USA > Connecticut > Tercentenary pamphlet series, v. 3 The Beginnings of Roman Catholicism in Connecticut > Part 26
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III
SUCH were the grim avant-courriers of the Connecticut literature of the late eighteenth century, and upon the Connecticut Wits, too, who then appeared, rested the shadow of the tottering Calvinism which Edwards had upheld. The members of the clique differed widely. Timothy Dwight, the theologian's grandson, traveled toward the opposite pole from Joel Barlow, who became Jeffersonian and Jacobinical, but the group represented, on the whole, the conservative forces of the old religion and the intrenched oligarchical politics which had re- sisted, with Yale as their nexus, far more tenaciously than the Massachusetts thinkers, the onslaughts of demo- cratic thought. The liberal tide was rising fast. The aristocratic reaction after the Revolution was short- lived. Jefferson was determined that the equality of mankind, for which theoretically Americans had fought, should not be lost by resurgent bonds with conservative forces in Europe, by concentration of wealth as in these Connecticut centers, by a hidebound Federalism in both religion and politics. But the Connecticut leaders thought otherwise. Dwight, angered by the post-Revolutionary materialism and by the mobocracy of the time, contin-
I For further account, see Annie R. Marble, The Hartford Wits (no. LIX in this series).
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ued to preach sound Calvinism and sound Federalism, while the political satires of the group, The anarchiad (1786) and The political greenhouse (1799), denounced the radicals and their shambling theories of government.
Such was the mood of the Wits. Such opinions bound them together more closely than their love of literature, which was incidental and which was as conservative as their fiscal policies. Such was their attitude, save in the case of one or two liberals such as Barlow. It was char- acteristic of the epoch that the mother, so to speak, of the first literary group was politics. But the immediate concern is rather with the impingements, often acci- dental, of this group upon literature, and with the personalities in this first American apprenticeship to organized literature. They were well-read gentry, these Wits, in a hearty, eupeptic fashion. They met with mild conviviality in Hartford, at The Bunch of Grapes or at The Black Horse Tavern. The reader, to see them in these friendly offhand moods, should turn to Mr. Francis Parsons's engaging study, "The friendly club." Here "Gallant Humphreys charm'd the list'ning throng." Here Joel Barlow, who so described his tie-wig friend, argued on the rights of man, unaware that he was, after a long career in Europe, to die on December 24, 1812, at Zarno- vich, Poland, with the sound of Napoleon's retreating troops in his ears. Here came John Trumbull, less weighty, but more brilliant, a deft satirist. Here for- gathered others, Noah Webster the lexicographer, Theo- dore Dwight, Lemuel Hopkins, Richard Alsop, Elihu Smith, Mason Cogswell, and, in particular, Timothy Dwight, who in this lighter mood perhaps conceived the couplet which has outlived his epics:
Why streams the life-blood from that female's throat? She sprinkled gravy on a guest's new coat!
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IV
IN spite of the solidity of these young men, Romance was to have her way with at least two of them, David Humphreys and Joel Barlow. Humphreys, born in Derby in 1752, attended Yale in company with Trumbull and. Dwight. He was a good soldier, and after active service with General Parsons and with Putnam, whose lupine adventure he celebrated, he became the aide-de-camp of Washington, who appreciated his "excellent heart, good nature ... sterling integrity ... sobriety." Later Hum- phreys used these gifts, which he really possessed, in the Connecticut legislature, in diplomatic missions in Portu- gal and Spain, and in services to agriculture, as practical as they were picturesque. Across Spain he brought his merino sheep, across the Atlantic he sailed with them, and up the Housatonic to Derby! He was Connecticut's own Jason-with differences.
In Humphreys' taste for literature appeared in epitome the point of view of this first literary group. Success was first, and literature second, a philosophy which lingered on in utilitarian America until Washington Irving could refer at the end of his life to writing as merely "a little gentlemanlike exercise of the pen." Humphreys, next to good farming, admired what he called "polish'd manners and the illumined mind." While with Washington in Virginia he composed a naïve, patriotic poem in honor of the General which he called "Mount Vernon." His titles define the proper spheres of activity, in his opinion, for the "illumined mind": A poem addressed to the armies of the United States (1780); The glory of America (1783); A poem on the happiness of America (1786); A poem on in- dustry, addressed to the citizens of the United States (1794). Humphreys composed poetry as he led his troops, im-
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petuously and without self-criticism, but occasionally writing of the Connecticut scene he was gently persua- sive, as in the following winter-piece, not unworthy, perhaps, of Whittier:
Nor then, unjoyous, Winter's rigors come, But find them happy and content with home; Their gran'ries filled-the task of culture past- Warm at their fire, they hear the howling blast, With patt'ring rain and snow, or driving sleet, Rave idly loud, and at their window beat: Safe from its rage, regardless of its roar, In vain the tempest rattles at the door; The tame brute sheltered, and the feathered brood From them, more provident, demand their food.
In all virtues, save perhaps those of the soldier, Humphreys was surpassed by the versatile and thought- ful Joel Barlow whose character, as revealed in the recent biography by Mr. T. A. Zunder, presents enigmatic lights and shades lacking in the brash Humphreys. At Yale in 1778 he was class poet. Though patriotic as army chaplain, he had not settled, like his more Calvinistic friends, all the problems of the cosmos. He could begin, even in these years, his mammoth poem, The vision of Columbus (1787), but he was capable of a romantic love experience, and as he grew into the businessman and statesman of the later period, he evidently continued to do his own thinking, a fault not attributable to all the other Wits. No longer a translator of the Psalms, he helped to organize the Scioto Land Company. No longer a listener to the anti-radical discourse at The Bunch of Grapes, he wrote his Advice to the privileged orders (1792-1793), and was made a French citizen. He trans- lated Volney's Ruins (1802); he built Kalorama, his prodigious mansion in Rock Creek Park, Washington;
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he was sent to Napoleon in behalf of American commerce; and he is still remembered as a liberal spirit.
Barlow loved literature, and his aims for that of his own country merit respect. His Columbiad (1807), the butt of innumerable jests, for its length, for its pompous verses, for its almost comic solemnity, as he discussed Danbury, Norwalk, or the Connecticut river, or as he soared heavily upward in his prophecy of America's future, was, nevertheless, a memorable book. Apart from its energy and optimism, it was a landmark in an en- deavor which was to reach its climax in Emerson's The American scholar (1837). In the long battle for intellec- tual independence, in the earnest, if bourgeois, passion to create a literature worthy of America, Barlow had a part. Volatile as he was, he had convictions on this point- convictions that today have had a measure of fulfilment. Let the reader glance at the appended passage from the Columbiad, to see Barlow at his worst:
Columbus turn'd; when rolling to the shore Swells o'er the sea an undulating roar; Slow, dark, portentous, as the meteors sweep, And curtain black the illimitable deep,
High stalks, from surge to surge, a demon Form, That howls through heaven and breathes a billowing storm.
His head is hung with clouds; his giant hand Flings a blue flame far flickering to the land; His blood-stain'd limbs drip carnage as he strides, And taint with gory grume the staggering tides; Like two red suns, his quivering eyeballs glare, His mouth disgorges all the stores of war, Pikes, muskets, mortars, guns and globes of fire, And lightened bombs that fusing trails expire. Percht on his helmet, two twin sisters rode, The favorite offspring of the murderous god, Famine and Pestilence; whom whilom bore His wife, grim Discord, on Trinacria's shore;
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When first their Cyclop sons, from Etna's forge, Fill'd his foul magazine, his gaping gorge; Then earth convulsive groan'd, high shriek'd the air, And hell in gratulation call'd him War.
Then, to perceive another side of Barlow, read his tribute to polenta or Indian meal in the delightful lines of The hasty-pudding (1796):
There is a choice in spoons. Tho' small appear The nice distinction, yet to me 'tis clear, The deep bowl'd Gallic spoon, contriv'd to scoop In ample draughts the thin diluted soup, Performs not well in those substantial things, Whose mass adhesive to the metal clings; Where the strong labial muscles must embrace The gentle curve, and sweep the hollow space. With ease to enter and discharge the freight, A bowl less concave, but still more dilate, Becomes the pudding best Fear not to slaver; 'tis no deadly sin.
Like the free Frenchman, from your joyous chin Suspend the ready napkin; or, like me, Poise with one hand your bowl upon your knee; Just in the zenith your wise head preject, Your full spoon, rising in a line direct, Bold as a bucket, heeds no drops that fall, The widemouth'd bowl will surely catch them all.
V
No such picturesque career as Humphreys' and Bar- low's awaited intellectual John Trumbull. Yet legends have gathered about his youthful precocity: that he could recite the entire New England primer; that he passed the entrance examinations for Yale at the age of seven; that he matriculated, after a prudent delay, at thirteen. Born in Westbury (now Watertown) in 1750, he sustained a real intellectual life until the year 1831, when
IO
Irving and Cooper were at the height of their fame. For the first time, in this study, the history of a writer is also the history of a truly literary mind. In college Trumbull read widely; his models were eighteenth-century English poets. In 1772 he published Part I of The progress of dulness, whose octosyllabics still offer an occasional witty couplet, such as
For he that drinks till all things reel, Sees double, and that's twice as well.
Trumbull's learning and wit found fullest expression in M'Fingal (1775; 1782), his lively satire on the Tories. M'Fingal is still salty. At the town meeting Squire M'Fingal declaims until he achieves his suit of tar and feathers:
Forthwith the crowd proceed to deck With halter'd noose M'Fingal's neck, ...
Then lifting high th' pond'rous jar,
Pour'd o'er his head the smoking tar . . . His flowing wig, as next the brim,
First met and drank the sable stream; . . .
From nose and chin's remotest end, The tarry icicles depend;
Till all o'erspread, with colors gay He glitter'd to the western ray, Like sleet-bound trees in wintry skies, Or Lapland idol carved in ice. And now the feather-bag display'd,
Is wav'd in triumph o'er his head, And spreads him o'er with feathers missive, And down upon the tar adhesive.
Arid stretches prevent a favorable comparison of this poem with Hudibras, and its surface satire lacks the in- sight which lifts such writing from the local and tempo- rary into the enduring penetration of human nature, but
II
the sting of its lines still lingers, and the thirty editions of M'Fingal in its own time attest the authentic wit of John Trumbull.
Like Barlow in breadth of interest, like Humphreys in his conception of a national literature, like Trumbull in his love of learning, but unlike them all in his fervid moral zeal, Timothy Dwight, brilliant undergraduate, tutor, and president of Yale, outtopped these others in dignity and depth of character. After resigning his chap- laincy in the army, he returned to Northampton, his boyhood home, for a time, but later was settled at Green- field Hill in Fairfield as minister for a dozen years until he became the head of his college in 1795. In his battle for the old faith against the atheism of his age, Dwight has a distinct place in the history of American thought. But was he, as a critic declared, as a poet "little inferior to any of his contemporaries in America"? Perhaps. This would not be high praise. He was certainly a sedulous imitator, and Goldsmith and Thomson may have been on his table as he composed his verse. In hymn and patriotic anthem he sometimes struck fire, but his epic, The conquest of Canaan (1785), and Greenfield Hill (1794) are dilute and unconvincing, and his Triumph of infidelity (1788), with its dedication to Voltaire, seems an obsolete and provincial impertinence. Yet how delightful he was as he related in prose his impressions of his native land! A candid and loyal spirit, Dwight felt, like Hawthorne, a genuine love of these few colonies beside the sea. Voltaire and the world of Europe he did not begin to comprehend. The real and gentler Dwight may be found in his Travels in New-England and New-York (1821-1822).
Enough has been said, perhaps, to indicate the basic unity, in spite of conflicts of opinion and personality, of the Wits. They may be left now, after glances at Theo-
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dore Dwight (1764-1846, resident of Hartford, the brother of Timothy, and the father of Theodore Dwight, the poet), at Richard Alsop (1761-1815, resident of Middletown), and, especially, at Dr. Lemuel Hopkins (1750-1801), welcome after these serious fellows for "his reckless levity of expression." Hopkins was born in Waterbury, studied at Wallingford, and practised medi- cine in Litchfield and Hartford. Less interested in the future of America than in the ravages of tuberculosis, he proposed a cure, but his humanity did not extend to the spurious members of his profession. In his "Epitaph on a patient killed by a cancer quack" he noted in easy verse the excrescence
Which, gnawing on with fiery pace Devoured one broadside of his face.
The denouement is in lines which David Humphreys never could have written:
Here lies a fool flat on his back,
The victim of a cancer quack
Who lost his money and his life,
By plaster, caustic, and by knife. The case was this-a pimple rose
South-east a little of his nose;
Which daily reddened and grew bigger As too much drinking gave it vigor.
Certainly Hopkins' brother physician, Mason Fitch Cogswell (1761-1830, resident of Hartford), could not have done as well, nor could Richard Alsop with his Conquest of Scandinavia (1793) and his poem on George Washington (1800), nor Dr. Elihu Hubbard Smith (1771- 1798) of Litchfield, who compiled the first American anthology in 1793. Hopkins' verses indicate the inclina- tion among the Wits, not merely toward the grandiose aims of Humphreys, Barlow, and Dwight, but toward
I3
poetry as a kindly, witty instrument for daily incidents and humble foibles. Such were the "Pleiades of Con- necticut," and, all in all, the state has not seen their equals since they flourished more than a century ago.
VI
INDEED, by 1825 consanguinity of purpose disappeared. Communications between the states broke down the idiosyncrasies of the snug little Connecticut community. Calvinism faded; new political parties formed; new na- tional aspirations grew; and Connecticut was absorbed in the growing nationalism of the country. More and more the state harbored writers who, sooner or later, departed to be famous elsewhere. At Yale Augustus Baldwin Longstreet (1790-1870) told tales of his native South, and later published them as Georgia scenes (1840). Here, too, studied Nathaniel Parker Willis (1806-1867), but drifted off to New York to become the disciple of Washington Irving. Francis Miles Finch (1827-1907), author of "The Blue and the Gray," Robert Kelley Weeks (1840-1876), Lewis Frank Tooker (1854-1925), Charles DeKay (1848-), Robert Cameron Rogers (1862-1912), Arthur Willis Colton (1868-)-all had more or less definite associations with Connecticut. The list be- comes catalogic, but it should also include Sylvester Judd (1813-1853), author of the transcendentalist novel, Margaret (1845); Eugene Schuyler (1840-1890), the diplomat and short-story writer; Clarence King (1842- 1901), author of Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada (1872); and Ehrman Syme Nadal (1843-1922), with his Impressions of London social life (1875) and A Virginia village (1917).
Turn over the old anthologies, so indifferent to the verdicts of posterity in their omission of such writers as
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Poe, and the abundance, if not the distinction, of writing in Connecticut in the first half of the nineteenth century becomes apparent. Forgotten now, many Connecticut writers had then their momentary fame: in Salisbury was born William Ray (1771-1827), author of Tripoli; in Guilford, George Hill (1796-1871), with his Ruins of Athens (1831); in North Stamford, Edward Augustus Mclaughlin (1798-1861); in Stratford, Prosper Mont- gomery Wetmore (1798-1876); and a score of others must be nameless in this short essay. It is necessary even to pass over, as temporary dwellers in Connecticut, the Beechers (associated with Litchfield), including Harriet Beecher Stowe (1812-1896), whose earlier and later years were spent in Connecticut. What state may claim Uncle Tom's Cabin? Or Jared Sparks (1789-1866), born in Willington, but later editor of the North American review and president of Harvard College? Or John Fiske (1842-1901), the philosopher and historian, born in Hart- ford but long a resident in Cambridge?
The fact is, that apart from a few prose writers, who will be mentioned at the close of this essay, the most characteristic medium of literary expression in Connecti- cut during the nineteenth century was poetry. Yet the search is in vain for a poet of the first or second rank; instead one finds imitators in the sentimental tradition, and rarely, as in the case of James Gates Percival, a genuine if limited poetic talent. John Pierpont (1785- 1866), for example, born at Litchfield and graduated from Yale, wrote in monotonous heroic couplets his Airs of Palestine (1840). His lachrymose stanzas are tolerable only in such a lyric as "My child," and even this poem in- vites a dangerous comparison with Emerson's "Threno- dy." Little more may be said of the poetry of James Abraham Hillhouse (1789-1841), associated with New
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Haven. In spite of Willis' declaration that reading Hill- house was "the opening of a new heaven of the imagina- tion," it is difficult to find in these masques (The judg- ment, 1821; Demetria, 1839) and oriental dramas (Hadad, 1825), other than what Dr. Charles A. Beard has called the products of a "mercantile culture." Connecticut poetry of this epoch is, indeed, happier when it avoids the lofty theme and sounding line and is content to record the simple moods arising naturally from the contemplation of actual surroundings. For this reason John Gardiner Calkins Brainard's (1796-1828) little volume of Occa- sional pieces of poetry (1825) is worth a dozen Hadads. Brainard, whose home was in New London and who lived to be only thirty-two, was a sensitive, sincere spirit, writing of the Connecticut and Salmon rivers gracefully and well.
Brainard, like all Connecticut, was fond of the "Sweet Singer of Hartford," Lydia Huntley Sigourney (1791- 1865), who, in the histories of literature, is still a symbol of pious, moral verse. Mrs. Sigourney, whose story has been recently told by Mr. Gordon S. Haight, was a direct product of a nineteenth-century mood now incompre- hensible to our more realistic, ironic era. Its causes are obscure: the conventional religion, the limited knowledge of science, the aftermath of eighteenth-century sentimen- talism, Byronism. In both England and America, the mezzotint, the pressed rose-leaf, the gift-book, the wax flower, the faded cheek, the dying infant were all stage properties for a wistful, tender view of life that seems to have drawn into its seas of tears not merely lonely spinsters but robust men-witness the taint of this in- fection in Prescott the historian. Born in Norwich, Mrs. Sigourney began in childhood her long career of vacuous virtue. At the age of twenty-four she issued her Moral
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pieces (1815). Soon there followed book after book on tombstones, widows, brides, olive buds, and water drops. Her epitaphs became so famous and so numerous that she was accused of having added a new terror to death. Yet it is wiser to study Mrs. Sigourney than to laugh at her, for in the immense popularity of her poetry is an index to the immature cultural standards of her epoch.
Two poets, though themselves not free from self-pity, were by contrast with Mrs. Sigourney robust. Fitz- Greene Halleck (1790-1867), who after a boyhood in Guilford made his home for many years in New York, echoed Byron in "Alnwick Castle" (1827), but his tongue had a whip and his pen a lash. His satirical verses, The Croaker papers (1819), and his humorous poem, "Fanny" (1819), won him among the Knickerbockers leadership as a wit not unlike that held by Washington Irving a decade earlier. Apart from his fiery "Marco Bozzaris" (1827), which our fathers declaimed in school, there is still life and vigor in Halleck, and his biography by Mr. Nelson F. Adkins shows him to have been a cultivated man of the world. It is defensible to call him, excepting the Wits, the most distinguished Connecticut poet.
He is, however, far less fascinating as a person than "our own Percival," James Gates Percival (1795-1856), physician, geologist, lexicographer, and poet. Mr. H. R. Warfel's recent researches reveal his learning, especially in languages; his high standards of scholarship; his true poetic gifts. It is difficult to subscribe to Whittier's tribute: "God pity the man who does not love the poetry of Percival," but he is, nevertheless, as Whittier added, a "singular and high-minded poet." To understand Perci- val one should first look at his portrait: the sharply cut features, the wild eyes, the intensely eager yet melan- choly expression, so characteristic of his unhappy life.
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Born in Kensington, he entered Yale in 1811, and straightway stories clustered about him. He posted verses on a college building, and then listened for criticism; he purchased a pistol with which to commit suicide; he re- fused to admit Longfellow, who journeyed from Cam- bridge to see this new literary portent; he lived in dirty rooms surrounded by the finest private library in Con- necticut. He was not, in the words of the too-fluent Willis "the purest and the most mere man of genius possible to our race," but he had, as Lowell declared "defeat worked into his very constitution." Yet his own words describe him best: "I know not how it is, but I cannot rest: I am eternally harassed by the fear that darkens the future. I sometimes wish intensely that I could find some fairy pilot to guide me on to my destined haven."
As so often is the case of unhappy genius, that "haven" was a modest fame with posterity. Most of Percival's poetry will, of course, remain forgotten. It is diffuse, excited, uneven. But Percival possessed, unlike some of his watery contemporaries, imaginative power and, at times, the gift of intense condensation. The customary winnowing of two exceptional poems from Percival's volumes is, perhaps, wise. "To Seneca Lake" may live, and certainly passages in "The coral grove," once read, linger in the mind. Of the mysterious submarine caverns Percival sang:
The water is calm and still below, For the waves and winds are absent there, And the sands are bright as the stars that glow In the motionless fields of upper air : There, with its waving blade of green The sea-flag streams through the silent water, And the crimson leaf of the dulse is seen
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To blush, like a banner bathed in slaughter: Then with light and easy motion, The fan-coral sweeps through the clear, deep sea; And the yellow and scarlet tufts of ocean Are bending like corn on the upland lea.
VII
THE Civil War, which Percival escaped, elicited from both the North and the South a substantial body of poetry and prose. Connecticut's only significant contri- butions were through Henry Howard Brownell (1820- 1872) and Theodore Winthrop (1828-1861). Brownell, born in Providence, was graduated from Trinity College and lived for long periods of his life at Hartford. A friend of Farragut, he chronicled the battle of Mobile Bay in a swiftly moving lyric, "The river fight." Winthrop, New Haven born and New Haven bred, one of the first Northern officers to die in the war, lives chiefly as a ro- mantic memory. "For one moment," wrote George William Curtis, "that brave inspiring form is plainly visible to his whole country, rapt and calm, standing on the log nearest the enemy's battery." In the novels, Cecil Dreeme (1861), John Brent (1862), and The canoe and the saddle (1862), there are echoes of Winthrop's gallant life.
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