first visit to new england-第5章
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love for the great romancer would not have been too much for him。
Hawthorne had already had his say; however; and he had not used his
native town with any great tenderness。 Indeed; the advantages to any
place of having a great genius born and reared in its midst are so
doubtful that it might be well for localities designing to become the
birthplaces of distinguished authors to think twice about it。 Perhaps
only the largest capitals; like London and Paris; and New York and
Chicago; ought to risk it。 But the authors have an unaccountable
perversity; and will seldom come into the world in the large cities;
which are alone without the sense of neighborhood; and the personal
susceptibilities so unfavorable to the practice of the literary art。
I dare say that it was owing to the local indifference to her greatest
name; or her reluctance from it; that I got a clearer impression of Salem
in some other respects than I should have had if I had been invited there
to devote myself solely to the associations of Hawthorne。 For the first
time I saw an old New England town; I do not know; but the most
characteristic; and took into my young Western consciousness the fact of
a more complex civilization than I had yet known。 My whole life had been
passed in a region where men were just beginning ancestors; and the
conception of family was very imperfect。 Literature; of course; was full
of it; and it was not for a devotee of Thackeray to be theoretically
ignorant of its manifestations; but I had hitherto carelessly supposed
that family was nowhere regarded seriously in America except in Virginia;
where it furnished a joke for the rest of the nation。 But now I found
myself confronted with it in its ancient houses; and heard its names
pronounced with a certain consideration; which I dare say was as much
their due in Salem as it could be anywhere。 The names were all strange;
and all indifferent to me; but those fine square wooden mansions; of a
tasteful architecture; and a pale buff…color; withdrawing themselves in
quiet reserve from the quiet street; gave me an impression of family as
an actuality and a force which I had never had before; but which no
Westerner can yet understand the East without taking into account。 I do
not suppose that I conceived of family as a fact of vital import then;
I think I rather regarded it as a color to be used in any aesthetic study
of the local conditions。 I am not sure that I valued it more even for
literary purposes; than the steeple which the captain pointed out as the
first and last thing he saw when he came and went on his long voyages; or
than the great palm…oil casks; which he showed me; and which I related to
the tree that stood
〃Auf brennender Felsenwand。〃
Whether that was the kind of palm that gives the oil; or was a sort only
suitable to be the dream of a lonely fir…tree in the North on a cold
height; I am in doubt to this day。
I heard; not without concern; that the neighboring industry of Lynn was
penetrating Salem; and that the ancient haunt of the witches and the
birthplace of our subtlest and somberest wizard was becoming a great
shoe…town; but my concern was less for its memories and sensibilities
than for an odious duty which I owed that industry; together with all the
others in New England。 Before I left home I had promised my earliest
publisher that I would undertake to edit; or compile; or do something
literary to; a work on the operation of the more distinctive mechanical
inventions of our country; which he had conceived the notion of
publishing by subscription。 He had furnished me; the most immechanical
of humankind; with a letter addressed generally to the great mills and
factories of the East; entreating their managers to unfold their
mysteries to me for the purposes of this volume。 His letter had the
effect of shutting up some of them like clams; and others it put upon
their guard against my researches; lest I should seize the secret of
their special inventions and publish it to the world。 I could not tell
the managers that I was both morally and mentally incapable of this;
that they might have explained and demonstrated the properties and
functions of their most recondite machinery; and upon examination
afterwards found me guiltless of having anything but a few verses of
Heine or Tennyson or Longfellow in my head。 So I had to suffer in
several places from their unjust anxieties; and from my own weariness of
their ingenious engines; or else endure the pangs of a bad conscience
from ignoring them。 As long as I was in Canada I was happy; for there
was no industry in Canada that I saw; except that of the peasant girls;
in their Evangeline hats and kirtles; tossing the hay in the way…side
fields; but when I reached Portland my troubles began。 I went with that
young minister of whom I have spoken to a large foundry; where they were
casting some sort of ironmongery; and inspected the process from a
distance beyond any chance spurt of the molten metal; and came away sadly
uncertain of putting the rather fine spectacle to any practical use。
A manufactory where they did something with coal…oil (which I now heard
for the first time called kerosene) refused itself to me; and I said to
myself that probably all the other industries of Portland were as
reserved; and I would not seek to explore them; but when I got to Salem;
my conscience stirred again。 If I knew that there were shoe…shops in
Salem; ought not I to go and inspect their processes? This was a
question which would not answer itself to my satisfaction; and I had no
peace till I learned that I could see shoemaking much better at Lynn; and
that Lynn was such a little way from Boston that I could readily run up
there; if I did not wish to examine the shoe machinery at once。
I promised myself that I would run up from Boston; but in order to do
this I must first go to Boston。
VII。
I am supposing still that I saw Salem before I saw Boston; but however
the fact may be; I am sure that I decided it would be better to see
shoemaking in Lynn; where I really did see it; thirty years later。 For
the purposes of the present visit; I contented myself with looking at a
machine in Haverhill; which chewed a shoe sole full of pegs; and dropped
it out of its iron jaws with an indifference as great as my own; and
probably as little sense of how it had done its work。 I may be unjust to
that machine; Heaven knows I would not wrong it; and I must confess that
my head had no room in it for the conception of any machinery but the
mythological; which also I despised; in my revulsion from the eighteenth…
century poets to those of my own day。
I cannot quite make out after the lapse of so many years just how or when
I got to Haverhill; or whether it was before or after I had been in
Salem。 There is an apparitional quality in my presences; at this point
or that; in the dim past; but I hope that; for the credit of their order;
ghosts are not commonly taken with such trivial things as I was。 For
instance; in Haverhill I was much interested by the sight of a young man;
coming gayly down the steps of the hotel where I lodged; in peg…top
trousers so much more peg top than my own that I seemed to be wearing
mere spring…bottoms in comparison; and in a day when every one who
respected himself had a necktie as narrow as he could get; this youth had
one no wider than a shoestring; and red at that; while mine measured
almost an inch; and was black。 To be sure; he was one of a band of negro
minstrels; who were to give a concert that night; and he had a light to
excel in fashion。
I will suppose; for convenience' sake; that I visited Haverhill; too;
before I reached Boston: somehow that shoe…pegging machine must come in;
and it may as well come in here。 When I actually found myself in Boston;
there were perhaps industries which it would have been well for me to
celebrate; but I either made believe there were none; or else I honestly
forgot all about them。 In either case I released myself altogether to
the literary and historical associations of the place。 I need not say
that I gave myself first to the first; and it rath