BEVERLY STREET,
though it lies in the heart of the city, is one of the most fashionable
quarters of Toronto. About the middle of its eastern side a whole
block is walled off from curious eyes by a high, blank fence, behind
which rises what seems a bit of primeval forest. The trees are
chiefly fir-trees, mossed with age, and sombre; and in the midst of
their effectual privacy, with sunny tennis-lawns spread out before its
windows, is The Grange. The entrance to the grounds is in another
street, Grange Road, where the fir-trees stand wide apart, and the lawns
stretch down to the great gates standing always hospitably open.
The house itself is an old-fashioned, wide-winged mansion of red brick,
low, and ample in the eaves, its warm color toned down by the frosts of
many Canadian winters to an exquisite harmony with the varying greens
which surround it. The quaint, undemonstrative doorway, the heavy,
dark-painted hall-door, the shining, massy knocker, and the prim side-
windows,—all savor delightfully of United Empire
Loyalist days. Just such fit and satisfactory architecture
this as we have fair chance of finding wherever the Makers of Canada
came to a rest from their flight out of the angry new-born
Republic. As the door opens one enters a dim, roomy hall, full of
soft brown tints and suggestion of quiet, the polished floor made
noiseless with Persian rugs. On the right hand open the parlors,
terminated by an octagonal conservatory. The wing opposite is
occupied by the dining-room and a spacious library. The dining-room
has a general tone of crimson and brown, and its walls are covered with
portraits in oil of the heroes of the Commonwealth. Milton,
Cromwell, Hampden, Pym, Vane, et al.—they are all there, gazing
down severely upon the well covered board. The abstemious host
serenely dines beneath that Puritan scrutiny; but to me it has always
seemed that a collection of the great cavaliers would look on with a
sympathy more exhilarating. From here a short passage leads to the
anteroom of the library, which, like library itself, is lined to the
ceiling with books. At the further end of the library is the
fire-place, under a heavy mantel of oak, and near it stands a massive
writing-desk, of some light colored wood. A smaller desk close by
is devoted to the use of the gentleman who acts as librarian and
secretary. The ample windows are all on one side, facing the lawn;
and the centre of the room is held by a billiard-table, which for the
most part is piled with the latest reviews and periodicals. The
master of The Grange is by no means an assiduous player, but he handles
the cue with fair skill. In such a home as this, Mr. Goldwin Smith
may be considered to have struck deep root into Canadian soil; and his
wife, whose bright hospitality gives The Grange its highest charm, is a
Canadian woman, he has every right to regard himself as identified with
Canada. In person Mr. Smith is very tall, straight, spare; his
face keen, grave, almost severe; his iron-gray hair cut close; his eyes
restless, alert, piercing, but capable at times of an unexpected
gentleness and sweetness; his smile so agreeable that one must the more
lament its rarity. The countenance and manner are pre-ëminently
those of the critic, the investigator, the tester. As he concerns
himself earnestly in all our most important public affairs, his general
appearance, through the medium of the Toronto Grip, our Canadian Punch,
has come to be by no means unfamiliar to the people of Canada.
In
becoming a Canadian, Goldwin Smith has not ceased to be an Englishman—and
he has also desired to become an American by the way. He holds his
English audience through the pages of The Contemporary and The
Nineteenth Century, and he addresses Americans for some weeks every
year from a chair in Cornell University. In Canada he chooses to
speak from behind an extremely diaphanous veil—the nom de plume of
'A Bystander;' and under this name he for some time issued a small
monthly (changed to a quarterly before its discontinuance), which was
written entirely by himself, and treated of current events and the
thought of the hour. That periodical has been lately succeeded by The
Week, to which the Bystander has been a contributor since the paper
was founded. It were out of place to speak here of Goldwin Smith's
career and work in England; it would be telling, too, what is pretty
widely known. In Canada his influence has been far deeper than is
generally imagined, or than to a surface-glance would appear. On
his first coming here he was unfairly and relentlessly attacked by what
was at the time the most powerful journal in Canada, the Toronto Globe;
and he has not lacked sharp but irregular antagonism ever since.
Somewhat relentless himself, as evinced by his attitude toward the Irish
and the Jews, and having always one organ or another in his control, he
has long ago wiped out his score against the Globe, and inspired
a good many of his adversaries with discretion. He devotes all his
energy and time, at least so far as the world knows, to work of a more
or less ephemeral nature; and when urged to the creation of something
permanent; something commensurate with his genius, he is wont to reply
that he regards himself rather as a journalist than an author. He
would live not by books, but by his mark stamped on men's minds.
It does indeed at first sight surprise one to observe the meagreness of
his enduring literary work, as compared with his vast reputation.
There is little bearing his name save the volume of collected lectures
and essays—chief among them the perhaps matchless historical study
entitled 'The Great Duel of the Seventeenth Century'—and the brilliant
but cold and ungenial monograph on Cowper contributed to the English
Men-of-Letters. His visible achievement is soon measured, but it
would be hard to measure the wide-reaching effects of his
influence. Now, while a sort of conservatism is creeping over his
utterances with years, doctrines contrary to those he used so
strenuously to urge seem much in the ascendant in England. But in
Canada he has found a more plastic material into which, almost without
either our knowledge or consent, his lines have sunk deeper. His
direct teachings, perhaps, have not greatly prevailed with us. He
has not called into being anything like a Bystander party, for instance,
to wage war against party government, and other great or little objects
of his attack. For this his genius is not synthetic enough—it is
too disintegrating. But his influence pervades all parties, and
has proved a mighty shatterer of fetters amongst us—a swift solvent of
many cast-iron prejudices. He has opened, liberalized, to some
extent deprovinicalized, our thought, and has convinced us that some of
our most revered fetishes were but feathers and a rattle after
all. But he sees too many sides of a question to give unmixed
satisfaction to anybody. The Canadian Nationalists, with whom he
is believed to be in sympathy, owe him both gratitude and a
grudge. He has made plain to us our right to our doctrines, and
the rightness of our doctrines; he has made ridiculous those who would
cry 'Treason' after us. But we could wish that he would suffer us
to indulge a little youthful enthusiasm, as would become a people
unquestionably young; and also that he would refrain from showing us
quite so vividly and persistently all the lions of our path. We
think we can deal with each as it comes against us. His words go
far to weaken our faith in the ultimate consolidation of Canada; he
tends to retard our perfect fusion, and is inclined to unduly exalt
Ontario at the expense of her sister Provinces. All these things
trouble us, as increasing the possibility of success for a movement just
now being actively stirred in England, and toward which Goldwin Smith's
attitude has ever been one of uncompromising antagonism—that is, the
movement toward Imperial Federation.
Speaking
of Mr. Smith and Canadian Nationalism, as the Nationalist movement is
now too big to fear laughter I may mention the sad fate of the first
efforts to institute such a movement. A number of years ago, certain
able and patriotic young men in Toronto established a 'Canada First'
party, and threw themselves with zeal into the work of
propagandizing. Mr. Smith's co-operation was joyfully accepted,
and he joined the movement. But it soon transpired that it was the
movement which had joined him. In very fact, he swallowed the
'Canada First' party; and growing tired of propagandizing when he
thought the time was ripe for it, and finding something else to do just
then than assist at the possibly premature birth of a nation, he let the
busy little movement fall to pieces. The vital germ, however,
existed in every one of the separate pieces, and has sprung up from
border to border of the land, till now it has a thousand centres, is
clothed in a thousand shapes, and is altogether incapable of being
swallowed.
As
I am writing for an American audience, it may not be irrelevant to say,
before concluding, that while Goldwin Smith is an ardent believer in and
friend of the American people, he has at the same time but a tepid
esteem for the chief part of American literature. He rather
decries all but the great humorists, for whom indeed his admiration is
unbounded. He has a full and generous appreciation for the genius
of Poe. But he misses entirely the greatness of Emerson, allows to
Lowell no eminence save as a satirist, and is continually asking,
privately, that America shall produce a book. As he has not,
however, made this exorbitant demand as yet in printer's ink, and over
his sign and seal, perhaps we may be permitted to regard it as no more
than a mild British joke.
FREDERICTON,
N.B.