Web
and Book
design, Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2007 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
Click
Here to return to Friends on the Shelf Content Page |
(HOME) |
WILLIAM HAZLITT HAPPY is
the man
who enjoys himself. His are
the true riches. Saving physical pain and mortal
illness, few evils can touch him. He may lose friends and make enemies;
all the
powers of the world may seem to have combined against him; he may work
hard and
fare worse; poverty may sit at his table and share his bed; but he is
not to be
greatly pitied. His good things are within. He enjoys himself. He has found
the secret that the rest of men are all, more or less consciously,
looking for,
— how to be happy though miserable. It seems an easy method; nothing
could be
less complicated: simply to enjoy one’s own mind. The thing is to do
it. Whether
any one
ever really accomplished the miracle for more than brief intervals at
once, a
skeptic may doubt; but some have believed themselves to have
accomplished it;
and in questions of this intimately personal nature, the difference
between
faith and fact is small and unimportant. It is of the essence of belief
not to
be disturbed overmuch by theoretical objections. If I am happy, what is
it to
me that my busybody of a neighbor across the way has settled it with
himself
that I am not happy, and in the nature of the case cannot be? Let my
meddlesome
neighbor mind his own affairs. The pudding is mine, not his; and, with
or
without his leave, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. These not
very
uncommonplace reflections are suggested by the remembrance of what are
reported
to have been the last words of the man whose name stands at the head of
this
paper. He was dying before his time, in what the world, if it had
happened to
concern itself about so inconsiderable an event, would have called
rather
squalid circumstances. His life had mostly been cloudy. The greater
part of his
fifty-two years had been spent in quarreling impartially with friends
and foes,
and, strange to say (matters terrestrial being habitually so out of
joint), the
logical result had followed. His domestic experiences, too, had been
little to
his comfort and less to his credit. So far as women were concerned, he
had
played the fool to his heart’s content and his enemies’ amusement. Of
his two
wives (both living), neither was now at his bedside. His purse was
empty, or
near it. It was almost a question how he should be buried. Withal, as a
man
more than ordinarily ambitious, he had never done the things he had
cared most
to do; and now it was all over. And being always an eloquent man, and
having
breath for one sentence more, he said, “Well, I have had a happy life.”
Nor need
it be
assumed that he was either lying or posing. With abundance of
misfortune and no
lack of disappointment, with outward things working pretty unanimously
against
him, he had enjoyed himself. In a word, he remained to the last what he
had
been from the first, a sentimentalist; and .a sentimentalist, like a
Christian,
has joys that the world knows not of. For a
sentimentalist is one who, more than the majority of his fellows,
cultivates
and relishes his emotions. They are the chief of his living, the
choicest of
his crop, his “best of dearest and his only care;” as why should they
not be,
since they give him the most of what he most desires? Perhaps we should
all be
sentimentalists if we could. As it is, the number of such is relatively
small,
though even at that they may be said to be of various kinds, as their
emotions
are excited by various classes of objects. If a man’s
nature
is religious, his sentimentalism, supposing him to have been born with
that
gift, naturally takes on a religious turn; he treasures the luxury of
contrition and the raptures of assured forgiveness. Like one of the
earliest
and most celebrated of his kind, he can feed day and night upon tears,
— having
plentiful occasion, perhaps, for such a watery diet, — and be the more
ecstatic
in proportion as he sounds more and more deeply the unfathomable depths
of his
unworthiness. This, in part at least, is what is meant by the current
phrase,
“enjoying religion.” Devotional literature bears unbroken witness to
its
reality and fervors, from the Psalms of David down to the “Lives of the
Saints”
and the diaries of latter-day Methodism. There is nothing sweeter to
the finer
sorts of human nature than devotional self-effacement, whether it be
sought as
Nirvâna in the silence of a Buddhist’s cell, or as a gift of special
grace in a
tumultuous chorus of “Oh, to be nothing, nothing,” at a crowded
conventicle.
Small wonder that the
“willing soul would
stay
In such a frame as this, And sit and sing itself away To everlasting bliss.” Small wonder, surely; for, say what you will (and the remark is not half so much a truism as it sounds), one of the surest ways to be happy is to have happy feelings. This
cultivation of
the religious sensibilities is probably the commonest, as at its best
it is
certainly the noblest form of what, meaning no offense, — though the
word has
been in bad company, and will never recover from the smirch, — we have
called
sentimentalism. But there are other forms, suited to other grades of
human
capacity, for all men are not saints. There is,
for
example, especially in these modern times, a purely poetic
susceptibility to
the charms of the natural world; so that the favored subject of it, not
every
day, to be sure, but as often as the mood is upon him, shall experience
joys
ineffable, “Trances of thought
and mountings of the mind,” at the sight of an
ordinary
landscape or the meanest of common flowers.
Of a much
lower
sort is the sentimentalism of such a man as Sterne; a something not
poetical,
only half real, a kind of rhetorical trick, never so neatly done, but
still a
trick, and whatever of genuine feeling there is in it so alloyed with
baser
metal that even while you enjoy to the very marrow the amazing
perfection of
the writing (for it would be hard to name another book in which there
are so
many perfect sentences to the page as in the “Sentimental Journey”), —
even
while you feel all this, you feel also what a relief it would be to
speak a
piece of your mind to the smirking, winking, face-making clergyman, who
has
such pretty feelings, and makes such incomparably pretty copy out of
them, but
who will by no means allow you to forget that he, as well as another,
is a man
of flesh and blood (especially flesh), knowing a thing or two of the
world in
spite of his cloth, and able, if he only would (though of course he
won’t), to
play the rake as handsomely as the next man. A strange candidate for
holy
orders he surely was, even in a country where a parish is frankly
recognized as
a “living”! It is a comfort to be assured, on the high authority of Mr.
Bagehot, that the only respect in which he resembled a clergyman of our
own
time was, that he lost his voice and traveled abroad to find it. And once
more, not
to refine upon the point unduly, there are such men as Rousseau and
Hazlitt;
not great poets, like Wordsworth, nor mere professional dealers in the
pathetic, like Sterne, but men of literary genius very exceptionally
endowed
with the dangerous gift of sensibility; which gift, wisely or unwisely,
they
have nourished and made the most of, first for their own exquisite
pleasure in
it, and afterward, it may well be, for the sake of its very
considerable value
as a literary asset.” Rousseau
and
Hazlitt, we say; for though the two are in some respects greatly
unlike, they
are plainly of the same school. For better or worse, the English boy
came early
under the Frenchman’s influence, and, to his credit be it spoken, he
was never
slow to acknowledge the debt thus incurred. His passion for the “New
Eloise”
was in time outgrown, but the “Confessions” he “never tired of.” He
loved to
run over in memory the dearer parts of them: Rousseau’s “first meeting
with
Madame Warens, the pomp of sound with which he has celebrated her name,
beginning ‘Louise-Éléonore de Warens était une demoiselle de La Tour de
Pil,
noble et ancienne famille de Vevai, ville du pays de Vaud’ (sounds
which we
still tremble to repeat); his description of her person, her angelic
smile, her
mouth of the size of his own; his walking out one day while the bells
were chiming
to vespers, and anticipating in a sort of waking dream the life he
afterward
led with her, in which months and years, and life itself, passed away
in
undisturbed felicity; the sudden disappointment of his hopes; his
transport
thirty years after at seeing the same flower which they had brought
home
together from one of their rambles near Chambéry; his thoughts in that
long
interval of time; his suppers with Grimm and Diderot after he came to
Paris; .
. . his literary projects, his fame, his misfortunes, his unhappy
temper; his
last solitary retirement on the lake and island of Bienne, with his dog
and his
boat; his reveries and delicious musings there — all these crowd into
our minds
with recollections which we do not choose to express. There are no
passages in
the ‘New Eloise’ of equal force and beauty with the best descriptions
in the
‘Confessions,’ if we except the excursion on the water, Julie’s last
letter to
St. Preux, and his letter to her, recalling the days of their first
love. We
spent two whole years in reading these two works, and (gentle reader,
it was
when we were young) in shedding tears over them, ‘as
fast as the
Arabian trees
Their medicinal gums.’ They were the
happiest years of our life. We may well say of them, sweet is the dew
of their
memory, and pleasant the balm of their recollection!”
The whole passage is
characteristic
and illuminating. Hazlitt is speaking of another, but as writers will
and must,
whether they mean it or not, he is disclosing himself. The boyish
reader’s
tears, the grown man’s trembling at the sound of the eloquent French
words, and
the confession of the concluding sentence (which he repeated word for
word
years afterward in the essay, “On Reading Old Books”) — here we have
the real
Hazlitt, or rather one of the real Hazlitts. He was
strong in
memory. His very darkest times — and they were dark enough — he could
brighten
with sunny recollections: of a painting, it might be, seen twenty years
before,
and loved ever since; of a favorite actor in a favorite part; of a book
read in
his youth (“the greatest pleasure in life is that of reading, while we
are
young”); of the birds that flitted about his path in happier mornings;
.of the
taste of frost-bitten barberries eaten thirty years before, when he was
five
years old, on the side of King-Oak Hill, in Weymouth,1
Massachusetts, and never tasted since; of the tea-gardens at Walworth,
to which
his father used to take him. Oh yes, he can see those gardens still,
though he
no longer visits them. He has only to “unlock the casket of memory,”
and a new
sense comes over him, as in a dream; his eyes “dazzle,” his sensations
are all
“glossy, spruce, voluptuous, and fine.” What luscious adjectives! And
how
shamelessly, like an innocent, sweet-toothed child, he rolls them under
his
tongue! Their goodness is inexpressible. But listen to him for another
sentence
or two, and see what a favor of Providence it is for a writer of essays
to be a
lover of his own feelings: “I see the beds of larkspur with purple
eyes; tall
hollyhocks, red or yellow; the broad sunflowers, caked in gold, with
bees
buzzing round them; wildernesses of pinks, and hot, glowing peonies;
poppies
run to seed; the sugared lily, and faint mignonette, all ranged in
order, and
as thick as they can grow; the box-tree borders; the gravel walks, the
painted
alcove, the confectionery, the clotted cream: — I think I see them now
with
sparkling looks; or have they vanished while I have been writing this
description of them? No matter; they will return again when I least
think of
them. All that I have observed since of flowers and plants and
grass-plots seem
to me borrowed from ‘that first garden of my innocence’ — to be slips
and
scions stolen from that bed of memory.” How
eloquent he
grows! “Slips and scions stolen from that bed of memory!” The very
words,
simple as they are, and homely as is their theme, throb with emotion,
and move
as if to music. “Most eloquent of English essayists,” his latest
biographer
pronounces him; and, whether we agree with the judgment or not
(sweeping
assertions cost little, and contribute to readability), at least we
recognize
the quality that the biographer has in mind. A
sentimentalist,
of all men, knows how to live his good days over again. Pleasure, to
his
thrifty way of thinking, is not a thing to be enjoyed once, and so done
with.
He will eat his cake and have it too. Nor shall it be the mere shadow
of a
feast. Nay, if there is to be any difference to speak of, the second
serving
shall be better and more substantial than the first. To him nothing
else is
quite so real as the past. He rejoices in it as in an unchangeable,
indefeasible possession. “The past at least is secure.” If the present
hour is
dark and lonely and friendless, he has only to run back and walk again
in
sunny, flower-bespangled fields, hand in hand with his own boyhood. Such was
Hazlitt’s
practice as a sentimental economist, and it would take an unusually
bold
Philistine, we think, to maintain that it was altogether a bad one. The
words
that he wrote of Rousseau are applicable to himself: “He seems to
gather up the
past moments of his being like drops of honey-dew to distil a precious
liquor
from them.” To vary a phrase of Mr. Pater’s, he is a master in the art
of
impassioned recollection. It makes little difference where he is, or what circumstance sets him going. He may be among the Alps. “Clarens is on my left,” he says, “the Dent de Jamant is behind me, the rocks of Meillerie opposite: under my feet is a green bank, enamelled with white and purple flowers, in which a dewdrop here and there glitters with pearly light. Intent upon the scene and upon the thoughts that stir within me, I conjure up the cheerful passages of my life, and a crowd of happy images appear before me.” Or he is in London, and hears the tinkle of the “Letter-Bell” as it passes. “It strikes upon the ear, it vibrates to the brain, it wakes me from the dream of time, it flings me back upon my first entrance into life, the period of my first coming up to town, when all around was strange, uncertain, adverse, — a hubbub of confused noises, a chaos of shifting objects, — and when this sound alone, startling me with the recollection of a letter I had to send to the friends I had lately left, brought me as it were to myself, made me feel that I had links still connecting me with the universe, and gave me hope and patience to persevere. At that loud‑tinkling, interrupted sound, the long line of blue hills near the place where I was brought up waves in the horizon, a golden sunset hovers over them, the dwarf oaks rustle their red leaves in the evening breeze, and the road from Wem to Shrewsbury, by which I first set out on my journey through life, stares me in the face as plain, but, from time and change, as visionary and mysterious, as the pictures in the ‘Pilgrim’s Progress.’” “When a
man has
arrived at a certain ripeness in intellect,” says Keats, “any one grand
and
spiritual passage serves him as a starting-post towards all ‘the
two-and-thirty
Palaces.’” Yes, and some men will go a good way on the same royal road,
with no
more spiritual incitement than the passing of the postman. How fondly
Hazlitt
recalls the day of days when he met Coleridge, and walked with him six
miles
homeward; when “the very milestones had ears, and Hamer Hill stooped
with all
its pines, to listen to a poet as he passed.” At the sixth milepost man
and boy
separated. “On my way back,” says Hazlitt, “I had a sound in my ears —
it was
the voice of Fancy; I had a light before me — it was the face of
Poetry.” A
second meeting had been agreed upon, and meanwhile the boy’s soul was
possessed
by “an uneasy, pleasurable sensation,” thinking of what was in store
for him.
“During those months the chill breath of winter gave me a welcoming;
the vernal
air was balm and inspiration to me. The golden sunsets, the silver star
of
evening, lighted me on my way to new hopes and prospects. I was to visit
Coleridge in the spring. Verily,
the words
of the dying man begin to sound less paradoxical. He had been happy. If
his
buffetings and disappointments had been more than fall to the lot of
average
humanity, so had been his joys and his triumphs. He had more capacity
for joy.
Therein, in great part, lay his genius. To borrow a good word from
Jeremy
Taylor, all his perceptions were “quick and full of relish.” Even his
sorrows,
once they were far enough behind him, became only a purer and more
ethereal
kind of bliss. So he tells us, in one of his later essays, how he loved
best of
all to lie whole mornings on a sunny bank on Salisbury Plain, with no
object
before him, neither knowing nor caring how the time passed, his
thoughts
floating like motes before his half-shut eyes, or some image of the
past
rushing by him — “Diana and her fawn, and all the glories of the
antique
world.” “Then,” he adds, “I start away to prevent the iron from
entering my
soul, and let fall some tears into that stream of time which separates
me
farther and farther from all I once loved.” Whether the tears were
physical or
metaphorical, whether they wet the cheek or only the printed page, the
man who
shed them is not, on their account, to be regarded as an object of
commiseration. Sadness that can be thus described, in words so like the
fabled
nightingale’s song, “most musical, most melancholy,” is more to be
desired than
much that goes by the name of pleasure, and the deeper and more
poignant the
emotion, the more precious are its returns. Nobody
ever
understood this better than Hazlitt. His sentimentalism, as we call it,
was no
ignorant, superficial gift of young-ladyish sensibility. It had
intellectual
foundations. He felt because he knew. He had been intimate with
himself; he had
cherished his own consciousness. He remarks somewhere that the three
perfect
egotists of the race were Rousseau, Wordsworth, and Benvenuto Cellini.
He would
defy the world, he said, to name a fourth. But he might easily enough
have
named the fourth himself, had not modesty — or something else —
prevented. If
he had lived longer, he would perhaps have written the fourth man’s
autobiography; his formal autobiography, that is to say. In fact,
though not in
name, he had already written it; some might be ready to maintain (but
they
would be wrong) that he had written little else. By “egotism” he meant
not
selfishness in the more ordinary, mercantile acceptation of the word, —
a lack
of benevolence, an extravagant desire to be better off than others in
the way
of worldly “goods,” — but the very quality we have been trying to show
forth:
absorption in one’s own mind, a profound and perpetual consciousness of
one’s
own being, the habit of interfusing self and outward things till
distinctions
of spirit and matter, finite and infinite, self and the universe, are
for the
moment almost done away with, and feeling is all in all. This, or
something
like this, was Hazlitt’s secret. This is the breath of life that throbs
in the
best of his pages. Whatever subject he handled, a prize-fight, a game
of fives,
a juggler’s trick, a play of Shakespeare, a picture of Titian, the
pleasure of
painting, he did it not simply con amore, or, as his newer critics say,
with
gusto (the word is Hazlitt’s own — he wrote an essay about it), but as
if the
thing were for the time being part and parcel of himself. And so,
oftener than
is commonly to be expected of essay-writers, his sentences are not so
much vivid
as alive. More than
most men,
he was alive himself. In Keats’s phrase, he felt existence. There was
no
telling its preciousness to him. The essay “On the Feeling of
Immortality in
Youth,” though at the end it breaks out despairingly into something
like the
old cry, Vanitas vanitatum,
is filled to the brim with a passionate love of
this present world. The idea of leaving it is abhorrent to him. To
think what
he has been, and what he has enjoyed, in those good days of his; days
when he
“looked for hours at a Rembrandt without being conscious of the flight
of
time;” days of the “full, pulpy feeling of youth, tasting existence and
every
object in it.” What a bliss to be young! Then life is new, and, for all
we know
of it, endless. As for old age and death, they are no concern of ours.
“Like a
rustic at a fair, we are full of amazement and rapture, and have no
thought of
going home, or that it will soon be night.” Sentences like this must
have been
what Keats had in mind when he spoke so lovingly of “distilled prose;”
prose
that bears repetition and brooding over, like exquisite verse. Some
sentences,
indeed, are better than whole books, and this of Hazlitt’s is one of
them; as
fine, almost, — as purely “distilled,” — as that famous kindred one of
Sir
William Temple: “When all is done, human life is, at the greatest and
the best,
but like a froward child, that must be played with and humored a little
to keep
it quiet till it falls asleep, and then the care is over.” And since
we are
quoting (and few authors invite quotation more than Hazlitt, as few
have
themselves quoted more constantly), let us please ourselves with
another
sentence from the same essay, — a page-long roll-call of a sentimental
man’s
beatitudes, turning at the close to a sudden blackness of darkness: “To see the golden sun, the azure sky, the
outstretched ocean; to walk upon the green earth, and be lord of a
thousand
creatures; to look down yawning precipices or over distant sunny vales;
to see
the world spread out under one’s feet on a map; to bring the stars
near; to
view the smallest insects through a microscope; to read history, and
consider
the revolutions of empire and the successions of generations; to hear
of the
glory of Tyre, of Sidon, of Babylon, and of Susa, and to say all these
were before
me and are now nothing; to say I exist in such a point of time and in
such a
point of space; to be a spectator and a part of its ever-moving scene;
to
witness the change of season, of spring and autumn, of winter and
summer; to
feel heat and cold, pleasure and pain, beauty and deformity, right and
wrong;
to be sensible to the accidents of nature; to consider the mighty world
of eye
and ear; to listen to the stock-dove’s notes amid the forest deep; to
journey
over moor and mountain; to hear the midnight sainted choir; to visit
lighted
halls, or the cathedral’s gloom, or sit in crowded theatres and see
life itself
mocked; to study the works of art and refine the sense of beauty to
agony; to
worship fame, and to dream of immortality; to look upon the Vatican,
and to
read Shakespeare; to gather up the wisdom of the ancients, and to pry
into the
future; to listen to the trump of war, the shout of victory; to
question
history as to the movements of the human heart; to seek for truth; to
plead the
cause of humanity; to overlook the world as if time and nature poured
their
treasures at our feet — to be and to do all this, and then in a moment
to be
nothing!” “To look
upon the
Vatican, and to read Shakespeare!” Once more we are reminded of Keats,
a man
very different from Hazlitt in many ways, but, like him, “a near
neighbor to
himself,” and a worshiper of beauty. “Things real,” says Keats, “such
as
existences of sun, moon and stars — and passages of Shakespeare.” Hazlitt’s
nature
was peculiarly intense, with the very slightest admixture of those
saner and
commoner elements that keep our poor humanity, in its ordinary
manifestations,
comparatively reasonable and sweet. His years, from what we read of
them, seem
to have passed in one long state of feverishness. He cannot have been a
pleasant man either for himself or for any one else to live with.
Self-absorbed, irascible, and proud, with little or no gift of humor
(sentimentalists as a class seem to be deficient in this quality, the
case of
Sterne to the contrary notwithstanding; and Sterne’s humor is perhaps
only an
additional reason for suspecting that his fine sentiments were mostly
literary), he had a splendid capacity for hating, and was possessed of
a kind
of ugly courage that made it easy for him to speak with extraordinary
plainness
of other men’s defects. If the men happened to be his friends, so much
the
better. He professed, indeed, to like a friend all the more for having
“faults
that one could talk about.” “Put a pen in his hand,” says Mr. Birrell,
“and he
would say anything.” Whatever he said or did, suffered or enjoyed, it
was all
with a kind of passion. As the common saying is, there was no halfway
work with
him. It could never be complained of him, as he complained of some
other
writer, that his sentences wanted impetus. He understood the value of
surprise,
and never balked at an extreme statement. Thus he would say, in the
coolest
manner imaginable, “It is utterly impossible to persuade an editor that
he is
nobody.” As if it really were! As if it were not ten times nearer
impossible to
persuade a contributor that he is nobody! On his way
to the
famous prize-fight, famous because he was there, — spending
the night at an inn crowded with the “Fancy,” he
overheard a “tall English yeoman” holding forth to those about him
concerning
“rent, and taxes, and the price of corn.” One of his hearers ventured
at a
certain point to interpose an objection, whereupon the yeoman bore down
upon
him with the word, “Confound it, man, don’t be insipid.” “Thinks I to
myself,”
says Hazlitt, “that’s a good phrase.” And so it was, and quite in his
own line.
“There is no surfeiting on gall,” he remarks somewhere, with admirable
truth.
He wrote an essay upon “Cant and Hypocrisy,” another upon Disagreeable
People,”
and another upon the “Pleasure of Hating.” And he knew whereof he
spake.
Sentimentalism — the Hazlitt brand of it, at any rate — is nothing like
sweetened water. “If any one wishes to see me quite calm,” he says, in
his
emphatic manner, “they may cheat me in a bargain, or tread upon my
toes; but a
truth repelled, a sophism repeated, totally disconcerts me, and I lose
all
patience. I am not, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, a
good-natured
man.” “Lamb,” he once remarked, “yearns after and covets what soothes
the frailty
of human nature.” So did not Hazlitt. Lamb delighted in people as such.
Even
their foibles — especially their foibles, it would be truer to say —
were
pleasant to him. In short, he was a humorist. Hazlitt’s first interest,
on the
other hand, seems to have been in places and things, — including books
and
pictures, — and his own thoughts about them. Of human beings he liked
personages, so called, men who have done something, — actors, painters,
authors, statesmen, and the like. As for the common run of his foolish
fellow
mortals, if their frailties were to be stroked, by all means let it be
done the
wrong way. The operation might be less acceptable to the patient, but
it would
probably do him more good, and would certainly be more amusing to the
operator and
the lookers-on. No doubt
the man
experienced now and then a reaction from his prevailing condition of
feverishness. He must have had moods, we may guess, when he saw the
beauty and
comfort of a quieter way of life. Indeed, he has left one inimitable
portrait
of a character the exact reverse of his own, a portrait drawn not
bitterly nor
grudgingly, but in something not altogether unlike the affectionately
quizzical
spirit of Lamb himself. He calls it the character of a bookworm. “The
person I
mean,” he says, “has an admiration for learning, if he is only dazzled
by its
light. He lives among old authors, if he does not enter much into their
spirit.
He handles the covers, and turns over the page, and is familiar with
the names
and dates. He is busy and self-involved. He hangs like a film and
cobweb upon
letters, or is like the dust upon the outside of’ knowledge, which
should not
be rudely brushed aside. He follows learning as its shadow; but as
such, he is
respectable. He browses on the husk and leaves of books, as the young
fawn
browses on the bark and leaves of trees. Such a one lives all his life
in a
dream of learning, and has never once had his sleep broken by a real
sense of
things. He believes implicitly in genius, truth, virtue, liberty,
because he
finds the names of these things in books. He thinks that love and
friendship
are the finest things imaginable, both in practice and theory. The
legend of
good women is to him no fiction.2 When he steals from the
twilight
of his cell, the scene breaks upon him like an illuminated missal, and
all the
people he sees are but so many figures in a camera obscura. He reads the world,
like a favorite volume, only to find beauties in it, or like an edition
of some
old work which he is preparing for the press, only to make emendations
in it,
and correct the errors that have inadvertently slipt in. He and his dog
Tray
are much the same honest, simple-hearted, faithful, affectionate
creatures — if
Tray could but read! His mind cannot take the impression of vice; but
the
gentleness of his nature turns gall to milk. He would not hurt a fly.
He draws
the picture of mankind from the guileless simplicity of his own heart;
and when
he dies, his spirit will take its smiling leave, without ever having
had an ill
thought of others, or the consciousness of one in itself!” It would
have been
for Hazlitt’s happiness, or at least for his comfort, if he had
possessed a
grain or two of his bookworm’s “guileless simplicity.” But things must
be as
they must. His name was not Nathanael. He was “dowered with the hate of
hate,
the scorn of scorn,” and it was not in his nature to be patient and
easy-going,
especially where anything so vitally essential as a difference of
opinion
touching the character of Napoleon Bonaparte was concerned. He had the
qualities of his defects. If he was sometimes too peppery, he was never
insipid. Men write
best of
matters in which they are most interested and most at home, and of
Hazlitt we
may say, speaking a little cynically, after his own manner, that with
all his
multiplicity of topics, he wrote best about his own feelings and his
neighbors’
infirmities, though as for the latter sort of material, to be sure, he
did not
confine himself very strictly to that with which his fellow men
furnished him.
Proud as he was, indeed (and here we may note another characteristic of
the
sentimentalist), he had sometimes a really shocking lack of decent
personal
reserve. During his infatuation with Miss Sarah Walker, as all the
world — or
all the Hazlitt world — knows, he could not keep his tongue in his
head. He
would even buttonhole a stranger on a street corner, and unbosom his
woes to
him at full length in most unmanly fashion: how he loved the girl, and
how the
girl would not love him, and so on, and so on. And having perpetrated
this
almost incredible absurdity, he would tell of it afterward; and then,
to make
matters still worse, when he had recovered from his distemper (always a
rapid
process in his case), he wrote a book about it. This book is reprinted,
all in
fair type, in the latest and handsomest edition of his works; but,
thank
Heaven, we are none of us bound to read it. Nor need we take the whole
miserable business too seriously, as if (except on its literary side)
it were
anything so very far out of the common. It was ridiculous, of course;
but so
are the love affairs of elderly men generally. Their folly has passed
into a
proverb. As wise old Izaak Walton — who had two excellent wives of his
own,
both “of distinguished clerical connexion” — long ago expressed it,
“love is a
flattering mischief,” “a passion that carries us to commit errors with
as much
ease as whirlwinds move feathers.” The good man’s assonance would have
driven
Flaubert insane, but his doctrine is consolatory. A feather may surely
be
excused for slipping its cable before a whirlwind. It was
only a year
or two after the conclusion of this distressing episode that Hazlitt,
being in
Italy, wrote one of the most delightful of his essays, the one upon a
sun-dial. “Horas non numero
nisi serenas is the motto of a sun-dial near Venice,” — so he
begins. Then,
after descanting upon the exceeding beauty and appropriateness of the
Latin
words, he falls foul of the French people for the “less sombre and less
edifying” turn that they are accustomed to give to similar matters. He
has seen
a clock in Paris bearing a figure of Time seated in a boat, which Cupid
is
rowing along, with the motto, L’Amour
fait passer le Temps; a motto that the
French wits, it appears, have travestied into Le Temps fait passer L’Amour.
This is ingenious, he concedes (how could he help it?), but it lacks
sentiment.
“I like people,” he declares, “who have something that they love, and
something
that they hate.” The French “never arrive at the classical — or the
romantic.”
The criticism may or may not be just (it seems a hard saying), but what
the
average reader of the paragraph is likely to be thinking of, if he
happens to
be familiar with the story of Hazlitt’s own adventures with Cupid, is
not any
weakness of the French people, but the amusing cleverness with which
the
Parisian wits have hit off the weakness of a certain literary
Englishman. Truly Le Temps fait
passer L’Amour, — sometimes with deplorable celerity, — on both
sides of the Channel. Naturally,
however,
nothing of this sort occurred to Hazlitt. His good memory was like the
sun-dial, — it counted none but the
bright hours. By this time he had almost
forgotten both his unhappy passion and the unhappier book that he wrote
about
it. And,
indeed, it is
time that we forgot them. For one who has found his profit in strolling
up and
down in Hazlitt’s essays at odd hours for half a lifetime, it is little
becoming to talk overmuch about the man’s personal imperfections. It
matters
little to any of us now that his temper was bad; that his passions too
often
betrayed him into folly; that his faculties lacked a certain balance;
that his
mal de rêverie, whether born with him or caught from his French master,
sometimes ran too feverish a course; that, in short, he had the not
unusual
weaknesses of super-sensitive men. What does matter is that at his best
he
wrote English prose as comparatively few have written it, and in doing
so said
a world of bright and memorable things that no one else could have said
so
well, even if it had ever occurred to any one else to say them at all.
If he
was difficult to live with, that is a question more than seventy years
out of
date; and no competent reader ever brought a similar accusation against
his
essays. It has been said of them more than once, to be sure, that they
are not
so good as Lamb’s; but then, you may say that of all essays; and really
the
comparison is futile, not to call it foolish. The men were nothing
alike;
though even so, we may gladly agree with Mr. Henley’s comment, that, as
“dissimilars,” they “go gallantly and naturally together — par nobile fratrum.” Perhaps
Hazlitt
sometimes wrote too much in haste, with hardly sufficient care for
those minute
excellences that go to the making of perfection, though he could talk
edifyingly under that head, and appears to have been the author of the
clever
parody, more clever than true, — as cleverness is apt to be, — “Learn to write
slow: all other graces
Will follow in their proper places;” and it may be, as one of the cleverest of his admirers assures us, that he was “really too witty.” Concerning points so nice as these, it is hard for “honest and painful men” to feel certain. Haste has the compensatory virtue of generating heat, while as for the having too much wit, it is like having too much money, or more than one’s share of personal beauty; serious misfortunes, both of them, beyond a doubt (every one says so), but misfortunes to be put up with, at a pinch, in a spirit of Christian resignation. All things considered, too much is perhaps better than too little, and, for better or worse, excess on both sides of the line is rather Hazlitt’s “note.” Of the virtues of courage and obstinacy he possessed enough for two. We applaud, even while we pity, to see how, all his life long, he stood up for what he believed to be the truth, in spite of the frowns, and worse than frowns, of all who in that day had it in their power to blast the career of men in his profession. He was defamed and abused, for political reasons, — all for that unlucky Bonapartean bee in his bonnet, — as few men of letters have ever been, and to the last he did not haul down his flag. Let so much be said in his honor. And whatever else is forgotten, let the words of Charles Lamb be remembered: “I should belie my own conscience if I said less than that I think W. H. to be in his natural and healthy state one of the wisest and finest spirits breathing.” The most virtuous of those who blame him may count themselves happy ever to receive half so handsome a tribute from so authoritative a source. Human nature is a tangled skein; moral perfection is not to be encountered every day, even among critics. To do one’s main stint well is probably as much as most of us can reasonably hope for; and so much, assuredly, Hazlitt did; for his main work, as we see it, was the writing of his few volumes of critical and miscellaneous essays. Into these he put the breath of long life. These are what count, seventy years after. Whoever begins with them, recurs to them. Not one of them but comes under Lamb’s heading of “takedownable.” As a
matter of
course, however, being a man of active mind and having his living to
make by
his pen, he wrote many things besides these. He began, indeed, with a
metaphysical treatise, — a child of his youth (he believed it a great
discovery)
for which he never ceased to cherish an excusable fondness. This, on
the
authority of those who have read it, or have talked with some who have
done so,
we take to be a rather difficult and innutritious choke-pear, something
to be
safely left alone by ordinary seekers after knowledge. Then, toward the
end of
his career, he produced a four-volume life of Napoleon, which, on
equally good
authority, we should think to have been a kind of anticipation or
foreshadowing
of the modern “novel with a purpose.” His latest editors go so far as
to leave
it out of their fine twelve-volume edition of his works. Somewhere
between
these two attempts at immortality he indulged himself in a book on
grammar,
intended especially to correct the errors of Lindley Murray, more
particularly,
we believe, his faulty definition of a noun as the name of an object.
Fortunately or otherwise, this work (every author of consequence has at
least
one such) never got beyond the original (manuscript) edition. The
making of it
seems a queer freak for a man of Hazlitt’s turn of mind; but then, as
Mr.
Birrell observes, “grammar has its fascinations; and even such men as
John
Milton and John Wesley, no less than William Cobbett and William
Hazlitt,
succumbed to its charm.” And he might have added a name more
illustrious still,
— the name of Julius Cæsar. All these
longer
works (including a “Reply to Malthus”) we consider ourselves, as
readers, at
full liberty to skip. Furthermore, we consider their merits or demerits
to have
no bearing whatever upon the question of their author’s standing as an
essayist. Like every man who practices an art, he is entitled to be
judged, not
by his experiments and failures, but by his successes. Wordsworth might
have
written a thousand “Ecclesiastical Sonnets,” instead of only one
hundred and
thirty odd, and every one of them might have been less imaginative than
the one
before it, without making him any the less a true and noble poet. For a
poet,
like the Pope, is infallible only when he is inspired; at other times
he may
nod as well as another man. Moreover, in the case of the poet, at
least, the
man himself may not be sure whether or not, at any given moment, the
divine
afflatus is upon him. It was Doctor Johnson, a poet himself, and the
biographer
of poets, who said that it was easy enough to make verses; he had made
a
hundred in a day; the difficulty was to know when you had made a good
one. And
the same difficulty, in a less degree, is encountered by the maker of
prose
essays. It is a wise father that knows his own child. Nor in such a
matter have
a man’s contemporaries any great advantage over the man himself. The
folly of
their judgments is proverbial. It is necessary to wait. Apparently
there is
some strange virtue in the mere lapse of time. “Time will tell,” the
common
people say; and the scholar has no better wisdom. Hazlitt must stand
his trial
with the rest. Sooner or later the years will render their verdict,
though none
of us may live long enough to hear it. The best that can be said now
is, that
so far the balloting seems to be strongly in his favor. ____________________
1 In this Old Colony
town, though
none of his English biographers appear to know it, the boy Hazlitt
lived in the
Old North Parsonage, in which had lived some time before a girl named
Abigail
Smith, afterward better known as Abigail Adams, wife of the second
President of
the United States, and mother of the sixth. For which fact, more
interesting to
him than to his readers, it is to be feared, the present writer is
indebted to
the researches of his old Weymouth schoolmate, now President of the
Weymouth
Historical Society, Mr. John J. Loud. 2 As it was to Solomon
and, by this
time, to William Hazlitt. |