In the
public mind, the Shakers are remembered today, if at all, for the oddness of
their doctrines and the elegant simplicity of their crafts, in particular chairs
and other furniture. They have, however, intrigued and earned the admiration of
first-rate minds. Msgr. Ronald Knox examines the Shakers in “Some Vagaries of
Modern Revivalism,” the second-to-last chapter in Enthusiasm: A Chapter in
the History of Religion (1950). After looking at other American religious
and utopian communities of the 18th and 19th centuries he writes:
“A child, I
think, can be happy anywhere; but the grown-ups – did the privileges of
communal marriage compensate them, in fact, for such a drab existence? [The Shakers
were doctrinally celibate.] There was more fun to be had, you feel, in the
cloistered shades of Mount Lebanon. The Shakers for us!”
Some thirty years
ago I wrote a long newspaper story about the Darrow School, an exclusive
private high school on the grounds of the Shaker settlement at Mount Lebanon,
N.Y., the largest in the United States (from 1787 to 1947). It’s the site of
the Great Stone Barn – fifty feet wide, four stories tall and almost two-hundred
feet long. Guy Davenport admired Shaker aesthetics and was fond of citing
Mother Ann Lee’s dictum that “every force evolves a form” (the title of his
1987 essay collection). He noted that it “sounds like Heraclitus or Darwin,”
and went on to say: “A work of art is a
form that articulates forces, making them intelligible.”
In 1963,
Davenport visited Thomas Merton in his cabin in the woods near the Trappist monastery
of Gethsemani in Kentucky. Merton was writing an essay, “Pleasant Hill” (the
name of a former Shaker colony near Lexington, Ky., where Davenport lived), that
would appear as the introduction to Religion in Wood: A Book of Shaker
Furniture (Edward Deming Andrews and Faith Andrews, 1966) and be collected
in Merton’s own Mystics and Zen Masters (1967). As Davenport relates in
the essay “Shaker Light” (The Hunter Gracchus, 1996), Merton said:
“The
peculiar grace of a Shaker chair is due to the fact that it was made by someone
capable of believing that an angel might come down and sit on it.”
It was
Lincoln, of course, who said at the conclusion of his first inaugural address:
“We are not
enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained
it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory,
stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and
hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union,
when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”
Sure; but check Hawthorne’s account of his visit (with Melville!) to the Shakers, in The American Notebooks.
ReplyDeleteDale Nelson