The
Last Days of John Brown
By Henry D. Thoreau
John Brown's career for the
last six weeks of his life was meteor-like, flashing through the
darkness in which we live. I know of nothing so miraculous in our
history.
If any person, in a
lecture or conversation at that time, cited any ancient example of
heroism, such as Cato or Tell or Winkelried, passing over the recent
deeds and words of Brown, it was felt by any intelligent audience of
Northern men to be tame and inexcusably far-fetched.
For my own part, I
commonly attend more to nature than to man, but any affecting human
event may blind our eyes to natural objects. I was so absorbed in
him as to be surprised whenever I detected the routine of the
natural world surviving still, or met persons going about their
affairs indifferent. It appeared strange to me that the "little
dipper" should be still diving quietly in the river, as of
yore; and it suggested that this bird might continue to dive here
when Concord should be no more.
I felt that he, a
prisoner in the midst of his enemies and under sentence of death, if
consulted as to his next step or resource, could answer more wisely
than all his countrymen beside. He best understood his position; he
contemplated it most calmly. Comparatively, all other men, North and
South, were beside themselves. Our thoughts could not revert to any
greater or wiser or better man with whom to contrast him, for he,
then and there, was above them all. The man this country was about
to hang appeared the greatest and best in it.
Years were not required
for a revolution of public opinion; days, nay hours, produced marked
changes in this case. Fifty who were ready to say, on going into our
meeting in honor of him in Concord, that he ought to be hung, would
not say it when they came out. They heard his words read; they saw
the earnest faces of the congregation; and perhaps they joined at
last in singing the hymn in his praise.
The order of instructors
was reversed. I heard that one preacher, who at first was shocked
and stood aloof, felt obliged at last, after he was hung, to make
him the subject of a sermon, in which, to some extent, he eulogized
the man, but said that his act was a failure. An influential
class-teacher thought it necessary, after the services, to tell his
grown-up pupils that at first he thought as the preacher did then,
but now he thought that John Brown was right. But it was understood
that his pupils were as much ahead of the teacher as he was ahead of
the priest; and I know for a certainty that very little boys at home
had already asked their parents, in a tone of surprise, why God did
not interfere to save him. In each case, the constituted teachers
were only half conscious that they were not leading, but
being dragged, with some loss of time and power.
The more conscientious
preachers, the Bible men, they who talk about principle, and doing
to others as you would that they should do unto you,—how could
they fail to recognize him, by far the greatest preacher of them
all, with the Bible in his life and in his acts, the embodiment of
principle, who actually carried out the golden rule? All whose moral
sense had been aroused, who had a calling from on high to preach,
sided with him. What confessions he extracted from the cold and
conservative! It is remarkable, but on the whole it is well, that it
did not prove the occasion for a new sect of Brownites being
formed in our midst.
They, whether within the
Church or out of it, who adhere to the spirit and let go the letter,
and are accordingly called infidel, were as usual foremost to
recognize him. Men have been hung in the South before for attempting
to rescue slaves, and the North was not much stirred by it. Whence,
then, this wonderful difference? We were not so sure of their
devotion to principle. We made a subtle distinction, forgot human
laws, and did homage to an idea. The North, I mean the living
North, was suddenly all transcendental. It went behind the human
law, it went behind the apparent failure, and recognized eternal
justice and glory. Commonly, men live according to a formula, and
are satisfied if the order of law is observed, but in this instance
they, to some extent, returned to original perceptions, and there
was a slight revival of old religion. They saw that what was called
order was confusion, what was called justice, injustice, and that
the best was deemed the worst. This attitude suggested a more
intelligent and generous spirit than that which actuated our
forefathers, and the possibility, in the course of ages, of a
revolution in behalf of another and an oppressed people.
Most Northern men, and a
few Southern ones, were wonderfully stirred by Brown's behavior and
words. They saw and felt that they were heroic and noble, and that
there had been nothing quite equal to them in their kind in this
country, or in the recent history of the world. But the minority
were unmoved by them. They were only surprised and provoked by the
attitude of their neighbors. They saw that Brown was brave, and that
he believed that he had done right, but they did not detect any
further peculiarity in him. Not being accustomed to make fine
distinctions, or to appreciate magnanimity, they read his letters
and speeches as if they read them not. They were not aware when they
approached a heroic statement,—they did not know when they burned.
They did not feel that he spoke with authority, and hence they only
remembered that the law must be executed. They remembered the
old formula, but did not hear the new revelation. The man who does
not recognize in Brown's words a wisdom and nobleness, and therefore
an authority, superior to our laws, is a modern Democrat. This is
the test by which to discover him. He is not willfully but
constitutionally blind on this side, and he is consistent with
himself. Such has been his past life; no doubt of it. In like manner
he has read history and his Bible, and he accepts, or seems to
accept, the last only as an established formula, and not because he
has been convicted by it. You will not find kindred sentiments in
his common-place book, if he has one.
When a noble deed is
done, who is likely to appreciate it? They who are noble themselves.
I was not surprised that certain of my neighbors spoke of John Brown
as an ordinary felon, for who are they? They have either much flesh,
or much office, or much coarseness of some kind. They are not
ethereal natures in any sense. The dark qualities predominate in
them. Several of them are decidedly pachydermatous. I say it in
sorrow, not in anger. How can a man behold the light who has no
answering inward light? They are true to their sight, but
when they look this way they see nothing, they are blind. For
the children of the light to contend with them is as if there should
be a contest between eagles and owls. Show me a man who feels
bitterly toward John Brown, and let me hear what noble verse he can
repeat. He'll be as dumb as if his lips were stone.
It is not every man who
can be a Christian, even in a very moderate sense, whatever
education you give him. It is a matter of constitution and
temperament, after all. He may have to be born again many times. I
have known many a man who pretended to be a Christian, in whom it
was ridiculous, for he had no genius for it. It is not every man who
can be a free man, even.
Editors persevered for a
good while in saying that Brown was crazy; but at last they said
only that it was "a crazy scheme," and the only evidence
brought to prove it was that it cost him his life. I have no doubt
that if he had gone with five thousand men, liberated a thousand
slaves, killed a hundred or two slaveholders, and had as many more
killed on his own side, but not lost his own life, these same
editors would have called it by a more respectable name. Yet he has
been far more successful than that. He has liberated many thousands
of slaves, both North and South. They seem to have known nothing
about living or dying for a principle. They all called him crazy
then; who calls him crazy now?
All through the
excitement occasioned by his remarkable attempt and subsequent
behavior the Massachusetts legislature, not taking any steps for the
defense of her citizens who were likely to be carried to Virginia as
witnesses and exposed to the violence of a slaveholding mob, was
wholly absorbed in a liquor-agency question, and indulging in poor
jokes on the word "extension." Bad spirits occupied their
thoughts. I am sure that no statesman up to the occasion could have
attended to that question at all at that time,—a very vulgar
question to attend to at any time!
When I looked into a
liturgy of the Church of England, printed near the end of the last
century, in order to find a service applicable to the case of Brown,
I found that the only martyr recognized and provided for by it was
King Charles the First, an eminent scamp. Of all the inhabitants of
England and of the world, he was the only one according to this
authority, whom that church had made a martyr and saint of; and for
more than a century it had celebrated his martyrdom, so called, by
an annual service. What a satire on the Church is that!
Look not to legislatures
and churches for your guidance, nor to any soulless incorporated
bodies, but to inspirited or inspired ones.
What avail all your
scholarly accomplishments and learning, compared with wisdom and
manhood? To omit his other behavior, see what a work this
comparatively unread and unlettered man wrote within six weeks.
Where is our professor of belles-lettres, or of logic and
rhetoric, who can write so well? He wrote in prison, not a History
of the World, like Raleigh, but an American book which I think will
live longer than that. I do not know of such words, uttered under
such circumstances, and so copiously withal, in Roman or English or
any history. What a variety of themes he touched on in that short
space! There are words in that letter to his wife, respecting the
education of his daughters, which deserve to be framed and hung over
every mantelpiece in the land. Compare this earnest wisdom with that
of Poor Richard.
The death of Irving,
which at any other time would have attracted universal attention,
having occurred while these things were transpiring, went almost
unobserved. I shall have to read of it in the biography of authors.
Literary gentlemen,
editors and critics, think that they know how to write, because they
have studied grammar and rhetoric; but they are egregiously
mistaken. The art of composition is as simple as the discharge of a
bullet from a rifle, and its masterpieces imply an infinitely
greater force behind them. This unlettered man's speaking and
writing are standard English. Some words and phrases deemed
vulgarisms and Americanisms before, he has made standard American;
such as "It will pay." It suggests that the one
great rule of composition—and if I were a professor of rhetoric, I
should insist on this—is, to speak the truth. This first,
this second, this third pebbles in your mouth or not. This demands
earnestness and manhood chiefly.
We seem to have forgotten
that the expression "a liberal education"
originally meant among the Romans one worthy of free men;
while the learning of trades and professions by which to get your
livelihood merely, was considered worthy of slaves only. But
taking a hint from the word, I would go a step further and say, that
it is not the man of wealth and leisure simply, though devoted to
art, or science, or literature, who, in a true sense, is liberally
educated, but only the earnest and free man. In a
slaveholding country like this, there can be no such thing as a liberal
education tolerated by the State; and those scholars of Austria and
France who, however learned they may be, are contented under their
tyrannies, have received only a servile education.
Nothing could his enemies
do but it redounded to his infinite advantage,—that is, to the
advantage of his cause. They did not hang him at once, but reserved
him to preach to them. And then there was another great blunder.
They did not hang his four followers with him; that scene was still
postponed; and so his victory was prolonged and completed. No
theatrical manager could have arranged things so wisely to give
effect to his behavior and words. And who, think you, was the
manager? Who placed the slave woman and her child, whom he
stooped to kiss for a symbol, between his prison and the gallows?
We soon saw, as he saw,
that he was not to be pardoned or rescued by men. That would have
been to disarm him, to restore to him a material weapon, a Sharp's
rifle, when he had taken up the sword of the spirit,—the sword
with which he has really won his greatest and most memorable
victories. Now he has not laid aside the sword of the spirit, for he
is pure spirit himself, and his sword is pure spirit also.
"He nothing common did or mean
Upon that memorable scene, . . .
Nor called the gods with vulgar spite,
To vindicate his helpless right;
But bowed his comely head
Down, as upon a bed."
What a transit was that of his horizontal body alone, but just cut
down from the gallows-tree! We read that at such a time it passed
through Philadelphia, and by Saturday night had reached New York.
Thus like a meteor it shot through the Union from the Southern
regions toward the North! No such freight had the cars borne since
they carried him southward alive.
On the day of his
translation, I heard, to be sure, that he was hung, but I did
not know what that meant; I felt no sorrow on that account; but not
for a day or two did I even hear that he was dead, and
not after any number of days shall I believe it. Of all the men who
were said to be my contemporaries, it seemed to me that John Brown
was the only one who had not died. I never hear of a man
named Brown now,—and I hear of them pretty often,—I never hear
of any particularly brave and earnest man, but my first thought is
of John Brown, and what relation he may be to him. I meet him at
every turn. He is more alive than ever he was. He has earned
immortality. He is not confined to North Elba nor to Kansas. He is
no longer working in secret. He works in public, and in the clearest
light that shines on this land.
Return
to Henry D. Thoreau: Works: Essays
Return to Henry D. Thoreau: Life
& Writings
A
Note on the Text:
-
1st
published in The Liberator (27 July 1860).
-
Source:
Cape Cod and Miscellanies [The Writings of Henry David
Thoreau (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1906) p. [441]-450]
-
Report
errors to the Curator of
Collections
|