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Galton
Boston. February 22, 1907
Last night I began reading through Father's diary. Much of it is dull
and lifeless, concerning precisely which concoctions he ate for
breakfast and which fruit-picking or canning "bees" he attended that
day. From what I could decipher, this dreary artifact consists largely
of trifles: observations on the weather, the travels of other community
members, and similar drivel. To be fair, the man is an impassioned
writer, even when he speaks of the trivial (although, rural Vermonter at
heart, he is sadly unschooled in the finer points of grammar and
syntax). He writes as if he has been in the habit of documenting his
presence on the earth from his earliest days, and I must admit that
there is something engaging, almost poignant, in his assumption that
these tedious details would actually matter to anyone, anywhere, or any
time. Frankly, there is even something inspirational about his ingenuous
self-importance, for despite my disparagements, I now find myself
embarking on a journal of my own. On a more frustrating note, Father's
handwriting is far from impeccable, and a good deal of his thoughts are
recorded in wholly illegible scrawls, or a baffling non-alphanumeric
code, of which I can make neither heads nor tails. Fortunately, Alice's
daughter Hope, who plans to make a history out of this opus, is schooled
in the code. Presumably she will have better luck finding something of
significance in it--should indeed it contain anything of significance.
Hope called on us after supper tonight, and I bestowed upon her the
leather-bound diary, still coated with a bit of attic dust and cobweb
debris, in spite of my best intentions. Rather than chide me for my
neglect of this cherished tome, this remarkable young woman nearly shook
with glee as I held it out to her. Indeed, I briefly thought that in her
happiness she would throw her arms about my neck, but I found equally
gratifying her more proper display--that slightly gap-toothed guileless
grin and a toss of curls that put me in mind of her mother so many years
ago. How odd to think that the same Alice Johnson is most certainly a
graying matron by now. Indeed, she must be safely past fifty, since I
remember her as a ripe incarnation of feminine perfection when I was
still a raw lad in the East Room, and she occasionally helped care for
us. Her daughter, of course, is a young lady herself these days, perhaps
as aged as twenty, but even older in visage and seriousness of intent.
This mature demeanor, I am convinced, reflects her breeding. She towed
me into her gaze with a confidence rarely found in the young women of
today and assured me soberly that by giving her the diary I was making a
contribution to history. I suspect she is right--and in more ways than
one--for had it not been for her original notes explaining the
importance of these old diaries, it is doubtful that I would be putting
pen to paper myself at this moment, creating my own crude historical
record. I am quite sure that it was her visible pleasure and her heroic
words that shattered my final piece of resistance. And so it is that I
sit here at 2 a.m., broken in spirit and fatigued in body after a day of
defeat, but still hunching over a dimly lit desk and neglecting my dear
wife Mary Elizabeth who sleeps fitfully across the room, tossing from
one side to the other and snorting wantonly at each turn.
However much I will rue this mad scribbling at sunrise, tonight I am
determined, determined and glad. I am glad above all to be rebuilding a
discipline in myself. This discipline was fostered in me as a youth,
and, perhaps too, draws upon that carefully bred character of mine to
instill what I now know is a vital habit. Too, I have come to understand
that this record-keeping, so routine amongst my predecessors, is what
will keep me alive when my physical body is no longer present. It is
what will bring a sense of the world I inhabit to the generations to
come, and, perhaps even more important, it is what will keep my focus on
the fundamental when I feel overwhelmed by the sordidness, brutality,
peevishness, misery, and sheer bestiality of my more active, less
reflective existence.
Ah, those are strong terms to use, rather arrogant I dare say, but
they sadly characterize the scene to which I bore witness earlier this
evening, before my happier visit with Hope. Paying a house-call to the
South End at the closing of this dark winter afternoon, I was forced to
stand by as my patient, poor Mr. L., finally succumbed, delirious and
incoherent, to his long illness (my lengthy attendance at such in part
excusing my inability to clean up the diary for Hope as intended). To be
frank, this man was no more than an animal at the end. We--all of us,
and myself no less than the blissfully ignorant family--helplessly
watched him slip away, wasted and wracked by this possibly treatable but
certainly incurable scourge.
When I witness such misery, I am still sometimes tempted to resort to
heroics, if only to fill the family with some small and temporary sense
of power. People expect this effort of their physician. My growing years
of experience convince me, however, that, most of our well-intentioned
efforts--whether they involve cruelly injecting quarts of near boiling
water into the poor patient's sinews or sweating him out with noxious
mercury vapors--are "cures" even worse than the disease itself. Our
brilliant scientists know now that a germ, a noxious spirochete, lies at
the heart of this disease, and that we cannot do anything lasting for
the patient until we can destroy that germ. But, ah, how to do so? If I
but had the answer, I would be a rich man I'm afraid.
That is not the worst of it. Even more gruesome than the patient's
physical suffering was the lying and pretense that has accompanied the
entire illness--and here on the deathbed was the final preposterous
conclusion of everybody's charade. I wanted to puke up my guts when I
had to look that pretty and devoted little wife in the eye again and
again and tell her that her husband was dying of a rare and incurable
blood disease, something like the sleeping sickness of Africa is what I
said. Coward that I am, I promised her that her husband was a fine and
loyal man, one who had simply been dealt a bad hand by fate. Balderdash!
Someday if I develop the guts for it I will write an article for my
colleagues denouncing this ridiculous and counterproductive posturing.
Of course, I'd have to keep my emotions under control, use the required
high faluting language and all that, but I would do whatever was
necessary to make my point.
February 24, 1907
Mary Elizabeth insisted that we invite young Hope Wilton for supper
tomorrow, as she believes no young lady should have to spend her
evenings alone in a strange city. I assured her that Hope was no
ordinary lass, but one on a mission, and that surely she had some other
engagement. Furthermore, I reminded her that Hope is staying with the
Youngs, old family friends who not only return to Kenwood regularly and
have thus known her from the cradle, but most certainly are keeping her
entertained and occupied. Still, my Mary--who is irrepressibly
charitable and also undoubtedly curious about the world I come from--can
be just as determined in her own way. Thus, Hope will be joining us
tomorrow. I wonder if she has found any items of interest in Father's
journal.
February 25, 1907
Hope came for supper this evening (Hannah served a most fine leg of
lamb, one of her better efforts) and told us all about her project. She
is helping her mother (who, it seems, has become an accomplished lady of
letters, having written several books for children) to compile a history
of the Oneida community. This history will essentially tell itself
through the diaries and letters of residents. It is a marvelous project,
and I applaud her for her role in it. The community was eccentric, there
can be no denying, and it apparently brought about great pain and
suffering to some individuals (as Mother Lily reminded our family many a
time), but it was a remarkable enterprise in its own day, and one which
reflected a fineness of the human spirit well worth preserving. As I
suspected, Father was hardly alone in keeping a regular record of his
activities, although not all of the descendents or former residents are
as willing as I was to open up their personal histories--Hope complained
bitterly that, even today, the society at large is not fully prepared to
hear some of the more intimate details, particularly those involving the
peculiar social arrangements of our forebears. I told Hope that she
didn't know how right she was, and how I daily fought the same
conspiracy of silence when it came to educating my patients and their
families about social diseases, not to mention reaching the young men at
large in this city whose escapades today will inevitably wreak havoc on
their future wives and babes. Because of this rampant ignorance--and the
accompanying self-inflicted blindness to the truth--we cannot instruct
the young in how to gratify a controllable desire. Thus, they go
blithely out into the world, sowing wild oats and in the process
introducing venereal infection into a marriage and polluting the next
generation, yea the entire race. I explained to young Hope that we live
under a double standard of sexual living to this day that undermines all
sense of what is right and just. It is a testament to the Oneida
upbringing that an unmarried young woman such as Hope could listen to my
rantings with obvious understanding, sympathy, and--most striking of
all--not a single blush or other sign of false demureness.
Feb. 28, 1907
Ever since our supper the other night, I find myself thinking of
Hope--and thinking of her frequently, perhaps as much as every hour. Not
in a carnal sense, I hasten to add, but in a mysterious, somewhat
bittersweet sense. I suppose this is because thoughts of her regal long
nose, steadfast eyes, and fawn-colored curls (which, despite her modish
dress, she keeps clipped just under her chin in the community style) put
me back in mind of my childhood, I mean the early part before Father and
Mother Lily took me off to Boston. There is something about the gestures
and intensity of this woman--the way she punctuates her comments with
her chin, the way her eyes seem to light up as she speaks, even the way
she pulls herself up to a stand in one fluid swoop--that fill me with
longing for the simplicity, yearnings for Mother, of course, and then a
return too of those old questions that in my better moments I have
learned to put aside.
Something else also occurred to me as I stared upon this wonder of a
woman:: Could any of Hope's documents hold my answer, the answer to the
question I have tried so hard and so long to work out of me? I realize
that this is juvenile of me, not to mention pointless, for what, after
all, does it matter? Am I not who I am no matter what my source? And,
indeed, believing Father to be Father--which is nothing more than the
official line--is positively beneficial to me, for I am a stirpicult, a
racially pure gem, and it befits me to believe that he was my sire.
Certainly my suitably distinguished role in the world, my adequate
mental power, and my generally strong constitution attest to this
breeding. My past relationship, my memories of "Father," would all be
pat and simple if I simply believed what is easiest to believe.
I remind myself of all this, and yet I cannot deny a small burning
part of me, impossible to extinguish, that secretly hopes for something
more. What was supposed to have happened is all well and good,
undoubtedly better than anything I can imagine, and yet that tiny part
of me wishes that I came of something other, indeed wishes that I was
the product of the purest love rather than the purest science. Mother
did not love Father in any but the most religious of senses, that she
made abundantly clear to me before I could even read, but she bore me
because she was a servant of God, a servant of the community, and had
signed a pact to that effect at the request of Mr. Noyes. She told me
this with great pride. She hoped I would be as great a servant of the
community and of the race as she had been, and what a great reward she
had for her service! And yet I know she had other lovers before Father,
pure and true lovers, including Uncle Peter who was always so helpful in
showing me how to set traps and Uncle Charles who took me on his lap and
taught me my letters. Father would always pay my way (even when he was
struggling so back in Syracuse) and never shirked from his paternal duty
to me, but when he looked at me his eyes never sparkled the way they did
when he looked at Natie, Harriet, or his other mongrels. Perhaps it was
because they were so much younger than I, so much needier than I, but I
always suspected it was because they, unlike me, were products of love.
Hope returns to Syracuse early next week, and I think I will call on her
just once more before she goes and ask if I might have a look through
Father's diary myself.
March 1, 1907
It is odd that I never once thought to read any of Father's old
papers before Hope contact me, never even thought to search through
those boxes I took from their home after Mother Lily passed. I did thumb
through a few pages of the diary when I uncovered it at Hope's request,
of course, but so much was in faded pencil or some kind of
indecipherable code, that I was more than happy to put it into Hope's
infinitely more competent hands.
Even had I known of the diary's existence before Hope appeared, too,
I doubt I would have had the least degree of interest in reading it.
History has never had much of a hold on me--perhaps that is an
affliction of the young--and, truly, I never had time for such
indulgences. Indeed, if it hadn't been for Mary Elizabeth's insistence
that housing the whole collection of papers and other rubbish--the two
of them having had no fine possessions--was our duty to the future, the
whole kit and caboodle would have been burnt long ago. It was clear from
the beginning that none of the other surviving offspring would have any
interest in such bric-a-brac. Harriet was, and still is, far too
overwhelmed by her ramshackle quarters, rambunctious brood, and
ever-absent husband to shelter such memorabilia, and there is
considerable debate about whether their cherished Nathan ever removed
himself from the bottle long enough to comprehend the news of his
mother's demise.
Fortunately, our attic is ample, and it was little problem to haul
these boxes up there for the sake of encumbering future generations. But
reading the diary? Frankly, I had no idea there was a diary at all, not
until Hope asked me to take fifteen minutes to go through the boxes of
sheet music and hymnals. She felt there was a good chance of finding
some kind of journal--so many of the community members kept them--and of
course she proved correct. The sad truth of it is that I never thought
of that sad little man as much of a thinker, and even when Hope made me
aware that he might have kept a record of his life, my immediate
reaction was that it couldn't possibly be much more than a list of where
to buy violin strings at a good cost and the like. When he was living,
he was nothing but an annoyance to me, someone to answer quickly and
politely--yes, I'm studying this now, no, I do not plan to live at
home--and then to escape, on to my own life and own plans. He and Mother
Lily were old and set in their ways, caught up in the seamy escapades of
their livelihoods and the continual illnesses of their sickly and
dwindling brood, pinching pennies at every opportunity, moaning
endlessly about their final illnesses and yet refusing the best of care
and causing me great embarrassment with colleagues because of their
needless parsimony.
Now that he is gone and unapproachable, however, I find myself
burning with the desire to know what went through my father's head, to
learn who he was and what made him do what he did, to see if what he
suffered can somehow make my own sufferings any easier. What a sad fact
of life that such yearnings only seem to arise when the source of their
satisfaction has long departed from this world.
March 3, 1907
It occurred to me that Hope could very well have something from Mama
too. Many of the community members kept diaries, after all, and Mama was
one of the more literate among them from everything I have been told. My
thinking is that if Mama did indeed leave a diary, if I could only read
her account of what happened in the year before my birth, I could put
the nagging question about Father to rest once and for all.
I don't lay awake nights wondering about this anymore, and, indeed,
haven't done so since the age of fifteen or sixteen. However, during
that rather rebellious time in my life, these matters weighed on me
heavily, and ever since Hope has joined our life they seem to be
returning more and more. In those earlier--and tortured--days, I
distinctly remember lying in bed for hours, pondering the unspoken
possibilities, imagining the world differently than it had been
presented to me, and all the while dreading the six a.m. whoops and
cries of Natie, Gert, or one of the babies, dreading too the inevitable
scolding from my teachers for drifting off during class and the price to
be paid on my examinations. When baby Thomas died, I was certain that my
evil-thoughts lay at the root of it. I also was convinced that it was
only a matter of time until I myself would be punished by a vengeful God
because I wished that the stern and self-righteous man sleeping in the
next bedroom was not my true Father and that I could go back to Oneida
and reunite with Uncle C. or Uncle P., one of whom would turn out to be
my true flesh and blood sire. At the same time, of course, I knew that
affiliating myself with these lesser examples of humanity, both of whom
had been considered unfit for propagation by Mr. Noyes, would deprive me
of my privileged status, a status which I'm ashamed to say I lauded over
my half-breed younger siblings at every possible opportunity. But I felt
a deep need to know the truth back then--and also, I suppose, carried a
secret puerile hankering, idealistic and romantic, to believe that I too
was the product of love and passion rather than scientific planning. |