Thatcher concludes that Marshall"s just and balanced treatment of his subject is not due to a care for his own reputation: "We are all so full of agitation and effervescence on political topicks, that a man, who keeps his temper, can hardly gain a hearing." Indeed, he complains of Marshall"s fairness: he writes as a spectator, instead of as "one, who has himself descended into the arena ... and is yet red with the wounds which he gave, and smarting with those which his enemies inflicted in return"; but the reviewer charges that these volumes are full of "barbarisms" and "grammatical impurities," "newspaper slang," and "unmeaning verbiage."

The Reverend Timothy Flint thought that Marshall"s work displayed more intellect and labor than "eloquence and interest."[740] George Bancroft, reviewing Sparks"s "Washington," declared that "all that is contained in Marshall is meagre and incomplete in comparison."[741] Even the British critics were not so harsh as the _New York Evening Post_, which p.r.o.nounced the judgment that if the biography "bears any traces of its author"s uncommon powers of mind, it is in the depths of dulness which he explored."[742]

The British critics were, of course, unsparing. The _Edinburgh Review_ called Marshall"s work "unpardonably deficient in all that const.i.tutes the soul and charm of biography.... We look in vain, through these stiff and countless pages, for any sketch or anecdote that might fix a distinguishing feature of private character in the memory.... What seemed to pa.s.s with him for dignity, will, by his reader, be p.r.o.nounced dullness and frigidity."[743] _Blackwood"s Magazine_ a.s.serted that Marshall"s "Life of Washington" was "a great, heavy book.... One gets tired and sick of the very name of Washington before he gets half through these ... prodigious ... octavos."[744]

Marshall was somewhat compensated for the criticisms of his work by an event which soon followed the publication of his last volume. On August 29, 1809, he was elected a corresponding member of the Ma.s.sachusetts Historical Society. In a singularly graceful letter to John Eliot, corresponding secretary of the Society at that time, Marshall expresses his thanks and appreciation.[745]

As long as he lived, Marshall worried over his biography of Washington.

When anybody praised it, he was as appreciative as a child. In 1827, Archibald D. Murphey eulogized Marshall"s volumes in an oration, a copy of which he sent to the Chief Justice, who thanks Murphey, and adds: "That work was hurried into a world with too much precipitation, but I have lately given it a careful examination and correction. Should another edition appear, it will be less fatiguing, and more worthy of the character which the biographer of Washington ought to sustain."[746]

Toilsomely he kept at his self-imposed task of revision. In 1816, Bushrod Washington wrote Wayne to send Marshall "the last three volumes in sheets (the two first he has) that he may devote this winter to their correction."[747]

When, five years later, the Chief Justice learned that Wayne was actually considering the risk of bringing out a new edition, Marshall"s delight was unbounded. "It is one of the most desirable objects I have in this life to publish a corrected edition of that work. I would not on any terms, could I prevent it, consent that one other set of the first edition should be published."[748]

Finally, in 1832, the revised biography was published. Marshall clung to the first volume, which was issued separately under the t.i.tle "History of the American Colonies." The remaining four volumes were, seemingly, reduced to two; but they were so closely printed and in such comparatively small type that the real condensation was far less than it appeared to be. The work was greatly improved, however, and is to this day the fullest and most trustworthy treatment of that period, from the conservative point of view.[749]

Fortunately for Marshall, the work required of him on the Bench gave him ample leisure to devote to his literary venture. During the years he consumed in writing his "Life of Washington" he wrote fifty-six opinions in cases decided in the Circuit Court at Richmond, and in twenty-seven cases determined by the Supreme Court. Only four of them[750] are of more than casual interest, and but three of them[751] are of any historical consequence. All the others deal with commercial law, practice, rules of evidence, and other familiar legal questions. In only one case, that of Marbury _vs._ Madison, was he called upon to deliver an opinion that affected the inst.i.tutions and development of the Nation.

FOOTNOTES:

[592] See vol. II, 210-12, of this work.

[593] See _infra_; also vol. II, 211, of this work.

[594] Marshall to James M. Marshall, April 1, 1804. MS.

[595] Marshall to Peters, Oct. 12, 1815, Peters MSS. Pa. Hist. Soc.

[596] Several persons were ambitious to write the life of Washington.

David Ramsay and Mason Locke Weems had already done so. Noah Webster was especially keen to undertake the task, and it was unfortunate that he was not chosen to do it.

[597] Washington to Wayne, April 11, 1800, Dreer MSS. Pa. Hist. Soc.

[598] _Ib._

[599] Bushrod Washington to Wayne, Dec. 11, 1801, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[600] Wayne to Bushrod Washington, Dec. 10, 1801, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[601] Bushrod Washington to Wayne, Dec. 11, 1801, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[602] The division was to be equal between Marshall and Washington.

[603] Bushrod Washington to Wayne, Dec. 11, 1801, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[604] "Articles of Agreement" between C. P. Wayne and Bushrod Washington, Sept. 22, 1802. (Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._) Marshall"s name does not appear in the contract, Washington having attended to all purely business details of the transaction.

[605] Wayne to Bushrod Washington, May 16, 1802, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[606] Jefferson to Barlow, May 3, 1802, _Works_: Ford, IX, 372.

[607] The "Anas," _Works_: Ford, I, 163-430, see _infra_. The "Anas" was Jefferson"s posthumous defense. It was arranged for publication as early as 1818, but was not given to the public until after his death. It first appeared in the edition of Jefferson"s works edited by his grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph. "It is the most precious melange of all sorts of scandals you ever read." (Story to Fay, Feb. 5, 1830, Story, II, 33.)

[608] Bushrod Washington to Wayne, Nov. 19, 1802, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[609] Wayne to Marshall, Feb. 17, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[610] Weems is one of the most entertaining characters in American history. He was born in Maryland, and was one of a family of nineteen children. He was educated in London as a physician, but abandoned medicine for the Church, and served for several years as rector of two or three little Episcopal churches in Maryland and ministered occasionally at Pohick Church, in Truro Parish (sometimes called Mount Vernon Parish), Virginia. In this devout occupation he could not earn enough to support his very large family. So he became a professional book agent--the greatest, perhaps, of that useful fraternity.

On horseback he went wherever it seemed possible to sell a book, his samples in his saddlebags. He was a natural orator, a born entertainer, an expert violinist; and these gifts he turned to good account in his book-selling activities.

If a political meeting was to be held near any place he happened upon, Weems would hurry to it, make a speech, and advertise his wares. A religious gathering was his joy; there he would preach and exhort--and sell books. Did young people a.s.semble for merrymaking, Weems was in his element, and played the fiddle for the dancing. If he arrived at the capital of a State when the Legislature was in session, he would contrive to be invited to address the Solons--and procure their subscriptions.

[611] Weems probably knew more of the real life of the country, from Pennsylvania southward, than any other one man; and he thoroughly understood American tastes and characteristics. To this is due the unparalleled success of his _Life of Washington_. In addition to this absurd but engaging book, Weems wrote the _Life of Gen. Francis Marion_ (1805); the _Life of Benjamin Franklin_ (1817); and the _Life of William Penn_ (1819). He was also the author of several temperance pamphlets, the most popular of which was the _Drunkard"s Looking Gla.s.s_. Weems died in 1825.

Weems"s _Life of Washington_ still enjoys a good sale. It has been one of the most widely purchased and read books in our history, and has profoundly influenced the American conception of Washington. To it we owe the grotesque and wholly imaginary stories of young Washington and the cherry tree, the planting of lettuce by his father to prove to the boy the designs of Providence, and other anecdotes that make that intensely human founder of the American Nation an impossible and intolerable prig.

The only biography of Weems is _Parson Weems_, by Lawrence C. Wroth, a mere sketch, but trustworthy and entertaining.

[612] Weems to Wayne, Dec. 10, 1802, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[613] Same to same, Dec. 14, 1802, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[614] Weems to Wayne, Dec. 17, 1802, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[615] Same to same, Dec. 22, 1802, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[616] Same to same, April 2, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[617] Wayne to Bushrod Washington, Jan. 23, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[618] Weems to Wayne, April 8, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[619] Same to same, April 18, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[620] Bushrod Washington, like the other Federalists, would not call his political opponents by their true party name, Republicans: he styled them "democrats," the most opprobrious term the Federalists could then think of, excepting only the word "Jacobins." (See vol. II, 439, of this work.)

[621] Washington to Wayne, March 1, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[622] Same to same. March 23, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

[623] Wayne to Washington, Oct. 23, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._

An interesting sidelight on the commercial methods of the times is displayed by a circular which Wayne sent to his agents calling for money from subscribers to Marshall"s _Life of Washington_: "The remittance may be made through the Post Office, and should any danger be apprehended, you can cut a Bank note in two parts and send each by separate mails."

(Wayne"s Circular, Feb. 17, 1803, Dreer MSS. _loc. cit._)

[624] This list was published in the first edition. It is a good directory of the most prominent Federalists and of the leading Republican politicians of the time. "T. Jefferson, P.U.S." and each member of his Cabinet subscribed; Marshall himself was a subscriber for his own book, and John C. Calhoun, a student at Yale College at the time, was another. In the cities most of the lawyers took Marshall"s book.

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