|

Nathaniel Hawthorne
Romantic Period Author, 1804-1864
"No black
knight in Sir Walter Scott's novels, nor the Indians of Cooper,
nor his famous pioneer, Leather Stocking of the forest, nor his long Tom of
the ocean, ever seemed more truly romantic than do Hawthorne's stern and
gloomy Calvinists of The Scarlet Letter" and The House of Seven
Gables, or his Italian hero of The Marble Faun.
We have
characterized Hawthorne as the greatest of American romancers. We might have
omitted the word American, for he has no equal in romance perhaps in
the world of letters. An eminent critic declared: 'His genius was greater
than that of the idealist,
Emerson. In all
his mysticism his style was always dear and exceedingly graceful, while in
those delicate, varied and permanent effects which are gained by a happy
arrangement of words in their sentences, together with that unerring
directness and unswerving force which characterize his writings, no author
in modern times has equaled him. To the rhetorician, his style is a study;
to the lay reader, a delight that eludes analysis. He is the most eminent
representative of
the American
spirit in literature.'
It was in the
old town of Salem,
Massachusetts—where
his Puritan ancestors had lived for nearly two hundred years—with
its haunted memories of witches and strange sea tales; its stories of
Endicott and the Indians, and the somber traditions of witchcraft and
Puritan persecution that Nathaniel Hawthorne was born July 4, 1804. And it
was in this grim, ancient city by the sea that the life of the renowned
romancer was greatly bound up. In his childhood the town was already falling
to decay, and his lonely surroundings filled his young imagination with a
weirdness that found expression in the books of his later life, and
impressed upon his character a seriousness that clung to him ever after.
His father was a
sea-captain—but
a most melancholy and silent man—who
died when Nathaniel was four years old. His mother lived a sad and secluded
life, and the boy thus early learned to exist in a strange and imaginative
world of his own creation. So fond of seclusion did he become that even
after his graduation from college in 1825, he returned to his old haunt at
Salem and resumed his solitary, dreamy existence. For twelve years, from
1825 to 1837, he went nowhere, he saw no one; he worked in his room by day,
reading and writing; at twilight he wandered out along the shore, or through
the darkened streets of the town. Certainly this was no attractive life to
most young men; but for Hawthorne it had its fascination and during this
time he was storing his mind, forming his style, training his imagination
and preparing for the splendid literary fame of his later years.
Hawthorne
received his early education in Salem, partly at the school of Joseph E.
Worcester, the author of Worcester's Dictionary. He entered Bowdoin
College in 1821. The poet,
Longfellow, and John S. C. Abbott were his classmates; and Franklin
Pierce—one
class in advance of him—was
his close friend. He graduated in 1825 without any special distinction. His
first book, Fanshawe, a novel, was issued in 1826, but so poor was
its success that he suppressed if further publication. Subsequently he
placed the manuscript of a collection of stories in the hands of his
publisher, but timidly withdrew and destroyed them. His first practical
encouragement was received from Samuel G. Goodrich, who published four
stories in the Token, one of the annuals of that time, in 1831. Mr.
Goodrich also engaged Hawthorne as editor of the American Magazine of
Useful and Entertaining Knowledge, which position he occupied from 1836
to 1838. About this time he also contributed some of his best stories to the
New England Magazine, The Knickerbocker, and the Democratic
Review. It was a part of these magazine stories which he collected and
published in 1837 in the volume entitled, Twice Told Tales, embodying
the fruits of his twelve years' labor.
This book stamped
the author as a man of stronger imagination and deeper insight into human
nature than Washington Irving evinced in his famous sketches of the Hudson
or Cooper in his frontier stories, for delightful as was Irving's writings
and vivid as were Cooper's pictures, it was plain to be seen that Hawthorne
had a richer style and a firmer grasp of the art of fiction than either of
them. Longfellow, the poet, reviewed the book with hearty commendation, and
Poe predicted a brilliant future for the writer if he would abandon
allegory.
Thus encouraged,
Hawthorne came out from his seclusion into the world again, and mixed once
more with his fellow-men. His friend, the historian, Bancroft, secured him
a. position in the Custom House at Salem, in 1839, which he held for two
years. This position he lost through political jobbery on a trumped-up
charge. For a few months he then joined in the Brook Farm settlement; though
he was never in sympathy with the movement; nor was he a be1iever in the
transcendental notions of Emerson and his school. He remained a staunch
Democrat in the midst of the Abolitionists. His note-books were full of his
discontent with the life at the Brook Farm. His observations of this
enterprise took shape in the Blythedale Romance which is the only
literary memorial of the association. The heroine of this novel was Margaret
Fuller, under the name of Zenobia, and the description of the
drowning of Zenobia—a
fate which Margaret Fuller had met—is
the most tragic passage in all the writings of the author.
In 1842 Hawthorne
married Miss Sophia Peabody—a
most fortunate and happy marriage—and
the young couple moved to Concord where they lived in the house known as the
Old Manse, which had been built for Emerson's grandfather, and in
which Emerson himself dwelt ten years. He chose for his study the same room
in which the philosopher had written his famous book Nature.
Hawthorne declares that the happiest period of his life were the four years
spent in the Old Manse. While living there he collected another lot of
miscellaneous stories and published them in 1845 as a second volume of
Twice-Told Tales, and the next year came his Mosses from an Old Manse,
being also a collection from his published writings.
In 1846 a depleted
income and larger demands of a growing family made it necessary for him to
seek a business engagement. Through a friend he received an appointment as
Surveyor of Customs at Salem, and again removed to the old town where he was
born forty-two years before. It was during his engagement here, from 1846 to
1849, that he planned and wrote his famous book The Scarlet Letter,
which was published in 1850.
A broader
experience is needed to compose a full-grown novel than to sketch a short
tale. Scott was more than fifty when he published Waverly. Cooper
wrote the Spy when thirty-three. Thackeray, the author of Vanity
Fair, was almost forty when he finished that work. Adam Bede
appeared when George Elliot was in her fortieth year; and The Scarlet
Letter, greater than them all, did not appear until 1850, when its
author was in his forty-seventh year. All critics readily agree that this
romance is the masterpiece in American fiction. The only novel in the United
States that can be compared with it is Mrs. Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin,
and, as a study of a type of life—Puritan
life in New England—The
Scarlet Letter is superior to Mrs. Stowe's immortal work. One-half a
century had passed since The Scarlet Letter was written; but it
stands today more popular than ever before.
Enumerated
briefly, the books written by Hawthorne in the order of their publication
are as follows: Fanshawe, a novel (1826), suppressed by the author;
Twice-Told Tales (1837), a collection of magazine stories;
Twice-Told Tales (second volume, 1845); Mosses from an Old Manse
(1846), written while he lived at the Old Manse; The Scarlet Letter"
(1850), his greatest book; The House of Seven Gables (1851), written
while he lived at Lenox, Massachusetts; The Wonder Book (1851), a
volume of classic stories for children; The Blythedale Romance
(1852); Life of Franklin Pierce (1852), which was written to assist
his friend Pierce, who was running for President of the United
States; Tanglewood Tales (1853), another work for children,
continuing the classic legends of his Wonder Book, reciting
the adventures of those who went forth to seek the Golden Fleece, to
explore the labyrinth of the Minotaur and sow the Dragon's Teeth.
Pierce was
elected President in 1853 and rewarded Hawthorne by appointing him Consul to
Liverpool. This position he filled for four years and afterwards spent three
years in traveling on the Continent, during which time he gathered material
for the greatest of his books—next
to The Scarlet Letter—entitled
The Marble Faun, which was brought out in England in 1860, and the
same year Mr. Hawthorne returned to America and spent the remainder of his
life at The Wayside in Concord. During his residence here he wrote
for the Atlantic Monthly the papers which were collected and
published in 1863 under the title of Our Old Home.
After Mr.
Hawthorne's death, his unpublished manuscripts, The Dolliver Romance,
Septimius Felton, and Dr. Grimshawe's Secret, were published.
Mrs. Hawthorne, also, edited and published her husband's American and
English Note-Books and his French and Italian Note-Books in 1869.
The best life of the author is perhaps that written by his son, Julian
Hawthorne, which appeared in 1885, entitled Nathaniel Hawthorne and His
Wife; a Biography....
Nathaniel
Hawthorne died May 18, 1864, while traveling with his friend and
college-mate, Ex-President Pierce, in the White Mountains, and was buried
near where Emerson and Thoreau were later placed in Concord Cemetery.
Emerson, Longfellow, Lowell
and Whittier were at the funeral.
His publisher, Mr. Field, was also there and wrote: 'We carried him through
the blossoming orchards of Concord and laid him down in a group of pines on
the hillside, the unfinished romance which had cost him such anxiety laid
upon his coffin. Mr. Longfellow, in an exquisite poem describes the scene,
and referring to the uncompleted romance in the closing lines says:
Ah, who shall
lift that wand of magic power,
And the lost clue regain?
The unfinished window in Alladin's tower
Unfinished must remain.
The noble wife, who had been the inspiration and practical stimulus of the
great romancer, survived her distinguished husband nearly seven years. She
died in London, aged sixty, February 26, 1871, and was buried in Kensal
Green Cemetery, near the grave of Leigh Hunt.
Source: The Literature of America and Our Favorite Authors, Birdsall &
Jones, p.173
Return to Boston Literature Page
|
|