A SMALL BOY AND OTHERS
[Illustration: Henry James and his Father From a daguerreotype taken in 1854]
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BOOKS BY HENRY JAMES
PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
A SMALL BOY AND OTHERS _net_ $2.50 THE OUTCRY _net_ 1.25 THE FINER GRAIN _net_ 1.25 THE SACRED FOUNT 1.50 THE WINGS OF THE DOVE, 2 vols. 2.50 THE BETTER SORT 1.50 THE GOLDEN BOWL, 2 vols. 2.50
NOVELS AND TALES. NEW YORK EDITION 24 vols., _net_ $48.00
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A SMALL BOY AND OTHERS
BY
HENRY JAMES
NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1913
COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
Published March, 1913
[Illustration: Publisher's logo]
A SMALL BOY AND OTHERS
I
In the attempt to place together some particulars of the early life of William James and present him in his setting, his immediate native and domestic air, so that any future gathered memorials of him might become the more intelligible and interesting, I found one of the consequences of my interrogation of the past assert itself a good deal at the expense of some of the others. For it was to memory in the first place that my main appeal for particulars had to be made; I had been too near a witness of my brother's beginnings of life, and too close a participant, by affection, admiration and sympathy, in whatever touched and moved him, not to feel myself in possession even of a greater quantity of significant truth, a larger handful of the fine substance of history, than I could hope to express or apply. To recover anything like the full treasure of scattered, wasted circumstance was at the same time to live over the spent experience itself, so deep and rich and rare, with whatever sadder and sorer intensities, even with whatever poorer and thinner passages, after the manner of every one's experience; and the effect of this in turn was to find discrimination among the parts of my subject again and again difficult--so inseparably and beautifully they seemed to hang together and the comprehensive case to decline mutilation or refuse to be treated otherwise than handsomely. This meant that aspects began to multiply and images to swarm, so far at least as they showed, to appreciation, as true terms and happy values; and that I might positively and exceedingly rejoice in my relation to most of them, using it for all that, as the phrase is, it should be worth. To knock at the door of the past was in a word to see it open to me quite wide--to see the world within begin to "compose" with a grace of its own round the primary figure, see it people itself vividly and insistently. Such then is the circle of my commemoration and so much these free and copious notes a labour of love and loyalty. We were, to my sense, the blest group of us, such a company of characters and such a picture of differences, and withal so fused and united and interlocked, that each of us, to that fond fancy, pleads for preservation, and that in respect to what I speak of myself as possessing I think I shall be ashamed, as of a cold impiety, to find any element altogether negligible. To which I may add perhaps that I struggle under the drawback, innate and inbred, of seeing the whole content of memory and affection in each enacted and recovered moment, as who should say, in the vivid image and the very scene; the light of the only terms in which life has treated me to experience. And I cherish the moment and evoke the image and repaint the scene; though meanwhile indeed scarce able to convey how prevailingly and almost exclusively, during years and years, the field was animated and the adventure conditioned for me by my brother's nearness and that play of genius in him of which I had never had a doubt from the first.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Small Boy and Others by Henry James
- 2: Of distinctness in the dimness
- 3: Our maternal greatgrandfather on the father's side
- 4: We were never in the same schoolroom
- 5: Which was pinkish red picked out with white
- 6: Formed amid these associations
- 7: Small brown snappy Mademoiselle Delavigne
- 8: Lavinia had no successor of her own sex unless I count Mrs
- 9: As shown by the Experiments upstairs
- 10: I at any rate watch the small boy dawdle and gape again
- 11: With impressions of New Brighton
- 12: Was the chance to dawdle and gape
- 13: He was naturally and incorruptibly French as
- 14: Our scant margin must have affected me more nobly
- 15: Having heard and perhaps read of dowagers
- 16: But at the same time almost indescribably
- 17: I but recover the preparations
- 18: Outer and quite kindred circle of the tipsy
- 19: In places in which people got tipsy
- 20: I had crossed the Rue de Castiglione and taken in
- 21: To have begun with the inward life
- 22: And might practise those kinds with whatever consistency
- 23: Emerson himself lecturing there to admiration
- 24: Though perpetually moving up Broadway
- 25: Deemed sovereign for sore mouths
- 26: Peaches white and peaches yellow
- 27: From whatever brief explorations or curiosities
- 28: Though since aware that they must have been
- 29: The little Batemans who were to be reserved
- 30: Fondest of my father's resorts
- 31: Those are great words for the daydream of infant ignorance
- 32: However few the years and however scant the scene
- 33: Blank private parlour at the Clarendon Hotel
- 34: Which offered the brave mystification
- 35: I consoled myself by baked apples and custards
- 36: Hard by the Fourteenth Street home
- 37: A strange little fund of theatrical reminiscence
- 38: Burton as the other of the Dromios
- 39: The charm imparted by the sisters Gougenheim
- 40: Chillington in the refined comedietta of A Morning Call
- 41: I listened to that rarest of infant phenomena
- 42: Wicked Ralph Nicklebys and scowling Arthur Grides
- 43: Instalment of David Copperfield
- 44: When you are quite entirely void
- 45: And to which also he vainly invited W
- 46: And an image of living antiquity
- 47: Apparently in the general country of the Beaverkill
- 48: Or of some especial strong drug
- 49: Was the figure of the spectral spouse
- 50: As cousin Helen confined herself
- 51: But it aspired to the grand tour
- 52: Each at any rate had in a general way his Miss Trotwood
- 53: Between whom and his sister and himself close cousinship
- 54: Before the wistful gentlewomen
- 55: He had that of the gentlewomen
- 56: By the general Barnum association and revelation
- 57: Whom I yet recall immensely admiring for his nobleness
- 58: With differences of appetite and of reach
- 59: The principle of this prolonged arrest
- 60: Than the fate of wondrous Martinetti Jocko
- 61: But we had at Niblo's harlequin and columbine
- 62: The atmosphere of whose institutions was weak
- 63: And jealousy was a sort of spiritual snatching
- 64: For the befriending of juvenile Gussy
- 65: And who floats back to me through the Rhinebeck picture
- 66: These all so human outstanding ones
- 67: Life at these intensities clearly became scenes
- 68: Have gone the hapless way of most of the Albany youth
- 69: Few and scant though they might be
- 70: A winter passed with my brother at the Institution Vergnes
- 71: And the whacks without passion
- 72: Richard Pulling Jenks where cleaner waters
- 73: Coe practised on a larger scale
- 74: Just as we were together outside of competition
- 75: Clearly the good man was a civiliser whacks and all
- 76: Is a different connection altogether
- 77: We were to convert and convert
- 78: The haunt of so many pedantries
- 79: To several very towny and domesticated little persons
- 80: Everyone did things and had things everyone knew how
- 81: Quite immediately Irish and Simpson
- 82: While even surpassing it for stickiness
- 83: Whereas we rallied without a break to the halls of Ferrero
- 84: Hathorn to bespeak a conveyance
- 85: Edward Ferrero was another matter
- 86: The essence of the debardeur being
- 87: Seemed ever to recede and recede
- 88: Charley and Freddy if these latter hadn't
- 89: Consumption of hot cakes and molasses
- 90: I think the honest Norcoms were in any case astonished
- 91: Next or near that of the De Peysters
- 92: But Edgar must promptly have known
- 93: With our large theatrical experience
- 94: Though with inordinate slowness
- 95: The Duesseldorf school commanded the market
- 96: There were other pictorial evenings
- 97: This image was known and admired among us as the Bacchante
- 98: After a recovery from first wounds
- 99: The place for the lapse consents with difficulty
- 100: From the balcony of an hotel that hung
- 101: In the court of the old Hotel de l'Univers at Lyons
- 102: Gathering in the fruits of a quickened sensibility to it
- 103: To the genial glow of my junior
- 104: Which kept you abundantly occupied
- 105: Upon ideals of culture so little organised
- 106: Rien que pour saluer ces dames
- 107: Hay Hill itself is somehow less sharply precipitous
- 108: Than the present great accommodated and accommodating city
- 109: The optimism begot precipitation
- 110: Constantly abetted our daubing
- 111: To the old Pantheon of Oxford Street
- 112: Even the charm of the Pantheon yielded
- 113: Then under the management of Charles Kean
- 114: I still see Robson slide across the stage
- 115: Lerambert who was surely good too
- 116: Lerambert by what agency invoked
- 117: In the most beautiful copper plate hand
- 118: Strayed little beyond the Champs Elysees
- 119: Guignol and Gringalet failed to claim his attention
- 120: Black Rue de Seine such a stretch of perspective
- 121: The inviolate Cafe Foyot of the left hand corner
- 122: Before that motion sinks to rest
- 123: And Delacroix in especial with the incalculable
- 124: Not only beauty and art and supreme design
- 125: Was probably still more appalling than the awful agent
- 126: The bliss in fact I think scarce disengaged itself at all
- 127: The memory of Mademoiselle Mars
- 128: Represents herself a citoyenne of citoyennes
- 129: The critical relish of the essence
- 130: And I see the Institution Fezandie
- 131: Cautiously for fear of the mouchards of the tyrant
- 132: Bonnefons was rare and unappraiseable
- 133: The liveliest lesson I must have drawn
- 134: Constituents of the Pension Fezandie
- 135: That and the other tattered web
- 136: Of presentations at the Tuileries to the then all wonderful
- 137: By Honorine and vaguely suggesting to me
- 138: We were much more serious than the Pendletons
- 139: With such an appeal to the right idealisation
- 140: I remember how I thought of Vernon himself
- 141: Some employed little Bronte heroine
- 142: And even with a new dimension introduced and acquired
- 143: Of the then closely clustered and inviolate haute ville
- 144: Or Nappie as he was called at the school
- 145: The agreeable agreeable to anything
- 146: All so short skirted and free limbed under stress
- 147: With the small still houses on the rampart
- 148: Of fairly hanging about the Rue des Vieillards
- 149: Of my working sense of the vieux temps
