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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg E-text of A Book of Autographs, by Nathaniel
+ Hawthorne
+ </title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Book of Autographs, 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: A Book of Autographs
+
+Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+
+Release Date: November, 2005 [EBook #9250]
+First Posted: September 25, 2003
+Last Updated: April 3, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK OF AUTOGRAPHS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger and Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h4>
+ THE DOLIVER ROMANCE AND OTHER PIECES<br />
+ </h4>
+ <h4>
+ TALES AND SKETCHES<br />
+ </h4>
+ <h3>
+ By Nathaniel Hawthorne<br />
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ A BOOK OF AUTOGRAPHS<br />
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have before us a volume of autograph letters, chiefly of soldiers and
+ statesmen of the Revolution, and addressed to a good and brave man,
+ General Palmer, who himself drew his sword in the cause. They are
+ profitable reading in a quiet afternoon, and in a mood withdrawn from too
+ intimate relation with the present time; so that we can glide backward
+ some three quarters of a century, and surround ourselves with the ominous
+ sublimity of circumstances that then frowned upon the writers. To give
+ them their full effect, we should imagine that these letters have this
+ moment been brought to town by the splashed and way-worn postrider, or
+ perhaps by an orderly dragoon, who has ridden in a perilous hurry to
+ deliver his despatches. They are magic scrolls, if read in the right
+ spirit. The roll of the drum and the fanfare of the trumpet is latent in
+ some of them; and in others, an echo of the oratory that resounded in the
+ old halls of the Continental Congress, at Philadelphia; or the words may
+ come to us as with the living utterance of one of those illustrious men,
+ speaking face to face, in friendly communion. Strange, that the mere
+ identity of paper and ink should be so powerful. The same thoughts might
+ look cold and ineffectual, in a printed book. Human nature craves a
+ certain materialism and clings pertinaciously to what is tangible, as if
+ that were of more importance than the spirit accidentally involved in it.
+ And, in truth, the original manuscript has always something which print
+ itself must inevitably lose. An erasure, even a blot, a casual
+ irregularity of hand, and all such little imperfections of mechanical
+ execution, bring us close to the writer, and perhaps convey some of those
+ subtle intimations for which language has no shape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are several letters from John Adams, written in a small, hasty,
+ ungraceful hand, but earnest, and with no unnecessary flourish. The
+ earliest is dated at Philadelphia, September 26, 1774, about twenty days
+ after the first opening of the Continental Congress. We look at this old
+ yellow document, scribbled on half a sheet of foolscap, and ask of it many
+ questions for which words have no response. We would fain know what were
+ their mutual impressions, when all those venerable faces, that have since
+ been traced on steel, or chiselled out, of marble, and thus made familiar
+ to posterity, first met one another's gaze! Did one spirit harmonize them,
+ in spite of the dissimilitude of manners between the North and the South,
+ which were now for the first time brought into political relations? Could
+ the Virginian descendant of the Cavaliers, and the New-Englander with his
+ hereditary Puritanism,&mdash;the aristocratic Southern planter, and the
+ self-made man from Massachusetts or Connecticut,&mdash;at once feel that
+ they were countrymen and brothers? What did John Adams think of Jefferson?&mdash;and
+ Samuel Adams of Patrick Henry? Did not North and South combine in their
+ deference for the sage Franklin, so long the defender of the colonies in
+ England, and whose scientific renown was already world-wide? And was there
+ yet any whispered prophecy, any vague conjecture, circulating among the
+ delegates, as to the destiny which might be in reserve for one stately
+ man, who sat, for the most part, silent among them?&mdash;what station he
+ was to assume in the world's history?&mdash;and how many statues would
+ repeat his form and countenance, and successively crumble beneath his
+ immortality?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter before us does not answer these inquiries. Its main feature is
+ the strong expression of the uncertainty and awe that pervaded even the
+ firm hearts of the Old Congress, while anticipating the struggle which was
+ to ensue. "The commencement of hostilities," it says, "is exceedingly
+ dreaded here. It is thought that an attack upon the troops, even should it
+ prove successful, would certainly involve the whole continent in a war. It
+ is generally thought that the Ministry would rejoice at a rupture in
+ Boston, because it would furnish an excuse to the people at home" [this
+ was the last time, we suspect, that John Adams spoke of England thus
+ affectionately], "and unite them in an opinion of the necessity of pushing
+ hostilities against us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His next letter bears on the superscription, "Favored by General
+ Washington." The date is June 20, 1775, three days after the battle of
+ Bunker Hill, the news of which could not yet have arrived at Philadelphia.
+ But the war, so much dreaded, had begun, on the quiet banks of Concord
+ River; an army of twenty thousand men was beleaguering Boston; and here
+ was Washington journeying northward to take the command. It seems to place
+ us in a nearer relation with the hero, to find him performing the little
+ courtesy of leaving a letter between friend and friend, and to hold in our
+ hands the very document intrusted to such a messenger. John Adams says
+ simply, "We send you Generals Washington and Lee for your comfort"; but
+ adds nothing in regard to the character of the Commander-in-Chief. This
+ letter displays much of the writer's ardent temperament; if he had been
+ anywhere but in the hall of Congress, it would have been in the
+ intrenchment before Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope," he writes, "a good account will be given of Gage, Haldiman,
+ Burgoyne, Clinton, and Howe, before winter. Such a wretch as Howe, with a
+ statue in honor of his family in Westminster Abbey, erected by the
+ Massachusetts, to come over with the design to cut the throats of the
+ Massachusetts people, is too much. I most sincerely, coolly, and devoutly
+ wish that a lucky ball or bayonet may make a signal example of him, in
+ warning to all such unprincipled, unsentimental miscreants for the
+ future!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He goes on in a strain that smacks somewhat of aristocratic feeling: "Our
+ camp will be an illustrious school of military virtue, and will be
+ resorted to and frequented, as such, by gentlemen in great numbers from
+ the other colonies." The term "gentleman" has seldom been used in this
+ sense subsequently to the Revolution. Another letter introduces us to two
+ of these gentlemen, Messrs. Acquilla Hall and Josias Carvill, volunteers,
+ who are recommended as "of the first families in Maryland, and possessing
+ independent fortunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the British had been driven out of Boston, Adams cries out,
+ "Fortify, fortify; and never let them get in again!" It is agreeable
+ enough to perceive the filial affection with which John Adams, and the
+ other delegates from the North, regard New England, and especially the
+ good old capital of the Puritans. Their love of country was hardly yet so
+ diluted as to extend over the whole thirteen colonies, which were rather
+ looked upon as allies than as composing one nation. In truth, the
+ patriotism of a citizen of the United States is a sentiment by itself of a
+ peculiar nature, and requiring a lifetime, or at least the custom of many
+ years, to naturalize it among the other possessions of the heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The collection is enriched by a letter dated "Cambridge, August 26, 1775"
+ from Washington himself. He wrote it in that house,&mdash;now so venerable
+ with his memory,&mdash;in that very room, where his bust now stands upon a
+ poet's table; from this sheet of paper passed the hand that held the
+ leading-staff! Nothing can be more perfectly in keeping with all other
+ manifestations of Washington than the whole visible aspect and embodiment
+ of this letter. The manuscript is as clear as daylight; the punctuation
+ exact, to a comma. There is a calm accuracy throughout, which seems the
+ production of a species of intelligence that cannot err, and which, if we
+ may so speak, would affect us with a more human warmth, if we could
+ conceive it capable of some slight human error. The chirography is
+ characterized by a plain and easy grace, which, in the signature, is
+ somewhat elaborated, and becomes a type of the personal manner of a
+ gentleman of the old school, but without detriment to the truth and
+ clearness that distinguish the rest of the manuscript. The lines are as
+ straight and equidistant as if ruled; and from beginning to end, there is
+ no physical symptom&mdash;as how should there be?&mdash;of a varying mood,
+ of jets of emotion, or any of those fluctuating feelings that pass from
+ the hearts into the fingers of common men. The paper itself (like most of
+ those Revolutionary letters, which are written on fabrics fit to endure
+ the burden of ponderous and earnest thought) is stout, and of excellent
+ quality, and bears the water-mark of Britannia, surmounted by the Crown.
+ The subject of the letter is a statement of reasons for not taking
+ possession of Point Alderton; a position commanding the entrance of Boston
+ Harbor. After explaining the difficulties of the case, arising from his
+ want of men and munitions for the adequate defence of the lines which he
+ already occupies, Washington proceeds: "To you, sir, who are a well-wisher
+ to the cause, and can reason upon the effects of such conduct, I may open
+ myself with freedom, because no improper disclosures will be made of our
+ situation. But I cannot expose my weakness to the enemy (though I believe
+ they are pretty well informed of everything that passes), by telling this
+ and that man, who are daily pointing out this, and that, and t' other
+ place, of all the motives that govern my actions; notwithstanding I know
+ what will be the consequence of not doing it,&mdash;namely, that I shall
+ be accused of inattention to the public service, and perhaps of want of
+ spirit to prosecute it. But this shall have no effect upon my conduct. I
+ will steadily (as far as my judgment will assist me) pursue such measures
+ as I think conducive to the interest of the cause, and rest satisfied
+ under any obloquy that shall be thrown, conscious of having discharged my
+ duty to the best of my abilities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above passage, like every other passage that could be quoted from his
+ pen, is characteristic of Washington, and entirely in keeping with the
+ calm elevation of his soul. Yet how imperfect a glimpse do we obtain of
+ him, through the medium of this, or any of his letters! We imagine him
+ writing calmly, with a hand that never falters; his majestic face neither
+ darkens nor gleams with any momentary ebullition of feeling, or
+ irregularity of thought; and thus flows forth an expression precisely to
+ the extent of his purpose, no more, no less. Thus much we may conceive.
+ But still we have not grasped the man; we have caught no glimpse of his
+ interior; we have not detected his personality. It is the same with all
+ the recorded traits of his daily life. The collection of them, by
+ different observers, seems sufficiently abundant, and strictly harmonizes
+ with itself, yet never brings us into intimate relationship with the hero,
+ nor makes us feel the warmth and the human throb of his heart. What can be
+ the reason? Is it, that his great nature was adapted to stand in relation
+ to his country, as man stands towards man, but could not individualize
+ itself in brotherhood to an individual?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two from Franklin, the earliest dated, "London, August 8, 1767,"
+ and addressed to "Mrs. Franklin, at Philadelphia." He was then in England,
+ as agent for the colonies in their resistance to the oppressive policy of
+ Mr. Grenville's administration. The letter, however, makes no reference to
+ political or other business. It contains only ten or twelve lines,
+ beginning, "My dear child," and conveying an impression of long and
+ venerable matrimony which has lost all its romance, but retained a
+ familiar and quiet tenderness. He speaks of making a little excursion into
+ the country for his health; mentions a larger letter, despatched by
+ another vessel; alludes with homely affability to "Mrs. Stevenson,"
+ "Sally," and "our dear Polly"; desires to be remembered to "all inquiring
+ friends"; and signs himself, "Your ever loving husband." In this conjugal
+ epistle, brief and unimportant as it is, there are the elements that
+ summon up the past, and enable us to create anew the man, his connections
+ and circumstances. We can see the sage in his London lodgings,&mdash;with
+ his wig cast aside, and replaced by a velvet cap,&mdash;penning this very
+ letter; and then can step across the Atlantic, and behold its reception by
+ the elderly, but still comely Madam Franklin, who breaks the seal and
+ begins to read, first remembering to put on her spectacles. The seal, by
+ the way, is a pompous one of armorial bearings, rather symbolical of the
+ dignity of the Colonial Agent, and Postmaster General of America, than of
+ the humble origin of the Newburyport printer. The writing is in the free,
+ quick style of a man with great practice of the pen, and is particularly
+ agreeable to the reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another letter from the same famous hand is addressed to General Palmer,
+ and dated, "Passy, October 27, 1779." By an indorsement on the outside it
+ appears to have been transmitted to the United States through the medium
+ of Lafayette. Franklin was now the ambassador of his country at the Court
+ of Versailles, enjoying an immense celebrity, caressed by the French
+ ladies, and idolized alike by the fashionable and the learned, who saw
+ something sublime and philosophic even in his blue yarn stockings. Still,
+ as before, he writes with the homeliness and simplicity that cause a human
+ face to look forth from the old, yellow sheet of paper, and in words that
+ make our ears re-echo, as with the sound of his long-extinct utterance.
+ Yet this brief epistle, like the former, has so little of tangible matter
+ that we are ashamed to copy it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next, we come to the fragment of a letter by Samuel Adams; an autograph
+ more utterly devoid of ornament or flourish than any other in the
+ collection. It would not have been characteristic, had his pen traced so
+ much as a hair-line in tribute to grace, beauty, or the elaborateness of
+ manner; for this earnest-hearted man had been produced out of the past
+ elements of his native land, a real Puritan, with the religion of his
+ forefathers, and likewise with their principles of government, taking the
+ aspect of Revolutionary politics. At heart, Samuel Adams was never so much
+ a citizen of the United States, as he was a New-Englander, and a son of
+ the old Bay Province. The following passage has much of the man in it: "I
+ heartily congratulate you," he writes from Philadelphia, after the British
+ have left Boston, "upon the sudden and important change in our affairs, in
+ the removal of the barbarians from the capital. We owe our grateful
+ acknowledgments to Him who is, as he is frequently styled in Sacred Writ,
+ 'The Lord of Hosts.' We have not yet been informed with certainty what
+ course the enemy have steered. I hope we shall be on our guard against
+ future attempts. Will not care be taken to fortify the harbor, and thereby
+ prevent the entrance of ships-of-war hereafter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Hancock, we have only the envelope of a document "on public service,"
+ directed to "The Hon. the Assembly, or Council of Safety of New
+ Hampshire," and with the autograph affixed, that, stands out so
+ prominently in the Declaration of Independence. As seen in the engraving
+ of that instrument, the signature looks precisely what we should expect
+ and desire in the handwriting of a princely merchant, whose penmanship had
+ been practised in the ledger which he is represented as holding, in
+ Copley's brilliant picture, but to whom his native ability, and the
+ circumstances and customs of his country, had given a place among its
+ rulers. But, on the coarse and dingy paper before us, the effect is very
+ much inferior; the direction, all except the signature, is a scrawl, large
+ and heavy, but not forcible; and even the name itself, while almost
+ identical in its strokes with that of the Declaration, has a strangely
+ different and more vulgar aspect. Perhaps it is all right, and typical of
+ the truth. If we may trust tradition, and unpublished letters, and a few
+ witnesses in print, there was quite as much difference between the actual
+ man, and his historical aspect, as between the manuscript signature and
+ the engraved one. One of his associates, both in political life and
+ permanent renown, is said to have characterized him as a "man without a
+ head or heart." We, of an after generation, should hardly be entitled, on
+ whatever evidence, to assume such ungracious liberty with a name that has
+ occupied a lofty position until it, has grown almost sacred, and which is
+ associated with memories more sacred than itself, and has thus become a
+ valuable reality to our countrymen, by the aged reverence that clusters
+ round about it. Nevertheless, it may be no impiety to regard Hancock not
+ precisely as a real personage, but as a majestic figure, useful and
+ necessary in its way, but producing its effect far more by an ornamental
+ outside than by any intrinsic force or virtue. The page of all history
+ would be half unpeopled if all such characters were banished from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From General Warren we have a letter dated January 14, 1775, only a few
+ months before he attested the sincerity of his patriotism, in his own
+ blood, on Bunker Hill. His handwriting has many ungraceful flourishes. All
+ the small d's spout upward in parabolic curves, and descend at a
+ considerable distance. His pen seems to have had nothing but hair-lines in
+ it; and the whole letter, though perfectly legible, has a look of thin and
+ unpleasant irregularity. The subject is a plan for securing to the
+ colonial party the services of Colonel Gridley the engineer, by an appeal
+ to his private interests. Though writing to General Palmer, an intimate
+ friend, Warren signs himself, most ceremoniously, "Your obedient servant."
+ Indeed, these stately formulas in winding up a letter were scarcely laid
+ aside, whatever might be the familiarity of intercourse: husband and wife
+ were occasionally, on paper at least, the "obedient servants" of one
+ another; and not improbably, among well-bred people, there was a
+ corresponding ceremonial of bows and courtesies, even in the deepest
+ interior of domestic life. With all the reality that filled men's hearts,
+ and which has stamped its impress on so many of these letters, it was a
+ far more formal age than the present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be remarked, that Warren was almost the only man eminently
+ distinguished in the intellectual phase of the Revolution, previous to the
+ breaking out of the war, who actually uplifted his arm to do battle. The
+ legislative patriots were a distinct class from the patriots of the camp,
+ and never laid aside the gown for the sword. It was very different in the
+ great civil war of England, where the leading minds of the age, when
+ argument had done its office, or left it undone, put on their steel
+ breastplates and appeared as leaders in the field. Educated young men,
+ members of the old colonial families,&mdash;gentlemen, as John Adams terms
+ them,&mdash;seem not to have sought employment in the Revolutionary army,
+ in such numbers as night have been expected. Respectable as the officers
+ generally were, and great as were the abilities sometimes elicited, the
+ intellect and cultivation of the country was inadequately represented in
+ them, as a body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning another page, we find the frank of a letter from Henry Laurens,
+ President of Congress,&mdash;him whose destiny it was, like so many
+ noblemen of old, to pass beneath the Traitor's Gate of the Tower of
+ London,&mdash;him whose chivalrous son sacrificed as brilliant a future as
+ any young American could have looked forward to, in an obscure skirmish.
+ Likewise, we have the address of a letter to Messrs. Leroy and Bayard, in
+ the handwriting of Jefferson; too slender a material to serve as a
+ talisman for summoning up the writer; a most unsatisfactory fragment,
+ affecting us like a glimpse of the retreating form of the sage of
+ Monticello, turning the distant corner of a street. There is a scrap from
+ Robert Morris, the financier; a letter or two from Judge Jay; and one from
+ General Lincoln, written, apparently, on the gallop, but without any of
+ those characteristic sparks that sometimes fly out in a hurry, when all
+ the leisure in the world would fail to elicit them. Lincoln was the type
+ of a New England soldier; a man of fair abilities, not especially of a
+ warlike cast, without much chivalry, but faithful and bold, and carrying a
+ kind of decency and restraint into the wild and ruthless business of arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From good old Baron Steuben, we find, not a manuscript essay on the method
+ of arranging a battle, but a commercial draft, in a small, neat hand, as
+ plain as print, elegant without flourish, except a very complicated one on
+ the signature. On the whole, the specimen is sufficiently characteristic,
+ as well of the Baron's soldier-like and German simplicity, as of the
+ polish of the Great Frederick's aide-de-camp, a man of courts and of the
+ world. How singular and picturesque an effect is produced, in the array of
+ our Revolutionary army, by the intermingling of these titled personages
+ from the Continent of Europe, with feudal associations clinging about
+ them,&mdash;Steuben, De Kalb, Pulaski, Lafayette!&mdash;the German
+ veteran, who had written from one famous battle-field to another for
+ thirty years; and the young French noble, who had come hither, though yet
+ unconscious of his high office, to light the torch that should set fire to
+ the antiquated trumpery of his native institutions. Among these
+ autographs, there is one from Lafayette, written long after our
+ Revolution, but while that of his own country was in full progress. The
+ note is merely as follows: "Enclosed you will find, my dear Sir, two
+ tickets for the sittings of this day. One part of the debate will be on
+ the Honors of the Pantheon, agreeably to what has been decreed by the
+ Constitutional Assembly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pleasant and comfortable thought, that we have no such classic
+ folly as is here indicated, to lay to the charge of our Revolutionary
+ fathers. Both in their acts, and in the drapery of those acts, they were
+ true to their several and simple selves, and thus left nothing behind them
+ for a fastidious taste to sneer at. But it must be considered that our
+ Revolution did not, like that of France, go so deep as to disturb the
+ common-sense of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Schuyler writes a letter, under date of February 22, 1780,
+ relating not to military affairs, from which the prejudices of his
+ countrymen had almost disconnected him, but to the Salt Springs of
+ Onondaga. The expression is peculiarly direct, and the hand that of a man
+ of business, free and flowing. The uncertainty, the vague, hearsay
+ evidence respecting these springs, then gushing into dim daylight beneath
+ the shadow of a remote wilderness, is such as might now be quoted in
+ reference to the quality of the water that supplies the fountains of the
+ Nile. The following sentence shows us an Indian woman and her son,
+ practising their simple process in the manufacture of salt, at a fire of
+ wind-strewn boughs, the flame of which gleams duskily through the arches
+ of the forest: "From a variety of information, I find the smallest
+ quantity made by a squaw, with the assistance of one boy, with a kettle of
+ about ten gallons' capacity, is half a bushel per day; the greatest with
+ the same kettle, about two bushels." It is particularly interesting to
+ find out anything as to the embryo, yet stationary arts of life among the
+ red people, their manufactures, their agriculture, their domestic labors.
+ It is partly the lack of this knowledge&mdash;the possession of which
+ would establish a ground of sympathy on the part of civilized men&mdash;that
+ makes the Indian race so shadow-like and unreal to our conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We could not select a greater contrast to the upright and unselfish
+ patriot whom we have just spoken of, than the traitor Arnold, from whom
+ there is a brief note, dated, "Crown Point, January 19, 1775," addressed
+ to an officer under his command. The three lines of which it consists can
+ prove bad spelling, erroneous grammar, and misplaced and superfluous
+ punctuation; but, with all this complication of iniquity, the ruffian
+ General contrives to express his meaning as briefly and clearly as if the
+ rules of correct composition had been ever so scrupulously observed. This
+ autograph, impressed with the foulest name in our history, has somewhat of
+ the interest that would attach to a document on which a fiend-devoted
+ wretch had signed away his salvation. But there was not substance enough
+ in the man&mdash;a mere cross between the bull-dog and the fox&mdash;to
+ justify much feeling of any sort about him personally. The interest, such
+ as it is, attaches but little to the man, and far more to the
+ circumstances amid which he acted, rendering the villainy almost sublime,
+ which, exercised in petty affairs, would only have been vulgar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We turn another leaf, and find a memorial of Hamilton. It is but a letter
+ of introduction, addressed to Governor Jay in favor of Mr. Davies, of
+ Kentucky; but it gives an impression of high breeding and courtesy, as
+ little to be mistaken as if we could see the writer's manner and hear his
+ cultivated accents, while personally making one gentleman known to
+ another. There is likewise a rare vigor of expression and pregnancy of
+ meaning, such as only a man of habitual energy of thought could have
+ conveyed into so commonplace a thing as an introductory letter. This
+ autograph is a graceful one, with an easy and picturesque flourish beneath
+ the signature, symbolical of a courteous bow at the conclusion of the
+ social ceremony so admirably performed. Hamilton might well be the leader
+ and idol of the Federalists; for he was pre-eminent in all the high
+ qualities that characterized the great men of that party, and which should
+ make even a Democrat feel proud that his country had produced such a noble
+ old band of aristocrats; and he shared all the distrust of the people,
+ which so inevitably and so righteously brought about their ruin. With his
+ autograph we associate that of another Federalist, his friend in life; a
+ man far narrower than Hamilton, but endowed with a native vigor, that
+ caused many partisans to grapple to him for support; upright, sternly
+ inflexible, and of a simplicity of manner that might have befitted the
+ sturdiest republican among us. In our boyhood we used to see a thin,
+ severe figure of an ancient mail, timeworn, but apparently indestructible,
+ moving with a step of vigorous decay along the street, and knew him as
+ "Old Tim Pickering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Side by side, too, with the autograph of Hamilton, we would place one from
+ the hand that shed his blood. It is a few lines of Aaron Burr, written in
+ 1823; when all his ambitious schemes, whatever they once were, had been so
+ long shattered that even the fragments had crumbled away, leaving him to
+ exert his withered energies on petty law cases, to one of which the
+ present note refers. The hand is a little tremulous with age, yet small
+ and fastidiously elegant, as became a man who was in the habit of writing
+ billet-doux on scented note-paper, as well as documents of war and state.
+ This is to us a deeply interesting autograph. Remembering what has been
+ said of the power of Burr's personal influence, his art to tempt men, his
+ might to subdue them, and the fascination that enabled him, though cold at
+ heart, to win the love of woman, we gaze at this production of his pen as
+ into his own inscrutable eyes, seeking for the mystery of his nature. How
+ singular that a character imperfect, ruined, blasted, as this man's was,
+ excites a stronger interest than if it had reached the highest earthly
+ perfection of which its original elements would admit! It is by the
+ diabolical part of Burr's character that he produces his effect on the
+ imagination. Had he been a better man, we doubt, after all, whether the
+ present age would not already have suffered him to wax dusty, and fade out
+ of sight, among the mere respectable mediocrities of his own epoch. But,
+ certainly, he was a strange, wild offshoot to have sprung from the united
+ stock of those two singular Christians, President Burr of Princeton
+ College, and Jonathan Edwards!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Omitting many, we have come almost to the end of these memorials of
+ historical men. We observe one other autograph of a distinguished soldier
+ of the Revolution, Henry Knox, but written in 1791, when he was Secretary
+ of War. In its physical aspect, it is well worthy to be a soldier's
+ letter. The hand is large, round, and legible at a glance; the lines far
+ apart, and accurately equidistant; and the whole affair looks not unlike a
+ company of regular troops in marching order. The signature has a
+ point-like firmness and simplicity. It is a curious observation, sustained
+ by these autographs, though we know not how generally correct, that
+ Southern gentlemen are more addicted to a flourish of the pen beneath
+ their names, than those of the North.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now we come to the men of a later generation, whose active life
+ reaches almost within the verge of present affairs; people of dignity, no
+ doubt, but whose characters have not acquired, either from time or
+ circumstances, the interest that can make their autographs valuable to any
+ but the collector. Those whom we have hitherto noticed were the men of an
+ heroic age. They are departed, and now so utterly departed, as not even to
+ touch upon the passing generation through the medium of persons still in
+ life, who can claim to have known them familiarly. Their letters,
+ therefore, come to us like material things out of the hands of mighty
+ shadows, long historical, and traditionary, and fit companions for the
+ sages and warriors of a thousand years ago. In spite of the proverb, it is
+ not in a single day, or in a very few years, that a man can be reckoned
+ "as dead as Julius Caesar." We feel little interest in scraps from the
+ pens of old gentlemen, ambassadors, governors, senators, heads of
+ departments, even presidents though they were, who lived lives of
+ praiseworthy respectability, and whose powdered heads and black
+ knee-breeches have but just vanished out of the drawing-room. Still less
+ do we value the blotted paper of those whose reputations are dusty, not
+ with oblivious time, but with present political turmoil and newspaper
+ vogue. Really great men, however, seem, as to their effect on the
+ imagination, to take their place amongst past worthies, even while walking
+ in the very sunshine that illuminates the autumnal day in which we write.
+ We look, not without curiosity, at the small, neat hand of Henry Clay,
+ who, as he remarks with his habitual deference to the wishes of the fair,
+ responds to a young lady's request for his seal; and we dwell longer over
+ the torn-off conclusion of a note from Mr. Calhoun, whose words are
+ strangely dashed off without letters, and whose name, were it less
+ illustrious, would be unrecognizable in his own autograph. But of all
+ hands that can still grasp a pen, we know not the one, belonging to a
+ soldier or a statesman, which could interest us more than the hand that
+ wrote the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir, your note of the 6th inst. is received. I hasten to answer that
+ there was no man 'in the station of colonel, by the name of J. T. Smith,'
+ under my command, at the battle of New Orleans; and am, respectfully,
+ </p>
+ <p class="noindent">
+ "Yours, ANDREW JACKSON.<br /> "OCT. 19th, 1833."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old general, we suspect, has been insnared by a pardonable little
+ stratagem on the part of the autograph collector. The battle of New
+ Orleans would hardly have been won, without better aid than this
+ problematical Colonel J. T. Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intermixed with and appended to these historical autographs, there are a
+ few literary ones. Timothy Dwight&mdash;the "old Timotheus" who sang the
+ Conquest of Cancan, instead of choosing a more popular subject, in the
+ British Conquest of Canada&mdash;is of eldest date. Colonel Trumbull,
+ whose hand, at various epochs of his life, was familiar with sword, pen,
+ and pencil, contributes two letters, which lack the picturesqueness of
+ execution that should distinguish the chirography of an artist. The value
+ of Trumbull's pictures is of the same nature with that of daguerreotypes,
+ depending not upon the ideal but the actual. The beautiful signature of
+ Washington Irving appears as the indorsement of a draft, dated in 1814,
+ when, if we may take this document as evidence, his individuality seems to
+ have been merged into the firm of "P. E. Irving &amp; Co." Never was
+ anything less mercantile than this autograph, though as legible as the
+ writing of a bank-clerk. Without apparently aiming at artistic beauty, it
+ has all the Sketch Book in it. We find the signature and seal of Pierpont,
+ the latter stamped with the poet's almost living countenance. What a
+ pleasant device for a seal is one's own face, which he may thus multiply
+ at pleasure, and send letters to his friends,&mdash;the Head without, and
+ the Heart within! There are a few lines in the school-girl hand of
+ Margaret Davidson, at nine years old; and a scrap of a letter from
+ Washington Allston, a gentle and delicate autograph, in which we catch a
+ glimpse of thanks to his correspondent for the loan of a volume of poetry.
+ Nothing remains, save a letter from Noah Webster, whose early toils were
+ manifested in a spelling-book, and those of his later age in a ponderous
+ dictionary. Under date of February 10, 1843, he writes in a sturdy,
+ awkward hand, very fit for a lexicographer, an epistle of old man's
+ reminiscences, from which we extract the following anecdote of Washington,
+ presenting the patriot in a festive light:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I was travelling to the South, in the year 1783, I called on General
+ Washington at Mount Vernon. At dinner, the last course of dishes was a
+ species of pancakes, which were handed round to each guest, accompanied
+ with a bowl of sugar and another of molasses for seasoning them, that each
+ guest might suit himself. When the dish came to me, I pushed by me the
+ bowl of molasses, observing to the gentlemen present, that I had enough of
+ that in my own country. The General burst out with a loud laugh, a thing
+ very unusual with him. 'Ah,' said he, 'there is nothing in that story
+ about your eating molasses in New England.' There was a gentleman from
+ Maryland at the table; and the General immediately told a story, stating
+ that, during the Revolution, a hogshead of molasses was stove in, in West
+ Chester, by the oversetting of a wagon; and a body of Maryland troops
+ being near, the soldiers ran hastily, and saved all they could by filling
+ their hats or caps with molasses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are said to be temperaments endowed with sympathies so exquisite,
+ that, by merely handling an autograph, they can detect the writer's
+ character with unerring accuracy, and read his inmost heart as easily as a
+ less-gifted eye would peruse the written page. Our faith in this power, be
+ it a spiritual one, or only a refinement of the physical nature, is not
+ unlimited, in spite of evidence. God has imparted to the human soul a
+ marvellous strength in guarding its secrets, and he keeps at least the
+ deepest and most inward record for his own perusal. But if there be such
+ sympathies as we have alluded to, in how many instances would History be
+ put to the blush by a volume of autograph letters, like this which we now
+ close!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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