| A Review of: Inventing Sam Slick by George FetherlingOver the years, a great deal of research has been done on Thomas
Chandler Haliburton, the Nova Scotian who wrote The Clockmaker and
a stack of subsequent books about Sam Slick, his fictional Yankee
peddler. Haliburton criticism has been even more voluminous. Until
now, however, there's never been a proper life of this important
early Canadian author. That's the argument in favour of Inventing
Sam Slick: A Biography of Richard Chandler Haliburton (University
of Toronto Press, $60) by Richard A. Davies of Acadia University.
Among its assets are thoroughness, rich historical context, and the
kind of even disposition so absent in Haliburton himself, especially
as he aged and his politics grew conservative in a crotchety sort
of way.
Sam Slick from Slickville, the fast-talking American with a knack
for sharp trading, was an instant success when he first appeared
in 1837-significantly, during the Jacksonian period of populist
democracy in the U.S., when ties with British culture and deportment
had faded and much of the world grew alarmed at what was seen as
American barbarism. Haliburton called his character a Yankee, but
what did he mean by that? Originally he was using it in the narrow
sense of a New Englander, for Slick, like Haliburton's maternal
ancestors, hailed from Connecticut. But the character's growing
popularity also attested to the broadening definition: a generic
American, an exponent, knowingly or not, of the rough new republican
culture.
By the end of his life (he died 1865 at 69) Haliburton had probably
come to accept the topical usage "Yankee" as the opposite
of a "rebel" in the American Civil War. Like a great many
Canadians claiming descent from the old Loyalist culture, he was
partial to the Southern states in that particular struggle. Most
of them, of course, were simply pro-South as a means of being
anti-North, but Haliburton seems also to have been sympathetic to
slavery as well. Certainly he was something of a racist. George
Elliott Clarke has devoted quite a bit of energy to examining this
attitude in Haliburton's life and work, producing criticism that
few reputations could hope to survive. Just as certainly Haliburton's
own stock has plummeted. As Davies points out, he is rapidly losing
his allure even as a local hero in Windsor, N.S., which has now
repositioned itself as the birthplace of hockey rather than of Sam
Slick.
Haliburton was the perfect illustration of what once was thought
of as the notarial class-the county-courthouse lawyers, weekly
newspaper editors, small-time office-holders and minor politicians
who were always the backbone of early frontier literature on both
sides of the border (wherever the frontier happened to be located
at any given moment). Specifically he was a lawyer in Annapolis
Royal, which he also represented in the legislative assembly, an
institution, Davies says, where he "honed his talent for
satirical comedy [and] found it increasingly difficult to curb his
wit." Early in his career, he was a probate judge but in time
got appointed to the Inferior Court of Common Pleas and finally to
the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia. In 1859 he retired and decamped
for Britain where he became an MP.
In the politics of British North America he began as a moderate
radical, so to speak. Being a beneficiary of the system of colonial
administration, he could well afford some flexibility of outlook
in order to preserve the system of privilege and entitlement. But
he was appalled when Nova Scotia became the first jurisdiction to
establish responsible government.After that, he turned sour. What
didn't change was his productivity. As Davies puts it, he "possessed
a remarkable capacity to chain himself to his inkhorn."
He wrote widely, but of course the character of Sam Slick, with his
slangy speech and get-up-and-go, is the creation that remains alive,
however diminished in popular memory. Like the title character in
Mark Twain's The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson, he is memorable in
part for his aphorisms. He's also credited with the coinage of some
enduring clichs: the early bird gets the worm, it's raining cats
and dogs, a stitch in time saves nine. Haliburton resembles Mark
Twain on a different level too. Like the earlier Washington Irving,
whom he so admired, Haliburton was a literary artist who worked
best in the now obsolete genre, the sketch-a tale, neither short
story nor essay but with some traits of each, in which hyperbole
and colour are essential ingredients. In his own sketches, Mark
Twain was in a way following in Haliburton's wake, as was Stephen
Leacock later on. Haliburton's sketches frequently made use of a
lawyer character and built to some moral or point of law at the
end. In this, he was the progenitor of Melville Davisson Post,
America's mostly highly paid fiction writer at the time of the Great
War, the inventor of the lawyer-as-hero, without whom John Grisham
and all the others today could not exist.
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