
Henry Lee Higginson:
"A Great Private Citizen"
by M.A. DeWolfe Howe
In March
1920, four months after Henry Lee Higginson's death, an
article about Higginson by Mark DeWolfe Howe was
published in the Atlantic Monthly. The excerpts that
follow are from this article, with accompanying comments
by Brian Pohanka.

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[His] was the quality of a patriot's idealism evoked in time of war and
sustained to the very end of a long life.
...He was a Puritan at heart, and in his daily life a
hard-working, hard-headed man of affairs, deeply immersed
in intensely practical matters...
The essential Puritan in him, that part of him which
cried out against extravagance and waste, both public and
private, and gave to his personal habits an austerity
quite foreign to the households of modern American
financiers....
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Howe quotes a letter that
Higginson wrote to a friend (in his 75th year), in which
he describes the emotions he felt by listening to
Beethoven's Third Symphony (The Eroica):
"As to the 'Eroica,' I had meant to tell you how I
felt about it, but it opens the flood-gates, and I can't.
The wail of grief, and then the sympathy which should
comfort the sufferer. The wonderful funeral dirge, so
solemn, so full, so deep, so splendid, and always with
courage and comfort. The delightful march home from the
grave in the scherzo—the wild Hungarian, almost gypsy in
tone—and then the climax of the melody, where the gates
of Heaven open, and we see the angels singing and
reaching their hands to us with perfect welcome. No words
are of any avail, and never does that passage of entire
relief and joy come to me without tears—and I wait for
it through life, and hear it, and wonder."
It seems that if Higginson
was in part a "Puritan" he was also, in part, a
Romantic.
...His constant refusal to count the cost in what he did
for others was offset at every turn by the little
severities he imposed upon his own mode of life....
Personal indulgence of any kind was as alien to him as to
his Puritan forebears.
His personal presence truthfully bespoke the man within.
Compact of stature, visaged with distinction, military in
bearing, alert and vigorous, forthright and staccato of
speech, both in public and in private, he visibly
embodied the qualities of utter fearlessness and honesty,
joined with a fortunate capacity for quick and righteous
anger. These qualities, moreover, were not wholly
unrelated to a human and endearing tendency to make
impulsive mistakes. But they stood in an equally close
relation to a definite gift for bestowing and winning
affection. To a remarkable degree his letters spoke with
his living voice. Nothing of good or evil fortune could
befall his friends without his writing to them, briefly
or at length, in terms appropriately compact of sympathy
and humor. His good letters were not the product of
accident, for he had a theory of letter-writing which he
once communicated to a business associate as follows:
"You sit down and visualize the person you are
addressing; you dictate exactly as if he were present;
you watch the changes in his face and anticipate his
replies. You go through it and cut out all the adjectives
and adverbs; then you probably have a good
letter."....
[He was] not a churchman or a regular church-goer
himself, but a holder of the simple faith that
"without God the bottom drops out of
everything."
...Instances innumerable might be drawn to illustrate the
living out of his avowed belief that "there seems no
other outcome, no other foundation for a happy mankind,
for civilization, than a full, generous, wise use of our
powers for the good of our fellow men, and a happy
forgetfulness of ourselves."
As his 85th birthday was drawing near, one he did not live to see, Higginson wrote
a friend:
"I've had only too many kind words of praise for
doing my duty, and only my duty, as my eyes and those of
dear, dead friends saw it. The simple tale—that he tried
to fill up gaps and sought to bring sunshine into the
lives of his fellow men and women, that he usually kept
his word, given and implied, and that he worshipped his
country and had the very best and most far-seeing
of friends—is the whole story."
Howe concludes:
Thus in retrospect he saw his life. To others it may
stand pre-eminently, as these pages began by suggesting,
for the possibility of sustaining from youth to old age
an idealism born in time of war. This central meaning of
it was richly symbolized at his burial. Into and out of
the academic surroundings of a college chapel the veteran
soldier, the indomitable lover of righteousness and
beauty, was borne in the uniform of his army days, his
sword at his side; and over his grave the "grieving
bugle" sounded its martial note of farewell. For his
country and its ideals he enlisted in the war of more
than half a century ago. The enlistment proved to be for
life....

Special thanks to Brian Pohanka for supplying the following materials: Excerpts from "A Great Private Citizen: Henry Lee Higginson," by M.A.
DeWolfe Howe, Atlantic Monthly, March 1920, pp.
329-339, and image of Higginson's 1905 photo by Notham, from Life and Letters of Henry Lee Higginson by Bliss Perry, Boston: The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1921.

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