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What
an Attic!
April
1995
by Joseph W. Reed '54, '61PhD
Joseph
W. Reed '54, '61PhD, is chairman of the trustees of the Yale Library
Associates and a professor of English and American Studies at Wesleyan
University. This piece is adapted from his catalog essay for the
"Things" exhibition, which was on view at the Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library from April 21 to June 30, 1995.
The
exhibition at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library opening
this month is unlike any the institution has ever mounted. "Things"
is a selection of the hundreds of artifacts -- some precious, some
just peculiar -- that have come to Yale over the centuries. The curator
of the show reports on the curious process of rummaging in one of
the nation's most extraordinary storehouses.
"Things"
is not a tribute to a literary or historical figure, an anniversary
talk, or a revisionist view.
The exhibition is of things a library collects, things that accrue
to a library rather than what its representatives actively seek
for it. I think it proves a point: Institutions have a life of their
own, and great institutions have a very full, willful, and sometimes
unexpected life.
Leibniz, advising Peter
the Great on what and how to collect, emphasized the pleasures of
plenitude and scope: "Such a cabinet should contain all significant
things and rarities created by nature and man. Foreign works to
be acquired should include diverse books, instruments, curiousities,
and rarities. In short, all that could enlighten and please the
eye. It is absolutely essential that they should be such as to serve
not only as objects of general curiousity, but also as a means to
the perfection of the arts and sciences."
Connoisseurs who assembled
"cabinets" in the 18th century and earlier had standards,
tastes, and organization systems different from our own. They wanted
to serve the curiosity of mankind, but in doing so they wanted to
omit nothing, even if the immediate use for which a particular object
was saved might be unknown at the time. Twentieth-century librarians
have become more systematic, but they have never lost that first
lovely agnosticism which holds that they (or their system) might
not yet know everything, might not yet know the use, the beauty,
or the delight that this thing might offer.
This exhibition had
its inception in 1956, when Donald Gallup and I put together in
the Sterling Library near the old Rare Book Room an exhibition of
objects for a staff holiday party. Many things that were in those
cases are in this show, although I lament several that couldn't
be found: a bit of submarine cable cut "under galling fire"
in Cienfugos, Cuba, during the Spanish-American War; a piece of
shrapnel that hit Evarts Tracy's tin hat in World War I; and William
Howard Taft's underpants, removed from his massive person during
a freshman rush.
Some of these things
were acquired by omnivorous collectors because they couldn't stop
themselves. Some were stolen from Yale by undergraduates who, later
growing remorseful as alumni, eventually gave them back. Only God
knows how some of these things got here. But here they are: hair,
apparel, crockery shards saved from a dish-throwing riot in Commons,
jewelry (a cameo belonging to George Eliot), weaponry, pieces of
the True Cross (of whatever religious persuasion), scraps of flags,
splinters of ironclads, a feather of a pet parrot, pictures of pets,
banners and chairs and trowels, Walt Whitman's last spectacles,
bricks and pieces of bricks, dental casts, and rubber fingertips.
A piece of the bullet that killed Lord Nelson. A pie plate from
the Frisbee Bakery of New Haven, later remade in a commercial form
as the Frisbee to become even more powerful than the hula hoop in
our culture. A fragment of the Haymarket Bomb. Awards for this,
for that, for the other: Medals of Freedom, a watch given by a czar
to a tenor, another given by an orchestra to a pianist. A bronzed
baby shoe. Pull toys.
These
things tend to be hard to find on the shelves;
their cataloging is less sure than that of books, because, hard
to classify, they are even harder to shelve. Sterling Memorial Library's
Department of Manuscripts and Archives (from whose hoard much of
the exhibition is drawn) has a system based on a classification
of things somewhat surer than the way much of the Beinecke material
is stashed. A show like this depends on the collective memory of
a dozen curators and past curators, but it still necessitates a
lot of list-reading and catalog-card turning. One object I never
would have found had I not read lists was "Snuffbox with names
of students (1861-2) stolen from an instructor in the President's
Lecture Room by a Freshman [William H. Sagel, Class of 1865]. It
was a device for calling men up to recite. By picking a man's [name]
out of the box the instructor established a random method for recitations.
The students preferred a predicted responsibility." (Or, rather,
a predictable one.)
Such things sit in our
wondering gaze (and later in our belief) like flies in amber, or,
to select an object from the show to use as metaphor, like a baby
shoe in bronze -- the one in the show fit the daughter of Peter Newell,
author of The Hole Book and The Slant Book. I always thought the
fad for having infant footgear bronzed reached its apex in the 1940s.
Yet this metal bootie could be dated no later than 1891. That Gertrude
Stein wore waistcoats I suppose we were all dimly aware. That they
were as lovely as the waistcoats in the exhibition perhaps we didn't
realize.
We are not prepared
for the sentiment that some keepsakes arouse, even if we did not
ourselves put them aside. Some of these things, before they ended
up at Yale, were sought after and acquired by somebody. Collectors
intent on finding and keeping every scrap of an author's literary
canon, or hot on the traces of a historical figure's spoor, found
they could not resist some piece of reality -- call it a piece of the
True Cross, or three-dimensional hard-stuff. Collectors want first-class
relics but will take almost any class of relic they are offered.
Relatives, cleaning house after a famous or near-famous death, cannot
bear to throw out his glasses, her wedding dress, this mailing tube
that once held his honorary degree from Princeton, so they phone
up Yale or just send it along. Graduates when dining out hear about
some piece of historical detritus and of course feel Yale must have
it. ("They never had anything that wonderful when I was at
Yale.") Distinguished visitors to Woodbridge Hall bring formal
gifts to the President of the University, and he (either because
he remembers the rule of the U.S. Congress that a gift must be returned
unless it can be drunk, smoked, or used up in one day, or because
he wants to find somebody else to cherish it) sees to it that it
is sent to the Beinecke or to Manuscripts and Archives with a nice
note. Or they get it by transfer from another library. Public collections
are like surviving relatives: In deaccessioning this flag or that
bust they think which ought to be the next institution to cherish
it. Yale often fills the bill.
High
on the list of relics in this exhibition is hair --
Alfred Lord Tennyson's and Lady Tennyson's (snipped on their wedding
day), John Keats's, a lock of Lord Byron's owned by the Elizabethan
Club. Indeed, of Yale's superior collection of hair it is difficult
to say enough. It falls readily into categories: most disgusting,
that of Major John Andre, the British spy whose corpse was
dug up 40 years after his burial and a hank of his hair sent by
his son to Benjamin Silliman, the youngest man ever to attain the
full professorate at Yale. The lock of Napoleon's hair was taken
from his corpse and bound by Sangorski and Sutcliffe into a volume
of St. Helena memoirs.
Hair, even bought hair,
has status similar to that of a first-class relic: a piece of a
saint. Things that could not rise to first- or second-class relic
status, or rather things that had been denied the newly magical
touch of a deceased blessed by one or another Muse, were nevertheless
gathered by enthusiasts because of "associative value."
By touching such artifacts one might somehow come closer to past
greatness. These things were sometimes little removed from souvenir-shop
horrors. It has been said, perhaps hyperbolically, that there are
enough fragments of the True Cross to build a new ark for Noah,
but think of the souvenir barrels made of the oak from Lord Nelson's
flagship HMS Victory, turned out anew every time an old timber of
the creaking antique is replicated by a new one: the rotting timber
is not carted away but sent to the lathe to be made into little
barrels for Americans (in many ways the modern equivalent of earnest
Victorians) to cart home with them.
One rule for this exhibition
from the outset was that what forms the bulk of most other exhibitions
at the Beinecke -- words, or rather, things with words on them, pictures
that are documents -- would have to be eliminated. Such an attempt
to remove the literal from a collection that embraces the literal
is not easy and was, of course, not entirely successful; a few words
remain in the show. There is still a sign from the days of compulsory
chapel, an ambulance certificate for Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas,
a desperate message written on cigarette paper by "Chinese"
Gordon when he was besieged at Khartoum (from Robert Louis Stevenson's
collection), a photo album put together by a doomed Czarina, and
autobiographical drawings of the great Lakota warrior Sitting Bull.
And musical memorabilia -- enough
to make a rhythm band for the largest kindergarten: Stevenson's
flageolet, an African drum from Carl Van Vechten, a tambourine signed
by Langston Hughes, Arthur Ficke's harmonica, Eddie Wittstein's
megaphone, and literally thousands of Benny Goodman's cast-off clarinet
reeds.
But these
are at least whole things.
Much of the exhibition consists of bits, fragments, splinters. Apparently
fragmentizing, morsellating, and pulverizing the whole objects from
which the relics came did nothing to reduce their power to fascinate,
inspire, or incite, at least in the eyes of collectors or scavengers.
In some cases, the more appropriate verb is to hypnotize, sometimes
to fascinate and hypnotize, with posterity finding itself trapped
like a vagrant deer in the glare of these peculiar headlights out
of the past.
There is a piece of
Napoleon's carriage, a wooden fragment of the confederate ironclad
Virginia, two pieces of Henry David Thoreau's cabin at Walden, a
piece of the rafter from the blockhouse on San Juan Hill (of Teddy
Roosevelt fame), a piece of molding from the Mormon Church near
Kirkland Lake County, Ohio, many pieces of the Old Yale Fence, and
the hands of the Old Campus clock torn off by a politically furious
undergraduate when Fort Sumter was fired upon.
There are also roses:
from Gertrude Stein not even a rose but an empty envelope that once
contained one, and a plate, a scarf, and a wax seal all bearing
Stein's famous A ROSE IS A ROSE IS A ROSE. A rose thought by a former
curator to support one of Goethe's botanical theories. A rose kissed
by Byron and another kissed by Liszt. Were we as mad scientists
able to perfect a way to salvage whatever DNA the celebrity transferred
to the rose by kissing it, we might, in the manner of Jurassic Park,
have for our collections an amusing poet and a tireless performer.
At the moment all Yale has to show is, alas, the roses.
The flags and pieces
of flags have in common (as flags should) that in their former whole
state they could inspire passionate belief. One is a piece of "The
Star Spangled Banner"; another, a piece of a banner torn down
by someone perhaps killed in the act by an angered Rebel; another
ripped untimely from a Democratic Party parade by enthusiastic freshmen
fraternity men, a bit of rather
careless iconoclasm that led to the end of freshman fraternities
at Yale. One was draped over William Howard Taft's coffin as he
lay in state at Arlington National Cemetery. Gertrude Stein and
Alice B. Toklas caused another American flag to be made for them
by French seamstresses so that they could welcome properly the Armistice
for World War I. The flag has the wrong number of stars for 1918,
but the right number for the year Stein left our shores for her
rich life of expatriation.
The piece of the sniper's
bullet that killed Lord Nelson at Trafalgar is probably Yale's closest
approach to a serious relic. But even for this grisly fragment the
anecdotes are funny. Witnesses to Nelson's death gathered soberly
to cut the bullet in half so as to make two souvenirs. Then the
owner of what was to become the Yale fragment took it ashore in
Turkey and had a casket suitable for half a bullet fashioned for
it of ivory and olive wood.
Commemorative
trowels are probably a thing of the past, but what a past! Straight
from the anni mirabili of American presentation silver, they come
to us fresh from a day when the University tried not just to stay
within its budget projections but to match its Manifest Destiny
with bricks and mortar. At another spot in this exhibition may be
seen the sextant by which Elias Loomis first observed the latitude
of New Haven, the telescope through which Ezra Stiles watched the
British make a landing at Savin Rock, and the last spectacles worn
by Walt Whitman. Glory is here, however humble may be its physical
remains.
Yale has the past's
jewelry tray. Medals, buttons, cockades, honors, kudos, the faded
achievements of all its treasured greats: two Nobel Prizes (Sinclair
Lewis's and Eugene O'Neill's), two Medals of Freedom, and three
representing the Kennedy Center honors. And busts: of Marsden Hartley,
Thornton Wilder, Gertrude Stein, William McFee, Fania Van Vechten,
Robert Louis Stevenson, Hermann Broch, William Howard Taft, Ethel
Waters, Charles Dickens, Glenway Wescott, Archibald MacLeish, Sir
Walter Scott, a campus policeman, an undergraduate of the Class
of 1832. Also, life-masks, death-masks, hand-casts. In short, just
about everything except the original Handsome
Dan, who remains amid the athletic splendor of the Payne
Whitney Gymnasium.
Of course, some of Yale's
things have no authority of celebrity at all. There is a rather
lovely ivory box evidently kept for its own sake. Inside it was
a white handkerchief
(9 1/2" x 4",
the careful catalogers inform us) and in the bottom of the box was
a note. "Edward and Esther, to be handed down to Ruth."
It is not thought that more profundity than this is available to
the thing, but Yale keeps it still.
This exhibition does
not question the guidelines of curators or the integrity of the
collection. When I first took on the guest curatorship of this show
I was intent that none of it should hold up any thing in the Yale
collections to ridicule. And I think no thing has been. The things
in this show have not only the value they had when they came to
the collections, but also the value of being cherished by Yale,
the value of preservation, of rarity, of puzzlement, of delight
that only such a ragtag and bobtail of mixed greatness and absurdity,
mortality and immortality, accidental preciousness and accrued pomposity
can bestow.
It is
not for us today to sit in judgment on posterity. Let
us not cavil, or criticize these objects, hats, swords, casts of
hands or teeth, piles of clarinet reeds, but rather rejoice in what
they could once inspire in those who put them here and in that reliquary
or at least residuary enthusiasm they may inspire in us. Let us
also exult in what remains behind and cultivate the attitude of
gratitude. Here's to a plenitude of three-dimensional hard-stuff
and gratitude for the enthusiasm that led to its preservation. It
is somehow touching to think that a great University has found room
for such things, tangible evidence both of institutional permanence
and of individual patience.
In Robert Louis Stevenson's
cherished message from "Chinese" Gordon we can see the
last gasp of 19th-century derring-do. In Elias Loomis's sextant
by which he first observed New Haven's latitude there is not only
a historical instrument (in every sense of that term) but something
of a memento mori: evidence that there was once a time when New
Haven hadn't found even its own place on the map. It is somehow
enough to know just that Liszt stopped playing long enough to kiss
a rose. Ah, the past; ah, the gesture; ah, collective zeal! And
things, like books, are seldom static. To put it somewhat grandly,
the dignity of some of these things has flaked off like old paint
as the years rolled by, while other things just got better and better.
Finally, good things can move us up the Platonic ladder to the great
women and men they were first kept to remind us of. It is a measure
of Yale's plenitude that such minor monuments -- little things, or
dear little things -- could be so cherished for so long by so great
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