<SPAN name="c9" id="c9"></SPAN>
<h3>Harriet G. Hosmer.</h3><SPAN href="images/c9hosmer.jpg"><br/>
<ANTIMG src="images/c9hosmer_t.jpg" alt= "(From the "Portrait Gallery of Eminent Men and Women.")" /></SPAN>
<p>Some years ago, in an art store in Boston, a crowd of
persons stood gazing intently upon a famous piece of statuary.
The red curtains were drawn aside, and the white marble seemed
almost to speak. A group of girls stood together, and looked on
in rapt admiration. One of them said, "Just to think that a
woman did it!"</p>
<p>"It makes me proud and glad," said another.</p>
<p>"Who is Harriet Hosmer?" said a third. "I wish I knew about
her."</p>
<p>And then one of us, who had stolen all the hours she could
get from school life to read art books from the Hartford
Athenaeum, and kept crude statues, made by herself from chalk
and plaster, secreted in her room, told all she had read about
the brilliant author of "Zenobia."</p>
<p>The statue was seven feet high, queenly in pose and face,
yet delicate and beautiful, with the thoughts which genius had
wrought in it. The left arm supported the elegant drapery,
while the right hung listlessly by her side, both wrists
chained; the captive of the Emperor Aurelian. Since that time,
I have looked upon other masterpieces in all the great
galleries of Europe, but perhaps none have ever made a stronger
impression upon me than "Zenobia," in those early years.</p>
<p>And who was the artist of whom we girls were so proud? Born
in Watertown, Mass., Oct. 9, 1830, Harriet Hosmer came into the
welcome home of a leading physician, and a delicate mother, who
soon died of consumption. Dr. Hosmer had also buried his only
child besides Harriet, with the same disease, and he determined
that this girl should live in sunshine and air, that he might
save her if possible. He used to say, "There is a whole
life-time for the education of the mind, but the body develops
in a few years; and during that time nothing should be allowed
to interfere with its free and healthy growth."</p>
<p>As soon as the child was large enough, she was given a pet
dog, which she decked with ribbons and bells. Then, as the
Charles River flowed past their house, a boat was provided, and
she was allowed to row at will. A Venetian gondola was also
built for her, with silver prow and velvet cushions. "Too much
spoiling--too much spoiling," said some of the neighbors; but
Dr. Hosmer knew that he was keeping his little daughter on the
earth instead of heaven.</p>
<p>A gun was now purchased, and the girl became an admirable
marksman. Her room was a perfect museum. Here were birds, bats,
beetles, snakes, and toads; some dissected, some preserved in
spirits, and others stuffed, all gathered and prepared by her
own hands. Now she made an inkstand from the egg of a sea-gull
and the body of a kingfisher; now she climbed to the top of a
tree and brought down a crow's nest. She could walk miles upon
miles with no fatigue. She grew up like a boy, which is only
another way of saying that she grew up healthy and strong
physically. Probably polite society was shocked at Dr. Hosmer's
methods. Would that there were many such fathers and mothers,
that we might have a vigorous race of women, and consequently,
a vigorous race of men!</p>
<p>When Harriet tired of books,--for she was an eager
reader,--she found delight in a clay-pit in the garden, where
she molded horses and dogs to her heart's content. Unused to
restraint, she did not like the first school at which she was
placed, the principal, the brother-in-law of Nathaniel
Hawthorne, writing to her father that he "could do nothing with
her."</p>
<p>She was then taken to Mrs. Sedgwick, who kept a famous
school at Lenox, Berkshire County. She received "happy Hatty,"
as she was called, with the remark, "I have a reputation for
training wild colts, and I will try this one." And the wise
woman succeeded. She won Harriet's confidence, not by the ten
thousand times repeated "don't," which so many children hear in
home and school, till life seems a prison-pen. She let her run
wild, guiding her all the time with so much tact, that the girl
scarcely knew she was guided at all. Blessed tact! How many
thousands of young people are ruined for lack of it!</p>
<p>She remained here three years. Mrs. Sedgwick says, "She was
the most difficult pupil to manage I ever had, but I think I
never had one in whom I took so deep an interest, and whom I
learned to love so well." About this time, not being quite as
well as usual, Dr. Hosmer engaged a physician of, large
practice to visit his daughter. The busy man could not be
regular, which sadly interfered with Harriet's boating and
driving. Complaining one day that it spoiled her pleasure, he
said, "If I am alive, I will be here," naming the day and
hour.</p>
<p>"Then if you are not here, I am to conclude that you are
dead," was the reply.</p>
<p>As he did not come, Harriet drove to the newspaper offices
in Boston that afternoon, and the next morning the community
was startled to read of Dr. ----'s sudden death. Friends
hastened to the house, and messages of condolence came pouring
in. It is probable that he was more punctual after this.</p>
<p>On Harriet's return from Lenox, she began to take lessons in
drawing, modeling, and anatomical studies, in Boston,
frequently walking from home and back, a distance of fourteen
miles. Feeling the need of a thorough course in anatomy, she
applied to the Boston Medical School for admittance, and was
refused because of her sex. The Medical College of St. Louis
proved itself broader, glad to encourage talent wherever found,
and received her.</p>
<p>Professor McDowell, under whom the artists Powers and
Clevenger studied anatomy, spared no pains to give her every
advantage, while the students were uniformly courteous. "I
remember him," says Miss Hosmer, "with great affection and
gratitude as being a most thorough and patient teacher, as well
as at all times a good, kind friend." In testimony of her
appreciation, she cut, from a bust of Professor McDowell by
Clevenger, a life-size medallion in marble, now treasured in
the college museum.</p>
<p>While in St. Louis she made her home with the family of
Wayman Crow, Esq., whose daughter had been her companion at
Lenox. This gentleman proved himself a constant and encouraging
friend, ordering her first statue from Rome, and helping in a
thousand ways a girl who had chosen for herself an unusual work
in life.</p>
<p>After completing her studies she made a trip to New Orleans,
and then North to the Falls of St. Anthony, smoking the pipe of
peace with the chief of the Dakota Indians, exploring lead
mines in Dubuque, and scaling a high mountain that was soon
after named for her. Did the wealthy girl go alone on these
journeys? Yes. As a rule, no harm comes to a young woman who
conducts herself with becoming reserve with men. Flirts usually
are paid in their own coin.</p>
<p>On her return home, Dr. Hosmer fitted up a studio for his
daughter, and her first work was to copy from the antique. Then
she cut Canova's "Napoleon" in marble for her father, doing all
the work, that he might especially value the gift. Her next
statue was an ideal bust of Hesper, "with," said Lydia Maria
Child, "the face of a lovely maiden gently falling asleep with
the sound of distant music. Her hair is gracefully arranged,
and intertwined with capsules of the poppy. A star shines on
her forehead, and under her breast lies the crescent moon. The
swell of the cheeks and the bust is like pure, young, healthy
flesh, and the muscles of the beautiful mouth so delicately
cut, it seems like a thing that breathes. She did every stroke
of the work with her own small hands, except knocking off the
corners of the block of marble. She employed a man to do that;
but as he was unused to work for sculptors, she did not venture
to have him approach within several inches of the surface she
intended to cut. Slight girl as she was, she wielded for eight
or ten hours a day a leaden mallet weighing four pounds and a
half. Had it not been for the strength and flexibility of
muscle acquired by rowing and other athletic exercises, such
arduous labor would have been impossible."</p>
<p>After "Hesper" was completed, she said to her father, "I am
ready to go to Rome."</p>
<p>"You shall go, my child, this very autumn," was the
response.</p>
<p>He would, of course, miss the genial companionship of his
only child, but her welfare was to be consulted rather than his
own. When autumn came, she rode on horseback to Wayland to say
good-bye to Mrs. Child. "Shall you never be homesick for your
museum-parlor in Watertown? Can you be contented in a foreign
land?"</p>
<p>"I can be happy anywhere," said Miss Hosmer, "with good
health and a bit of marble."</p>
<p>Late in the fall Dr. Hosmer and his daughter started for
Europe, reaching Rome Nov. 12, 1852. She had greatly desired to
study under John Gibson, the leading English sculptor, but he
had taken young women into his studio who in a short time
became discouraged or showed themselves afraid of hard work,
and he feared Miss Hosmer might be of the same useless
type.</p>
<p>When the photographs of "Hesper" were placed before him by
an artist friend of the Hosmers, he looked at them carefully,
and said, "Send the young lady to me, and whatever I know, and
can teach her, she shall learn." He gave Miss Hosmer an
upstairs room in his studio, and here for seven years she
worked with delight, honored and encouraged by her noble
teacher. She wrote to her friends: "The dearest wish of my
heart is gratified in that I am acknowledged by Gibson as a
pupil. He has been resident in Rome thirty-four years, and
leads the van. I am greatly in luck. He has just finished the
model of the statue of the queen; and as his room is vacant, he
permits me to use it, and I am now in his own studio. I have
also a little room for work which was formerly occupied by
Canova, and perhaps inspiration may be drawn from the
walls."</p>
<p>The first work which she copied, to show Gibson whether she
had correctness of eye and proper knowledge, was the Venus of
Milo. When nearly finished, the iron which supported the clay
snapped, and the figure lay spoiled upon the floor. She did not
shrink nor cry, but immediately went to work cheerfully to
shape it over again. This conduct Mr. Gibson greatly admired,
and made up his mind to assist her all he could.</p>
<p>After this she copied the "Cupid" of Praxitiles and Tasso
from the British Museum. Her first original work was Daphne,
the beautiful girl whom Apollo loved, and who, rather than
accept his addresses, was changed into laurel by the gods.
Apollo crowned his head with laurel, and made the flower sacred
to himself forever.</p>
<p>Next, Miss Hosmer produced "Medusa," famed for her beautiful
hair, which Minerva turned into serpents because Neptune loved
her. According to Grecian mythology, Perseus made himself
immortal by conquering Medusa, whose head he cut off, and the
blood dripping from it filled Africa with snakes. Miss Hosmer
represents the beautiful maiden, when she finds, with horror,
that her hair is turning into serpents.</p>
<p>Needing a real snake for her work, Miss Hosmer sent a man
into the suburbs to bring her one alive. When it was obtained,
she chloroformed it till she had made a cast, keeping it in
plaster for three hours and a half. Then, instead of killing
it, like a true-hearted woman, as she is, she sent it back into
the country, glad to regain its liberty.</p>
<p>"Daphne" and "Medusa" were both exhibited in Boston the
following year, 1853, and were much praised. Mr. Gibson said:
"The power of imitating the roundness and softness of flesh, he
had never seen surpassed." Rauch, the great Prussian, whose
mausoleum at Charlottenburg of the beautiful queen Louise can
never be forgotten, gave Miss Hosmer high praise.</p>
<p>Two years later she completed "Oenone," made for Mr. Crow of
St. Louis. It is the full-length figure of the beautiful nymph
of Mount Ida. The story is a familiar one. Before the birth of
Paris, the son of Priam, it was foretold that he by his
imprudence should cause the destruction of Troy. His father
gave orders for him to be put to death, but possibly through
the fondness of his mother, he was spared, and carried to Mount
Ida, where he was brought up by the shepherds, and finally
married Oenone. In time he became known to his family, who
forgot the prophecy and cordially received him. For a decision
in favor of Venus he was promised the most beautiful woman in
the world for his wife. Forgetting Oenone, he fell in love with
the beautiful Helen, already the wife of Menelaus, and
persuaded her to fly with him to Troy, to his father's court.
War resulted. When he found himself dying of his wounds, he
fled to Oenone for help, but died just as he came into her
presence. She bathed the body with her tears, and stabbed
herself to the heart, a very foolish act for so faithless a
man. Miss Hosmer represents her as a beautiful shepherdess,
bowed with grief from her desertion.</p>
<p>This work was so much liked in America, that the St. Louis
Mercantile Library made a liberal offer for some other statue.
Accordingly, two years after, "Beatrice Cenci" was sent. The
noble girl lies asleep, the night before her execution, after
the terrible torture. "It was," says Mrs. Child, "the sleep of
a body worn out with the wretchedness of the soul. On that
innocent face suffering had left its traces. The arm that had
been tossing in the grief tempest, had fallen heavily, too
weary to change itself into a more easy position. Those large
eyes, now so closely veiled by their swollen lids, had
evidently wept till the fountain of tears was dry. That lovely
mouth was still the open portal of a sigh, which the mastery of
sleep had left no time to close."</p>
<p>To make this natural, the sculptor caused several models to
go to sleep in her studio, that she might study them. Gibson is
said to have remarked upon seeing this, "I can teach her
nothing." This was also exhibited in London and in several
American cities.</p>
<p>For three years she had worked continuously, not leaving
Rome even in the hot, unhealthy summers. She had said, "I will
not be an amateur; I will work as if I had to earn my daily
bread." However, as her health seemed somewhat impaired, at her
father's earnest wish, she had decided to go to England for the
season. Her trunks were packed, and she was ready to start,
when lo! a message came that Dr. Hosmer had lost his property,
that he could send her no more money, and suggested that she
return home at once.</p>
<p>At first she seemed overwhelmed; then she said firmly, "I
cannot go back, and give up my art." Her trunks were at once
unpacked and a cheap room rented. Her handsome horse and saddle
were sold, and she was now to work indeed "as if she earned her
daily bread."</p>
<p>By a strange freak of human nature, by which we sometimes do
our most humorous work when we are saddest, Miss Hosmer
produced now in her sorrow her fun-loving "Puck." It represents
a child about four years old seated on a toadstool which breaks
beneath him. The left hand confines a lizard, while the right
holds a beetle. The legs are crossed, and the great toe of the
right foot turns up. The whole is full of merriment. The Crown
Princess of Germany, on seeing it, exclaimed, "Oh, Miss Hosmer,
you have such a talent for toes!" Very true, for this statue,
with the several copies made from it, brought her thirty
thousand dollars! The Prince of Wales has a copy, the Duke of
Hamilton also, and it has gone even to Australia and the West
Indies. A companion piece is the "Will-o'-the-wisp."</p>
<p>About this time the lovely sixteen-year-old daughter of
Madam Falconnet died at Rome, and for her monument in the
Catholic church of San Andrea del Fratte, Miss Hosmer produced
an exquisite figure resting upon a sarcophagus. Layard, the
explorer of Babylon and Nineveh, wrote to Madam Falconnet: "I
scarcely remember to have seen a monument which more completely
commanded my sympathy and more deeply interested me. I really
know of none, of modern days, which I would rather have placed
over the remains of one who had been dear to me."</p>
<p>Miss Hosmer also modeled a fountain from the story of Hylas.
The lower basin contains dolphins spouting jets, while in the
upper basin, supported by swans, the youth Hylas stands,
surrounded by the nymphs who admire his beauty, and who
eventually draw him into the water, where he is drowned.</p>
<p>Miss Hosmer returned to America in 1857, five years after
her departure. She was still young, twenty-seven, vivacious,
hopeful, not wearied from her hard work, and famous. While here
she determined upon a statue of Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra, and
read much concerning her and her times. She had touched fiction
and poetry; now she would attempt history. She could scarcely
have chosen a more heroic or pathetic subject. The brave leader
of a brave people, a skilful warrior, marching at the head of
her troops, now on foot, and now on horseback, beautiful in
face, and cultured in mind, acquainted with Latin, Greek,
Syriac, and Egyptian, finally captured by Aurelian, and borne
through the streets of Rome, adorning his triumphal
procession.</p>
<p>After Miss Hosmer's return to Rome, she worked on "Zenobia"
with energy and enthusiasm, as she molded the clay, and then
the plaster. When brought to this country, it awakened the
greatest interest; crowds gathered to see it. In Chicago it was
exhibited at the Sanitary Fair in behalf of the soldiers.
Whittier said: "It very fully expresses my conception of what
historical sculpture should be. It tells its whole proud and
melancholy story. In looking at it, I felt that the artist had
been as truly serving her country while working out her
magnificent design abroad, as our soldiers in the field, and
our public officers in their departments." From its exhibition
Miss Hosmer received five thousand dollars. It was purchased by
Mr. A.W. Griswold, of New York. So great a work was the statue
considered in London, that some of the papers declared Gibson
to be its author. Miss Hosmer at once began suits for libel,
and retractions were speedily made.</p>
<p>In 1860 Miss Hosmer again visited America, to see her
father, who was seriously ill. How proud Dr. Hosmer must have
been of his gifted daughter now that her fame was in two
hemispheres! Surely he had not "spoiled" her. She could now
spend for him as he had spent for her in her childhood. While
here, she received a commission from St. Louis for a bronze
portrait-statue of Missouri's famous statesman, Thomas Hart
Benton. The world wondered if she could bring out of the marble
a man with all his strength and dignity, as she had a woman
with all her grace and nobility.</p>
<p>She visited St. Louis, to examine portraits and mementos of
Colonel Benton, and then hastened across the ocean to her work.
The next year a photograph of the model was sent to the
friends, and the likeness pronounced good. The statue was cast
at the great royal foundry at Munich, and in due time shipped
to this country. May 27, 1868, it was unveiled in Lafayette
Park, in the presence of an immense concourse of people, the
daughter, Mrs. John C. Fremont, removing the covering. The
statue is ten feet high, and weighs three and one-half tons. It
rests on a granite pedestal, ten feet square, the whole being
twenty-two feet square. On the west side of the pedestal are
the words from Colonel Benton's famous speech on the Pacific
Railroad, "There is the East--there is India." Both press and
people were heartily pleased with this statue, for which Miss
Hosmer received ten thousand dollars, the whole costing thirty
thousand.</p>
<p>She was now in the midst of busy and successful work. Orders
crowded upon her. Her "Sleeping Faun," which was exhibited at
the Dublin Exhibition in 1865, was sold on the day of opening
for five thousand dollars, to Sir Benjamin Guinness. Some
discussion having arisen about the sale, he offered ten
thousand, saying, that if money could buy it, he would possess
it. Miss Hosmer, however, would receive only the five thousand.
The faun is represented reclining against the trunk of a tree,
partly draped in the spoils of a tiger. A little faun, with
mischievous look, is binding the faun to the tree with the
tiger-skin. The newspapers were enthusiastic about the
work.</p>
<p>The <i>London Times</i> said: "In the groups of statues are
many works of exquisite beauty, but there is one which at once
arrests attention and extorts admiration. It is a curious fact
that amid all the statues in this court, contributed by the
natives of lands in which the fine arts were naturalized
thousands of years ago, one of the finest should be the
production of an American artist." The French <i>Galignani</i>
said, "The gem of the classical school, in its nobler style of
composition, is due to an American lady, Miss Hosmer." The
<i>London Art Journal</i> said, "The works of Miss Hosmer,
Hiram Powers, and others we might name, have placed American on
a level with the best modern sculptors of Europe." This work
was repeated for the Prince of Wales and for Lady Ashburton, of
England.</p>
<p>Not long ago I visited the studio of Miss Hosmer in the Via
Margutta, at Rome, and saw her numerous works, many of them
still unfinished. Here an arm seemed just reaching out from the
rough block of marble; here a sweet face seemed like
Pygmalion's statue, coming into life. In the centre of the
studio was the "Siren Fountain," executed for Lady Marion
Alford. A siren sits in the upper basin and sings to the music
of her lute. Three little cupids sit on dolphins, and listen to
her music.</p>
<p>For some years Miss Hosmer has been preparing a golden
gateway for an art gallery at Ashridge Hall, England, ordered
by Earl Brownlow. These gates, seventeen feet high, are covered
with bas-reliefs representing the Air, Earth, and Sea. The
twelve hours of the night show "Aeolus subduing the Winds," the
"Descent of the Zephyrs," "Iris descending with the Dew,"
"Night rising with the Stars," "The Rising Moon," "The Hour's
Sleep," "The Dreams Descend," "The Falling Star," "Phosphor and
Hesper," "The Hours Wake," "Aurora Veils the Stars," and
"Morning." More than eighty figures are in the nineteen
bas-reliefs. Miss Hosmer has done other important works, among
them a statue of the beautiful Queen of Naples, who was a
frequent visitor to the artist's studio, and several well-known
monuments. With her girlish fondness for machinery, she has
given much thought to mechanics in these later years, striving
to find, like many another, the secret of producing perpetual
motion. She spends much of her time now in England. She is
still passionately fond of riding, the Empress of Austria, who
owns more horses than any woman in the world, declaring "that
there was nothing she looked forward to with more interest in
Rome, than to see Miss Hosmer ride."</p>
<p>Many of the closing years of the sculptor's long life were
spent in Rome, where she had a wide circle of eminent American
and English friends, among whom were Hawthorne, Thackeray,
George Eliot, and the Brownings. She made several discoveries
in her work, one of which was a process of hardening limestone
so that it resembled marble. She also wrote both prose and
poetry, and would have been successful as an author, if she had
not given the bulk of her time to her beloved sculpture.</p>
<p>After her long sojourn in Rome she spent several years in
England, executing important commissions, and then turned her
face toward America. In Watertown, where she was born, she
again made her home; and here she breathed her last, February
21, 1908, after an illness of three weeks. She was in her
seventy-eighth year. By her long life of earnest work and
self-reliant purpose, coupled with her high gift, she has made
for herself an abiding place in the history of art.</p>
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