1 €(^xm\\ Winivmii^ ^ihxm^ y;m\ ^df^^jJvmA'i ") ..Idij^vmU-fi-skL^ u 678-2 ,*' Cornell University Library PS 1185.B91 1894 Bryant centennial, CumHiinSlonj, .AHS.y?',.!!^^^ 3 1924 022 052 413 '^, ipy (16 , cK.o-^i^eJ- I 44^iyMC <1L■y^^<^ ^4.pl^^ , mu.fr:h:(i)rs,.^Jt;. Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022052413 i/>it Z *x.; I L I ^L ^-^^-t,./ ? t. /y ^S , / f/C^ r ' BRYANT CENTENNIAL CUMMINGTON AUGUST THE SIXTEENTH 1894 NOVEMBER THE THIRD NOVEMBER THE THIRD 1794 1894 /\.^-7o^^3 Clark W. Bbtan Co. Pbint^kb, Sprin&fiblt>, MA89. TO JULIA S. BRYANT TO THE READER. No word of introduction can add to the beauty or completeness of the tributes contained in this little volume. To many of the present generation, Bryant is still a gracious memory, but when the time shall arrive, in which his name and work is only a tradi- tion to the inhabitants of his native town, and another centenary is reached, the curious antiquary or the devoted pilgrim, who seeks the spot where the first centennial was remembered, may wish to trace its landmarks, and some record of it may then be found needful. At the annual town meeting it was voted to observe the hun- dredth anniversary of Bryant's birth by a literary festival, and a committee of five of the citizens was appointed to carry out this design. The occasion was unique, not many days of the kind having been celebrated, for Bryant's birth marked the beginning of Ameri- can Poetry, and American Literature was still in its childhood one hundred years ago. The day chosen was August sixteenth, as the pleasant summer time was, deemed more suitable for an outdoor gathering, than the day of November on which the poet was born, which is often bleak and forbidding in its aspect. The spot selected had already become historic, for the poet and his brothers had traced, upon the trees around, rude hieroglyphics in years long past. In a maple grove northwest of the Bryant homestead, where the younger children were born and all were reared, a central platform was raised and surrounded by seats rising from the front in the form of an amphitheater. Upon a hickory tree, around which the platform was built, a lithograph portrait of Bryant was hung, en- circled with wreaths and adorned with pendant sumac boughs. Around a table, banked with golden-rod and asters, were grouped some of America's most distinguished men of letters, who had come from far places to honor the memory of one who was one of America's first citizens as well as Cummington's foremost son. Nature smiled upon the da\' and the event, which was made mem- orable by the number of people who were present, — about five thousand climbing from all points, and from the towns in the dis- tant valleys, to this remote hilltop. At ten o'clock a bird's-eye view would have presented a novel sight, when every approach, as far as the eye could see, was filled with slowly moving vehicles, until nearly a thousand had arrived, from the modern tally-ho to the improvised farm wagon, its sides trimmed with hemlock boughs. Through the arched entrance, trimmed with evergreens, the ex- pectant crowd passed quickly to the grove, filling the seats, while some hundreds grouped themselves around these. The clouds lightly floating above and the sunlight glinting through the foliage upon the upturned faces, made the scene not only picturesque but impressive. The presence of the one surviving brother of the poet, and his only remaining daughter, added interest to the occa- sion, and the choice of his son-in-law as president of the day gave added dignity to the anniversary, which in itself was of the greatest interest to the people of this region. After the memorial address and songs, the people scattered in groups, to partake of their basket lunches. Some sought the " Rivulet," some the " Entrance to the Wood," or other haunts which suggested the lines of the poet, and the holiday aspect was in keeping with the simplicity and naturalness of the poet's life. The dinner for the two hundred invited guests was served in the apple orchard nearly opposite the spacious barns, in the green carpeted passages formed by the rows of trees. After the colla- tion had been served, again the people gathered in the grove to listen to the addresses of the afternoon, given in a somewhat lighter vein than those of the morning, interspersed with appro- priate music, and at five o'clock the multitude departed with pleas- ant memories of this day of days, and we whose glad privilege it was to execute the wishes of the townspeople, hasten to make this lasting record before swift-footed time shall render such a work impossible. MY NATIVE VALE. There stands a dwelling in a peaceful vale, With sloping hills and waving woods around, Fenced from the blast. There never ruder gale Bows the tall grass that covers all the ground ; And planted shrubs are there, and cherished flowers, And brightest verdure born of gentle showers 'Twas there my young existence was begun ; My earliest sports were on its flowery green ; -And often, when my schoolboy lask was done, I climbed its hills to view the pleasant scene. And stood and gazed till the sun's setting ray Shone on the height— the sweetest of the day. There, when that hour of mellow light was conic. And mountain shadows cooled the ripened grain, I saw the weary yeoman plodding home In the lone path that winds across the plain, To rest his limbs, and watch his child at play And tell him o'er the labors of the day. And when the woods put on their autumn glow. And the bright sun shone in among the trees, .\nd leaves were gathered in the den below. Swept softly from the hillside by the breeze, I wandered, till the starlight, on the stream. At length awoke me from my fairy dream. ,Ah ! happy days, too happy to return. Fled on the wings of youth's departed years , A bitter lesson has been mine to learn, The truth of life, its labors, pains and fears. Yet does the memory of my boyhood sray, A twilight of the brightness passed away. ,Mv thoughts steal back to that dear dwelling still. Its flowers and peaceful shades before me rise ; The play-place and the prospect from the hill. Its summer verdure and autumnal dyes ; The present brings its storms, but, while they last I shelter seek in the delightful past. John Howard Hrvant. PROGRAMME Wednesday Evening, AT 7.30 o'clock. Children's Memorial Exercises by the Bryant School and others jt the Congregational Church. Thursda'i Morning, AT 10 o'clock. March, " Washington Post," .'iou/,a ORCHESTR.V. PRAYER. Anthem, " Sing ye Jehovah's praises. " Address of Welcome, Lorenzo H. Tower. Address hv President, Parke Godwin Memorial Address, Kdwin R. Brown. Duet, "O deem not they are blest alone," Julie A. Shaw, Henrietta S. Nahmek. Reading, .. xh^Rivufet," John H. Bryant. Chorus, "The Battle Hymn of the Republic' PROGKAMMH THURSIrA^' At I KkNi i(J\. AT ■> O'n oi K MflRi II, "()|ij HiiriieMeail," ORCHHSI KA. Reading of Letters by the Shi KKTAK^. (.'HoRiis, "A F.irevt Retreat." . ADDKl'.SStS Hon. John Bigeluw, Julia Ward I iowc, Charles Dudlir\ \\ arner. Duet. " Old Friends are the Fruesl." John W. Hutchinson, t Le.ster Hkown. Reading, At Eighty-seven, John H. Hryant. A1)1iK1vSn1':s. Prof. Charles E. Norton, Rev. John \V. Chadvvick, George W, Cable. Chorus, "The Oaks." Verdi. ADDRKSSES. I'tes. G. Stanley Hall, A. .M. Howe, Esq., Il.i.rv S Gere. INVOCATION. By Rkv. John White Chadwick. " Blessings be on them and eternal praise, Who gave us nobler lives and nobler cares ; The poets who on earth have made us heirs Of truth and puie delight by heavenly lays." O Thou who art the life and heart of all this breathing world ; we come together in a temple made by Thine own hands, to thank- fully remember one who looked through Nature up to Thee, who found Thy visible presence in the strength of Thy eternal hills, Thy beauty in the trees and streams, Thy voice in the deep breath- ings of the storm, and in the silence of the night. We thank Thee for the songs he sung, and that he made his life a great and noble poem, epical with a lofty purpose, and lyrical with many tender passages of love and home. We are glad and thankful for those happy influences which issued from his life and work, opening our eyes to see the beauty and our hearts to feel the wonder of the fair and perfect world, and plead- ing with us to make ourselves the servants of all high causes, even such as make for the enlightenment and exaltation of our individual and common life. We thank Thee, O God, for all Thy poets who by their song have cheered and glorified our human lot, and especially for that noble company in our own land, of which our own Bryant was the eldest brother and of which one only now remains. Very tenderly would we think of him to-day, desiring for him every blessing that belongs to the old age of one who has so often with sweet, guileless laughter cheered our burdened hearts. May this time of grateful recollection consecrate us, each and all, to a more wise and serious affection for the great things of nature and of art, and a more serene devotion to the welfare of our fellow-men. Vi We offer Thee, O God, these thanks and these desires with some- thing of that proud humility which befits the children of Thy house. Amen. After the invocation an orchestra of stringed instruments, ac- companied by an organ, performed one of Sousa's marches, which was followed by the anthem, " Sing ye Jehovah's praises," ren- dered by a local chorus. ADDRESS OF WELCOME. By Lorenzo H. Tower. It was thought that a short address of welcome by a native resi- dent of the town would be expected in accordance with the usual custom on occasions like this. It would seem proper that the host's welcome should be by deeds, not words, and a proper prepa- ration to receive his guests. If this has been done, words of wel- come are unnecessary ; if neglected, any address, however eloquent, would be of no account. In applying this test, due consideration of the ability of the host and the number and wants of his guests should be kept in mind. Ours is a small mountain town, contain- ing eight hundred souls all told, remote from the principal lines of travel, with limited hotel accommodations ; and with the expecta- tion that every home would be filled with personal and family friends, the prospect was not good for a successful result to-day. With these and other disabilitities may we not indulge the hope that you will be charitable with our shortcomings. The welcome that Cummington extends to you to-day is substantially the same as greeted the embryo poet one hundred years ago. That the peo- ple are the same in kind is proven by the fact that of the two hundred voters in town but three are of foreign birth ; the quality may have deteriorated, as the flower of our sons and daughters have gone forth to enrich other communities, nearly every home having furnished its full quota. There are but few of us left, but these few are willing to stand up and be counted. Of the families that have lived at the Bryant Homestead for the last one hundred years, the first sent forth five sons and one daugh- ter to make their homes outside of the town ; of these but one remains to be with us to-day. Of the second, three sons and one daughter sought other homes, and from this family two are here to meet old friends. From the third, one daughter by adoption is with us to-day. This is perhaps an exceptional case, but it shows the tendency of the population to leave the hill towns. Many homes have been abandoned, and their location is marked by a hollow in the ground where once was a cellar. In some parts of the town it is possible to find as many of these as of homes. The occupation of the people is the same as of old, living wide apart to cultivate the soil, that is none too free with its return for the labor that is bestowed upon it. The Westfield flows through its narrow valley ; the little villages nestle by its side as in the past ; the amphitheater of hills and val- leys that girt the eastern horizon are the same that Bryant's first conscious vision looked upon ; the little brooks still murmur through their narrow glens ; the groves, the darker woods, the sunny slopes where wild flowers bloom, all are here still to inspire other poets. The home that sheltered our poet from infancy to early manhood, the home to which he turned when fortune had smiled and the frost of age was upon hair and beard, making of it a fit place to spend a short season each year to renew his acquaint- ance with nature "through her \isible forms," free from the cares of an exacting profession. To all of these we welcome you ; without these nothing we could say or do would be worthy of a moment's consideration by you. May we not hope that when time has softened your remembrance of the discomforts and fatigue of the journey, you may not wholly regret that in 1894 you made the pilgrimage to Cummington, to the home of Bryant, one of the best of his race, one of the poets of the world. REMARKS Of J \V. GuRNEY, Chairman of the Committee of Arrangements on Opening the Exercises at the Bryant Centennial Celebration. Ladies and Gentlemen : We have assembled here this beautiful summer morning to cele- brate the hundredth anniversary of an event that has made this historic ground. These valleys, these wooded hills, the little spark- ling rivulet that goes leaping and laughing down the mountain side, have all been immortalized by the pen of Bryant. Some one living in what he imagined to be a more favored region has slightingly remarked that all our " New England hills were good for was to help hold the world together; that their principal productions were ice and granite.'' Well, I have always believed they played an important part in the earth's make-up, and they furnish plenty of ice and granite for home consumption, and yet they boast grander products. We raise men and women who are constantly going out from us, taking with them New England's best gifts, virtue, intelligence and industry. New England's hills, old earth's mainstay — Steadfast and reliant — Let it forever be their boast That they produced a Bryant. My friends, you have gathered here from many sections of our great country, to unite with us in honoring the name and memory of Cummington's noblest , son, and as the centuries follow each other down time's calendar, the people of Cummington will ever cherish the memory of William Cullen Bryant. But the name of Bryant is not the heritage of Cummington alone ; it is the birth- right of every American citizen, and in arranging the programme of these exercises we have not confined ourselves to any section, 16 or been restrained by any boundary lines. We are exceedingly fortunate in having with us to-day a gentleman whose intimate social and business relations with Mr. Bryant for many years make it eminently fitting that he should take a prominent part in these exercises. I now have the distinguished honor of introducing to you Mr. Parke Godwin, as president of the day. Parke Godwin, President of the Day. ADDRESS. I'.Y I'RKSIDENT I'ARKE (JUDWIN. Ladies' and Gentlemen : Dr. Samuel Johnson said that "the man is little to be envied whose patriotism would not gain force on the plain of Marathon, or whose piety would not grow warmer among the ruins of Zona." He meant by this that localities acquire by mere historic asso- ciation a power which stirs the minds and r.earts of men to their fountains. Such a locality is this, and assuredly, no American can visit these hills without feeling his whole nature exalted by the consciousness that here one of the first and most eminent of Ameri- can poets, one of the first and most energetic of American citizens, \\'illiam Cullen Bryant, was born. It was here, a hundred years ago, that his infant eyes first opened to the light of the heavens ; here that his childish limbs first tottered among the flowers of the earth, and here that he first played upon the banks of the rivulet, which prattled from grove to grove while he cropped the violets from its brim, and listened to the brown thrush's vernal hymn. It was here that he turned his first artless notes to the whisper of the wind, or to the song of the birds ; it was here, amid this scenery, which combines so much that is grand with so much that is beauti- ful, that he imbibed that love of nature which made him, in after life, her most faithful painter, knowing every tree, every flower, every spire of grass, every sound of the winged tribes, and every play of the winds among the trees, every aspect of the seasons, the luxuriant fullness of summer, the melancholy yet many-colored decay of autumn, and even the charm of winter, when the bleak blast dis- robes the forests, and oceans of snow had almost drowned the landscape, but the sunrises and sunsets were yet as glorious as any of Italy, and the delicate fingers of the frost built in the woods its palaces of amethyst and topaz. It was here, lying before the even- 18 ing birch fire, that he read the Bible and Shakespeare, Homer as Pope gives him, and Cowper and Wordsworth ; it was here, among the thickets, that he shouted to his brothers grand lines from the Iliad or the CEdipus Tyrrannus ; it was here that he heard from the lips of veterans who had taken part in the strife, the stories of Bunker Hill and Concord and Trenton and Saratoga ; it was here that he caught the first bitterness of politics, as thundered around the name of Jefferson, and it was here that he learned the better lessons taught by nature's "sweet and gentle ministrations." It was from this place went forth the first articulate poetic utter- ance of the great soul of the western world, Thanatopsis, grave and sombre in its theme suggested by the immense and impenetrable solitude of the wilderness around, where the silent work of death is ever going on, as it has been from the beginning and will be to the end of time, but treated with such rare depth and breadth of thought, with such brilliancy of imagination and with such an organ flow of music, it has captivated the universal human mind and imbedded and enshrined itself in immortal memory. Thana- topsis was the morning star of our poetic dawn, opening the way to the broader day that was to follow ; but in the flush and efful- gence of a broader light, but still holding its place in the skies as a luminary that is destined never to set. But the mere active life of Mr. Bryant was not passed amid these solitudes which, while they nourished his genius by their many appeals to the imagination, to fancy, to reverence and to thought, could not supply his more practical needs. He must go into the larger world which lay beyond their summits, and sad was the hour when he was compelled to leave them. It was in the early winter of the year when alone, without prosperity and almost without friends, he took his way up yonder steep road to Plainfield, to enter the unknown yet inviting vortex of actual combat. His heart was despondent, but a lustrous sunset sufl^used the mountains and he saw a solitary bird making its flight through the desert and illimitable air, to its far home among the reeds, and he thought 19 •" There is a Power whose care teaches thy way along that pathless coast," and it came to him as a solace and support, that " He who from zone to zone Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight, In the long way that I must tread alone Will lead my steps aright." And that Power did lead him aright when he was launched upon that vast ocean of struggle and turmoil and toil which is ever •seething in the metropolis of a nation. I was much impressed some years ago in an interview with John Bright, when he told me that he " never went to bed without read- ing some of the poets, to lure his mind away from the distrac- tions of Parliament — which is often a cockpit — and to invigorate his imagination," and he added, " I read your poets in prefer- ence to ours, not because they are greater poets, but because they are greater citizens. Your Bryant, your Emerson, your Long- fellow, )'our Whittier, and your Lowell take part in the common life of the nation, and all are better poets because they are com- pleter men." Their inspiration comes not from the society in which they live, and has the freshness and impulse of liberty, nature and the present age. This was particularly true of Mr. Bryant, who from his childhood to his old age mingled in the active life of the public. From the time in which he sang his crude Fourth of July odes and as a boy satirized Jefferson, to the time in which he upheld the arms of Lincoln during the war, and deplored his death in a dirge, whose ■words like flight of angels lulled our aching hearts, he held it to be one of his first duties to participate in all the movements which influenced the politics of the state. He went down into the arena and grappled with the fighters. But in every struggle he kept his eye steadily fixed on certain ideas, which like the Star of the Pole keeps its old unvarying station. Other stars rise and set, or file away in glittering trains, to sink ultimately behind the horizon, but that star is the unfailing guide of the half-wrecked mariner when his 20 compass is lost, and assures the steps of those who stray in darkest wastes by night. To Mr. Bryant, that guiding star was his convic- tion of duty to the development and good of the individual man. He was no doctrinaire, for he always pursued even ideal ends through actual a\ailable means, but one trust seemed clearer to him than any other and that was that the aim of all religion, of all morals, of all social progress was the elevation and upraising of man to the full dignity of his nature. And he inferred that such should be the final aim of all politics. Mr. Brj'ant was the advocate from the beginning of his public career of perfect freedom of speech and of assembly; he was the enemy, from the beginning, of that hideous system of slavery which had got the nation in its clutch, and he was ever the sedu- lous, considerate and irrepressible opponent of that other system of industrial servitude, which under the pretext of general protec- tion fosters special trades, monopolies and trusts, lures a pernicious immigration and prepares the way for di\'ision of classes and anarchical outbreaks and bloodshed. In the defense of these views Mr. Bryant was cast into the furnace of debate, where his sensitive, nervous organization suffered severely, but he controlled himself with moderation and contributed as much as any other one man to the triumph of liberal principles, in the release of his fellow-men from a degrading bondage. In these efforts he was in advance of his day, for the battle is not yet won ; but he lived to see an emancipated race, a regenerated union, and the republic of his love, the mightiest power upon earth and destined to be mightier, as the freedom which he advocated shall extend its benificent arms to broader circles of activity. It is not my province, upon this occasion, to speak in detail of this public career, which was at once so eminent and so exemplary. That theme has been reserved for other and more eloquent lips. But as it has been the one great good fortune of my life to be as- sociated with Mr. Bryant privately for more than fifty years, I can- not refrain from saying a word of what I deem greater than the poet, greater than the publicist, greater than the patriot, and that 21 is the source and substance of all the rest — the man. As a brother poet, Whittier, has written : — " We praise not no.v the poet's art, The rounded beauty of his song ; Wlio weighs him from his life apart, Must do his nobler natufe wrong." Every clay that I saw him, whether in his domestic circle, or amid the vicissitudes of trying public contests (and he lived through the terrible battle era of the Republic), added to my esti- mate of his completeness as a human being. Modest he was with the shyness of the sensitive young girl who like a violet had passed the days in silence and shade; humble he was with the humility of one who asked no applause from his fellows, and disinterested to the part of an almost absolute self-negation ; and yet with so strong a sense of self-respect, so earnest a worship of truth, so unswerv- ing a fidelity to his convictions, that he feared no enmity, no calumny, no loss of ease or fame, in the discharge of what he deemed his duty. A world in arms against him had no terrors for his simple soul. Mr. Bryant was deemed by many to be cold in his manner, even to chilliness. Among strangers he was singularly reserved. But once you broke through this atmosphere of reticence, you found in the inside the genial humorist- who loved fun, the warm-hearted comrade, and a keen sympathizer with all sorts of human suffering and sorrow. His affections were not demonstrative, but they were sincere and profound. To his children he was the cheerful companion, and they loved him none the less because of their reverence for him. One affection indeed ran like a silver lining through all the tissues of his being, from the time when first he met his Fanny, " The fairest of the rural maids Whose birth was in the forest shades.'' All his personal attachments, though slow in their formation, once formed were like hooks of steel. He never abandoned a friend ; he never, if he could help it, misjudged an enemy. Once 22 when he had been severely calumniated by a newspaper opponent he said to me, " Will you not answer that fellow ? I dislike him so much I may do him an injustice." His purse was ever open to a charity; not always, in the exuberance of his pity, judicious. Hundreds were uniting to say, when he was gone, that their saintly providence was lost. I do not know in history a more impressive picture than that which is furnished by the old age of Mr. Bryant gliding " in long serenity away." In easy circumstances, the ac- knowledged patriarch of our literature, the idol not merely of friends, but of a wide public, every day he gave to some honorable or useful occupation, to a translation of Homer, to a patriotic ad- dress, to a cheery feast to the children of the village, to a great meeting for the furtherance of human welfare, to a letter of en- couragement to some struggling young author, or to the reading and review of some good recent books. A friend at Roslyn, who walked with him on his last Sunday on earth, says : " I turned to take my leave and saw him standing bareheaded in the sun, his face towards the sparkling waters of the bay, his white locks and beard just moved by the passing breeze and he looking like one of the bards of the Bible, in the rapture of devotion ; or better still as an image of Homer himself listening to the murmur- ing waves of his own blue ^gean.'' Mr. Bryant died in his eighty-fourth year, and the last words that he uttered in public were in aspiration for the coming of that uni- versal religion and soul liberty when the rights and dislikes of human brotherhood shall be acknowledged by all the races of mankind. The chief address of the day was given by Edwin R. Brown, one of Cummington's sons, who was especially fitted by good liter- ary taste and judgment and the associations of many years, to per- form this delicate and important task. Edwin R. Brown, Orator of the Day. MEMORIAL ADDRESS. By I'.DWiN R. Ekown. Mr. President and Ladies and Gentlemen : " I stand upon my native hills again. Inroad, round and green, that in the summer sl