The Atlantic Monthly | July 1864
Hawthorne
"It was my fortune to be among the last of the friends who
looked upon Hawthorne's living face"
by O.W. Holmes
.....
t is with a sad pleasure that the readers of this
magazine will see in its pages the first chapter of "The
Dolliver Romance," the latest record of Nathaniel hawthorne
meant for the public eye. The charm of his description and the
sweet flow of his style will lead all who open upon it to read
on to the closing paragraph. With its harmonious cadences the
music of this quaint, mystic overture is suddenly hushed, and
we seem to hear instead the tolling of a bell in the far
distance. The procession of shadowy characters which was
gathering in our imaginations about the ancient man and the
little child who come so clearly before our sight seems to
fade away, and in its place a slow-pacing train winds through
the village-road and up the wooded hillside until it stops
at a little opening among the tall trees. There the bed is
made in which he whose dreams had peopled our common life with
shapes and thoughts of beauty and wonder is to take his rest.
This is the end of the first chapter we have been reading, and
of that other first chapter in the life of an Immortal, whose folded
pages will be opened, we trust, in the light of a brighter
day.
It was my fortune to be among the last of the friends who
looked upon Hawthorne's living face. Late in the afternoon
of the day before he left Boston on his last journey I called
upon him at the hotel where he was staying. He had gone out
but a moment before. Looking along the street, I saw a figure
at some distance in advance which could only be his,—but how
changed from his former port and figure! There was no mistaking the long iron-gray locks, the carriage of the head, and
the general look of the natural outlines and movement but he
seemed to have shrunken in all his dimensions, and faltered
along with an uncertain, feeble step, as if every movement
were an effort. I joined him, and we walked together half an
hour, during which time I learned so much of his state of mind
and body as could be got at without worrying him with
suggestive questions,—my object being to form an opinion
of his condition, as I had been requested to do, and to give
him some hints that might be useful to him on his journey.
His aspect, medically considered, was very unfavorable. There were
persistent local symptoms, referred especially to the
stomach,— "boring pain," distension, difficult digestion,
with great wasting of flesh and strength. He was very
gentle, very willing to answer questions, very docile to such
counsel as I offered him, but evidently had no hope of recovering his health. He spoke as if his work were done, and he
should write no more.
With all his obvious depression, there
was no failing noticeable in his conversational powers.
There was the same backwardness and hesitancy which in his
best days it was hard for him to overcome, so that talking
with him was almost like love-making, and his shy, beautiful
soul had to be wooed from its bashful pudency like an
unschooled maiden. The calm despondency with which he spoke
about himself confirmed the unfavorable opinion suggested by
his look and history. The journey on which Mr. Hawthorne was
setting out, when I saw him, was undertaken for the benefit
of his health. A few weeks earlier he had left Boston on a
similar errand in company with Mr. William D. Ticknor, who
had kindly volunteered to be his companion in a trip which
promised to be of some extent and duration, and from which
this faithful friend, whose generous devotion deserves the
most grateful remembrance, hoped to bring him back restored,
or at least made stronger. Death joined the travellers, but it
was not the invalid whom he selected as his victim. The
strong man was taken, and the suffering valetudinanan found
himself charged with those last duties which he was so soon to
need at the hands of others. The fatigue of mind and body thus
substituted for the recreation which he greatly needed must
have hastened the course of his disease, or at least have
weakened his powers of resistance to no small extent.
Once more, however, in company with his old college-friend and
classmate, Ex-President Pierce, he made the attempt to
recover his lost health by this second journey. My visit to
him on the day before his departure was a somewhat peculiar one, partly of friendship, but partly also in compliance
with the request I have referred to.
I asked only such questions as were like to afford practical hints as to the way in which he should manage himself on his journey. It was more
important that he should go away as hopeful as might be than
that a searching examination should point him to the precise
part diseased, condemning him to a forlorn self-knowledge
such as the masters of the art of diagnosis sometimes rashly
substitute for the ignorance which is comparative happiness.
Being supposed to remember something of the craft pleasantly
satirized in the chapter before us, I volunteered, not "an
infallible panacea of my own distillation," but some familiar
palhiatives which I hoped might relieve the symptoms of which he complained most. The history of his disease must, I suppose, remain unwritten, and perhaps it is just as well that it should be so. Men of sensibility and
genius hate to have their infirmities dragged out of them by
the roots in exhaustive series of cross-questionings and
harassing physical explorations, and he who has enlarged the
domain of the human soul may perhaps be spared his
contribution to the pathology of the human body. At least, I
was thankful that it was not my duty to sound all the jarring chords of this sensitive organism, and that a few
cheering words and the prescription of a not ungrateful
sedative and cordial or two could not lay on me the reproach
of having given him his "final bitter taste of this world,
perhaps doomed to be a recollected nauseousness in the
next."
There was nothing in Mr. Hawthorne's aspect that gave
warning of so sudden an end as that which startled us all. It
seems probable that he died by the gentlest of all modes of
release, fainting, without the trouble and confusion of coming
back to life,—a way of ending liable to happen in any
disease attended with much debility.
Mr. Hawthorne died in
the town of Plymouth, New Hampshire, on the nineteenth of
May. The moment, and even the hour, could not be told, for he
had passed away without giving any sign of suffering, such as
might call the attention of the friend near bun. On Monday,
the twenty-third of May, his body was given back to earth in
the place where he had long lived, and which he had helped to
make widely known,—the ancient town of Concord.
The day of his burial will always live in the memory of all who shared in
its solemn, grateful duties. All the fair sights and sweet
sounds of the opening season mingled their enchantments as if
in homage to the dead master, who, as a lover of Nature and a
student of life, had given such wealth of poetry to our New
England home, and invested the stern outlines of Puritan
character with the colors of romance. It was the bridal day of
the season, perfect in light as if heaven were looking on,
perfect in air as if Nature herself were sighing for our loss.
The orchards were all in fresh flower,—
"One boundless blush,
one white-empurpled shower Of mingled blossoms";—
the banks
were literally blue with violets; the elms were putting out
their tender leaves, just in that passing aspect which Raphael
loved to pencil in the backgrounds of his holy pictures, not
as yet printing deep shadows, but only mottling the sunshine
at their feet. The birds were in full song; the pines were
musical with the soft winds they sweetened. All was in
faultless accord, and every heart was filled with the beauty
that flooded the landscape.
The church where the funeral
services were performed was luminous with the whitest
blossoms of the luxuriant spring. A great throng of those who
loved him, of those who honored his genius, of those who
held him in kindly esteem as a neighbor and friend, filled the
edifice. Most of those who were present wished to look once
more at the features which they remembered with the lights and
shadows of life's sunshine upon them. The cold moonbeam of
death lay white on the noble forehead and still, placid
features; but they never looked fuller of power than in this
last aspect with which they met the eyes that were turned upon
them.
In a patch of sunlight, flecked by the shade of tall,
murmuring pines, at the summit of a gently swelling mound
where the wild-flowers had climbed to find the light and the
stirring of fresh breezes, the tired poet was laid beneath the
green turf. Poet let us call him, though his chants were not
modulated in the rhythm of verse. The element of poetry is
air: we know the poet by his atmospheric effects, by the
blue of his distances, by the softening of every hard outline
he touches, by the silvery mist in which he veils deformity
and clothes what is common so that it changes to awe-inspiring
mystery, by the cloud of gold and purple which are the
drapery of his dreams. And surely we have had but one prose'
writer who could be compared with him in ai~rial perspective,
if we may use the painter's term. If Irving is the Claude of
our unrhymed poetry, Hawthorne is its Poussin.
This is not the occasion for the analysis and valuation of Hawthorne's
genius. If the reader wishes to see a thoughtful and generous
estimate of his powers, and a just recognition of the singular
beauty of his style, he may turn to the number of this
magazine published in May, 1860. The last effort of
Hawthorne's creative mind is before him in the chapter here
printed. The hand of the dead master shows itself in every
line. The shapes and scenes he pictures slide at once into our
consciousness, as if they belonged there as much as our own
homes and relatives. That limpid flow of expression, never
laboring, never shallow, never hurried nor uneven nor turbid,
but moving on with tranquil force, clear to the depths of its
profoundest thought, shows itself with all its consummate
perfections. Our literature could ill spare the rich ripe autumn of such a life as Hawthorne's, but he has left enough to
keep his name in remembrance as long as the language in which
he shaped his deep imaginations is spoken by human lips.
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Copyright © 2003 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; July 1864; Hawthorne; Volume 45, No. 268; page 194.
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