1: Boyhood and Youth
Foreword || 2: The Vigor of Life >>
My grandfather on my father's side was of almost purely Dutch blood.
When he was young he still spoke some Dutch, and Dutch was last used
in the services of the Dutch Reformed Church in New York while he was
a small boy.
About 1644 his ancestor Klaes Martensen van Roosevelt came to New
Amsterdam as a "settler"—the euphemistic name for an immigrant who
came over in the steerage of a sailing ship in the seventeenth century
instead of the steerage of a steamer in the nineteenth century. From
that time for the next seven generations from father to son every one
of us was born on Manhattan Island.
My father's paternal ancestors were of Holland stock; except that
there was one named Waldron, a wheelwright, who was one of the
Pilgrims who remained in Holland when the others came over to found
Massachusetts, and who then accompanied the Dutch adventurers to New
Amsterdam. My father's mother was a Pennsylvanian. Her forebears had
come to Pennsylvania with William Penn, some in the same ship with
him; they were of the usual type of the immigration of that particular
place and time. They included Welsh and English Quakers, an Irishman,
—with a Celtic name, and apparently not a Quaker,—and peace-loving
Germans, who were among the founders of Germantown, having been driven
from their Rhineland homes when the armies of Louis the Fourteenth
ravaged the Palatinate; and, in addition, representatives of a by-no-
means altogether peaceful people, the Scotch Irish, who came to
Pennsylvania a little later, early in the eighteenth century. My
grandmother was a woman of singular sweetness and strength, the
keystone of the arch in her relations with her husband and sons.
Although she was not herself Dutch, it was she who taught me the only
Dutch I ever knew, a baby song of which the first line ran, "Trippe
troppa tronjes." I always remembered this, and when I was in East
Africa it proved a bond of union between me and the Boer settlers, not
a few of whom knew it, although at first they always had difficulty in
understanding my pronunciation—at which I do not wonder. It was
interesting to meet these men whose ancestors had gone to the Cape
about the time that mine went to America two centuries and a half
previously, and to find that the descendants of the two streams of
emigrants still crooned to their children some at least of the same
nursery songs.
Of my great-grandfather Roosevelt and his family life a century and
over ago I know little beyond what is implied in some of his books
that have come down to me—the Letters of Junius, a biography of John
Paul Jones, Chief Justice Marshall's Life of Washington. They seem
to indicate that his library was less interesting than that of my
wife's great-grandfather at the same time, which certainly included
such volumes as the original Edinburgh Review, for we have them now
on our own book-shelves. Of my grandfather Roosevelt my most vivid
childish reminiscence is not something I saw, but a tale that was told
me concerning him. In his boyhood Sunday was as dismal a day for
small Calvinistic children of Dutch descent as if they had been of
Puritan or Scotch Covenanting or French Huguenot descent—and I speak
as one proud of his Holland, Huguenot, and Covenanting ancestors, and
proud that the blood of that stark Puritan divine Jonathan Edwards
flows in the veins of his children. One summer afternoon, after
listening to an unusually long Dutch Reformed sermon for the second
time that day, my grandfather, a small boy, running home before the
congregation had dispersed, ran into a party of pigs, which then
wandered free in New York's streets. He promptly mounted a big boar,
which no less promptly bolted and carried him at full speed through
the midst of the outraged congregation.
By the way, one of the Roosevelt documents which came down to me
illustrates the change that has come over certain aspects of public
life since the time which pessimists term "the earlier and better days
of the Republic." Old Isaac Roosevelt was a member of an Auditing
Committee which shortly after the close of the Revolution approved the
following bill:
The State of New York, to John Cape Dr.
To a Dinner Given by His Excellency the Governor
and Council to their Excellencies the Minnister of
France and General Washington & Co.
1783
December
To 120 dinners at 48: 0:0
To 135 Bottles Madira 54: 0:0
" 36 ditto Port 10:16:0
" 60 ditto English Beer 9: 0:0
" 30 Bouls Punch 9: 0:0
" 8 dinners for Musick 1:12:0
" 10 ditto for Sarvts 2: 0:0
" 60 Wine Glasses Broken 4:10:0
" 8 Cutt decanters Broken 3: 0:0
" Coffee for 8 Gentlemen 1:12:0
" Music fees &ca 8: 0:0
" Fruit & Nuts 5: 0:0
156:10:0
By Cash . . . 100:16:0
55:14:0
WE a Committee of Council having examined
the above account do certify it (amounting to
one hundred and fifty-six Pounds ten Shillings)
to be just.
December 17th 1783.
Isaac Roosevelt
Jas. Duane
Egbt. Benson
Fred. Jay
Received the above Contents in full
New York 17th December 1783
John Cape
Think of the Governor of New York now submitting such a bill for such
an entertainment of the French Ambassador and the President of the
United States! Falstaff's views of the proper proportion between sack
and bread are borne out by the proportion between the number of bowls
of punch and bottles of port, Madeira, and beer consumed, and the
"coffee for eight gentlemen"—apparently the only ones who lasted
through to that stage of the dinner. Especially admirable is the
nonchalant manner in which, obviously as a result of the drinking of
said bottles of wine and bowls of punch, it is recorded that eight
cut-glass decanters and sixty wine-glasses were broken.
During the Revolution some of my forefathers, North and South, served
respectably, but without distinction, in the army, and others rendered
similar service in the Continental Congress or in various local
legislatures. By that time those who dwelt in the North were for the
most part merchants, and those who dwelt in the South, planters.
My mother's people were predominantly of Scotch, but also of Huguenot
and English, descent. She was a Georgian, her people having come to
Georgia from South Carolina before the Revolution. The original
Bulloch was a lad from near Glasgow, who came hither a couple of
centuries ago, just as hundreds of thousands of needy, enterprising
Scotchmen have gone to the four quarters of the globe in the
intervening two hundred years. My mother's great-grandfather,
Archibald Bulloch, was the first Revolutionary "President" of Georgia.
My grandfather, her father, spent the winters in Savannah and the
summers at Roswell, in the Georgia uplands near Atlanta, finally
making Roswell his permanent home. He used to travel thither with his
family and their belongings in his own carriage, followed by a baggage
wagon. I never saw Roswell until I was President, but my mother told
me so much about the place that when I did see it I felt as if I
already knew every nook and corner of it, and as if it were haunted by
the ghosts of all the men and women who had lived there. I do not mean
merely my own family, I mean the slaves. My mother and her sister, my
aunt, used to tell us children all kinds of stories about the slaves.
One of the most fascinating referred to a very old darky called Bear
Bob, because in the early days of settlement he had been partially
scalped by a black bear. Then there was Mom' Grace, who was for a time
my mother's nurse, and whom I had supposed to be dead, but who greeted
me when I did come to Roswell, very respectable, and apparently with
years of life before her. The two chief personages of the drama that
used to be repeated to us were Daddy Luke, the Negro overseer, and his
wife, Mom' Charlotte. I never saw either Daddy Luke or Mom' Charlotte,
but I inherited the care of them when my mother died. After the close
of the war they resolutely refused to be emancipated or leave the
place. The only demand they made upon us was enough money annually to
get a new "critter," that is, a mule. With a certain lack of ingenuity
the mule was reported each Christmas as having passed away, or at
least as having become so infirm as to necessitate a successor—a
solemn fiction which neither deceived nor was intended to deceive, but
which furnished a gauge for the size of the Christmas gift.
My maternal grandfather's house was on the line of Sherman's march to
the sea, and pretty much everything in it that was portable was taken
by the boys in blue, including most of the books in the library. When
I was President the facts about my ancestry were published, and a
former soldier in Sherman's army sent me back one of the books with my
grandfather's name in it. It was a little copy of the poems of "Mr.
Gray"—an eighteenth-century edition printed in Glasgow.
On October 27, 1858, I was born at No. 28 East Twentieth Street, New
York City, in the house in which we lived during the time that my two
sisters and my brother and I were small children. It was furnished in
the canonical taste of the New York which George William Curtis
described in the /Potiphar Papers/. The black haircloth furniture in
the dining-room scratched the bare legs of the children when they sat
on it. The middle room was a library, with tables, chairs, and
bookcases of gloomy respectability. It was without windows, and so was
available only at night. The front room, the parlor, seemed to us
children to be a room of much splendor, but was open for general use
only on Sunday evening or on rare occasions when there were parties.
The Sunday evening family gathering was the redeeming feature in a day
which otherwise we children did not enjoy—chiefly because we were all
of us made to wear clean clothes and keep neat. The ornaments of that
parlor I remember now, including the gas chandelier decorated with a
great quantity of cut-glass prisms. These prisms struck me as
possessing peculiar magnificence. One of them fell off one day, and I
hastily grabbed it and stowed it away, passing several days of furtive
delight in the treasure, a delight always alloyed with fear that I
would be found out and convicted of larceny. There was a Swiss wood-
carving representing a very big hunter on one side of an exceedingly
small mountain, and a herd of chamois, disproportionately small for
the hunter and large for the mountain, just across the ridge. This
always fascinated us; but there was a small chamois kid for which we
felt agonies lest the hunter might come on it and kill it. There was
also a Russian moujik drawing a gilt sledge on a piece of malachite.
Some one mentioned in my hearing that malachite was a valuable marble.
This fixed in my mind that it was valuable exactly as diamonds are
valuable. I accepted that moujik as a priceless work of art, and it
was not until I was well in middle age that it occurred to me that I
was mistaken.
Now and then we children were taken round to our grandfather's house;
a big house for the New York of those days, on the corner of
Fourteenth Street and Broadway, fronting Union Square. Inside there
was a large hall running up to the roof; there was a tessellated
black-and-white marble floor, and a circular staircase round the sides
of the hall, from the top floor down. We children much admired both
the tessellated floor and the circular staircase. I think we were
right about the latter, but I am not so sure as to the tessellated
floor.
The summers we spent in the country, now at one place, now at another.
We children, of course, loved the country beyond anything. We disliked
the city. We were always wildly eager to get to the country when
spring came, and very sad when in the late fall the family moved back
to town. In the country we of course had all kinds of pets—cats,
dogs, rabbits, a coon, and a sorrel Shetland pony named General Grant.
When my younger sister first heard of the real General Grant, by the
way, she was much struck by the coincidence that some one should have
given him the same name as the pony. (Thirty years later my own
children had their pony Grant.) In the country we children ran
barefoot much of the time, and the seasons went by in a round of
uninterrupted and enthralling pleasures—supervising the haying and
harvesting, picking apples, hunting frogs successfully and woodchucks
unsuccessfully, gathering hickory-nuts and chestnuts for sale to
patient parents, building wigwams in the woods, and sometimes playing
Indians in too realistic manner by staining ourselves (and
incidentally our clothes) in liberal fashion with poke-cherry juice.
Thanksgiving was an appreciated festival, but it in no way came up to
Christmas. Christmas was an occasion of literally delirious joy. In
the evening we hung up our stockings—or rather the biggest stockings
we could borrow from the grown-ups—and before dawn we trooped in to
open them while sitting on father's and mother's bed; and the bigger
presents were arranged, those for each child on its own table, in the
drawing-room, the doors to which were thrown open after breakfast. I
never knew any one else have what seemed to me such attractive
Christmases, and in the next generation I tried to reproduce them
exactly for my own children.
My father, Theodore Roosevelt, was the best man I ever knew. He
combined strength and courage with gentleness, tenderness, and great
unselfishness. He would not tolerate in us children selfishness or
cruelty, idleness, cowardice, or untruthfulness. As we grew older he
made us understand that the same standard of clean living was demanded
for the boys as for the girls; that what was wrong in a woman could
not be right in a man. With great love and patience, and the most
understanding sympathy and consideration, he combined insistence on
discipline. He never physically punished me but once, but he was the
only man of whom I was ever really afraid. I do not mean that it was a
wrong fear, for he was entirely just, and we children adored him. We
used to wait in the library in the evening until we could hear his key
rattling in the latch of the front hall, and then rush out to greet
him; and we would troop into his room while he was dressing, to stay
there as long as we were permitted, eagerly examining anything which
came out of his pockets which could be regarded as an attractive
novelty. Every child has fixed in his memory various details which
strike it as of grave importance. The trinkets he used to keep in a
little box on his dressing-table we children always used to speak of
as "treasures." The word, and some of the trinkets themselves, passed
on to the next generation. My own children, when small, used to troop
into my room while I was dressing, and the gradually accumulating
trinkets in the "ditty-box"—the gift of an enlisted man in the navy—
always excited rapturous joy. On occasions of solemn festivity each
child would receive a trinket for his or her "very own." My children,
by the way, enjoyed one pleasure I do not remember enjoying myself.
When I came back from riding, the child who brought the bootjack would
itself promptly get into the boots, and clump up and down the room
with a delightful feeling of kinship with Jack of the seven-league
strides.
The punishing incident I have referred to happened when I was four
years old. I bit my elder sister's arm. I do not remember biting her
arm, but I do remember running down to the yard, perfectly conscious
that I had committed a crime. From the yard I went into the kitchen,
got some dough from the cook, and crawled under the kitchen table. In
a minute or two my father entered from the yard and asked where I was.
The warm-hearted Irish cook had a characteristic contempt for
"informers," but although she said nothing she compromised between
informing and her conscience by casting a look under the table. My
father immediately dropped on all fours and darted for me. I feebly
heaved the dough at him, and, having the advantage of him because I
could stand up under the table, got a fair start for the stairs, but
was caught halfway up them. The punishment that ensued fitted the
crime, and I hope—and believe—that it did me good.
I never knew any one who got greater joy out of living than did my
father, or any one who more whole-heartedly performed every duty; and
no one whom I have ever met approached his combination of enjoyment of
life and performance of duty. He and my mother were given to a
hospitality that at that time was associated more commonly with
southern than northern households; and, especially in their later
years when they had moved up town, in the neighborhood of Central
Park, they kept a charming, open house.
My father worked hard at his business, for he died when he was forty-
six, too early to have retired. He was interested in every social
reform movement, and he did an immense amount of practical charitable
work himself. He was a big, powerful man, with a leonine face, and his
heart filled with gentleness for those who needed help or protection,
and with the possibility of much wrath against a bully or an
oppressor. He was very fond of riding both on the road and across the
country, and was also a great whip. He usually drove four-in-hand, or
else a spike team, that is, a pair with a third horse in the lead. I
do not suppose that such a team exists now. The trap that he drove we
always called the high phaeton. The wheels turned under in front. I
have it yet. He drove long-tailed horses, harnessed loose in light
American harness, so that the whole rig had no possible resemblance to
anything that would be seen now. My father always excelled in
improving every spare half-hour or three-quarters of an hour, whether
for work or enjoyment. Much of his four-in-hand driving was done in
the summer afternoons when he would come out on the train from his
business in New York. My mother and one or perhaps two of us children
might meet him at the station. I can see him now getting out of the
car in his linen duster, jumping into the wagon, and instantly driving
off at a rattling pace, the duster sometimes bagging like a balloon.
The four-in-hand, as can be gathered from the above description, did
not in any way in his eyes represent possible pageantry. He drove it
because he liked it. He was always preaching caution to his boys, but
in this respect he did not practice his preaching overmuch himself;
and, being an excellent whip, he liked to take chances. Generally they
came out all right. Occasionally they did not; but he was even better
at getting out of a scrape than into it. Once when we were driving
into New York late at night the leaders stopped. He flicked them, and
the next moment we could dimly make out that they had jumped. It then
appeared that the street was closed and that a board had been placed
across it, resting on two barrels, but without a lantern. Over this
board the leaders had jumped, and there was considerable excitement
before we got the board taken off the barrels and resumed our way.
When in the city on Thanksgiving or Christmas, my father was very apt
to drive my mother and a couple of friends up to the racing park to
take lunch. But he was always back in time to go to the dinner at the
Newsboys' Lodging-House, and not infrequently also to Miss Sattery's
Night School for little Italians. At a very early age we children were
taken with him and were required to help. He was a staunch friend of
Charles Loring Brace, and was particularly interested in the Newsboys'
Lodging-House and in the night schools and in getting the children off
the streets and out on farms in the West. When I was President, the
Governor of Alaska under me, Governor Brady, was one of these ex-
newsboys who had been sent from New York out West by Mr. Brace and my
father. My father was greatly interested in the societies to prevent
cruelty to children and cruelty to animals. On Sundays he had a
mission class. On his way to it he used to drop us children at our
Sunday-school in Dr. Adams's Presbyterian Church on Madison Square; I
remember hearing my aunt, my mother's sister, saying that when he
walked along with us children he always reminded her of Greatheart in
Bunyan. Under the spur of his example I taught a mission class myself
for three years before going to college and for all four years that I
was in college. I do not think I made much of a success of it. But the
other day on getting out of a taxi in New York the chauffeur spoke to
me and told me that he was one of my old Sunday-school pupils. I
remembered him well, and was much pleased to find that he was an
ardent Bull Mooser!
My mother, Martha Bulloch, was a sweet, gracious, beautiful Southern
woman, a delightful companion and beloved by everybody. She was
entirely "unreconstructed" to the day of her death. Her mother, my
grandmother, one of the dearest of old ladies, lived with us, and was
distinctly overindulgent to us children, being quite unable to harden
her heart towards us even when the occasion demanded it. Towards the
close of the Civil War, although a very small boy, I grew to have a
partial but alert understanding of the fact that the family were not
one in their views about that conflict, my father being a strong
Lincoln Republican; and once, when I felt that I had been wronged by
maternal discipline during the day, I attempted a partial vengeance by
praying with loud fervor for the success of the Union arms, when we
all came to say our prayers before my mother in the evening. She was
not only a most devoted mother, but was also blessed with a strong
sense of humor, and she was too much amused to punish me; but I was
warned not to repeat the offense, under penalty of my father's being
informed—he being the dispenser of serious punishment. Morning
prayers were with my father. We used to stand at the foot of the
stairs, and when father came down we called out, "I speak for you and
the cubby-hole too!" There were three of us young children, and we
used to sit with father on the sofa while he conducted morning
prayers. The place between father and the arm of the sofa we called
the "cubby-hole." The child who got that place we regarded as
especially favored both in comfort and somehow or other in rank and
title. The two who were left to sit on the much wider expanse of sofa
on the other side of father were outsiders for the time being.
My aunt Anna, my mother's sister, lived with us. She was as devoted to
us children as was my mother herself, and we were equally devoted to
her in return. She taught us our lessons while we were little. She and
my mother used to entertain us by the hour with tales of life on the
Georgia plantations; of hunting fox, deer, and wildcat; of the long-
tailed driving horses, Boone and Crockett, and of the riding horses,
one of which was named Buena Vista in a fit of patriotic exaltation
during the Mexican War; and of the queer goings-on in the Negro
quarters. She knew all the "Br'er Rabbit" stories, and I was brought
up on them. One of my uncles, Robert Roosevelt, was much struck with
them, and took them down from her dictation, publishing them in
Harper's, where they fell flat. This was a good many years before a
genius arose who in "Uncle Remus" made the stories immortal.
My mother's two brothers, James Dunwoodie Bulloch and Irvine Bulloch,
came to visit us shortly after the close of the war. Both came under
assumed names, as they were among the Confederates who were at that
time exempted from the amnesty. "Uncle Jimmy" Bulloch was a dear old
retired sea-captain, utterly unable to "get on" in the worldly sense
of that phrase, as valiant and simple and upright a soul as ever
lived, a veritable Colonel Newcome. He was an Admiral in the
Confederate navy, and was the builder of the famous Confederate war
vessel Alabama. My uncle Irvine Bulloch was a midshipman on the
Alabama, and fired the last gun discharged from her batteries in the
fight with the Kearsarge. Both of these uncles lived in Liverpool
after the war.
My uncle Jimmy Bulloch was forgiving and just in reference to the
Union forces, and could discuss all phases of the Civil War with
entire fairness and generosity. But in English politics he promptly
became a Tory of the most ultra-conservative school. Lincoln and Grant
he could admire, but he would not listen to anything in favor of Mr.
Gladstone. The only occasions on which I ever shook his faith in me
were when I would venture meekly to suggest that some of the
manifestly preposterous falsehoods about Mr. Gladstone could not be
true. My uncle was one of the best men I have ever known, and when I
have sometimes been tempted to wonder how good people can believe of
me the unjust and impossible things they do believe, I have consoled
myself by thinking of Uncle Jimmy Bulloch's perfectly sincere
conviction that Gladstone was a man of quite exceptional and nameless
infamy in both public and private life.
I was a sickly, delicate boy, suffered much from asthma, and
frequently had to be taken away on trips to find a place where I could
breathe. One of my memories is of my father walking up and down the
room with me in his arms at night when I was a very small person, and
of sitting up in bed gasping, with my father and mother trying to help
me. I went very little to school. I never went to the public schools,
as my own children later did, both at the Cove School at Oyster Bay
and at the Ford School in Washington. For a few months I attended
Professor McMullen's school in Twentieth Street near the house where I
was born, but most of the time I had tutors. As I have already said,
my aunt taught me when I was small. At one time we had a French
governess, a loved and valued "mam'selle," in the household.
When I was ten years old I made my first journey to Europe. My
birthday was spent in Cologne, and in order to give me a thoroughly
"party" feeling I remember that my mother put on full dress for my
birthday dinner. I do not think I gained anything from this particular
trip abroad. I cordially hated it, as did my younger brother and
sister. Practically all the enjoyment we had was in exploring any
ruins or mountains when we could get away from our elders, and in
playing in the different hotels. Our one desire was to get back to
America, and we regarded Europe with the most ignorant chauvinism and
contempt. Four years later, however, I made another journey to Europe,
and was old enough to enjoy it thoroughly and profit by it.
While still a small boy I began to take an interest in natural
history. I remember distinctly the first day that I started on my
career as zoologist. I was walking up Broadway, and as I passed the
market to which I used sometimes to be sent before breakfast to get
strawberries I suddenly saw a dead seal laid out on a slab of wood.
That seal filled me with every possible feeling of romance and
adventure. I asked where it was killed, and was informed in the
harbor. I had already begun to read some of Mayne Reid's books and
other boys' books of adventure, and I felt that this seal brought all
these adventures in realistic fashion before me. As long as that seal
remained there I haunted the neighborhood of the market day after day.
I measured it, and I recall that, not having a tape measure, I had to
do my best to get its girth with a folding pocket foot-rule, a
difficult undertaking. I carefully made a record of the utterly
useless measurements, and at once began to write a natural history of
my own, on the strength of that seal. This, and subsequent natural
histories, were written down in blank books in simplified spelling,
wholly unpremeditated and unscientific. I had vague aspirations of in
some way or another owning and preserving that seal, but they never
got beyond the purely formless stage. I think, however, I did get the
seal's skull, and with two of my cousins promptly started what we
ambitiously called the "Roosevelt Museum of Natural History." The
collections were at first kept in my room, until a rebellion on the
part of the chambermaid received the approval of the higher
authorities of the household and the collection was moved up to a kind
of bookcase in the back hall upstairs. It was the ordinary small boy's
collection of curios, quite incongruous and entirely valueless except
from the standpoint of the boy himself. My father and mother
encouraged me warmly in this, as they always did in anything that
could give me wholesome pleasure or help to develop me.
The adventure of the seal and the novels of Mayne Reid together
strengthened my instinctive interest in natural history. I was too
young to understand much of Mayne Reid, excepting the adventure part
and the natural history part—these enthralled me. But of course my
reading was not wholly confined to natural history. There was very
little effort made to compel me to read books, my father and mother
having the good sense not to try to get me to read anything I did not
like, unless it was in the way of study. I was given the chance to
read books that they thought I ought to read, but if I did not like
them I was then given some other good book that I did like. There were
certain books that were taboo. For instance, I was not allowed to read
dime novels. I obtained some surreptitiously and did read them, but I
do not think that the enjoyment compensated for the feeling of guilt.
I was also forbidden to read the only one of Ouida's books which I
wished to read—Under Two Flags. I did read it, nevertheless, with
greedy and fierce hope of coming on something unhealthy; but as a
matter of fact all the parts that might have seemed unhealthy to an
older person made no impression on me whatever. I simply enjoyed in a
rather confused way the general adventures.
I think there ought to be children's books. I think that the child
will like grown-up books also, and I do not believe a child's book is
really good unless grown-ups get something out of it. For instance,
there is a book I did not have when I was a child because it was not
written. It is Laura E. Richard's Nursery Rhymes. My own children
loved them dearly, and their mother and I loved them almost equally;
the delightfully light-hearted Man from New Mexico who Lost his
Grandmother out in the Snow, the adventures of The Owl, the Eel, and
the Warming-Pan, and the extraordinary genealogy of the kangaroo
whose "father was a whale with a feather in his tail who lived in the
Greenland sea," while "his mother was a shark who kept very dark in
the Gulf of Caribee."
As a small boy I had Our Young Folks, which I then firmly believed
to be the very best magazine in the world—a belief, I may add, which
I have kept to this day unchanged, for I seriously doubt if any
magazine for old or young has ever surpassed it. Both my wife and I
have the bound volumes of Our Young Folks which we preserved from
our youth. I have tried to read again the Mayne Reid books which I so
dearly loved as a boy, only to find, alas! that it is impossible. But
I really believe that I enjoy going over Our Young Folks now nearly
as much as ever. Cast Away in the Cold, Grandfather's Struggle for
a Homestead, The William Henry Letters, and a dozen others like
them were first-class, good healthy stories, interesting in the first
place, and in the next place teaching manliness, decency, and good
conduct. At the cost of being deemed effeminate, I will add that I
greatly liked the girls' stories—Pussy Willow and A Summer in
Leslie Goldthwaite's Life, just as I worshiped Little Men and
Little Women and An Old-Fashioned Girl.
This enjoyment of the gentler side of life did not prevent my reveling
in such tales of adventure as Ballantyne's stories, or Marryat's
Midshipman Easy. I suppose everybody has kinks in him, and even as a
child there were books which I ought to have liked and did not. For
instance, I never cared at all for the first part of Robinson Crusoe
(and although it is unquestionably the best part, I do not care for it
now); whereas the second part, containing the adventures of Robinson
Crusoe, with the wolves in the Pyrenees, and out in the Far East,
simply fascinated me. What I did like in the first part were the
adventures before Crusoe finally reached his island, the fight with
the Sallee Rover, and the allusion to the strange beasts at night
taking their improbable bath in the ocean. Thanks to being already an
embryo zoologist, I disliked the Swiss Family Robinson because of
the wholly impossible collection of animals met by that worthy family
as they ambled inland from the wreck. Even in poetry it was the
relation of adventures that most appealed to me as a boy. At a pretty
early age I began to read certain books of poetry, notably
Longfellow's poem, "The Saga of King Olaf," which absorbed me. This
introduced me to Scandinavian literature; and I have never lost my
interest in and affection for it.
Among my first books was a volume of a hopelessly unscientific kind by
Mayne Reid, about mammals, illustrated with pictures no more artistic
than but quite as thrilling as those in the typical school geography.
When my father found how deeply interested I was in this not very
accurate volume, he gave me a little book by J. G. Wood, the English
writer of popular books on natural history, and then a larger one of
his called Homes Without Hands. Both of these were cherished
possessions. They were studied eagerly; and they finally descended to
my children. The "Homes Without Hands," by the way, grew to have an
added association in connection with a pedagogical failure on my part.
In accordance with what I believed was some kind of modern theory of
making education interesting and not letting it become a task, I
endeavored to teach my eldest small boy one or two of his letters from
the title-page. As the letter "H" appeared in the title an unusual
number of times, I selected that to begin on, my effort being to keep
the small boy interested, not to let him realize that he was learning
a lesson, and to convince him that he was merely having a good time.
Whether it was the theory or my method of applying it that was
defective I do not know, but I certainly absolutely eradicated from
his brain any ability to learn what "H" was; and long after he had
learned all the other letters of the alphabet in the old-fashioned
way, he proved wholly unable to remember "H" under any circumstances.
Quite unknown to myself, I was, while a boy, under a hopeless
disadvantage in studying nature. I was very near-sighted, so that the
only things I could study were those I ran against or stumbled over.
When I was about thirteen I was allowed to take lessons in taxidermy
from a Mr. Bell, a tall, clean-shaven, white-haired old gentleman, as
straight as an Indian, who had been a companion of Audubon's. He had a
musty little shop, somewhat on the order of Mr. Venus's shop in "Our
Mutual Friend," a little shop in which he had done very valuable work
for science. This "vocational study," as I suppose it would be called
by modern educators, spurred and directed my interest in collecting
specimens for mounting and preservation. It was this summer that I got
my first gun, and it puzzled me to find that my companions seemed to
see things to shoot at which I could not see at all. One day they read
aloud an advertisement in huge letters on a distant billboard, and I
then realized that something was the matter, for not only was I unable
to read the sign but I could not even see the letters. I spoke of this
to my father, and soon afterwards got my first pair of spectacles,
which literally opened an entirely new world to me. I had no idea how
beautiful the world was until I got those spectacles. I had been a
clumsy and awkward little boy, and while much of my clumsiness and
awkwardness was doubtless due to general characteristics, a good deal
of it was due to the fact that I could not see and yet was wholly
ignorant that I was not seeing. The recollection of this experience
gives me a keen sympathy with those who are trying in our public
schools and elsewhere to remove the physical causes of deficiency in
children, who are often unjustly blamed for being obstinate or
unambitious, or mentally stupid.
This same summer, too, I obtained various new books on mammals and
birds, including the publications of Spencer Baird, for instance, and
made an industrious book-study of the subject. I did not accomplish
much in outdoor study because I did not get spectacles until late in
the fall, a short time before I started with the rest of the family
for a second trip to Europe. We were living at Dobbs Ferry, on the
Hudson. My gun was a breech-loading, pin-fire double-barrel, of French
manufacture. It was an excellent gun for a clumsy and often absent-
minded boy. There was no spring to open it, and if the mechanism
became rusty it could be opened with a brick without serious damage.
When the cartridges stuck they could be removed in the same fashion.
If they were loaded, however, the result was not always happy, and I
tattooed myself with partially unburned grains of powder more than
once.
When I was fourteen years old, in the winter of '72 and '73, I visited
Europe for the second time, and this trip formed a really useful part
of my education. We went to Egypt, journeyed up the Nile, traveled
through the Holy Land and part of Syria, visited Greece and
Constantinople; and then we children spent the summer in a German
family in Dresden. My first real collecting as a student of natural
history was done in Egypt during this journey. By this time I had a
good working knowledge of American bird life from the superficially
scientific standpoint. I had no knowledge of the ornithology of Egypt,
but I picked up in Cairo a book by an English clergyman, whose name I
have now forgotten, who described a trip up the Nile, and in an
appendix to his volume gave an account of his bird collection. I wish
I could remember the name of the author now, for I owe that book very
much. Without it I should have been collecting entirely in the dark,
whereas with its aid I could generally find out what the birds were.
My first knowledge of Latin was obtained by learning the scientific
names of the birds and mammals which I collected and classified by the
aid of such books as this one.
The birds I obtained up the Nile and in Palestine represented merely
the usual boy's collection. Some years afterward I gave them, together
with the other ornithological specimens I had gathered, to the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington, and I think some of them also
to the American Museum of Natural History in New York. I am told that
the skins are to be found yet in both places and in other public
collections. I doubt whether they have my original labels on them.
With great pride the directors of the "Roosevelt Museum," consisting
of myself and the two cousins aforesaid, had printed a set of
Roosevelt Museum labels in pink ink preliminary to what was regarded
as my adventurous trip to Egypt. This bird-collecting gave what was
really the chief zest to my Nile journey. I was old enough and had
read enough to enjoy the temples and the desert scenery and the
general feeling of romance; but this in time would have palled if I
had not also had the serious work of collecting and preparing my
specimens. Doubtless the family had their moments of suffering—
especially on one occasion when a well-meaning maid extracted from my
taxidermist's outfit the old tooth-brush with which I put on the skins
the arsenical soap necessary for their preservation, partially washed
it, and left it with the rest of my wash kit for my own personal use.
I suppose that all growing boys tend to be grubby; but the
ornithological small boy, or indeed the boy with the taste for natural
history of any kind, is generally the very grubbiest of all. An added
element in my case was the fact that while in Egypt I suddenly started
to grow. As there were no tailors up the Nile, when I got back to
Cairo I needed a new outfit. But there was one suit of clothes too
good to throw away, which we kept for a "change," and which was known
as my "Smike suit," because it left my wrists and ankles as bare as
those of poor Smike himself.
When we reached Dresden we younger children were left to spend the
summer in the house of Herr Minckwitz, a member of either the
Municipal or the Saxon Government—I have forgotten which. It was
hoped that in this way we would acquire some knowledge of the German
language and literature. They were the very kindest family imaginable.
I shall never forget the unwearied patience of the two daughters. The
father and mother, and a shy, thin, student cousin who was living in
the flat, were no less kind. Whenever I could get out into the country
I collected specimens industriously and enlivened the household with
hedge-hogs and other small beasts and reptiles which persisted in
escaping from partially closed bureau drawers. The two sons were
fascinating students from the University of Leipsic, both of them
belonging to dueling corps, and much scarred in consequence. One, a
famous swordsman, was called Der Rothe Herzog (the Red Duke), and
the other was nicknamed Herr Nasehorn (Sir Rhinoceros) because the
tip of his nose had been cut off in a duel and sewn on again. I
learned a good deal of German here, in spite of myself, and above all
I became fascinated with the Nibelungenlied. German prose never became
really easy to me in the sense that French prose did, but for German
poetry I cared as much as for English poetry. Above all, I gained an
impression of the German people which I never got over. From that time
to this it would have been quite impossible to make me feel that the
Germans were really foreigners. The affection, the Gemuthlichkeit (a
quality which cannot be exactly expressed by any single English word),
the capacity for hard work, the sense of duty, the delight in studying
literature and science, the pride in the new Germany, the more than
kind and friendly interest in three strange children—all these
manifestations of the German character and of German family life made
a subconscious impression upon me which I did not in the least define
at the time, but which is very vivid still forty years later.
When I got back to America, at the age of fifteen, I began serious
study to enter Harvard under Mr. Arthur Cutler, who later founded the
Cutler School in New York. I could not go to school because I knew so
much less than most boys of my age in some subjects and so much more
in others. In science and history and geography and in unexpected
parts of German and French I was strong, but lamentably weak in Latin
and Greek and mathematics. My grandfather had made his summer home in
Oyster Bay a number of years before, and my father now made Oyster Bay
the summer home of his family also. Along with my college preparatory
studies I carried on the work of a practical student of natural
history. I worked with greater industry than either intelligence or
success, and made very few additions to the sum of human knowledge;
but to this day certain obscure ornithological publications may be
found in which are recorded such items as, for instance, that on one
occasion a fish-crow, and on another an Ipswich sparrow, were obtained
by one Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., at Oyster Bay, on the shore of Long
Island Sound.
In the fall of 1876 I entered Harvard, graduating in 1880. I
thoroughly enjoyed Harvard, and I am sure it did me good, but only in
the general effect, for there was very little in my actual studies
which helped me in after life. More than one of my own sons have
already profited by their friendship with certain of their masters in
school or college. I certainly profited by my friendship with one of
my tutors, Mr. Cutler; and in Harvard I owed much to the professor of
English, Mr. A. S. Hill. Doubtless through my own fault, I saw almost
nothing of President Eliot and very little of the professors. I ought
to have gained much more than I did gain from writing the themes and
forensics. My failure to do so may have been partly due to my taking
no interest in the subjects. Before I left Harvard I was already
writing one or two chapters of a book I afterwards published on the
Naval War of 1812. Those chapters were so dry that they would have
made a dictionary seem light reading by comparison. Still, they
represented purpose and serious interest on my part, not the
perfunctory effort to do well enough to get a certain mark; and
corrections of them by a skilled older man would have impressed me and
have commanded my respectful attention. But I was not sufficiently
developed to make myself take an intelligent interest in some of the
subjects assigned me—the character of the Gracchi, for instance. A
very clever and studious lad would no doubt have done so, but I
personally did not grow up to this particular subject until a good
many years later. The frigate and sloop actions between the American
and British sea-tigers of 1812 were much more within my grasp. I
worked drearily at the Gracchi because I had to; my conscientious and
much-to-be-pitied professor dragging me through the theme by main
strength, with my feet firmly planted in dull and totally idea-proof
resistance.
I had at the time no idea of going into public life, and I never
studied elocution or practiced debating. This was a loss to me in one
way. In another way it was not. Personally I have not the slightest
sympathy with debating contests in which each side is arbitrarily
assigned a given proposition and told to maintain it without the least
reference to whether those maintaining it believe in it or not. I know
that under our system this is necessary for lawyers, but I
emphatically disbelieve in it as regards general discussion of
political, social, and industrial matters. What we need is to turn out
of our colleges young men with ardent convictions on the side of the
right; not young men who can make a good argument for either right or
wrong as their interest bids them. The present method of carrying on
debates on such subjects as "Our Colonial Policy," or "The Need of a
Navy," or "The Proper Position of the Courts in Constitutional
Questions," encourages precisely the wrong attitude among those who
take part in them. There is no effort to instill sincerity and
intensity of conviction. On the contrary, the net result is to make
the contestants feel that their convictions have nothing to do with
their arguments. I am sorry I did not study elocution in college; but
I am exceedingly glad that I did not take part in the type of debate
in which stress is laid, not upon getting a speaker to think rightly,
but on getting him to talk glibly on the side to which he is assigned,
without regard either to what his convictions are or to what they
ought to be.
I was a reasonably good student in college, standing just within the
first tenth of my class, if I remember rightly; although I am not sure
whether this means the tenth of the whole number that entered or of
those that graduated. I was given a Phi Beta Kappa "key." My chief
interests were scientific. When I entered college, I was devoted to
out-of-doors natural history, and my ambition was to be a scientific
man of the Audubon, or Wilson, or Baird, or Coues type—a man like
Hart Merriam, or Frank Chapman, or Hornaday, to-day. My father had
from the earliest days instilled into me the knowledge that I was to
work and to make my own way in the world, and I had always supposed
that this meant that I must enter business. But in my freshman year
(he died when I was a sophomore) he told me that if I wished to become
a scientific man I could do so. He explained that I must be sure that
I really intensely desired to do scientific work, because if I went
into it I must make it a serious career; that he had made enough money
to enable me to take up such a career and do non-remunerative work of
value if I intended to do the very best work there was in me; but
that I must not dream of taking it up as a dilettante. He also gave me
a piece of advice that I have always remembered, namely, that, if I
was not going to earn money, I must even things up by not spending it.
As he expressed it, I had to keep the fraction constant, and if I was
not able to increase the numerator, then I must reduce the
denominator. In other words, if I went into a scientific career, I
must definitely abandon all thought of the enjoyment that could
accompany a money-making career, and must find my pleasures elsewhere.
After this conversation I fully intended to make science my life-work.
I did not, for the simple reason that at that time Harvard, and I
suppose our other colleges, utterly ignored the possibilities of the
faunal naturalist, the outdoor naturalist and observer of nature. They
treated biology as purely a science of the laboratory and the
microscope, a science whose adherents were to spend their time in the
study of minute forms of marine life, or else in section-cutting and
the study of the tissues of the higher organisms under the microscope.
This attitude was, no doubt, in part due to the fact that in most
colleges then there was a not always intelligent copying of what was
done in the great German universities. The sound revolt against
superficiality of study had been carried to an extreme; thoroughness
in minutiae as the only end of study had been erected into a fetish.
There was a total failure to understand the great variety of kinds of
work that could be done by naturalists, including what could be done
by outdoor naturalists—the kind of work which Hart Merriam and his
assistants in the Biological Survey have carried to such a high degree
of perfection as regards North American mammals. In the entirely
proper desire to be thorough and to avoid slipshod methods, the
tendency was to treat as not serious, as unscientific, any kind of
work that was not carried on with laborious minuteness in the
laboratory. My taste was specialized in a totally different direction,
and I had no more desire or ability to be a microscopist and section-
cutter than to be a mathematician. Accordingly I abandoned all thought
of becoming a scientist. Doubtless this meant that I really did not
have the intense devotion to science which I thought I had; for, if I
had possessed such devotion, I would have carved out a career for
myself somehow without regard to discouragements.
As regards political economy, I was of course while in college taught
the laissez-faire doctrines—one of them being free trade—then
accepted as canonical. Most American boys of my age were taught both
by their surroundings and by their studies certain principles which
were very valuable from the standpoint of National interest, and
certain others which were very much the reverse. The political
economists were not especially to blame for this; it was the general
attitude of the writers who wrote for us of that generation. Take my
beloved Our Young Folks, the magazine of which I have already
spoken, and which taught me much more than any of my text-books.
Everything in this magazine instilled the individual virtues, and the
necessity of character as the chief factor in any man's success—a
teaching in which I now believe as sincerely as ever, for all the laws
that the wit of man can devise will never make a man a worthy citizen
unless he has within himself the right stuff, unless he has self-
reliance, energy, courage, the power of insisting on his own rights
and the sympathy that makes him regardful of the rights of others. All
this individual morality I was taught by the books I read at home and
the books I studied at Harvard. But there was almost no teaching of
the need for collective action, and of the fact that in addition to,
not as a substitute for, individual responsibility, there is a
collective responsibility. Books such as Herbert Croly's Promise of
American Life and Walter E. Weyl's New Democracy would generally at
that time have been treated either as unintelligible or else as pure
heresy.
The teaching which I received was genuinely democratic in one way. It
was not so democratic in another. I grew into manhood thoroughly
imbued with the feeling that a man must be respected for what he made
of himself. But I had also, consciously or unconsciously, been taught
that socially and industrially pretty much the whole duty of the man
lay in thus making the best of himself; that he should be honest in
his dealings with others and charitable in the old-fashioned way to
the unfortunate; but that it was no part of his business to join with
others in trying to make things better for the many by curbing the
abnormal and excessive development of individualism in a few. Now I do
not mean that this training was by any means all bad. On the contrary,
the insistence upon individual responsibility was, and is, and always
will be, a prime necessity. Teaching of the kind I absorbed from both
my text-books and my surroundings is a healthy anti-scorbutic to the
sentimentality which by complacently excusing the individual for all
his shortcomings would finally hopelessly weaken the spring of moral
purpose. It also keeps alive that virile vigor for the lack of which
in the average individual no possible perfection of law or of
community action can ever atone. But such teaching, if not corrected
by other teaching, means acquiescence in a riot of lawless business
individualism which would be quite as destructive to real civilization
as the lawless military individualism of the Dark Ages. I left college
and entered the big world owing more than I can express to the
training I had received, especially in my own home; but with much else
also to learn if I were to become really fitted to do my part in the
work that lay ahead for the generation of Americans to which I
belonged.
Foreword || 2: The Vigor of Life >>