2: The Vigor of Life
<< 1: Retrospect || 3: Reporting >>
Looking back, a man really has a more objective feeling about himself
as a child than he has about his father or mother. He feels as if that
child were not the present he, individually, but an ancestor; just as
much an ancestor as either of his parents. The saying that the child
is the father to the man may be taken in a sense almost the reverse of
that usually given to it. The child is father to the man in the sense
that his individuality is separate from the individuality of the
grown-up into which he turns. This is perhaps one reason why a man can
speak of his childhood and early youth with a sense of detachment.
Having been a sickly boy, with no natural bodily prowess, and having
lived much at home, I was at first quite unable to hold my own when
thrown into contact with other boys of rougher antecedents. I was
nervous and timid. Yet from reading of the people I admired—ranging
from the soldiers of Valley Forge, and Morgan's riflemen, to the
heroes of my favorite stories—and from hearing of the feats performed
by my Southern forefathers and kinsfolk, and from knowing my father, I
felt a great admiration for men who were fearless and who could hold
their own in the world, and I had a great desire to be like them.
Until I was nearly fourteen I let this desire take no more definite
shape than day-dreams. Then an incident happened that did me real
good. Having an attack of asthma, I was sent off by myself to
Moosehead Lake. On the stage-coach ride thither I encountered a couple
of other boys who were about my own age, but very much more competent
and also much more mischievous. I have no doubt they were good-hearted
boys, but they were boys! They found that I was a foreordained and
predestined victim, and industriously proceeded to make life miserable
for me. The worst feature was that when I finally tried to fight them
I discovered that either one singly could not only handle me with easy
contempt, but handle me so as not to hurt me much and yet to prevent
my doing any damage whatever in return.
The experience taught me what probably no amount of good advice could
have taught me. I made up my mind that I must try to learn so that I
would not again be put in such a helpless position; and having become
quickly and bitterly conscious that I did not have the natural prowess
to hold my own, I decided that I would try to supply its place by
training. Accordingly, with my father's hearty approval, I started to
learn to box. I was a painfully slow and awkward pupil, and certainly
worked two or three years before I made any perceptible improvement
whatever. My first boxing-master was John Long, an ex-prize-fighter. I
can see his rooms now, with colored pictures of the fights between Tom
Hyer and Yankee Sullivan, and Heenan and Sayers, and other great
events in the annals of the squared circle. On one occasion, to excite
interest among his patrons, he held a series of "championship" matches
for the different weights, the prizes being, at least in my own class,
pewter mugs of a value, I should suppose, approximating fifty cents.
Neither he nor I had any idea that I could do anything, but I was
entered in the lightweight contest, in which it happened that I was
pitted in succession against a couple of reedy striplings who were
even worse than I was. Equally to their surprise and to my own, and to
John Long's, I won, and the pewter mug became one of my most prized
possessions. I kept it, and alluded to it, and I fear bragged about
it, for a number of years, and I only wish I knew where it was now.
Years later I read an account of a little man who once in a fifth-rate
handicap race won a worthless pewter medal and joyed in it ever after.
Well, as soon as I read that story I felt that that little man and I
were brothers.
This was, as far as I remember, the only one of my exceedingly rare
athletic triumphs which would be worth relating. I did a good deal of
boxing and wrestling in Harvard, but never attained to the first rank
in either, even at my own weight. Once, in the big contests in the
Gym, I got either into the finals or semi-finals, I forget which; but
aside from this the chief part I played was to act as trial horse for
some friend or classmate who did have a chance of distinguishing
himself in the championship contests.
I was fond of horseback-riding, but I took to it slowly and with
difficulty, exactly as with boxing. It was a long time before I became
even a respectable rider, and I never got much higher. I mean by this
that I never became a first-flight man in the hunting field, and never
even approached the bronco-busting class in the West. Any man, if he
chooses, can gradually school himself to the requisite nerve, and
gradually learn the requisite seat and hands, that will enable him to
do respectably across country, or to perform the average work on a
ranch. Of my ranch experiences I shall speak later. At intervals after
leaving college I hunted on Long Island with the Meadowbrook hounds.
Almost the only experience I ever had in this connection that was of
any interest was on one occasion when I broke my arm. My purse did not
permit me to own expensive horses. On this occasion I was riding an
animal, a buggy horse originally, which its owner sold because now and
then it insisted on thoughtfully lying down when in harness. It never
did this under the saddle; and when he turned it out to grass it would
solemnly hop over the fence and get somewhere where it did not belong.
The last trait was what converted it into a hunter. It was a natural
jumper, although without any speed. On the hunt in question I got
along very well until the pace winded my ex-buggy horse, and it turned
a somersault over a fence. When I got on it after the fall I found I
could not use my left arm. I supposed it was merely a strain. The
buggy horse was a sedate animal which I rode with a snaffle. So we
pounded along at the tail of the hunt, and I did not appreciate that
my arm was broken for three or four fences. Then we came to a big
drop, and the jar made the bones slip past one another so as to throw
the hand out of position. It did not hurt me at all, and as the horse
was as easy to sit as a rocking-chair, I got in at the death.
I think August Belmont was master of the hunt when the above incident
occurred. I know he was master on another occasion on which I met with
a mild adventure. On one of the hunts when I was out a man was thrown,
dragged by one stirrup, and killed. In consequence I bought a pair of
safety stirrups, which I used the next time I went out. Within five
minutes after the run began I found that the stirrups were so very
"safe" that they would not stay in at all. First one went off at one
jump, and then the other at another jump—with a fall for me on each
occasion. I hated to give up the fun so early, and accordingly
finished the run without any stirrups. My horse never went as fast as
on that run. Doubtless a first-class horseman can ride as well without
stirrups as with them. But I was not a first-class horseman. When
anything unexpected happened, I was apt to clasp the solemn buggy
horse firmly with my spurred heels, and the result was that he laid
himself out to do his best in the way of galloping. He speedily found
that, thanks to the snaffle bit, I could not pull him in, so when we
came to a down grade he would usually put on steam. Then if there was
a fence at the bottom and he checked at all, I was apt to shoot
forward, and in such event we went over the fence in a way that
reminded me of Leech's picture, in /Punch/, of Mr. Tom Noddy and his
mare jumping a fence in the following order: Mr. Tom Noddy, I; his
mare, II. However, I got in at the death this time also.
I was fond of walking and climbing. As a lad I used to go to the north
woods, in Maine, both in fall and winter. There I made life friends of
two men, Will Dow and Bill Sewall: I canoed with them, and tramped
through the woods with them, visiting the winter logging camps on
snow-shoes. Afterward they were with me in the West. Will Dow is dead.
Bill Sewall was collector of customs under me, on the Aroostook
border. Except when hunting I never did any mountaineering save for a
couple of conventional trips up the Matterhorn and the Jungfrau on one
occasion when I was in Switzerland.
I never did much with the shotgun, but I practiced a good deal with
the rifle. I had a rifle-range at Sagamore Hill, where I often took
friends to shoot. Once or twice when I was visited by parties of
released Boer prisoners, after the close of the South African War,
they and I held shooting matches together. The best man with both
pistol and rifle who ever shot there was Stewart Edward White. Among
the many other good men was a stanch friend, Baron Speck von
Sternberg, afterwards German Ambassador at Washington during my
Presidency. He was a capital shot, rider, and walker, a devoted and
most efficient servant of Germany, who had fought with distinction in
the Franco-German War when barely more than a boy; he was the hero of
the story of "the pig dog" in Archibald Forbes's volume of
reminiscences. It was he who first talked over with me the raising of
a regiment of horse riflemen from among the ranchmen and cowboys of
the plains. When Ambassador, the poor, gallant, tender-hearted fellow
was dying of a slow and painful disease, so that he could not play
with the rest of us, but the agony of his mortal illness never in the
slightest degree interfered with his work. Among the other men who
shot and rode and walked with me was Cecil Spring-Rice, who has just
been appointed British Ambassador to the United States. He was my
groomsman, my best man, when I was married—at St. George's, Hanover
Square, which made me feel as if I were living in one of Thackeray's
novels.
My own experience as regards marksmanship was much the same as my
experience as regards horsemanship. There are men whose eye and hand
are so quick and so sure that they achieve a perfection of
marksmanship to which no practice will enable ordinary men to attain.
There are other men who cannot learn to shoot with any accuracy at
all. In between come the mass of men of ordinary abilities who, if
they choose resolutely to practice, can by sheer industry and judgment
make themselves fair rifle shots. The men who show this requisite
industry and judgment can without special difficulty raise themselves
to the second class of respectable rifle shots; and it is to this
class that I belong. But to have reached this point of marksmanship
with the rifle at a target by no means implies ability to hit game in
the field, especially dangerous game. All kinds of other qualities,
moral and physical, enter into being a good hunter, and especially a
good hunter after dangerous game, just as all kinds of other qualities
in addition to skill with the rifle enter into being a good soldier.
With dangerous game, after a fair degree of efficiency with the rifle
has been attained, the prime requisites are cool judgment and that
kind of nerve which consists in avoiding being rattled. Any beginner
is apt to have "buck fever," and therefore no beginner should go at
dangerous game.
Buck fever means a state of intense nervous excitement which may be
entirely divorced from timidity. It may affect a man the first time he
has to speak to a large audience just as it affects him the first time
he sees a buck or goes into battle. What such a man needs is not
courage but nerve control, cool-headedness. This he can get only by
actual practice. He must, by custom and repeated exercise of self-
mastery, get his nerves thoroughly under control. This is largely a
matter of habit, in the sense of repeated effort and repeated exercise
of will power. If the man has the right stuff in him, his will grows
stronger and stronger with each exercise of it—and if he has not the
right stuff in him he had better keep clear of dangerous game hunting,
or indeed of any other form of sport or work in which there is bodily
peril.
After he has achieved the ability to exercise wariness and judgment
and the control over his nerves /which will make him shoot as well at
the game as at a target/, he can begin his essays at dangerous game
hunting, and he will then find that it does not demand such abnormal
prowess as the outsider is apt to imagine. A man who can hit a soda-
water bottle at the distance of a few yards can brain a lion or a bear
or an elephant at that distance, and if he cannot brain it when it
charges he can at least bring it to a standstill. All he has to do is
to shoot as accurately as he would at a soda-water bottle; and to do
this requires nerve, at least as much as it does physical address.
Having reached this point, the hunter must not imagine that he is
warranted in taking desperate chances. There are degrees in
proficiency; and what is a warrantable and legitimate risk for a man
to take when he has reached a certain grade of efficiency may be a
foolish risk for him to take before he has reached that grade. A man
who has reached the degree of proficiency indicated above is quite
warranted in walking in at a lion at bay, in an open plain, to, say,
within a hundred yards. If the lion has not charged, the man ought at
that distance to knock him over and prevent his charging; and if the
lion is already charging, the man ought at that distance to be able to
stop him. But the amount of prowess which warrants a man in relying on
his ability to perform this feat does not by any means justify him in
thinking that, for instance, he can crawl after a wounded lion into
thick cover. I have known men of indifferent prowess to perform this
latter feat successfully, but at least as often they have been
unsuccessful, and in these cases the result has been unpleasant. The
man who habitually follows wounded lions into thick cover must be a
hunter of the highest skill, or he can count with certainty on an
ultimate mauling.
The first two or three bucks I ever saw gave me buck fever badly, but
after I had gained experience with ordinary game I never had buck
fever at all with dangerous game. In my case the overcoming of buck
fever was the result of conscious effort and a deliberate
determination to overcome it. More happily constituted men never have
to make this determined effort at all—which may perhaps show that the
average man can profit more from my experiences than he can from those
of the exceptional man.
I have shot only five kinds of animals which can fairly be called
dangerous game—that is, the lion, elephant, rhinoceros, and buffalo
in Africa, and the big grizzly bear a quarter of a century ago in the
Rockies. Taking into account not only my own personal experience, but
the experiences of many veteran hunters, I regard all the four African
animals, but especially the lion, elephant, and buffalo, as much more
dangerous than the grizzly. As it happened, however, the only narrow
escape I personally ever had was from a grizzly, and in Africa the
animal killed closest to me as it was charging was a rhinoceros—all
of which goes to show that a man must not generalize too broadly from
his own personal experiences. On the whole, I think the lion the most
dangerous of all these five animals; that is, I think that, if fairly
hunted, there is a larger percentage of hunters killed or mauled for a
given number of lions killed than for a given number of any one of the
other animals. Yet I personally had no difficulties with lions. I
twice killed lions which were at bay and just starting to charge, and
I killed a heavy-maned male while it was in full charge. But in each
instance I had plenty of leeway, the animal being so far off that even
if my bullet had not been fatal I should have had time for a couple
more shots. The African buffalo is undoubtedly a dangerous beast, but
it happened that the few that I shot did not charge. A bull elephant,
a vicious "rogue," which had been killing people in the native
villages, did charge before being shot at. My son Kermit and I stopped
it at forty yards. Another bull elephant, also unwounded, which
charged, nearly got me, as I had just fired both cartridges from my
heavy double-barreled rifle in killing the bull I was after—the first
wild elephant I had ever seen. The second bull came through the thick
brush to my left like a steam plow through a light snowdrift,
everything snapping before his rush, and was so near that he could
have hit me with his trunk. I slipped past him behind a tree. People
have asked me how I felt on this occasion. My answer has always been
that I suppose I felt as most men of like experience feel on such
occasions. At such a moment a hunter is so very busy that he has no
time to get frightened. He wants to get in his cartridges and try
another shot.
Rhinoceros are truculent, blustering beasts, much the most stupid of
all the dangerous game I know. Generally their attitude is one of mere
stupidity and bluff. But on occasions they do charge wickedly, both
when wounded and when entirely unprovoked. The first I ever shot I
mortally wounded at a few rods' distance, and it charged with the
utmost determination, whereat I and my companion both fired, and more
by good luck than anything else brought it to the ground just thirteen
paces from where we stood. Another rhinoceros may or may not have been
meaning to charge me; I have never been certain which. It heard us and
came at us through rather thick brush, snorting and tossing its head.
I am by no means sure that it had fixedly hostile intentions, and
indeed with my present experience I think it likely that if I had not
fired it would have flinched at the last moment and either retreated
or gone by me. But I am not a rhinoceros mind reader, and its actions
were such as to warrant my regarding it as a suspicious character. I
stopped it with a couple of bullets, and then followed it up and
killed it. The skins of all these animals which I thus killed are in
the National Museum at Washington.
But, as I said above, the only narrow escape I met with was not from
one of these dangerous African animals, but from a grizzly bear. It
was about twenty-four years ago. I had wounded the bear just at
sunset, in a wood of lodge-pole pines, and, following him, I wounded
him again, as he stood on the other side of a thicket. He then charged
through the brush, coming with such speed and with such an irregular
gait that, try as I would, I was not able to get the sight of my rifle
on the brain-pan, though I hit him very hard with both the remaining
barrels of my magazine Winchester. It was in the days of black powder,
and the smoke hung. After my last shot, the first thing I saw was the
bear's left paw as he struck at me, so close that I made a quick
movement to one side. He was, however, practically already dead, and
after another jump, and while in the very act of trying to turn to
come at me, he collapsed like a shot rabbit.
By the way, I had a most exasperating time trying to bring in his
skin. I was alone, traveling on foot with one very docile little
mountain mare for a pack pony. The little mare cared nothing for bears
or anything else, so there was no difficulty in packing her. But the
man without experience can hardly realize the work it was to get that
bearskin off the carcass and then to pack it, wet, slippery, and
heavy, so that it would ride evenly on the pony. I was at the time
fairly well versed in packing with a "diamond hitch," the standby of
Rocky Mountain packers in my day; but the diamond hitch is a two-man
job; and even working with a "squaw hitch," I got into endless trouble
with that wet and slippery bearskin. With infinite labor I would get
the skin on the pony and run the ropes over it until to all seeming it
was fastened properly. Then off we would start, and after going about
a hundred yards I would notice the hide beginning to bulge through
between two ropes. I would shift one of them, and then the hide would
bulge somewhere else. I would shift the rope again; and still the hide
would flow slowly out as if it was lava. The first thing I knew it
would come down on one side, and the little mare, with her feet
planted resolutely, would wait for me to perform my part by getting
that bearskin back in its proper place on the McClellan saddle which I
was using as a makeshift pack saddle. The feat of killing the bear the
previous day sank into nothing compared with the feat of making the
bearskin ride properly as a pack on the following three days.
The reason why I was alone in the mountains on this occasion was
because, for the only time in all my experience, I had a difficulty
with my guide. He was a crippled old mountain man, with a profound
contempt for "tenderfeet," a contempt that in my case was accentuated
by the fact that I wore spectacles—which at that day and in that
region were usually held to indicate a defective moral character in
the wearer. He had never previously acted as guide, or, as he
expressed it, "trundled a tenderfoot," and though a good hunter, who
showed me much game, our experience together was not happy. He was
very rheumatic and liked to lie abed late, so that I usually had to
get breakfast, and, in fact, do most of the work around camp. Finally
one day he declined to go out with me, saying that he had a pain.
When, that afternoon, I got back to camp, I speedily found what the
"pain" was. We were traveling very light indeed, I having practically
nothing but my buffalo sleeping-bag, my wash kit, and a pair of socks.
I had also taken a flask of whisky for emergencies—although, as I
found that the emergencies never arose and that tea was better than
whisky when a man was cold or done out, I abandoned the practice of
taking whisky on hunting trips twenty years ago. When I got back to
camp the old fellow was sitting on a tree-trunk, very erect, with his
rifle across his knees, and in response to my nod of greeting he
merely leered at me. I leaned my rifle against a tree, walked over to
where my bed was lying, and, happening to rummage in it for something,
I found the whisky flask was empty. I turned on him at once and
accused him of having drunk it, to which he merely responded by asking
what I was going to do about it. There did not seem much to do, so I
said that we would part company—we were only four or five days from a
settlement—and I would go in alone, taking one of the horses. He
responded by cocking his rifle and saying that I could go alone and be
damned to me, but I could not take any horse. I answered "all right,"
that if I could not I could not, and began to move around to get some
flour and salt pork. He was misled by my quietness and by the fact
that I had not in any way resented either his actions or his language
during the days we had been together, and did not watch me as closely
as he ought to have done. He was sitting with the cocked rifle across
his knees, the muzzle to the left. My rifle was leaning against a tree
near the cooking things to his right. Managing to get near it, I
whipped it up and threw the bead on him, calling, "Hands up!" He of
course put up his hands, and then said, "Oh, come, I was only joking";
to which I answered, "Well, I am not. Now straighten your legs and let
your rifle go to the ground." He remonstrated, saying the rifle would
go off, and I told him to let it go off. However, he straightened his
legs in such fashion that it came to the ground without a jar. I then
made him move back, and picked up the rifle. By this time he was quite
sober, and really did not seem angry, looking at me quizzically. He
told me that if I would give him back his rifle, he would call it
quits and we could go on together. I did not think it best to trust
him, so I told him that our hunt was pretty well through, anyway, and
that I would go home. There was a blasted pine on the trail, in plain
view of the camp, about a mile off, and I told him that I would leave
his rifle at that blasted pine if I could see him in camp, but that he
must not come after me, for if he did I should assume that it was with
hostile intent and would shoot. He said he had no intention of coming
after me; and as he was very much crippled with rheumatism, I did not
believe he would do so.
Accordingly I took the little mare, with nothing but some flour,
bacon, and tea, and my bed-roll, and started off. At the blasted pine
I looked round, and as I could see him in camp, I left his rifle
there. I then traveled till dark, and that night, for the only time in
my experience, I used in camping a trick of the old-time trappers in
the Indian days. I did not believe I would be followed, but still it
was not possible to be sure, so, after getting supper, while my pony
fed round, I left the fire burning, repacked the mare and pushed ahead
until it literally became so dark that I could not see. Then I
picketed the mare, slept where I was without a fire until the first
streak of dawn, and then pushed on for a couple of hours before
halting to take breakfast and to let the little mare have a good feed.
No plainsman needs to be told that a man should not lie near a fire if
there is danger of an enemy creeping up on him, and that above all a
man should not put himself in a position where he can be ambushed at
dawn. On this second day I lost the trail, and toward nightfall gave
up the effort to find it, camped where I was, and went out to shoot a
grouse for supper. It was while hunting in vain for a grouse that I
came on the bear and killed it as above described.
When I reached the settlement and went into the store, the storekeeper
identified me by remarking: "You're the tenderfoot that old Hank was
trundling, ain't you?" I admitted that I was. A good many years later,
after I had been elected Vice-President, I went on a cougar hunt in
northwestern Colorado with Johnny Goff, a famous hunter and mountain
man. It was midwinter. I was rather proud of my achievements, and
pictured myself as being known to the few settlers in the neighborhood
as a successful mountain-lion hunter. I could not help grinning when I
found out that they did not even allude to me as the Vice-President-
elect, let alone as a hunter, but merely as "Johnny Goff's tourist."
Of course during the years when I was most busy at serious work I
could do no hunting, and even my riding was of a decorous kind. But a
man whose business is sedentary should get some kind of exercise if he
wishes to keep himself in as good physical trim as his brethren who do
manual labor. When I worked on a ranch, I needed no form of exercise
except my work, but when I worked in an office the case was different.
A couple of summers I played polo with some of my neighbors. I shall
always believe we played polo in just the right way for middle-aged
men with stables of the general utility order. Of course it was polo
which was chiefly of interest to ourselves, the only onlookers being
the members of our faithful families. My two ponies were the only
occupants of my stable except a cart-horse. My wife and I rode and
drove them, and they were used for household errands and for the
children, and for two afternoons a week they served me as polo ponies.
Polo is a good game, infinitely better for vigorous men than tennis or
golf or anything of that kind. There is all the fun of football, with
the horse thrown in; and if only people would be willing to play it in
simple fashion it would be almost as much within their reach as golf.
But at Oyster Bay our great and permanent amusements were rowing and
sailing; I do not care for the latter, and am fond of the former. I
suppose it sounds archaic, but I cannot help thinking that the people
with motor boats miss a great deal. If they would only keep to
rowboats or canoes, and use oar or paddle themselves, they would get
infinitely more benefit than by having their work done for them by
gasoline. But I rarely took exercise merely as exercise. Primarily I
took it because I liked it. Play should never be allowed to interfere
with work; and a life devoted merely to play is, of all forms of
existence, the most dismal. But the joy of life is a very good thing,
and while work is the essential in it, play also has its place.
When obliged to live in cities, I for a long time found that boxing
and wrestling enabled me to get a good deal of exercise in condensed
and attractive form. I was reluctantly obliged to abandon both as I
grew older. I dropped the wrestling earliest. When I became Governor,
the champion middleweight wrestler of America happened to be in
Albany, and I got him to come round three or four afternoons a week.
Incidentally I may mention that his presence caused me a difficulty
with the Comptroller, who refused to audit a bill I put in for a
wrestling-mat, explaining that I could have a billiard-table,
billiards being recognized as a proper Gubernatorial amusement, but
that a wrestling-mat symbolized something unusual and unheard of and
could not be permitted. The middleweight champion was of course so
much better than I was that he could not only take care of himself but
of me too and see that I was not hurt—for wrestling is a much more
violent amusement than boxing. But after a couple of months he had to
go away, and he left as a substitute a good-humored, stalwart
professional oarsman. The oarsman turned out to know very little about
wrestling. He could not even take care of himself, not to speak of me.
By the end of our second afternoon one of his long ribs had been caved
in and two of my short ribs badly damaged, and my left shoulder-blade
so nearly shoved out of place that it creaked. He was nearly as
pleased as I was when I told him I thought we would "vote the war a
failure" and abandon wrestling. After that I took up boxing again.
While President I used to box with some of the aides, as well as play
single-stick with General Wood. After a few years I had to abandon
boxing as well as wrestling, for in one bout a young captain of
artillery cross-countered me on the eye, and the blow smashed the
little blood-vessels. Fortunately it was my left eye, but the sight
has been dim ever since, and if it had been the right eye I should
have been entirely unable to shoot. Accordingly I thought it better to
acknowledge that I had become an elderly man and would have to stop
boxing. I then took up jiu-jitsu for a year or two.
When I was in the Legislature and was working very hard, with little
chance of getting out of doors, all the exercise I got was boxing and
wrestling. A young fellow turned up who was a second-rate prize-
fighter, the son of one of my old boxing teachers. For several weeks I
had him come round to my rooms in the morning to put on the gloves
with me for half an hour. Then he suddenly stopped, and some days
later I received a letter of woe from him from the jail. I found that
he was by profession a burglar, and merely followed boxing as the
amusement of his lighter moments, or when business was slack.
Naturally, being fond of boxing, I grew to know a good many prize-
fighters, and to most of those I knew I grew genuinely attached. I
have never been able to sympathize with the outcry against prize-
fighters. The only objection I have to the prize ring is the
crookedness that has attended its commercial development. Outside of
this I regard boxing, whether professional or amateur, as a first-
class sport, and I do not regard it as brutalizing. Of course matches
can be conducted under conditions that make them brutalizing. But this
is true of football games and of most other rough and vigorous sports.
Most certainly prize-fighting is not half as brutalizing or
demoralizing as many forms of big business and of the legal work
carried on in connection with big business. Powerful, vigorous men of
strong animal development must have some way in which their animal
spirits can find vent. When I was Police Commissioner I found (and
Jacob Riis will back me up in this) that the establishment of a boxing
club in a tough neighborhood always tended to do away with knifing and
gun-fighting among the young fellows who would otherwise have been in
murderous gangs. Many of these young fellows were not naturally
criminals at all, but they had to have some outlet for their
activities. In the same way I have always regarded boxing as a first-
class sport to encourage in the Young Men's Christian Association. I
do not like to see young Christians with shoulders that slope like a
champagne bottle. Of course boxing should be encouraged in the army
and navy. I was first drawn to two naval chaplains, Fathers Chidwick
and Rainey, by finding that each of them had bought half a dozen sets
of boxing-gloves and encouraged their crews in boxing.
When I was Police Commissioner, I heartily approved the effort to get
boxing clubs started in New York on a clean basis. Later I was
reluctantly obliged to come to the conclusion that the prize ring had
become hopelessly debased and demoralized, and as Governor I aided in
the passage of and signed the bill putting a stop to professional
boxing for money. This was because some of the prize-fighters
themselves were crooked, while the crowd of hangers-on who attended
and made up and profited by the matches had placed the whole business
on a basis of commercialism and brutality that was intolerable. I
shall always maintain that boxing contests themselves make good,
healthy sport. It is idle to compare them with bull-fighting; the
torture and death of the wretched horses in bull-fighting is enough of
itself to blast the sport, no matter how great the skill and prowess
shown by the bull-fighters. Any sport in which the death and torture
of animals is made to furnish pleasure to the spectators is debasing.
There should always be the opportunity provided in a glove fight or
bare-fist fight to stop it when one competitor is hopelessly
outclassed or too badly hammered. But the men who take part in these
fights are hard as nails, and it is not worth while to feel
sentimental about their receiving punishment which as a matter of fact
they do not mind. Of course the men who look on ought to be able to
stand up with the gloves, or without them, themselves; I have scant
use for the type of sportsmanship which consists merely in looking on
at the feats of some one else.
Some as good citizens as I know are or were prize-fighters. Take Mike
Donovan, of New York. He and his family represent a type of American
citizenship of which we have a right to be proud. Mike is a devoted
temperance man, and can be relied upon for every movement in the
interest of good citizenship. I was first intimately thrown with him
when I was Police Commissioner. One evening he and I—both in dress
suits—attended a temperance meeting of Catholic societies. It
culminated in a lively set-to between myself and a Tammany Senator who
was a very good fellow, but whose ideas of temperance differed
radically from mine, and, as the event proved, from those of the
majority of the meeting. Mike evidently regarded himself as my backer
—he was sitting on the platform beside me—and I think felt as
pleased and interested as if the set-to had been physical instead of
merely verbal. Afterward I grew to know him well both while I was
Governor and while I was President, and many a time he came on and
boxed with me.
Battling Nelson was another stanch friend, and he and I think alike on
most questions of political and industrial life; although he once
expressed to me some commiseration because, as President, I did not
get anything like the money return for my services that he aggregated
during the same term of years in the ring. Bob Fitzsimmons was another
good friend of mine. He has never forgotten his early skill as a
blacksmith, and among the things that I value and always keep in use
is a penholder made by Bob out of a horseshoe, with an inscription
saying that it is "Made for and presented to President Theodore
Roosevelt by his friend and admirer, Robert Fitzsimmons." I have for a
long time had the friendship of John L. Sullivan, than whom in his
prime no better man ever stepped into the ring. He is now a
Massachusetts farmer. John used occasionally to visit me at the White
House, his advent always causing a distinct flutter among the waiting
Senators and Congressmen. When I went to Africa he presented me with a
gold-mounted rabbit's foot for luck. I carried it through my African
trip; and I certainly had good luck.
On one occasion one of my prize-fighting friends called on me at the
White House on business. He explained that he wished to see me alone,
sat down opposite me, and put a very expensive cigar on the desk,
saying, "Have a cigar." I thanked him and said I did not smoke, to
which he responded, "Put it in your pocket." He then added, "Take
another; put both in your pocket." This I accordingly did. Having thus
shown at the outset the necessary formal courtesy, my visitor, an old
and valued friend, proceeded to explain that a nephew of his had
enlisted in the Marine Corps, but had been absent without leave, and
was threatened with dishonorable discharge on the ground of desertion.
My visitor, a good citizen and a patriotic American, was stung to the
quick at the thought of such an incident occurring in his family, and
he explained to me that it must not occur, that there must not be the
disgrace to the family, although he would be delighted to have the
offender "handled rough" to teach him a needed lesson; he added that
he wished I would take him and handle him myself, for he knew that I
would see that he "got all that was coming to him." Then a look of
pathos came into his eyes, and he explained: "That boy I just cannot
understand. He was my sister's favorite son, and I always took a
special interest in him myself. I did my best to bring him up the way
he ought to go. But there was just nothing to be done with him. His
tastes were naturally low. He took to music!" What form this debasing
taste for music assumed I did not inquire; and I was able to grant my
friend's wish.
While in the White House I always tried to get a couple of hours'
exercise in the afternoons—sometimes tennis, more often riding, or
else a rough cross-country walk, perhaps down Rock Creek, which was
then as wild as a stream in the White Mountains, or on the Virginia
side along the Potomac. My companions at tennis or on these rides and
walks we gradually grew to style the Tennis Cabinet; and then we
extended the term to take in many of my old-time Western friends such
as Ben Daniels, Seth Bullock, Luther Kelly, and others who had taken
part with me in more serious outdoor adventures than walking and
riding for pleasure. Most of the men who were oftenest with me on
these trips—men like Major-General Leonard Wood; or Major-General
Thomas Henry Barry; or Presley Marion Rixey, Surgeon-General of the
Navy; or Robert Bacon, who was afterwards Secretary of State; or James
Garfield, who was Secretary of the Interior; or Gifford Pinchot, who
was chief of the Forest Service—were better men physically than I
was; but I could ride and walk well enough for us all thoroughly to
enjoy it. Often, especially in the winters and early springs, we would
arrange for a point to point walk, not turning aside for anything—for
instance, swimming Rock Creek or even the Potomac if it came in our
way. Of course under such circumstances we had to arrange that our
return to Washington should be when it was dark, so that our
appearance might scandalize no one. On several occasions we thus swam
Rock Creek in the early spring when the ice was floating thick upon
it. If we swam the Potomac, we usually took off our clothes. I
remember one such occasion when the French Ambassador, Jusserand, who
was a member of the Tennis Cabinet, was along, and, just as we were
about to get in to swim, somebody said, "Mr. Ambassador, Mr.
Ambassador, you haven't taken off your gloves," to which he promptly
responded, "I think I will leave them on; we might meet ladies!"
We liked Rock Creek for these walks because we could do so much
scrambling and climbing along the cliffs; there was almost as much
climbing when we walked down the Potomac to Washington from the
Virginia end of the Chain Bridge. I would occasionally take some big-
game friend from abroad, Selous or St. George Littledale or Captain
Radclyffe or Paul Niedicke, on these walks. Once I invited an entire
class of officers who were attending lectures at the War College to
come on one of these walks; I chose a route which gave us the hardest
climbing along the rocks and the deepest crossings of the creek; and
my army friends enjoyed it hugely—being the right sort, to a man.
On March 1, 1909, three days before leaving the Presidency, various
members of the Tennis Cabinet lunched with me at the White House.
"Tennis Cabinet" was an elastic term, and of course many who ought to
have been at the lunch were, for one reason or another, away from
Washington; but, to make up for this, a goodly number of out-of-town
honorary members, so to speak, were present—for instance, Seth
Bullock; Luther Kelly, better known as Yellowstone Kelly in the days
when he was an army scout against the Sioux; and Abernathy, the wolf-
hunter. At the end of the lunch Seth Bullock suddenly reached forward,
swept aside a mass of flowers which made a centerpiece on the table,
and revealed a bronze cougar by Proctor, which was a parting gift to
me. The lunch party and the cougar were then photographed on the lawn.
Some of the younger officers who were my constant companions on these
walks and rides pointed out to me the condition of utter physical
worthlessness into which certain of the elder ones had permitted
themselves to lapse, and the very bad effect this would certainly have
if ever the army were called into service. I then looked into the
matter for myself, and was really shocked at what I found. Many of the
older officers were so unfit physically that their condition would
have excited laughter, had it not been so serious, to think that they
belonged to the military arm of the Government. A cavalry colonel
proved unable to keep his horse at a smart trot for even half a mile,
when I visited his post; a Major-General proved afraid even to let his
horse canter, when he went on a ride with us; and certain otherwise
good men proved as unable to walk as if they had been sedentary
brokers. I consulted with men like Major-Generals Wood and Bell, who
were themselves of fine physique, with bodies fit to meet any demand.
It was late in my administration; and we deemed it best only to make a
beginning—experience teaches the most inveterate reformer how hard it
is to get a totally non-military nation to accept seriously any
military improvement. Accordingly, I merely issued directions that
each officer should prove his ability to walk fifty miles, or ride one
hundred, in three days.
This is, of course, a test which many a healthy middle-aged woman
would be able to meet. But a large portion of the press adopted the
view that it was a bit of capricious tyranny on my part; and a
considerable number of elderly officers, with desk rather than field
experience, intrigued with their friends in Congress to have the order
annulled. So one day I took a ride of a little over one hundred miles
myself, in company with Surgeon-General Rixey and two other officers.
The Virginia roads were frozen and in ruts, and in the afternoon and
evening there was a storm of snow and sleet; and when it had been thus
experimentally shown, under unfavorable conditions, how easy it was to
do in one day the task for which the army officers were allowed three
days, all open objection ceased. But some bureau chiefs still did as
much underhanded work against the order as they dared, and it was
often difficult to reach them. In the Marine Corps Captain Leonard,
who had lost an arm at Tientsin, with two of his lieutenants did the
fifty miles in one day; for they were vigorous young men, who laughed
at the idea of treating a fifty-mile walk as over-fatiguing. Well, the
Navy Department officials rebuked them, and made them take the walk
over again in three days, on the ground that taking it in one day did
not comply with the regulations! This seems unbelievable; but Leonard
assures me it is true. He did not inform me at the time, being afraid
to "get in wrong" with his permanent superiors. If I had known of the
order, short work would have been made of the bureaucrat who issued
it.(1)
These tests were kept during my administration. They were afterwards
abandoned; not through perversity or viciousness; but through
weakness, and inability to understand the need of preparedness in
advance, if the emergencies of war are to be properly met, when, or
if, they arrive.
In no country with an army worth calling such is there a chance for a
man physically unfit to stay in the service. Our countrymen should
understand that every army officer—and every marine officer—ought to
be summarily removed from the service unless he is able to undergo far
severer tests than those which, as a beginning, I imposed. To follow
any other course is to put a premium on slothful incapacity, and to do
the gravest wrong to the Nation.
I have mentioned all these experiences, and I could mention scores of
others, because out of them grew my philosophy—perhaps they were in
part caused by my philosophy—of bodily vigor as a method of getting
that vigor of soul without which vigor of the body counts for nothing.
The dweller in cities has less chance than the dweller in the country
to keep his body sound and vigorous. But he can do so, if only he will
take the trouble. Any young lawyer, shopkeeper, or clerk, or shop-
assistant can keep himself in good condition if he tries. Some of the
best men who have ever served under me in the National Guard and in my
regiment were former clerks or floor-walkers. Why, Johnny Hayes, the
Marathon victor, and at one time world champion, one of my valued
friends and supporters, was a floor-walker in Bloomingdale's big
department store. Surely with Johnny Hayes as an example, any young
man in a city can hope to make his body all that a vigorous man's body
should be.
I once made a speech to which I gave the title "The Strenuous Life."
Afterwards I published a volume of essays with this for a title. There
were two translations of it which always especially pleased me. One
was by a Japanese officer who knew English well, and who had carried
the essay all through the Manchurian campaign, and later translated it
for the benefit of his countrymen. The other was by an Italian lady,
whose brother, an officer in the Italian army who had died on duty in
a foreign land, had also greatly liked the article and carried it
round with him. In translating the title the lady rendered it in
Italian as Vigor di Vita. I thought this translation a great
improvement on the original, and have always wished that I had myself
used "The Vigor of Life" as a heading to indicate what I was trying to
preach, instead of the heading I actually did use.
There are two kinds of success, or rather two kinds of ability
displayed in the achievement of success. There is, first, the success
either in big things or small things which comes to the man who has in
him the natural power to do what no one else can do, and what no
amount of training, no perseverance or will power, will enable any
ordinary man to do. This success, of course, like every other kind of
success, may be on a very big scale or on a small scale. The quality
which the man possesses may be that which enables him to run a hundred
yards in nine and three-fifths seconds, or to play ten separate games
of chess at the same time blindfolded, or to add five columns of
figures at once without effort, or to write the "Ode to a Grecian
Urn," or to deliver the Gettysburg speech, or to show the ability of
Frederick at Leuthen or Nelson at Trafalgar. No amount of training of
body or mind would enable any good ordinary man to perform any one of
these feats. Of course the proper performance of each implies much
previous study or training, but in no one of them is success to be
attained save by the altogether exceptional man who has in him the
something additional which the ordinary man does not have.
This is the most striking kind of success, and it can be attained only
by the man who has in him the quality which separates him in kind no
less than in degree from his fellows. But much the commoner type of
success in every walk of life and in every species of effort is that
which comes to the man who differs from his fellows not by the kind of
quality which he possesses but by the degree of development which he
has given that quality. This kind of success is open to a large number
of persons, if only they seriously determine to achieve it. It is the
kind of success which is open to the average man of sound body and
fair mind, who has no remarkable mental or physical attributes, but
who gets just as much as possible in the way of work out of the
aptitudes that he does possess. It is the only kind of success that is
open to most of us. Yet some of the greatest successes in history have
been those of this second class—when I call it second class I am not
running it down in the least, I am merely pointing out that it differs
in kind from the first class. To the average man it is probably more
useful to study this second type of success than to study the first.
From the study of the first he can learn inspiration, he can get
uplift and lofty enthusiasm. From the study of the second he can, if
he chooses, find out how to win a similar success himself.
I need hardly say that all the successes I have ever won have been of
the second type. I never won anything without hard labor and the
exercise of my best judgment and careful planning and working long in
advance. Having been a rather sickly and awkward boy, I was as a young
man at first both nervous and distrustful of my own prowess. I had to
train myself painfully and laboriously not merely as regards my body
but as regards my soul and spirit.
When a boy I read a passage in one of Marryat's books which always
impressed me. In this passage the captain of some small British man-
of-war is explaining to the hero how to acquire the quality of
fearlessness. He says that at the outset almost every man is
frightened when he goes into action, but that the course to follow is
for the man to keep such a grip on himself that he can act just as if
he was not frightened. After this is kept up long enough it changes
from pretense to reality, and the man does in very fact become
fearless by sheer dint of practicing fearlessness when he does not
feel it. (I am using my own language, not Marryat's.) This was the
theory upon which I went. There were all kinds of things of which I
was afraid at first, ranging from grizzly bears to "mean" horses and
gun-fighters; but by acting as if I was not afraid I gradually ceased
to be afraid. Most men can have the same experience if they choose.
They will first learn to bear themselves well in trials which they
anticipate and which they school themselves in advance to meet. After
a while the habit will grow on them, and they will behave well in
sudden and unexpected emergencies which come upon them unawares.
It is of course much pleasanter if one is naturally fearless, and I
envy and respect the men who are naturally fearless. But it is a good
thing to remember that the man who does not enjoy this advantage can
nevertheless stand beside the man who does, and can do his duty with
the like efficiency, if he chooses to. Of course he must not let his
desire take the form merely of a day-dream. Let him dream about being
a fearless man, and the more he dreams the better he will be, always
provided he does his best to realize the dream in practice. He can do
his part honorably and well provided only he sets fearlessness before
himself as an ideal, schools himself to think of danger merely as
something to be faced and overcome, and regards life itself as he
should regard it, not as something to be thrown away, but as a pawn to
be promptly hazarded whenever the hazard is warranted by the larger
interests of the great game in which we are all engaged.
_________
(1) One of our best naval officers sent me the following letter, after
the above had appeared:—
"I note in your Autobiography now being published in the Outlook
that you refer to the reasons which led you to establish a
physical test for the Army, and to the action you took (your 100-
mile ride) to prevent the test being abolished. Doubtless you did
not know the following facts:
"1. The first annual navy test of 50 miles in three days was
subsequently reduced to 25 miles in two days in each quarter.
"2. This was further reduced to 10 miles each month, which is the
present 'test,' and there is danger lest even this utterly
insufficient test be abolished.
"I enclose a copy of a recent letter to the Surgeon General which
will show our present deplorable condition and the worse condition
into which we are slipping back.
"The original test of 50 miles in three days did a very great deal
of good. It decreased by thousands of dollars the money expended
on street car fare, and by a much greater sum the amount expended
over the bar. It eliminated a number of the wholly unfit; it
taught officers to walk; it forced them to learn the care of their
feet and that of their men; and it improved their general health
and was rapidly forming a taste for physical exercise."
The enclosed letter ran in part as follows:—
"I am returning under separate cover The Soldiers' Foot and the
Military Shoe.
"The book contains knowledge of a practical character that is
valuable for the men who have to march, who have suffered from foot troubles, and who must avoid them in
order to attain efficiency.
"The words in capitals express, according to my idea, the gist of
the whole matter as regards military men.
"The army officer whose men break down on test gets a black eye.
The one whose men show efficiency in this respect gets a bouquet.
"To such men the book is invaluable. There is no danger that they
will neglect it. They will actually learn it, for exactly the same
reasons that our fellows learn the gunnery instructions—or did
learn them before they were withdrawn and burned.
"But, I have not been able to interest a single naval officer in
this fine book. They will look at the pictures and say it is a
good book, but they won't read it. The marine officers, on the
contrary, are very much interested, because they have to teach
their men to care for their feet and they must know how to care
for their own. But the naval officers feel no such necessity,
simply because their men do not have to demonstrate their
efficiency by practice marches, and they themselves do not have to
do a stunt that will show up their own ignorance and inefficiency
in the matter.
"For example, some time ago I was talking with some chaps about
shoes—the necessity of having them long enough and wide enough,
etc., and one of them said: 'I have no use for such shoes, as I
never walk except when I have to, and any old shoes do for the 10-
mile-a-month stunt,' so there you are!
"When the first test was ordered, Edmonston (Washington shoe man)
told me that he sold more real walking shoes to naval officers in
three months than he had in the three preceding years. I know
three officers who lost both big-toe nails after the first test,
and another who walked nine miles in practice with a pair of heavy
walking shoes that were too small and was laid up for three days—
could not come to the office. I know plenty of men who after the
first test had to borrow shoes from larger men until their feet
'went down' to their normal size.
"This test may have been a bit too strenuous for old hearts (of men
who had never taken any exercise), but it was excellent as a
matter of instruction and training of handling feet—and in an
emergency (such as we soon may have in Mexico) sound hearts are
not much good if the feet won't stand.
"However, the 25-mile test in two days each quarter answered the
same purpose, for the reason that 12.5 miles will produce sore
feet with bad shoes, and sore feet and lame muscles even with good
shoes, if there has been no practice marching.
"It was the necessity of doing 12.5 more miles on the second day with sore feet and lame muscles that made 'em sit up and take
notice—made 'em practice walking, made 'em avoid street cars, buy
proper shoes, show some curiosity about sox and the care of the
feet in general.
"All this passed out with the introduction of the last test of 10
miles a month. As one fellow said: 'I can do that in sneakers'—
but he couldn't if the second day involved a tramp on the sore
feet.
"The point is that whereas formerly officers had to practice
walking a bit and give some attention to proper footgear, now they
don't have to, and the natural consequence is that they don't do
it.
"There are plenty of officers who do not walk any more than is
necessary to reach a street car that will carry them from their
residences to their offices. Some who have motors do not do so
much. They take no exercise. They take cocktails instead and are
getting beefy and 'ponchy,' and something should be done to remedy
this state of affairs.
"It would not be necessary if service opinion required officers so
to order their lives that it would be common knowledge that
they were 'hard,' in order to avoid the danger of being selected
out.
"We have no such service opinion, and it is not in process of
formation. On the contrary, it is known that the 'Principal
Dignitaries' unanimously advised the Secretary to abandon all
physical tests. He, a civilian, was wise enough not to take the
advice.
"I would like to see a test established that would oblige officers
to take sufficient exercise to pass it without inconvenience. For
the reasons given above, 20 miles in two days every other month
would do the business, while 10 miles each month does not touch
it, simply because nobody has to walk on 'next day' feet. As for
the proposed test of so many hours 'exercise' a week, the flat
foots of the pendulous belly muscles are delighted. They are
looking into the question of pedometers, and will hang one of
these on their wheezy chests and let it count every shuffling step
they take out of doors.
"If we had an adequate test throughout 20 years, there would at the
end of that time be few if any sacks of blubber at the upper end
of the list; and service opinion against that sort of thing would
be established."
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