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Browne the
Beloved*
Original
manuscript of Eulogy written by John Muir of his close
friend Francis Fisher Browne, published in The Dial on June
16, 1913. Courtesy of The Newberry Library, University of
the Pacific. |
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Francis Fisher Browne, or Browne
the Beloved as I like to call him, was one of the finest and
rarest men I ever knew. During the last five or six years of
his life, when I came to know him intimately, my love and
admiration have been constantly growing as the noble
strength and beauty of his character came more and more
clearly to view.
I have never ceased to
wonder how he was able to do so vast an amount of downright
hard work of lasting influence on our literature and at the
same time lend a helping hand to hundreds of young aspiring
writers, sympathizing with them in their struggles, and
cheering them on with heartening advice while himself
fighting an almost everyday battle against bad health, heavy
enough utterly to disable most men. He was one of the
literary pioneers of the old West who have made roaring
commercial Chicago a centre of literature. His paper, The
Dial, is regarded by far better judges than I am as the most
influential of all the American periodicals devoted to
literary affairs. This paper he founded some thirty-three
years ago, and edited almost to the time of his death.
He never regained
anything like sound health after it was broken by camp
fevers in the Civil War. But nothing could crush him or in
any appreciable degree abate his wonderful industry. Head
and heart triumphed over everything.
He had a wonderful
memory, knew almost every poet, and could quote their finest
pieces as if reading from their books. The beauty and manly
strength of his character and his capacity for life-long
sacrifice and devotion are displayed in his writings, but
they showed still more tellingly in his conversation when
his fine face was glowing with soul radium. Like every
great-hearted poet, he was a nature lover and a charming
companion on wave-embroidered shores and sunny hills and
mountains. And it is with peculiar delight that I recall my
walks with him on the Pasadena hills in the spring and in
sublime Yosemite.
When I took John
Burroughs into the Valley two years ago |
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we had the grand good fortune to
find our beloved Browne there. He was suffering from one of
his dreadful sick-headaches, and was unable to go to the
hotel dinner table; so I managed to get something he wanted
from the kitchen, and we all retired early to our rooms in
the Big Tree Cottage and went to bed. Burroughs had a room
to himself, while Browne and I occupied a larger one
separated from John's only by thin dry board partition,
resonant as a fiddle, and which faithfully transmitted every
word we spoke or sang. After the headache clouds had thinned
and lifted a little, all bedroom rules, and even the great
cliffs and waterfalls of the valley were forgotten; and we
began a glorious revel in Burns's poems, all of which we had
by heart, reciting and singing for hours, and sadly
interfering with John's regular habits, as repeated rappings
and calls for sleep-silence testified. With lowered voices
we then continued our grand revel, keeping down our merry
humor fits as low as possible until far on toward the "wee
sma’ hours ayont the twal," making a most memorable night of
it. Beloved Browne was the only American I ever knew or
heard of who had all of burns by heart, and who understood
him so thoroughly that he was able to enjoy the immortal
poet almost as well as a veritable Scot.
As we grow old we cling
all the more fondly to old friends; but Death takes them
away just when our need of them is sorest. Within the last
two years two of my Californian friends of the dear old leal
sort have vanished, never to be seen again in this world of
light. And now Beloved Browne has gone, and all California
seems lonelier than ever. Surely no man was better loved,
and his lovely friendship will abide with us until the end.
John Muir.*This letter reached us only a day or so too
late to be included with the other tributes to the memory of
Francis Fisher Browne, contained in our last issue. - EDR. |
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Original manuscript of Eulogy
written by John Muir of his close friend Francis Fisher
Browne, published in The Dial on June 16, 1913. Courtesy of
The Newberry Library, University of the Pacific. |
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