Only a germ in a withered flower, That the rain will bring
out--sometime. SOMETIME in the
year 1850, a tobacco-planter in Southern Georgia (Perry H. Oliver by name)
bought a likely negro woman with some other field-hands. She was stout,
tough-muscled, willing, promised to be a remunerative servant; her baby, however,
a boy a few months old, was only thrown in as a makeweight to the bargain, or
rather because Mr. Oliver would not consent to separate mother and child.
Charity only could have induced him to take the picaninny, in fact, for he was
but a lump of black flesh, born blind, and with the vacant grin of idiocy, they
thought, already stamped on his face. The two slaves were purchased, I believe,
from a trader: it has been impossible, therefore, for me to ascertain where Tom
was born, or when. Georgia field-hands are not accurate as Jews in preserving
their genealogy; they do not anticipate a Messiah. A white man, you know, has
that vague hope unconsciously latent in him, that he is, or shall give birth
to, the great man of his race, a helper, a provider for the world's hunger: so
he grows jealous with his blood; the dead grandfather may have presaged the
possible son; besides, it is a debt he owes to this coming Saul to tell him
whence he came. There are some classes, free and slave, out of whom society has
crushed this hope: they have no clan, no family-names among them, therefore.
This idiot-boy, chosen by God to be anointed with the holy chrism, is only
"Tom,"--"Blind Tom," they call him in all the Southern
States, with a kind cadence always, being proud and fond of him; and
yet--nothing but Tom? That is pitiful. Just a mushroom-growth,--unkinned,
unexpected, not hoped for, for generations, owning no name to purify and honor
and give away when he is dead. His mother, at work to-day in the Oliver
plantations, can never comprehend why her boy is famous; this gift of God to
him means nothing to her. Nothing to him, either, which is saddest of all; he
is unconscious, wears his crown as an idiot might. Whose fault is that? Deeper
than slavery the evil lies.
Mr. Oliver did his duty
well to the boy, being an observant and thoroughly kind master. The plantation
was large, heartsome, faced the sun, swarmed with little black urchins, with
plenty to eat, and nothing to do.
All that Tom required,
as he fattened out of baby- into boyhood, was room in which to be warm, on the
grass-patch, or by the kitchen-fires, to be stupid, flabby, sleepy,--kicked and
petted alternately by the other hands. He had a habit of crawling up on the
porches and verandas of the mansion and squatting there in the sun, waiting for
a kind word or touch from those who went in and out. He seldom failed to
receive it. Southerners know nothing of the physical shiver of aversion with
which even the Abolitionists of the North touch the negro: so Tom, through his
very helplessness, came to be a sort of pet in the family, a playmate,
occasionally, of Mr. Oliver's own infant children. The boy, creeping about day
after day in the hot light, was as repugnant an object as the lizards in the
neighboring swamp, and promised to be of as little use to his master. He was of
the lowest negro type, from which only field-hands can be made,--coal-black,
with protruding heels, the ape-jaw, blubber-lips constantly open, the sightless
eyes closed, and the head thrown far back on the shoulders, lying on the back,
in fact, a habit which he still retains, and which adds to the imbecile
character of the face. Until he was seven years of age, Tom was regarded on the
plantation as an idiot, not unjustly; for at the present time his judgment and
reason rank but as those of a child four years old. He showed a dog-like
affection for some members of the household,--a son of Mr. Oliver's
especially,--and a keen, nervous sensitiveness to the slightest blame or praise
from them,--possessed, too, a low animal irritability of temper, giving way to
inarticulate yelps of passion when provoked. That is all, so far; we find no
other outgrowth of intellect or soul from the boy: just the same record as that
of thousands of imbecile negro-children. Generations of heathendom and slavery
have dredged the inherited brains and temperaments of such children tolerably
clean of all traces of power or purity,--palsied the brain, brutalized the
nature. Tom apparently fared no better than his fellows.
It was not until 1857
that those phenomenal powers latent in the boy were suddenly developed, which
stamped him the anomaly he is to-day.
One night, sometime in
the summer of that year, Mr. Oliver's family were wakened by the sound of music
in the drawing-room: not only the simple airs, but the most difficult exercises
usually played by his daughters, were repeated again and again, the touch of
the musician being timid, but singularly true and delicate. Going down, they
found Tom, who had been left asleep in the hall, seated at the piano in an
ecstasy of delight, breaking out at the end of each successful fugue into
shouts of laughter, kicking his heels and clapping his hands. This was the
first time he had touched the piano.
Naturally, Tom became a
nine-days' wonder on the plantation. He was brought in as an after-dinner's
amusement; visitors asked for him as the show of the place. There was hardly a
conception, however, in the minds of those who heard him, of how deep the cause
for wonder lay. The planters' wives and daughters of the neighborhood were not
people who would be apt to comprehend music as a science, or to use it as a
language; they only saw in the little negro, therefore a remarkable facility
for repeating the airs they drummed on their pianos,--in a different manner
from theirs, it is true,--which bewildered them. They noticed, too, that,
however the child's fingers fell on the keys, cadences followed, broken,
wandering, yet of startling beauty and pathos. The house-servants, looking in
through the open doors at the little black figure perched up before the
instrument, while unknown, wild harmony drifted through the evening air, had a
better conception of him. He was possessed; some ghost spoke through him: which
is a fair enough definition of genius for a Georgian slave to offer.
Mr. Oliver, as we said,
was indulgent. Tom was allowed to have constant access to the piano; in truth,
he could not live without it; when deprived of music now, actual physical
debility followed: the gnawing Something had found its food at last. No attempt
was made, however, to give him any scientific musical teaching; nor--I wish it
distinctly borne in mind --has he ever at any time received such instruction.
The planter began to
wonder what kind of a creature this was which he had bought, flesh and soul. In
what part of the unsightly baby-carcass had been stowed away these old airs,
forgotten by every one else, and some of them never heard by the child but
once, but which he now reproduced, every note intact, and with whatever quirk
or quiddity of style belonged to the person who originally had sung or played
them? Stranger still the harmonies which he had never heard, had learned from
no man. The sluggish breath of the old house, being enchanted, grew into quaint
and delicate whims of music, never the same, changing every day. Never glad:
uncertain, sad minors always, vexing the content of the hearer,--one
inarticulate, unanswered question of pain in all, making them one. Even the
vulgarest listener was troubled, hardly knowing why,--how sorry Tom's music
was!
At last the time came
when the door was to be opened, when some listener, not vulgar, recognizing the
child as God made him, induced his master to remove him from the plantation.
Something ought to be done for him; the world ought not to be cheated of this
pleasure; besides--the money that could be made! So Mr. Oliver, with a kindly
feeling for Tom, proud, too, of this agreeable monster which his plantation had
grown, and sensible that it was a more fruitful source of revenue than
tobacco-fields, set out with the boy, literally to seek their fortune.
The first exhibition of
him was given, I think, in Savannah, Georgia; thence he was taken to
Charleston, Richmond, to all the principal cities and towns in the Southern
States.
This was in 1858. From
that time until the present Tom has lived constantly an open life, petted,
feted, his real talent befogged by exaggeration, and so pampered and coddled
that one might suppose the only purpose was to corrupt and wear it out. For
these reasons this statement is purposely guarded, restricted to plain, known
facts.
No sooner had Tom been
brought before the public than the pretensions put forward by his master
commanded the scrutiny of both scientific and musical skeptics. His capacities
were subjected to rigorous tests. Fortunately for the boy: for, so
tried,--harshly, it is true, yet skilfully,--they not only bore the trial, but
acknowledged the touch as skilful; every day new powers were developed, until
he reached his limit, beyond which it is not probable he will ever pass. That
limit, however, establishes him as an anomaly in musical science.
Physically, and in
animal temperament, this negro ranks next to the lowest Guinea type: with
strong appetites and gross bodily health, except in one particular, which will
be mentioned hereafter. In the every-day apparent intellect, in reason or
judgment, he is but one degree above an idiot,--incapable of comprehending the
simplest conversation on ordinary topics, amused or enraged with trifles such
as would affect a child of three years old. On the other side, his affections
are alive, even vehement, delicate in their instinct as a dog's or an infant's;
he will detect the step of any one dear to him in a crowd, and burst into
tears, if not kindly spoken to.
His memory is so
accurate that he can repeat, without the loss of a syllable, a discourse of
fifteen minutes in length, of which he does not understand a word. Songs, too,
in French or German, after a single hearing, he renders not only literally in
words, but in notes, style, and expression. His voice, however, is discordant,
and of small compass.
In music, this boy of
twelve years, born blind, utterly ignorant of a note, ignorant of every phase
of so-called musical science, interprets severely classical composers with a
clearness of conception in which he excels, and a skill in mechanism equal to
that of our second-rate artists. His concerts usually include any themes
selected by the audience from the higher grades of Italian or German opera. His
comprehension of the meaning of music, as a prophetic or historical voice which
few souls utter and fewer understand, is clear and vivid: he renders it thus,
with whatever mastery of the mere material part he may possess, fingering,
dramatic effects, etc.: these are but means to him, not an end, as with most
artists. One could fancy that Tom was never traitor to the intent or soul of
the theme. What God or the Devil meant to say by this or that harmony, what the
soul of one man cried aloud to another in it, this boy knows, and is to that a
faithful witness. His deaf, uninstructed soul has never been tampered with by
art-critics who know the body well enough of music, but nothing of the living
creature within. The world is full of these vulgar souls that palter with
eternal Nature and the eternal Arts, blind to the Word who dwells among us
therein. Tom, or the dćmon in Tom, was not one of them.
With regard to his
command of the instrument, two points have been especially noted by musicians:
the unusual frequency of occurrence of tours de force in his playing, and the
scientific precision of his manner of touch. For example, in a progression of
augmented chords, his mode of fingering is invariably that of the schools, not
that which would seem natural to a blind child never taught to place a finger.
Even when seated with his back to the piano, and made to play in that position
(a favorite feat in his concerts,) the touch is always scientifically accurate.
The peculiar power
which Tom possesses, however, is one which requires no scientific knowledge of
music in his audiences to appreciate. Placed at the instrument with any
musician, he plays a perfect bass accompaniment to the treble of music heard
for the first time as he plays. Then taking the seat vacated by the other
performer, he instantly gives the entire piece, intact in brilliancy and
symmetry, not a note lost or misplaced. The selections of music by which this
power of Tom's was tested, two years ago, were sometimes fourteen and sixteen
pages in length; on one occasion, at an exhibition at the White House, after a
long concert, he was tried with two pieces,--one thirteen, the other twenty
pages long, and was successful.
We know of no parallel
case to this in musical history. Grimm tells us, as one of the most remarkable
manifestations of Mozart's infant genius, that at the age of nine he was
required to give an accompaniment to an aria which he had never heard before,
and without notes. There were false accords in the first attempt, he
acknowledges; but the second was pure. When the music to which Tom plays
secondo is strictly classical, he sometimes balks for an instant in passages;
to do otherwise would argue a creative power equal to that of the master
composers; but when any chordant harmony runs through it, (on which the glowing
negro soul can seize, you know,) there are no "false accords," as
with the infant Mozart. I wish to draw especial attention to this power of the
boy, not only because it is, so far as I know, unmatched in the development of
any musical talent, but because, considered in the context of his entire
intellectual structure, it involves a curious problem. The mere repetition of
music heard but once, even when, as in Tom's case, it is given with such
incredible fidelity, and after the lapse of years, demands only a command of
mechanical skill, and an abnormal condition of the power of memory; but to play
secondo to music never heard or seen implies the comprehension of the full
drift of the symphony in its current,--a capacity to create, in short. Yet such
attempts as Tom has made to dictate music for publication do not sustain any
such inference. They are only a few light marches, gallops, etc., simple and
plaintive enough, but with easily detected traces of remembered harmonies: very
different from the strange, weird improvisations of every day. One would fancy
that the mere attempt to bring this mysterious genius within him in bodily
presence before the outer world woke, too, the idiotic nature to utter its
reproachful, unable cry. Nor is this the only bar by which poor Tom's soul is
put in mind of its foul bestial prison. After any too prolonged effort, such as
those I have alluded to, his whole bodily frame gives way, and a complete
exhaustion of the brain follows, accompanied with epileptic spasms. The trial
at the White House, mentioned before, was successful, but was followed by days
of illness.
Being a slave, Tom
never was taken into a Free State; for the same reason his master refused
advantageous offers from European managers. The highest points North at which
his concerts were given were Baltimore and the upper Virginia towns. I heard
him sometime in 1860. He remained a week or two in the town, playing every
night.
The concerts were
unique enough. They were given in a great barn of a room, gaudy with hot,
soot-stained frescoes, chandeliers, walls splotched with gilt. The audience was
large, always; such as a provincial town affords: not the purest bench of
musical criticism before which to bring poor Tom. Beaux and belles, siftings of
old country families, whose grandfathers trapped and traded and married with
the Indians,--the savage thickening of whose blood told itself in high
cheekbones, flashing jewelry, champagne-bibbing, a comprehension of the tom-tom
music of schottisches and polkas; money-made men and their wives, cooped up by
respectability, taking concerts when they were given in town, taking the White
Sulphur or Cape May in summer, taking beef for dinner, taking the pork-trade in
winter,--toute la vie en programme; the débris of a town, the roughs, the boys,
school-children, --Tom was nearly as well worth a quarter as the
negro-minstrels; here and there a pair of reserved, home-sick eyes, a peculiar,
reticent face, some whey-skinned ward-teacher's, perhaps, or some German
cobbler's, but hints of a hungry soul, to whom Beethoven and Mendelssohn knew
how to preach an unerring gospel. The stage was broad, planked, with a
drop-curtain behind, --the Doge marrying the sea, I believe; in front, a piano
and chair.
Presently, Mr. Oliver,
a well-natured looking man, (one thought of that,) came forward, leading and
coaxing along a little black boy, dressed in white linen, somewhat fat and
stubborn in build. Tom was not in a good humor that night; the evening before
had refused to play altogether; so his master perspired anxiously before he
could get him placed in rule before the audience, and repeat his own little
speech, which sounded like a Georgia after-dinner gossip. The boy's head, as I
said, rested on his back, his mouth wide open constantly; his great blubber
lips and shining teeth, therefore, were all you saw when he faced you. He
required to be petted and bought like any other weak-minded child. The concert
was a mixture of music, whining, coaxing, and promised candy and cake.
He seated himself at
last before the piano, a full half-yard distant, stretching out his arms
full-length, like an ape clawing for food,--his feet, when not on the pedals,
squirming and twisting incessantly,--answering some joke of his master's with a
loud "Yha! yha!" Nothing indexes the brain like the laugh; this was
idiotic.
"Now, Tom, boy,
something we like from Verdi."
The head fell farther
back, the claws began to work, and those of his harmonies which you would have
chosen as the purest exponents of passion began to float through the room.
Selections from Weber, Beethoven, and others whom I have forgotten, followed.
At the close of each piece, Tom, without waiting for the audience, would
himself applaud violently, kicking, pounding his hands together, turning always
to his master for the approving pat on the head. Songs, recitations such as I
have described, filled up the first part of the evening; then a musician from
the audience went upon the stage to put the boy's powers to the final test.
Songs and intricate symphonies were given, which it was most improbable the boy
could ever have heard; he remained standing, utterly motionless, until they
were finished, and for a moment or two after, --then, seating himself, gave
them without the break of a note. Others followed, more difficult, in which he
played the bass accompaniment in the manner I have described, repeating
instantly the treble. The child looked dull, wearied, during this part of the
trial, and his master, perceiving it, announced the exhibition closed, when the
musician (who was a citizen of the town, by-the-way) drew out a thick roll of
score, which he explained to be a Fantasia of his own composition, never
published.
"This it was
impossible the boy could have heard; there could be no trick of memory in this;
and on this trial," triumphantly, "Tom would fail."
The manuscript was some
fourteen pages long,--variations on an inanimate theme. Mr. Oliver refused to
submit the boy's brain to so cruel a test; some of the audience, even,
interfered; but the musician insisted, and took his place. Tom sat beside
him,--his head rolling nervously from side to side,--struck the opening
cadence, and then, from the first note to the last, gave the secondo
triumphantly. Jumping up, he fairly shoved the man from his seat, and proceeded
to play the treble with more brilliancy and power than its composer. When he
struck the last octave, he sprang up, yelling with delight:--
"Um's got him,
Massa! um's got him!" cheering and rolling about the stage.
The cheers of the
audience--for the boys especially did not wait to clap--excited him the more.
It was an hour before his master could quiet his hysteric agitation.
That feature of the
concerts which was the most painful I have not touched upon: the moments when
his master was talking, and Tom was left to himself,--when a weary despair
seemed to settle down on the distorted face, and the stubby little black
fingers, wandering over the keys, spoke for Tom's own caged soul within. Never,
by any chance, a merry, childish laugh of music in the broken cadences; tender
or wild, a defiant outcry, a tired sigh breaking down into silence. Whatever
wearied voice it took, the same bitter, hopeless soul spoke through all:
"Bless me, even me, also, O my Father!" A something that took all the
pain and pathos of the world into its weak, pitiful cry.
Some beautiful caged
spirit, one could not but know, struggled for breath under that brutal form and
idiotic brain. I wonder when it will be free. Not in this life: the bars are
too heavy.
You cannot help Tom,
either; all the war is between you. He was in Richmond in May. But (do you hate
the moral to a story?) in your own kitchen, in your own back-alley, there are
spirits as beautiful, caged in forms as bestial, that you could set free, if
you pleased. Don't call it bad taste in me to speak for them. You know they are
more to be pitied than Tom,--for they are dumb.