Thoughts about Henry Lee Higginson
by Brian Pohanka
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Henry
Lee Higginson was a wonderful man, one of my favorite
people. Student, aspiring musician, traveler, soldier,
businessman, banker, philanthropist, founder of the
Boston Symphony Orchestra—Higginson led a full life, a
long life. His example is so noteworthy, valuable and
inspiring.
During his youth, it was not common for a young American
of such potential to flail about, as it were, chasing
dreams of music and art, abroad in a Europe that many
Puritan New Englanders must have considered the height of
decadence. In this Henry Higginson harkens ahead some
hundred and ten years, to the late 1960s. But he was so
eager, so good natured, so smart about it all—as well as
sincere—that his efforts to win over his father ring a
bell of common human experience down to our own times.
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The war came. And it brought out his intrinsic beliefs in
country, in Union, in love of the Republic, in sense of
the rights of humankind, of the wrongs of slavery, of the
need to risk for high ideals—of duty. It must have been
one of those times when a sense of "higher than
self" intersected with one's own longings, dreams,
hopes, challenges, doubts—and it called him, as it did
his friends, that noble cause.
His friends died—he lived—though he had his own brush
with death and it served to strengthen his life's
purpose. Major Higginson never forgot these dear friends
who fell in the war, and three decades later, memorialized
them at the Soldiers Field at Harvard: James Savage, Jr.,
Charles Russell Lowell, Edward Barry Dalton, Stephen
George Perkins, James Jackson Lowell, and Robert Gould
Shaw. In June 1890, Higginson addressed the faculty and
students at Harvard at the Dedication of the Soldiers
Field, reminding them—and us—of the bravery and loss of
those comrades:
This field means more than a playground to me, for
I ask to make it a memorial to some dear friends who
gave their lives, and all that they had or hoped for,
to their country and to their fellow men in the hour
of great need.... These friends were men of mark,
either as to mental or moral powers, or both, and
were dead in earnest about life in all its phases.
They lived in happy homes and were surrounded with
friends, mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers,
sweethearts—had high hopes for the future and with
good cause, too; but at the first call of our great
captain, Abraham Lincoln, they went at once, gladly,
eagerly, to the front, and stayed there. Not a doubt,
not a thought of themselves, except to serve; and
they did serve to the end, and were happy in their
service....
All of these men were dear friends to me...so full
were they of thoughts, and hopes, and feelings, about
all possible things. These men are a loss to the
world, and heaven must have sorely needed them to
have taken them from us so early in their lives....
And let me say here that the war was not boy's play.
No men of any country ever displayed more
intelligence, devotion, energy, brilliancy,
fortitude, in any cause than did our Southern
brothers. Hunger, cold, sickness, wounds, captivity,
hard work, hard blows—all these were their portion
and ours.... It was not boy's play; and to-day these
Southern brothers are as cordial and as kindly to us
as men can be, as I have found by experience. Now,
what do the lives of our friends teach us? Surely the
beauty and the holiness of work and of utter,
unselfish, thoughtful devotion to the right cause, to
our country, and to mankind.... One of these friends,
Charles Lowell, dead, and yet alive to me as you are,
wrote me just before his last battle:—
"Don't grow rich; if you once begin, you'll find it
much more difficult to be a useful citizen. Don't
seek office; but don't 'disremember' that the useful
citizen holds his time, his trouble, his money, and
his life always ready at the hint of his country. The
useful citizen is a mighty unpretending hero; but we
are not going to have a country very long unless such
heroism is developed. There! what a stale sermon I'm
preaching! But, being a soldier, it does seem to me
that I should like nothing so well as being a useful
citizen."
This was his last charge to me, and in a month he was
in his grave. I have tried to live up to it, and I
ask you to take his words to heart and to be moved
and guided by them....
I don't think it was so much the personal
trials and suffering that Higginson endured that shaped
his future—so many endured those things—it was the loss
of his friends that forged his future as it scorched his
soul. He seems to have been one who doubted himself, or
his abilities at any rate, even as he quested for
something that was elusive in a manner almost always
cheerful and energetic and strong. He did not think much
of his intellectual powers, or of his capacity, be it as
musician or businessman. In part this was because he saw
his dear friends and comrades, men of real potential and
strength and intellect (as he saw them) and in the
balance, compared with them, he felt he fell somewhat short.
I think that those words of Charles Russell Lowell—about
being a "useful citizen" and the need for such
individuals were a central force in his postwar character
and the externalization of his "practical
idealism"—they were key to Higginson's philosophy
and indeed to his life. By living that way he not only
manifested his own wonderful combination of the practical
and the ideal, of the "Puritan" and the
"Romantic," he gave expression to what might
have been lost, have died, with Lowell and his other
fallen friends.
That they fought and fell, that their lives were cut
short, that they did not live to serve and prosper—and
that he was able to do these things—this was both a
burden and blessing to him. On one level they were lost,
their potential for greatness and achievement and
happiness was only a "might have been." But
their memories and example were vibrant and alive
nonetheless, as they lived on in the work and deeds of
those, like Higginson, who would always remember them.
Not only to lay a laurel upon their graves, literally or
figuratively, but to live one's life as if they were
still there at one's side—to enjoy the wonderful give
and take of philosophy, or the strenuous rambles across
the Alps or Tuscany...to hear their voices, to climb
those mountains together, and bask in the sunshine along
a stream in Virginia.... And I think Henry Higginson did
this, almost every conscious moment of his living life
long. And he was both thankful to have survived that war,
even as he was saddened at the loss of those dear friends
who still lived, for him.
But above all he chose to live his life as they would
have, and his friends lived on, through him. All that he
did was motivated, in large part, by this. And he was
happy in his work, for it was, most truly, a labor of
love.
Black and white photo of John Singer Sargent's 1903 painting of Higginson
from The Life and Letters of
Henry Lee Higginson, by Bliss Perry, Boston: The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1921. Image courtesy of Brian Pohanka.
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