the john muir exhibit - life - life_and_letters - life and letters
The Life and Letters of John Muir
by William Frederic Badè
Volume I
Chapter I
The Ancestral Background
Delving one day among miscellaneous papers that had been brought to me
from the silent and deserted home of John Muir in the Alhambra Valley,
near Martinez, California, I found a sketch of his life which led me to
hope that a difficult part of my biographical task had been made easy.
Just then my eye caught the laconic comment, "A strange, bold mixture of
Muirs!" penciled across the manuscript in his own familiar flowing hand.
Apparently the sketch had been sent to Muir by the admiring author, who,
finding himself in need of an ancestry worthy of his subject, had made
short shrift of facts to get one. Taking a survey of Muirs available in
biographical reference works, he selected as father for John Muir a distinguished
Scotch Sanscritist of the same name, gave him as an uncle an equally eminent
Scotch Arabist, and for good measure added, as a younger brother, a well-known
Scotch chemist. Given the conviction that genius must spring from genius,
the would-be biographer had done his best to provide his hero with an adequate
pedigree.
But while John Muir's origin was humbler than this invention, the mixture
of elements need abate nothing either in strangeness or in boldness. Although
unfortunately it is not possible to trace back far the tangled thread of
his descent, one feels instinctively that marked ancestral traits and faculties
must have gone into the making of a personality so unusual and so fascinating.
His name he appears to have taken from his paternal grandfather, a Scotchman
by the name of John Muir. Beyond the latter our knowledge of this line
of Muirs ceases, and it may be doubted whether a search of Scotch parish
records, even, would reveal more than another bare name.
Of this ancestral John Muir we know only that he was a soldier by profession;
that he married an English woman by the name of Sarah Higgs; that she bore
him two children--Mary and Daniel; that his wife died when the second child
was only nine months old; and that he followed her to the grave three months
later. The orphaning of Mary and Daniel Muir at so tender an age may account
for the fact that the American family tradition of the Muirs has little
to report about John Muir, the soldier, and his wife Sarah Higgs Muir,
except the tragedy of their untimely deaths. All knowledge of their birthplaces
and parentage, tastes, accomplishments, and dispositions is lost in oblivion.
Our detailed knowledge of the family really begins with Daniel Muir,
the younger of the two orphans and the only male link in the Muir pedigree
atthis point. He it was who in due time became the father of John Muir,
the naturalist, and to the latter's brief sketch of his father's life,
written as an obituary notice, we owe practically all our extant information
about the early life of Daniel Muir. The latter was born in Manchester,
England, in 1804. His sister Mary Muir was his senior by about eleven years,
and when their parents had died she "became a mother to him and brought
him up on a farm that belonged to a relative in Lanarkshire, Scotland."
From an aged daughter of Mary Muir, Grace Blakley Brown, the writer ascertained
the fact that the above-mentioned farm was situated at Crawfordjohn, about
thirty-five miles south-east of Glasgow. If it is true, as alleged, that
it was one of his mother's people to whom the farm belonged, we are probably
not far wrong in supposing that John Muir, the elder, also came from this
region, and met Sarah Higgs in Crawfordjohn.
How much importance one may attach to ante-natal influences exerted
upon one's forbears by the physical characteristics of a country is a debatable
question. "Some of my grandfathers," John Muir once wrote in playful mood
to a friend, "must have been born on a muirland, for there is heather in
me, and tinctures of bog juices, that send me to Cassiope, and, oozing
through all my veins, impel me unhaltingly through endless glacier meadows,
seemingly the deeper and danker the better." Did he have in mind some family
tradition of a Scotch Highland ancestry? We do not know; but if any of
his ancestors came from the country of Lanark there is aptness in the hyperbole.
The parish of Crawford consists chiefly of mountains and moors. Coulter
Fell, Tinto, Green Louther, Five Cairn Louther, and other summits in the
immediate vicinity of Crawfordjohn rise grandly out of the high moorlands
that constitute most of the area in the eastern and southern parts of the
county. Hard by the village flows Duneaton Water, one of the numerous rushing,
songful streams that feed the River Clyde. The highest inhabited land in
Scotland is said to lie at Leadhills, on the banks of Glengonner Water,
not many miles south of Crawfordjohn.
In any case, it was amid these surroundings, according to John Muir's
sketch, that his father "lived the life of a farm servant, growing up a
remarkably bright, handsome boy, delighting in athletic games and eager
to excel in everything. He was notably fond of music, had a fine voice,
and usually took a leading part in the merry song-singing gatherings of
the neighborhood. Having no money to buy a violin, when he was anxious
to learn to play that instrument, he made one with his own hands, and ran
ten miles to a neighboring village through mud and rain after dark to get
strings for it."
In the course of time his sister Mary married a shepherd-farmer of Crawfordjohn
by the name of Hamilton Blakley, whereupon her new home became also that
of Daniel Muir. A Scottish peasant's life in a country village, remote
from populous centers, must have afforded only narrow opportunities for
education and self-improvement. John Muir was accustomed to ascribe the
rigidity of his father's prejudices and convictions to the deficient quality
of his early education. But it must be admitted that the making of a violin
by a boy, who had grown up amid the handicaps of such surroundings, indicates
the possession on his part of uncommon native resources of skill and ingenuity.
An achievement of this kind suggests the probability that there were other
products of his manual craftsmanship, and the remarkable inventive power
and "whittling" skill which his son John developed as a young man doubtless
were not unconnected with his father's example and ability. "While yet
more boy than man," continues the sketch, "he suddenly left home to seek
his fortune with only a few shillings in his pocket, but with his head
full of romantic schemes for the benefit of his sister and all the world
besides. Going to Glasgow and drifting about the great city, friendless
and unknown, he was induced to enter the British army, but remained in
it only a few years, when he purchased his discharge before he had been
engaged in any active service. On leaving the army he married and began
business as a merchant in Dunbar, Scotland. Here he remained and prospered
for twenty years, establishing an excellent reputation for fair dealing
and enterprise. Here, too, his eight children were born, excepting the
youngest who was born in Wisconsin." It is strong evidence of his energy
and love of adventure that he closed out his business in Dunbar in 1849
and "emigrated to the wilds of America" at the mature age of forty-five
years. His original intention was to go to the backwoods of Upper Canada,
but he was diverted from this purpose by fellow emigrants who told him
that the woods of Canada were so dense and heavy that an excessive amount
of labor was required to clear land for agriculture. From Milwaukee he
made his way by wagon into the central part of southern Wisconsin, where
he bought, cleared, and brought under cultivation, successively, two large
farms. They were situated about ten miles from Kingston and were known
respectively as the Fountain Lake and the Hickory Hill farms.
[When the second one also was] . . . thoroughly subdued and
under cultivation, and his three sons had gone to seek their fortunes elsewhere,
he sold it and devoted himself solely to religious work. As an evangelist
he went from place to place in Wisconsin, Canada, and Arkansas, distributing
books and tracts at his own cost, and preaching the gospel in season and
out of season with a firm sustained zeal.
Nor was this period of religious activity restricted to those later
years, for throughout almost his whole life as a soldier, merchant, and
farmer, as well as evangelist, he was an enthusiastic believer and upholder
of the gospel and it is this burning belief that forms the groundwork of
his character and explains its apparent contradictions. He belonged to
almost every Protestant denomination in turn, going from one to another,
not in search of a better creed, for he was never particular as to the
niceties of creeds, but ever in search of a warmer and more active zeal
among its members with whom he could contribute his time and money to the
spread of the gospel.
Though suffering always under the disadvantage of an imperfect education,
himself overtasked, but by sheer force of will and continuous effort overcame
all difficulties that stood in his way. He was successful in business and
bestowed much of his earnings on churches and charities.
His life was singularly clean and pure. He never had a single vice excepting,
perhaps, the vices of over-industry and over-giving. Good Scripture measure,
heaped up, shaken together, and running over, he meted out to all. He loved
little children, and beneath a stern face, rigid with principle, he carried
a warm and tender heart. He seemed to care not at all what people would
think of him. That never was taken into consideration when work was being
planned. The Bible was his guide and companion and almost the only book
he ever cared to read.
His last years, as he lay broken in body, waiting for rest, were full
of calm divine light. Faith in God and charity to all became the end of
all his teachings, and he oftentimes spoke of the mistakes he had made
in his relation toward his family and neighbors, urging those about him
to be on their guard and see to it that love alone was made the guide and
rule of every action. . . . His youthful enthusiasm burned on to the end,
his mind glowing like a fire beneath all its burden of age and pain, until
at length he passed on into the land of light, dying like a summer day
in deep peace, surrounded by his children.
On his mother's side John Muir was descended from the old Scottish stock
of the Gilderoys whose deeds won a place in the Border lore of Scotland.
There is, for instance, the fine old ballad "Gilderoy," but the possibility
that its thirteen stanzas may celebrate a member of this branch of the
family must remain as remote as it is romantic. In a manuscript copy of
the ballad, made for John Muir years ago by a Scotch relative of the Gilroy
line, the opening stands run as follows:
"Gilderoy was a bonnie boy,
Had roses till his shoon;
His stockings were of sillken soy,
Wi' garters hanging coon;
It was, I ween, a comely sight,
To see see trim a boy;
He was my joy and heart's delight,
My winsome Gilderoy.
"Oh! sic twa charming een he had,
A breath as sweet as rose;
He never ware a Highland plaid,
But costly silken clothes.
He gained the love of ladies gay,
Nane e'er to him was coy.
Ah! wee is me! I mourn this day,
For my dear Gilderoy!" etc.
In Thompson's
Orpheus Caledonius (1733) the hero of the poem is
represented as contemporary with Mary, Queen of Scots. But a later authority,
describing this Gilderoy as "the Robin Hood of Scottish minstrelsy," identified
him with the leader of a band of freebooters that three centuries ago roamed
over the Highlands of Perthshire until both he and his band fell victims
to the Stewarts of Atholl in 1638.
According to a Muir family tradition John's maternal great-grandfather,
James Gilderoy, had three sons who took respectively the names Gilderoy,
Gilroy, and Gilrye. Inquiry of descendants in Scotland has failed to bring
to light the first of these. But a James Gilderoy[Also spelled "Gildroy"
and "Gilroy" in contemporary documents.] was resident at Wark in Northumberland,
on the Border, in 1765. He is known to have had at least two sons--John
and David. The former, born in 1765, took the Gilroy form of the family
name and was alternately a professional gardener and a "land agent." David
who was born July 15th, 1767, is the "grandfather Gilrye" of Muir's The
Story of My Boyhood and Youth. Both boys appear to have gradually moved
northward along the border, and an old Scotch family Bible, in the possession
of a granddaughter of John Gilroy, invests with the importance of an event
the arrival of David Gilrye at Dunbar, Scotland, on December 20th, 1794.
David was no longer in the first flush of youth when he settled in Dunbar.
He was twenty-seven years old, and in his years of wandering, if we knew
something about them, we probably should find no lack of hardship and adventure.
Love of gardens and of landscapes, not improbably, gave direction sometimes
to his footsteps, for John Muir more than a century later told how his
earliest recollections of the country were gained on short walks in company
with Grandfather Gilrye, who also loved to take him to Lord Louderdale's
gardens. There is something pleasingly suggestive in the picture of seventy-five-year-old
David Gilrye leading his three-year-old grandson into the paths that were
to bring fame to the one, and rescue from oblivion to the other.
Perhaps it was Margaret Hay who confided to her Bible the date of David's
arrival at Dunbar. She had good reason to remember the event, for six months
later he led her to the altar and made her his wife. Through Grandmother
Gilrye, John Muir thus shared the good Scotch blood of the Hays, a numerous
clan, that has produced men and women of distinction both in Europe and
in America. A relative of Margaret Hay is said to have suffered martyrdom
in the days when the Covenanters were hunted down for their sturdy opposition
to "popery and prelacy."
A numerous offspring came to enliven the household of David and Margaret
Hay Gilrye--three sons and seven daughters. But death, also, was a tragically
persistent visitor. All the sons and three of the daughters died between
the ages of seventeen and twenty-six--a fearful toll of life exacted by
the white plague. Since two other daughters had died at a tenderer age,
only Margaret, the eldest, and Ann, the seventh of the Gilrye sisters,
lived to survive their parents and round out a good old age. The tragedy
of such a series of untimely deaths is likely to have had an intensifying
influence upon the religious sensibilities of the family. In 1874, when
her sister Margaret died at the ripe age of seventy-eight, Ann Gilrye,
then the wife of Daniel Muir, described herself as "the last remnant of
a numerous family." "My mother," she wrote to her son John, "was just seventy-eight
years old when she died, and my father eighty-eight. My parents have mouldered
in the dust over twenty years, but Christ is the resurrection and the life,
and if we believe in him our souls will never die."
Daniel Muir, coming to Dunbar as a recruiting sergeant, met there his
first wife by whom he had one child. She was a woman of some means and
enabled him to purchase his release from the army in order to engage in
the conduct of a business which she had inherited. Their happiness together
was of brief duration, for both she and the child were snatched away by
a premature death, leaving him alone.
It seems to have been early in 1833 that Daniel, now a widower with
a prospering business, became a familiar caller in the Gilrye family--now
also sadly depleted in number. Margaret had been married thirteen years
earlier to James Rae and had established her own home. It was Aunt Rae's
precious lily garden that later excited the childish admiration of little
Johnny Muir and made him wonder whether, when he grew up, he "should ever
be rich enough to own anything like so grand." Twenty-year-old Ann and
her sixteen-year-old brother David were the only ones left under the parental
roof. All the rest were lying side by side in the Dunbar churchyard, whither
also the last male scion of the family was to be carried the following
year.
On the 28th of November, 1833, Ann Gilrye became the wife of Daniel
Muir, and moved across the street into the old house which John Muir has
described in his boyhood recollections. A lively brood of children soon
came to make their home there. Margaret, Sarah, John, David, Daniel, Mary,
and Anna were born there in the given order, Joanna being the only one
who was born in Wisconsin. John Muir, third in succession and the eldest
boy, was born on the 21st of April, 1838.
The bond of affectionate intimacy which always existed between him and
his mother would make a characterization of her from his pen of more than
ordinary interest. But we have to content ourselves with one sentence from
a fragmentary autobiographical sketch. "She was a representative Scotch
woman," he wrote, "quiet, conservative, of pious, affectionate character,
fond of painting and poetry." To this we may add the interesting information,
contained in one of his letters, that his mother wrote poetry in her girlhood
days.
It is quite apparent from her letters that she shared with him that
aesthetic appreciation of nature which is so characteristic an element
in his writings. While most of her letters concern home affairs and are
full of maternal solicitude for his health and comfort, they are seldom
without that additional touch which reveals kinship of soul as well as
of blood. Referring to descriptions in one of his early California letters,
she writes, "Your enjoyment of the beauties of California is shared by
me, as I take much pleasure in reading your accounts."
Underneath the maternal solicitude for his health and safety one may
also detect at times the Scotch Covenanter's concern for his spiritual
welfare. "Dear John," she writes in 1870, "I hope your health is good--so
that you will be able really to enjoy and admire all the vast magnificence
with which you are daily surrounded. I know it is far beyond any conception
of mine, but we can unite in praising and serving our Heavenly Father who
is the maker and supporter of this wonderful world on which we live for
a time. But time is short, and we must live forever. I trust we have a
good hope, through grace, of spending eternity in mansions of glory everlasting."
The glacial studies with which her son began to busy himself during
the seventies must have tried at times her Covenanter faith in so far as
it involved a conception of the age and origin of the world different from
that which she had learned in her youth. But she continues to write cheerfully
about summers and autumns that make rambles in the woods a deepening joy.
"The trees and flowers and plants looked more beautiful to me than ever
before. . . . I presume you are quite busy with your studies writing your
book. I feel much interested in all that interests you, although in many
of your studies you leave me far behind. Yet I rejoice in all your joy,
and hopes of future advancement. . . . You were much talked about and thought
about at our last Christmas gathering. Many were the kind wishes and loving
thoughts wafted to the valley of Yosemite." Almost to the last year of
her life she was accustomed to go to the woods in April in order to gather
and send to him with her birthday wishes a few of his favorite Wisconsin
spring flowers. These little acts reveal, even more than anything she said,
the poetic strain in her blood which kept fresh for her and her eldest
boy, until he was nearly sixty and she over eighty, the vernal blossoms
they had picked together long ago.
Very different was the attitude which Daniel Muir assumed toward the
interests and enthusiasms of his son. Being an extreme literalist as far
as the Bible was concerned, he could not look without suspicion upon his
scientific studies, because they went "beyond what was written." Whenever
he saw an issue arising between his traditional interpretation of the world's
origin according to Genesis on the one side, and the facts of geology and
glaciation on the other, he was accustomed to say, "Let God be true and
every man a liar." John's passion for exploration, and the adventures incidental
thereto, he regarded as little less than sinful. That there were different
levels of development within the Bible, involving the displacement of earlier
and cruder ideas of God and the world by higher and more intelligent ones,
never entered his mind. Nor did it ever occur to him, apparently, that
the facts of nature are likewise a part of the manuscripts of God, and
that he who endeavors to read them accurately may be rendering his fellow
men a religious as well as an intellectual service. He sincerely believed
that his son was cheating the Almighty in devoting his time to such interests
and enjoyments. "You are God's property," he wrote to him once. "You are
God's property, soul and body and substance--give those powers up to their
owner!" Even the most painstaking naturalist, he maintained, could not
discover anything of value in the natural world that the believer did not
see at one glance of the eye. These views went hand in hand with a naive
credulity that accepted unquestioningly the pious marvels related in the
tracts which he was distributing, and of which he kept sending selected
ones, with comments, to his son John.
Perhaps the reader will receive a clearer and truer impression of the
differing attitudes of his father and mother toward his nature studies
if we offer at this point a typical letter of Daniel Muir in which the
underscored words are indicated by italics. A note on the envelope, in
John's handwriting, says "written after reading the account of my storm
night on Shasta."
Portage City
March 19th, 1874
My Very Dear John
Were you as really happy as my wish would make you, you would
be permanency so in the best sense of the word. I received yours of the
third inst. with your slip of paper, but I had read the same thing in The
Wisconsin, some days before I got yours, and then I wished I
had not seen it, because it harried up my feelings so with another of your
hair-breadth escapes. Had I seen it to be God's work you were doing
I would have felt the other way, but I knew it was not God's work,
although you seem to think you are doing God's service. If it had not been
for God's boundless mercy you would have been cut off in the midst of your
folly. All chat you are attempting to show the Holy Spirit of God
gives the believer to see at one glance of the eye, for according to the
tract I send you they can see God's love, power, and glory in everything,
and it has the effect of turning away their sight and eyes from the things
that are seen and temporal to the things that are not seen and eternal,
according
to God 's holy word. It is of no use to look through a glass darkly
when we have the Gospel, and its fulfillment, and when the
true practical believer has got the Godhead in fellowship with himself
all the time, and reigning in his heart all the time. I know that the world
and the church of the world will glory in such as you, but how can they
believe which receive honor one of another and seek not the honor that
cometh from God only John 5, 44. You cannot warm the heart of the saint
of God with your cold icy-topped mountains. O. my dear son come away from
them to the spirit of God and His holy word, and He will show our lovely
Jesus unto you, who is by His finished work presented to you without money
and price. It will kindle a flame of sacred fire in your heart that will
never go out, and then you will go and willingly expend it upon other icy
hearts and you will thus be blessed infinitely in tribulation and eternally
through Jesus Christ, who is made unto us of God wisdom, righteousness,
sanctification, and redemption. I Cor. 1, 30, 31. And the best and soonest
way of getting quit of the writing and publishing your book is to burn
it, and then it will do no more harm either to you or others. And then,
like Paul, look to the cross of Christ and glory in it, and as in the sight
of God and in Jesus Christ, my only Lord and Master, I hereby say Amen
to it.
I expect, my God willing, to leave Portage City for Hamilton, Toronto,
on the last day of this month. I bought a house last October there and
without my family, at present, I mean to go in the way of God's providence
to spend all my time in His service and wholly by His grace to glorify
Him. I shall be glad to hear from you there any time. I will get your letters
at the post-office there.
We are all well. Your dear mother sends her love to you.
Your affectionate father in Christ
Daniel Muir
The meaning of the last paragraph of the letter will be found in some,
disquieting news contained in a letter of Mrs. Daniel Muir, Sr., under
date of February 26th, 1872. "We were surprised," she writes, "to hear
your father say that he has decided to sell the Hickory Hill farm, and
everything he has on it, by auction. So he is at present engaged in putting
up bills of sale, the sale to take place on Tuesday, the 5th of March.
He says he will not decide on where he will go until the sale is over."
The purpose he had in view in coming to this sudden decision is revealed
in one of John's letters to his brother David. Daniel Muir's religious
fanaticism had in John's view reached a point where it was necessary to
ask his brother and his brother-in-law to interfere in the interest of
their sisters and their mother.
To David Gilrye Muir
Yosemite Valley
March 1st, 1873
Dear Dave:
I answer your letter at once because I want to urge you to do what
you can in breaking up that wild caprice of father's of going to Bristol
and Lord Muller. You and David Galloway are the only reliable common-sense
heads in our tribe, and it is important, when the radical welfare of our
parents and sisters is at stake, that we should do all that is in our power.
I expected a morbid and semi-fanatical outbreak of this kind as soon
as I heard of his breaking free from the wholesome cares of the farm. Yet
I hoped that he would find ballast in your town of some Sabbath-school
or missionary kind that would save him from any violent crisis like the
present. That thick matted sod of Bristol orphans, which is a sort of necessary
evil induced by other evils, is all right enough for Muller in England,
but all wrong for Muir in America
The lives of Anna and Joanna, accustomed to the free wild Nature of
our woods, if transplanted to artificial fields and dingy towns of England,
would wilt and shrivel to mere husks, even if they were not to make their
life
work amid those pinched and blinking orphans.
Father, in his present feeble-minded condition, is sick and requires
the most considerate treatment from all who have access to his thoughts,
and his moral disease is by no means contemptible, for it is only those
who are endowed with poetic and enthusiastic brains that are subject to
it.
Most people who are born into the world remain babies all their lives,
their development being arrested like sun-dried seeds. Father is a magnificent
baby, who, instead of doe dozing contentedly like most of his neighbors,
suffers growing pains that are ready to usher in the dawn of a higher life.
But to come to our work, can you not induce father to engage in some
tract or mission or Sabbath-school enterprise that will satisfy his demands
for bodily and spiritual exercise? Can you not find him some thicket of
destitution worthy of his benevolence? Can you not convince him that the
whole world is full of work for the kind and willing heart? Or, if you
cannot urge him to undertake any independent charity, can you not place
him in correspondence with some Milwaukee or Chicago society where he would
find elbow room for all his importance. An earnest man like father, who
also has a little money, is a valuable acquisition to many societies of
a philanthropic kind, and I feel sure that if once fairly afloat from this
shoal of indolence upon which he now chafes, he would sail calmly the years
now remaining to him. At all events, tell mother and the girls, that whether
this side the sea or that, they need take no uneasiness concerning bread
. . . .
John Muir
Their efforts were successful. A new home was established in Portage, Wisconsin,
and from there Daniel Muir went alone on prolonged evangelistic trips to
Canada and parts of the central West. Laid low by old age and a broken
limb, he died in Kansas City, at the home of one of his daughters, in 1885.
His last years were calm and peaceful as John had foreseen. Eleven years
later his wife also followed him into the land of the leal.
Into this parental and ancestral background, sketched in its more significant
outlines, was born at Dunbar, Scotland, April 21st, 1838, the subject of
this biography. Fleeting glimpses of his earliest childhood reveal Johnny
Muir as a vivid, auburn-haired lad with an uncommonly keen and inquiring
pair of blue eyes. His boyhood in Scotland extended over only the first
eleven years of his life (1838-49), but the fifty and more pages which
he devotes to memories of these years in his autobiography reveal the deep
impression they made upon his mind. His school education began early before
he had completed his third year. But even before that time he had, like
his fellow Scotchman Hugh Miller, learned his letters from shop Signs across
the street. In this as in other matters Grandfather Gilrye was his earliest
teacher and guide.
Scotch pedagogical methods in those days were an uncompromising tyranny.
So much is clear from Muir's feeling allusions to the inevitable thrashing,
in school and at home, which promptly followed any failure to commit assigned
lessons to memory. The learning of a certain number of Bible verses every
day was a task which his father superimposed upon the school lessons, and
exacted with military precision. "By the time I was eleven years old,"
wrote the victim of this method, "I had about three-fourths of the Old
Testament and all of the New by heart and by sore flesh. I could recite
the New Testament from the beginning of Matthew to the end of Revelation
without a single stop." Records both written and oral testify to John's
phenomenal feats of memory in reciting chapters from the Bible and the
poetry of Robert Burns.
Whatever may be thought of the wisdom of this educational method, there
can be no doubt that it resulted in forming the boy's literary taste and
in giving him a rare training in the use of English undefiled. The dignity
and rich quality of his diction, and his arrestingly effective employment
of Biblical metaphors disclose the main sources of his literary power in
familiarity with the King James Version, the only one available in his
boyhood.
The severest kind of pedagogical weather was encountered when he left
the old Davel Brae school for the grammar school. Old Mungo Siddons, who
presided over the former, seems to have been a man possessed of human sympathies,
for he managed to make himself gratefully remembered for the gooseberries
and currants, at least, with which he sweetened the closing exercises when
vacation days arrived. But Mr. Lyon, the master of the grammar school,
was a disciplinarian of the most inflexible kind. "Under him," Muir writes,
"we had to get three lessons every day in Latin, three in French, and as
many in English, besides spelling, history, arithmetic, and geography.
Word lessons in particular, the wouldst-couldst-shouldst-have-loved kind,
were kept up, with much warlike thrashing, until I had committed the whole
of the French, Latin, and English grammars to memory, and in connection
with reading-lessons we were called on to recite parts of them with the
rules over and over again, as if all the regular and irregular incomprehensible
verb stuff was poetry. "
Some of the textbooks he used have survived the accidents of time and
travel and furnish illuminating examples of the severe demands that were
made upon children in the Dun bar grammar school. One of these is Willymot's
Selections
from the Colloquies of Corderius, which he began to study when he was
nine years old, and which would be a severe tax on the wits of most Freshmen
of our day. It must have seemed little less than mockery to the pupils
that the "Argumentum" of the very first "Colloquium" calls it an "exemplum
ad parvulos blande et comiter in schola tractandos, ne severitate disciplinae
absterreantur." "Kind and gentle treatment of youngsters lest they
be frightened away by severity of discipline"--that was no serious concern
of schoolmaster Lyon. "Old-fashioned Scotch teachers," wrote Muir in describing
his school days, "spent no time in seeking short roads to knowledge, or
in trying any of the new-fangled psychological methods so much in vogue
nowadays. There was nothing said about making the seats easy or the lessons
easy. We were simply driven point-blank against our books like soldiers
against the enemy, and sternly ordered 'Up and at 'em. Commit your lessons
to memory.' If we failed in any part, however slight, we were whipped;
for the grand, simple, all-sufficing Scotch discovery had been made that
there was a close connection between the skin and the memory, and that
irritating the skin excited the memory to any required degree."
Though John was compelled at this time to store his memory with many
things which in his mature judgment were mere "cinders and ashes," the
mental discipline at least was a permanent gain. His knowledge of French
was sufficient to open for him the treasures of French literature. A considerable
section of his library was composed of French works on travel, exploration,
and natural science. The Latin he had acquired so drastically from Corderius'
Colloquies
and Turner's Exercises to the Accidence, etc., proved useful in
botanical and paleontological studies. Besides, the habit, formed early,
of committing to memory choice passages from English literature was kept
up by him till far into middle life and was commended to his children as
a valuable means of education. In a letter to his daughter Wanda, on the
occasion of his first visit to Dunbar, forty-four years after he had left
his native town, he wrote: "You are now a big girl, almost a woman, and
you must mind your lessons and get in a good store of the best words of
the best people while your memory is retentive and then you will go through
life rich. Ask mother to give you lessons to commit to memory every day,
mostly the sayings of Christ in the gospels, and selections from the poets.
Find the hymn of praise in Paradise Lost, 'These are thy glorious
works, Parent of good, Almighty!' and learn it well."
If in these formal elements of John's early education profit and loss
were often doubtfully balanced, it was not so with the lessons he learned
from Nature. He would have agreed with Henry Adams that life was a series
of violent contrasts which gave to life their relative values. Winter and
summer, cold and heat, town and country, school and vacation, force and
freedom, marked two widely different modes of life and thought. What is
more, they all registered their effects in the sum total of what we call
education. On the one hand was the wintry, storm-beaten town with its restraint,
confinement, and school discipline; on the other, the country with its
penetrable hedges, daisied fields, bird-song, and nest hunting expeditions.
There, in particular, were skylarks and mavises, the most universally beloved
of all the birds of Scotland. John tells how he and his companions used
to stand for hours on a broad meadow near Dunbar listening to the singing
of the larks; or how they lay on their backs in competitive tests of keensightedness,
each trying to outdo the other in keeping a soaring singer in sight.
Among the sublimer aspects of Nature that made an indelible impression
upon the boy's mind were those of the stormy North Sea. Answering the letters
of some Los Angeles school children in 1904, he tells how the school which
they described brought to mind the two schools which he attended when he
was a boy in Scotland. "They," he wrote, "were still nearer the sea. One
of them stood so near that at high tide on stormy days the waves seemed
to be playing tag on our playground wall, running up the sandy shore and
perhaps just touching the base of the wall and running back. But sometimes
in wild storms the tops of the waves came flying over the wall into the
playground, while the finer spray, carried on the wild roaring flood, drenched
the schoolhouse itself and washed it fresh and clean. These great roaring
storms were glorious sights. But we were taught to pity the poor sailors,
for many ships were driven ashore on the stormy coast almost every year,
and many sailors drowned. From the highest part of the playground we could
see the ships sailing past, and often tried to guess whence they came,
where they were bound for, and what they were carrying." The numerous drawings
of ships that decorate the fly-leaves of John's schoolbooks may be regarded
as tell-tale of what he saw from the windows and the playground of the
Davel Brae school.
But there were many other thrilling experiences for the by-hours of
a boy like Johnny Muir. He drank in by every pore the sombre wildness of
the rugged seashore about his native town, explored the pools among the
rocks where shells, seaweeds, eels, and crabs excited his childish wonder
when the tide was low, and found adventurous recreation by climbing the
craggy headlands. Yet most impressive of all was the roar of North Sea
tempests that, mingling sea and sky, hurled mountainous waves against the
black headland crowned by the ruins of Dunbar Castle. All this he saw and
felt and explored with intense delight.
How ineffaceably these scenes and early experiences engraved themselves
upon his memory is revealed by a passage in one of his notebooks. He was
a day's journey from the Gulf of Mexico, on his thousand-mile walk through
the South, when he suddenly caught a whiff of the sea, borne upon the wind.
It was "the first sea-breeze," he writes, "that had touched me in twenty
years. I was plodding along with my satchel and plants, leaning wearily
forward . . . when suddenly I felt the salt air, and before I had time
to think, a whole flood of long-dominant associations rolled in upon me.
The Firth of Forth, the Bass Rock, Dunbar Castle, and the winds and rocks
and hills came upon the wings of that wind, and stood in as clear and sudden
light as a landscape flashed upon the view by a blaze of lightning in a
dark night."
It is not surprising that John Muir, reflecting upon his Scotch boyhood,
should in his later years have reamed to regard the natural environment
of Dunbar as a source of a valuable part of his early education. The heroic
origins of the town are lost in dim traditions that reach back at least
a thousand years. Not the least of its romantic associations are represented
by such names as Black Agnes of Dunbar, Joanna Beaufort, Earl Bothwell
and Mary, Queen of Scots. Just southeast of the town was fought the Battle
of Dunbar in which Cromwell won a decisive victory over Leslie. All this,
no less than the legends, superstitions, and folklore, which clung like
moss about the surviving ruins of other days, could not but exert a strong
influence upon the imagination of this active-minded boy.
But the fields and woods exerted by far the strongest attraction upon
him. In spite of sure and severe punishments he and his companions regularly
managed to slip away into the country to indulge their love of that open
"wildness" which, he says, "was ever sounding in our ears. Nature saw to
it that besides school lessons and church lessons some of her own lessons
should be reamed, perhaps with a view to the time when we should be called
to wander in wildness to our hearts' content. Oh, the blessed enchantment
of those Saturday runaways in the prime of spring! How our young wondering
eyes revelled in the sunny, breezy glory of the hills and sky, every particle
of us thrilling and tingling with the bees and glad birds and glad streams!
Kings may be blessed; we were glorious, we were free,--school cares and
scoldings, heart thrashings and flesh thrashings alike, were forgotten
in the fullness of Nature's glad wildness. These were my first excursions,--the
beginnings of lifelong wanderings."
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