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SOT TO A NUSRY RHYME

James Russell Lowell

[The incident which gave rise to the debate satirized in the following

verses was the unsuccessful attempt of Drayton and Sayres to give

freedom to seventy men and women, fellow-beings and fellow-Christians.

Had Tripoli, instead of Washington, been the scene of this undertaking,

the unhappy leaders in it would have been as secure of the theoretic as

they now are of the practical part of martyrdom. I question whether the

Dey of Tripoli is blessed with a District Attorney so benighted as ours

at the seat of government. Very fitly is he named Key, who would allow

himself to be made the instrument of locking the door of hope against

sufferers in such a cause. Not all the waters of the ocean can cleanse

the vile smutch of the jailer's fingers from off that little Key.

_Ahenea clavis_, a brazen Key indeed!

 

Mr. Calhoun, who is made the chief speaker in this burlesque, seems to

think that the light of the nineteenth century is to be put out as soon

as he tinkles his little cow-bell curfew. Whenever slavery is touched,

he sets up his scarecrow of dissolving the Union. This may do for the

North, but I should conjecture that something more than a

pumpkin-lantern is required to scare manifest and irretrievable Destiny

out of her path. Mr. Calhoun cannot let go the apron-string of the Past.

The Past is a good nurse, but we must be weaned from her sooner or

later, even though, like Plotinus, we should run home from school to ask

the breast, after we are tolerably well-grown youths. It will not do for

us to hide our faces in her lap, whenever the strange Future holds out

her arms and asks us to come to her.

 

But we are all alike. We have all heard it said, often enough, that

little boys must not play with fire; and yet, if the matches be taken

away from us, and put out of reach upon the shelf, we must needs get

into our little corner, and scowl and stamp and threaten the dire

revenge of going to bed without our supper. The world shall stop till we

get our dangerous plaything again. Dame Earth, meanwhile, who has more

than enough household matters to mind, goes bustling hither and thither

as a hiss or a sputter tells her that this or that kettle of hers is

boiling over, and before bedtime we are glad to eat our porridge cold,

and gulp down our dignity along with it.

 

Mr. Calhoun has somehow acquired the name of a great statesman, and, if

it be great statesmanship to put lance in rest and run a tilt at the

Spirit of the Age with the certainty of being next moment hurled neck

and heels into the dust amid universal laughter, he deserves the title.

He is the Sir Kay of our modern chivalry. He should remember the old

Scandinavian mythus. Thor was the strongest of gods, but he could not

wrestle with Time, nor so much as lift up a fold of the great snake

which bound the universe together; and when he smote the Earth, though

with his terrible mallet, it was but as if a leaf had fallen. Yet all

the while it seemed to Thor that he had only been wrestling with an old

woman, striving to lift a cat, and striking a stupid giant on the head.

 

And in old times, doubtless, the giants _were_ stupid, and there was no

better sport for the Sir Launcelots and Sir Gawains than to go about

cutting off their great blundering heads with enchanted swords. But

things have wonderfully changed. It is the giants, nowadays, that have

the science and the intelligence, while the chivalrous Don Quixotes of

Conservatism still cumber themselves with the clumsy armor of a bygone

age. On whirls the restless globe through unsounded time, with its

cities and its silences, its births and funerals, half light, half

shade, but never wholly dark, and sure to swing round into the happy

morning at last. With an involuntary smile, one sees Mr. Calhoun letting

slip his pack-thread cable with a crooked pin at the end of it to anchor

South Carolina upon the bank and shoal of the Past.--H.W.]