"
Well, as Danforth says, all that is over now; though I do not
know but I expose myself to a criminal prosecution on the evi-
dence of the very revelation I am making.
Well, as Danforth says, all that is over now; though I do not
know but I expose myself to a criminal prosecution on the evi-
dence of the very revelation I am making.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v12 - Gre to Hen
crownes for that in Roan, which,
in trifles bestowed upon the savages, stoode him not in fortie
crownes.
The nature and qualitie of thother parte of America from
Cape Briton, beinge in 46 degrees unto the latitude of 52. for iij
C. leagues within the lande even to Hochelaga, is notably de-
scribed in the twoo voyadges of Iacques Cartier. In the fifte
chapiter of his second relation thus he writeth: From the 19. till
the 28. of September wee sailed upp the ryver, never loosinge
one houre of tyme, all which space wee sawe as goodly a contrie
as possibly coulde be wisshed for, full of all sortes of goodly
trees; that is to say, oakes, elmes, walnut-trees, cedars, fyrres,
asshes, boxe, willoughes, and greate store of vynes, all as full
of grapes as coulde be, that if any of our fellowes wente on
shoare, they came home laden with them. There were likewise
many cranes, swannes, geese, mallardes, fesauntes, partridges,
thrusshes, black birdes, turtles, finches, reddbreastes, nightingales,
sparrowes, with other sortes of birdes even as in Fraunce, and
greate plentie and store. Againe in the xlth chapiter of the said
relation there ys mention of silver and golde to be upon a ryver
that is three monethes' saylinge, navigable southwarde from
Hoghelaga; and that redd copper is yn Saguynay. All that con-
trie is full of sondrie sortes of woodde and many vines. There
is great store of stagges, redd dere, fallowe dere, beares, and
other suche like sorts of beastes, as conies, hares, marterns, foxes,
otters, bevers, squirrells, badgers, and rattes exceedinge greate,
and divers other sortes of beastes for huntinge. There are also
many sortes of fowles as cranes, swannes, outardes, wilde geese
white and graye, duckes, thrusshes, black birdes, turtles, wild
pigeons, lynnetts, finches, redd breastes, stares, nightingales, spar-
rowes, and other birdes even as in Fraunce. Also, as wee have
said before, the said ryver is the plentifullest of fyshe that ever
hath bene seene or hearde of, because that from the heade to
the mouthe of yt you shall finde all kinde of freshe and salte
water fyshe accordinge to their season. There are also many
·
## p. 6815 (#195) ###########################################
RICHARD HAKLUYT
6815
whales, porposes, sea horses, and adhothuis, which is a kinde of
fishe which wee have never seene nor hearde of before. And in
the x11th chapiter thus: Wee understoode of Donaconna and
others that
there are people cladd with clothe as wee
are, very honest, and many inhabited townes, and that they had
greate store of golde and redd copper; and that within the land
beyonde the said firste ryver unto Hochelaga and Saguynay, ys an
iland envyroned rounde aboute with that and other ryvers, and
that there is a sea of freshe water founde, and as they have
hearde say of those of uynay, there was never man hearde of
that founde out the begynnynge and ende thereof. Finally, in
the postcripte of the seconde relation, wee reade these wordes:
They of Canada saye, that it is a moones sailinge to goe to a
lande where cynamonde and cloves are gathered.
Thus having alleaged many printed testymonies of these cred-
ible persons, which were personally betwene 30. and 63. degrees
in America, as well on the coaste as within the lande, which
affirmed unto the princes and kinges which sett them oute that
they found there,
I may well and truly conclude with
reason and authoritie, that all the comodities of all our olde
decayed and daungerous trades in all Europe, Africa, and Asia
haunted by us, may in shorte space for little or nothinge, and
many for the very workmanshippe, in a manner be had in that
part of America which lieth between 30. and 60. degrees of
northerly latitude, if by our slacknes we suffer not the Frenche
or others to prevente us.
CAP. IV.
That this enterprize will be for the manifolde ymployment of
nombers of idle men, and for bredinge of many sufficient, and for
utteraunce of the great quantitie of the comodities of our realme.
It is well worthe the observation to see and consider what the
like voyadges of discoverye and plantinge in the Easte and Weste
Indies hath wroughte in the kingdomes of Portingale and Spayne;
bothe which realmes, beinge of themselves poore and barren and
hardly able to susteine their inhabitaunts, by their discoveries
have founde suche occasion of employmente, that these many
yeres we have not herde scarcely of any pirate of those twoo
nations; whereas wee and the Frenche are moste infamous for
our outeragious, common, and daily piracies. Againe, when hearde
wee almoste of one theefe amongest them? The reason is, that
## p. 6816 (#196) ###########################################
6816
RICHARD HAKLUYT
by these their newe discoveries, they have so many honest wayes
to set them on worke, as they rather wante men than meanes to
ymploye them. But wee, for all the statutes that hitherto can be
devised, and the sharpe execution of the same in poonishinge idle
lazye persons, for wante of sufficient occasion of honest employ-
mente cannot deliver our commonwealthe from multitudes of
loyterers and idle vagabondes. Truthe it is that throughe our
longe peace and seldome sicknes (twoo singuler blessinges of Al-
mightie God) wee are growen more populous than ever hereto-
fore; so that nowe there are of every arte and science so many
that they can hardly lyve one by another, nay rather they are
readie to eate uppe one another; yea many thousandes of idle
persons are within this realme, which, havinge no way to be sett
on worke, be either mutinous or seeke alteration in the State, or
at leaste very burdensome to the commonwealth, and often fall
to pilferinge and thevinge and other lewdnes, whereby all the
prisons of the lande are daily pestred and stuffed full of them,
where either they pitifully pyne awaye or els at length are mis-
erably hanged, even xxti at a clappe oute of some one jayle.
Whereas yf this voyadge were put in execution, these pety theves
mighte be condempned for certein yeres in the westerne partes,
especially in Newefounde lande, in sawinge and fellinge of tym-
ber for mastes of shippes, and deale boordes; in burninge of the
firres and pine-trees to make pitche, tarr, rosen, and sope ashes·
in beatinge and workinge of hempe for cordage; and in the more
southerne partes, in settinge them to worke in mynes of golde,
silver, copper, leade, and yron; in dragginge for perles and cur-
rall; in plantinge of suger canes, as the Portingales have done in
Madera; in mayneteynaunce and increasinge of silke wormes for
silke, and in dressinge the same; in gatheringe up cotten whereof
there is plentie; in tillinge of the soile there for graine; in dress-
inge of vines whereof there is greate aboundaunce for wyne;
olyves, whereof the soile ys capable, for oyle; trees for oranges,
lymons, almondes, figges and other frutes, all which are founde
to growe there already; in sowinge of woade and madder for
diers, as the Portingales have don in the Azores; in dressinge of
raw hides of divers kindes of beastes; in makinge and gatheringe
of salte, as in Rochel and Bayon, which may serve for the newe
lande fisshinge; in killinge the whale, seale, porpose, and whirle-
poole for trayne oile; in fisshinge, saltinge, and dryenge of linge,
codde, salmon, herringe; in makinge and gatheringe of hony,
## p. 6817 (#197) ###########################################
RICHARD HAKLUYT
6817
waxe, turpentine; in hewinge and shapinge of stone, as marble,
jeate, christall, freestone, which will be goodd ballaste for our
shippes homewardes, and after serve for noble buildinges; in
makinge of caskes, oares, and all other manner of staves; in
buildinge of fortes, townes, churches; in powdringe and barrel-
linge of fishe, fowles, and fleshe, which will be notable provision
for sea and land; in dryenge, sortinge, and packinge of fethers,
whereof may be had there marvelous greate quantitie.
Besides this, such as by any kinde of infirmitie can not passe
the seas thither, and nowe are chardgeable to the realme at home,
by this voyadge shalbe made profitable members, by employinge
them in England in makinge of a thousande triflinge thinges,
which will be very goodd marchandize for those contries where
wee shall have moste ample vente thereof.
And seinge the savages of the Graunde Baye, and all alonge
the mightie ryver ronneth upp to Canada and Hochelaga, are
greately delighted with any cappe or garment made of course
wollen clothe, their contrie beinge colde and sharpe in the winter,
yt is manifeste wee shall finde greate utteraunce of our clothes,
especially of our coursest and basest northerne doosens, and our
Irishe and Welshe frizes and rugges; whereby all occupations
belonginge to clothinge and knittinge shalbe freshly sett on
worke, as cappers, knitters, clothiers, wollmen, carders, spynners,
weavers, fullers, sheremen, dyers, drapers, hatters, and such like,
whereby many decayed townes may be repaired.
In somme, this enterprice will mynister matter for all sortes
and states of men to worke upon; namely, all severall kindes of
artificers, husbandmen, seamen, merchaunts, souldiers, capitaines,
phisitions, lawyers, devines, cosmographers, hidrographers, astrono-
mers, historiographers; yea, olde folkes, lame persons, women, and
younge children, by many meanes which hereby shall still be
mynistred unto them, shalbe kepte from idlenes, and be made
able by their owne honest and easie labour to finde themselves,
withoute surchardginge others.
Whatsoever clothe wee shall vente on the tracte of that firme,
or in the ilands of the same, or in other landes, ilandes, and ter-
ritories beyonde, be they within the circle articke or withoute, all
these clothes, I say, are to passe oute of this realme full wroughte
by our naturall subjectes in all degrees of labour. And if it come
aboute in tyme that wee shall vente that masse there that wee
vented in the Base Contries, which is hoped by greate reason,
XII-427
## p. 6818 (#198) ###########################################
6818
RICHARD HAKLUYT
then shall all that clothe passe oute of this realme in all degrees
of labour full wroughte by the poore naturall subjectes of this
realme, like as the quantitie of our clothe dothe passe that goeth
hence to Russia, Barbarie, Turkye, Persia, &c. And then conse-
quently it followeth, that the like nomber of people alleaged to
the Emperour shal be sett on worke in England of our poore
subjectes more then hath bene; and so her Majestie shall not be
troubled with the pitefull outecryes of cappers, knytters, spyn-
ners, &c.
And on the other side wee are to note, that all the comodities
wee shall bringe thence, we shall not bringe them wroughte,
as wee bringe now the comodities of Fraunce and Flaunders,
&c. , but shall receave them all substaunces unwroughte, to the
ymploymente of a wonderfull multitude of the poore subjectes
of this realme in returne. And so to conclude, what in the nom-
ber of thinges to goe oute wroughte, and to come in unwroughte,
there nede not one poore creature to steale, to starve, or to begge,
as they doe.
And to answer objections: where fooles for the swarminge of
beggars alleage that the realme is too populous, Salomon saieth
that the honour and strengthe of a prince consisteth in the mul-
titude of the people. And if this come aboute, that worke may
be had for the multitude, where the realme hath nowe one thou-
sande for the defence thereof, the same may have fyve thousande.
For when people knowe howe to live, and howe to mayneteyne
and feede their wyves and children, they will not abstaine from
mariage as nowe they doe. And the soile thus aboundinge with
corne, fleshe, mylke, butter, cheese, herbes, rootes, and frutes,
&c. , and the seas that envyron the same so infynitely aboundinge
in fishe, I dare truly affirme, that if the nomber in this realme
were as greate as all Spaine and Ffraunce have, the people be-
inge industrous, I say, there shoulde be founde victualls ynoughe
at the full in all bounty to suffice them all. And takinge order
to cary hence thither our clothes made in hose, coates, clokes,
whoodes, &c. , and to returne thither hides of their owne beastes,
tanned and turned into shoes and bootes, and other skynnes of
goates, whereof they have store, into gloves, &c. , no doubte but
wee shall sett on worke in this realme, besides sailers and suche
as shalbe seated there in those westerne discovered contries, at
the leaste C. M. subjectes, to the greate abatinge of the goodd
estate of subjectes of forreine princes, enemies, or doubtfull
## p. 6819 (#199) ###########################################
RICHARD HAKLUYT
6819
frends, and this absque injuria, as the lawyers say, albeit not
sine damno.
CHAP. XV. That spedie plantinge in divers fitt places is moste necessarie
upon these laste luckye westerne discoveries, for feare of the danger
of beinge prevented by other nations which have the like intention,
with the order thereof, and other reasons therewithall alleaged.
HAVINGE by God's goodd guidinge and mercifull direction
atchieved happily this presente westerne discoverye, after the
seekinge the advauncement of the kingedome of Christe, the
seconde chefe and principall ende of the same is traficque, which
consisteth in the vente of the masse of our clothes and other
comodities of England, and in receaving backe of the nedefull
comodities that wee nowe receave from all other places of the
worlde. But forasmoche as this is a matter of greate ymport-
aunce and a thinge of so greate gaine as forren princes will
stomacke at, this one thinge is to be don withoute which it were
in vaine to goe aboute this; and that is, the matter of plantinge
and fortificacion, withoute due consideracion whereof in vaine
were it to think of the former. And therefore upon the firste
said viewe taken by the shippes that are to be sente thither, wee
are to plante upon the mouthes of the greate navigable rivers
which are there, by stronge order of fortification, and there to
plante our colonies. And so beinge firste setled in strengthe
with men, armour, munition, and havinge our navy within our
bayes, havens, and roades, wee shall be able to lett the entraunce
of all subjectes of forren princes, and so with our freshe powers
to encounter their shippes at the sea, and to renewe the same
with freshe men, as the sooden feightes shall require; and by
our fortes shalbe able to hold faste our firste footinge, and
readily to annoye such weary power of any other that shall seke
to arryve; and shalbe able with out navye to sende advertise-
mente into England upon every sooden whatsoever shall happen.
And these fortifications shall kepe the naturall people of the
contrye in obedience and goodd order. And these fortes at the
mouthes of those greate portable and navigable ryvers may at
all tymes sende upp their shippes, barkes, barges, and boates
into the inland with all the comodities of England, and returne
unto the said fortes all the comodities of the inlandes that wee
shall receave in exchange, and thence at pleasure convey the
same into England. And thus settled in those fortes, yf the
## p. 6820 (#200) ###########################################
6820
RICHARD HAKLUYT
nexte neighboures shall attempte any annoye to our people wee
are kepte safe by our fortes; and wee may, upon violence and
wronge offred by them, ronne upon the rivers with our shippes,
pynnesses, barkes, and boates, and enter into league with the
petite princes their neighboures, that have alwayes lightly warres
one with an other, and so entringe league nowe with the one
and then with the other, wee shall purchase our owne safetie, and
make our selves lordes of the whole.
Contrarywise, withoute this plantinge in due time, wee shall
never be able to have full knowledge of the language, manners,
and customes of the people of those regions, neither shall wee
be able thoroughly to knowe the riches and comodities of the
inlandes, with many other secretes whereof as yet wee have but
a small taste. And althoughe by other meanes we might attaine
to the knowedge thereof, yet beinge not there fortified and
strongly seated, the French that swarme with multitude of peo-
ple, or other nations, mighte secretly fortifie and settle them-
selves before us, hearinge of the benefite that is to be reaped of
that voyadge: and so wee shoulde beate the bushe and other
men take the birdes; wee shoulde be at the chardge and travell
and other men reape the gaine.
Yf wee doe procras-
tinate the plantinge (and where our men have nowe presently
discovered, and founde it to be the beste parte of America that
is lefte, and in truthe more agreeable to our natures, and more
nere unto us, than Nova Hispania), the Frenche, the Normans,
the Brytons, or the Duche, or some other nation, will not onely
prevente us of the mightie Baye of St. Lawrence, where they
have gotten the starte of us already, thoughe wee had the same
revealed to us by bookes published and printed in Englishe before
them, but also will depriue us of that goodd lande which nowe
wee have discovered.
God, which doth all thinges in his due time, and hath in his
hande the hertes of all Princes, stirr upp the mynde of her
Majestie at lengthe to assiste her moste willinge and forwarde
subjectes to the perfourmaunce of this moste godly and profit-
able action; which was begonne at the chardges of Kinge Henry
the viith her grandfather, followed by Kinge Henry the Eighte,
her father, and lefte as it semeth to be accomplished by her
(as the three yeres golden voyadge to Ophir was by Salomon), to
the makinge of her realme and subjectes moste happy, and her
selfe moste famous to all posteritie. Amen.
## p. 6821 (#201) ###########################################
6821
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
(1822-)
HE city of Boston has been long remarkable for its distin-
guished figures in science, politics, and affairs, in art and lit-
erature- and particularly in the walk of letters. Edward
Everett Hale is one of these figures.
Dr. Hale's long and still productive life has been one of great and
varied usefulness. The religious, philanthropic, civic, and literary
circles of his community have felt for many years the impact of his
vigorous personality, and his reputation as preacher and writer has
become national. His family is a noted one:
his father was Nathan Hale, first editor of
the Boston Daily Advertiser,-Nathan Hale
the martyr. being of the same line, - while
several of the immediate kin of Edward
Hale find places in American biography.
Born in Boston, April 3d, 1822, Edward
Everett Hale was educated at the famous
Latin School, then at Harvard, of which he
is one of the most noteworthy sons. Hale
read theology and was licensed to preach
by the Boston Association of Congregational
Ministers, his first regular settlement being
in Worcester, where he was pastor of the EDWARD EVERETT HALE
Church of the Unity from 1846 to 1856.
Thence he went to the Boston Unitarian society known as the South
Congregational Church, and for more than forty years has been its
active head.
ZOG
As a clergyman Dr. Hale has shown rare qualities as preacher and
organizer. His theology has been of the advanced liberal type, his
teaching emphasizing good works. His earnest, helpful efforts in the
broadest humanitarian undertakings have gone far outside the con-
ventional limits of his calling, making him more widely known as a
public man. Both by direct personal endeavor and through the influ-
ence of his writings he has been instrumental in founding many
societies for beneficent work of all kinds, of which the Harry Wads-
worth Clubs and the Look-Up Legion, with members by the tens of
thousands in different lands, are examples. He has kept closely in
## p. 6822 (#202) ###########################################
6822
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
touch with his Alma Mater at Cambridge, serving it as member of
the board of overseers and as president of the Phi Beta Kappa
Society. The degree of S. T. D. was conferred upon him by Harvard
in 1879.
His journalistic enterprises have been too many for enumeration
here. He began early, setting type in his father's office as a lad and
showing himself a diligent scribbler. Perhaps his best known edito-
rial connections have been with the magazine Old and New, started
under Unitarian auspices with the idea of giving literary expression
to liberal Christianity, and afterwards merged in Scribner's Monthly;
and Lend A Hand, a sort of record of organized charity, founded in
1886.
Few writing clergymen have been so voluminous as Dr. Hale; few
so successful. In addition to the long list of his magazine papers and
articles of every sort, his books number upwards of fifty titles. As is
inevitable in one who is so prolific, throwing off literary work with a
running pen,-often with a practical rather than an artistic aim,-
much of his writing is occasional in motive and ephemeral in char-
acter. It includes histories, essays, novels, poems, and short stories;
and the average quality, considering the variety and extent of the
performance and the fact that with Dr. Hale literature is an avoca-
tion, an aside from his main business in life, is decidedly high. The
short story is the literary form in which he has best expressed his
gift and character. One of his stories, The Man Without a Coun-
try,' is a little American classic. Others, such as 'My Double and
How he Undid Me' and 'The Skeleton in the Closet,' have also won
permanent popularity. They were written a generation ago, when the
short story was not the familiar form it has since become; so that in
addition to their merit, they are of interest as early ventures in the
tale distinguished from the full-length novel.
'The Man Without a Country,' selections from which follow, well
represents Dr. Hale's characteristics. Its manner has ease, felicity,
and good breeding. The narrative runs along in such an honest,
straightforward way, there is such an air of verisimilitude, that the
reader is half inclined to accept it all as history; although the idea
of a United States naval officer kept a prisoner at sea for a long life-
time and never permitted to hear or know of his native land, is
hardly more credible than the idea of the Flying Dutchman' or the
'Wandering Jew. ' Yet when the tale appeared the writer received
letters of inquiry, indicating that the fiction was taken in sober ear-
nest; and in a later edition he stated in an appendix that it lacked
all foundation in fact. But over and above its literary fascination,
"The Man Without a Country' is surcharged with ethical significance.
It is a beautiful allegory, showing the dire results of a momentary
## p. 6823 (#203) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6823
and heedless lapse from patriotism, and so preaching love of country.
It develops a lively sense of what it is to have a flag to fight for, a
land to love. This lesson is conveyed with power and pathos; and
the story's instant and continued acceptance is testimony, were any
needed, that Americans felt the appeal while enjoying the lovely.
fiction for its own sake. Such work, on the moral side, is typical of
Dr. Hale. He cannot write without a spiritual or moral purpose.
his literature is didactic, it is not dull; and hence, doing good, it also
justifies itself as art.
If
PHILIP NOLAN
From The Man Without a Country. ' Copyrighted; reprinted by permission
of Dr. Hale and J. S. Smith & Co. , publishers, Boston
PHIL
HILIP NOLAN was as fine a young officer as there was in the
"Legion of the West," as the Western division of our army
was then called. When Aaron Burr made his first dashing
expedition down to New Orleans in 1805 at Fort Massac, or
somewhere above on the river, he met, as the Devil would have
it, this gay, dashing, bright young fellow,-at some dinner-party,
I think. Burr marked him, talked to him, walked with him, took
him a day or two's voyage in his flatboat, and in short fasci-
nated him. For the next year, barrack life was very tame to poor
Nolan. He occasionally availed himself of the permission the
great man had given him to write to him. Long, high-worded,
stilted letters the poor boy wrote and rewrote and copied. But
never a line did he have in reply from the gay deceiver. The
other boys in the garrison sneered at him, because he sacrificed
in this unrequited affection for a politician the time which they
devoted to Monongahela, hazard, and high-low-Jack. Bourbon,
euchre, and poker were still unknown.
But one day Nolan had his revenge. This time Burr came
down the river, not as an attorney seeking a place for his office,
but as a distinguished conqueror. He had defeated I know not
how many district attorneys; he had dined at I know not how
many public dinners; he had been heralded in I know not how
many Weekly Arguses, and it was rumored that he had an army
behind him and an empire before him. It was a great day-
his arrival -to poor Nolan. Burr had not been at the fort an
hour before he sent for him. That evening he asked Nolan to take
him out in his skiff, to show him a cane-brake or a cotton-wood
## p. 6824 (#204) ###########################################
6824
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
tree, as he said, really to seduce him; and by the time the
sail was over, Nolan was enlisted body and soul. From that
time, though he did not yet know it, he lived as A Man With-
out a Country.
What Burr meant to do I know no more than you, dear
reader. It is none of our business just now. Only, when the
grand catastrophe came, and Jefferson and the house of Vir-
ginia of that day undertook to break on the wheel all the possi-
ble Clarences of the then house of York by the great treason
trial at Richmond, some of the lesser fry in that distant Missis-
sippi Valley, which was farther from us than Puget's Sound is
to-day, introduced the like novelty on their provincial stage; and
to while away the monotony of the summer at Fort Adams, got
up, for spectacles, a string of court-martials on the officers there.
One and another of the colonels and majors were tried, and to
fill out the list, little Nolan; against whom, Heaven knows there
was evidence enough,—that he was sick of the service, had been
willing to be false to it, and would have obeyed any order to
march anywhither with any one who would follow him, had the
order been signed "By command of His Exc. A. Burr. " The
courts dragged on. The big flies escaped,—rightly, for all I
know. Nolan was proved guilty enough, as I say; yet you and
I would never have heard of him, reader, but that when the
president of the court asked him at the close whether he wished
to say anything to show that he had always been faithful to the
United States, he cried out in a fit of frenzy:—
"Damn the United States! I wish I may never hear of the
United States again! "
I suppose he did not know how the words shocked old Colonel
Morgan, who was holding the court. Half the officers who sat
in it had served through the Revolution; and their lives, not to
say their necks, had been risked for the very idea which he so
cavalierly cursed in his madness. He on his part had grown
up in the West of those days, in the midst of "Spanish plot,"
"Orleans plot," and all the rest. He had been educated on a
plantation where the finest company was a Spanish officer or a
French merchant from Orleans. His education, such as it was,
had been perfected in commercial expeditions to Vera Cruz; and
I think he told me his father once hired an Englishman to be a
private tutor for a winter on the plantation. He had spent half
his youth with an older brother, hunting horses in Texas; and in
## p. 6825 (#205) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6825
a word, to him "United States" was scarcely a reality. Yet he
had been fed by "United States" for all the years since he had
been in the army.
He had sworn on his faith as a Christian to
be true to "United States. " It was "United States" which gave
him the uniform he wore and the sword by his side.
Nay, my
poor Nolan, it was only because "United States" had picked you
out first as one of her own confidential men of honor, that
"A. Burr" cared for you a straw more than for the flatboat-
men who sailed his ark for him. I do not excuse Nolan; I only
explain to the reader why he damned his country, and wished
he might never hear her name again.
He never did hear her name but once again. From that
moment, September 23d, 1807, till the day he died, May 11th,
1863, he never heard her name again. For that half-century and
more he was a man without a country.
Old Morgan, as I said, was terribly shocked. If Nolan had
compared George Washington to Benedict Arnold, or had cried
"God save King George! " Morgan would not have felt worse.
He called the court into his private room, and returned in fifteen
minutes with a face like a sheet, to say:
-
"Prisoner, hear the sentence of the court! The court decides,
subject to the approval of the President, that you never hear the
name of the United States again. "
Nolan laughed. But nobody else laughed. Old Morgan was
too solemn, and the whole room was hushed dead as night for a
minute. Even Nolan lost his swagger in a moment. Then Mor-
gan added:-
"Mr. Marshal, take the prisoner to Orleans in an armed boat,
and deliver him to the naval commander there. "
The marshal gave his orders, and the prisoner was taken out
of court.
"Mr. Marshal," continued old Morgan, «< see that no one men-
tions the United States to the prisoner. Mr. Marshal, make my
respects to Lieutenant Mitchell at Orleans, and request him to
order that no one shall mention the United States to the pris-
oner while he is on board ship. You will receive your written
orders from the officer on duty here this evening. The court is
adjourned without day. "
Since writing this, and while considering whether or no I
would print it as a warning to the young Nolans and Vallan-
dighams and Tatnalls of to-day of what it is to throw away a
## p. 6826 (#206) ###########################################
6826
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
country, I have received from Danforth, who is on board the
Levant, a letter which gives an account of Nolan's last hours. It
removes all my doubts about telling this story.
To understand the first words of the letter, the non-profes-
sional reader should remember that after 1817 the position of
every officer who had Nolan in charge was one of the greatest
delicacy. The government had failed to renew the order of 1807
regarding him. What was a man to do? Should he let him go?
what then if he were called to account by the Department for
violating the order of 1807? Should he keep him? what then if
Nolan should be liberated some day, and should bring an action
for false imprisonment or kidnapping against every man who
had had him in charge? I urged and pressed this upon South-
ard, and I have reason to think that other officers did the same
thing. But the Secretary always said, as they so often do at
Washington, that there were no special orders to give, and that
we must act on our own judgment. That means, “If you suc-
ceed, you will be sustained; if you fail, you will be disavowed.
"
Well, as Danforth says, all that is over now; though I do not
know but I expose myself to a criminal prosecution on the evi-
dence of the very revelation I am making.
Here is the letter:-
LEVANT, 2°2′ S. @ 131° W.
Dear Fred:
I TRY to find heart and life to tell you that it is all over with
dear old Nolan. I have been with him on this voyage more than
I ever was; and I can understand wholly now the way in which
you used to speak of the dear old fellow. I could see that he
was not strong, but I had no idea the end was so near. The
doctor has been watching him very carefully, and yesterday morn-
ing came to me and told me that Nolan was not so well, and
had not left his state-room,-a thing I never remember before.
He had let the doctor come and see him as he lay there,— the
first time the doctor had been in the state-room,- and he said he
should like to see me. Oh dear! do you remember the mysteries
we boys used to invent about his room in the old Intrepid"
days? Well, I went in; and there to be sure the poor fellow lay
in his berth, smiling pleasantly as he gave me his hand, but
looking very frail. I could not help a glance round, which showed
me what a little shrine he had made of the box he was lying in.
<<
## p. 6827 (#207) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6827
The Stars and Stripes were triced up above and around a picture
of Washington, and he had painted a majestic eagle, with light-
nings blazing from his beak, and his foot just clasping the whole
globe, which his wings overshadowed. The dear old boy saw
my glance, and said with a sad smile, "Here, you see, I have a
country! " And then he pointed to the foot of his bed, where I
had not seen before a great map of the United States, as he had
drawn it from memory, and which he had there to look upon as
he lay. Quaint, queer old names were on it in large letters:
"Indiana Territory," "Mississippi Territory," and "Louisiana
Territory," as I suppose our fathers learned such things: but the
old fellow had patched in Texas too; he had carried his western
boundary all the way to the Pacific, but on that shore he had
defined nothing.
"O Danforth," he said, "I know I am dying. I cannot get
home. Surely you will tell me something now? Stop! stop!
do not speak till I say what I am sure you know, that there is
not in this ship, that there is not in America - God bless her!
a more loyal man than I. There cannot be a man who loves
the old flag as I do, or prays for it as I do, or hopes for it as
I do. There are thirty-four stars in it now, Danforth. I thank
God for that, though I do not know what their names are.
There has never been one taken away; I thank God for that.
I know by that that there has never been any successful Burr.
O Danforth, Danforth," he sighed out, "how like a 'wretched
night's dream a boy's idea of personal fame or of separate sov-
ereignty seems, when one looks back on it after such a life as
mine! But tell me, tell me something tell me everything,
Danforth, before I die! "
―――
Ingham, I swear to you that I felt like a monster that I had
not told him everything before. Danger or no danger, delicacy
or no delicacy, who was I that I should have been acting the
tyrant all this time over this dear sainted old man, who had
years ago expiated, in his whole manhood's life, the madness of a
boy's treason? "Mr. Nolan," said I, "I will tell you everything
you ask about. Only, where shall I begin? »
Oh, the blessed smile that crept over his white face! and he
pressed my hand, and said, "God bless you! Tell me their
names," he said, and he pointed to the stars on the flag. "The
last I know is Ohio. My father lived in Kentucky. But I
have guessed Michigan and Indiana and Mississippi,- that was
## p. 6828 (#208) ###########################################
6828
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
where Fort Adams is: they make twenty. But where are your
other fourteen? You have not cut up any of the old ones, I
hope. »
Well, that was not a bad text; and I told him the names in
as good order as I could, and he bade me take down his beautiful
map, and draw them in as I best could with my pencil. He was
wild with delight about Texas, - told me how his cousin died
there; he had marked a gold cross near where he supposed his
grave was, and he had guessed at Texas. Then he was delighted
as he saw California and Oregon; that, he said, he had sus-
pected, partly because he had never been permitted to land on
that shore, though the ships were there so much. "And the
men," said he laughing, "brought off a good deal besides furs. "
Then he went back heavens, how far! -to ask about the
Chesapeake, and what was done to Barron for surrendering her
to the Leopard, and whether Burr ever tried again, and he
ground his teeth with the only passion he showed. But in a
moment that was over, and he said, "God forgive me, for I am
sure I forgive him. " Then he asked about the old war; told me
the true story of his serving the gun the day we took the Java;
asked about dear old David Porter, as he called him. Then he
settled down more quietly and very happily, to hear me tell in
an hour the history of fifty years.
How I wished it had been somebody who knew something!
But I did as well as I could. I told him of the English war. I
told him about Fulton and the steamboat beginning. I told him
about old Scott and Jackson; told him all I could think of about
the Mississippi and New Orleans and Texas and his own old
Kentucky. And do you think, he asked who was in command of
the "Legion of the West"! I told him it was a very gallant
officer named Grant, and that by our last news he was about to
establish his headquarters at Vicksburg. Then, "Where was
Vicksburg? " I worked that out on the map; it was about a
hundred miles, more or less, above his old Fort Adams; and I
thought Fort Adams must be a ruin now. "It must be at old
Vick's plantation, at Walnut Hills," said he: "well, that is a
change! "
I tell you, Ingham, it was a hard thing to condense the
history of half a century into that talk with a sick man. And
I do not now know what I told him, —of immigration, and the
means of it; of steamboats and railroads and telegraphs; of
-
## p. 6829 (#209) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6829
inventions and books and literature; of the colleges and West
Point and the Naval School, - but with the queerest interrup-
tions that ever you heard. You see, it was Robinson Crusoe
asking all the accumulated questions of fifty-six years!
I remember he asked, all of a sudden, who was President
now; and when I told him, he asked if Old Abe was General
Benjamin Lincoln's son. He said he met old General Lincoln
when he was quite a boy himself, at some Indian treaty. I said
no, that Old Abe was a Kentuckian like himself, but I could not
tell him of what family; he had worked up from the ranks.
"Good for him! " cried Nolan; "I am glad of that. As I have
brooded and wondered, I have thought our danger was in keep-
ing up those regular successions in the first families. " Then I
got talking about my visit to Washington. I told him of meet-
ing the Oregon Congressman Harding; I told him about the
Smithsonian and the Exploring Expedition; I told him about the
Capitol, and the statues for the pediment, and Crawford's Liberty,
and Greenough's Washington. Ingham, I told him everything I
could think of that would show the grandeur of his country and
its prosperity; but I could not make up my mouth to tell him a
word about this infernal Rebellion!
And he drank it in, and enjoyed it as I cannot tell you. He
grew more and more silent, yet I never thought he was tired or
faint. I gave him a glass of water, but he just wet his lips, and
told me not to go away. Then he asked me to bring the Pres-
byterian 'Book of Public Prayer,' which lay there, and said with
a smile that it would open at the right place, and so it did.
There was his double red mark down the page; and I knelt down
and read, and he repeated with me:- "For ourselves and our
country, O gracious God, we thank thee that notwithstanding
our manifold transgressions of thy holy laws, thou hast con-
tinued to us thy marvelous kindness," - and so to the end of that
thanksgiving. Then he turned to the end of the same book, and
I read the words more familiar to me: "Most heartily we be-
seech thee with thy favor to behold and bless thy servant the
President of the United States, and all others in authority,”—
and the rest of the Episcopal collect. "Danforth," said he, "I
have repeated those prayers night and morning, it is now fifty-
five years. " And then he said he would go to sleep. He bent
me down over him, and kissed me; and he said, "Look in my
Bible, Danforth, when I am gone. " And I went away.
――
## p. 6830 (#210) ###########################################
6830
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
But I had no thought it was the end. I thought he was tired
and would sleep. I knew he was happy, and I wanted him to be
alone.
But in an hour, when the doctor went in gently, he found
Nolan had breathed his life away with a smile. He had some-
thing pressed close to his lips. It was his father's badge of the
Order of the Cincinnati.
We looked in his Bible, and there was a slip of paper at the
place where he had marked the text:
"They desire a country, even a heavenly: wherefore God is
not ashamed to be called their God; for he hath prepared for
them a city. "
On this slip of paper he had written:-
―
BURY me in the sea; it has been my home, and I love it.
But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort
Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I
ought to bear? Say on it:-
IN MEMORY OF
PHILIP NOLAN,
Lieutenant in the Army of the United States
He loved his country as no other man has loved her;
but no man deserved less at her hands.
## p. 6831 (#211) ###########################################
6831
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
(1834-)
UDOVIC HALÉVY, known to American readers chiefly as the
author of the graceful little novel The Abbé Constantin,'
entered French letters as a dramatist and writer of librettos.
Born in Paris in 1834 of Jewish parentage, he is the son of Léon
Halévy, a poet and littérateur of some note in his day; and he is, as
well, the nephew of the composer of The Jewess' and of 'The Queen
of Cyprus. ' He grew up in the atmosphere of the theatre. After
leaving college he entered his country's civil service, and rapidly
rose to occupy positions of distinction. At
the same time he gave his leisure to writ-
ing plays and short stories, looking forward
to the day when he would be able to throw
off the burdensome yoke of clerical duties
and to devote himself entirely to literature.
Unsuccessful at first, Halévy finally worked
his way into public favor, especially after
associating his pen with that of Henri Meil-
hac. In collaboration with the latter, Halévy
wrote many of the librettos of Offenbach's
most brilliant and satiric operettas, includ-
ing The Perichole,' 'The Brigands,' the
'Belle Hélène,' and 'The Grand Duchess
of Gérolstein'-a burlesque opera which had
such vogue that it is said to have been the first thing the Emperor
Alexander of Russia wished to hear, when he came to Paris to attend
the Exposition of 1867. Several serious librettos of high excellence
are from the same hands, including that for Bizet's Carmen. ' In
spoken drama, 'Frou-Frou' and 'Tricoche and Cacolet' are among
the most popular plays the two dramatists produced together. In
speaking of the collaboration of Halévy with Meilhac in humorous
drama, Francisque Sarcey says:-"Gifted with an exquisite apprecia-
tion of the real, Halévy has preserved the more fantastic and bizarre
characteristics of the imagination of the latter. From this mutual
work have sprung plays which in my opinion are not sufficiently
estimated by us; -we have seen them hundreds of times, and have
referred to them with a grimace of contempt. There is a great deal
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
## p. 6832 (#212) ###########################################
6832
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
of imagination, of wit, and of good sense in these amusing parodies
of every-day life. "
Yet, great as was the success of his dramatic work, Halévy's claim
to a place in French literature rests on what he produced alone after
the collaboration with Meilhac had suffered a rupture, in 1881. At
the same time he ceased writing for the stage, and turned to fiction.
'L'Abbé Constantin,' the first of his novels, is also the most popular.
It opened to him the French Academy. It was for more than one
season the French story of the day. It is a charming story, full of
fresh air and sun, simply and skillfully told. It presented a view
of American character and temperament not usual in French fiction;
and irreproachable in its moral tone, it has become a sort of classic
for American schools and colleges. La Famille Cardinal' (The Cardi-
nal Family) and 'Crichette' are others of Halévy's studies in fiction
of aspects of Parisian life. 'Notes and Souvenirs' embody observa-
tions during the Prussian invasion of 1871. They are interesting, as
giving faithful pictures of the temper of the people during those days.
Among his short stories, 'Un Mariage d'Amour' (A Marriage for
Love) is one of the most delightful; and a highly characteristic one,
'The Most Beautiful Woman in Paris,' is appended to this sketch.
Says Mr. Brander Matthews:-
-
"In all these books there are the same artistic qualities; the same sharp-
ness of vision, the same gentle irony, the same constructive skill, and the
same dramatic touch.
M. Halévy's irony is delicate and playful.
There is no harshness in his manner and no hatred in his mind. We do not
find in his pages any of the pessimism which is perhaps the dominant char-
acteristic of the best French fiction of our time.
More than Maupas-
sant, or Flaubert, or Merimée, is M. Halévy a Parisian. Whether or not the
characters of his tales are dwellers in the capital, whether or not the scene of
his story is laid in the city by the Seine, the point of view is always Parisian.
His style even, his swift and limpid prose,- the prose which some-
how corresponds to the best vers de société in its brilliancy and buoyancy,—
is the style of one who lives at the centre of things. Cardinal Newman once
said that while Livy and Tacitus and Terence and Seneca wrote Latin, Cicero
wrote Roman. So, while M. Zola on one side and M. Georges Ohnet on the
other may write French, M. Halévy writes Parisian. »
·
## p. 6833 (#213) ###########################################
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
6833
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN PARIS
From Parisian Points of View. Copyright 1894, by Harper & Brothers
N FRIDAY, April 19th, Prince Agénor was really distracted at
the opera during the second act of Sigurd. ' The prince
kept going from box to box, and his enthusiasm increased
as he went.
Ο
(
"That blonde! oh, that blonde! she is ideal! Look at that
blonde! Do you know that blonde? "
It was from the front part of Madame de Marizy's large
first-tier box that all these exclamations were coming at that
moment.
“Which blonde? " asked Madame de Marizy.
"Which blonde! Why, there is but one this evening in the
house. Opposite to you, over there in the first box, the Sainte
Mesmes' box. Look, baroness, look straight over there. "
"Yes, I am looking at her. She is atrociously got up, but
pretty. "
«< Pretty! She is a wonder! simply a wonder!
Got up?
Yes, agreed some country relative. The Sainte Mesmes have
cousins in Périgord. But what a smile! How well her neck is
set on! And the slope of the shoulders! ah, especially the
shoulders! "
"Come, either keep still or go away. Let me listen to Ma-
•
dame Caron. ”
The prince went away as no one knew that incomparable
blonde. Yet she had often been to the opera, but in an unpre-
tentious way-in the second tier of boxes. And to Prince Agé-
nor, above the first tier of boxes there was nothing, absolutely
nothing. There was emptiness—space. The prince had never
been in a second-tier box, so the second-tier boxes did not exist.
While Madame Caron was marvelously singing the marvelous
phrase of Reyer, "Ô mon sauveur silencieux, la Valkyrie est ta
conquête," the prince strolled along the passages of the opera.
Who was that blonde? He wanted to know, and he would.
know.
·
And suddenly he remembered that good Madame Picard was
the box-opener of the Sainte Mesmes, and that he, Prince of
Nérins, had had the honor of being for a long time a friend of
that good Madame Picard.
XII-428
## p. 6834 (#214) ###########################################
6834
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
"Ah, prince," said Madame Picard on seeing Agénor, "there
is no one for you to-night in my boxes. Madame de Simiane is
not here, and Madame de Sainte Mesme has rented her box. "
Don't you know the people in Madame
"That's precisely it.
de Sainte Mesme's box?
"Not at all, prince.
the marquise's box. "
It's the first time I have seen them in
"Then you have no idea-»
"None, prince. Only to me they don't appear to be people
of — »
She was going to say of our set. A box-opener of the first
tier of boxes at the opera, having generally only to do with
absolutely high-born people, considers herself as being a little of
their set, and shows extreme disdain for unimportant people; it
displeases her to receive these unimportant people in her boxes.
Madame Picard however had tact which rarely forsook her, and
so stopped herself in time to say:
"People of your set. They belong to the middle class, to the
wealthy middle class; but still the middle class. That doesn't
satisfy you; you wish to know more on account of the blonde.
Is it not so, prince? "
Those last words were spoken with rare delicacy; they were
murmured more than spoken-box-opener to prince! It would
have been unacceptable without that perfect reserve in accent
and tone; yes, it was a box-opener who spoke, but a box-opener
who was a little bit the aunt of former times, the aunt à la
mode de Cythère. Madame Picard continued:-
no
"Ah, she is a beauty! She came with a little dark man - her
husband, I'm sure; for while she was taking off her cloak — it
always takes some time he didn't say a word to her:
eagerness, no little attentions - yes, he could only be a husband.
I examined the cloak: people one doesn't know puzzle me and
my colleague; Madame Flachet and I always amuse ourselves by
trying to guess from appearances. Well, the cloak comes from a
good dressmaker, but not from a great one; it is fine and well
made, but it has no style. I think they are middle-class people,
prince. But how stupid I am! You know M.
in trifles bestowed upon the savages, stoode him not in fortie
crownes.
The nature and qualitie of thother parte of America from
Cape Briton, beinge in 46 degrees unto the latitude of 52. for iij
C. leagues within the lande even to Hochelaga, is notably de-
scribed in the twoo voyadges of Iacques Cartier. In the fifte
chapiter of his second relation thus he writeth: From the 19. till
the 28. of September wee sailed upp the ryver, never loosinge
one houre of tyme, all which space wee sawe as goodly a contrie
as possibly coulde be wisshed for, full of all sortes of goodly
trees; that is to say, oakes, elmes, walnut-trees, cedars, fyrres,
asshes, boxe, willoughes, and greate store of vynes, all as full
of grapes as coulde be, that if any of our fellowes wente on
shoare, they came home laden with them. There were likewise
many cranes, swannes, geese, mallardes, fesauntes, partridges,
thrusshes, black birdes, turtles, finches, reddbreastes, nightingales,
sparrowes, with other sortes of birdes even as in Fraunce, and
greate plentie and store. Againe in the xlth chapiter of the said
relation there ys mention of silver and golde to be upon a ryver
that is three monethes' saylinge, navigable southwarde from
Hoghelaga; and that redd copper is yn Saguynay. All that con-
trie is full of sondrie sortes of woodde and many vines. There
is great store of stagges, redd dere, fallowe dere, beares, and
other suche like sorts of beastes, as conies, hares, marterns, foxes,
otters, bevers, squirrells, badgers, and rattes exceedinge greate,
and divers other sortes of beastes for huntinge. There are also
many sortes of fowles as cranes, swannes, outardes, wilde geese
white and graye, duckes, thrusshes, black birdes, turtles, wild
pigeons, lynnetts, finches, redd breastes, stares, nightingales, spar-
rowes, and other birdes even as in Fraunce. Also, as wee have
said before, the said ryver is the plentifullest of fyshe that ever
hath bene seene or hearde of, because that from the heade to
the mouthe of yt you shall finde all kinde of freshe and salte
water fyshe accordinge to their season. There are also many
·
## p. 6815 (#195) ###########################################
RICHARD HAKLUYT
6815
whales, porposes, sea horses, and adhothuis, which is a kinde of
fishe which wee have never seene nor hearde of before. And in
the x11th chapiter thus: Wee understoode of Donaconna and
others that
there are people cladd with clothe as wee
are, very honest, and many inhabited townes, and that they had
greate store of golde and redd copper; and that within the land
beyonde the said firste ryver unto Hochelaga and Saguynay, ys an
iland envyroned rounde aboute with that and other ryvers, and
that there is a sea of freshe water founde, and as they have
hearde say of those of uynay, there was never man hearde of
that founde out the begynnynge and ende thereof. Finally, in
the postcripte of the seconde relation, wee reade these wordes:
They of Canada saye, that it is a moones sailinge to goe to a
lande where cynamonde and cloves are gathered.
Thus having alleaged many printed testymonies of these cred-
ible persons, which were personally betwene 30. and 63. degrees
in America, as well on the coaste as within the lande, which
affirmed unto the princes and kinges which sett them oute that
they found there,
I may well and truly conclude with
reason and authoritie, that all the comodities of all our olde
decayed and daungerous trades in all Europe, Africa, and Asia
haunted by us, may in shorte space for little or nothinge, and
many for the very workmanshippe, in a manner be had in that
part of America which lieth between 30. and 60. degrees of
northerly latitude, if by our slacknes we suffer not the Frenche
or others to prevente us.
CAP. IV.
That this enterprize will be for the manifolde ymployment of
nombers of idle men, and for bredinge of many sufficient, and for
utteraunce of the great quantitie of the comodities of our realme.
It is well worthe the observation to see and consider what the
like voyadges of discoverye and plantinge in the Easte and Weste
Indies hath wroughte in the kingdomes of Portingale and Spayne;
bothe which realmes, beinge of themselves poore and barren and
hardly able to susteine their inhabitaunts, by their discoveries
have founde suche occasion of employmente, that these many
yeres we have not herde scarcely of any pirate of those twoo
nations; whereas wee and the Frenche are moste infamous for
our outeragious, common, and daily piracies. Againe, when hearde
wee almoste of one theefe amongest them? The reason is, that
## p. 6816 (#196) ###########################################
6816
RICHARD HAKLUYT
by these their newe discoveries, they have so many honest wayes
to set them on worke, as they rather wante men than meanes to
ymploye them. But wee, for all the statutes that hitherto can be
devised, and the sharpe execution of the same in poonishinge idle
lazye persons, for wante of sufficient occasion of honest employ-
mente cannot deliver our commonwealthe from multitudes of
loyterers and idle vagabondes. Truthe it is that throughe our
longe peace and seldome sicknes (twoo singuler blessinges of Al-
mightie God) wee are growen more populous than ever hereto-
fore; so that nowe there are of every arte and science so many
that they can hardly lyve one by another, nay rather they are
readie to eate uppe one another; yea many thousandes of idle
persons are within this realme, which, havinge no way to be sett
on worke, be either mutinous or seeke alteration in the State, or
at leaste very burdensome to the commonwealth, and often fall
to pilferinge and thevinge and other lewdnes, whereby all the
prisons of the lande are daily pestred and stuffed full of them,
where either they pitifully pyne awaye or els at length are mis-
erably hanged, even xxti at a clappe oute of some one jayle.
Whereas yf this voyadge were put in execution, these pety theves
mighte be condempned for certein yeres in the westerne partes,
especially in Newefounde lande, in sawinge and fellinge of tym-
ber for mastes of shippes, and deale boordes; in burninge of the
firres and pine-trees to make pitche, tarr, rosen, and sope ashes·
in beatinge and workinge of hempe for cordage; and in the more
southerne partes, in settinge them to worke in mynes of golde,
silver, copper, leade, and yron; in dragginge for perles and cur-
rall; in plantinge of suger canes, as the Portingales have done in
Madera; in mayneteynaunce and increasinge of silke wormes for
silke, and in dressinge the same; in gatheringe up cotten whereof
there is plentie; in tillinge of the soile there for graine; in dress-
inge of vines whereof there is greate aboundaunce for wyne;
olyves, whereof the soile ys capable, for oyle; trees for oranges,
lymons, almondes, figges and other frutes, all which are founde
to growe there already; in sowinge of woade and madder for
diers, as the Portingales have don in the Azores; in dressinge of
raw hides of divers kindes of beastes; in makinge and gatheringe
of salte, as in Rochel and Bayon, which may serve for the newe
lande fisshinge; in killinge the whale, seale, porpose, and whirle-
poole for trayne oile; in fisshinge, saltinge, and dryenge of linge,
codde, salmon, herringe; in makinge and gatheringe of hony,
## p. 6817 (#197) ###########################################
RICHARD HAKLUYT
6817
waxe, turpentine; in hewinge and shapinge of stone, as marble,
jeate, christall, freestone, which will be goodd ballaste for our
shippes homewardes, and after serve for noble buildinges; in
makinge of caskes, oares, and all other manner of staves; in
buildinge of fortes, townes, churches; in powdringe and barrel-
linge of fishe, fowles, and fleshe, which will be notable provision
for sea and land; in dryenge, sortinge, and packinge of fethers,
whereof may be had there marvelous greate quantitie.
Besides this, such as by any kinde of infirmitie can not passe
the seas thither, and nowe are chardgeable to the realme at home,
by this voyadge shalbe made profitable members, by employinge
them in England in makinge of a thousande triflinge thinges,
which will be very goodd marchandize for those contries where
wee shall have moste ample vente thereof.
And seinge the savages of the Graunde Baye, and all alonge
the mightie ryver ronneth upp to Canada and Hochelaga, are
greately delighted with any cappe or garment made of course
wollen clothe, their contrie beinge colde and sharpe in the winter,
yt is manifeste wee shall finde greate utteraunce of our clothes,
especially of our coursest and basest northerne doosens, and our
Irishe and Welshe frizes and rugges; whereby all occupations
belonginge to clothinge and knittinge shalbe freshly sett on
worke, as cappers, knitters, clothiers, wollmen, carders, spynners,
weavers, fullers, sheremen, dyers, drapers, hatters, and such like,
whereby many decayed townes may be repaired.
In somme, this enterprice will mynister matter for all sortes
and states of men to worke upon; namely, all severall kindes of
artificers, husbandmen, seamen, merchaunts, souldiers, capitaines,
phisitions, lawyers, devines, cosmographers, hidrographers, astrono-
mers, historiographers; yea, olde folkes, lame persons, women, and
younge children, by many meanes which hereby shall still be
mynistred unto them, shalbe kepte from idlenes, and be made
able by their owne honest and easie labour to finde themselves,
withoute surchardginge others.
Whatsoever clothe wee shall vente on the tracte of that firme,
or in the ilands of the same, or in other landes, ilandes, and ter-
ritories beyonde, be they within the circle articke or withoute, all
these clothes, I say, are to passe oute of this realme full wroughte
by our naturall subjectes in all degrees of labour. And if it come
aboute in tyme that wee shall vente that masse there that wee
vented in the Base Contries, which is hoped by greate reason,
XII-427
## p. 6818 (#198) ###########################################
6818
RICHARD HAKLUYT
then shall all that clothe passe oute of this realme in all degrees
of labour full wroughte by the poore naturall subjectes of this
realme, like as the quantitie of our clothe dothe passe that goeth
hence to Russia, Barbarie, Turkye, Persia, &c. And then conse-
quently it followeth, that the like nomber of people alleaged to
the Emperour shal be sett on worke in England of our poore
subjectes more then hath bene; and so her Majestie shall not be
troubled with the pitefull outecryes of cappers, knytters, spyn-
ners, &c.
And on the other side wee are to note, that all the comodities
wee shall bringe thence, we shall not bringe them wroughte,
as wee bringe now the comodities of Fraunce and Flaunders,
&c. , but shall receave them all substaunces unwroughte, to the
ymploymente of a wonderfull multitude of the poore subjectes
of this realme in returne. And so to conclude, what in the nom-
ber of thinges to goe oute wroughte, and to come in unwroughte,
there nede not one poore creature to steale, to starve, or to begge,
as they doe.
And to answer objections: where fooles for the swarminge of
beggars alleage that the realme is too populous, Salomon saieth
that the honour and strengthe of a prince consisteth in the mul-
titude of the people. And if this come aboute, that worke may
be had for the multitude, where the realme hath nowe one thou-
sande for the defence thereof, the same may have fyve thousande.
For when people knowe howe to live, and howe to mayneteyne
and feede their wyves and children, they will not abstaine from
mariage as nowe they doe. And the soile thus aboundinge with
corne, fleshe, mylke, butter, cheese, herbes, rootes, and frutes,
&c. , and the seas that envyron the same so infynitely aboundinge
in fishe, I dare truly affirme, that if the nomber in this realme
were as greate as all Spaine and Ffraunce have, the people be-
inge industrous, I say, there shoulde be founde victualls ynoughe
at the full in all bounty to suffice them all. And takinge order
to cary hence thither our clothes made in hose, coates, clokes,
whoodes, &c. , and to returne thither hides of their owne beastes,
tanned and turned into shoes and bootes, and other skynnes of
goates, whereof they have store, into gloves, &c. , no doubte but
wee shall sett on worke in this realme, besides sailers and suche
as shalbe seated there in those westerne discovered contries, at
the leaste C. M. subjectes, to the greate abatinge of the goodd
estate of subjectes of forreine princes, enemies, or doubtfull
## p. 6819 (#199) ###########################################
RICHARD HAKLUYT
6819
frends, and this absque injuria, as the lawyers say, albeit not
sine damno.
CHAP. XV. That spedie plantinge in divers fitt places is moste necessarie
upon these laste luckye westerne discoveries, for feare of the danger
of beinge prevented by other nations which have the like intention,
with the order thereof, and other reasons therewithall alleaged.
HAVINGE by God's goodd guidinge and mercifull direction
atchieved happily this presente westerne discoverye, after the
seekinge the advauncement of the kingedome of Christe, the
seconde chefe and principall ende of the same is traficque, which
consisteth in the vente of the masse of our clothes and other
comodities of England, and in receaving backe of the nedefull
comodities that wee nowe receave from all other places of the
worlde. But forasmoche as this is a matter of greate ymport-
aunce and a thinge of so greate gaine as forren princes will
stomacke at, this one thinge is to be don withoute which it were
in vaine to goe aboute this; and that is, the matter of plantinge
and fortificacion, withoute due consideracion whereof in vaine
were it to think of the former. And therefore upon the firste
said viewe taken by the shippes that are to be sente thither, wee
are to plante upon the mouthes of the greate navigable rivers
which are there, by stronge order of fortification, and there to
plante our colonies. And so beinge firste setled in strengthe
with men, armour, munition, and havinge our navy within our
bayes, havens, and roades, wee shall be able to lett the entraunce
of all subjectes of forren princes, and so with our freshe powers
to encounter their shippes at the sea, and to renewe the same
with freshe men, as the sooden feightes shall require; and by
our fortes shalbe able to hold faste our firste footinge, and
readily to annoye such weary power of any other that shall seke
to arryve; and shalbe able with out navye to sende advertise-
mente into England upon every sooden whatsoever shall happen.
And these fortifications shall kepe the naturall people of the
contrye in obedience and goodd order. And these fortes at the
mouthes of those greate portable and navigable ryvers may at
all tymes sende upp their shippes, barkes, barges, and boates
into the inland with all the comodities of England, and returne
unto the said fortes all the comodities of the inlandes that wee
shall receave in exchange, and thence at pleasure convey the
same into England. And thus settled in those fortes, yf the
## p. 6820 (#200) ###########################################
6820
RICHARD HAKLUYT
nexte neighboures shall attempte any annoye to our people wee
are kepte safe by our fortes; and wee may, upon violence and
wronge offred by them, ronne upon the rivers with our shippes,
pynnesses, barkes, and boates, and enter into league with the
petite princes their neighboures, that have alwayes lightly warres
one with an other, and so entringe league nowe with the one
and then with the other, wee shall purchase our owne safetie, and
make our selves lordes of the whole.
Contrarywise, withoute this plantinge in due time, wee shall
never be able to have full knowledge of the language, manners,
and customes of the people of those regions, neither shall wee
be able thoroughly to knowe the riches and comodities of the
inlandes, with many other secretes whereof as yet wee have but
a small taste. And althoughe by other meanes we might attaine
to the knowedge thereof, yet beinge not there fortified and
strongly seated, the French that swarme with multitude of peo-
ple, or other nations, mighte secretly fortifie and settle them-
selves before us, hearinge of the benefite that is to be reaped of
that voyadge: and so wee shoulde beate the bushe and other
men take the birdes; wee shoulde be at the chardge and travell
and other men reape the gaine.
Yf wee doe procras-
tinate the plantinge (and where our men have nowe presently
discovered, and founde it to be the beste parte of America that
is lefte, and in truthe more agreeable to our natures, and more
nere unto us, than Nova Hispania), the Frenche, the Normans,
the Brytons, or the Duche, or some other nation, will not onely
prevente us of the mightie Baye of St. Lawrence, where they
have gotten the starte of us already, thoughe wee had the same
revealed to us by bookes published and printed in Englishe before
them, but also will depriue us of that goodd lande which nowe
wee have discovered.
God, which doth all thinges in his due time, and hath in his
hande the hertes of all Princes, stirr upp the mynde of her
Majestie at lengthe to assiste her moste willinge and forwarde
subjectes to the perfourmaunce of this moste godly and profit-
able action; which was begonne at the chardges of Kinge Henry
the viith her grandfather, followed by Kinge Henry the Eighte,
her father, and lefte as it semeth to be accomplished by her
(as the three yeres golden voyadge to Ophir was by Salomon), to
the makinge of her realme and subjectes moste happy, and her
selfe moste famous to all posteritie. Amen.
## p. 6821 (#201) ###########################################
6821
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
(1822-)
HE city of Boston has been long remarkable for its distin-
guished figures in science, politics, and affairs, in art and lit-
erature- and particularly in the walk of letters. Edward
Everett Hale is one of these figures.
Dr. Hale's long and still productive life has been one of great and
varied usefulness. The religious, philanthropic, civic, and literary
circles of his community have felt for many years the impact of his
vigorous personality, and his reputation as preacher and writer has
become national. His family is a noted one:
his father was Nathan Hale, first editor of
the Boston Daily Advertiser,-Nathan Hale
the martyr. being of the same line, - while
several of the immediate kin of Edward
Hale find places in American biography.
Born in Boston, April 3d, 1822, Edward
Everett Hale was educated at the famous
Latin School, then at Harvard, of which he
is one of the most noteworthy sons. Hale
read theology and was licensed to preach
by the Boston Association of Congregational
Ministers, his first regular settlement being
in Worcester, where he was pastor of the EDWARD EVERETT HALE
Church of the Unity from 1846 to 1856.
Thence he went to the Boston Unitarian society known as the South
Congregational Church, and for more than forty years has been its
active head.
ZOG
As a clergyman Dr. Hale has shown rare qualities as preacher and
organizer. His theology has been of the advanced liberal type, his
teaching emphasizing good works. His earnest, helpful efforts in the
broadest humanitarian undertakings have gone far outside the con-
ventional limits of his calling, making him more widely known as a
public man. Both by direct personal endeavor and through the influ-
ence of his writings he has been instrumental in founding many
societies for beneficent work of all kinds, of which the Harry Wads-
worth Clubs and the Look-Up Legion, with members by the tens of
thousands in different lands, are examples. He has kept closely in
## p. 6822 (#202) ###########################################
6822
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
touch with his Alma Mater at Cambridge, serving it as member of
the board of overseers and as president of the Phi Beta Kappa
Society. The degree of S. T. D. was conferred upon him by Harvard
in 1879.
His journalistic enterprises have been too many for enumeration
here. He began early, setting type in his father's office as a lad and
showing himself a diligent scribbler. Perhaps his best known edito-
rial connections have been with the magazine Old and New, started
under Unitarian auspices with the idea of giving literary expression
to liberal Christianity, and afterwards merged in Scribner's Monthly;
and Lend A Hand, a sort of record of organized charity, founded in
1886.
Few writing clergymen have been so voluminous as Dr. Hale; few
so successful. In addition to the long list of his magazine papers and
articles of every sort, his books number upwards of fifty titles. As is
inevitable in one who is so prolific, throwing off literary work with a
running pen,-often with a practical rather than an artistic aim,-
much of his writing is occasional in motive and ephemeral in char-
acter. It includes histories, essays, novels, poems, and short stories;
and the average quality, considering the variety and extent of the
performance and the fact that with Dr. Hale literature is an avoca-
tion, an aside from his main business in life, is decidedly high. The
short story is the literary form in which he has best expressed his
gift and character. One of his stories, The Man Without a Coun-
try,' is a little American classic. Others, such as 'My Double and
How he Undid Me' and 'The Skeleton in the Closet,' have also won
permanent popularity. They were written a generation ago, when the
short story was not the familiar form it has since become; so that in
addition to their merit, they are of interest as early ventures in the
tale distinguished from the full-length novel.
'The Man Without a Country,' selections from which follow, well
represents Dr. Hale's characteristics. Its manner has ease, felicity,
and good breeding. The narrative runs along in such an honest,
straightforward way, there is such an air of verisimilitude, that the
reader is half inclined to accept it all as history; although the idea
of a United States naval officer kept a prisoner at sea for a long life-
time and never permitted to hear or know of his native land, is
hardly more credible than the idea of the Flying Dutchman' or the
'Wandering Jew. ' Yet when the tale appeared the writer received
letters of inquiry, indicating that the fiction was taken in sober ear-
nest; and in a later edition he stated in an appendix that it lacked
all foundation in fact. But over and above its literary fascination,
"The Man Without a Country' is surcharged with ethical significance.
It is a beautiful allegory, showing the dire results of a momentary
## p. 6823 (#203) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6823
and heedless lapse from patriotism, and so preaching love of country.
It develops a lively sense of what it is to have a flag to fight for, a
land to love. This lesson is conveyed with power and pathos; and
the story's instant and continued acceptance is testimony, were any
needed, that Americans felt the appeal while enjoying the lovely.
fiction for its own sake. Such work, on the moral side, is typical of
Dr. Hale. He cannot write without a spiritual or moral purpose.
his literature is didactic, it is not dull; and hence, doing good, it also
justifies itself as art.
If
PHILIP NOLAN
From The Man Without a Country. ' Copyrighted; reprinted by permission
of Dr. Hale and J. S. Smith & Co. , publishers, Boston
PHIL
HILIP NOLAN was as fine a young officer as there was in the
"Legion of the West," as the Western division of our army
was then called. When Aaron Burr made his first dashing
expedition down to New Orleans in 1805 at Fort Massac, or
somewhere above on the river, he met, as the Devil would have
it, this gay, dashing, bright young fellow,-at some dinner-party,
I think. Burr marked him, talked to him, walked with him, took
him a day or two's voyage in his flatboat, and in short fasci-
nated him. For the next year, barrack life was very tame to poor
Nolan. He occasionally availed himself of the permission the
great man had given him to write to him. Long, high-worded,
stilted letters the poor boy wrote and rewrote and copied. But
never a line did he have in reply from the gay deceiver. The
other boys in the garrison sneered at him, because he sacrificed
in this unrequited affection for a politician the time which they
devoted to Monongahela, hazard, and high-low-Jack. Bourbon,
euchre, and poker were still unknown.
But one day Nolan had his revenge. This time Burr came
down the river, not as an attorney seeking a place for his office,
but as a distinguished conqueror. He had defeated I know not
how many district attorneys; he had dined at I know not how
many public dinners; he had been heralded in I know not how
many Weekly Arguses, and it was rumored that he had an army
behind him and an empire before him. It was a great day-
his arrival -to poor Nolan. Burr had not been at the fort an
hour before he sent for him. That evening he asked Nolan to take
him out in his skiff, to show him a cane-brake or a cotton-wood
## p. 6824 (#204) ###########################################
6824
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
tree, as he said, really to seduce him; and by the time the
sail was over, Nolan was enlisted body and soul. From that
time, though he did not yet know it, he lived as A Man With-
out a Country.
What Burr meant to do I know no more than you, dear
reader. It is none of our business just now. Only, when the
grand catastrophe came, and Jefferson and the house of Vir-
ginia of that day undertook to break on the wheel all the possi-
ble Clarences of the then house of York by the great treason
trial at Richmond, some of the lesser fry in that distant Missis-
sippi Valley, which was farther from us than Puget's Sound is
to-day, introduced the like novelty on their provincial stage; and
to while away the monotony of the summer at Fort Adams, got
up, for spectacles, a string of court-martials on the officers there.
One and another of the colonels and majors were tried, and to
fill out the list, little Nolan; against whom, Heaven knows there
was evidence enough,—that he was sick of the service, had been
willing to be false to it, and would have obeyed any order to
march anywhither with any one who would follow him, had the
order been signed "By command of His Exc. A. Burr. " The
courts dragged on. The big flies escaped,—rightly, for all I
know. Nolan was proved guilty enough, as I say; yet you and
I would never have heard of him, reader, but that when the
president of the court asked him at the close whether he wished
to say anything to show that he had always been faithful to the
United States, he cried out in a fit of frenzy:—
"Damn the United States! I wish I may never hear of the
United States again! "
I suppose he did not know how the words shocked old Colonel
Morgan, who was holding the court. Half the officers who sat
in it had served through the Revolution; and their lives, not to
say their necks, had been risked for the very idea which he so
cavalierly cursed in his madness. He on his part had grown
up in the West of those days, in the midst of "Spanish plot,"
"Orleans plot," and all the rest. He had been educated on a
plantation where the finest company was a Spanish officer or a
French merchant from Orleans. His education, such as it was,
had been perfected in commercial expeditions to Vera Cruz; and
I think he told me his father once hired an Englishman to be a
private tutor for a winter on the plantation. He had spent half
his youth with an older brother, hunting horses in Texas; and in
## p. 6825 (#205) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6825
a word, to him "United States" was scarcely a reality. Yet he
had been fed by "United States" for all the years since he had
been in the army.
He had sworn on his faith as a Christian to
be true to "United States. " It was "United States" which gave
him the uniform he wore and the sword by his side.
Nay, my
poor Nolan, it was only because "United States" had picked you
out first as one of her own confidential men of honor, that
"A. Burr" cared for you a straw more than for the flatboat-
men who sailed his ark for him. I do not excuse Nolan; I only
explain to the reader why he damned his country, and wished
he might never hear her name again.
He never did hear her name but once again. From that
moment, September 23d, 1807, till the day he died, May 11th,
1863, he never heard her name again. For that half-century and
more he was a man without a country.
Old Morgan, as I said, was terribly shocked. If Nolan had
compared George Washington to Benedict Arnold, or had cried
"God save King George! " Morgan would not have felt worse.
He called the court into his private room, and returned in fifteen
minutes with a face like a sheet, to say:
-
"Prisoner, hear the sentence of the court! The court decides,
subject to the approval of the President, that you never hear the
name of the United States again. "
Nolan laughed. But nobody else laughed. Old Morgan was
too solemn, and the whole room was hushed dead as night for a
minute. Even Nolan lost his swagger in a moment. Then Mor-
gan added:-
"Mr. Marshal, take the prisoner to Orleans in an armed boat,
and deliver him to the naval commander there. "
The marshal gave his orders, and the prisoner was taken out
of court.
"Mr. Marshal," continued old Morgan, «< see that no one men-
tions the United States to the prisoner. Mr. Marshal, make my
respects to Lieutenant Mitchell at Orleans, and request him to
order that no one shall mention the United States to the pris-
oner while he is on board ship. You will receive your written
orders from the officer on duty here this evening. The court is
adjourned without day. "
Since writing this, and while considering whether or no I
would print it as a warning to the young Nolans and Vallan-
dighams and Tatnalls of to-day of what it is to throw away a
## p. 6826 (#206) ###########################################
6826
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
country, I have received from Danforth, who is on board the
Levant, a letter which gives an account of Nolan's last hours. It
removes all my doubts about telling this story.
To understand the first words of the letter, the non-profes-
sional reader should remember that after 1817 the position of
every officer who had Nolan in charge was one of the greatest
delicacy. The government had failed to renew the order of 1807
regarding him. What was a man to do? Should he let him go?
what then if he were called to account by the Department for
violating the order of 1807? Should he keep him? what then if
Nolan should be liberated some day, and should bring an action
for false imprisonment or kidnapping against every man who
had had him in charge? I urged and pressed this upon South-
ard, and I have reason to think that other officers did the same
thing. But the Secretary always said, as they so often do at
Washington, that there were no special orders to give, and that
we must act on our own judgment. That means, “If you suc-
ceed, you will be sustained; if you fail, you will be disavowed.
"
Well, as Danforth says, all that is over now; though I do not
know but I expose myself to a criminal prosecution on the evi-
dence of the very revelation I am making.
Here is the letter:-
LEVANT, 2°2′ S. @ 131° W.
Dear Fred:
I TRY to find heart and life to tell you that it is all over with
dear old Nolan. I have been with him on this voyage more than
I ever was; and I can understand wholly now the way in which
you used to speak of the dear old fellow. I could see that he
was not strong, but I had no idea the end was so near. The
doctor has been watching him very carefully, and yesterday morn-
ing came to me and told me that Nolan was not so well, and
had not left his state-room,-a thing I never remember before.
He had let the doctor come and see him as he lay there,— the
first time the doctor had been in the state-room,- and he said he
should like to see me. Oh dear! do you remember the mysteries
we boys used to invent about his room in the old Intrepid"
days? Well, I went in; and there to be sure the poor fellow lay
in his berth, smiling pleasantly as he gave me his hand, but
looking very frail. I could not help a glance round, which showed
me what a little shrine he had made of the box he was lying in.
<<
## p. 6827 (#207) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6827
The Stars and Stripes were triced up above and around a picture
of Washington, and he had painted a majestic eagle, with light-
nings blazing from his beak, and his foot just clasping the whole
globe, which his wings overshadowed. The dear old boy saw
my glance, and said with a sad smile, "Here, you see, I have a
country! " And then he pointed to the foot of his bed, where I
had not seen before a great map of the United States, as he had
drawn it from memory, and which he had there to look upon as
he lay. Quaint, queer old names were on it in large letters:
"Indiana Territory," "Mississippi Territory," and "Louisiana
Territory," as I suppose our fathers learned such things: but the
old fellow had patched in Texas too; he had carried his western
boundary all the way to the Pacific, but on that shore he had
defined nothing.
"O Danforth," he said, "I know I am dying. I cannot get
home. Surely you will tell me something now? Stop! stop!
do not speak till I say what I am sure you know, that there is
not in this ship, that there is not in America - God bless her!
a more loyal man than I. There cannot be a man who loves
the old flag as I do, or prays for it as I do, or hopes for it as
I do. There are thirty-four stars in it now, Danforth. I thank
God for that, though I do not know what their names are.
There has never been one taken away; I thank God for that.
I know by that that there has never been any successful Burr.
O Danforth, Danforth," he sighed out, "how like a 'wretched
night's dream a boy's idea of personal fame or of separate sov-
ereignty seems, when one looks back on it after such a life as
mine! But tell me, tell me something tell me everything,
Danforth, before I die! "
―――
Ingham, I swear to you that I felt like a monster that I had
not told him everything before. Danger or no danger, delicacy
or no delicacy, who was I that I should have been acting the
tyrant all this time over this dear sainted old man, who had
years ago expiated, in his whole manhood's life, the madness of a
boy's treason? "Mr. Nolan," said I, "I will tell you everything
you ask about. Only, where shall I begin? »
Oh, the blessed smile that crept over his white face! and he
pressed my hand, and said, "God bless you! Tell me their
names," he said, and he pointed to the stars on the flag. "The
last I know is Ohio. My father lived in Kentucky. But I
have guessed Michigan and Indiana and Mississippi,- that was
## p. 6828 (#208) ###########################################
6828
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
where Fort Adams is: they make twenty. But where are your
other fourteen? You have not cut up any of the old ones, I
hope. »
Well, that was not a bad text; and I told him the names in
as good order as I could, and he bade me take down his beautiful
map, and draw them in as I best could with my pencil. He was
wild with delight about Texas, - told me how his cousin died
there; he had marked a gold cross near where he supposed his
grave was, and he had guessed at Texas. Then he was delighted
as he saw California and Oregon; that, he said, he had sus-
pected, partly because he had never been permitted to land on
that shore, though the ships were there so much. "And the
men," said he laughing, "brought off a good deal besides furs. "
Then he went back heavens, how far! -to ask about the
Chesapeake, and what was done to Barron for surrendering her
to the Leopard, and whether Burr ever tried again, and he
ground his teeth with the only passion he showed. But in a
moment that was over, and he said, "God forgive me, for I am
sure I forgive him. " Then he asked about the old war; told me
the true story of his serving the gun the day we took the Java;
asked about dear old David Porter, as he called him. Then he
settled down more quietly and very happily, to hear me tell in
an hour the history of fifty years.
How I wished it had been somebody who knew something!
But I did as well as I could. I told him of the English war. I
told him about Fulton and the steamboat beginning. I told him
about old Scott and Jackson; told him all I could think of about
the Mississippi and New Orleans and Texas and his own old
Kentucky. And do you think, he asked who was in command of
the "Legion of the West"! I told him it was a very gallant
officer named Grant, and that by our last news he was about to
establish his headquarters at Vicksburg. Then, "Where was
Vicksburg? " I worked that out on the map; it was about a
hundred miles, more or less, above his old Fort Adams; and I
thought Fort Adams must be a ruin now. "It must be at old
Vick's plantation, at Walnut Hills," said he: "well, that is a
change! "
I tell you, Ingham, it was a hard thing to condense the
history of half a century into that talk with a sick man. And
I do not now know what I told him, —of immigration, and the
means of it; of steamboats and railroads and telegraphs; of
-
## p. 6829 (#209) ###########################################
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
6829
inventions and books and literature; of the colleges and West
Point and the Naval School, - but with the queerest interrup-
tions that ever you heard. You see, it was Robinson Crusoe
asking all the accumulated questions of fifty-six years!
I remember he asked, all of a sudden, who was President
now; and when I told him, he asked if Old Abe was General
Benjamin Lincoln's son. He said he met old General Lincoln
when he was quite a boy himself, at some Indian treaty. I said
no, that Old Abe was a Kentuckian like himself, but I could not
tell him of what family; he had worked up from the ranks.
"Good for him! " cried Nolan; "I am glad of that. As I have
brooded and wondered, I have thought our danger was in keep-
ing up those regular successions in the first families. " Then I
got talking about my visit to Washington. I told him of meet-
ing the Oregon Congressman Harding; I told him about the
Smithsonian and the Exploring Expedition; I told him about the
Capitol, and the statues for the pediment, and Crawford's Liberty,
and Greenough's Washington. Ingham, I told him everything I
could think of that would show the grandeur of his country and
its prosperity; but I could not make up my mouth to tell him a
word about this infernal Rebellion!
And he drank it in, and enjoyed it as I cannot tell you. He
grew more and more silent, yet I never thought he was tired or
faint. I gave him a glass of water, but he just wet his lips, and
told me not to go away. Then he asked me to bring the Pres-
byterian 'Book of Public Prayer,' which lay there, and said with
a smile that it would open at the right place, and so it did.
There was his double red mark down the page; and I knelt down
and read, and he repeated with me:- "For ourselves and our
country, O gracious God, we thank thee that notwithstanding
our manifold transgressions of thy holy laws, thou hast con-
tinued to us thy marvelous kindness," - and so to the end of that
thanksgiving. Then he turned to the end of the same book, and
I read the words more familiar to me: "Most heartily we be-
seech thee with thy favor to behold and bless thy servant the
President of the United States, and all others in authority,”—
and the rest of the Episcopal collect. "Danforth," said he, "I
have repeated those prayers night and morning, it is now fifty-
five years. " And then he said he would go to sleep. He bent
me down over him, and kissed me; and he said, "Look in my
Bible, Danforth, when I am gone. " And I went away.
――
## p. 6830 (#210) ###########################################
6830
EDWARD EVERETT HALE
But I had no thought it was the end. I thought he was tired
and would sleep. I knew he was happy, and I wanted him to be
alone.
But in an hour, when the doctor went in gently, he found
Nolan had breathed his life away with a smile. He had some-
thing pressed close to his lips. It was his father's badge of the
Order of the Cincinnati.
We looked in his Bible, and there was a slip of paper at the
place where he had marked the text:
"They desire a country, even a heavenly: wherefore God is
not ashamed to be called their God; for he hath prepared for
them a city. "
On this slip of paper he had written:-
―
BURY me in the sea; it has been my home, and I love it.
But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort
Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I
ought to bear? Say on it:-
IN MEMORY OF
PHILIP NOLAN,
Lieutenant in the Army of the United States
He loved his country as no other man has loved her;
but no man deserved less at her hands.
## p. 6831 (#211) ###########################################
6831
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
(1834-)
UDOVIC HALÉVY, known to American readers chiefly as the
author of the graceful little novel The Abbé Constantin,'
entered French letters as a dramatist and writer of librettos.
Born in Paris in 1834 of Jewish parentage, he is the son of Léon
Halévy, a poet and littérateur of some note in his day; and he is, as
well, the nephew of the composer of The Jewess' and of 'The Queen
of Cyprus. ' He grew up in the atmosphere of the theatre. After
leaving college he entered his country's civil service, and rapidly
rose to occupy positions of distinction. At
the same time he gave his leisure to writ-
ing plays and short stories, looking forward
to the day when he would be able to throw
off the burdensome yoke of clerical duties
and to devote himself entirely to literature.
Unsuccessful at first, Halévy finally worked
his way into public favor, especially after
associating his pen with that of Henri Meil-
hac. In collaboration with the latter, Halévy
wrote many of the librettos of Offenbach's
most brilliant and satiric operettas, includ-
ing The Perichole,' 'The Brigands,' the
'Belle Hélène,' and 'The Grand Duchess
of Gérolstein'-a burlesque opera which had
such vogue that it is said to have been the first thing the Emperor
Alexander of Russia wished to hear, when he came to Paris to attend
the Exposition of 1867. Several serious librettos of high excellence
are from the same hands, including that for Bizet's Carmen. ' In
spoken drama, 'Frou-Frou' and 'Tricoche and Cacolet' are among
the most popular plays the two dramatists produced together. In
speaking of the collaboration of Halévy with Meilhac in humorous
drama, Francisque Sarcey says:-"Gifted with an exquisite apprecia-
tion of the real, Halévy has preserved the more fantastic and bizarre
characteristics of the imagination of the latter. From this mutual
work have sprung plays which in my opinion are not sufficiently
estimated by us; -we have seen them hundreds of times, and have
referred to them with a grimace of contempt. There is a great deal
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
## p. 6832 (#212) ###########################################
6832
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
of imagination, of wit, and of good sense in these amusing parodies
of every-day life. "
Yet, great as was the success of his dramatic work, Halévy's claim
to a place in French literature rests on what he produced alone after
the collaboration with Meilhac had suffered a rupture, in 1881. At
the same time he ceased writing for the stage, and turned to fiction.
'L'Abbé Constantin,' the first of his novels, is also the most popular.
It opened to him the French Academy. It was for more than one
season the French story of the day. It is a charming story, full of
fresh air and sun, simply and skillfully told. It presented a view
of American character and temperament not usual in French fiction;
and irreproachable in its moral tone, it has become a sort of classic
for American schools and colleges. La Famille Cardinal' (The Cardi-
nal Family) and 'Crichette' are others of Halévy's studies in fiction
of aspects of Parisian life. 'Notes and Souvenirs' embody observa-
tions during the Prussian invasion of 1871. They are interesting, as
giving faithful pictures of the temper of the people during those days.
Among his short stories, 'Un Mariage d'Amour' (A Marriage for
Love) is one of the most delightful; and a highly characteristic one,
'The Most Beautiful Woman in Paris,' is appended to this sketch.
Says Mr. Brander Matthews:-
-
"In all these books there are the same artistic qualities; the same sharp-
ness of vision, the same gentle irony, the same constructive skill, and the
same dramatic touch.
M. Halévy's irony is delicate and playful.
There is no harshness in his manner and no hatred in his mind. We do not
find in his pages any of the pessimism which is perhaps the dominant char-
acteristic of the best French fiction of our time.
More than Maupas-
sant, or Flaubert, or Merimée, is M. Halévy a Parisian. Whether or not the
characters of his tales are dwellers in the capital, whether or not the scene of
his story is laid in the city by the Seine, the point of view is always Parisian.
His style even, his swift and limpid prose,- the prose which some-
how corresponds to the best vers de société in its brilliancy and buoyancy,—
is the style of one who lives at the centre of things. Cardinal Newman once
said that while Livy and Tacitus and Terence and Seneca wrote Latin, Cicero
wrote Roman. So, while M. Zola on one side and M. Georges Ohnet on the
other may write French, M. Halévy writes Parisian. »
·
## p. 6833 (#213) ###########################################
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
6833
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN PARIS
From Parisian Points of View. Copyright 1894, by Harper & Brothers
N FRIDAY, April 19th, Prince Agénor was really distracted at
the opera during the second act of Sigurd. ' The prince
kept going from box to box, and his enthusiasm increased
as he went.
Ο
(
"That blonde! oh, that blonde! she is ideal! Look at that
blonde! Do you know that blonde? "
It was from the front part of Madame de Marizy's large
first-tier box that all these exclamations were coming at that
moment.
“Which blonde? " asked Madame de Marizy.
"Which blonde! Why, there is but one this evening in the
house. Opposite to you, over there in the first box, the Sainte
Mesmes' box. Look, baroness, look straight over there. "
"Yes, I am looking at her. She is atrociously got up, but
pretty. "
«< Pretty! She is a wonder! simply a wonder!
Got up?
Yes, agreed some country relative. The Sainte Mesmes have
cousins in Périgord. But what a smile! How well her neck is
set on! And the slope of the shoulders! ah, especially the
shoulders! "
"Come, either keep still or go away. Let me listen to Ma-
•
dame Caron. ”
The prince went away as no one knew that incomparable
blonde. Yet she had often been to the opera, but in an unpre-
tentious way-in the second tier of boxes. And to Prince Agé-
nor, above the first tier of boxes there was nothing, absolutely
nothing. There was emptiness—space. The prince had never
been in a second-tier box, so the second-tier boxes did not exist.
While Madame Caron was marvelously singing the marvelous
phrase of Reyer, "Ô mon sauveur silencieux, la Valkyrie est ta
conquête," the prince strolled along the passages of the opera.
Who was that blonde? He wanted to know, and he would.
know.
·
And suddenly he remembered that good Madame Picard was
the box-opener of the Sainte Mesmes, and that he, Prince of
Nérins, had had the honor of being for a long time a friend of
that good Madame Picard.
XII-428
## p. 6834 (#214) ###########################################
6834
LUDOVIC HALÉVY
"Ah, prince," said Madame Picard on seeing Agénor, "there
is no one for you to-night in my boxes. Madame de Simiane is
not here, and Madame de Sainte Mesme has rented her box. "
Don't you know the people in Madame
"That's precisely it.
de Sainte Mesme's box?
"Not at all, prince.
the marquise's box. "
It's the first time I have seen them in
"Then you have no idea-»
"None, prince. Only to me they don't appear to be people
of — »
She was going to say of our set. A box-opener of the first
tier of boxes at the opera, having generally only to do with
absolutely high-born people, considers herself as being a little of
their set, and shows extreme disdain for unimportant people; it
displeases her to receive these unimportant people in her boxes.
Madame Picard however had tact which rarely forsook her, and
so stopped herself in time to say:
"People of your set. They belong to the middle class, to the
wealthy middle class; but still the middle class. That doesn't
satisfy you; you wish to know more on account of the blonde.
Is it not so, prince? "
Those last words were spoken with rare delicacy; they were
murmured more than spoken-box-opener to prince! It would
have been unacceptable without that perfect reserve in accent
and tone; yes, it was a box-opener who spoke, but a box-opener
who was a little bit the aunt of former times, the aunt à la
mode de Cythère. Madame Picard continued:-
no
"Ah, she is a beauty! She came with a little dark man - her
husband, I'm sure; for while she was taking off her cloak — it
always takes some time he didn't say a word to her:
eagerness, no little attentions - yes, he could only be a husband.
I examined the cloak: people one doesn't know puzzle me and
my colleague; Madame Flachet and I always amuse ourselves by
trying to guess from appearances. Well, the cloak comes from a
good dressmaker, but not from a great one; it is fine and well
made, but it has no style. I think they are middle-class people,
prince. But how stupid I am! You know M.