Rosy Days of Fatherhood, Far From 'The Scarlet
Letter'; A Rediscovered Story by Nathaniel Hawthorne Recalls His Romps With His
Young Son
By MEL GUSSOW
That story long ago
found a place in Hawthorne's ''American Notebooks,'' where it was read by
scholars, but remained obscure until Paul Auster, the novelist, rediscovered it
and brought about its publication for the first time as an individual book.
Recently published by New York Review Books, it is pocket size, 72 pages,
preceded by a long introduction by Mr. Auster. It is, Mr. Auster writes, a
portrait of Hawthorne as ''the historian of everyday life'' and is ''a humorous
work by a notoriously melancholic man.''
In the summer of 1851,
when Hawthorne was 47 and had written all his major works including ''The
Scarlet Letter'' and ''The House of the Seven Gables,'' his wife went to visit
her parents, taking their daughters, Una and baby Rose. She left their son,
Julian, with his father in their home in Lenox, Mass. At 5, Julian was a
babbling brook of ideas and emotions. The first thing he said after their
departure, according to the story, was: ''Father, isn't it nice to have baby
gone? Because now I can shout and squeal just as loud as I please!''
For three weeks father
and son lived alone (with the help of a housekeeper), and Hawthorne kept a
diary of their daily activities. Habitually Hawthorne did not write fiction
during the summer and so was able to devote himself to his son. The diary
offers a portrait of Hawthorne in a lighter mode, delighted -- although
sometimes quietly exasperated -- by the constant demands of the boy, but a
generous family man with infinite patience and a deep appreciation of nature.
Here is Hawthorne
climbing trees, scaling stones with his son and playfully wrestling with him.
They take long walks in the Berkshire woods, indulge Julian's pet rabbit.
Hawthorne rescues a cat from a cistern. Julian reveals a natural curiosity,
asking why a rainbow is not called a sunbow. In the course of the book, the two
become as close as a father and son can be.
One day on the way home
from the post office, they sit down in a grove and Hawthorne reads a newspaper.
''While thus engaged,'' he wrote, ''a cavalier on horseback came along the road
and saluted me in Spanish; to which I replied by touching my hat, and went on
with the newspaper. But the cavalier renewed his salutation. I regarded him
more attentively, and saw that it was Herman Melville!''
Melville lifts Julian up
and puts him in the saddle, ''and the little man was highly pleased, and sat on
the horse with the freedom and the fearlessness of an old equestrian.''
Sometime later Julian confided to his father that he loved Mr. Melville as much
as he loved him, his mother and his older sister. There goes another foreboding
image from American literature.
''For many years I've
been a great admirer of Hawthorne,' Mr. Auster said recently. ''There is a deep
affinity I have for his writing and also for him as a man. The more you
penetrate the peripheral writings, the letters and diaries, you see this
tremendous wit that was there from a very early age.'' Next year will be the
200th anniversary of Hawthorne's birth.
In ''The American
Notebooks'' (published by Ohio State University Press), he said, ''you see
Hawthorne talking to himself on very intimate terms, and thinking up ideas for
stories, and the prose is lightning fast and lean.'' So far as he knows,
''Twenty Days'' is the only self-contained work within the notebooks.
''What it proves,'' he
said, ''is that Hawthorne was a human being just like all of us. He happened to
be a great writer on top of that, but writers have lives, too. It's rare that
we get a glimpse of this kind of relationship in a writer's life. It should be
the bible of all the housefathers, the stay-at-home fathers today.''
In the book Julian is
such an ingratiating child that readers may wonder about his adult life. He
went to Harvard and became a writer, publishing more than 40 novels, but never
equaling his father's success. His books about his family, beginning with
''Nathaniel Hawthorne and His Wife,'' were better received.
With his editor, Edwin
Frank, Mr. Auster looked at the original diary and other items collected at the
Morgan Library in New York. He said that Hawthorne and his wife, Sophia, kept a
separate notebook in which they both wrote about their children. ''What was so
touching,'' he said, ''was that the book must have been lying around the house.
If you turn the pages, you see little pencil drawings by the children,
scratches right over Hawthorne's text.''
When his wife returned
home, Hawthorne gave her ''Twenty Days,'' and she blacked out several lines --
to protect their privacy, Mr. Auster assumes -- although there was never an
indication that it would be published. Like a photo album, it was for family
consumption. ''We remember real events in mental pictures of course,'' Mr.
Auster said, ''but I think a well-written paragraph captures more of reality
than a photograph.''
Always shy, Hawthorne
avoided contact as much as possible with his neighbors, even, Mr. Auster said,
hiding behind trees so as not to talk to people he knew. The main exception was
Melville, who lived nearby and looked upon Hawthorne as his mentor. Sophia
Hawthorne called him ''Mr. Omoo,'' a reference to Melville's second novel.
When the Hawthornes were
married, they lived in the Old Manse in Concord, Mass. (the setting for
Hawthorne's ''Mosses From an Old Manse''). ''As a wedding present,'' Mr. Auster
said, ''Emerson hired Thoreau to plant Hawthorne's garden.'' Mrs. Hawthorne
was, he added, a good writer as demonstrated in her letters.
''From the kitchen,
looking out on the Concord River in the winter,'' Mr. Auster said, ''Sophia
writes to her mother a hilarious passage about Hawthorne, Emerson and Thoreau
ice skating on the frozen river. She describes how they looked: there's old Mr.
Emerson, who is only a year older than Hawthorne, bent over, straining to keep
upright. There's Mr. Thoreau jumping around with dithyrambic leaps, 'very ugly,
methinks,' and Mr. Hawthorne -- a very handsome man -- moving like a
self-impelled Greek statue.''
Could this be the source
for another book humanizing Hawthorne?
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