Hawthorne A life

Brenda Wineapple

Book - 2003

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BIOGRAPHY/Hawthorne, Nathaniel
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Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2003.
Language
English
Main Author
Brenda Wineapple (-)
Physical Description
509 pages : illustrations
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780375400445
  • Illustrations
  • Chapter 1. The Prison Door--Introductory
  • Chapter 2. Home
  • Chapter 3. The Forest of Arden
  • Chapter 4. The Era of Good Feelings
  • Chapter 5. That Dream of Undying Fame
  • Chapter 6. Storyteller
  • Chapter 7. Mr. Wakefield
  • Chapter 8. The Wedding Knell
  • Chapter 9. The Sister Years
  • Chapter 10. Romance of the Revenue Service
  • Chapter 11. The World Found Out
  • Chapter 12. Beautiful Enough
  • Chapter 13. Repatriation
  • Chapter 14. Salem Recidivus
  • Chapter 15. Scarlet Letters
  • Chapter 16. The Uneven Balance
  • Chapter 17. The Hidden Life of Property
  • Chapter 18. Citizen of Somewhere Else
  • Chapter 19. The Main Chance
  • Chapter 20. This Farther Flight
  • Chapter 21. Truth Stranger Than Fiction
  • Chapter 22. Questions of Travel
  • Chapter 23. Things to See and Suffer
  • Chapter 24. Between Two Countries
  • Chapter 25. The Smell of Gunpowder
  • Chapter 26. A Handful of Moments
  • Epilogue: The Painted Veil
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Wineapple (independent scholar) adapts her biography to the present time, crafting a lively tale from available sources and not shying away from embarrassing details--Hawthorne's mother was two months pregnant when his parents married. As for speculations, e.g., that Hawthorne might have poisoned himself on his final journey with Franklin Pierce, Wineapple presents evidence without insisting on a conclusion. Respectful but honest--in contrast to Hawthorne-devotee Margaret Moore (The Salem World of Nathaniel Hawthorne, CH, Jun'98)--Wineapple points out Hawthorne's lack of industry, his office seeking under the spoils system, and his stance on slavery, with awareness of the time but without excuse. She succinctly states critical insights--e.g., regarding Seven Gables: "for time is the novel's cardinal theme, time and its relentless passage in a world hell-bent on progress." The book's overriding thesis is that Hawthorne's stories are autobiographical--Wakefield is the misunderstood artist "alienated from his duller contemporaries by sensibility and vocation, an estranged, filmy figure ... insecure himself but discerning and astute." Writing for a diverse audience, Wineapple summarizes more than Hawthorne scholars will need. Well illustrated, this book is meticulously researched and beautifully written. ^BSumming Up: Essential. All collections. M. S. Stephenson University of Texas at Brownsville

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

The great novelist Hawthorne gave his readers no fictional character more tantalizing than the strange person staring back at him from his mirror: a man who talked to himself in the dark. Shrewd and patient, Wineapple has learned much by listening in on Hawthorne's shadowed soliloquies. She has heard the interior monologue of a writer animated by Puritan impulses inherited from a great-grandfather who condemned innocent women to hang as witches--and whose posterity lived under the gallows curse of one of them. She has also heard the mental debate of a man who hated slavery--and yet accepted political appointment from its apologists. And she has made herself privy to the anxieties of a father determined to snuff out the literary ambitions of three children inspired by his own example. But besides insinuating herself into Hawthorne's oft-clouded mind, Wineapple has also attended to the public controversies that shaped his world: the Whig triumphs that cost him his custom-house job and forced him into writing; the critical exchanges that heartened him with praise for his work (including that from fellow author Herman Melville) and wounded him with disparagement; and the Civil War battles that drove him to despair--and into political disrepute as a copperhead. But whatever her focus, Wineapple never ceases to probe the artistic processes behind such masterpieces as The Scarlet Letter and The House of Seven Gables. A portrait both convincing and memorable. --Bryce Christensen Copyright 2003 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

One of the great American writers of the 19th century never fully believed in his profession. For Nathaniel Hawthorne, writing was "a source of shame as much as pleasure and a necessity he could neither forgo nor entirely approve," says Wineapple (Genet: A Biography of Janet Flanner). He uprooted his family again and again, shuttling between government jobs and the solitary writing life, never fully satisfied with either. His romances were brilliant and powerful, but his own life seemed muted and melancholy. Although he had an impressive set of friends and associates during his early years in New England, he nevertheless led a strikingly reclusive existence; he was neighbors with Emerson and Thoreau in Concord, Mass., classmates with Longfellow and Franklin Pierce at Bowdoin, and a good friend to Margaret Fuller and Herman Melville, but very little is made of these relationships. His friends and associates repeatedly described Hawthorne as enigmatic, a man who loved humanity in the abstract but not in its particulars. Wineapple, too, seems mystified by Hawthorne and his life, insecure about his motives. The biography assumes a reportorial style, presenting conflicting views (of his ambiguous friendship with Melville, of his mysterious death) without putting forth any pet theories or compelling evidence to sway the reader one way or the other. The final years of his life coincided with an incredibly tumultuous period in American history, the Civil War, and Wineapple describes how Hawthorne alienated many Northerners with his proslavery views. One critic described his politics as "pure intellect, without emotion, without sympathy, without principle" and that best captures the essence of Nathaniel Hawthorne as depicted in this biography. 56 photos. (Oct. 2) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In yet another fascinating biography, commended biographer Wineapple (Genet: A Biography of Janet Flanner; Sister Brother: Gertrude and Leo Stein) offers a life sketch of celebrated 19th-century American author Nathaniel Hawthorne that is rich in archival details and perceptive analysis. Known as the first major American writer to create erotic female characters, Hawthorne was very handsome and daring in his youth. His lonely childhood and puritanical surroundings gave rise to his characters, who, like their creator, were isolated from their communities and lived a double life. Such interesting particulars and insights keep readers engaged throughout and take them back to Hawthorne's time. Written in remarkably simple language, this book is successful in capturing the spirit of the age and commenting on the making of the author. Recommended for all libraries with large collections.-Aparna Zambare, Central Michigan Univ. Libs., Mount Pleasant (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An thoughtful, absorbing life of the gloomy prince of American literature. Born Nathaniel Hathorne in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1802, the reluctant hero of Wineapple's (Sister Brother, 1996, etc.) tale wanted nothing more than to take up the family tradition of seafaring: "his earliest compositions," she writes, "were said to have been sea stories about bronzed pirates and hardy privateers." His desire may have been less for seaborne adventure than for simple escape, for, Wineapple ably shows, Hawthorne was always a man apart, one who believed that the writer was "a citizen of another country," one with no specific point on the map. With a taste for drama and plenty of self-doubt, Hawthorne burned much of his early work ("I am as tractable an author as you ever knew," he wrote to an editor, "so far as putting my articles into the fire goes; though I cannot abide alterations or omissions"), then took a job as a customs inspector "not because he needed the money or because the country ignored its artists--though both were true--but because he liked it," and went on to write an exquisite body of short stories and novels that, though now standards of American literature, went little noticed for much of his life. (The first edition of Twice-Told Tales sold only a few hundred copies and was unceremoniously remaindered, and other of his books met much the same fate.) Hawthorne, writes Wineapple, nursed a dark, critical view of life, observing that his Scarlet Letter was "a h-ll fired story, into which I found it almost impossible to throw any cheering light." His refusal to endorse the abolitionist cause (on which point Wineapple provides a brilliant reading of The Blithedale Romance) and his opposition to the Civil War led detractors to say that he stood for "doubt, darkness, and the Democratic Party." More difficult, Wineapple writes with much sympathy, were his relations with his children, who bore the burden of his fame and genius over the course of their troubled lives. Richly detailed and nuanced: a model of literary biography, and an illumination for students of Hawthorne's work. (For an excerpt of Hawthorne, go to www.kirkusreviews.com.) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One The Prison Door-Introductory The wrong-doing of one generation lives into the successive ones, and, divesting itself of every temporary advantage, becomes a pure and uncontrollable mischief. Nathaniel Hawthorne, The House of the Seven Gables And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.         T. S. Eliot, "Little Gidding" But the past was not dead. Nathaniel Hawthorne, "The Custom-House" Guilty. He heard the verdict and flinched. The second-born child of the very famous author had been convicted of defrauding the public, a violation of section 215 of the United States Criminal Code, in the matter of the Hawthorne Silver and Iron Mines, Ltd., Julian Hawthorne, president. Julian's father had written obsessively of crime and punishment and the sins of fathers visited on sons, and here he was, the son, sixty-six years old, hair white as sugar, well known, respected, and guilty-guilty-sitting in a New York City courtroom, sporting a scarlet tie. Judge Mayer banged his gavel. Staring straight ahead, Julian frowned slightly as befitted a man of his stature and his shame. He, Nathaniel Hawthorne's son, would be imprisoned a year and a day in the United States federal penitentiary in Atlanta, his term set to run from November 25, 1912, the day the public trial began. Likely his personal trials began much earlier. The great name of Nathaniel Hawthorne will "always handicap you more or less," poet James Russell Lowell had warned. "To be the son of a man of genius is at best to be born to a heritage of invidious comparisons," Henry James Jr. had acknowledged-and placed the Atlantic Ocean between himself and his philosopher father. But at least the younger James wrote fiction, which the elder James did not; comparisons are especially invidious when the son plies the father's trade, as Julian did. But it was even more than that. Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne's children seemed to spring from one of Hawthorne's tales, incarnating their father's paradoxes writ large. "To plant a family!" Hawthorne had written. "This idea is at the bottom of most of the wrong and mischief which men do." It was as if the past always lay in wait, just around the bend. The fortunes of each Hawthorne child uncannily bore out what Hawthorne considered a curse of guilt and grief, of somberness and what we today call depression, as well as talent, penury, pluck, and fortitude, all stitched together in a bright pattern, like Hester Prynne's letter "A." Hawthorne's firstborn, a daughter, descended directly from literature. Christened Una after Spenser's heroine in The Faerie Queene, she served as the model for Pearl, the precocious child in The Scarlet Letter, and many observers noticed her resemblance to her literary father. Like him, she was handsome, tall, exacting, and remote. "The more I feel the more it seems a necessity to be reserved," said Una at fifteen. Una had worshipped sorrow, said her mother, since the age of six. "It was impossible she should ever be happy," remarked a friend. The sky was too blue, the sun too blazing, her own feelings too hard to bear. She died mysteriously at the age of thirty-three. Rose Hawthorne, the youngest Hawthorne child, fared better-eventually. After the death of both her parents, a horrible marriage, a feud with her siblings, and the early loss of her only child to diphtheria, Rose fulfilled the unspoken mission of one of the characters in Hawthorne's novel The Marble Faun: she takes communion. As a self-ordained Sister of Mercy, Rose consecrated herself to the poor and the sick, and at the age of forty-four, in 1896, established the charitable organization Sister Rose's Free Home (after St. Rose of Lima) to care for indigent cancer patients. In 1899 she received the Holy Habit of the Third Order of St. Dominic, and two years later, in 1901, the home was incorporated as the Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer, still extant today in Hawthorne, New York. Then there was Julian, in the middle. On Easter Sunday, 1913, he was transported to the federal penitentiary in Atlanta. The formal charge against him and his cronies was misuse of the United States Postal Service, a catchall complaint designed to nail the defendants, whose real offense, according to Judge Mayer, wasn't selling shares in a worthless silver and iron mine so much as the exploitation of their recognizable names. "Theirs is the greater crime," spat the New York district attorney, "for they have prostituted them." The general counsel for the Hawthorne mines, former mayor of Boston Josiah Quincy, was cleared of the one conspiracy count against him, but the neurologist Dr. William J. Morton, whose father had discovered ether just before the Civil War, went to jail with Julian. Julian held his head up high. His conviction disgraced neither him nor his name, he said, just the sleazy people who wished to see him-for some inexplicable reason-go to prison. What else could he say? After his sentencing, he briskly strode from the courtroom into the marshal's office and with remarkable sangfroid pulled out a small cigarette case, which he pushed toward Morton and the fourth accomplice, Alfred Freeman, a petty swindler without a fancy name. Morton stood paralyzed. Freeman circled the room. Hawthorne pocketed his case and shook the hand of a sympathetic well-wisher. "In such extremities," he later noted, "a man's manhood and dignity come to his support." But when the deputy marshal clicked a pair of steel handcuffs round his wrist, Julian blinked in disbelief and with some confusion walked through the slanting rain to the city jail, a place familiarly known, à la Hawthorne, as the Tombs. "I was sure we should be acquitted," he muttered. Yet by and large the only son of America's most esteemed novelist maintained a transcendental faith in his own innocence, a trait that linked him more to his tender, doting mother than to his morally particular father, who spent a lifetime probing motives, his own most of all. An epicure of intent, Hawthorne knew what the heart held in thrall. "It is a very common thing," he wrote near the end of his life, "-this fact of a man's being caught and made prisoner by himself." But Julian knew what he was doing when he exploited the Hawthorne name, which he plainly saw as false. Nathaniel Hawthorne: to the public it conjured American probity and success; to Julian it was fraudulent, overblown, hollow at the core. Dissimulation was the keystone of Julian's career. And inadvertent parody of his father. Nathaniel Hawthorne's writing life was short and well crafted; Julian's, an interminable flood: hundreds of second-rate novels and poems, stories, histories, travel books, reminiscences, essays, even a two-volume biography of his parents, all capitalizing on the eminent patronymic. (With spooky foresight, his father once said of Julian that "his tendencies . . . seem to be rather towards breadth than elevation.") In 1908, when Julian abandoned literature for geology, as the president of the Hawthorne Silver and Iron Mines, Ltd., he managed to write hundreds of promotional letters as well as several promotional books. His energy was amazing. If his father obeyed the Muse, Julian served Mammon. On selling his first short story, he thought, "Why not go on adding to my income in this way from time to time?" It seemed easy enough. "I think we take ourselves too seriously," he said of his fellow novelists, and at his death was credited as one of the first American writers to make literature "a bread-and-butter calling." When Henry James published his incisive study of Hawthorne, Julian confided to his diary that James deserved success "better than I do, not only because his work is better than mine, but because he takes more pains to make it so." In public, however, Julian protected himself from James and, more importantly, from his father's literary scruples. "I cannot sufficiently admire the pains we are at to make our work . . . immaculate in form," he declared. Aesthetic niceties are effeminate. Success is a racket. Broad-chested and handsome-like his father-and with the same high coloring and dark wavy hair, Julian was born "to have ample means," declared his adoring mother. Friends thought she overpraised him, and that his father hadn't praised him enough. Whatever had happened, Julian combined his father's cynicism with his mother's ebullience. He loved women (though he was no feminist), tailored clothes, abundance, and a good scam. Hawthorne dryly assessed his son's character; he ought to join a ministry, he said. Julian floundered at Harvard, quitting just months after his father's death, his interests inclining more to sport than study. He floundered at the Lawrence Scientific School and at the Realschule in Dresden, where he proposed to study civil engineering with a view toward knocking together a huge fortune in the American West. This plan also went awry. Unlike his father, who had delayed his marriage to Sophia, Julian married at the age of twenty-four and sired ten children, eight of whom survived. But he never had enough, kept enough, saved enough, planned enough. His insouciance exasperated Rose. That he wouldn't accept a pardon unless William Morton also received one was yet another instance of his irresponsibility, she told his family. "But he is he, so to speak," she said, throwing her hands up. Still, Rose mounted a loyal defense. "I know that he really believed in the mines," she reportedly told Joseph P. Tumulty, Woodrow Wilson's secretary. To Julian, however, she starchily observed, "I am consoled about your personal trials by knowing that you have always adapted yourself to deprivations with the unconcern-or, rather, the manly vigor of one of your remote ancestors." Coming from Rose, it was an equivocal compliment. She knew their Puritan ancestors whipped, scorched, hanged, and banished women such as herself for views far less heretical than hers. Julian too had disapproved of her vocation, though more amiably than their ancestors would have. After her death, he remembered Rose as a headstrong girl prone to egregious errors of judgment. Her errand in Washington, D.C., on his behalf, was one of these. On April 3, 1913, Mother Alphonsa, as Rose was known, traveled by train to the nation's capital to ask President Wilson to pardon her brother. "What had I to do with 'pardons'?" Julian was furious. "Pardon for what?" But Rose was determined to restore luster to the Hawthorne name. A band of white cloth pleated across her forehead and stern black robes sweeping about her ample figure, she was every bit as fierce as Hester Prynne and probably just as nervous when she boarded a humid trolley for the White House. Tumulty received her. Strangely affected by the pink-cheeked woman in black and white, he ignored protocol and sent her request directly to the president. Or said he had. Nothing happened. Public opinion was against Julian. Parole was denied. Not until the following fall, on October 15, 1913, was Julian Hawthorne released from prison. Again, he wore the scarlet tie. Rose Hawthorne was born when her father was forty-seven. "She is to be the daughter of my age," he remarked, "-the comfort (at least so it is to be hoped) of my declining years." Hawthorne died, however, just before his sixtieth birthday and the day before her thirteenth. He had called her Pessima. She was mercurial, fastidious, self-critical, and impatient. Explained Sophia in the double-edged terms she perfected, "I think you inherited from Papa this immitigable demand for beauty and order and right, & though, in the course of your development, it has made you sometimes pettish and unreasonable, I always was glad you had it." Rose wanted to write, but her father's interdiction against the literary life put an end to that. In fact, both parents were wildly ambivalent about the practice of literature, declining to teach their children to read until they reached the ripe age of seven. Sophia was adamant about this. "I have not the smallest ambition about early learning in my children," she declared. And though her two sisters were educators of note and her brother-in-law, Horace Mann, once the secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, Sophia refused to hand her children over to schoolmistresses of dubious intent. Hawthorne deferred to her. "The men of our family are compliant husbands," his own sister later scoffed. Encouraged to paint by her artistic mother, Rose dutifully studied art until Sophia's death in 1871, and then she cut loose, sort of. Barely twenty, she quickly married George Parsons Lathrop, a twenty-year-old aspiring writer. But if Rose believed she was replacing her parents by replicating their wonderful marriage-artist to writer-she was utterly mistaken. "Love is different from what I supposed and I don't like it," admits a character in one of her short stories. She did write after all. George Lathrop got a job as assistant editor at the Atlantic Monthly, the showcase for much of his father-in-law's work, and when he lost the post he and Rose drifted to New York, where they nibbled at the edge of the literary set. Often dressed in yellow, her favorite color, Rose was soon known as a passable if gloomy poet and indifferent author of short stories, her best production fittingly called "Prisoners." George, a conventional and reasonably prolific writer, was known as a drunk. The Lathrops converted to Catholicism, but religion didn't help their failing marriage, and after much soul-searching, Rose separated from her husband in 1895. Una suspected abuse. Then, in a volte-face that Julian found "abrupt and strange," Rose chose to rededicate her life to "usefulness." To Rose, however, it was her father's fine-grained appreciation of suffering that motivated her. "He was as earnest as a priest," she said, "for he cared that the world was full of sorrow & sin." Certainly Hawthorne's last illness had cast a pall over his youngest child; and in 1887 she was devastated yet again by the premature death of poet Emma Lazarus, a cherished friend. This stiffened her purpose once and for all. On May 19, 1898, the thirty-fifth anniversary of her father's death, she clipped her auburn hair and stowed the leftover tufts under a linen cap. Henceforth she dressed in an austere monkish gown. "I gave up the world," she said, "as if I were dead." She swore off men and earthly things, and for the rest of her life lived productively in a community of faithful women. "From close observation I have learned something about the true courage of women," she had written years earlier. Her choice reflecting a condition of her parents' lives-intimate friendships with members of the same sex-Rose started one of the first hospices in America in a tenement house on Scammel Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan where she nursed the dying poor. Proceeds from a memoir of her father, published in 1897, supported her in this, and with Alice Huber, a "life-helper" (her word), she opened Sister Rose's Free Home in a three-story red brick building at 426 Cherry Street. Unlike her siblings, Rose managed to remake Nathaniel Hawthorne's legacy into something of her own. " Excerpted from Hawthorne: A Life by Brenda Wineapple All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.