Now
and then it asserted itself as education more roughly than school
ever did. One of the commonest boy-games of winter, inherited
directly from the eighteenth-century, was a game of war on Boston
Common. In old days the two hostile forces were called North-Enders
and South-Enders. In 1850 the North-Enders still survived as a
legend, but in practice it was a battle of the Latin School against
all comers, and the Latin School, for snowball, included all the
boys of the West End. Whenever, on a half-holiday, the weather was
soft enough to soften the snow, the Common was apt to be the scene
of a fight, which began in daylight with the Latin School in force,
rushing their opponents down to Tremont Street, and which generally
ended at dark by the Latin School dwindling in numbers and
disappearing. As the Latin School grew weak, the roughs and young
blackguards grew strong. As long as snowballs were the only weapon,
no one was much hurt, but a stone may be put in a snowball, and in
the dark a stick or a slungshot in the hands of a boy is as
effective as a knife. One afternoon the fight had been long and
exhausting. The boy Henry, following, as his habit was, his bigger
brother Charles, had taken part in the battle, and had felt his
courage much depressed by seeing one of his trustiest leaders,
Henry Higginson - "Bully Hig," his school name - struck by a stone
over the eye, and led off the field bleeding in rather a ghastly
manner. As night came on, the Latin School was steadily forced back
to the Beacon Street Mall where they could retreat no further
without disbanding, and by that time only a small band was left,
headed by two heroes, Savage and Marvin. A dark mass of figures
could be seen below, making ready for the last rush, and rumor said
that a swarm of blackguards from the slums, led by a grisly terror
called Conky Daniels, with a club and a hideous reputation, was
going to put an end to the Beacon Street cowards forever. Henry
wanted to run away with the others, but his brother was too big to
run away, so they stood still and waited immolation. The dark mass
set up a shout, and rushed forward. The Beacon Street boys turned
and fled up the steps, except Savage and Marvin and the few
champions who would not run. The terrible Conky Daniels swaggered
up, stopped a moment with his body-guard to swear a few oaths at
Marvin, and then swept on and chased the flyers, leaving the few
boys untouched who stood their ground. The obvious moral taught
that blackguards were not so black as they were painted; but the
boy Henry had passed through as much terror as though he were
Turenne or Henri IV, and ten or twelve years afterwards when these
same boys were fighting and falling on all the battle-fields of
Virginia and Maryland, he wondered whether their education on
Boston Common had taught Savage and Marvin how to die.
If violence were a part of complete education,
Boston was not incomplete. The idea of violence was familiar to the
anti-slavery leaders as well as to their followers. Most of them
suffered from it. Mobs were always possible. Henry never happened
to be actually concerned in a mob, but he, like every other boy,
was sure to be on hand wherever a mob was expected, and whenever he
heard Garrison or Wendell Phillips speak, he looked for trouble.
Wendell Phillips on a platform was a model dangerous for youth.
Theodore Parker in his pulpit was not much safer. Worst of all, the
execution of the Fugitive Slave Law in Boston - the sight of Court
Square packed with bayonets, and his own friends obliged to line
the streets under arms as State militia, in order to return a negro
to slavery - wrought frenzy in the brain of a fifteen-year-old,
eighteenth-century boy from Quincy, who wanted to miss no
reasonable chance of mischief.
One lived in the atmosphere of the Stamp Act, the
Tea Tax, and the Boston Massacre. Within Boston, a boy was first an
eighteenth-century politician, and afterwards only a possibility;
beyond Boston the first step led only further into politics. After
February, 1848, but one slight tie remained of all those that,
since 1776, had connected Quincy with the outer world. The Madam
stayed in Washington, after her husband's death, and in her turn
was struck by paralysis and bedridden. From time to time her son
Charles, whose affection and sympathy for his mother in her many
tribulations were always pronounced, went on to see her, and in
May, 1850, he took with him his twelve-year-old son. The journey
was meant as education, and as education it served the purpose of
fixing in memory the stage of a boy's thought in 1850. He could not
remember taking special interest in the railroad journey or in New
York; with railways and cities he was familiar enough. His first
impression was the novelty of crossing New York Bay and finding an
English railway carriage on the Camden and Amboy Railroad. This was
a new world; a suggestion of corruption in the simple habits of
American life; a step to exclusiveness never approached in Boston;
but it was amusing. The boy rather liked it.
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