newspapers that contained accounts of
+the battle between the Merrimack and Monitor, which had been fought the
+day before. A railway-train met us, conveying a regiment out of
+Washington to some unknown point; and reaching the capital, we filed out
+of the station between lines of soldiers, with shouldered muskets,
+putting us in mind of similar spectacles at the gates of European cities.
+It was not without sorrow that we saw the free circulation of the
+nation's life-blood (at the very heart, moreover) clogged with such
+strictures as these, which have caused chronic diseases in almost all
+countries save our own. Will the time ever come again, in America, when
+we may live half a score of years without once seeing the likeness of a
+soldier, except it be in the festal march of a company on its summer
+tour? Not in this generation, I fear, nor in the next, nor till the
+Millennium; and even that blessed epoch, as the prophecies seem to
+intimate, will advance to the sound of the trumpet.
+
+One terrible idea occurs in reference to this matter. Even supposing the
+war should end to-morrow, and the army melt into the mass of the
+population within the year, what an incalculable preponderance will there
+be of military titles and pretensions for at least half a century to
+come! Every country-neighborhood will have its general or two, its three
+or four colonels, half a dozen majors, and captains without end,--besides
+non-commissioned officers and privates, more than the recruiting offices
+ever knew of,--all with their campaign-stories, which will become the
+staple of fireside talk forevermore. Military merit, or rather, since
+that is not so readily estimated, military notoriety, will be the measure
+of all claims to civil distinction.--One bullet-headed general will
+succeed another in the Presidential chair; and veterans will hold the
+offices at home and abroad, and sit in Congress and the state
+legislatures, and fill all the avenues of public life. And yet I do not
+speak of this deprecatingly, since, very likely, it may substitute
+something more real and genuine, instead of the many shams on which men
+have heretofore founded their claims to public regard; but it behooves
+civilians to consider their wretched prospects in the future, and assume
+the military button before it is too late.
+
+We were not in time to see Washington as a camp. On the very day of our
+arrival sixty thousand men had crossed the Potomac on their march towards
+Manassas; and almost with their first step into the Virginia mud, the
+phantasmagory of a countless host and impregnable ramparts, before which
+they had so long remained quiescent, dissolved quite away. It was as if
+General McClellan had thrust his sword into a gigantic enemy, and,
+beholding him suddenly collapse, had discovered to himself and the world
+that he had merely punctured an enormously swollen bladder. There are
+instances of a similar character in old romances, where great armies are
+long kept at bay by the arts of necromancers, who build airy towers and
+battlements, and muster warriors of terrible aspect, and thus feign a
+defence of seeming impregnability, until some bolder champion of the
+besiegers dashes forward to try an encounter with the foremost foeman,
+and finds him melt away in the death grapple. With such heroic
+adventures let the march upon Manassas be hereafter reckoned. The whole
+business, though connected with the destinies of a nation, takes
+inevitably a tinge of the ludicrous. The vast preparation of men and
+warlike material,--the majestic patience and docility with which the
+people waited through those weary and dreary months,--the martial skill,
+courage, and caution, with which our movement was ultimately made,--and,
+at last, the tremendous shock with which we were brought suddenly up
+against nothing at all! The Southerners show little sense of humor
+nowadays, but I think they must have meant to provoke a laugh at our
+expense, when they planted those Quaker guns. At all events, no other
+Rebel artillery has played upon us with such overwhelming effect.
+
+The troops being gone, we had the better leisure and opportunity to look
+into other matters. It is natural enough to suppose that the centre and
+heart of Washington is the Capitol; and certainly, in its outward aspect,
+the world has not many statelier or more beautiful edifices, nor any, I
+should suppose, more skilfully adapted to legislative purposes, and to
+all accompanying needs. But, etc., etc. [We omit several paragraphs
+here, in which the author speaks of some prominent Members of Congress
+with a freedom that seems to have been not unkindly meant, but might be
+liable to misconstruction. As he admits that he never listened to an
+important debate, we can hardly recognize his qualifications to estimate
+these gentlemen, in their legislative and oratorical capacities.]
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+We found one man, however, at the Capitol, who was satisfactorily
+adequate to the business which brought him thither. In quest of him, we
+went through halls, galleries, and corridors, and ascended a noble
+staircase, balustraded with a dark and beautifully variegated marble from
+Tennessee, the richness of which is quite a sufficient cause for
+objecting to the secession of that State. At last we came to a barrier
+of pine boards, built right across the stairs. Knocking at a rough,
+temporary door, we thrust a card beneath; and in a minute or two it was
+opened by a person in his shirt-sleeves, a middle-aged figure, neither
+tall nor short, of Teutonic build and aspect, with an ample beard of a
+ruddy tinge and chestnut hair. He looked at us, in the first place, with
+keen and somewhat guarded eyes, as if it were not his practice to
+vouchsafe any great warmth of greeting, except upon sure ground of
+observation. Soon, however, his look grew kindly and genial (not that it
+had ever been in the least degree repulsive, but only reserved), and
+Leutze allowed us to gaze at the cartoon of his great fresco, and talked
+about it unaffectedly, as only a man of true genius can speak of his own
+works. Meanwhile the noble design spoke for itself upon the wall. A
+sketch in color, which we saw afterwards, helped us to form some distant
+and flickering notion of what the picture will be, a few months hence,
+when these bare outlines, already so rich in thought and suggestiveness,
+shall glow with a fire of their own,--a fire which, I truly believe, will
+consume every other pictorial decoration of the Capitol, or, at least,
+will compel us to banish those stiff and respectable productions to some
+less conspicuous gallery. The work will be emphatically original and
+American, embracing characteristics that neither art nor literature have
+yet dealt with, and producing new forms of artistic beauty from the
+natural features of the Rocky-Mountain region, which Leutze seems to have
+studied broadly and minutely. The garb of the hunters and wanderers of
+those deserts, too, under his free and natural management, is shown as
+the most picturesque of costumes. But it would be doing this admirable
+painter no kind office to overlay his picture with any more of my
+colorless and uncertain words; so I shall merely add that it looked full
+of energy, hope, progress, irrepressible movement onward, all represented
+in a momentary pause of triumph; and it was most cheering to feel its
+good augury at this dismal time, when our country might seem to have
+arrived at such a deadly stand-still.
+
+It was an absolute comfort, indeed, to find Leutze so quietly busy at
+this great national work, which is destined to glow for centuries on the
+walls of the Capitol, if that edifice shall stand, or must share its
+fate, if treason shall succeed in subverting it with the Union which it
+represents. It was delightful to see him so calmly elaborating his
+design, while other men doubted and feared, or hoped treacherously, and
+whispered to one another that the nation would exist only a little
+longer, or that, if a remnant still held together, its centre and seat of
+government would be far northward and westward of Washington. But the
+artist keeps right on, firm of heart and hand, drawing his outlines with
+an unwavering pencil, beautifying and idealizing our rude, material life,
+and thus manifesting that we have an indefeasible claim to a more
+enduring national existence. In honest truth, what with the
+hope-inspiring influence of the design, and what with Leutze's
+undisturbed evolvement of it, I was exceedingly encouraged, and allowed
+these cheerful auguries to weigh against a sinister omen that was pointed
+out to me in another part of the Capitol. The freestone walls of the
+central edifice are pervaded with great cracks, and threaten to come
+thundering down, under the immense weight of the iron dome,--an
+appropriate catastrophe enough if it should occur on the day when we drop
+the Southern stars out of our flag.
+
+Everybody seems to be at Washington, and yet there is a singular dearth
+of imperatively noticeable people there. I question whether there are
+half a dozen individuals, in all kinds of eminence, at whom a stranger,
+wearied with the contact of a hundred moderate celebrities, would turn
+round to snatch a second glance. Secretary Seward, to be sure,--a pale,
+large-nosed, elderly man, of moderate stature, with a decided originality
+of gait and aspect, and a cigar in his mouth,--etc., etc.
+[We are again compelled to interfere with our friend's license of
+personal description and criticism. Even Cabinet Ministers (to whom the
+next few pages of the article were devoted) had their private immunities,
+which ought to be conscientiously observed,--unless, indeed, the writer
+chanced to have some very piquant motives for violating them.]
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+Of course, there was one other personage, in the class of statesmen, whom
+I should have been truly mortified to leave Washington without seeing;
+since (temporarily, at least, and by force of circumstances) he was the
+man of men. But a private grief had built up a barrier about him,
+impeding the customary free intercourse of Americans with their chief
+magistrate; so that I might have come away without a glimpse of his very
+remarkable physiognomy, save for a semi-official opportunity of which I
+was glad to take advantage. The fact is, we were invited to annex
+ourselves, as supernumeraries, to a deputation that was about to wait
+upon the President, from a Massachusetts whip-factory, with a present of
+a splendid whip.
+
+Our immediate party consisted only of four or five (including Major Ben
+Perley Poore, with his note-book and pencil), but we were joined by
+several other persons, who seemed to have been lounging about the
+precincts of the White House, under the spacious porch, or within the
+hall, and who swarmed in with us to take the chances of a presentation.
+Nine o'clock had been appointed as the time for receiving the deputation,
+and we were punctual to the moment; but not so the President, who sent us
+word that he was eating his breakfast, and would come as soon as he
+could. His appetite, we were glad to think, must have been a pretty fair
+one; for we waited about half an hour in one of the antechambers, and
+then were ushered into a reception-room, in one corner of which sat the
+Secretaries of War and of the Treasury, expecting, like ourselves, the
+termination of the Presidential breakfast. During this interval there
+were several new additions to our group, one or two of whom were in a
+working-garb, so that we formed a very miscellaneous collection of
+people, mostly unknown to each other, and without any common sponsor, but
+all with an equal right to look our head-servant in the face.
+
+By and by there was a little stir on the staircase and in the
+passage-way, and in lounged a tall, loose-jointed figure, of an
+exaggerated Yankee port and demeanor, whom (as being about the homeliest
+man I ever saw, yet by no means repulsive or disagreeable) it was
+impossible not to recognize as Uncle Abe.
+
+Unquestionably, Western man though he be, and Kentuckian by birth,
+President Lincoln is the essential representative of all Yankees, and the
+veritable specimen, physically, of what the world seems determined to
+regard as our characteristic qualities. It is the strangest and yet the
+fittest thing in the jumble of human vicissitudes, that he, out of so
+many millions, unlooked for, unselected by any intelligible process that
+could be based upon his genuine qualities, unknown to those who chose
+him, and unsuspected of what endowments may adapt him for his tremendous
+responsibility, should have found the way open for him to fling his lank
+personality into the chair of state,--where, I presume, it was his first
+impulse to throw his legs on the council-table, and tell the Cabinet
+Ministers a story. There is no describing his lengthy awkwardness, nor
+the uncouthness of his movement; and yet it seemed as if I had been in
+the habit of seeing him daily, and had shaken hands with him a thousand
+times in some village street; so true was he to the aspect of the pattern
+American, though with a certain extravagance which, possibly, I
+exaggerated still further by the delighted eagerness with which I took it
+in. If put to guess his calling and livelihood, I should have taken him
+for a country schoolmaster as soon as anything else. He was dressed in a
+rusty black frock-coat and pantaloons, unbrushed, and worn so faithfully
+that the suit had adapted itself to the curves and angularities of his
+figure, and had grown to be an outer skin of the man. He had shabby
+slippers on his feet. His hair was black, still unmixed with gray,
+stiff, somewhat bushy, and had apparently been acquainted with neither
+brush nor comb that morning, after the disarrangement of the pillow; and
+as to a night-cap, Uncle Abe probably knows nothing of such effeminacies.
+His complexion is dark and sallow, betokening, I fear, an insalubrious
+atmosphere around the White House; he has thick black eyebrows and an
+impending brow; his nose is large, and the lines about his mouth are very
+strongly defined.
+
+The whole physiognomy is as coarse a one as you would meet anywhere in
+the length and breadth of the States; but, withal, it is redeemed,
+illuminated, softened, and brightened by a kindly though serious look out
+of his eyes, and an expression of homely sagacity, that seems weighted
+with rich results of village experience. A great deal of native sense;
+no bookish cultivation, no refinement; honest at heart, and thoroughly
+so, and yet, in some sort, sly,--at least, endowed with a sort of tact
+and wisdom that are akin to craft, and would impel him, I think, to take
+an antagonist in flank, rather than to make a bull-run at him right in
+front. But, on the whole, I like this sallow, queer, sagacious visage,
+with the homely human sympathies that warmed it; and, for my small share
+in the matter, would as lief have Uncle Abe for a ruler as any man whom
+it would have been practicable to put in his place.
+
+Immediately on his entrance the President accosted our member of
+Congress, who had us in charge, and, with a comical twist of his face,
+made some jocular remark about the length of his breakfast. He then
+greeted us all round, not waiting for an introduction, but shaking and
+squeezing everybody's hand with the utmost cordiality, whether the
+individual's name was announced to him or not. His manner towards us was
+wholly without pretence, but yet had a kind of natural dignity, quite
+sufficient to keep the forwardest of us from clapping him on the shoulder
+and asking him for a story. A mutual acquaintance being established, our
+leader took the whip out of its case, and began to read the address of
+presentation. The whip was an exceedingly long one, its handle wrought
+in ivory (by some artist in the Massachusetts State Prison, I believe),
+and ornamented with a medallion of the President, and other equally
+beautiful devices; and along its whole length there was a succession of
+golden bands and ferrules. The address was shorter than the whip, but
+equally well made, consisting chiefly of an explanatory description of
+these artistic designs, and closing with a hint that the gift was a
+suggestive and emblematic one, and that the President would recognize the
+use to which such an instrument should be put.
+
+This suggestion gave Uncle Abe rather a delicate task in his reply,
+because, slight as the matter seemed, it apparently called for some
+declaration, or intimation, or faint foreshadowing of policy in reference
+to the conduct of the war, and the final treatment of the Rebels. But
+the President's Yankee aptness and not-to-be-caughtness stood him in good
+stead, and he jerked or wiggled himself out of the dilemma with an
+uncouth dexterity that was entirely in character; although, without his
+gesticulation of eye and month,--and especially the flourish of the whip,
+with which he imagined himself touching up a pair of fat horses,--I doubt
+whether his words would be worth recording, even if I could remember
+them. The gist of the reply was, that he accepted the whip as an emblem
+of peace; not punishment; and, this great affair over, we retired out of
+the presence in high good-humor, only regretting that we could not have
+seen the President sit down and fold up his legs (which is said to be a
+most extraordinary spectacle), or have heard him tell one of those
+delectable stories for which he is so celebrated. A good many of them
+are afloat upon the common talk of Washington, and are certainly the
+aptest, pithiest, and funniest little things imaginable; though, to be
+sure, they smack of the frontier freedom, and would not always bear
+repetition in a drawing-room, or on the immaculate page of the Atlantic.
+
+
+[The above passage relating to President Lincoln was one of those omitted
+from the article as originally published, and the following note was
+appended to explain the omission, which had been indicated by a line of
+points:--
+
+We are compelled to omit two or three pages, in which the author
+describes the interview, and gives his idea of the personal appearance
+and deportment of the President. The sketch appears to have been written
+in a benign spirit, and perhaps conveys a not inaccurate impression of
+its august subject; but it lacks reverence, and it pains us to see a
+gentleman of ripe age, and who has spent years under the corrective
+influence of foreign institutions, falling into the characteristic and
+most ominous fault of Young America.]
+
+
+Good Heavens! what liberties have I been taking with one of the
+potentates of the earth, and the man on whose conduct more important
+consequences depend than on that of any other historical personage of the
+century! But with whom is an American citizen entitled to take a
+liberty, if not with his own chief magistrate? However, lest the above
+allusions to President Lincoln's little peculiarities (already well known
+to the country and to the world) should be misinterpreted, I deem it
+proper to say a word or two in regard to him, of unfeigned respect and
+measurable confidence. He is evidently a man of keen faculties, and,
+what is still more to the purpose, of powerful character. As to his
+integrity, the people have that intuition of it which is never deceived.
+Before he actually entered upon his great office, and for a considerable
+time afterwards, there is no reason to suppose that he adequately
+estimated the gigantic task about to be imposed on him, or, at least, had
+any distinct idea how it was to be managed; and I presume there may have
+been more than one veteran politician who proposed to himself to take the
+power out of President Lincoln's hands into his own, leaving our honest
+friend only the public responsibility for the good or ill success of the
+career. The extremely imperfect development of his statesmanly
+qualities, at that period, may have justified such designs. But the
+President is teachable by events, and has now spent a year in a very
+arduous course of education; he has a flexible mind, capable of much
+expansion, and convertible towards far loftier studies and activities
+than those of his early life; and if he came to Washington a backwoods
+humorist, he has already transformed himself into as good a statesman (to
+speak moderately) as his prime-minister.
+
+Among other excursions to camps and places of interest in the
+neighborhood of Washington, we went, one day, to Alexandria. It is a
+little port on the Potomac, with one or two shabby wharves and docks,
+resembling those of a fishing-village in New England, and the respectable
+old brick town rising gently behind. In peaceful times it no doubt bore
+an aspect of decorous quietude and dulness; but it was now thronged with
+the Northern soldiery, whose stir and bustle contrasted strikingly with
+the many closed warehouses, the absence of citizens from their customary
+haunts, and the lack of any symptom of healthy activity, while
+army-wagons trundled heavily over the pavements, and sentinels paced the
+sidewalks, and mounted dragoons dashed to and fro on military errands. I
+tried to imagine how very disagreeable the presence of a Southern army
+would be in a sober town of Massachusetts; and the thought considerably
+lessened my wonder at the cold and shy regards that are cast upon our
+troops, the gloom, the sullen demeanor, the declared or scarcely hidden
+sympathy with rebellion, which are so frequent here. It is a strange
+thing in human life, that the greatest errors both of men and women often
+spring from their sweetest and most generous qualities; and so,
+undoubtedly, thousands of warm-hearted, sympathetic, and impulsive
+persons have joined the Rebels, not from any real zeal for the cause, but
+because, between two conflicting loyalties, they chose that which
+necessarily lay nearest the heart. There never existed any other
+government against which treason was so easy, and could defend itself by
+such plausible arguments, as against that of the United States. The
+anomaly of two allegiances (of which that of the State comes nearest home
+to a man's feelings, and includes the altar and the hearth, while the
+General Government claims his devotion only to an airy mode of law, and
+has no symbol but a flag) is exceedingly mischievous in this point of
+view; for it has converted crowds of honest people into traitors, who
+seem to themselves not merely innocent but patriotic, and who die for a
+bad cause with as quiet a conscience as if it were the best. In the vast
+extent of our country,--too vast by far to be taken into one small human
+heart,--we inevitably limit to our own State, or, at farthest, to our own
+section, that sentiment of physical love for the soil which renders an
+Englishman, for example, so intensely sensitive to the dignity and
+well-being of his little island, that one hostile foot, treading anywhere
+upon it, would make a bruise on each individual breast. If a man loves
+his individual State, therefore, and is content to be ruined with her,
+let us shoot him if we can, but allow him an honorable burial in the soil
+he fights for.
+
+[We do not thoroughly comprehend the author's drift in the foregoing
+paragraph, but are inclined to think its tone reprehensible, and its
+tendency impolitic in the present stage of our national difficulties.]
+
+In Alexandria we visited the tavern in which Colonel Ellsworth was
+killed, and saw the spot where he fell, and saw the stairs below, whence
+Jackson fired the fatal shot, and where he himself was slain a moment
+afterwards; so that the assassin and his victim must have met on the
+threshold of the spirit-world, and perhaps came to a better understanding
+before they had taken many steps on the other side. Ellsworth was too
+generous to bear an immortal grudge for a deed like that, done in hot
+blood, and by no skulking enemy. The memorial-hunters have completely
+cut away the original wood-work around the spot, with their
+pocket-knives; and the staircase, balustrade, and floor, as well as the
+adjacent doors and door-frames, have recently been renewed; the walls,
+moreover, are covered with new paper-hangings, the former having been
+torn off in tatters; and thus it becomes something like a metaphysical
+question whether the place of the murder actually exists.
+
+Driving out of Alexandria, we stopped on the edge of the city to inspect
+an old slave-pen, which is one of the lions of the place, but a very poor
+one; and a little farther on, we came to a brick church, where Washington
+used sometimes to attend service,--a pre-Revolutionary edifice, with ivy
+growing over its walls, though not very luxuriantly. Reaching the open
+country, we saw forts and camps on all sides; some of the tents being
+placed immediately on the ground, while others were raised over a
+basement of logs, laid lengthwise, like those of a log-hut, or driven
+vertically into the soil in a circle,--thus forming a solid wall, the
+chinks closed up with Virginia mud, and above it the pyramidal shelter of
+the tent. Here were in progress all the occupations, and all the
+idleness, of the soldier in the tented field: some were cooking the
+company-rations in pots hung over fires in the open air; some played at
+ball, or developed their muscular power by gymnastic exercise; some read
+newspapers; some smoked cigars or pipes; and many were cleaning their
+arms or accoutrements,--the more carefully, perhaps, because their
+division was to be reviewed by the Commander-in-Chief that afternoon;
+others sat on the ground, while their comrades cut their hair,--it being
+a soldierly fashion (and for excellent reasons) to crop it within an inch
+of the skull; others, finally, lay asleep in breast-high tents, with
+their legs protruding into the open air.
+
+We paid a visit to Fort Ellsworth, and from its ramparts (which have been
+heaped up out of the muddy soil within the last few months, and will
+require still a year or two to make them verdant) we had a beautiful view
+of the Potomac, a truly majestic river, and the surrounding country. The
+fortifications, so numerous in all this region, and now so unsightly with
+their bare, precipitous sides, will remain as historic monuments,
+grass-grown and picturesque memorials of an epoch of terror and
+suffering: they will serve to make our country dearer and more
+interesting to us, and afford fit soil for poetry to root itself in: for
+this is a plant which thrives best in spots where blood has been spilt
+long ago, and grows in abundant clusters in old ditches, such as the moat
+around Fort Ellsworth will be a century hence. It may seem to be paying
+dear for what many will reckon but a worthless weed; but the more
+historical associations we can link with our localities, the richer will
+be the daily life that feeds upon the past, and the more valuable the
+things that have been long established: so that our children will be less
+prodigal than their fathers in sacrificing good institutions to
+passionate impulses and impracticable theories. This herb of grace, let
+us hope, will be found in the old footprints of the war.
+
+Even in an aesthetic point of view, however, the war has done a great
+deal of enduring mischief, by causing the devastation of great tracts of
+woodland scenery, in which this part of Virginia would appear to be very
+rich. Around all the encampments, and everywhere along the road, we saw
+the bare sites of what had evidently been tracts of hard-wood forest,
+indicated by the unsightly stumps of well-grown trees, not smoothly
+felled by regular axe-men, but hacked, haggled, and unevenly amputated,
+as by a sword or other miserable tool, in an unskilful hand. Fifty years
+will not repair this desolation. An army destroys everything before and
+around it, even to the very grass; for the sites of the encampments are
+converted into barren esplanades, like those of the squares in French
+cities, where not a blade of grass is allowed to grow. As to the other
+symptoms of devastation and obstruction, such as deserted houses,
+unfenced fields, and a general aspect of nakedness and ruin, I know not
+how much may be due to a normal lack of neatness in the rural life of
+Virginia, which puts a squalid face even upon a prosperous state of
+things; but undoubtedly the war must have spoilt what was good, and made
+the bad a great deal worse. The carcasses of horses were scattered along
+the wayside.
+
+One very pregnant token of a social system thoroughly disturbed was
+presented by a party of contrabands, escaping out of the mysterious
+depths of Secessia; and its strangeness consisted in the leisurely delay
+with which they trudged forward, as dreading no pursuer, and encountering
+nobody to turn them back. They were unlike the specimens of their race
+whom we are accustomed to see at the North, and, in my judgment, were far
+more agreeable. So rudely were they attired,--as if their garb had grown
+upon them spontaneously,--so picturesquely natural in manners, and
+wearing such a crust of primeval simplicity (which is quite polished away
+from the Northern black man), that they seemed a kind of creature by
+themselves, not altogether human, but perhaps quite as good, and akin to
+the fawns and rustic deities of olden times. I wonder whether I shall
+excite anybody's wrath by saying this. It is no great matter. At all
+events, I felt most kindly towards these poor fugitives, but knew not
+precisely what to wish in their behalf, nor in the least how to help
+them. For the sake of the manhood which is latent in them, I would not
+have turned them back; but I should have felt almost as reluctant, on
+their own account, to hasten them forward to the stranger's land; and I
+think my prevalent idea was, that, whoever may be benefited by the
+results of this war, it will not be the present generation of negroes,
+the childhood of whose race is now gone forever, and who must henceforth
+fight a hard battle with the world, on very unequal terms. On behalf of
+my own race, I am glad and can only hope that an inscrutable Providence
+means good to both parties.
+
+There is an historical circumstance, known to few, that connects the
+children of the Puritans with these Africans of Virginia in a very
+singular way. They are our brethren, as being lineal descendants from
+the Mayflower, the fated womb of which, in her first voyage, sent forth a
+brood of Pilgrims on Plymouth Rock, and, in a subsequent one, spawned
+slaves upon the Southern soil,--a monstrous birth, but with which we have
+an instinctive sense of kindred, and so are stirred by an irresistible
+impulse to attempt their rescue, even at the cost of blood and ruin. The
+character of our sacred ship, I fear, may suffer a little by this
+revelation; but we must let her white progeny offset her dark one,--and
+two such portents never sprang from an identical source before.
+
+While we drove onward, a young officer on horseback looked earnestly into
+the carriage, and recognized some faces that he had seen before; so he
+rode along by our side, and we pestered him with queries and
+observations, to which he responded more civilly than they deserved. He
+was on General McClellan's staff; and a gallant cavalier, high-booted,
+with a revolver in his belt, and mounted on a noble horse, which trotted
+hard and high without disturbing the rider in his accustomed seat. His
+face had a healthy hue of exposure and an expression of careless
+hardihood; and, as I looked at him, it seemed to me that the war had
+brought good fortune to the youth of this epoch, if to none beside; since
+they now make it their daily business to ride a horse and handle a sword,
+instead of lounging listlessly through the duties, occupations,
+pleasures--all tedious alike--to which the artificial state of society
+limits a peaceful generation. The atmosphere of the camp and the smoke
+of the battle-field are morally invigorating; the hardy virtues flourish
+in them, the nonsense dies like a wilted weed. The enervating effects of
+centuries of civilization vanish at once, and leave these young men to
+enjoy a life of hardship, and the exhilarating sense of danger,--to kill
+men blamelessly, or to be killed gloriously,--and to be happy in
+following out their native instincts of destruction, precisely in the
+spirit of Homer's heroes, only with some considerable change of mode.
+One touch of Nature makes not only the whole world, but all time, akin.
+Set men face to face, with weapons in their hands, and they are as ready
+to slaughter one another now, after playing at peace and good-will for so
+many years, as in the rudest ages, that never heard of peace-societies,
+and thought no wine so delicious as what they quaffed from an enemy's
+skull. Indeed, if the report of a Congressional committee may be
+trusted, that old-fashioned kind of goblet has again come into use at the
+expense of our Northern head-pieces,--a costly drinking-cup to him that
+furnishes it! Heaven forgive me for seeming to jest upon such a
+subject!--only, it is so odd, when we measure our advances from
+barbarism, and find ourselves just here! [We hardly expected this
+outbreak in favor of war from the Peaceable Man; but the justness of our
+cause makes us all soldiers at heart, however quiet in our outward life.
+We have heard of twenty Quakers in a single company of a Pennsylvania
+regiment.]
+
+We now approached General McClellan's head-quarters, which, at that time,
+were established at Fairfield Seminary. The edifice was situated on a
+gentle elevation, amid very agreeable scenery, and, at a distance, looked
+like a gentleman's seat. Preparations were going forward for reviewing a
+division of ten or twelve thousand men, the various regiments composing
+which had begun to array themselves on an extensive plain, where,
+methought, there was a more convenient place for a battle than is usually
+found in this broken and difficult country. Two thousand cavalry made a
+portion of the troops to be reviewed. By and by we saw a pretty numerous
+troop of mounted officers, who were congregated on a distant part of the
+plain, and whom we finally ascertained to be the Commander-in-Chief's
+staff, with McClellan himself at their head. Our party managed to
+establish itself in a position conveniently close to the General, to
+whom, moreover, we had the honor of an introduction; and he bowed, on his
+horseback, with a good deal of dignity and martial courtesy, but no airs
+nor fuss nor pretension beyond what his character and rank inevitably
+gave him.
+
+Now, at that juncture, and in fact, up to the present moment, there was,
+and is, a most fierce and bitter outcry, and detraction loud and low,
+against General McClellan, accusing him of sloth, imbecility, cowardice,
+treasonable purposes, and, in short, utterly denying his ability as a
+soldier, and questioning his integrity as a man. Nor was this to be
+wondered at; for when before, in all history, do we find a general in
+command of half a million of men, and in presence of an enemy inferior in
+numbers and no better disciplined than his own troops, leaving it still
+debatable, after the better part of a year, whether he is a soldier or
+no? The question would seem to answer itself in the very asking.
+Nevertheless, being most profoundly ignorant of the art of war, like the
+majority of the General's critics, and, on the other hand, having some
+considerable impressibility by men's characters, I was glad of the
+opportunity to look him in the face, and to feel whatever influence might
+reach me from his sphere. So I stared at him, as the phrase goes, with
+all the eyes I had; and the reader shall have the benefit of what I saw,
+--to which he is the more welcome, because, in writing this article, I
+feel disposed to be singularly frank, and can scarcely restrain myself
+from telling truths the utterance of which I should get slender thanks
+for.
+
+The General was dressed in a simple, dark-blue uniform, without epaulets,
+booted to the knee, and with a cloth cap upon his head; and, at first
+sight, you might have taken him for a corporal of dragoons, of
+particularly neat and soldier-like aspect, and in the prime of his age
+and strength. He is only of middling stature, but his build is very
+compact and sturdy, with broad shoulders and a look of great physical
+vigor, which, in fact, he is said to possess,--he and Beauregard having
+been rivals in that particular, and both distinguished above other men.
+His complexion is dark and sanguine, with dark hair. He has a strong,
+bold, soldierly face, full of decision; a Roman nose, by no means a thin
+prominence, but very thick and firm; and if he follows it (which I should
+think likely), it may be pretty confidently trusted to guide him aright.
+His profile would make a more effective likeness than the full face,
+which, however, is much better in the real man than in any photograph
+that I have seen. His forehead is not remarkably large, but comes
+forward at the eyebrows; it is not the brow nor countenance of a
+prominently intellectual man (not a natural student, I mean, or abstract
+thinker), but of one whose office it is to handle things practically and
+to bring about tangible results. His face looked capable of being very
+stern, but wore, in its repose, when I saw it, an aspect pleasant and
+dignified; it is not, in its character, an American face, nor an English
+one. The man on whom he fixes his eye is conscious of him. In his
+natural disposition, he seems calm and self-possessed, sustaining his
+great responsibilities cheerfully, without shrinking, or weariness, or
+spasmodic effort, or damage to his health, but all with quiet, deep-drawn
+breaths; just as his broad shoulders would bear up a heavy burden without
+aching beneath it.
+
+After we had had sufficient time to peruse the man (so far as it could be
+done with one pair of very attentive eyes), the General rode off,
+followed by his cavalcade, and was lost to sight among the troops. They
+received him with loud shouts, by the eager uproar of which--now near,
+now in the centre, now on the outskirts of the division, and now sweeping
+back towards us in a great volume of sound--we could trace his progress
+through the ranks. If he is a coward, or a traitor, or a humbug, or
+anything less than a brave, true, and able man, that mass of intelligent
+soldiers, whose lives and honor he had in charge, were utterly deceived,
+and so was this present writer; for they believed in him, and so did I;
+and had I stood in the ranks, should have shouted with the lustiest of
+them. Of course I may be mistaken; my opinion on such a point is worth
+nothing, although my impression may be worth a little more; neither do I
+consider the General's antecedents as bearing very decided testimony to
+his practical soldiership. A thorough knowledge of the science of war
+seems to be conceded to him; he is allowed to be a good military critic;
+but all this is possible without his possessing any positive qualities of
+a great general, just as a literary critic may show the profoundest
+acquaintance with the principles of epic poetry without being able to
+produce a single stanza of an epic poem. Nevertheless, I shall not give
+up my faith in General McClellan's soldiership until he is defeated, nor
+in his courage and integrity even then.
+
+Another of our excursions was to Harper's Ferry,--the Directors of the
+Baltimore and Ohio Railroad having kindly invited us to accompany them on
+the first trip over the newly laid track, after its breaking up by the
+Rebels. It began to rain, in the early morning, pretty soon after we
+left Washington, and continued to pour a cataract throughout the day; so
+that the aspect of the country was dreary, where it would otherwise have
+been delightful, as we entered among the hill-scenery that is formed by
+the subsiding swells of the Alleghanies. The latter part of our journey
+lay along the shore of the Potomac, in its upper course, where the margin
+of that noble river is bordered by gray, over-hanging crags, beneath
+which--and sometimes right through them--the railroad takes its way. In
+one place the Rebels had attempted to arrest a train by precipitating an
+immense mass of rock down upon the track, by the side of which it still
+lay, deeply imbedded in the ground, and looking as if it might have lain
+there since the Deluge. The scenery grew even more picturesque as we
+proceeded, the bluffs becoming very bold in their descent upon the river,
+which, at Harper's Ferry, presents as striking a vista among the hills as
+a painter could desire to see. But a beautiful landscape is a luxury,
+and luxuries are thrown away amid discomfort; and when we alighted in the
+tenacious mud and almost fathomless puddle, on the hither side of the
+Ferry (the ultimate point to which the cars proceeded, since the railroad
+bridge had been destroyed by the Rebels), I cannot remember that any very
+rapturous emotions were awakened by the scenery.
+
+We paddled and floundered over the ruins of the track, and, scrambling
+down an embankment, crossed the Potomac by a pontoon-bridge, a thousand
+feet in length, over the narrow line of which--level with the river, and
+rising and subsiding with it--General Banks had recently led his whole
+army, with its ponderous artillery and heavy laden wagons. Yet our own
+tread made it vibrate. The broken bridge of the railroad was a little
+below us, and at the base of one of its massive piers, in the rocky bed
+of the river, lay a locomotive, which the Rebels had precipitated there.
+
+As we passed over, we looked towards the Virginia shore, and beheld the
+little town of Harper's Ferry, gathered about the base of a round hill
+and climbing up its steep acclivity; so that it somewhat resembled the
+Etruscan cities which I have seen among the Apennines, rushing, as it
+were, down an apparently breakneck height. About midway of the ascent
+stood a shabby brick church, towards which a difficult path went
+scrambling up the precipice, indicating, one would say; a very fervent
+aspiration on the part of the worshippers, unless there was some easier
+mode of access in another direction. Immediately on the shore of the
+Potomac, and extending back towards the town, lay the dismal ruins of the
+United States arsenal and armory, consisting of piles of broken bricks
+and a waste of shapeless demolition, amid which we saw gun-barrels in
+heaps of hundreds together. They were the relics of the conflagration,
+bent with the heat of the fire, and rusted with the wintry rain to which
+they had since been exposed. The brightest sunshine could not have made
+the scene cheerful, nor have taken away the gloom from the dilapidated
+town; for, besides the natural shabbiness, and decayed, unthrifty look of
+a Virginian village, it has an inexpressible forlornness resulting from
+the devastations of war and its occupation by both armies alternately.
+Yet there would be a less striking contrast between Southern and New
+England villages, if the former were as much in the habit of using white
+paint as we are. It is prodigiously efficacious in putting a bright face
+upon a bad matter.
+
+There was one small shop which appeared to have nothing for sale. A
+single man and one or two boys were all the inhabitants in view, except
+the Yankee sentinels and soldiers, belonging to Massachusetts regiments,
+who were scattered about pretty numerously. A guard-house stood on the
+slope of the hill; and in the level street at its base were the offices
+of the Provost-Marshal and other military authorities, to whom we
+forthwith reported ourselves. The Provost-Marshal kindly sent a corporal
+to guide us to the little building which John Brown seized upon as his
+fortress, and which, after it was stormed by the United States marines,
+became his temporary prison. It is an old engine-house, rusty and
+shabby, like every other work of man's hands in this God-forsaken town,
+and stands fronting upon the river, only a short distance from the bank,
+nearly at the point where the pontoon-bridge touches the Virginia shore.
+In its front wall, on each side of the door, are two or three ragged
+loop-holes, which John Brown perforated for his defence, knocking out
+merely a brick or two, so as to give himself and his garrison a sight
+over their rifles. Through these orifices the sturdy old man dealt a
+good deal of deadly mischief among his assailants, until they broke down
+the door by thrusting against it with a ladder, and tumbled headlong in
+upon him. I shall not pretend to be an admirer of old John Brown, any
+farther than sympathy with Whittier's excellent ballad about him may go;
+nor did I expect ever to shrink so unutterably from any apophthegm of a
+sage, whose happy lips have uttered a hundred golden sentences, as from
+that saying (perhaps falsely attributed to so honored a source), that the
+death of this blood-stained fanatic has "made the Gallows as venerable as
+the Cross!" Nobody was ever more justly hanged. He won his martyrdom
+fairly, and took it firmly. He himself, I am persuaded (such was his
+natural integrity), would have acknowledged that Virginia had a right to
+take the life which he had staked and lost; although it would have been
+better for her, in the hour that is fast coming, if she could generously
+have forgotten the criminality of his attempt in its enormous folly. On
+the other hand, any common-sensible man, looking at the matter
+unsentimentally, must have felt a certain intellectual satisfaction in
+seeing him hanged, if it were only in requittal of his preposterous
+miscalculation of possibilities. [Can it be a son of old Massachusetts
+who utters this abominable sentiment? For shame.]
+
+But, coolly as I seem to say these things, my Yankee heart stirred
+triumphantly when I saw the use to which John Brown's fortress and
+prison-house has now been put. What right have I to complain of any
+other man's foolish impulses, when I cannot possibly control my own? The
+engine-house is now a place of confinement for Rebel prisoners.
+
+A Massachusetts soldier stood on guard, but readily permitted our whole
+party to enter. It was a wretched place. A room of perhaps twenty-five
+feet square occupied the whole interior of the building, having an iron
+stove in its centre, whence a rusty funnel ascended towards a hole in the
+roof, which served the purposes of ventilation, as well as for the exit
+of smoke. We found ourselves right in the midst of the Rebels, some of
+whom lay on heaps of straw, asleep, or, at all events, giving no sign of
+consciousness; others sat in the corners of the room, huddled close
+together, and staring with a lazy kind of interest at the visitors; two
+were astride of some planks, playing with the dirtiest pack of cards that
+I ever happened to see. There was only one figure in the least military
+among all these twenty prisoners of war,--a man with a dark, intelligent,
+moustached face, wearing a shabby cotton uniform, which he had contrived
+to arrange with a degree of soldierly smartness, though it had evidently
+borne the brunt of a very filthy campaign. He stood erect, and talked
+freely with those who addressed him, telling them his place of residence,
+the number of his regiment, the circumstances of his capture, and such
+other particulars as their Northern inquisitiveness prompted them to ask.
+I liked the manliness of his deportment; he was neither ashamed, nor
+afraid, nor in the slightest degree sullen, peppery, or contumacious, but
+bore himself as if whatever animosity he had felt towards his enemies was
+left upon the battle-field, and would not be resumed till he had again a
+weapon in his hand.
+
+Neither could I detect a trace of hostile feeling in the countenance,
+words, or manner of any prisoner there. Almost to a man, they were
+simple, bumpkin-like fellows, dressed in homespun clothes, with faces
+singularly vacant of meaning, but sufficiently good-humored: a breed of
+men, in short, such as I did not suppose to exist in this country,
+although I have seen their like in some other parts of the world. They
+were peasants, and of a very low order; a class of people with whom our
+Northern rural population has not a single trait in common. They were
+exceedingly respectful,--more so than a rustic New-Englander ever dreams
+of being towards anybody, except perhaps his minister; and had they worn
+any hats they would probably have been self-constrained to take them off,
+under the unusual circumstance of being permitted to hold conversation
+with well-dressed persons. It is my belief that not a single bumpkin of
+them all (the moustached soldier always excepted) had the remotest
+comprehension of what they had been fighting for, or how they had
+deserved to be shut up in that dreary hole; nor, possibly, did they care
+to inquire into this latter mystery, but took it as a godsend to be
+suffered to lie here in a heap of unwashed human bodies, well warmed and
+well foddered to-day, and without the necessity of bothering themselves
+about the possible hunger and cold of to-morrow. Their dark prison-life
+may have seemed to them the sunshine of all their lifetime.
+
+There was one poor wretch, a wild-beast of a man, at whom I gazed with
+greater interest than at his fellows; although I know not that each one
+of them, in their semi-barbarous moral state, might not have been capable
+of the same savage impulse that had made this particular individual a
+horror to all beholders. At the close of some battle or skirmish, a
+wounded Union soldier had crept on hands and knees to his feet, and
+besought his assistance,--not dreaming that any creature in human shape,
+in the Christian land where they had so recently been brethren, could
+refuse it. But this man (this fiend, if you prefer to call him so,
+though I would not advise it) flung a bitter curse at the poor
+Northerner, and absolutely trampled the soul out of his body, as he lay
+writhing beneath his feet. The fellow's face was horribly ugly; but I am
+not quite sure that I should have noticed it if I had not known his
+story. He spoke not a word, and met nobody's eye, but kept staring
+upward into the smoky vacancy towards the ceiling, where, it might be, he
+beheld a continual portraiture of his victim's horror-stricken agonies.
+I rather fancy, however, that his moral sense was yet too torpid to
+trouble him with such remorseful visions, and that, for his own part, he
+might have had very agreeable reminiscences of the soldier's death, if
+other eyes had not been bent reproachfully upon him and warned him that
+something was amiss. It was this reproach in other men's eyes that made
+him look aside. He was a wild-beast, as I began with saying,--an
+unsophisticated wild-beast,--while the rest of us are partially tamed,
+though still the scent of blood excites some of the savage instincts of
+our nature. What this wretch needed, in order to make him capable of the
+degree of mercy and benevolence that exists in us, was simply such a
+measure of moral and intellectual development as we have received; and,
+in my mind, the present war is so well justified by no other
+consideration as by the probability that it will free this class of
+Southern whites from a thraldom in which they scarcely begin to be
+responsible beings. So far as the education of the heart is concerned,
+the negroes have apparently the advantage of them; and as to other
+schooling, it is practically unattainable by black or white.
+
+Looking round at these poor prisoners, therefore, it struck me as an
+immense absurdity that they should fancy us their enemies; since, whether
+we intend it so or no, they have a far greater stake on our success than
+we can possibly have. For ourselves, the balance of advantages between
+defeat and triumph may admit of question. For them, all truly valuable
+things are dependent on our complete success; for thence would come the
+regeneration of a people,--the removal of a foul scurf that has overgrown
+their life, and keeps then in a state of disease and decrepitude, one of
+the chief symptoms of which is, that, the more they suffer and are
+debased, the more they imagine themselves strong and beautiful. No human
+effort, on a grand scale, has ever yet resulted according to the purpose,
+of its projectors. The advantages are always incidental. Man's
+accidents are God's purposes. We miss the good we sought, and do the
+good we little cared for. [The author seems to imagine that he has
+compressed a great deal of meaning into these little, hard, dry pellets
+of aphoristic wisdom. We disagree with him. The counsels of wise and
+good men are often coincident with the purposes of Providence; and the
+present war promises to illustrate our remark.]
+
+Our Government evidently knows when and where to lay its finger upon its
+most available citizens; for, quite unexpectedly, we were joined by some
+other gentlemen, scarcely less competent than ourselves, in a commission
+to proceed to Fortress Monroe and examine into things in general. Of
+course, official propriety compels us to be extremely guarded in our
+description of the interesting objects which this expedition opened to
+our view. There can be no harm, however, in stating that we were
+received by the commander of the fortress with a kind of acid
+good-nature, or mild cynicism, that indicated him to be a humorist,
+characterized by certain rather pungent peculiarities, yet of no
+unamiable cast. He is a small, thin, old gentleman, set off by a large
+pair of brilliant epaulets,--the only pair, so far as my observation
+went, that adorn the shoulders of any officer in the Union army. Either
+for our inspection, or because the matter had already been arranged, he
+drew out a regiment of Zouaves that formed the principal part of his
+garrison, and appeared at their head, sitting on horseback with rigid
+perpendicularity, and affording us a vivid idea of the disciplinarian of
+Baron Steuben's school.
+
+There can be no question of the General's military qualities; he must
+have been especially useful in converting raw recruits into trained and
+efficient soldiers. But valor and martial skill are of so evanescent a
+character (hardly less fleeting than a woman's beauty), that Government
+has perhaps taken the safer course in assigning to this gallant officer,
+though distinguished in former wars, no more active duty than the
+guardianship of an apparently impregnable fortress. The ideas of
+military men solidify and fossilize so fast, while military science makes
+such rapid advances, that even here there might be a difficulty. An
+active, diversified, and therefore a youthful, ingenuity is required by
+the quick exigencies of this singular war. Fortress Monroe, for example,
+in spite of the massive solidity of its ramparts, its broad and deep
+moat, and all the contrivances of defence that were known at the not very
+remote epoch of its construction, is now pronounced absolutely incapable
+of resisting the novel modes of assault which may be brought to bear upon
+it. It can only be the flexible talent of a young man that will evolve a
+new efficiency out of its obsolete strength.
+
+It is a pity that old men grow unfit for war, not only by their
+incapacity for new ideas, but by the peaceful and unadventurous
+tendencies that gradually possess themselves of the once turbulent
+disposition, which used to snuff the battle-smoke as its congenial
+atmosphere. It is a pity; because it would be such an economy of human
+existence, if time-stricken people (whose value I have the better right
+to estimate, as reckoning myself one of them) could snatch from their
+juniors the exclusive privilege of carrying on the war. In case of death
+upon the battle-field, how unequal would be the comparative sacrifice!
+On one part, a few unenjoyable years, the little remnant of a life grown
+torpid; on the other, the many fervent summers of manhood in its spring
+and prime, with all that they include of possible benefit to mankind.
+Then, too, a bullet offers such a brief and easy way, such a pretty
+little orifice, through which the weary spirit might seize the
+opportunity to be exhaled! If I had the ordering of these matters, fifty
+should be the tenderest age at which a recruit might be accepted for
+training; at fifty-five or sixty, I would consider him eligible for most
+kinds of military duty and exposure, excluding that of a forlorn hope,
+which no soldier should be permitted to volunteer upon, short of the ripe
+age of seventy. As a general rule, these venerable combatants should
+have the preference for all dangerous and honorable service in the order
+of their seniority, with a distinction in favor of those whose
+infirmities might render their lives less worth the keeping. Methinks
+there would be no more Bull Runs; a warrior with gout in his toe, or
+rheumatism in his joints, or with one foot in the grave, would make a
+sorry fugitive!
+
+On this admirable system, the productive part of the population would be
+undisturbed even by the bloodiest war; and, best of all, those thousands
+upon thousands of our Northern girls, whose proper mates will perish in
+camp-hospitals or on Southern battle-fields, would avoid their doom of
+forlorn old-maidenhood. But, no doubt, the plan will be pooh-poohed down
+by the War Department; though it could scarcely be more disastrous than
+the one on which we began the war, when a young army was struck with
+paralysis through the age of its commander.
+
+The waters around Fortress Monroe were thronged with a gallant array of
+ships of war and transports, wearing the Union flag,--"Old Glory," as I
+hear it called in these days. A little withdrawn from our national fleet
+lay two French frigates, and, in another direction, an English sloop,
+under that banner which always makes itself visible, like a red portent
+in the air, wherever there is strife. In pursuance of our official duty
+(which had no ascertainable limits), we went on board the flag-ship, and
+were shown over every part of her, and down into her depths, inspecting
+her gallant crew, her powerful armament, her mighty engines, and her
+furnaces, where the fires are always kept burning, as well at midnight as
+at noon, so that it would require only five minutes to put the vessel
+under full steam. This vigilance has been felt necessary ever since the
+Merrimack made that terrible dash from Norfolk. Splendid as she is,
+however, and provided with all but the very latest improvements in naval
+armament, the Minnesota belongs to a class of vessels that will be built
+no more, nor ever fight another battle,--being as much a thing of the
+past as any of the ships of Queen Elizabeth's time, which grappled with
+the galleons of the Spanish Armada.
+
+On her quarter-deck, an elderly flag-officer was pacing to and fro, with
+a self-conscious dignity to which a touch of the gout or rheumatism
+perhaps contributed a little additional stiffness. He seemed to be a
+gallant gentleman, but of the old, slow, and pompous school of naval
+worthies, who have grown up amid rules, forms, and etiquette which were
+adopted full-blown from the British navy into ours, and are somewhat too
+cumbrous for the quick spirit of to-day. This order of nautical heroes
+will probably go down, along with the ships in which they fought
+valorously and strutted most intolerably. How can an admiral condescend
+to go to sea in an iron pot? What space and elbow-room can be found for
+quarter-deck dignity in the cramped lookout of the Monitor, or even in
+the twenty-feet diameter of her cheese-box? All the pomp and splendor of
+naval warfare are gone by. Henceforth there must come up a race of
+enginemen and smoke-blackened cannoneers, who will hammer away at their
+enemies under the direction of a single pair of eyes; and even heroism--
+so deadly a gripe is Science laying on our noble possibilities--will
+become a quality of very minor importance, when its possessor cannot
+break through the iron crust of his own armament and give the world a
+glimpse of it.
+
+At no great distance from the Minnesota lay the strangest-looking craft I
+ever saw. It was a platform of iron, so nearly on a level with the water
+that the swash of the waves broke over it, under the impulse of a very
+moderate breeze; and on this platform was raised a circular structure,
+likewise of iron, and rather broad and capacious, but of no great height.
+It could not be called a vessel at all; it was a machine,--and I have
+seen one of somewhat similar appearance employed in cleaning out the
+docks; or, for lack of a better similitude, it looked like a gigantic
+rat-trap. It was ugly, questionable, suspicious, evidently mischievous,
+--nay, I will allow myself to call it devilish; for this was the new
+war-fiend, destined, along with others of the same breed, to annihilate
+whole navies and batter down old supremacies. The wooden walls of Old
+England cease to exist, and a whole history of naval renown reaches its
+period, now that the Monitor comes smoking into view; while the billows
+dash over what seems her deck, and storms bury even her turret in green
+water, as she burrows and snorts along, oftener under the surface than
+above. The singularity of the object has betrayed me into a more
+ambitious vein of description than I often indulge; and, after all, I
+might as well have contented myself with simply saying that she looked
+very queer.
+
+Going on board, we were surprised at the extent and convenience of her
+interior accommodations. There is a spacious ward-room, nine or ten feet
+in height, besides a private cabin for the commander, and sleeping
+accommodations on an ample scale; the whole well lighted and ventilated,
+though beneath the surface of the water. Forward, or aft (for it is
+impossible to tell stem from stern), the crew are relatively quite as
+well provided for as the officers. It was like finding a palace, with
+all its conveniences, under the sea. The inaccessibility, the apparent
+impregnability, of this submerged iron fortress are most satisfactory;
+the officers and crew get down through a little hole in the deck,
+hermetically seal themselves, and go below; and until they see fit to
+reappear, there would seem to be no power given to man whereby they can
+be brought to light. A storm of cannon-shot damages them no more than a
+handful of dried peas. We saw the shot-marks made by the great artillery
+of the Merrimack on the outer casing of the iron tower; they were about
+the breadth and depth of shallow saucers, almost imperceptible dents,
+with no corresponding bulge on the interior surface. In fact, the thing
+looked altogether too safe; though it may not prove quite an agreeable
+predicament to be thus boxed up in impenetrable iron, with the
+possibility, one would imagine, of being sent to the bottom of the sea,
+and, even there, not drowned, but stifled. Nothing, however, can exceed
+the confidence of the officers in this new craft. It was pleasant to see
+their benign exultation in her powers of mischief, and the delight with
+which they exhibited the circumvolutory movement of the tower, the quick
+thrusting forth of the immense guns to deliver their ponderous missiles,
+and then the immediate recoil, and the security behind the closed
+port-holes. Yet even this will not long be the last and most terrible
+improvement in the science of war. Already we hear of vessels the
+armament of which is to act entirely beneath the surface of the water; so
+that, with no other external symptoms than a great bubbling and foaming,
+and gush of smoke, and belch of smothered thunder out of the yeasty
+waves, there shall be a deadly fight going on below,--and, by and by, a
+sucking whirlpool, as one of the ships goes down.
+
+The Monitor was certainly an object of great interest; but on our way to
+Newport News, whither we next went, we saw a spectacle that affected us
+with far profounder emotion. It was the sight of the few sticks that are
+left of the frigate Congress, stranded near the shore,--and still more,
+the masts of the Cumberland rising midway out of the water, with a
+tattered rag of a pennant fluttering from one of them. The invisible
+hull of the latter ship seems to be careened over, so that the three
+masts stand slantwise; the rigging looks quite unimpaired, except that a
+few ropes dangle loosely from the yards. The flag (which never was
+struck, thank Heaven!) is entirely hidden under the waters of the bay,
+but is still doubtless waving in its old place, although it floats to and
+fro with the swell and reflex of the tide, instead of rustling on the
+breeze. A remnant of the dead crew still man the sunken ship, and
+sometimes a drowned body floats up to the surface.
+
+That was a noble fight. When was ever a better word spoken than that of
+Commodore Smith, the father of the commander of the Congress, when he
+heard that his son's ship was surrendered? "Then Joe's dead!" said he;
+and so it proved. Nor can any warrior be more certain of enduring renown
+than the gallant Morris, who fought so well the final battle of the old
+system of naval warfare, and won glory for his country and himself out of
+inevitable disaster and defeat. That last gun from the Cumberland, when
+her deck was half submerged, sounded the requiem of many sinking ships.
+Then went down all the navies of Europe and our own, Old Ironsides and
+all, and Trafalgar and a thousand other fights became only a memory,
+never to be acted over again; and thus our brave countrymen come last in
+the long procession of heroic sailors that includes Blake and Nelson, and
+so many mariners of England, and other mariners as brave as they, whose
+renown is our native inheritance. There will be other battles, but no
+more such tests of seamanship and manhood as the battles of the past;
+and, moreover, the Millennium is certainly approaching, because human
+strife is to be transferred from the heart and personality of man into
+cunning contrivances of machinery, which by and by will fight out our
+wars with only the clank and smash of iron, strewing the field with
+broken engines, but damaging nobody's little finger except by accident.
+Such is obviously the tendency of modern improvement. But, in the mean
+while, so long as manhood retains any part of its pristine value, no
+country can afford to let gallantry like that of Morris and his crew, any
+more than that of the brave Worden, pass unhonored and unrewarded. If
+the Government do nothing, let the people take the matter into their own
+hands, and cities give him swords, gold boxes, festivals of triumph, and,
+if he needs it, heaps of gold. Let poets brood upon the theme, and make
+themselves sensible how much of the past and future is contained within
+its compass, till its spirit shall flash forth in the lightning of a
+song!
+
+From these various excursions, and a good many others (including one to
+Manassas), we gained a pretty lively idea of what was going on; but,
+after all, if compelled to pass a rainy day in the hall and parlors of
+Willard's Hotel, it proved about as profitably spent as if we had
+floundered through miles of Virginia mud, in quest of interesting matter.
+This hotel, in fact, may be much more justly called the centre of
+Washington and the Union than either the Capitol, the White House, or the
+State Department. Everybody may be seen there. It is the meeting-place
+of the true representatives of the country,--not such as are chosen
+blindly and amiss by electors who take a folded ballot from the hand of a
+local politician, and thrust it into the ballot-box unread, but men who
+gravitate or are attracted hither by real business, or a native impulse
+to breathe the intensest atmosphere of the nation's life, or a genuine
+anxiety to see how this life-and-death struggle is going to deal with us.
+Nor these only, but all manner of loafers. Never, in any other spot, was
+there such a miscellany of people. You exchange nods with governors of
+sovereign States; you elbow illustrious men, and tread on the toes of
+generals; you hear statesmen and orators speaking in their familiar
+tones. You are mixed up with office-seekers, wire-pullers, inventors,
+artists, poets, prosers (including editors, army-correspondents, attaches
+of foreign journals, and long-winded talkers), clerks, diplomatists,
+mail-contractors, railway-directors, until your own identity is lost
+among them. Occasionally you talk with a man whom you have never before
+heard of, and are struck with the brightness of a thought, and fancy that
+there is more wisdom hidden among the obscure than is anywhere revealed
+among the famous. You adopt the universal habit of the place, and call
+for mint-julep, a whiskey-skin, a gin-cocktail, a brandy smash, or a
+glass of pure Old Rye; for the conviviality of Washington sets in at an
+early hour, and, so far as I had opportunity of observing, never
+terminates at any hour, and all these drinks are continually in request
+by almost all these people. A constant atmosphere of cigar-smoke, too,
+envelops the motley crowd, and forms a sympathetic medium, in which men
+meet more closely and talk more frankly than in any other kind of air.
+If legislators would smoke in session, they might speak truer words, and
+fewer of them, and bring about more valuable results.
+
+It is curious to observe what antiquated figures and costumes sometimes
+make their appearance at Willard's. You meet elderly men with frilled
+shirt-fronts, for example, the fashion of which adornment passed away
+from among the people of this world half a century ago. It is as if one
+of Stuart's portraits were walking abroad. I see no way of accounting
+for this, except that the trouble of the times, the impiety of traitors,
+and the peril of our sacred Union and Constitution have disturbed, in
+their honored graves, some of the venerable fathers of the country,
+and summoned them forth to protest against the meditated and
+half-accomplished sacrilege. If it be so, their wonted fires are not
+altogether extinguished in their ashes,--in their throats, I might rather
+say,--for I beheld one of these excellent old men quaffing such a horn of
+Bourbon whiskey as a toper of the present century would be loath to
+venture upon. But, really, one would be glad to know where these strange
+figures come from. It shows, at any rate, how many remote, decaying
+villages and country-neighborhoods of the North, and forest-nooks of the
+West, and old mansion-houses in cities, are shaken by the tremor of our
+native soil, so that men long hidden in retirement put on the garments of
+their youth and hurry out to inquire what is the matter. The old men
+whom we see here have generally more marked faces than the young ones,
+and naturally enough; since it must be an extraordinary vigor and
+renewability of life that can overcome the rusty sloth of age, and keep
+the senior flexible enough to take an interest in new things; whereas
+hundreds of commonplace young men come hither to stare with eyes of
+vacant wonder, and with vague hopes of finding out what they are fit for.
+And this war (we may say so much in its favor) has been the means of
+discovering that important secret to not a few.
+
+We saw at Willard's many who had thus found out for themselves, that,
+when Nature gives a young man no other utilizable faculty, she must be
+understood as intending him for a soldier. The bulk of the army had
+moved out of Washington before we reached the city; yet it seemed to me
+that at least two thirds of the guests and idlers at the hotel were one
+or another token of the military profession. Many of them, no doubt,
+were self-commissioned officers, and had put on the buttons and the
+shoulder-straps, and booted themselves to the knees, merely because
+captain, in these days, is so good a travelling-name. The majority,
+however, had been duly appointed by the President, but might be none the
+better warriors for that. It was pleasant, occasionally, to distinguish
+a grizzly veteran among this crowd of carpet-knights,--the trained
+soldier of a lifetime, long ago from West Point, who had spent his prime
+upon the frontier, and very likely could show an Indian bullet-mark on
+his breast,--if such decorations, won in an obscure warfare, were worth
+the showing now.
+
+The question often occurred to me,--and, to say the truth, it added an
+indefinable piquancy to the scene,--what proportion of all these people,
+whether soldiers or civilians, were true at heart to the Union, and what
+part were tainted, more or less, with treasonable sympathies and wishes,
+even if such had never blossomed into purpose. Traitors there were among
+them,--no doubt of that,--civil servants of the public, very reputable
+persons, who yet deserved to dangle from a cord; or men who buttoned
+military coats over their breasts, hiding perilous secrets there, which
+might bring the gallant officer to stand pale-faced before a file of
+musketeers, with his open grave behind him. But, without insisting upon
+such picturesque criminality and punishment as this, an observer, who
+kept both his eyes and heart open, would find it by no means difficult to
+discern that many residents and visitors of Washington so far sided with
+the South as to desire nothing more nor better than to see everything
+reestablished a little worse than its former basis. If the cabinet of
+Richmond were transferred to the Federal city, and the North awfully
+snubbed, at least, and driven back within its old political limits, they
+would deem it a happy day. It is no wonder, and, if we look at the
+matter generously, no unpardonable crime. Very excellent people
+hereabouts remember the many dynasties in which the Southern character
+has been predominant, and contrast the genial courtesy, the warm and
+graceful freedom of that region, with what they call (though I utterly
+disagree with them) the frigidity of our Northern manners, and the
+Western plainness of the President. They have a conscientious, though
+mistaken belief, that the South was driven out of the Union by
+intolerable wrong on our part, and that we are responsible for having
+compelled true patriots to love only half their country instead of the
+whole, and brave soldiers to draw their swords against the Constitution
+which they would once have died for,--to draw them, too, with a
+bitterness of animosity which is the only symptom of brotherhood (since
+brothers hate each other best) that any longer exists. They whisper
+these things with tears in their eyes, and shake their heads, and stoop
+their poor old shoulders, at the tidings of another and another Northern
+victory, which, in their opinion, puts farther off the remote, the
+already impossible, chance of a reunion.
+
+I am sorry for them, though it is by no means a sorrow without hope.
+Since the matter has gone so far, there seems to be no way but to go on
+winning victories, and establishing peace and a truer union in another
+generation, at the expense, probably, of greater trouble, in the present
+one, than any other people ever voluntarily suffered. We woo the South
+"as the Lion wooes his bride;" it is a rough courtship, but perhaps love
+and a quiet household may come of it at last. Or, if we stop short of
+that blessed consummation, heaven was heaven still, as Milton sings,
+after Lucifer and a third part of the angels had seceded from its golden
+palaces,--and perhaps all the more heavenly, because so many gloomy
+brows, and soured, vindictive hearts, had gone to plot ineffectual
+schemes of mischief elsewhere.
+
+
+[We regret the innuendo in the concluding sentence. The war can never be
+allowed to terminate, except in the complete triumph of Northern
+principles. We hold the event in our own hands, and may choose whether
+to terminate it by the methods already so successfully used, or by other
+means equally within our control, and calculated to be still more
+speedily efficacious. In truth, the work is already done.
+
+We should be sorry to cast a doubt on the Peaceable Man's loyalty, but he
+will allow us to say that we consider him premature in his kindly
+feelings towards traitors and sympathizers with treason. As the author
+himself says of John Brown (and, so applied, we thought it an atrociously
+cold-blooded dictum), "any common-sensible man would feel an intellectual
+satisfaction in seeing them hanged, were it only for their preposterous
+miscalculation of possibilities." There are some degrees of absurdity
+that put Reason herself into a rage, and affect us like an intolerable
+crime,--which this Rebellion is, into the bargain.]
+
+
+
+
+
+ALICE DOANE'S APPEAL.
+
+
+On a pleasant afternoon of June, it was my good fortune to be the
+companion of two young ladies in a walk. The direction of our course
+being left to me, I led them neither to Legge's Hill, nor to the Cold
+Spring, nor to the rude shores and old batteries of the Neck, nor yet to
+Paradise; though if the latter place were rightly named, my fair friends
+would have been at home there. We reached the outskirts of the town, and
+turning aside from a street of tanners and curriers, began to ascend a
+hill, which at a distance, by its dark slope and the even line of its
+summit, resembled a green rampart along the road. It was less steep than
+its aspect threatened. The eminence formed part of an extensive tract of
+pasture land, and was traversed by cow paths in various directions; but,
+strange to tell, though the whole slope and summit were of a peculiar
+deep green, scarce a blade of grass was visible from the base upward.
+This deceitful verdure was occasioned by a plentiful crop of "wood-wax,"
+which wears the same dark and glossy green throughout the summer, except
+at one short period, when it puts forth a profusion of yellow blossoms.
+At that season, to a distant spectator, the hill appears absolutely
+overlaid with gold, or covered with a glory of sunshine, even beneath a
+clouded sky. But the curious wanderer on the hill will perceive that all
+the grass, and everything that should nourish man or beast, has been
+destroyed by this vile and ineradicable weed: its tufted roots make the
+soil their own, and permit nothing else to vegetate among them; so that a
+physical curse may be said to have blasted the spot, where guilt and
+frenzy consummated the most execrable scene that our history blushes to
+record. For this was the field where superstition won her darkest
+triumph; the high place where our fathers set up their shame, to the
+mournful gaze of generations far remote. The dust of martyrs was beneath
+our feet. We stood on Gallows Hill.
+
+For my own part, I have often courted the historic influence of the spot.
+But it is singular how few come on pilgrimage to this famous hill; how
+many spend their lives almost at its base, and never once obey the
+summons of the shadowy past, as it beckons them to the summit. Till a
+year or two since, this portion of our history had been very imperfectly
+written, and, as we are not a people of legend or tradition, it was not
+every citizen of our ancient town that could tell, within half a century,
+so much as the date of the witchcraft delusion. Recently, indeed, an
+historian has treated the subject in a manner that will keep his name
+alive, in the only desirable connection with the errors of our ancestry,
+by converting the hill of their disgrace into an honorable monument of
+his own antiquarian lore, and of that better wisdom, which draws the
+moral while it tells the tale. But we are a people of the present, and
+have no heartfelt interest in the olden time. Every fifth of November,
+in commemoration of they know not what, or rather without an idea beyond
+the momentary blaze, the young men scare the town with bonfires on this
+haunted height, but never dream of paying funeral honors to those who
+died so wrongfully, and, without a coffin or a prayer, were buried here.
+
+Though with feminine susceptibility, my companions caught all the
+melancholy associations of the scene, yet these could but imperfectly
+overcome the gayety of girlish spirits. Their emotions came and went
+with quick vicissitude, and sometimes combined to form a peculiar and
+delicious excitement, the mirth brightening the gloom into a sunny shower
+of feeling, and a rainbow in the mind. My own more sombre mood was
+tinged by theirs. With now a merry word and next a sad one, we trod
+among the tangled weeds, and almost hoped that our feet would sink into
+the hollow of a witch's grave. Such vestiges were to be found within the
+memory of man, but have vanished now, and with them, I believe, all
+traces of the precise spot of the executions. On the long and broad
+ridge of the eminence, there is no very decided elevation of any one
+point, nor other prominent marks, except the decayed stumps of two trees,
+standing near each other, and here and there the rocky substance of the
+hill, peeping just above the wood-wax.
+
+There are few such prospects of town and village, woodland and cultivated
+field, steeples and country seats, as we beheld from this unhappy spot.
+No blight had fallen on old Essex; all was prosperity and riches,
+healthfully distributed. Before us lay our native town, extending from
+the foot of the hill to the harbor, level as a chess board, embraced by
+two arms of the sea, and filling the whole peninsula with a close
+assemblage of wooden roofs, overtopped by many a spire, and intermixed
+with frequent heaps of verdure, where trees threw up their shade from
+unseen trunks. Beyond was the bay and its islands, almost the only
+objects, in a country unmarked by strong natural features, on which time
+and human toil had produced no change. Retaining these portions of the
+scene, and also the peaceful glory and tender gloom of the declining sun,
+we threw, in imagination, a veil of deep forest over the land, and
+pictured a few scattered villages, and this old town itself a village, as
+when the prince of hell bore sway there. The idea thus gained of its
+former aspect, its quaint edifices standing far apart, with peaked roofs
+and projecting stories, and its single meeting-house pointing up a tall
+spire in the midst; the vision, in short, of the town in 1692, served to
+introduce a wondrous tale of those old times.
+
+I had brought the manuscript in my pocket. It was one of a series
+written years ago, when my pen, now sluggish and perhaps feeble, because
+I have not munch to hope or fear, was driven by stronger external motives
+and a more passionate impulse within, than I am fated to feel again.
+Three or four of these tales had appeared in the "Token," after a long
+time and various adventures, but had encumbered me with no troublesome
+notoriety, even in my birthplace. One great heap had met a brighter
+destiny: they had fed the flames; thoughts meant to delight the world and
+endure for ages had perished in a moment, and stirred not a single heart
+but mine. The story now to be introduced, and another, chanced to be in
+kinder custody at the time, and thus, by no conspicuous merits of their
+own, escaped destruction.
+
+The ladies, in consideration that I had never before intruded my
+performances on them, by any but the legitimate medium, through the
+press, consented to hear me read. I made them sit down on a moss-grown
+rock, close by the spot where we chose to believe that the death tree had
+stood. After a little hesitation on my part, caused by a dread of
+renewing my acquaintance with fantasies that had lost their charm in the
+ceaseless flux of mind, I began the tale, which opened darkly with the
+discovery of a murder.
+
+
+
+A hundred years, and nearly half that time, have elapsed since the body
+of a murdered man was found, at about the distance of three miles, on the
+old road to Boston. He lay in a solitary spot, on the bank of a small
+lake, which the severe frost of December had covered with a sheet of ice.
+Beneath this, it seemed to have been the intention of the murderer to
+conceal his victim in a chill and watery grave, the ice being deeply
+hacked, perhaps with the weapon that had slain him, though its solidity
+was too stubborn for the patience of a man with blood upon his hand. The
+corpse therefore reclined on the earth, but was separated from the road
+by a thick growth of dwarf pines. There had been a slight fall of snow
+during the night, and as if nature were shocked at the deed, and strove
+to hide it with her frozen tears, a little drifted heap had partly buried
+the body, and lay deepest over the pale dead face. An early traveller,
+whose dog had led him to the spot, ventured to uncover the features, but
+was affrighted by their expression. A look of evil and scornful triumph
+had hardened on them, and made death so life-like and so terrible, that
+the beholder at once took flight, as swiftly as if the stiffened corpse
+would rise up and follow.
+
+I read on, and identified the body as that of a young man, a stranger in
+the country, but resident during several preceding months in the town
+which lay at our feet. The story described, at some length, the
+excitement caused by the murder, the unavailing quest after the
+perpetrator, the funeral ceremonies, and other commonplace matters, in
+the course of which, I brought forward the personages who were to move
+among the succeeding events. They were but three. A young man and his
+sister; the former characterized by a diseased imagination and morbid
+feelings; the latter, beautiful and virtuous, and instilling something of
+her own excellence into the wild heart of her brother, but not enough to
+cure the deep taint of his nature. The third person was a wizard; a
+small, gray, withered man, with fiendish ingenuity in devising evil, and
+superhuman power to execute it, but senseless as an idiot and feebler
+than a child to all better purposes. The central scene of the story was
+an interview between this wretch and Leonard Doane, in the wizard's hut,
+situated beneath a range of rocks at some distance from the town. They
+sat beside a smouldering fire, while a tempest of wintry rain was beating
+on the roof.
+
+The young man spoke of the closeness of the tie which united him and
+Alice, the consecrated fervor of their affection from childhood upwards,
+their sense of lonely sufficiency to each other, because they only of
+their race had escaped death, in a night attack by the Indians. He
+related his discovery or suspicion of a secret sympathy between his
+sister and Walter Brome, and told how a distempered jealousy had maddened
+him. In the following passage, I threw a glimmering light on the mystery
+of the tale.
+
+"Searching," continued Leonard, "into the breast of Walter Brome, I at
+length found a cause why Alice must inevitably love him. For he was my
+very counterpart! I compared his mind by each individual portion, and as
+a whole, with mine. There was a resemblance from which I shrunk with
+sickness, and loathing, and horror, as if my own features had come and
+stared upon me in a solitary place, or had met me in struggling through a
+crowd. Nay! the very same thoughts would often express themselves in the
+same words from our lips, proving a hateful sympathy in our secret souls.
+His education, indeed, in the cities of the old world, and mine in the
+rude wilderness, had wrought a superficial difference. The evil of his
+character, also, had been strengthened and rendered prominent by a
+reckless and ungoverned life, while mine had been softened and purified
+by the gentle and holy nature of Alice. But my soul had been conscious
+of the germ of all the fierce and deep passions, and of all the many
+varieties of wickedness, which accident had brought to their full
+maturity in him. Nor will I deny that, in the accursed one, I could see
+the withered blossom of every virtue, which, by a happier culture, had
+been made to bring forth fruit in me. Now, here was a man whom Alice
+might love with all the strength of sisterly affection, added to that
+impure passion which alone engrosses all the heart. The stranger would
+have more than the love which had been gathered to me from the many
+graves of our household--and I be desolate!"
+
+
+Leonard Doane went on to describe the insane hatred that had kindled his
+heart into a volume of hellish flame. It appeared, indeed, that his
+jealousy had grounds, so far as that Walter Brome had actually sought the
+love of Alice, who also had betrayed an undefinable, but powerful
+interest in the unknown youth. The latter, in spite of his passion for
+Alice, seemed to return the loathful antipathy of her brother; the
+similarity of their dispositions made them like joint possessors of an
+individual nature, which could not become wholly the property of one,
+unless by the extinction of the other. At last, with the sane devil in
+each bosom, they chanced to meet, they two, on a lonely road. While
+Leonard spoke, the wizard had sat listening to what he already knew, yet
+with tokens of pleasurable interest, manifested by flashes of expression
+across his vacant features, by grisly smiles, and by a word here and
+there, mysteriously filling up some void in the narrative. But when the
+young man told how Walter Brome had taunted him with indubitable proofs
+of the shame of Alice, and, before the triumphant sneer could vanish from
+his face, had died by her brother's hand, the wizard laughed aloud.
+Leonard started, but just then a gust of wind came down the chimney,
+forming itself into a close resemblance of the slow, unvaried laughter,
+by which he had been interrupted. "I was deceived," thought he; and thus
+pursued his fearful story.
+
+
+"I trod out his accursed soul, and knew that he was dead; for my spirit
+bounded as if a chain had fallen from it and left me free. But the burst
+of exulting certainty soon fled, and was succeeded by a torpor over my
+brain and a dimness before my eyes, with the sensation of one who
+struggles through a dream. So I bent down over the body of Walter Brome,
+gazing into his face, and striving to make my soul glad with the thought,
+that he, in very truth, lay dead before me. I know not what space of
+time I had thus stood, nor how the vision came. But it seemed to me that
+the irrevocable years since childhood had rolled back, and a scene, that
+had long been confused and broken in my memory, arrayed itself with all
+its first distinctness. Methought I stood a weeping infant by my
+father's hearth; by the cold and blood-stained hearth where he lay dead.
+I heard the childish wail of Alice, and my own cry arose with hers, as we
+beheld the features of our parent, fierce with the strife and distorted
+with the pain, in which his spirit had passed away. As I gazed, a cold
+wind whistled by, and waved my father's hair. Immediately I stood again
+in the lonesome road, no more a sinless child, but a man of blood, whose
+tears were falling fast over the face of his dead enemy. But the
+delusion was not wholly gone; that face still wore a likeness of my
+father; and because my soul shrank from the fixed glare of the eyes, I
+bore the body to the lake, and would have buried it there. But before
+his icy sepulchre was hewn, I heard the voices of two travellers and
+fled."
+
+
+Such was the dreadful confession of Leonard Doane. And now tortured by
+the idea of his sister's guilt, yet sometimes yielding to a conviction of
+her purity; stung with remorse for the death of Walter Brome, and
+shuddering with a deeper sense of some unutterable crime, perpetrated, as
+he imagined, in madness or a dream; moved also by dark impulses, as if a
+fiend were whispering him to meditate violence against the life of Alice;
+he had sought this interview with the wizard, who, on certain conditions,
+had no power to withhold his aid in unravelling the mystery. The tale
+drew near its close.
+
+
+The moon was bright on high; the blue firmament appeared to glow with an
+inherent brightness; the greater stars were burning in their spheres; the
+northern lights threw their mysterious glare far over the horizon; the
+few small clouds aloft were burdened with radiance; but the sky, with all
+its variety of light, was scarcely so brilliant as the earth. The rain
+of the preceding night had frozen as it fell, and, by that simple magic,
+had wrought wonders. The trees were hung with diamonds and many-colored
+gems; the houses were overlaid with silver, and the streets paved with
+slippery brightness; a frigid glory was flung over all familiar things,
+from the cottage chimney to the steeple of the meeting-house, that
+gleamed upward to the sky. This living world, where we sit by our
+firesides, or go forth to meet beings like ourselves, seemed rather the
+creation of wizard power, with so much of resemblance to known objects
+that a man might shudder at the ghostly shape of his old beloved
+dwelling, and the shadow of a ghostly tree before his door. One looked
+to behold inhabitants suited to such a town, glittering in icy garments,
+with motionless features, cold, sparkling eyes, and just sensation enough
+in their frozen hearts to shiver at each other's presence.
+
+
+By this fantastic piece of description, and more in the same style, I
+intended to throw a ghostly glimmer round the reader, so that his
+imagination might view the town through a medium that should take off its
+every-day aspect, and make it a proper theatre for so wild a scene as the
+final one. Amid this unearthly show, the wretched brother and sister
+were represented as setting forth, at midnight, through the gleaming
+streets, and directing their steps to a graveyard, where all the dead had
+been laid from the first corpse in that ancient town, to the murdered man
+who was buried three days before. As they went, they seemed to see the
+wizard gliding by their sides, or walking dimly on the path before them.
+But here I paused, and gazed into the faces of my two fair auditors, to
+judge whether, even on the hill where so many had been brought to death
+by wilder tales than this, I might venture to proceed. Their bright eyes
+were fixed on me; their lips apart. I took courage, and led the fated
+pair to a new made grave, where for a few moments, in the bright and
+silent midnight, they stood alone. But suddenly there was a multitude of
+people among the graves.
+
+
+Each family tomb had given up its inhabitants, who, one by one, through
+distant years, had been borne to its dark chamber, but now came forth and
+stood in a pale group together. There was the gray ancestor, the aged
+mother, and all their descendants, some withered and full of years, like
+themselves, and others in their prime; there, too, were the children who
+went prattling to the tomb, and there the maiden who yielded her early
+beauty to death's embrace, before passion had polluted it. Husbands and
+wives arose, who had lain many years side by side, and young mothers who
+had forgotten to kiss their first babes, though pillowed so long on their
+bosoms. Many had been buried in the habiliments of life, and still wore
+their ancient garb; some were old defenders of the infant colony, and
+gleamed forth in their steel-caps and bright breastplates, as if starting
+up at an Indian war-cry; other venerable shapes had been pastors of the
+church, famous among the New England clergy, and now leaned with hands
+clasped over their gravestones, ready to call the congregation to prayer.
+There stood the early settlers, those old illustrious ones, the heroes of
+tradition and fireside legends, the men of history whose features had
+been so long beneath the sod that few alive could have remembered them.
+There, too, were faces of former townspeople, dimly recollected from
+childhood, and others, whom Leonard and Alice had wept in later years,
+but who now were most terrible of all, by their ghastly smile of
+recognition. All, in short, were there; the dead of other generations,
+whose moss-grown names could scarce be read upon their tombstones, and
+their successors, whose graves were not yet green; all whom black
+funerals had followed slowly thither now reappeared where the mourners
+left them. Yet none but souls accursed were there, and fiends
+counterfeiting the likeness of departed saints.
+
+The countenances of those venerable men, whose very features had been
+hallowed by lives of piety, were contorted now by intolerable pain or
+hellish passion, and now by an unearthly and derisive merriment. Had the
+pastors prayed, all saintlike as they seemed, it had been blasphemy. The
+chaste matrons, too, and the maidens with untasted lips, who had slept in
+their virgin graves apart from all other dust, now wore a look from which
+the two trembling mortals shrank, as if the unimaginable sin of twenty
+worlds were collected there. The faces of fond lovers, even of such as
+had pined into the tomb, because there their treasure was, were bent on
+one another with glances of hatred and smiles of bitter scorn, passions
+that are to devils what love is to the blest. At times, the features of
+those who had passed from a holy life to heaven would vary to and fro,
+between their assumed aspect and the fiendish lineaments whence they had
+been transformed. The whole miserable multitude, both sinful souls and
+false spectres of good men, groaned horribly and gnashed their teeth, as
+they looked upward to the calm loveliness of the midnight sky, and beheld
+those homes of bliss where they must never dwell. Such was the
+apparition, though too shadowy for language to portray; for here would be
+the moonbeams on the ice, glittering through a warrior's breastplate, and
+there the letters of a tombstone, on the form that stood before it; and
+whenever a breeze went by, it swept the old men's hoary heads, the
+women's fearful beauty, and all the unreal throng, into one
+indistinguishable cloud together.
+
+
+I dare not give the remainder of the scene, except in a very brief
+epitome. This company of devils and condemned souls had come on a
+holiday, to revel in the discovery of a complicated crime; as foul a one
+as ever was imagined in their dreadful abode. In the course of the tale,
+the reader had been permitted to discover that all the incidents were
+results of the machinations of the wizard, who had cunningly devised that
+Walter Brome should tempt his unknown sister to guilt and shame, and
+himself perish by the hand of his twin-brother. I described the glee of
+the fiends at this hideous conception, and their eagerness to know if it
+were consummated. The story concluded with the Appeal of Alice to the
+spectre of Walter Brome; his reply, absolving her from every stain; and
+the trembling awe with which ghost and devil fled as from the sinless
+presence of an angel.
+
+The sun had gone down. While I held my page of wonders in the fading
+light, and read how Alice and her brother were left alone among the
+graves, my voice mingled with the sigh of a summer wind, which passed
+over the hill-top, with the broad and hollow sound as of the flight of
+unseen spirits. Not a word was spoken till I added that the wizard's
+grave was close beside us, and that the wood-wax had sprouted originally
+from his unhallowed bones. The ladies started; perhaps their cheeks
+might have grown pale had not the crimson west been blushing on them; but
+after a moment they began to laugh, while the breeze took a livelier
+motion, as if responsive to their mirth. I kept an awful solemnity of
+visage, being, indeed, a little piqued that a narrative which had good
+authority in our ancient superstitions, and would have brought even a
+church deacon to Gallows Hill, in old witch times, should now be
+considered too grotesque and extravagant for timid maids to tremble at.
+Though it was past supper time, I detained them a while longer on the
+hill, and made a trial whether truth were more powerful than fiction.
+
+We looked again towards the town, no longer arrayed in that icy splendor
+of earth, tree, and edifice, beneath the glow of a wintry midnight, which
+shining afar through the gloom of a century had made it appear the very
+home of visions in visionary streets. An indistinctness had begun to
+creep over the mass of buildings and blend them with the intermingled
+tree-tops, except where the roof of a statelier mansion, and the steeples
+and brick towers of churches, caught the brightness of some cloud that
+yet floated in the sunshine. Twilight over the landscape was congenial
+to the obscurity of time. With such eloquence as my share of feeling and
+fancy could supply, I called back hoar antiquity, and bade my companions
+imagine an ancient multitude of people, congregated on the hillside,
+spreading far below, clustering on the steep old roofs, and climbing the
+adjacent heights, wherever a glimpse of this spot might be obtained. I
+strove to realize and faintly communicate the deep, unutterable loathing
+and horror, the indignation, the affrighted wonder, that wrinkled on
+every brow, and filled the universal heart. See! the whole crowd turns
+pale and shrinks within itself, as the virtuous emerge from yonder
+street. Keeping pace with that devoted company, I described them one by
+one; here tottered a woman in her dotage, knowing neither the crime
+imputed her, nor its punishment; there another, distracted by the
+universal madness, till feverish dreams were remembered as realities, and
+she almost believed her guilt. One, a proud man once, was so broken down
+by the intolerable hatred heaped upon him, that he seemed to hasten his
+steps, eager to hide himself in the grave hastily dug at the foot of the
+gallows. As they went slowly on, a mother looked behind, and beheld her
+peaceful dwelling; she cast her eyes elsewhere, and groaned inwardly yet
+with bitterest anguish, for there was her little son among the accusers.
+I watched the face of an ordained pastor, who walked onward to the same
+death; his lips moved in prayer; no narrow petition for himself alone,
+but embracing all his fellow-sufferers and the frenzied multitude; he
+looked to Heaven and trod lightly up the hill.
+
+Behind their victims came the afflicted, a guilty and miserable band;
+villains who had thus avenged themselves on their enemies, and viler
+wretches, whose cowardice had destroyed their friends; lunatics, whose
+ravings had chimed in with the madness of the land; and children, who had
+played a game that the imps of darkness might have envied them, since it
+disgraced an age, and dipped a people's hands in blood. In the rear of
+the procession rode a figure on horseback, so darkly conspicuous, so
+sternly triumphant, that my hearers mistook him for the visible presence
+of the fiend himself; but it was only his good friend, Cotton Mather,
+proud of his well-won dignity, as the representative of all the hateful
+features of his time: the one blood-thirsty man, in whom were
+concentrated those vices of spirit and errors of opinion that sufficed to
+madden the whole surrounding multitude. And thus I marshalled them
+onward, the innocent who were to die, and the guilty who were to grow old
+in long remorse--tracing their every step, by rock, and shrub, and broken
+track, till their shadowy visages had circled round the hilltop, where we
+stood. I plunged into my imagination for a blacker horror, and a deeper
+woe, and pictured the scaffold----
+
+But here my companions seized an arm on each side; their nerves were
+trembling; and, sweeter victory still, I had reached the seldom trodden
+places of their hearts, and found the well-spring of their tears. And
+now the past had done all it could. We slowly descended, watching the
+lights as they twinkled gradually through the town, and listening to the
+distant mirth of boys at play, and to the voice of a young girl warbling
+somewhere in the dusk, a pleasant sound to wanderers from old witch
+times. Yet, ere we left the hill, we could not but regret that there is
+nothing on its barren summit, no relic of old, nor lettered stone of
+later days, to assist the imagination in appealing to the heart. We
+build the memorial column on the height which our fathers made sacred
+with their blood, poured out in a holy cause. And here, in dark,
+funereal stone, should rise another monument, sadly commemorative of the
+errors of an earlier race, and not to be cast down while the human heart
+has one infirmity that may result in crime.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP
+
+Outlines of an English Romance.
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+
+"Septimius Felton" was the outgrowth of a project, formed by Hawthorne
+during his residence in England, of writing a romance, the scene of which
+should be laid in that country; but this project was afterwards
+abandoned, giving place to a new conception in which the visionary search
+for means to secure an earthly immortality was to form the principal
+interest. The new conception took shape in the uncompleted "Dolliver
+Romance." The two themes, of course, were distinct, but, by a curious
+process of thought, one grew directly out of the other: the whole history
+constitutes, in fact, a chapter in what may be called the genealogy of a
+romance. There remained, after "Septimius Felton" had been published,
+certain manuscripts connected with the scheme of an English story. One
+of these manuscripts was written in the form of a journalized narrative;
+the author merely noting the date of what he wrote, as he went along.
+The other was a more extended sketch of much greater bulk, and without
+date, but probably produced several years later. It was not originally
+intended by those who at the time had charge of Hawthorne's papers that
+either of these incomplete writings should be laid before the public;
+because they manifestly had not been left by him in a form which he would
+have considered as warranting such a course. But since the second and
+larger manuscript has been published under the title of "Dr. Grimshawe's
+Secret," it has been thought best to issue the present sketch, so that
+the two documents may be examined together. Their appearance places in
+the hands of readers the entire process of development leading to the
+"Septimius" and "The Dolliver Romance." They speak for themselves much
+more efficiently than any commentator can expect to do; and little,
+therefore, remains to be said beyond a few words of explanation in regard
+to the following pages.
+
+The Note-Books show that the plan of an English romance, turning upon the
+fact that an emigrant to America had carried away a family secret which
+should give his descendant the power to ruin the family in the mother
+country, had occurred to Hawthorne as early as April, 1855. In August of
+the same year he visited Smithell's Hall, in Bolton le Moors, concerning
+which he had already heard its legend of "The Bloody Footstep," and from
+that time on, the idea of this footprint on the threshold-stone of the
+ancestral mansion seems to have associated itself inextricably with the
+dreamy substance of his yet unshaped romance. Indeed, it leaves its mark
+broadly upon Sibyl Dacy's wild legend in "Septimius Felton," and
+reappears in the last paragraph of that story. But, so far as we can
+know at this day, nothing definite was done until after his departure for
+Italy. It was then, while staying in Rome, that he began to put upon
+paper that plot which had first occupied his thoughts three years before,
+in the scant leisure allowed him by his duties at the Liverpool
+consulate. Of leisure there was not a great deal at Rome, either; for,
+as the "French and Italian Note-Books" show, sight-seeing and social
+intercourse took up a good deal of his time, and the daily record in his
+journal likewise had to be kept up. But he set to work resolutely to
+embody, so far as he might, his stray imaginings upon the haunting
+English theme, and to give them connected form. April 1, 1858, he began;
+and then nearly two weeks passed before he found an opportunity to
+resume; April 13th being the date of the next passage. By May he gets
+fully into swing, so that day after day, with but slight breaks, he
+carries on the story, always increasing in interest for as who read as
+for him who improvised. Thus it continues until May 19th, by which time
+he has made a tolerably complete outline, filled in with a good deal of
+detail here and there. Although the sketch is cast in the form of a
+regular narrative, one or two gaps occur, indicating that the author had
+thought out certain points which he then took for granted without making
+note of them. Brief scenes, passages of conversation and of narration,
+follow one another after the manner of a finished story, alternating with
+synopses of the plot, and queries concerning particulars that needed
+further study; confidences of the romancer to himself which form
+certainly a valuable contribution to literary history. The manuscript
+closes with a rapid sketch of the conclusion, and the way in which it is
+to be executed. Succinctly, what we have is a romance in embryo; one,
+moreover, that never attained to a viable stature and constitution.
+During his lifetime it naturally would not have been put forward as
+demanding public attention; and, in consideration of that fact, it has
+since been withheld from the press by the decision of his daughter, in
+whom the title to it vests. Students of literary art, however, and many
+more general readers will, I think, be likely to discover in it a charm
+all the greater for its being in parts only indicated; since, as it
+stands, it presents the precise condition of a work of fiction in its
+first stage. The unfinished "Grimshawe" was another development of the
+same theme, and the "Septimius" a later sketch, with a new element
+introduced. But the present experimental fragment, to which it has been
+decided to give the title of "The Ancestral Footstep," possesses a
+freshness and spontaneity recalling the peculiar fascination of those
+chalk or pencil outlines with which great masters in the graphic art have
+been wont to arrest their fleeting glimpses of a composition still
+unwrought.
+
+It would not be safe to conclude, from the large amount of preliminary
+writing done with a view to that romance, that Hawthorne always adopted
+this laborious mode of making several drafts of a book. On the contrary,
+it is understood that his habit was to mature a design so thoroughly in
+his mind before attempting to give it actual existence on paper that but
+little rewriting was needed. The circumstance that he was obliged to
+write so much that did not satisfy him in this case may account partly
+for his relinquishing the theme, as one which for him had lost its
+seductiveness through too much recasting.
+
+It need be added only that the original manuscript, from which the
+following pages are printed through the medium of an exact copy, is
+singularly clear and fluent. Not a single correction occurs throughout;
+but here and there a word is omitted obviously by mere accident, and
+these omissions have been supplied. The correction in each case is
+marked by brackets in this printed reproduction. The sketch begins
+abruptly; but there is no reason to suppose that anything preceded it
+except the unrecorded musings in the author's mind, and one or two
+memoranda in the "English Note-Books." We must therefore imagine the
+central figure, Middleton, who is the American descendant of an old
+English family, as having been properly introduced, and then pass at once
+to the opening sentences. The rest will explain itself. G. P. L.
+
+
+
+
+THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP.
+
+Outlines of an English Romance.
+
+
+I.
+
+April 1, 1858. Thursday.--He had now been travelling long in those rich
+portions of England where he would most have wished to find the object of
+his pursuit; and many had been the scenes which he would willingly have
+identified with that mentioned in the ancient, time-yellowed record which
+he bore about with him. It is to be observed that, undertaken at first
+half as the amusement, the unreal object of a grown man's play-day, it
+had become more and more real to him with every step of the way that he
+followed it up; along those green English lanes it seemed as if
+everything would bring him close to the mansion that he sought; every
+morning he went on with renewed hopes, nor did the evening, though it
+brought with it no success, bring with it the gloom and heaviness of a
+real disappointment. In all his life, including its earliest and
+happiest days, he had never known such a spring and zest as now filled
+his veins, and gave lightsomeness to his limbs; this spirit gave to the
+beautiful country which he trod a still richer beauty than it had ever
+borne, and he sought his ancient home as if he had found his way into
+Paradise and were there endeavoring to trace out the sight [site] of
+Eve's bridal bower, the birthplace of the human race and its glorious
+possibilities of happiness and high performance.
+
+In these sweet and delightful moods of mind, varying from one dream to
+another, he loved indeed the solitude of his way; but likewise he loved
+the facility which his pursuit afforded him, of coming in contact with
+many varieties of men, and he took advantage of this facility to an
+extent which it was not usually his impulse to do. But now he came forth
+from all reserves, and offered himself to whomever the chances of the way
+offered to him, with a ready sensibility that made its way through every
+barrier that even English exclusiveness, in whatever rank of life, could
+set up. The plastic character of Middleton was perhaps a variety of
+American nature only presenting itself under an individual form; he could
+throw off the man of our day, and put on a ruder nature, but then it was
+with a certain fineness, that made this only [a] distinction between it
+and the central truth. He found less variety of form in the English
+character than he had been accustomed to see at home; but perhaps this
+was in consequence of the external nature of his acquaintance with it;
+for the view of one well accustomed to a people, and of a stranger to
+them, differs in this--that the latter sees the homogeneity, the one
+universal character, the ground work of the whole, while the former sees
+a thousand little differences, which distinguish the individual men apart
+to such a degree that they seem hardly to have any resemblance among
+themselves.
+
+But just at the period of his journey when we take him up, Middleton had
+been for two or three days the companion of an old man who interested him
+more than most of his wayside companions; the more especially as he
+seemed to be wandering without an object, or with such a dreamy object as
+that which led Middleton's own steps onward. He was a plain old man
+enough, but with a pale, strong-featured face and white hair, a certain
+picturesqueness and venerableness, which Middleton fancied might have
+befitted a richer garb than he now wore. In much of their conversation,
+too, he was sensible that, though the stranger betrayed no acquaintance
+with literature, nor seemed to have conversed with cultivated minds, yet
+the results of such acquaintance and converse were here. Middleton was
+inclined to think him, however, an old man, one of those itinerants, such
+as Wordsworth represented in the "Excursion," who smooth themselves by
+the attrition of the world and gain a knowledge equivalent to or better
+than that of books from the actual intellect of man awake and active
+around them.
+
+Often, during the short period since their companionship originated,
+Middleton had felt impelled to disclose to the old man the object of his
+journey, and the wild tale by which, after two hundred years, he had been
+blown as it were across the ocean, and drawn onward to commence this
+search. The old man's ordinary conversation was of a nature to draw
+forth such a confidence as this; frequently turning on the traditions of
+the wayside; the reminiscences that lingered on the battle-fields of the
+Roses, or of the Parliament, like flowers nurtured by the blood of the
+slain, and prolonging their race through the centuries for the wayfarer
+to pluck them; or the family histories of the castles, manor-houses, and
+seats which, of various epochs, had their park-gates along the roadside
+and would be seen with dark gray towers or ancient gables, or more modern
+forms of architecture, rising up among clouds of ancient oaks. Middleton
+watched earnestly to see if, in any of these tales, there were
+circumstances resembling those striking and singular ones which he had
+borne so long in his memory, and on which he was now acting in so strange
+a manner; but [though] there was a good deal of variety of incident in
+them, there never was any combination of incidents having the peculiarity
+of this.
+
+"I suppose," said he to the old man, "the settlers in my country may have
+carried away with them traditions long since forgotten in this country,
+but which might have an interest and connection, and might even piece out
+the broken relics of family history, which have remained perhaps a
+mystery for hundreds of years. I can conceive, even, that this might be
+of importance in settling the heirships of estates; but which now, only
+the two insulated parts of the story being known, remain a riddle,
+although the solution of it is actually in the world, if only these two
+parts could be united across the sea, like the wires of an electric
+telegraph."
+
+"It is an impressive idea," said the old man. "Do you know any such
+tradition as you have hinted at?"
+
+April 13th.--Middleton could not but wonder at the singular chance that
+had established him in such a place, and in such society, so strangely
+adapted to the purposes with which he had been wandering through England.
+He had come hither, hoping as it were to find the past still alive and in
+action; and here it was so in this one only spot, and these few persons
+into the midst of whom he had suddenly been cast. With these reflections
+he looked forth from his window into the old-fashioned garden, and at the
+stone sun-dial, which had numbered all the hours--all the daylight and
+serene ones, at least--since his mysterious ancestor left the country.
+And [is] this, then, he thought to himself, the establishment of which
+some rumor had been preserved? Was it here that the secret had its
+hiding-place in the old coffer, in the cupboard, in the secret chamber,
+or whatever was indicated by the apparently idle words of the document
+which he had preserved? He still smiled at the idea, but it was with a
+pleasant, mysterious sense that his life had at last got out of the dusty
+real, and that strangeness had mixed itself up with his daily experience.
+
+With such feelings he prepared himself to go down to dinner with his
+host. He found him alone at table, which was placed in a dark old room
+modernized with every English comfort and the pleasant spectacle of a
+table set with the whitest of napery and the brightest of glass and
+china. The friendly old gentleman, as he had found him from the first,
+became doubly and trebly so in that position which brings out whatever
+warmth of heart an Englishman has, and gives it to him if he has none.
+The impressionable and sympathetic character of Middleton answered to the
+kindness of his host; and by the time the meal was concluded, the two
+were conversing with almost as much zest and friendship as if they were
+similar in age, even fellow-countrymen, and had known one another all
+their lifetime. Middleton's secret, it may be supposed, came often to
+the tip of his tongue; but still he kept it within, from a natural
+repugnance to bring out the one romance of his life. The talk, however,
+necessarily ran much upon topics among which this one would have come in
+without any extra attempt to introduce it.
+
+"This decay of old families," said the Master, "is much greater than
+would appear on the surface of things. We have such a reluctance to part
+with them, that we are content to see them continued by any fiction,
+through any indirections, rather than to dispense with old names. In
+your country, I suppose, there is no such reluctance; you are willing
+that one generation should blot out all that preceded it, and be itself
+the newest and only age of the world."
+
+"Not quite so," answered Middleton; "at any rate, if there be such a
+feeling in the people at large, I doubt whether, even in England, those
+who fancy themselves possessed of claims to birth, cherish them more as a
+treasure than we do. It is, of course, a thousand times more difficult
+for us to keep alive a name amid a thousand difficulties sedulously
+thrown around it by our institutions, than for you to do, where your
+institutions are anxiously calculated to promote the contrary purpose.
+It has occasionally struck me, however, that the ancient lineage might
+often be found in America, for a family which has been compelled to
+prolong itself here through the female line, and through alien stocks."
+
+"Indeed, my young friend," said the Master, "if that be the case, I
+should like to [speak?] further with you upon it; for, I can assure you,
+there are sometimes vicissitudes in old families that make me grieve to
+think that a man cannot be made for the occasion."
+
+All this while, the young lady at table had remained almost silent; and
+Middleton had only occasionally been reminded of her by the necessity of
+performing some of those offices which put people at table under a
+Christian necessity of recognizing one another. He was, to say the
+truth, somewhat interested in her, yet not strongly attracted by the
+neutral tint of her dress, and the neutral character of her manners. She
+did not seem to be handsome, although, with her face full before him, he
+had not quite made up his mind on this point.
+
+April 14th.--So here was Middleton, now at length seeing indistinctly a
+thread, to which the thread that he had so long held in his hand--the
+hereditary thread that ancestor after ancestor had handed down--might
+seem ready to join on. He felt as if they were the two points of an
+electric chain, which being joined, an instantaneous effect must follow.
+Earnestly, as he would have looked forward to this moment (had he in
+sober reason ever put any real weight on the fantasy in pursuit of which
+he had wandered so far) he now, that it actually appeared to be realizing
+itself, paused with a vague sensation of alarm. The mystery was
+evidently one of sorrow, if not of crime, and he felt as if that sorrow
+and crime might not have been annihilated even by being buried out of
+human sight and remembrance so long. He remembered to have heard or
+read, how that once an old pit had been dug open, in which were found the
+remains of persons that, as the shuddering by-standers traditionally
+remembered, had died of an ancient pestilence; and out of that old grave
+had come a new plague, that slew the far-off progeny of those who had
+first died by it. Might not some fatal treasure like this, in a moral
+view, be brought to light by the secret into which he had so strangely
+been drawn? Such were the fantasies with which he awaited the return of
+Alice, whose light footsteps sounded afar along the passages of the old
+mansion; and then all was silent.
+
+At length he heard the sound, a great way off, as he concluded, of her
+returning footstep, approaching from chamber to chamber, and along the
+staircases, closing the doors behind her. At first, he paid no great
+attention to the character of these sounds, but as they drew nearer, he
+became aware that the footstep was unlike those of Alice; indeed, as
+unlike as could be, very regular, slow, yet not firm, so that it seemed
+to be that of an aged person, sauntering listlessly through the rooms.
+We have often alluded to Middleton's sensitiveness, and the quick
+vibrations of his sympathies; and there was something in this slow
+approach that produced a strange feeling within him; so that he stood
+breathlessly, looking towards the door by which these slow footsteps were
+to enter. At last, there appeared in the doorway a venerable figure,
+clad in a rich, faded dressing-gown, and standing on the threshold looked
+fixedly at Middleton, at the same time holding up a light in his left
+hand. In his right was some object that Middleton did not distinctly
+see. But he knew the figure, and recognized the face. It was the old
+man, his long since companion on the journey hitherward.
+
+"So," said the old man, smiling gravely, "you have thought fit, at last,
+to accept the hospitality which I offered you so long ago. It might have
+been better for both of us--for all parties--if you had accepted it
+then!"
+
+"You here!" exclaimed Middleton. "And what can be your connection with
+all the error and trouble, and involuntary wrong, through which I have
+wandered since our last meeting? And is it possible that you even then
+held the clue which I was seeking?"
+
+"No,--no," replied Rothermel. "I was not conscious, at least, of so
+doing. And yet had we two sat down there by the wayside, or on that
+English stile, which attracted your attention so much; had we sat down
+there and thrown forth each his own dream, each his own knowledge, it
+would have saved much that we must now forever regret. Are you even now
+ready to confide wholly in me?"
+
+"Alas," said Middleton, with a darkening brow, "there are many reasons,
+at this moment, which did not exist then, to incline me to hold my peace.
+And why has not Alice returned?--and what is your connection with her?"
+
+"Let her answer for herself," said Rothermel; and he called her, shouting
+through the silent house as if she were at the furthest chamber, and he
+were in instant need: "Alice!--Alice!--Alice!--here is one who would know
+what is the link between a maiden and her father!"
+
+Amid the strange uproar which he made Alice came flying back, not in
+alarm but only in haste, and put her hand within his own. "Hush,
+father," said she. "It is not time."
+
+Here is an abstract of the plot of this story. The Middleton who
+emigrated to America, more than two hundred years ago, had been a dark
+and moody man; he came with a beautiful though not young woman for his
+wife, and left a family behind him. In this family a certain heirloom
+had been preserved, and with it a tradition that grew wilder and stranger
+with the passing generations. The tradition had lost, if it ever had,
+some of its connecting links; but it referred to a murder, to the
+expulsion of a brother from the hereditary house, in some strange way,
+and to a Bloody Footstep which he had left impressed into the threshold,
+as he turned about to make a last remonstrance. It was rumored, however,
+or vaguely understood, that the expelled brother was not altogether an
+innocent man; but that there had been wrong done as well as crime
+committed, insomuch that his reasons were strong that led him,
+subsequently, to imbibe the most gloomy religious views, and to bury
+himself in the Western wilderness. These reasons he had never fully
+imparted to his family; but had necessarily made allusions to them, which
+had been treasured up and doubtless enlarged upon. At last, one
+descendant of the family determines to go to England, with the purpose of
+searching out whatever ground there may be for these traditions, carrying
+with him certain ancient documents, and other relics; and goes about the
+country, half in earnest, and half in sport of fancy, in quest of the old
+family mansion. He makes singular discoveries, all of which bring the
+book to an end unexpected by everybody, and not satisfactory to the
+natural yearnings of novel readers. In the traditions that he brought
+over, there was a key to some family secrets that were still unsolved,
+and that controlled the descent of estates and titles. His influence
+upon these matters involves [him] in divers strange and perilous
+adventures; and at last it turns out that he himself is the rightful heir
+to the titles and estate, that had passed into another name within the
+last half-century. But he respects both, feeling that it is better to
+make a virgin soil than to try to make the old name grow in a soil that
+had been darkened with so much blood and misfortune as this.
+
+April 27th, Tuesday.--It was with a delightful feeling of release from
+ordinary rules, that Middleton found himself brought into this connection
+with Alice; and he only hoped that this play-day of his life might last
+long enough to rest him from all that he had suffered. In the enjoyment
+of his position he almost forgot the pursuit that occupied him, nor might
+he have remembered for a long space if, one evening, Alice herself had
+not alluded to it. "You are wasting precious days," she suddenly said.
+"Why do you not renew your quest?"
+
+"To what do you allude?" said Middleton in surprise. "What object do you
+suppose me to have?"
+
+Alice smiled; nay, laughed outright. "You suppose yourself to be a
+perfect mystery, no doubt," she replied. "But do not I know you--have
+not I known you long--as the holder of the talisman, the owner of the
+mysterious cabinet that contains the blood-stained secret?"
+
+"Nay, Alice, this is certainly a strange coincidence, that you should
+know even thus much of a foolish secret that makes me employ this little
+holiday time, which I have stolen out of a weary life, in a wild-goose
+chase. But, believe me, you allude to matters that are more a mystery to
+me than my affairs appear to be to you. Will you explain what you would
+suggest by this badinage?"
+
+Alice shook her head. "You have no claim to know what I know, even if it
+would be any addition to your own knowledge. I shall not, and must not
+enlighten you. You must burrow for the secret with your own tools, in
+your own manner, and in a place of your own choosing. I am bound not to
+assist you."
+
+"Alice, this is wilful, wayward, unjust," cried Middleton, with a flushed
+cheek. "I have not told you--yet you know well--the deep and real
+importance which this subject has for me. We have been together as
+friends, yet, the instant when there comes up an occasion when the
+slightest friendly feeling would induce you to do me a good office, you
+assume this altered tone."
+
+"My tone is not in the least altered in respect to you," said Alice.
+"All along, as you know, I have reserved myself on this very point; it
+being, I candidly tell you, impossible for me to act in your interest in
+the matter alluded to. If you choose to consider this unfriendly, as
+being less than the terms on which you conceive us to have stood give you
+a right to demand of me--you must resent it as you please. I shall not
+the less retain for you the regard due to one who has certainly
+befriended me in very untoward circumstances."
+
+This conversation confirmed the previous idea of Middleton, that some
+mystery of a peculiarly dark and evil character was connected with the
+family secret with which he was himself entangled; but it perplexed him
+to imagine in what way this, after the lapse of so many years, should
+continue to be a matter of real importance at the present day. All the
+actors in the original guilt--if guilt it were--must have been long ago
+in their graves; some in the churchyard of the village, with those
+moss-grown letters embossing their names; some in the church itself, with
+mural tablets recording their names over the family-pew, and one, it
+might be, far over the sea, where his grave was first made under the
+forest leaves, though now a city had grown up around it. Yet here was
+he, the remote descendant of that family, setting his foot at last in the
+country, and as secretly as might be; and all at once his mere presence
+seemed to revive the buried secret, almost to awake the dead who partook
+of that secret and had acted it. There was a vibration from the other
+world, continued and prolonged into this, the instant that he stepped
+upon the mysterious and haunted ground.
+
+He knew not in what way to proceed. He could not but feel that there was
+something not exactly within the limits of propriety in being here,
+disguised--at least, not known in his true character--prying into the
+secrets of a proud and secluded Englishman. But then, as he said to
+himself on his own side of the question, the secret belonged to himself
+by exactly as ancient a tenure and by precisely as strong a claim, as to
+the Englishman. His rights here were just as powerful and well-founded
+as those of his ancestor had been, nearly three centuries ago; and here
+the same feeling came over him that he was that very personage, returned
+after all these ages, to see if his foot would fit this bloody footstep
+left of old upon the threshold. The result of all his cogitation was, as
+the reader will have foreseen, that he decided to continue his
+researches, and, his proceedings being pretty defensible, let the result
+take care of itself.
+
+For this purpose he went next day to the hospital, and ringing at the
+Master's door, was ushered into the old-fashioned, comfortable library,
+where he had spent that well-remembered evening which threw the first ray
+of light on the pursuit that now seemed developing into such strange and
+unexpected consequences. Being admitted, he was desired by the domestic
+to wait, as his Reverence was at that moment engaged with a gentleman on
+business. Glancing through the ivy that mantled over the window,
+Middleton saw that this interview was taking place in the garden, where
+the Master and his visitor were walking to and fro in the avenue of box,
+discussing some matter, as it seemed to him, with considerable
+earnestness on both sides. He observed, too, that there was warmth,
+passion, a disturbed feeling on the stranger's part; while, on that of
+the Master, it was a calm, serious, earnest representation of whatever
+view he was endeavoring to impress on the other. At last, the interview
+appeared to come toward a climax, the Master addressing some words to his
+guest, still with undisturbed calmness, to which the latter replied by a
+violent and even fierce gesture, as it should seem of menace, not towards
+the Master, but some unknown party; and then hastily turning, he left the
+garden and was soon heard riding away. The Master looked after him
+awhile, and then, shaking his white head, returned into the house and
+soon entered the parlor.
+
+He looked somewhat surprised, and, as it struck Middleton, a little
+startled, at finding him there; yet he welcomed him with all his former
+cordiality--indeed, with a friendship that thoroughly warmed Middleton's
+heart even to its coldest corner.
+
+"This is strange!" said the old gentleman. "Do you remember our
+conversation on that evening when I first had the unlooked-for pleasure
+of receiving you as a guest into my house? At that time I spoke to you
+of a strange family story, of which there was no denouement, such as a
+novel-writer would desire, and which had remained in that unfinished
+posture for more than two hundred years! Well; perhaps it will gratify
+you to know that there seems a prospect of that wanting termination being
+supplied!"
+
+"Indeed!" said Middleton.
+
+"Yes," replied the Master. "A gentleman has just parted with me who was
+indeed the representative of the family concerned in the story. He is
+the descendant of a younger son of that family, to whom the estate
+devolved about a century ago, although at that time there was search for
+the heirs of the elder son, who had disappeared after the bloody incident
+which I related to you. Now, singular as it may appear, at this late
+day, a person claiming to be the descendant and heir of that eldest son
+has appeared, and if I may credit my friend's account, is disposed not
+only to claim the estate, but the dormant title which Eldredge himself
+has been so long preparing to claim for himself. Singularly enough, too,
+the heir is an American."
+
+May 2d, Sunday.--"I believe," said Middleton, "that many English secrets
+might find their solution in America, if the two threads of a story could
+be brought together, disjoined as they have been by time and the ocean.
+But are you at liberty to tell me the nature of the incidents to which
+you allude?"
+
+"I do not see any reason to the contrary," answered the Master; "for the
+story has already come in an imperfect way before the public, and the
+full and authentic particulars are likely soon to follow. It seems that
+the younger brother was ejected from the house on account of a love
+affair; the elder having married a young woman with whom the younger was
+in love, and, it is said, the wife disappeared on the bridal night, and
+was never heard of more. The elder brother remained single during the
+rest of his life; and dying childless, and there being still no news of
+the second brother, the inheritance and representation of the family
+devolved upon the third brother and his posterity. This branch of the
+family has ever since remained in possession; and latterly the
+representation has become of more importance, on account of a claim to an
+old title, which, by the failure of another branch of this ancient
+family, has devolved upon the branch here settled. Now, just at this
+juncture, comes another heir from America, pretending that he is the
+descendant of a marriage between the second son, supposed to have been
+murdered on the threshold of the manor-house, and the missing bride! Is
+it not a singular story?"
+
+"It would seem to require very strong evidence to prove it," said
+Middleton. "And methinks a Republican should care little for the title,
+however he might value the estate."
+
+"Both--both," said the Master, smiling, "would be equally attractive to
+your countryman. But there are further curious particulars in connection
+with this claim. You must know, they are a family of singular
+characteristics, humorists, sometimes developing their queer traits into
+something like insanity; though oftener, I must say, spending stupid
+hereditary lives here on their estates, rusting out and dying without
+leaving any biography whatever about them. And yet there has always been
+one very queer thing about this generally very commonplace family. It is
+that each father, on his death-bed, has had an interview with his son, at
+which he has imparted some secret that has evidently had an influence on
+the character and after life of the son, making him ever after a
+discontented man, aspiring for something he has never been able to find.
+Now the American, I am told, pretends that he has the clue which has
+always been needed to make the secret available; the key whereby the lock
+may be opened; the something that the lost son of the family carried away
+with him, and by which through these centuries he has impeded the
+progress of the race. And, wild as the story seems, he does certainly
+seem to bring something that looks very like the proof of what he says."
+
+"And what are those proofs?" inquired Middleton, wonder-stricken at the
+strange reduplication of his own position and pursuits.
+
+"In the first place," said the Master, "the English marriage-certificate
+by a clergyman of that day in London, after publication of the banns,
+with a reference to the register of the parish church where the marriage
+is recorded. Then, a certified genealogy of the family in New England,
+where such matters can be ascertained from town and church records, with
+at least as much certainty, it would appear, as in this country. He has
+likewise a manuscript in his ancestor's autograph, containing a brief
+account of the events which banished him from his own country; the
+circumstances which favored the idea that he had been slain, and which he
+himself was willing should be received as a belief; the fortune that led
+him to America, where he wished to found a new race wholly disconnected
+with the past; and this manuscript he sealed up, with directions that it
+should not be opened till two hundred years after his death, by which
+time, as it was probable to conjecture, it would matter little to any
+mortal whether the story was told or not. A whole generation has passed
+since the time when the paper was at last unsealed and read, so long it
+had no operation; yet now, at last, here comes the American, to disturb
+the succession of an ancient family!"
+
+"There is something very strange in all this," said Middleton.
+
+And indeed there was something stranger in his view of the matter than he
+had yet communicated to the Master. For, taking into consideration the
+relation in which he found himself with the present recognized
+representative of the family, the thought struck him that his coming
+hither had dug up, as it were, a buried secret that immediately assumed
+life and activity the moment that it was above ground again. For seven
+generations the family had vegetated in the quietude of English country
+gentility, doing nothing to make itself known, passing from the cradle to
+the tomb amid the same old woods that had waved over it before his
+ancestor had impressed the bloody footstep; and yet the instant that he
+came back, an influence seemed to be at work that was likely to renew the
+old history of the family. He questioned with himself whether it were
+not better to leave all as it was; to withdraw himself into the secrecy
+from which he had but half emerged, and leave the family to keep on, to
+the end of time perhaps, in its rusty innocence, rather than to interfere
+with his wild American character to disturb it. The smell of that dark
+crime--that brotherly hatred and attempted murder--seemed to breathe out
+of the ground as he dug it up. Was it not better that it should remain
+forever buried, for what to him was this old English title--what this
+estate, so far from his own native land, located amidst feelings and
+manners which would never be his own? It was late, to be sure--yet not
+too late for him to turn back: the vibration, the fear, which his
+footsteps had caused, would subside into peace! Meditating in this way,
+he took a hasty leave of the kind old Master, promising to see him again
+at an early opportunity. By chance, or however it was, his footsteps
+turned to the woods of ------ Chace, and there he wandered through its
+glades, deep in thought, yet always with a strange sense that he was
+treading on the soil where his ancestors had trodden, and where he
+himself had best right of all men to be. It was just in this state of
+feeling that he found his course arrested by a hand upon his shoulder.
+
+"What business have you here?" was the question sounded in his ear; and,
+starting, he found himself in the grasp, as his blood tingled to know, of
+a gentleman in a shooting-dress, who looked at him with a wrathful brow.
+"Are you a poacher, or what?"
+
+Be the case what it might, Middleton's blood boiled at the grasp of that
+hand, as it never before had done in the coarse of his impulsive life.
+He shook himself free, and stood fiercely before his antagonist,
+confronting him, with his uplifted stick, while the other, likewise,
+appeared to be shaken by a strange wrath.
+
+"Fellow," muttered he--"Yankee blackguard!--imposter--take yourself off
+these grounds. Quick, or it will be the worse for you!"
+
+Middleton restrained himself. "Mr. Eldredge," said he, "for I believe I
+speak to the man who calls himself owner of this land on which we stand,
+--Mr. Eldredge, you are acting under a strange misapprehension of my
+character. I have come hither with no sinister purpose, and am entitled,
+at the hands of a gentleman, to the consideration of an honorable
+antagonist, even if you deem me one at all. And perhaps, if you think
+upon the blue chamber and the ebony cabinet, and the secret connected.
+with it,"--
+
+"Villain, no more!" said Eldredge; and utterly mad with rage, he
+presented his gun at Middleton; but even at the moment of doing so, he
+partly restrained himself, so far as, instead of shooting him, to raise
+the butt of his gun, and strike a blow at him. It came down heavily on
+Middleton's shoulder, though aimed at his head; and the blow was terribly
+avenged, even by itself, for the jar caused the hammer to come down; the
+gun went off, sending the bullet downwards through the heart of the
+unfortunate man, who fell dead upon the ground. Eldredge [Evidently a
+slip of the pen; Middleton being intended.] stood stupefied, looking at
+the catastrophe which had so suddenly occurred.
+
+May 3d, Monday.--So here was the secret suddenly made safe in this so
+terrible way; its keepers reduced from two parties to one interest; the
+other who alone knew of this age-long mystery and trouble now carrying it
+into eternity, where a long line of those who partook of the knowledge,
+in each successive generation, might now be waiting to inquire of him how
+he had held his trust. He had kept it well, there was no doubt of it;
+for there he lay dead upon the ground, having betrayed it to no one,
+though by a method which none could have foreseen, the whole had come
+into the possession of him who had brought hither but half of it.
+Middleton looked down in horror upon the form that had just been so full
+of life and wrathful vigor--and now lay so quietly. Being wholly
+unconscious of any purpose to bring about the catastrophe, it had not at
+first struck him that his own position was in any manner affected by the
+violent death, under such circumstances, of the unfortunate man. But now
+it suddenly occurred to him, that there had been a train of incidents all
+calculated to make him the object of suspicion; and he felt that he could
+not, under the English administration of law, be suffered to go at large
+without rendering a strict account of himself and his relations with the
+deceased. He might, indeed, fly; he might still remain in the vicinity,
+and possibly escape notice. But was not the risk too great? Was it just
+even to be aware of this event, and not relate fully the manner of it,
+lest a suspicion of blood-guiltiness should rest upon some innocent head?
+But while he was thus cogitating, he heard footsteps approaching along
+the wood-path; and half-impulsively, half on purpose, he stept aside into
+the shrubbery, but still where he could see the dead body, and what
+passed near it.
+
+The footsteps came on, and at the turning of the path, just where
+Middleton had met Eldredge, the new-comer appeared in sight. It was
+Hoper, in his usual dress of velveteen, looking now seedy,
+poverty-stricken, and altogether in ill-case, trudging moodily along,
+with his hat pulled over his brows, so that he did not see the ghastly
+object before him till his foot absolutely trod upon the dead man's hand.
+Being thus made aware of the proximity of the corpse, he started back a
+little, yet evincing such small emotion as did credit to his English
+reserve; then uttering a low exclamation,--cautiously low, indeed,--he
+stood looking at the corpse a moment or two, apparently in deep
+meditation. He then drew near, bent down, and without evincing any
+horror at the touch of death in this horrid shape, he opened the dead
+man's vest, inspected the wound, satisfied himself that life was extinct,
+and then nodded his head and smiled gravely. He next proceeded to
+examine seriatim the dead man's pockets, turning each of them inside out
+and taking the contents, where they appeared adapted to his needs: for
+instance, a silken purse, through the interstices of which some gold was
+visible; a watch, which however had been injured by the explosion, and
+had stopt just at the moment--twenty-one minutes past five--when the
+catastrophe took place. Hoper ascertained, by putting the watch to his
+ear, that this was the case; then pocketing it, he continued his
+researches. He likewise secured a note-book, on examining which he found
+several bank-notes, and some other papers. And having done this, the
+thief stood considering what to do next; nothing better occurring to him,
+he thrust the pockets back, gave the corpse as nearly as he could the
+same appearance that it had worn before he found it, and hastened away,
+leaving the horror there on the wood-path.
+
+He had been gone only a few minutes when another step, a light woman's
+step, [was heard] coming along the pathway, and Alice appeared, having on
+her usual white mantle, straying along with that fearlessness which
+characterized her so strangely, and made her seem like one of the
+denizens of nature. She was singing in a low tone some one of those airs
+which have become so popular in England, as negro melodies; when
+suddenly, looking before her, she saw the blood-stained body on the
+grass, the face looking ghastly upward. Alice pressed her hand upon her
+heart; it was not her habit to scream, not the habit of that strong,
+wild, self-dependent nature; and the exclamation which broke from her was
+not for help, but the voice of her heart crying out to herself. For an
+instant she hesitated, as [if] not knowing what to do; then approached,
+and with her white, maiden hand felt the brow of the dead man,
+tremblingly, but yet firm, and satisfied herself that life had wholly
+departed. She pressed her hand, that had just touched the dead man's, on
+her forehead, and gave a moment to thought.
+
+What her decision might have been, we cannot say, for while she stood in
+this attitude, Middleton stept from his seclusion, and at the noise of
+his approach she turned suddenly round, looking more frightened and
+agitated than at the moment when she had first seen the dead body. She
+faced Middleton, however, and looked him quietly in the eye. "You see
+this!" said she, gazing fixedly at him. "It is not at this moment that
+you first discover it."
+
+"No," said Middleton, frankly. "It is not. I was present at the
+catastrophe. In one sense, indeed, I was the cause of it; but, Alice, I
+need not tell you that I am no murderer."
+
+"A murderer?--no," said Alice, still looking at him with the same fixed
+gaze. "But you and this man were at deadly variance. He would have
+rejoiced at any chance that would have laid you cold and bloody on the
+earth, as he is now; nay, he would most eagerly have seized on any
+fair-looking pretext that would have given him a chance to stretch you
+there. The world will scarcely believe, when it knows all about your
+relations with him, that his blood is not on your hand. Indeed," said
+she, with a strange smile, "I see some of it there now!"
+
+And, in very truth, so there was; a broad blood-stain that had dried on
+Middleton's hand. He shuddered at it, but essayed vainly to rub it off.
+
+"You see," said she. "It was foreordained that you should shed this
+man's blood; foreordained that, by digging into that old pit of
+pestilence, you should set the contagion loose again. You should have
+left it buried forever. But now what do you mean to do?"
+
+"To proclaim this catastrophe," replied Middleton. "It is the only
+honest and manly way. What else can I do?"
+
+"You can and ought to leave him on the wood-path, where he has fallen,"
+said Alice, "and go yourself to take advantage of the state of things
+which Providence has brought about. Enter the old house, the hereditary
+house, where--now, at least--you alone have a right to tread. Now is the
+hour. All is within your grasp. Let the wrong of three hundred years be
+righted, and come back thus to your own, to these hereditary fields, this
+quiet, long-descended home; to title, to honor."
+
+Yet as the wild maiden spoke thus, there was a sort of mockery in her
+eyes; on her brow; gleaming through all her face, as if she scorned what
+she thus pressed upon him, the spoils of the dead man who lay at their
+feet. Middleton, with his susceptibility, could not [but] be sensible of
+a wild and strange charm, as well as horror, in the situation; it seemed
+such a wonder that here, in formal, orderly, well-governed England, so
+wild a scene as this should have occurred; that they too [two?] should
+stand here, deciding on the descent of an estate, and the inheritance of
+a title, holding a court of their own.
+
+"Come, then," said he, at length. "Let us leave this poor fallen
+antagonist in his blood, and go whither you will lead me. I will judge
+for myself. At all events, I will not leave my hereditary home without
+knowing what my power is."
+
+"Come," responded Alice; and she turned back; but then returned and threw
+a handkerchief over the dead man's face, which while they spoke had
+assumed that quiet, ecstatic expression of joy which often is observed to
+overspread the faces of those who die of gunshot wounds, however fierce
+the passion in which their spirits took their flight. With this strange,
+grand, awful joy did the dead man gaze upward into the very eyes and
+hearts, as it were, of the two that now bent over him. They looked at
+one another.
+
+"Whence comes this expression?" said Middleton, thoughtfully. "Alice,
+methinks he is reconciled to us now; and that we are members of one
+reconciled family, all of whom are in heaven but me."
+
+Tuesday, May 4th.--"How strange is this whole situation between you and
+me," said Middleton, as they went up the winding pathway that led towards
+the house. "Shall I ever understand it? Do you mean ever to explain it
+to me? That I should find you here with that old man [The allusion here
+is apparently to the old man who proclaims himself Alice's father, in the
+portion dated April 14th. He figures hereafter as the old Hospitaller,
+Hammond. The reader must not take this present passage as referring to
+the death of Eldredge, which has just taken place in he preceding
+section. The author is now beginning to elaborate the relation of
+Middleton and Alice. As will be seen, farther on, the death of Eldredge
+is ignored and abandoned; Eldredge is revived, and the story proceeds in
+another way.--G. P. L.], so mysterious, apparently so poor, yet so
+powerful! What [is] his relation to you?"
+
+"A close one," replied Alice sadly. "He was my father!"
+
+"Your father!" repeated Middleton, starting back. "It does but heighten
+the wonder! Your father! And yet, by all the tokens that birth and
+breeding, and habits of thought and native character can show, you are my
+countrywoman. That wild, free spirit was never born in the breast of an
+Englishwoman; that slight frame, that slender beauty, that frail
+envelopment of a quick, piercing, yet stubborn and patient spirit,--are
+those the properties of an English maiden?"
+
+"Perhaps not," replied Alice quietly. "I am your countrywoman. My
+father was an American, and one of whom you have heard--and no good,
+alas!--for many a year."
+
+"And who then was he?" asked Middleton.
+
+"I know not whether you will hate me for telling you," replied Alice,
+looking him sadly though firmly in the face. "There was a man--long
+years since, in your childhood--whose plotting brain proved the ruin of
+himself and many another; a man whose great designs made him a sort of
+potentate, whose schemes became of national importance, and produced
+results even upon the history of the country in which he acted. That man
+was my father; a man who sought to do great things, and, like many who
+have had similar aims, disregarded many small rights, strode over them,
+on his way to effect a gigantic purpose. Among other men, your father
+was trampled under foot, ruined, done to death, even, by the effects of
+his ambition."
+
+"How is it possible!" exclaimed Middleton. "Was it Wentworth?"
+
+"Even so," said Alice, still with the same sad calmness and not
+withdrawing her steady eyes from his face. "After his ruin; after the
+catastrophe that overwhelmed him and hundreds more, he took to flight;
+guilty, perhaps, but guilty as a fallen conqueror is; guilty to such an
+extent that he ceased to be a cheat, as a conqueror ceases to be a
+murderer. He came to England. My father had an original nobility of
+nature; and his life had not been such as to debase it, but rather such
+as to cherish and heighten that self-esteem which at least keeps the
+possessor of it from many meaner vices. He took nothing with him;
+nothing beyond the bare means of flight, with the world before him,
+although thousands of gold would not have been missed out of the
+scattered fragments of ruin that lay around him. He found his way
+hither, led, as you were, by a desire to reconnect himself with the place
+whence his family had originated; for he, too, was of a race which had
+something to do with the ancient story which has now been brought to a
+close. Arrived here, there were circumstances that chanced to make his
+talents and habits of business available to this Mr. Eldredge, a man
+ignorant and indolent, unknowing how to make the best of the property
+that was in his hands. By degrees, he took the estate into his
+management, acquiring necessarily a preponderating influence over such a
+man."
+
+"And you," said Middleton. "Have you been all along in England? For you
+must have been little more than an infant at the time."
+
+"A mere infant," said Alice, "and I remained in our own country under the
+care of a relative who left me much to my own keeping; much to the
+influences of that wild culture which the freedom of our country gives to
+its youth. It is only two years that I have been in England."
+
+"This, then," said Middleton thoughtfully, "accounts for much that has
+seemed so strange in the events through which we have passed; for the
+knowledge of my identity and my half-defined purpose which has always
+glided before me, and thrown so many strange shapes of difficulty in my
+path. But whence,--whence came that malevolence which your father's
+conduct has so unmistakably shown? I had done him no injury, though I
+had suffered much."
+
+"I have often thought," replied Alice, "that my father, though retaining
+a preternatural strength and acuteness of intellect, was really not
+altogether sane. And, besides, he had made it his business to keep this
+estate, and all the complicated advantages of the representation of this
+old family, secure to the person who was deemed to have inherited them.
+A succession of ages and generations might be supposed to have blotted
+out your claims from existence; for it is not just that there should be
+no term of time which can make security for lack of fact and a few
+formalities. At all events, he had satisfied himself that his duty was
+to act as he has done."
+
+"Be it so! I do not seek to throw blame on him," said Middleton.
+"Besides, Alice, he was your father!"
+
+"Yes," said she, sadly smiling; "let him [have] what protection that
+thought may give him, even though I lose what he may gain. And now here
+we are at the house. At last, come in! It is your own; there is none
+that can longer forbid you!"
+
+They entered the door of the old mansion, now a farm-house, and there
+were its old hall, its old chambers, all before them. They ascended the
+staircase, and stood on the landing-place above; while Middleton had
+again that feeling that had so often made him dizzy,--that sense of being
+in one dream and recognizing the scenery and events of a former dream.
+So overpowering was this feeling, that he laid his hand on the slender
+arm of Alice, to steady himself; and she comprehended the emotion that
+agitated him, and looked into his eyes with a tender sympathy, which she
+had never before permitted to be visible,--perhaps never before felt. He
+steadied himself and followed her till they had entered an ancient
+chamber, but one that was finished with all the comfortable luxury
+customary to be seen in English homes.
+
+"Whither have you led me now?" inquired Middleton.
+
+"Look round," said Alice. "Is there nothing here that you ought to
+recognize?--nothing that you kept the memory of, long ago?"
+
+He looked around the room again and again, and at last, in a somewhat
+shadowy corner, he espied an old cabinet made of ebony and inlaid with
+pearl; one of those tall, stately, and elaborate pieces of furniture that
+are rather articles of architecture than upholstery; and on which a
+higher skill, feeling, and genius than now is ever employed on such
+things, was expended. Alice drew near the stately cabinet and threw wide
+the doors, which, like the portals of a palace, stood between two
+pillars; it all seemed to be unlocked, showing within some beautiful old
+pictures in the panel of the doors, and a mirror, that opened a long
+succession of mimic halls, reflection upon reflection, extending to an
+interminable nowhere.
+
+"And what is this?" said Middleton,--"a cabinet? Why do you draw my
+attention so strongly to it?"
+
+"Look at it well," said she. "Do you recognize nothing there? Have you
+forgotten your description? The stately palace with its architecture,
+each pillar with its architecture, those pilasters, that frieze; you
+ought to know them all. Somewhat less than you imagined in size,
+perhaps; a fairy reality, inches for yards; that is the only difference.
+And you have the key?"
+
+And there then was that palace, to which tradition, so false at once and
+true, had given such magnitude and magnificence in the traditions of the
+Middleton family, around their shifting fireside in America. Looming
+afar through the mists of time, the little fact had become a gigantic
+vision. Yes, here it was in miniature, all that he had dreamed of; a
+palace of four feet high!
+
+"You have the key of this palace," said Alice; "it has waited--that is,
+its secret and precious chamber has, for you to open it, these three
+hundred years. Do you know how to find that secret chamber?"
+
+Middleton, still in that dreamy mood, threw open an inner door of the
+cabinet, and applying the old-fashioned key at his watch-chain to a hole
+in the mimic pavement within, pressed one of the mosaics, and immediately
+the whole floor of the apartment sank, and revealed a receptacle withal.
+Alice had come forward eagerly, and they both looked into the
+hiding-place, expecting what should be there. It was empty! They looked
+into each other's faces with blank astonishment. Everything had been so
+strangely true, and so strangely false, up to this moment, that they
+could not comprehend this failure at the last moment. It was the
+strangest, saddest jest! It brought Middleton up with such a sudden
+revulsion that he grew dizzy, and the room swam round him and the cabinet
+dazzled before his eyes. It had been magnified to a palace; it had
+dwindled down to Liliputian size; and yet, up till now, it had seemed to
+contain in its diminutiveness all the riches which he had attributed to
+its magnitude. This last moment had utterly subverted it; the whole
+great structure seemed to vanish.
+
+"See; here are the dust and ashes of it," observed Alice, taking
+something that was indeed only a pinch of dust out of the secret
+compartment. "There is nothing else."
+
+
+II.
+
+May 5th, Wednesday.--The father of these two sons, an aged man at the
+time, took much to heart their enmity; and after the catastrophe, he
+never held up his head again. He was not told that his son had perished,
+though such was the belief of the family; but imbibed the opinion that he
+had left his home and native land to become a wanderer on the face of the
+earth, and that some time or other he might return. In this idea he
+spent the remainder of his days; in this idea he died. It may be that
+the influence of this idea might be traced in the way in which he spent
+some of the latter years of his life, and a portion of the wealth which
+had become of little value in his eyes, since it had caused dissension
+and bloodshed between the sons of one household. It was a common mode of
+charity in those days--a common thing for rich men to do--to found an
+almshouse or a hospital, and endow it, for the support of a certain
+number of old and destitute men or women, generally such as had some
+claim of blood upon the founder, or at least were natives of the parish,
+the district, the county, where he dwelt. The Eldredge Hospital was
+founded for the benefit of twelve old men, who should have been wanderers
+upon the face of the earth; men, they should be, of some education, but
+defeated and hopeless, cast off by the world for misfortune, but not for
+crime. And this charity had subsisted, on terms varying little or
+nothing from the original ones, from that day to this; and, at this very
+time, twelve old men were not wanting, of various countries, of various
+fortunes, but all ending finally in ruin, who had centred here, to live
+on the poor pittance that had been assigned to them, three hundred years
+ago. What a series of chronicles it would have been if each of the
+beneficiaries of this charity, since its foundation, had left a record of
+the events which finally led him hither. Middleton often, as he talked
+with these old men, regretted that he himself had no turn for authorship,
+so rich a volume might he have compiled from the experience, sometimes
+sunny and triumphant, though always ending in shadow, which he gathered
+here. They were glad to talk to him, and would have been glad and
+grateful for any auditor, as they sat on one or another of the stone
+benches, in the sunshine of the garden; or at evening, around the great
+fireside, or within the chimney-corner, with their pipes and ale.
+
+There was one old man who attracted much of his attention, by the
+venerableness of his aspect; by something dignified, almost haughty and
+commanding, in his air. Whatever might have been the intentions and
+expectations of the founder, it certainly had happened in these latter
+days that there was a difficulty in finding persons of education, of good
+manners, of evident respectability, to put into the places made vacant by
+deaths of members; whether that the paths of life are surer now than they
+used to be, and that men so arrange their lives as not to be left, in any
+event, quite without resources as they draw near its close; at any rate,
+there was a little tincture of the vagabond running through these twelve
+quasi gentlemen,--through several of them, at least. But this old man
+could not well be mistaken; in his manners, in his tones, in all his
+natural language and deportment, there was evidence that he had been more
+than respectable; and, viewing him, Middleton could not help wondering
+what statesman had suddenly vanished out of public life and taken refuge
+here, for his head was of the statesman-class, and his demeanor that of
+one who had exercised influence over large numbers of men. He sometimes
+endeavored to set on foot a familiar relation with this old man, but
+there was even a sternness in the manner in which he repelled these
+advances, that gave little encouragement for their renewal. Nor did it
+seem that his companions of the Hospital were more in his confidence than
+Middleton himself. They regarded him with a kind of awe, a shyness, and
+in most cases with a certain dislike, which denoted an imperfect
+understanding of him. To say the truth, there was not generally much
+love lost between any of the members of this family; they had met with
+too much disappointment in the world to take kindly, now, to one another
+or to anything or anybody. I rather suspect that they really had more
+pleasure in burying one another, when the time came, than in any other
+office of mutual kindness and brotherly love which it was their part to
+do; not out of hardness of heart, but merely from soured temper, and
+because, when people have met disappointment and have settled down into
+final unhappiness, with no more gush and spring of good spirits, there is
+nothing any more to create amiability out of.
+
+So the old people were unamiable and cross to one another, and unamiable
+and cross to old Hammond, yet always with a certain respect; and the
+result seemed to be such as treated the old man well enough. And thus he
+moved about among them, a mystery; the histories of the others, in the
+general outline, were well enough known, and perhaps not very uncommon;
+this old man's history was known to none, except, of course, to the
+trustees of the charity, and to the Master of the Hospital, to whom it
+had necessarily been revealed, before the beneficiary could be admitted
+as an inmate. It was judged, by the deportment of the Master, that the
+old man had once held some eminent position in society; for, though bound
+to treat them all as gentlemen, he was thought to show an especial and
+solemn courtesy to Hammond.
+
+Yet by the attraction which two strong and cultivated minds inevitably
+have for one another, there did spring up an acquaintanceship, an
+intercourse, between Middleton and this old man, which was followed up in
+many a conversation which they held together on all subjects that were
+supplied by the news of the day, or the history of the past. Middleton
+used to make the newspaper the opening for much discussion; and it seemed
+to him that the talk of his companion had much of the character of that
+of a retired statesman, on matters which, perhaps, he would look at all
+the more wisely, because it was impossible he could ever more have a
+personal agency in them. Their discussions sometimes turned upon the
+affairs of his own country, and its relations with the rest of the world,
+especially with England; and Middleton could not help being struck with
+the accuracy of the old man's knowledge respecting that country, which so
+few Englishmen know anything about; his shrewd appreciation of the
+American character,--shrewd and caustic, yet not without a good degree of
+justice; the sagacity of his remarks on the past, and prophecies of what
+was likely to happen,--prophecies which, in one instance, were singularly
+verified, in regard to a complexity which was then arresting the
+attention of both countries.
+
+"You must have been in the United States," said he, one day.
+
+"Certainly; my remarks imply personal knowledge," was the reply. "But it
+was before the days of steam."
+
+"And not, I should imagine, for a brief visit," said Middleton. "I only
+wish the administration of this government had the benefit to-day of your
+knowledge of my countrymen. It might be better for both of these kindred
+nations."
+
+"Not a whit," said the old man. "England will never understand America;
+for England never does understand a foreign country; and whatever you may
+say about kindred, America is as much a foreign country as France itself.
+These two hundred years of a different climate and circumstances--of life
+on a broad continent instead of in an island, to say nothing of the
+endless intermixture of nationalities in every part of the United States,
+except New England--have created a new and decidedly original type of
+national character. It is as well for both parties that they should not
+aim at any very intimate connection. It will never do."
+
+"I should be very sorry to think so," said Middleton; "they are at all
+events two noble breeds of men, and ought to appreciate one another. And
+America has the breadth of idea to do this for England, whether
+reciprocated or not."
+
+Thursday, May 6th.--Thus Middleton was established in a singular way
+among these old men, in one of the surroundings most unlike anything in
+his own country. So old it was that it seemed to him the freshest and
+newest thing that he had ever met with. The residence was made
+infinitely the more interesting to him by the sense that he was near the
+place--as all the indications warned him--which he sought, whither his
+dreams had tended from his childhood; that he could wander each day round
+the park within which were the old gables of what he believed was his
+hereditary home. He had never known anything like the dreamy enjoyment
+of these days; so quiet, such a contrast to the turbulent life from which
+he had escaped across the sea. And here he set himself, still with that
+sense of shadowiness in what he saw and in what he did, in making all the
+researches possible to him, about the neighborhood; visiting every little
+church that raised its square battlemented Norman tower of gray stone,
+for several miles round about; making himself acquainted with each little
+village and hamlet that surrounded these churches, clustering about the
+graves of those who had dwelt in the same cottages aforetime. He visited
+all the towns within a dozen miles; and probably there were few of the
+inhabitants who had so good an acquaintance with the neighborhood as this
+native American attained within a few weeks after his coming thither.
+
+In course of these excursions he had several times met with a young
+woman,--a young lady, one might term her, but in fact he was in some
+doubt what rank she might hold, in England,--who happened to be wandering
+about the country with a singular freedom. She was always alone, always
+on foot; he would see her sketching some picturesque old church, some
+ivied ruin, some fine drooping elm. She was a slight figure, much more
+so than Englishwomen generally are; and, though healthy of aspect, had
+not the ruddy complexion, which he was irreverently inclined to call the
+coarse tint, that is believed the great charm of English beauty. There
+was a freedom in her step and whole little womanhood, an elasticity, an
+irregularity, so to speak, that made her memorable from first sight; and
+when he had encountered her three or four times, he felt in a certain way
+acquainted with her. She was very simply dressed, and quite as simple in
+her deportment; there had been one or two occasions, when they had both
+smiled at the same thing; soon afterwards a little conversation had taken
+place between them; and thus, without any introduction, and in a way that
+somewhat puzzled Middleton himself, they had become acquainted. It was
+so unusual that a young English girl should be wandering about the
+country entirely alone--so much less usual that she should speak to a
+stranger--that Middleton scarcely knew how to account for it, but
+meanwhile accepted the fact readily and willingly, for in truth he found
+this mysterious personage a very likely and entertaining companion.
+There was a strange quality of boldness in her remarks, almost of
+brusqueness, that he might have expected to find in a young countrywoman
+of his own, if bred up among the strong-minded, but was astonished to
+find in a young Englishwoman. Somehow or other she made him think more
+of home than any other person or thing he met with; and he could not but
+feel that she was in strange contrast with everything about her. She was
+no beauty; very piquant; very pleasing; in some points of view and at
+some moments pretty; always good-humored, but somewhat too self-possessed
+for Middleton's taste. It struck him that she had talked with him as if
+she had some knowledge of him and of the purposes with which he was
+there; not that this was expressed, but only implied by the fact that, on
+looking back to what had passed, he found many strange coincidences in
+what she had said with what he was thinking about.
+
+He perplexed himself much with thinking whence this young woman had come,
+where she belonged, and what might be her history; when, the next day, he
+again saw her, not this time rambling on foot, but seated in an open
+barouche with a young lady. Middleton lifted his hat to her, and she
+nodded and smiled to him; and it appeared to Middleton that a
+conversation ensued about him with the young lady, her companion. Now,
+what still more interested him was the fact that, on the panel of the
+barouche were the arms of the family now in possession of the estate of
+Smithell's; so that the young lady, his new acquaintance, or the young
+lady, her seeming friend, one or the other, was the sister of the present
+owner of that estate. He was inclined to think that his acquaintance
+could not be the Miss Eldredge, of whose beauty he had heard many tales
+among the people of the neighborhood. The other young lady, a tall,
+reserved, fair-haired maiden, answered the description considerably
+better. He concluded, therefore, that his acquaintance must be a
+visitor, perhaps a dependent and companion; though the freedom of her
+thought, action, and way of life seemed hardly consistent with this idea.
+However, this slight incident served to give him a sort of connection
+with the family, and he could but hope that some further chance would
+introduce him within what he fondly called his hereditary walls. He had
+come to think of this as a dreamland; and it seemed even more a dreamland
+now than before it rendered itself into actual substance, an old house of
+stone and timber standing within its park, shaded about with its
+ancestral trees.
+
+But thus, at all events, he was getting himself a little wrought into the
+net-work of human life around him, secluded as his position had at first
+seemed to be, in the farm-house where he had taken up his lodgings. For,
+there was the Hospital and its old inhabitants, in whose monotonous
+existence he soon came to pass for something, with his liveliness of
+mind, his experience, his good sense, his patience as a listener, his
+comparative youth even--his power of adapting himself to these stiff and
+crusty characters, a power learned among other things in his political
+life, where he had acquired something of the faculty (good or bad as
+might be) of making himself all things to all men. But though he amused
+himself with them all, there was in truth but one man among them in whom
+he really felt much interest; and that one, we need hardly say, was
+Hammond. It was not often that he found the old gentleman in a
+conversible mood; always courteous, indeed, but generally cool and
+reserved; often engaged in his one room, to which Middleton had never yet
+been admitted, though he had more than once sent in his name, when
+Hammond was not apparent upon the bench which, by common consent of the
+Hospital, was appropriated to him.
+
+One day, however, notwithstanding that the old gentleman was confined to
+his room by indisposition, he ventured to inquire at the door, and,
+considerably to his surprise, was admitted. He found Hammond in his
+easy-chair, at a table, with writing-materials before him: and as
+Middleton entered, the old gentleman looked at him with a stern, fixed
+regard, which, however, did not seem to imply any particular displeasure
+towards this visitor, but rather a severe way of regarding mankind in
+general. Middleton looked curiously around the small apartment, to see
+what modification the character of the man had had upon the customary
+furniture of the Hospital, and how much of individuality he had given to
+that general type. There was a shelf of books, and a row of them on the
+mantel-piece; works of political economy, they appeared to be, statistics
+and things of that sort; very dry reading, with which, however,
+Middleton's experience as a politician had made him acquainted. Besides
+there were a few works on local antiquities, a county-history borrowed
+from the Master's library, in which Hammond appeared to have been lately
+reading.
+
+"They are delightful reading," observed Middleton, "these old
+county-histories, with their great folio volumes and their minute account
+of the affairs of families and the genealogies, and descents of estates,
+bestowing as much blessed space on a few hundred acres as other
+historians give to a principality. I fear that in my own country we
+shall never have anything of this kind. Our space is so vast that we
+shall never come to know and love it, inch by inch, as the English
+antiquarians do the tracts of country with which they deal; and besides,
+our land is always likely to lack the interest that belongs to English
+estates; for where land changes its ownership every few years, it does
+not become imbued with the personalities of the people who live on it.
+It is but so much grass; so much dirt, where a succession of people have
+dwelt too little to make it really their own. But I have found a
+pleasure that I had no conception of before, in reading some of the
+English local histories."
+
+"It is not a usual course of reading for a transitory visitor," said
+Hammond. "What could induce you to undertake it?"
+
+"Simply the wish, so common and natural with Americans," said Middleton--
+"the wish to find out something about my kindred--the local origin of my
+own family."
+
+"You do not show your wisdom in this," said his visitor. "America had
+better recognize the fact that it has nothing to do with England, and
+look upon itself as other nations and people do, as existing on its own
+hook. I never heard of any people looking back to the country of their
+remote origin in the way the Anglo-Americans do. For instance, England
+is made up of many alien races, German, Danish, Norman, and what not: it
+has received large, accessions of population at a later date than the
+settlement of the United States. Yet these families melt into the great
+homogeneous mass of Englishmen, and look back no more to any other
+country. There are in this vicinity many descendants of the French
+Huguenots; but they care no more for France than for Timbuctoo, reckoning
+themselves only Englishmen, as if they were descendants of the aboriginal
+Britons. Let it be so with you."
+
+"So it might be," replied Middleton, "only that our relations with
+England remain far more numerous than our disconnections, through the
+bonds of history, of literature, of all that makes up the memories, and
+much that makes up the present interests of a people. And therefore I
+must still continue to pore over these old folios, and hunt around these
+precincts, spending thus the little idle time I am likely to have in a
+busy life. Possibly finding little to my purpose; but that is quite a
+secondary consideration."
+
+"If you choose to tell me precisely what your aims are," said Hammond,
+"it is possible I might give you some little assistance."
+
+May 7th, Friday.--Middleton was in fact more than half ashamed of the
+dreams which he had cherished before coming to England, and which since,
+at times, had been very potent with him, assuming as strong a tinge of
+reality as those [scenes?] into which he had strayed. He could not
+prevail with himself to disclose fully to this severe, and, as he
+thought, cynical old man how strong within him was the sentiment that
+impelled him to connect himself with the old life of England, to join on
+the broken thread of ancestry and descent, and feel every link well
+established. But it seemed to him that he ought not to lose this fair
+opportunity of gaining some light on the abstruse field of his
+researches; and he therefore explained to Hammond that he had reason,
+from old family traditions, to believe that he brought with him a
+fragment of a history that, if followed out, might lead to curious
+results. He told him, in a tone half serious, what he had heard
+respecting the quarrel of the two brothers, and the Bloody Footstep, the
+impress of which was said to remain, as a lasting memorial of the tragic
+termination of that enmity. At this point, Hammond interrupted him. He
+had indeed, at various points of the narrative, nodded and smiled
+mysteriously, as if looking into his mind and seeing something there
+analogous to what he was listening to. He now spoke.
+
+"This is curious," said he. "Did you know that there is a manor-house in
+this neighborhood, the family of which prides itself on having such a
+blood-stained threshold as you have now described?"
+
+"No, indeed!" exclaimed Middleton, greatly interested. "Where?"
+
+"It is the old manor-house of Smithell's," replied Hammond, "one of those
+old wood and timber [plaster?] mansions, which are among the most ancient
+specimens of domestic architecture in England. The house has now passed
+into the female line, and by marriage has been for two or three
+generations in possession of another family. But the blood of the old
+inheritors is still in the family. The house itself, or portions of it,
+are thought to date back quite as far as the Conquest."
+
+"Smithell's?" said Middleton. "Why, I have seen that old house from a
+distance, and have felt no little interest in its antique aspect. And it
+has a Bloody Footstep! Would it be possible for a stranger to get an
+opportunity to inspect it?"
+
+"Unquestionably," said Hammond; "nothing easier. It is but a moderate
+distance from here, and if you can moderate your young footsteps, and
+your American quick walk, to an old man's pace, I would go there with you
+some day. In this languor and ennui of my life, I spend some time in
+local antiquarianism, and perhaps I might assist you in tracing out how
+far these traditions of yours may have any connection with reality. It
+would be curious, would it not, if you had come, after two hundred years,
+to piece out a story which may have been as much a mystery in England as
+there in America?"
+
+An engagement was made for a walk to Smithell's the ensuing day; and
+meanwhile Middleton entered more fully into what he had received from
+family traditions and what he had thought out for himself on the matter
+in question.
+
+"Are you aware," asked Hammond, "that there was formerly a title in this
+family, now in abeyance, and which the heirs have at various times
+claimed, and are at this moment claiming? Do you know, too,--but you can
+scarcely know it,--that it has been surmised by some that there is an
+insecurity in the title to the estate, and has always been; so that the
+possessors have lived in some apprehension, from time immemorial, that
+another heir would appear and take from them the fair inheritance? It is
+a singular coincidence."
+
+"Very strange," exclaimed Middleton. "No; I was not aware of it; and, to
+say the truth, I should not altogether like to come forward in the light
+of a claimant. But this is a dream, surely!"
+
+"I assure you, sir," continued the old man, "that you come here in a very
+critical moment; and singularly enough there is a perplexity, a
+difficulty, that has endured for as long a time as when your ancestors
+emigrated, that is still rampant within the bowels, as I may say, of the
+family. Of course, it is too like a romance that you should be able to
+establish any such claim as would have a valid influence on this matter;
+but still, being here on the spot, it may be worth while, if merely as a
+matter of amusement, to make some researches into this matter."
+
+"Surely I will," said Middleton, with a smile, which concealed more
+earnestness than he liked to show; "as to the title, a Republican cannot
+be supposed to think twice about such a bagatelle. The estate!--that
+might be a more serious consideration."
+
+They continued to talk on the subject; and Middleton learned that the
+present possessor of the estates was a gentleman nowise distinguished
+from hundreds of other English gentlemen; a country squire modified in
+accordance with the type of to-day, a frank, free, friendly sort of a
+person enough, who had travelled on the Continent, who employed himself
+much in field-sports, who was unmarried, and had a sister who was
+reckoned among the beauties of the county.
+
+While the conversation was thus going on, to Middleton's astonishment
+there came a knock at the door of the room, and, without waiting for a
+response, it was opened, and there appeared at it the same young woman
+whom he had already met. She came in with perfect freedom and
+familiarity, and was received quietly by the old gentleman; who, however,
+by his manner towards Middleton, indicated that he was now to take his
+leave. He did so, after settling the hour at which the excursion of the
+next day was to take place. This arranged, he departed, with much to
+think of, and a light glimmering through the confused labyrinth of
+thoughts which had been unilluminated hitherto.
+
+To say the truth, he questioned within himself whether it were not better
+to get as quickly as he could out of the vicinity; and, at any rate, not
+to put anything of earnest in what had hitherto been nothing more than a
+romance to him. There was something very dark and sinister in the events
+of family history, which now assumed a reality that they had never before
+worn; so much tragedy, so much hatred, had been thrown into that deep
+pit, and buried under the accumulated debris, the fallen leaves, the rust
+and dust of more than two centuries, that it seemed not worth while to
+dig it up; for perhaps the deadly influences, which it had taken so much
+time to hide, might still be lurking there, and become potent if he now
+uncovered them. There was something that startled him, in the strange,
+wild light, which gleamed from the old man's eyes, as he threw out the
+suggestions which had opened this prospect to him. What right had he--an
+American, Republican, disconnected with this country so long, alien from
+its habits of thought and life, reverencing none of the things which
+Englishmen reverenced--what right had he to come with these musty claims
+from the dim past, to disturb them in the life that belonged to them?
+There was a higher and a deeper law than any connected with ancestral
+claims which he could assert; and he had an idea that the law bade him
+keep to the country which his ancestor had chosen and to its
+institutions, and not meddle nor make with England. The roots of his
+family tree could not reach under the ocean; he was at most but a
+seedling from the parent tree. While thus meditating he found that his
+footsteps had brought him unawares within sight of the old manor-house of
+Smithell's; and that he was wandering in a path which, if he followed it
+further, would bring him to an entrance in one of the wings of the
+mansion. With a sort of shame upon him, he went forward, and, leaning
+against a tree, looked at what he considered the home of his ancestors.
+
+May 9th, Sunday.--At the time appointed, the two companions set out on
+their little expedition, the old man in his Hospital uniform, the long
+black mantle, with the bear and ragged staff engraved in silver on the
+breast, and Middleton in the plain costume which he had adopted in these
+wanderings about the country. On their way, Hammond was not very
+communicative, occasionally dropping some shrewd remark with a good deal
+of acidity in it; now and then, too, favoring his companion with some
+reminiscence of local antiquity; but oftenest silent. Thus they went on,
+and entered the park of Pemberton Manor by a by-path, over a stile and
+one of those footways, which are always so well worth threading out in
+England, leading the pedestrian into picturesque and characteristic
+scenes, when the high-road would show him nothing except what was
+commonplace and uninteresting. Now the gables of the old manor-house
+appeared before them, rising amidst the hereditary woods, which doubtless
+dated from a time beyond the days which Middleton fondly recalled, when
+his ancestors had walked beneath their shade. On each side of them were
+thickets and copses of fern, amidst which they saw the hares peeping out
+to gaze upon them, occasionally running across the path, and comporting
+themselves like creatures that felt themselves under some sort of
+protection from the outrages of man, though they knew too much of his
+destructive character to trust him too far. Pheasants, too, rose close
+beside them, and winged but a little way before they alighted; they
+likewise knew, or seemed to know, that their hour was not yet come. On
+all sides in these woods, these wastes, these beasts and birds, there was
+a character that was neither wild nor tame. Man had laid his grasp on
+them all, and done enough to redeem them from barbarism, but had stopped
+short of domesticating them; although Nature, in the wildest thing there,
+acknowledged the powerful and pervading influence of cultivation.
+
+Arriving at a side door of the mansion, Hammond rang the bell, and a
+servant soon appeared. He seemed to know the old man, and immediately
+acceded to his request to be permitted to show his companion the house;
+although it was not precisely a show-house, nor was this the hour when
+strangers were usually admitted. They entered; and the servant did not
+give himself the trouble to act as a cicerone to the two visitants, but
+carelessly said to the old gentleman that he knew the rooms, and that he
+would leave him to discourse to his friend about them. Accordingly, they
+went into the old hall, a dark oaken-panelled room, of no great height,
+with many doors opening into it. There was a fire burning on the hearth;
+indeed, it was the custom of the house to keep it up from morning to
+night; and in the damp, chill climate of England, there is seldom a day
+in some part of which a fire is not pleasant to feel. Hammond here
+pointed out a stuffed fox, to which some story of a famous chase was
+attached; a pair of antlers of enormous size; and some old family
+pictures, so blackened with time and neglect that Middleton could not
+well distinguish their features, though curious to do so, as hoping to
+see there the lineaments of some with whom he might claim kindred. It
+was a venerable apartment, and gave a good foretaste of what they might
+hope to find in the rest of the mansion.
+
+But when they had inspected it pretty thoroughly, and were ready to
+proceed, an elderly gentleman entered the hall, and, seeing Hammond,
+addressed him in a kindly, familiar way; not indeed as an equal friend,
+but with a pleasant and not irksome conversation. "I am glad to see you
+here again," said he. "What? I have an hour of leisure; for, to say the
+truth, the day hangs rather heavy till the shooting season begins. Come;
+as you have a friend with you, I will be your cicerone myself about the
+house, and show you whatever mouldy objects of interest it contains."
+
+He then graciously noticed the old man's companion, but without asking or
+seeming to expect an introduction; for, after a careless glance at him,
+he had evidently set him down as a person without social claims, a young
+man in the rank of life fitted to associate with an inmate of Pemberton's
+Hospital. And it must be noticed that his treatment of Middleton was not
+on that account the less kind, though far from being so elaborately
+courteous as if he had met him as an equal. "You have had something of a
+walk," said he, "and it is a rather hot day. The beer of Pemberton Manor
+has been reckoned good these hundred years; will you taste it?"
+
+Hammond accepted the offer, and the beer was brought in a foaming
+tankard; but Middleton declined it, for in truth there was a singular
+emotion in his breast, as if the old enmity, the ancient injuries, were
+not yet atoned for, and as if he must not accept the hospitality of one
+who represented his hereditary foe. He felt, too, as if there were
+something unworthy, a certain want of fairness, in entering clandestinely
+the house, and talking with its occupant under a veil, as it were; and
+had he seen clearly how to do it, he would perhaps at that moment have
+fairly told Mr. Eldredge that he brought with him the character of
+kinsman, and must be received in that grade or none. But it was not easy
+to do this; and after all, there was no clear reason why he should do it;
+so he let the matter pass, merely declining to take the refreshment, and
+keeping himself quiet and retired.
+
+Squire Eldredge seemed to be a good, ordinary sort of gentleman,
+reasonably well educated, and with few ideas beyond his estate and
+neighborhood, though he had once held a seat in Parliament for part of a
+term. Middleton could not but contrast him, with an inward smile, with
+the shrewd, alert politicians, their faculties all sharpened to the
+utmost, whom he had known and consorted with in the American Congress.
+Hammond had slightly informed him that his companion was an American; and
+Mr. Eldredge immediately gave proof of the extent of his knowledge of
+that country, by inquiring whether he came from the State of New England,
+and whether Mr. Webster was still President of the United States;
+questions to which Middleton returned answers that led to no further
+conversation.
+
+These little preliminaries over, they continued their ramble through the
+house, going through tortuous passages, up and down little flights of
+steps, and entering chambers that had all the charm of discoveries of
+hidden regions; loitering about, in short, in a labyrinth calculated to
+put the head into a delightful confusion. Some of these rooms contained
+their time-honored furniture, all in the best possible repair, heavy,
+dark, polished; beds that had been marriage beds and dying beds over and
+over again; chairs with carved backs; and all manner of old world
+curiosities; family pictures, and samplers, and embroidery; fragments of
+tapestry; an inlaid floor; everything having a story to it, though, to
+say the truth, the possessor of these curiosities made but a bungling
+piece of work in telling the legends connected with them. In one or two
+instances Hammond corrected him.
+
+By and by they came to what had once been the principal bed-room of the
+house; though its gloom, and some circumstances of family misfortune that
+had happened long ago, had caused it to fall into disrepute, in latter
+times; and it was now called the Haunted Chamber, or the Ghost's Chamber.
+The furniture of this room, however, was particularly rich in its antique
+magnificence; and one of the principal objects was a great black cabinet
+of ebony and ivory, such as may often be seen in old English houses, and
+perhaps often in the palaces of Italy, in which country they perhaps
+originated. This present cabinet was known to have been in the house as
+long ago as the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and how much longer neither
+tradition nor record told. Hammond particularly directed Middleton's
+attention to it.
+
+"There is nothing in this house," said he, "better worth your attention
+than that cabinet. Consider its plan; it represents a stately mansion,
+with pillars, an entrance, with a lofty flight of steps, windows, and
+everything perfect. Examine it well."
+
+There was such an emphasis in the old man's way of speaking that
+Middleton turned suddenly round from all that he had been looking at, and
+fixed his whole attention on the cabinet; and strangely enough, it seemed
+to be the representative, in small, of something that he had seen in a
+dream. To say the truth, if some cunning workman had been employed to
+copy his idea of the old family mansion, on a scale of half an inch to a
+yard, and in ebony and ivory instead of stone, he could not have produced
+a closer imitation. Everything was there.
+
+"This is miraculous!" exclaimed he. "I do not understand it."
+
+"Your friend seems to be curious in these matters," said Mr. Eldredge
+graciously. "Perhaps he is of some trade that makes this sort of
+manufacture particularly interesting to him. You are quite at liberty,
+my friend, to open the cabinet and inspect it as minutely as you wish.
+It is an article that has a good deal to do with an obscure portion of
+our family history. Look, here is the key, and the mode of opening the
+outer door of the palace, as we may well call it." So saying, he threw
+open the outer door, and disclosed within the mimic likeness of a stately
+entrance hall, with a floor chequered of ebony and ivory. There were
+other doors that seemed to open into apartments in the interior of the
+palace; but when Mr. Eldredge threw them likewise wide, they proved to be
+drawers and secret receptacles, where papers, jewels, money, anything
+that it was desirable to store away secretly, might be kept.
+
+"You said, sir," said Middleton, thoughtfully, "that your family history
+contained matter of interest in reference to this cabinet. Might I
+inquire what those legends are?"
+
+"Why, yes," said Mr. Eldredge, musing a little. "I see no reason why I
+should have any idle concealment about the matter, especially to a
+foreigner and a man whom I am never likely to see again. You must know,
+then, my friend, that there was once a time when this cabinet was known
+to contain the fate of the estate and its possessors; and if it had held
+all that it was supposed to hold, I should not now be the lord of
+Pemberton Manor, nor the claimant of an ancient title. But my father,
+and his father before him, and his father besides, have held the estate
+and prospered on it; and I think we may fairly conclude now that the
+cabinet contains nothing except what we see."
+
+And he rapidly again threw open one after another all the numerous
+drawers and receptacles of the cabinet.
+
+"It is an interesting object," said Middleton, after looking very closely
+and with great attention at it, being pressed thereto, indeed, by the
+owner's good-natured satisfaction in possessing this rare article of
+vertu. "It is admirable work," repeated he, drawing back. "That mosaic
+floor, especially, is done with an art and skill that I never saw
+equalled."
+
+There was something strange and altered in Middleton's tones, that
+attracted the notice of Mr. Eldredge. Looking at him, he saw that he had
+grown pale, and had a rather bewildered air.
+
+"Is your friend ill?" said he. "He has not our English ruggedness of
+look. He would have done better to take a sip of the cool tankard, and a
+slice of the cold beef. He finds no such food and drink as that in his
+own country, I warrant."
+
+"His color has come back," responded Hammond, briefly. "He does not need
+any refreshment, I think, except, perhaps, the open air."
+
+In fact, Middleton, recovering himself, apologized to Mr. Hammond.
+[Eldredge?]; and as they had now seen nearly the whole of the house, the
+two visitants took their leave, with many kindly offers on Mr. Eldredge's
+part to permit the young man to view the cabinet whenever he wished. As
+they went out of the house (it was by another door than that which gave
+them entrance), Hammond laid his hand on Middleton's shoulder and pointed
+to a stone on the threshold, on which he was about to set his foot.
+"Take care!" said he. "It is the Bloody Footstep."
+
+Middleton looked down and saw something, indeed, very like the shape of a
+footprint, with a hue very like that of blood. It was a twilight sort of
+a place, beneath a porch, which was much overshadowed by trees and
+shrubbery. It might have been blood; but he rather thought, in his
+wicked skepticism, that it was a natural, reddish stain in the stone. He
+measured his own foot, however, in the Bloody Footstep.
+
+May 10th, Monday.--This is the present aspect of the story: Middleton is
+the descendant of a family long settled in the United States; his
+ancestor having emigrated to New England with the Pilgrims; or, perhaps,
+at a still earlier date, to Virginia with Raleigh's colonists. There had
+been a family dissension,--a bitter hostility between two brothers in
+England; on account, probably, of a love affair, the two both being
+attached to the same lady. By the influence of the family on both sides,
+the young lady had formed an engagement with the elder brother, although
+her affections had settled on the younger. The marriage was about to
+take place when the younger brother and the bride both disappeared, and
+were never heard of with any certainty afterwards; but it was believed at
+the time that he had been killed, and in proof of it a bloody footstep
+remained on the threshold of the ancestral mansion. There were rumors,
+afterwards, traditionally continued to the present day, that the younger
+brother and the bride were seen, and together, in England; and that some
+voyager across the sea had found them living together, husband and wife,
+on the other side of the Atlantic. But the elder brother became a moody
+and reserved man, never married, and left the inheritance to the children
+of a third brother, who then became the representative of the family in
+England; and the better authenticated story was that the second brother
+had really been slain, and that the young lady (for all the parties may
+have been Catholic) had gone to the Continent and taken the veil there.
+Such was the family history as known or surmised in England, and in the
+neighborhood of the manor-house, where the Bloody Footstep still remained
+on the threshold; and the posterity of the third brother still held the
+estate, and perhaps were claimants of an ancient baronage, long in
+abeyance.
+
+Now, on the other side of the Atlantic, the second brother and the young
+lady had really been married, and became the parents of a posterity,
+still extant, of which the Middleton of the romance is the surviving
+male. Perhaps he had changed his name, being so much tortured with the
+evil and wrong that had sprung up in his family, so remorseful, so
+outraged, that he wished to disconnect himself with all the past, and
+begin life quite anew in a new world. But both he and his wife, though
+happy in one another, had been remorsefully and sadly so; and, with such
+feelings, they had never again communicated with their respective
+families, nor had given their children the means of doing so. There
+must, I think, have been something nearly approaching to guilt on the
+second brother's part, and the bride should have broken a solemnly
+plighted troth to the elder brother, breaking away from him when almost
+his wife. The elder brother had been known to have been wounded at the
+time of the second brother's disappearance; and it had been the surmise
+that he had received this hurt in the personal conflict in which the
+latter was slain. But in truth the second brother had stabbed him in the
+emergency of being discovered in the act of escaping with the bride; and
+this was what weighed upon his conscience throughout life in America.
+The American family had prolonged itself through various fortunes, and
+all the ups and downs incident to our institutions, until the present
+day. They had some old family documents, which had been rather
+carelessly kept; but the present representative, being an educated man,
+had looked over them, and found one which interested him strongly. It
+was--what was it?--perhaps a copy of a letter written by his ancestor on
+his deathbed, telling his real name, and relating the above incidents.
+These incidents had come down in a vague wild way, traditionally, in the
+American family, forming a wondrous and incredible legend, which
+Middleton had often laughed at, yet been greatly interested in; and the
+discovery of this document seemed to give a certain aspect of veracity
+and reality to the tradition. Perhaps, however, the document only
+related to the change of name, and made reference to certain evidences by
+which, if any descendant of the family should deem it expedient, he might
+prove his hereditary identity. The legend must be accounted for by
+having been gathered from the talk of the first ancestor and his wife.
+There must be in existence, in the early records of the colony, an
+authenticated statement of this change of name, and satisfactory proofs
+that the American family, long known as Middleton, were really a branch
+of the English family of Eldredge, or whatever. And in the legend,
+though not in the written document, there must be an account of a certain
+magnificent, almost palatial residence, which Middleton shall presume to
+be the ancestral house; and in this palace there shall be said to be a
+certain secret chamber, or receptacle, where is reposited a document that
+shall complete the evidence of the genealogical descent.
+
+Middleton is still a young man, but already a distinguished one in his
+own country; he has entered early into politics, been sent to Congress,
+but having met with some disappointments in his ambitious hopes, and
+being disgusted with the fierceness of political contests in our country,
+he has come abroad for recreation and rest. His imagination has dwelt
+much, in his boyhood, on the legendary story of his family; and the
+discovery of the document has revived these dreams. He determines to
+search out the family mansion; and thus he arrives, bringing half of a
+story, being the only part known in America, to join it on to the other
+half, which is the only part known in England. In an introduction I must
+do the best I can to state his side of the matter to the reader, he
+having communicated it to me in a friendly way, at the Consulate; as many
+people have communicated quite as wild pretensions to English
+genealogies.
+
+He comes to the midland counties of England, where he conceives his
+claims to lie, and seeks for his ancestral home; but there are
+difficulties in the way of finding it, the estates having passed into the
+female line, though still remaining in the blood. By and by, however, he
+comes to an old town where there is one of the charitable institutions
+bearing the name of his family, by whose beneficence it had indeed been
+founded, in Queen Elizabeth's time. He of course becomes interested in
+this Hospital; he finds it still going on, precisely as it did in the old
+days; and all the character and life of the establishment must be
+picturesquely described. Here he gets acquainted with an old man, an
+inmate of the Hospital, who (if the uncontrollable fatality of the story
+will permit) must have an active influence on the ensuing events. I
+suppose him to have been an American, but to have fled his country and
+taken refuge in England; he shall have been a man of the Nicholas Biddle
+stamp, a mighty speculator, the ruin of whose schemes had crushed
+hundreds of people, and Middleton's father among the rest. Here he had
+quitted the activity of his mind, as well as he could, becoming a local
+antiquary, etc., and he has made himself acquainted with the family
+history of the Eldredges, knowing more about it than the members of the
+family themselves do. He had known in America (from Middleton's father,
+who was his friend) the legends preserved in this branch of the family,
+and perhaps had been struck by the way in which they fit into the English
+legends; at any rate, this strikes him when Middleton tells him his story
+and shows him the document respecting the change of name. After various
+conversations together (in which, however, the old man keeps the secret
+of his own identity, and indeed acts as mysteriously as possible) they go
+together to visit the ancestral mansion. Perhaps it should not be in
+their first visit that the cabinet, representing the stately mansion,
+shall be seen. But the Bloody Footstep may; which shall interest
+Middleton much, both because Hammond has told him the English tradition
+respecting it, and because too the legends of the American family made
+some obscure allusions to his ancestor having left blood--a bloody
+footstep--on the ancestral threshold. This is the point to which the
+story has now been sketched out. Middleton finds a commonplace old
+English country gentleman in possession of the estate, where his
+forefathers had lived in peace for many generations; but there must be
+circumstances contrived which shall cause Middleton's conduct to be
+attended by no end of turmoil and trouble. The old Hospitaller, I
+suppose, must be the malicious agent in this; and his malice must be
+motived in some satisfactory way. The more serious question, what shall
+be the nature of this tragic trouble, and how can it be brought about?
+
+May 11th, Tuesday.--How much better would it have been if this secret,
+which seemed so golden, had remained in the obscurity in which two
+hundred years had buried it! That deep, old, grass-grown grave being
+opened, out from it streamed into the sunshine the old fatalities, the
+old crimes, the old misfortunes, the sorrows, that seemed to have
+departed from the family forever. But it was too late now to close it
+up; he must follow out the thread that led him on,--the thread of fate,
+if you choose to call it so; but rather the impulse of an evil will, a
+stubborn self-interest, a desire for certain objects of ambition which
+were preferred to what yet were recognized as real goods. Thus reasoned,
+thus raved, Eldredge, as he considered the things that he had done, and
+still intended to do; nor did these perceptions make the slightest
+difference in his plans, nor in the activity with which he set about
+their performance. For this purpose he sent for his lawyer, and
+consulted him on the feasibility of the design which he had already
+communicated to him respecting Middleton. But the man of law shook his
+head, and, though deferentially, declined to have any active concern with
+the matter that threatened to lead him beyond the bounds which he allowed
+himself, into a seductive but perilous region.
+
+"My dear sir," said he, with some earnestness, "you had much better
+content yourself with such assistance as I can professionally and
+consistently give you. Believe [me], I am willing to do a lawyer's
+utmost, and to do more would be as unsafe for the client as for the legal
+adviser."
+
+Thus left without an agent and an instrument, this unfortunate man had to
+meditate on what means he would use to gain his ends through his own
+unassisted efforts. In the struggle with himself through which he had
+passed, he had exhausted pretty much all the feelings that he had to
+bestow on this matter; and now he was ready to take hold of almost any
+temptation that might present itself, so long as it showed a good
+prospect of success and a plausible chance of impunity. While he was
+thus musing, he heard a female voice chanting some song, like a bird's
+among the pleasant foliage of the trees, and soon he saw at the end of a
+wood-walk Alice, with her basket on her arm, passing on toward the
+village. She looked towards him as she passed, but made no pause nor yet
+hastened her steps; not seeming to think it worth her while to be
+influenced by him. He hurried forward and overtook her.
+
+So there was this poor old gentleman, his comfort utterly overthrown,
+decking his white hair and wrinkled brow with the semblance of a coronet,
+and only hoping that the reality might crown and bless him before he was
+laid in the ancestral tomb. It was a real calamity; though by no means
+the greatest that had been fished up out of the pit of domestic discord
+that had been opened anew by the advent of the American; and by the use
+which had been made of it by the cantankerous old man of the Hospital.
+Middleton, as he looked at these evil consequences, sometimes regretted
+that he had not listened to those forebodings which had warned him back
+on the eve of his enterprise; yet such was the strange entanglement and
+interest which had wound about him, that often he rejoiced that for once
+he was engaged in something that absorbed him fully, and the zeal for the
+development of which made him careless for the result in respect to its
+good or evil, but only desirous that it show itself. As for Alice, she
+seemed to skim lightly through all these matters, whether as a spirit of
+good or ill he could not satisfactorily judge. He could not think her
+wicked; yet her actions seemed unaccountable on the plea that she was
+otherwise. It was another characteristic thread in the wild web of
+madness that had spun itself about all the prominent characters of our
+story. And when Middleton thought of these things, he felt as if it
+might be his duty (supposing he had the power) to shovel the earth again
+into the pit that he had been the means of opening; but also felt that,
+whether duty or not, he would never perform it.
+
+For, you see, on the American's arrival he had found the estate in the
+hands of one of the descendants; but some disclosures consequent on his
+arrival had thrown it into the hands of another; or, at all events, had
+seemed to make it apparent that justice required that it should be so
+disposed of. No sooner was the discovery made than the possessor put on
+a coronet; the new heir had commenced legal proceedings; the sons of the
+respective branches had come to blows and blood; and the devil knows what
+other devilish consequences had ensued. Besides this, there was much
+falling in love at cross-purposes, and a general animosity of every body
+against everybody else, in proportion to the closeness of the natural
+ties and their obligation to love one another.
+
+The moral, if any moral were to be gathered from these petty and wretched
+circumstances, was, "Let the past alone: do not seek to renew it; press
+on to higher and better things,--at all events, to other things; and be
+assured that the right way can never be that which leads you back to the
+identical shapes that you long ago left behind. Onward, onward, onward!"
+
+"What have you to do here?" said Alice. "Your lot is in another land.
+You have seen the birthplace of your forefathers, and have gratified your
+natural yearning for it; now return, and cast in your lot with your own
+people, let it be what it will. I fully believe that it is such a lot as
+the world has never yet seen, and that the faults, the weaknesses, the
+errors, of your countrymen will vanish away like morning mists before the
+rising sun. You can do nothing better than to go back."
+
+"This is strange advice, Alice," said Middleton, gazing at her and
+smiling. "Go back, with such a fair prospect before me; that were
+strange indeed! It is enough to keep me here, that here only I shall see
+you,--enough to make me rejoice to have come, that I have found you
+here."
+
+"Do not speak in this foolish way," cried Alice, panting. "I am giving
+you the best advice, and speaking in the wisest way I am capable of,--
+speaking on good grounds too,--and you turn me aside with a silly
+compliment. I tell you that this is no comedy in which we are
+performers, but a deep, sad tragedy; and that it depends most upon you
+whether or no it shall be pressed to a catastrophe. Think well of it."
+
+"I have thought, Alice," responded the young man, "and I must let things
+take their course; if, indeed, it depends at all upon me, which I see no
+present reason to suppose. Yet I wish you would explain to me what you
+mean."
+
+To take up the story from the point where we left it: by the aid of the
+American's revelations, some light is thrown upon points of family
+history, which induce the English possessor of the estate to suppose that
+the time has come for asserting his claim to a title which has long been
+in abeyance. He therefore sets about it, and engages in great expenses,
+besides contracting the enmity of many persons, with whose interests he
+interferes. A further complication is brought about by the secret
+interference of the old Hospitaller, and Alice goes singing and dancing
+through the whole, in a way that makes her seem like a beautiful devil,
+though finally it will be recognized that she is an angel of light.
+Middleton, half bewildered, can scarcely tell how much of this is due to
+his own agency; how much is independent of him and would have happened
+had he stayed on his own side of the water. By and by a further and
+unexpected development presents the singular fact that he himself is the
+heir to whatever claims there are, whether of property or rank,--all
+centring in him as the representative of the eldest brother. On this
+discovery there ensues a tragedy in the death of the present possessor of
+the estate, who has staked everything upon the issue; and Middleton,
+standing amid the ruin and desolation of which he has been the innocent
+cause, resigns all the claims which he might now assert, and retires, arm
+in arm with Alice, who has encouraged him to take this course, and to act
+up to his character. The estate takes a passage into the female line,
+and the old name becomes extinct, nor does Middleton seek to continue it
+by resuming it in place of the one long ago assumed by his ancestor.
+Thus he and his wife become the Adam and Eve of a new epoch, and the
+fitting missionaries of a new social faith, of which there must be
+continual hints through the book.
+
+A knot of characters may be introduced as gathering around Middleton,
+comprising expatriated Americans of all sorts: the wandering printer who
+came to me so often at the Consulate, who said he was a native of
+Philadelphia, and could not go home in the thirty years that he had been
+trying to do so, for lack of the money to pay his passage; the large
+banker; the consul of Leeds; the woman asserting her claims to half
+Liverpool; the gifted literary lady, maddened by Shakespeare, etc., etc.
+The Yankee who had been driven insane by the Queen's notice, slight as it
+was, of the photographs of his two children which he had sent her. I
+have not yet struck the true key-note of this Romance, and until I do,
+and unless I do, I shall write nothing but tediousness and nonsense. I
+do not wish it to be a picture of life, but a Romance, grim, grotesque,
+quaint, of which the Hospital might be the fitting scene. It might have
+so much of the hues of life that the reader should sometimes think it was
+intended for a picture, yet the atmosphere should be such as to excuse
+all wildness. In the Introduction, I might disclaim all intention to
+draw a real picture, but say that the continual meetings I had with
+Americans bent on such errands had suggested this wild story. The
+descriptions of scenery, etc., and of the Hospital, might be correct, but
+there should be a tinge of the grotesque given to all the characters and
+events. The tragic and the gentler pathetic need not be excluded by the
+tone and treatment. If I could but write one central scene in this vein,
+all the rest of the Romance would readily arrange itself around that
+nucleus. The begging-girl would be another American character; the
+actress too; the caravan people. It must be humorous work, or nothing.
+
+
+III.
+
+May 12th, Wednesday.--Middleton found his abode here becoming daily more
+interesting; and he sometimes thought that it was the sympathies with the
+place and people, buried under the supergrowth of so many ages, but now
+coming forth with the life and vigor of a fountain, that, long hidden
+beneath earth and ruins, gushes out singing into the sunshine, as soon as
+these are removed. He wandered about the neighborhood with insatiable
+interest; sometimes, and often, lying on a hill-side and gazing at the
+gray tower of the church; sometimes coming into the village clustered
+round that same church, and looking at the old timber and plaster houses,
+the same, except that the thatch had probably been often renewed, that
+they used to be in his ancestor's days. In those old cottages still
+dwelt the families, the ------s, the Prices, the Hopnorts, the Copleys,
+that had dwelt there when America was a scattered progeny of infant
+colonies; and in the churchyard were the graves of all the generations
+since--including the dust of those who had seen his ancestor's face
+before his departure.
+
+The graves, outside the church walls indeed, bore no marks of this
+antiquity; for it seems not to have been an early practice in England to
+put stones over such graves; and where it has been done, the climate
+causes the inscriptions soon to become obliterated and unintelligible.
+But, within the church, there were rich words of the personages and times
+with whom Middleton's musings held so much converse.
+
+But one of his greatest employments and pastimes was to ramble through
+the grounds of Smithell's, making himself as well acquainted with its
+wood paths, its glens, its woods, its venerable trees, as if he had been
+bred up there from infancy. Some of those old oaks his ancestor might
+have been acquainted with, while they were already sturdy and well-grown
+trees; might have climbed them in boyhood; might have mused beneath them
+as a lover; might have flung himself at full length on the turf beneath
+them, in the bitter anguish that must have preceded his departure forever
+from the home of his forefathers. In order to secure an uninterrupted
+enjoyment of his rambles here, Middleton had secured the good-will of the
+game-keepers and other underlings whom he was likely to meet about the
+grounds, by giving them a shilling or a half-crown; and he was now free
+to wander where he would, with only the advice rather than the caution,
+to keep out of the way of their old master,--for there might be trouble,
+if he should meet a stranger on the grounds, in any of his tantrums.
+But, in fact, Mr. Eldredge was not much in the habit of walking about the
+grounds; and there were hours of every day, during which it was
+altogether improbable that he would have emerged from his own apartments
+in the manor-house. These were the hours, therefore, when Middleton most
+frequented the estate; although, to say the truth, he would gladly have
+so timed his visits as to meet and form an acquaintance with the lonely
+lord of this beautiful property, his own kinsman, though with so many
+ages of dark oblivion between. For Middleton had not that feeling of
+infinite distance in the relationship, which he would have had if his
+branch of the family had continued in England, and had not intermarried
+with the other branch, through such a long waste of years; he rather felt
+as if he were the original emigrant who, long resident on a foreign
+shore, had now returned, with a heart brimful of tenderness, to revisit
+the scenes of his youth, and renew his tender relations with those who
+shared his own blood.
+
+There was not, however, much in what he heard of the character of the
+present possessor of the estate--or indeed in the strong family
+characteristic that had become hereditary--to encourage him to attempt
+any advances. It is very probable that the religion of Mr. Eldredge, as
+a Catholic, may have excited a prejudice against him, as it certainly had
+insulated the family, in a great degree, from the sympathies of the
+neighborhood. Mr. Eldredge, moreover, had resided long on the Continent;
+long in Italy; and had come back with habits that little accorded with
+those of the gentry of the neighborhood; so that, in fact, he was almost
+as much of a stranger, and perhaps quite as little of a real Englishman,
+as Middleton himself. Be that as it might, Middleton, when he sought to
+learn something about him, heard the strangest stories of his habits of
+life, of his temper, and of his employments, from the people with whom he
+conversed. The old legend, turning upon the monomania of the family, was
+revived in full force in reference to this poor gentleman; and many a
+time Middleton's interlocutors shook their wise heads, saying with a
+knowing look and under their breath that the old gentleman was looking
+for the track of the Bloody Footstep. They fabled--or said, for it might
+not have been a false story--that every descendant of this house had a
+certain portion of his life, during which he sought the track of that
+footstep which was left on the threshold of the mansion; that he sought
+it far and wide, over every foot of the estate; not only on the estate,
+but throughout the neighborhood; not only in the neighborhood but all
+over England; not only throughout England but all about the world. It
+was the belief of the neighborhood--at least of some old men and women in
+it--that the long period of Mr. Eldredge's absence from England had been
+spent in the search for some trace of those departing footsteps that had
+never returned. It is very possible--probable, indeed--that there may
+have been some ground for this remarkable legend; not that it is to be
+credited that the family of Eldredge, being reckoned among sane men,
+would seriously have sought, years and generations after the fact, for
+the first track of those bloody footsteps which the first rain of drippy
+England must have washed away; to say nothing of the leaves that had
+fallen and the growth and decay of so many seasons, that covered all
+traces of them since. But nothing is more probable than that the
+continual recurrence to the family genealogy, which had been necessitated
+by the matter of the dormant peerage, had caused the Eldredges, from
+father to son, to keep alive an interest in that ancestor who had
+disappeared, and who had been supposed to carry some of the most
+important family papers with him. But yet it gave Middleton a strange
+thrill of pleasure, that had something fearful in it, to think that all
+through these ages he had been waited for, sought for, anxiously
+expected, as it were; it seemed as if the very ghosts of his kindred, a
+long shadowy line, held forth their dim arms to welcome him; a line
+stretching back to the ghosts of those who had flourished in the old, old
+times; the doubletted and beruffled knightly shades of Queen Elizabeth's
+time; a long line, stretching from the mediaeval ages, and their
+duskiness, downward, downward, with only one vacant space, that of him
+who had left the Bloody Footstep. There was an inexpressible pleasure
+(airy and evanescent, gone in a moment if he dwelt upon it too
+thoughtfully, but very sweet) to Middleton's imagination, in this idea.
+When he reflected, however, that his revelations, if they had any effect
+at all, might serve only to quench the hopes of these long expectants, it
+of course made him hesitate to declare himself.
+
+One afternoon, when he was in the midst of musings such as this, he saw
+at a distance through the park, in the direction of the manor-house, a
+person who seemed to be walking slowly and seeking for something upon the
+ground. He was a long way off when Middleton first perceived him; and
+there were two clumps of trees and underbrush, with interspersed tracts
+of sunny lawn, between them. The person, whoever he was, kept on, and
+plunged into the first clump of shrubbery, still keeping his eyes on the
+ground, as if intensely searching for something. When he emerged from
+the concealment of the first clump of shrubbery, Middleton saw that he
+was a tall, thin person, in a dark dress; and this was the chief
+observation that the distance enabled him to make, as the figure kept
+slowly onward, in a somewhat wavering line, and plunged into the second
+clump of shrubbery. From that, too, he emerged; and soon appeared to be
+a thin elderly figure, of a dark man with gray hair, bent, as it seemed
+to Middleton, with infirmity, for his figure still stooped even in the
+intervals when he did not appear to be tracking the ground. But
+Middleton could not but be surprised at the singular appearance the
+figure had of setting its foot, at every step, just where a previous
+footstep had been made, as if he wanted to measure his whole pathway in
+the track of somebody who had recently gone over the ground in advance of
+him. Middleton was sitting at the foot of an oak; and he began to feel
+some awkwardness in the consideration of what he would do if Mr.
+Eldredge--for he could not doubt that it was he--were to be led just to
+this spot, in pursuit of his singular occupation. And even so it proved.
+
+Middleton could not feel it manly to fly and hide himself, like a guilty
+thing; and indeed the hospitality of the English country gentleman in
+many cases gives the neighborhood and the stranger a certain degree of
+freedom in the use of the broad expanse of ground in which they and their
+forefathers have loved to sequester their residences. The figure kept
+on, showing more and more distinctly the tall, meagre, not unvenerable
+features of a gentleman in the decline of life, apparently in ill-health;
+with a dark face, that might once have been full of energy, but now
+seemed enfeebled by time, passion, and perhaps sorrow. But it was
+strange to see the earnestness with which he looked on the ground, and
+the accuracy with which he at last set his foot, apparently adjusting it
+exactly to some footprint before him; and Middleton doubted not that,
+having studied and restudied the family records and the judicial
+examinations which described exactly the track that was seen the day
+after the memorable disappearance of his ancestor, Mr. Eldredge was now,
+in some freak, or for some purpose best known to himself, practically
+following it out. And follow it out he did, until at last he lifted up
+his eyes, muttering to himself: "At this point the footsteps wholly
+disappear."
+
+Lifting his eyes, as we have said, while thus regretfully and
+despairingly muttering these words, he saw Middleton against the oak,
+within three paces of him.
+
+May 13th, Thursday.--Mr. Eldredge (for it was he) first kept his eyes
+fixed full on Middleton's face, with an expression as if he saw him not;
+but gradually--slowly, at first--he seemed to become aware of his
+presence; then, with a sudden flush, he took in the idea that he was
+encountered by a stranger in his secret mood. A flush of anger or shame,
+perhaps both, reddened over his face; his eyes gleamed; and he spoke
+hastily and roughly.
+
+"Who are you?" he said. "How come you here? I allow no intruders in my
+park. Begone, fellow!"
+
+"Really, sir, I did not mean to intrude upon you," said Middleton
+blandly. "I am aware that I owe you an apology; but the beauties of your
+park must plead my excuse; and the constant kindness of [the] English
+gentleman, which admits a stranger to the privilege of enjoying so much
+of the beauty in which he himself dwells as the stranger's taste permits
+him to enjoy."
+
+"An artist, perhaps," said Mr. Eldredge, somewhat less uncourteously. "I
+am told that they love to come here and sketch those old oaks and their
+vistas, and the old mansion yonder. But you are an obtrusive set, you
+artists, and think that a pencil and a sheet of paper may be your
+passport anywhere. You are mistaken, sir. My park is not open to
+strangers."
+
+"I am sorry, then, to have intruded upon you," said Middleton, still in
+good humor; for in truth he felt a sort of kindness, a sentiment,
+ridiculous as it may appear, of kindred towards the old gentleman, and
+besides was not unwilling in any way to prolong a conversation in which
+he found a singular interest. "I am sorry, especially as I have not even
+the excuse you kindly suggest for me. I am not an artist, only an
+American, who have strayed hither to enjoy this gentle, cultivated, tamed
+nature which I find in English parks, so contrasting with the wild,
+rugged nature of my native land. I beg your pardon, and will retire."
+
+"An American," repeated Mr. Eldredge, looking curiously at him. "Ah, you
+are wild men in that country, I suppose, and cannot conceive that an
+English gentleman encloses his grounds--or that his ancestors have done
+so before him--for his own pleasure and convenience, and does not
+calculate on having it infringed upon by everybody, like your own
+forests, as you say. It is a curious country, that of yours: and in
+Italy I have seen curious people from it."
+
+"True, sir," said Middleton, smiling. "We send queer specimens abroad;
+but Englishmen should consider that we spring from them, and that we
+present after all only a picture of their own characteristics, a little
+varied by climate and in situation."
+
+Mr. Eldredge looked at him with a certain kind of interest, and it seemed
+to Middleton that he was not unwilling to continue the conversation, if a
+fair way to do so could only be afforded to him. A secluded man often
+grasps at any opportunity of communicating with his kind, when it is
+casually offered to him, and for the nonce is surprisingly familiar,
+running out towards his chance-companion with the gush of a dammed-up
+torrent, suddenly unlocked. As Middleton made a motion to retire, he put
+out his hand with an air of authority to restrain him.
+
+"Stay," said he. "Now that you are here, the mischief is done, and you
+cannot repair it by hastening away. You have interrupted me in my mood
+of thought, and must pay the penalty by suggesting other thoughts. I am
+a lonely man here, having spent most of my life abroad, and am separated
+from my neighbors by various circumstances. You seem to be an
+intelligent man. I should like to ask you a few questions about your
+country."
+
+He looked at Middleton as he spoke, and seemed to be considering in what
+rank of life he should place him; his dress being such as suited a humble
+rank. He seemed not to have come to any very certain decision on this
+point.
+
+"I remember," said he, "you have no distinctions of rank in your country;
+a convenient thing enough, in some respects. When there are no
+gentlemen, all are gentlemen. So let it be. You speak of being
+Englishmen; and it has often occurred to me that Englishmen have left
+this country and been much missed and sought after, who might perhaps be
+sought there successfully."
+
+"It is certainly so, Mr. Eldredge," said Middleton, lifting his eyes to
+his face as he spoke, and then turning them aside. "Many footsteps, the
+track of which is lost in England, might be found reappearing on the
+other side of the Atlantic; ay, though it be hundreds of years since the
+track was lost here."
+
+Middleton, though he had refrained from looking full at Mr. Eldredge as
+he spoke, was conscious that he gave a great start; and he remained
+silent for a moment or two, and when he spoke there was the tremor in his
+voice of a nerve that had been struck and still vibrated.
+
+"That is a singular idea of yours," he at length said; "not singular in
+itself, but strangely coincident with something that happened to be
+occupying my mind. Have you ever heard any such instances as you speak
+of?"
+
+"Yes," replied Middleton, "I have had pointed out to me the rightful heir
+to a Scottish earldom, in the person of an American farmer, in his
+shirt-sleeves. There are many Americans who believe themselves to hold
+similar claims. And I have known one family, at least, who had in their
+possession, and had had for two centuries, a secret that might have been
+worth wealth and honors if known in England. Indeed, being kindred as we
+are, it cannot but be the case."
+
+Mr. Eldredge appeared to be much struck by these last words, and gazed
+wistfully, almost wildly, at Middleton, as if debating with himself
+whether to say more. He made a step or two aside; then returned
+abruptly, and spoke.
+
+"Can you tell me the name of the family in which this secret was kept?"
+said he; "and the nature of the secret?"
+
+"The nature of the secret," said Middleton, smiling, "was not likely to
+be extended to any one out of the family. The name borne by the family
+was Middleton. There is no member of it, so far as I am aware, at this
+moment remaining in America."
+
+"And has the secret died with them?" asked Mr. Eldredge.
+
+"They communicated it to none," said Middleton.
+
+"It is a pity! It was a villainous wrong," said Mr. Eldredge. "And so,
+it may be, some ancient line, in the old country, is defrauded of its
+rights for want of what might have been obtained from this Yankee, whose
+democracy has demoralized them to the perception of what is due to the
+antiquity of descent, and of the bounden duty that there is, in all
+ranks, to keep up the honor of a family that has had potence enough to
+preserve itself in distinction for a thousand years."
+
+"Yes," said Middleton, quietly, "we have sympathy with what is strong and
+vivacious to-day; none with what was so yesterday."
+
+The remark seemed not to please Mr. Eldredge; he frowned, and muttered
+something to himself; but recovering himself, addressed Middleton with
+more courtesy than at the commencement of their interview; and, with this
+graciousness, his face and manner grew very agreeable, almost
+fascinating: he [was] still haughty, however.
+
+"Well, sir," said he, "I am not sorry to have met you. I am a solitary
+man, as I have said, and a little communication with a stranger is a
+refreshment, which I enjoy seldom enough to be sensible of it. Pray, are
+you staying hereabouts?"
+
+Middleton signified to him that he might probably spend some little time
+in the village.
+
+"Then, during your stay," maid Mr. Eldredge, "make free use of the walks
+in these grounds; and though it is not probable that you will meet me in
+them again, you need apprehend no second questioning of your right to be
+here. My house has many points of curiosity that may be of interest to a
+stranger from a new country. Perhaps you have heard of some of them."
+
+"I have heard some wild legend about a Bloody Footstep," answered
+Middleton; "indeed, I think I remember hearing something about it in my
+own country; and having a fanciful sort of interest in such things, I
+took advantage of the hospitable custom which opens the doors of curious
+old houses to strangers, to go to see it. It seemed to me, I confess,
+only a natural stain in the old stone that forms the doorstep."
+
+"There, sir," said Mr. Eldredge, "let me say that you came to a very
+foolish conclusion; and so, good-by, sir."
+
+And without further ceremony, he cast an angry glance at Middleton, who
+perceived that the old gentleman reckoned the Bloody Footstep among his
+ancestral honors, and would probably have parted with his claim to the
+peerage almost as soon as have given up the legend.
+
+Present aspect of the story: Middleton on his arrival becomes acquainted
+with the old Hospitaller, and is familiarized at the Hospital. He pays a
+visit in his company to the manor-house, but merely glimpses at its
+remarkable things, at this visit, among others at the old cabinet, which
+does not, at first view, strike him very strongly. But, on musing about
+his visit afterwards, he finds the recollection of the cabinet strangely
+identifying itself with his previous imaginary picture of the palatial
+mansion; so that at last he begins to conceive the mistake he has made.
+At this first [visit], he does not have a personal interview with the
+possessor of the estate; but, as the Hospitaller and himself go from room
+to room, he finds that the owner is preceding them, shyly flitting like a
+ghost, so as to avoid them. Then there is a chapter about the character
+of the Eldredge of the day, a Catholic, a morbid, shy man, representing
+all the peculiarities of an old family, and generally thought to be
+insane. And then comes the interview between him and Middleton, where
+the latter excites such an interest that he dwells upon the old man's
+mind, and the latter probably takes pains to obtain further intercourse
+with him, and perhaps invites him to dinner, and [to] spend a night in
+his house. If so, this second meeting must lead to the examination of
+the cabinet, and the discovery of some family documents in it. Perhaps
+the cabinet may be in Middleton's sleeping-chamber, and he examines it by
+himself, before going to bed; and finds out a secret which will perplex
+him how to deal with it.
+
+May 14th, Friday.--We have spoken several times already of a young girl,
+who was seen at this period about the little antiquated village of
+Smithells; a girl in manners and in aspect unlike those of the cottages
+amid which she dwelt. Middleton had now so often met her, and in
+solitary places, that an acquaintance had inevitably established itself
+between them. He had ascertained that she had lodgings at a farm-house
+near by, and that she was connected in some way with the old Hospitaller,
+whose acquaintance had proved of such interest to him; but more than this
+he could not learn either from her or others. But he was greatly
+attracted and interested by the free spirit and fearlessness of this
+young woman; nor could he conceive where, in staid and formal England,
+she had grown up to be such as she was, so without manner, so without
+art, yet so capable of doing and thinking for herself. She had no
+reserve, apparently, yet never seemed to sin against decorum; it never
+appeared to restrain her that anything she might wish to do was contrary
+to custom; she had nothing of what could be called shyness in her
+intercourse with him; and yet he was conscious of an unapproachableness
+in Alice. Often, in the old man's presence, she mingled in the
+conversation that went on between him and Middleton, and with an
+acuteness that betokened a sphere of thought much beyond what could be
+customary with young English maidens; and Middleton was often reminded of
+the theories of those in our own country, who believe that the
+amelioration of society depends greatly on the part that women shall
+hereafter take, according to their individual capacity, in all the
+various pursuits of life. These deeper thoughts, these higher qualities,
+surprised him as they showed themselves, whenever occasion called them
+forth, under the light, gay, and frivolous exterior which she had at
+first seemed to present. Middleton often amused himself with surmises in
+what rank of life Alice could have been bred, being so free of all
+conventional rule, yet so nice and delicate in her perception of the true
+proprieties that she never shocked him.
+
+One morning, when they had met in one of Middleton's rambles about the
+neighborhood, they began to talk of America; and Middleton described to
+Alice the stir that was being made in behalf of women's rights; and he
+said that whatever cause was generous and disinterested always, in that
+country, derived much of its power from the sympathy of women, and that
+the advocates of every such cause were in favor of yielding the whole
+field of human effort to be shared with women.
+
+"I have been surprised," said he, "in the little I have seen and heard of
+Englishwomen, to discover what a difference there is between them and my
+own countrywomen."
+
+"I have heard," said Alice, with a smile, "that your countrywomen are a
+far more delicate and fragile race than Englishwomen; pale, feeble
+hot-house plants, unfit for the wear and tear of life, without energy of
+character, or any slightest degree of physical strength to base it upon.
+If, now, you had these large-framed Englishwomen, you might, I should
+imagine, with better hopes, set about changing the system of society, so
+as to allow them to struggle in the strife of politics, or any other
+strife, hand to hand, or side by side, with men."
+
+"If any countryman of mine has said this of our women," exclaimed
+Middleton, indignantly, "he is a slanderous villain, unworthy to have
+been borne by an American mother; if an Englishman has said it--as I know
+many of them have and do--let it pass as one of the many prejudices only
+half believed, with which they strive to console themselves for the
+inevitable sense that the American race is destined to higher purposes
+than their own. But pardon me; I forgot that I was speaking to an
+Englishwoman, for indeed you do not remind me of them. But, I assure
+you, the world has not seen such women as make up, I had almost said the
+mass of womanhood in my own country; slight in aspect, slender in frame,
+as you suggest, but yet capable of bringing forth stalwart men; they
+themselves being of inexhaustible courage, patience, energy; soft and
+tender, deep of heart, but high of purpose. Gentle, refined, but bold in
+every good cause."
+
+"Oh, you have said quite enough," replied Alice, who had seemed ready to
+laugh outright, during this encomium. "I think I see one of those
+paragons now, in a Bloomer, I think you call it, swaggering along with a
+Bowie knife at her girdle, smoking a cigar, no doubt, and tippling
+sherry-cobblers and mint-juleps. It must be a pleasant life."
+
+"I should think you, at least, might form a more just idea of what women
+become," said Middleton, considerably piqued, "in a country where the
+roles of conventionalism are somewhat relaxed; where woman, whatever you
+may think, is far more profoundly educated than in England, where a few
+ill-taught accomplishments, a little geography, a catechism of science,
+make up the sum, under the superintendence of a governess; the mind being
+kept entirely inert as to any capacity for thought. They are cowards,
+except within certain rules and forms; they spend a life of old
+proprieties, and die, and if their souls do not die with them, it is
+Heaven's mercy."
+
+Alice did not appear in the least moved to anger, though considerably to
+mirth, by this description of the character of English females. She
+laughed as she replied, "I see there is little danger of your leaving
+your heart in England." She added more seriously, "And permit me to say,
+I trust, Mr. Middleton, that you remain as much American in other
+respects as in your preference of your own race of women. The American
+who comes hither and persuades himself that he is one with Englishmen, it
+seems to me, makes a great mistake; at least, if he is correct in such an
+idea he is not worthy of his own country, and the high development that
+awaits it. There is much that is seductive in our life, but I think it
+is not upon the higher impulses of our nature that such seductions act.
+I should think ill of the American who, for any causes of ambition,--any
+hope of wealth or rank,--or even for the sake of any of those old,
+delightful ideas of the past, the associations of ancestry, the
+loveliness of an age-long home,--the old poetry and romance that haunt
+these ancient villages and estates of England,--would give up the chance
+of acting upon the unmoulded future of America."
+
+"And you, an Englishwoman, speak thus!" exclaimed Middleton. "You
+perhaps speak truly; and it may be that your words go to a point where
+they are especially applicable at this moment. But where have you
+learned these ideas? And how is it that you know how to awake these
+sympathies, that have slept perhaps too long?"
+
+"Think only if what I have said be the truth," replied Alice. "It is no
+matter who or what I am that speak it."
+
+"Do you speak," asked Middleton, from a sudden impulse, "with any secret
+knowledge affecting a matter now in my mind?"
+
+Alice shook her head, as she turned away; but Middleton could not
+determine whether the gesture was meant as a negative to his question, or
+merely as declining to answer it. She left him; and he found himself
+strangely disturbed with thoughts of his own country, of the life that he
+ought to be leading there, the struggles in which he ought to be taking
+part; and, with these motives in his impressible mind, the motives that
+had hitherto kept him in England seemed unworthy to influence him.
+
+May 15th, Saturday.--It was not long after Middleton's meeting with Mr.
+Eldredge in the park of Smithell's, that he received--what it is
+precisely the most common thing to receive--an invitation to dine at the
+manor-house and spend the night. The note was written with much
+appearance of cordiality, as well as in a respectful style; and Middleton
+could not but perceive that Mr. Eldredge must have been making some
+inquiries as to his social status, in order to feel him justified in
+putting him on this footing of equality. He had no hesitation in
+accepting the invitation, and on the appointed day was received in the
+old house of his forefathers as a guest. The owner met him, not quite on
+the frank and friendly footing expressed in his note, but still with a
+perfect and polished courtesy, which however could not hide from the
+sensitive Middleton a certain coldness, a something that seemed to him
+Italian rather than English; a symbol of a condition of things between
+them, undecided, suspicious, doubtful very likely. Middleton's own
+manner corresponded to that of his host, and they made few advances
+towards more intimate acquaintance. Middleton was however recompensed
+for his host's unapproachableness by the society of his daughter, a young
+lady born indeed in Italy, but who had been educated in a Catholic family
+in England; so that here was another relation--the first female one--to
+whoa he had been introduced. She was a quiet, shy, undemonstrative young
+woman, with a fine bloom and other charms which she kept as much in the
+background as possible, with maiden reserve. (There is a Catholic priest
+at table.)
+
+Mr. Eldredge talked chiefly, during dinner, of art, with which his long
+residence in Italy had made him thoroughly acquainted, and for which he
+seemed to have a genuine taste and enjoyment. It was a subject on which
+Middleton knew little; but he felt the interest in it which appears to be
+not uncharacteristic of Americans, among the earliest of their
+developments of cultivation; nor had he failed to use such few
+opportunities as the English public or private galleries offered him to
+acquire the rudiments of a taste. He was surprised at the depth of some
+of Mr. Eldredge's remarks on the topics thus brought up, and at the
+sensibility which appeared to be disclosed by his delicate appreciation
+of some of the excellencies of those great masters who wrote their epics,
+their tender sonnets, or their simple ballads, upon canvas; and Middleton
+conceived a respect for him which he had not hitherto felt, and which
+possibly Mr. Eldredge did not quite deserve. Taste seems to be a
+department of moral sense; and yet it is so little identical with it, and
+so little implies conscience, that some of the worst men in the world
+have been the most refined.
+
+After Miss Eldredge had retired, the host appeared to desire to make the
+dinner a little more social than it had hitherto been; he called for a
+peculiar species of wine from Southern Italy, which he said was the most
+delicious production of the grape, and had very seldom, if ever before,
+been imported pure into England. A delicious perfume came from the
+cradled bottle, and bore an ethereal, evanescent testimony to the truth
+of what he said: and the taste, though too delicate for wine quaffed in
+England, was nevertheless delicious, when minutely dwelt upon.
+
+"It gives me pleasure to drink your health, Mr. Middleton," said the
+host. "We might well meet as friends in England, for I am hardly more an
+Englishman than yourself; bred up, as I have been, in Italy, and coming
+back hither at my age, unaccustomed to the manners of the country, with
+few friends, and insulated from society by a faith which makes most
+people regard me as an enemy. I seldom welcome people here, Mr.
+Middleton; but you are welcome."
+
+"I thank you, Mr. Eldredge, and may fairly say that the circumstances to
+which you allude make me accept your hospitality with a warmer feeling
+than I otherwise might. Strangers, meeting in a strange land, have a
+sort of tie in their foreignness to those around them, though there be no
+positive relation between themselves."
+
+"We are friends, then?" said Mr. Eldredge, looking keenly at Middleton,
+as if to discover exactly how much was meant by the compact. He
+continued, "You know, I suppose, Mr. Middleton, the situation in which I
+find myself on returning to my hereditary estate; which has devolved to
+me somewhat unexpectedly by the death of a younger man than myself.
+There is an old flaw here, as perhaps you have been told, which keeps me
+out of a property long kept in the guardianship of the crown, and of a
+barony, one of the oldest in England. There is an idea--a tradition--a
+legend, founded, however, on evidence of some weight, that there is still
+in existence the possibility of finding the proof which we need, to
+confirm our cause."
+
+"I am most happy to hear it, Mr. Eldredge," said Middleton.
+
+"But," continued his host, "I am bound to remember and to consider that
+for several generations there seems to have been the same idea, and the
+same expectation; whereas nothing has ever come of it. Now, among other
+suppositions--perhaps wild ones--it has occurred to me that this
+testimony, the desirable proof, may exist on your side of the Atlantic;
+for it has long enough been sought here in vain."
+
+"As I said in our meeting in your park, Mr. Eldredge," replied Middleton,
+"such a suggestion may very possibly be true; yet let me point out that
+the long lapse of years, and the continual melting and dissolving of
+family institutions--the consequent scattering of family documents, and
+the annihilation of traditions from memory, all conspire against its
+probability."
+
+"And yet, Mr. Middleton," said his host, "when we talked together at our
+first singular interview, you made use of an expression--of one
+remarkable phrase--which dwelt upon my memory and now recurs to it."
+
+"And what was that, Mr. Eldredge?" asked Middleton.
+
+"You spoke," replied his host, "of the Bloody Footstep reappearing on the
+threshold of the old palace of S------. Now where, let me ask you, did
+you ever hear this strange name, which you then spoke, and which I have
+since spoken?"
+
+"From my father's lips, when a child, in America," responded Middleton.
+
+"It is very strange," said Mr. Eldredge, in a hasty, dissatisfied tone.
+"I do not see my way through this."
+
+May 16th, Sunday.--Middleton had been put into a chamber in the oldest
+part of the house, the furniture of which was of antique splendor, well
+befitting to have come down for ages, well befitting the hospitality
+shown to noble and even royal guests. It was the same room in which, at
+his first visit to the house, Middleton's attention had been drawn to the
+cabinet, which he had subsequently remembered as the palatial residence
+in which he had harbored so many dreams. It still stood in the chamber,
+making the principal object in it, indeed; and when Middleton was left
+alone, he contemplated it not without a certain awe, which at the same
+time he felt to be ridiculous. He advanced towards it, and stood
+contemplating the mimic facade, wondering at the singular fact of this
+piece of furniture having been preserved in traditionary history, when so
+much had been forgotten,--when even the features and architectural
+characteristics of the mansion in which it was merely a piece of
+furniture had been forgotten. And, as he gazed at it, he half thought
+himself an actor in a fairy portal [tale?]; and would not have been
+surprised--at least, he would have taken it with the composure of a
+dream--if the mimic portal had unclosed, and a form of pigmy majesty had
+appeared within, beckoning him to enter and find the revelation of what
+had so long perplexed him. The key of the cabinet was in the lock, and
+knowing that it was not now the receptacle of anything in the shape of
+family papers, he threw it open; and there appeared the mosaic floor, the
+representation of a stately, pillared hall, with the doors on either side
+opening, as would seem, into various apartments. And here should have
+stood the visionary figures of his ancestry, waiting to welcome the
+descendant of their race, who had so long delayed his coming. After
+looking and musing a considerable time,--even till the old clock from the
+turret of the house told twelve, he turned away with a sigh, and went to
+bed. The wind moaned through the ancestral trees; the old house creaked
+as with ghostly footsteps; the curtains of his bed seemed to waver. He
+was now at home; yes, he had found his home, and was sheltered at last
+under the ancestral roof after all those long, long wanderings,--after
+the little log-built hut of the early settlement, after the straight roof
+of the American house, after all the many roofs of two hundred years,
+here he was at last under the one which he had left, on that fatal night,
+when the Bloody Footstep was so mysteriously impressed on the threshold.
+As he drew nearer and nearer towards sleep, it seemed more and more to
+him as if he were the very individual--the self-same one throughout the
+whole--who had done, seen, suffered, all these long toils and
+vicissitudes, and were now come back to rest, and found his weariness so
+great that there could be no rest.
+
+Nevertheless, he did sleep; and it may be that his dreams went on, and
+grew vivid, and perhaps became truer in proportion to their vividness.
+When he awoke he had a perception, an intuition, that he had been
+dreaming about the cabinet, which, in his sleeping imagination, had again
+assumed the magnitude and proportions of a stately mansion, even as he
+had seen it afar from the other side of the Atlantic. Some dim
+associations remained lingering behind, the dying shadows of very vivid
+ones which had just filled his mind; but as he looked at the cabinet,
+there was some idea that still seemed to come so near his consciousness
+that, every moment, he felt on the point of grasping it. During the
+process of dressing, he still kept his eyes turned involuntarily towards
+the cabinet, and at last he approached it, and looked within the mimic
+portal, still endeavoring to recollect what it was that he had heard or
+dreamed about it,--what half obliterated remembrance from childhood, what
+fragmentary last night's dream it was, that thus haunted him. It must
+have been some association of one or the other nature that led him to
+press his finger on one particular square of the mosaic pavement; and as
+he did so, the thin plate of polished marble slipt aside. It disclosed,
+indeed, no hollow receptacle, but only another leaf of marble, in the
+midst of which appeared to be a key-hole: to this Middleton applied the
+little antique key to which we have several times alluded, and found it
+fit precisely. The instant it was turned, the whole mimic floor of the
+hall rose, by the action of a secret spring, and discovered a shallow
+recess beneath. Middleton looked eagerly in, and saw that it contained
+documents, with antique seals of wax appended; he took but one glance at
+them, and closed the receptacle as it was before.
+
+Why did he do so? He felt that there would be a meanness and wrong in
+inspecting these family papers, coming to the knowledge of them, as he
+had, through the opportunities offered by the hospitality of the owner of
+the estate; nor, on the other hand, did he feel such confidence in his
+host, as to make him willing to trust these papers in his hands, with any
+certainty that they would be put to an honorable use. The case was one
+demanding consideration, and he put a strong curb upon his impatient
+curiosity, conscious that, at all events, his first impulsive feeling was
+that he ought not to examine these papers without the presence of his
+host or some other authorized witness. Had he exercised any casuistry
+about the point, however, he might have argued that these papers,
+according to all appearance, dated from a period to which his own
+hereditary claims ascended, and to circumstances in which his own
+rightful interest was as strong as that of Mr. Eldredge. But he had
+acted on his first impulse, closed the secret receptacle, and hastening
+his toilet descended from his room; and, it being still too early for
+breakfast, resolved to ramble about the immediate vicinity of the house.
+As he passed the little chapel, he heard within the voice of the priest
+performing mass, and felt how strange was this sign of mediaeval religion
+and foreign manners in homely England.
+
+As the story looks now: Eldredge, bred, and perhaps born, in Italy, and a
+Catholic, with views to the church before he inherited the estate, has
+not the English moral sense and simple honor; can scarcely be called an
+Englishman at all. Dark suspicions of past crime, and of the possibility
+of future crime, may be thrown around him; an atmosphere of doubt shall
+envelop him, though, as regards manners, he may be highly refined.
+Middleton shall find in the house a priest; and at his first visit he
+shall have seen a small chapel, adorned with the richness, as to marbles,
+pictures, and frescoes, of those that we see in the churches at Rome; and
+here the Catholic forms of worship shall be kept up. Eldredge shall have
+had an Italian mother, and shall have the personal characteristics of an
+Italian. There shall be something sinister about him, the more apparent
+when Middleton's visit draws to a conclusion; and the latter shall feel
+convinced that they part in enmity, so far as Eldredge is concerned. He
+shall not speak of his discovery in the cabinet.
+
+May 17th, Monday.--Unquestionably, the appointment of Middleton as
+minister to one of the minor Continental courts must take place in the
+interval between Eldredge's meeting him in the park, and his inviting him
+to his house. After Middleton's appointment, the two encounter each
+other at the Mayor's dinner in St. Mary's Hall, and Eldredge, startled at
+meeting the vagrant, as he deemed him, under such a character, remembers
+the hints of some secret knowledge of the family history, which Middleton
+had thrown out. He endeavors, both in person and by the priest, to make
+out what Middleton really is, and what he knows, and what he intends; but
+Middleton is on his guard, yet cannot help arousing Eldredge's suspicions
+that he has views upon the estate and title. It is possible, too, that
+Middleton may have come to the knowledge--may have had some knowledge--of
+some shameful or criminal fact connected with Mr. Eldredge's life on the
+Continent; the old Hospitaller, possibly, may have told him this, from
+some secret malignity hereafter to be accounted for. Supposing Eldredge
+to attempt his murder, by poison for instance, bringing back into modern
+life his old hereditary Italian plots; and into English life a sort of
+crime which does not belong to it,--which did not, at least, although at
+this very period there have been fresh and numerous instances of it.
+There might be a scene in which Middleton and Eldredge come to a fierce
+and bitter explanation; for in Eldredge's character there must be the
+English surly boldness as well as the Italian subtlety; and here,
+Middleton shall tell him what he knows of his past character and life,
+and also what he knows of his own hereditary claims. Eldredge might have
+committed a murder in Italy; might have been a patriot and betrayed his
+friends to death for a bribe, bearing another name than his own in Italy;
+indeed, he might have joined them only as an informer. All this he had
+tried to sink, when he came to England in the character of a gentleman of
+ancient name and large estate. But this infamy of his previous character
+must be foreboded from the first by the manner in which Eldredge is
+introduced; and it must make his evil designs on Middleton appear natural
+and probable. It may be, that Middleton has learned Eldredge's previous
+character through some Italian patriot who had taken refuge in America,
+and there become intimate with him; and it should be a piece of secret
+history, not known to the world in general, so that Middleton might seem
+to Eldredge the sole depositary of the secret then in England. He feels
+a necessity of getting rid of him; and thenceforth Middleton's path lies
+always among pitfalls; indeed, the first attempt should follow promptly
+and immediately on his rupture with Eldredge. The utmost pains must be
+taken with this incident to give it an air of reality; or else it must be
+quite removed out of the sphere of reality by an intensified atmosphere
+of romance. I think the old Hospitaller must interfere to prevent the
+success of this attempt, perhaps through the means of Alice.
+
+The result of Eldredge's criminal and treacherous designs is, somehow or
+other, that he comes to his death; and Middleton and Alice are left to
+administer on the remains of the story; perhaps, the Mayor being his
+friend, he may be brought into play here. The foreign ecclesiastic shall
+likewise come forward, and he shall prove to be a man of subtile policy
+perhaps, yet a man of religion and honor; with a Jesuit's principles, but
+a Jesuit's devotion and self-sacrifice. The old Hospitaller must die in
+his bed, or some other how; or perhaps not--we shall see. He may just as
+well be left in the Hospital. Eldredge's attempt on Middleton must be in
+some way peculiar to Italy, and which he shall have learned there; and,
+by the way, at his dinner-table there shall be a Venice glass, one of the
+kind that were supposed to be shattered when poison was put into them.
+When Eldredge produces his rare wine, he shall pour it into this, with a
+jesting allusion to the legend. Perhaps the mode of Eldredge's attempt
+on Middleton's life shall be a reproduction of the attempt made two
+hundred years before; and Middleton's knowledge of that incident shall be
+the means of his salvation. That would be a good idea; in fact, I think
+it must be done so and no otherwise. It is not to be forgotten that
+there is a taint of insanity in Eldredge's blood, accounting for much
+that is wild and absurd, at the same time that it must be subtile, in his
+conduct; one of those perplexing mad people, whose lunacy you are
+continually mistaking for wickedness or vice versa. This shall be the
+priest's explanation and apology for him, after his death. I wish I
+could get hold of the Newgate Calendar, the older volumes, or any other
+book of murders--the Causes Celebres, for instance. The legendary
+murder, or attempt at it, will bring its own imaginative probability with
+it, when repeated by Eldredge; and at the same time it will have a
+dreamlike effect; so that Middleton shall hardly know whether he is awake
+or not. This incident is very essential towards bringing together the
+past time and the present, and the two ends of the story.
+
+May 18th, Tuesday.--All down through the ages since Edward had
+disappeared from home, leaving that bloody footstep on the threshold,
+there had been legends and strange stories of the murder and the manner
+of it. These legends differed very much among themselves. According to
+some, his brother had awaited him there, and stabbed him on the
+threshold. According to others, he had been murdered in his chamber, and
+dragged out. A third story told, that he was escaping with his lady
+love, when they were overtaken on the threshold, and the young man slain.
+It was impossible at this distance of time to ascertain which of these
+legends was the true one, or whether either of them had any portion of
+truth, further than that the young man had actually disappeared from that
+night, and that it never was certainly known to the public that any
+intelligence had ever afterwards been received from him. Now, Middleton
+may have communicated to Eldredge the truth in regard to the matter; as,
+for instance, that he had stabbed him with a certain dagger that was
+still kept among the curiosities of the manor-house. Of course, that
+will not do. It must be some very ingenious and artificially natural
+thing, an artistic affair in its way, that should strike the fancy of
+such a man as Eldredge, and appear to him altogether fit, mutatis
+mutandis, to be applied to his own requirements and purposes. I do not
+at present see in the least how this is to be wrought out. There shall
+be everything to make Eldredge look with the utmost horror and alarm at
+any chance that he may be superseded and ousted from his possession of
+the estate; for he shall only recently have established his claim to it,
+tracing out his pedigree, when the family was supposed to be extinct.
+And he is come to these comfortable quarters after a life of poverty,
+uncertainty, difficulty, hanging loose on society; and therefore he shall
+be willing to risk soul and body both, rather than return to his former
+state. Perhaps his daughter shall be introduced as a young Italian girl,
+to whom Middleton shall decide to leave the estate.
+
+On the failure of his design, Eldredge may commit suicide, and be found
+dead in the wood; at any rate, some suitable end shall be contrived,
+adapted to his wants. This character must not be so represented as to
+shut him out completely from the reader's sympathies; he shall have
+taste, sentiment, even a capacity for affection, nor, I think, ought he
+to have any hatred or bitter feeling against the man whom he resolves to
+murder. In the closing scenes, when he thinks the fate of Middleton
+approaching, there might even be a certain tenderness towards him, a
+desire to make the last drops of life delightful; if well done, this
+would produce a certain sort of horror, that I do not remember to have
+seen effected in literature. Possibly the ancient emigrant might be
+supposed to have fallen into an ancient mine, down a precipice, into some
+pitfall; no, not so. Into a river; into a moat. As Middleton's
+pretensions to birth are not publicly known, there will be no reason why,
+at his sudden death, suspicion should fix on Eldredge as the murderer;
+and it shall be his object so to contrive his death as that it shall
+appear the result of accident. Having failed in effecting Middleton's
+death by this excellent way, he shall perhaps think that he cannot do
+better them to make his own exit in precisely the same manner. It might
+be easy, and as delightful as any death could be; no ugliness in it, no
+blood; for the Bloody Footstep of old times might be the result of the
+failure of the old plot, not of its success. Poison seems to be the only
+elegant method; but poison is vulgar, and in many respects unfit for my
+purpose. It won't do. Whatever it may be, it must not come upon the
+reader as a sudden and new thing, but as one that might have been
+foreseen from afar, though he shall not actually have foreseen it until
+it is about to happen. It must be prevented through the agency of Alice.
+Alice may have been an artist in Rome, and there have known Eldredge and
+his daughter, and thus she may have become their guest in England; or he
+may be patronizing her now--at all events she shall be the friend of the
+daughter, and shall have a just appreciation of the father's character.
+It shall be partly due to her high counsel that Middleton foregoes his
+claim to the estate, and prefers the life of an American, with its lofty
+possibilities for himself and his race, to the position of an Englishman
+of property and title; and she, for her part, shall choose the condition
+and prospects of woman in America, to the emptiness of the life of a
+woman of rank in England. So they shall depart, lofty and poor, out of
+the home which might be their own, if they would stoop to make it so.
+Possibly the daughter of Eldredge may be a girl not yet in her teens, for
+whom Alice has the affection of an elder sister.
+
+It should be a very carefully and highly wrought scene, occurring just
+before Eldredge's actual attempt on Middleton's life, in which all the
+brilliancy of his character--which shall before have gleamed upon the
+reader--shall come out, with pathos, with wit, with insight, with
+knowledge of life. Middleton shall be inspired by this, and shall vie
+with him in exhilaration of spirits; but the ecclesiastic shall look on
+with singular attention, and some appearance of alarm; and the suspicion
+of Alice shall likewise be aroused. The old Hospitaller may have gained
+his situation partly by proving himself a man of the neighborhood, by
+right of descent; so that he, too, shall have a hereditary claim to be in
+the Romance.
+
+Eldredge's own position as a foreigner in the midst of English home life,
+insulated and dreary, shall represent to Middleton, in some degree, what
+his own would be, were he to accept the estate. But Middleton shall not
+come to the decision to resign it, without having to repress a deep
+yearning for that sense of long, long rest in an age-consecrated home,
+which he had felt so deeply to be the happy lot of Englishmen. But this
+ought to be rejected, as not belonging to his country, nor to the age,
+nor any longer possible.
+
+May 19th, Wednesday.--The connection of the old Hospitaller with the
+story is not at all clear. He is an American by birth, but deriving his
+English origin from the neighborhood of the Hospital, where he has
+finally established himself. Some one of his ancestors may have been
+somehow connected with the ancient portion of the story. He has been a
+friend of Middleton's father, who reposed entire confidence in him,
+trusting him with all his fortune, which the Hospitaller risked in his
+enormous speculations, and lost it all. His fame had been great in the
+financial world. There were circumstances that made it dangerous for his
+whereabouts to be known, and so he had come hither and found refuge in
+this institution, where Middleton finds him, but does not know who he is.
+In the vacancy of a mind formerly so active, he has taken to the study of
+local antiquities; and from his former intimacy with Middleton's father,
+he has a knowledge of the American part of the story, which he connects
+with the English portion, disclosed by his researches here; so that he is
+quite aware that Middleton has claims to the estate, which might be urged
+successfully against the present possessor. He is kindly disposed
+towards the son of his friend, whom he had so greatly injured; but he is
+now very old, and ------. Middleton has been directed to this old man,
+by a friend in America, as one likely to afford him all possible
+assistance in his researches; and so he seeks him out and forms an
+acquaintance with him, which the old man encourages to a certain extent,
+taking an evident interest in him, but does not disclose himself; nor
+does Middleton suspect him to be an American. The characteristic life of
+the Hospital is brought out, and the individual character of this old
+man, vegetating here after an active career, melancholy and miserable;
+sometimes torpid with the slow approach of utmost age; sometimes feeble,
+peevish, wavering; sometimes shining out with a wisdom resulting from
+originally bright faculties, ripened by experience. The character must
+not be allowed to get vague, but, with gleams of romance, must yet be
+kept homely and natural by little touches of his daily life.
+
+As for Alice, I see no necessity for her being anywise related to or
+connected with the old Hospitaller. As originally conceived, I think she
+may be an artist--a sculptress--whom Eldredge had known in Rome. No; she
+might be a granddaughter of the old Hospitaller, born and bred in
+America, but who had resided two or three years in Rome in the study of
+her art, and have there acquired a knowledge of the Eldredges and have
+become fond of the little Italian girl his daughter. She has lodgings in
+the village, and of course is often at the Hospital, and often at the
+Hall; she makes busts and little statues, and is free, wild, tender,
+proud, domestic, strange, natural, artistic; and has at bottom the
+characteristics of the American woman, with the principles of the
+strong-minded sect; and Middleton shall be continually puzzled at meeting
+such a phenomenon in England. By and by, the internal influence
+[evidence?] of her sentiments (though there shall be nothing to confirm
+it in her manner) shall lead him to charge her with being an American.
+
+Now, as to the arrangement of the Romance;--it begins as an integral and
+essential part, with my introduction, giving a pleasant and familiar
+summary of my life in the Consulate at Liverpool; the strange species of
+Americans, with strange purposes, in England, whom I used to meet there;
+and, especially, how my countrymen used to be put out of their senses by
+the idea of inheritances of English property. Then I shall particularly
+instance one gentleman who called on me on first coming over; a
+description of him must be given, with touches that shall puzzle the
+reader to decide whether it is not an actual portrait. And then this
+Romance shall be offered, half seriously, as the account of the fortunes
+that he met with in his search for his hereditary home. Enough of his
+ancestral story may be given to explain what is to follow in the Romance;
+or perhaps this may be left to the scenes of his intercourse with the old
+Hospitaller.
+
+The Romance proper opens with Middleton's arrival at what he has reason
+to think is the neighborhood of his ancestral home, and here he makes
+application to the old Hospitaller. Middleton shall be described as
+approaching the Hospital, which shall be pretty literally copied after
+Leicester's, although the surrounding village must be on a much smaller
+scale of course. Much elaborateness may be given to this portion of the
+book. Middleton shall have assumed a plain dress, and shall seek to make
+no acquaintances except that of the old Hospitaller; the acquaintance of
+Alice naturally following. The old Hospitaller and he go together to the
+old Hall, where, as they pass through the rooms, they find that the
+proprietor is flitting like a ghost before them from chamber to chamber;
+they catch his reflection in a glass, etc., etc. When these have been
+wrought up sufficiently, shall come the scene in the wood, where Eldredge
+is seen yielding to the superstition that he has inherited, respecting
+the old secret of the family, on the discovery of which depends the
+enforcement of his claim to a title. All this while, Middleton has
+appeared in the character of a man of no note; and now, through some
+political change, not necessarily told, he receives a packet addressed to
+him as an ambassador, and containing a notice of his appointment to that
+dignity. A paragraph in the "Times" confirms the fact, and makes it
+known in the neighborhood. Middleton immediately becomes an object of
+attention; the gentry call upon him; the Mayor of the neighboring
+county-town invites him to dinner, which shall be described with all its
+antique formalities. Here he meets Eldredge, who is surprised,
+remembering the encounter in the wood; but passes it all off, like a man
+of the world, makes his acquaintance, and invites him to the Hall.
+Perhaps he may make a visit of some time here, and become intimate, to a
+certain degree, with all parties; and here things shall ripen themselves
+for Eldredge's attempt upon his life.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Sketches and Studies, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
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