Written by a former U.S. Congressman, this autobiographical
book is less a novel as it is a miscellany of anecdotes, travel writing,
boosterism, musings, and political rhetoric. In the character of John Campbell,
the storyline parallels the career of the author during the years 1874-1878,
when Bell was a young lawyer in Colorado.
Plot. Campbell is
the “pilgrim” of the story, a tenderfoot from Tennessee, fresh out of law
school. Traveling to the gold fields of the Rocky Mountains, he meets and
befriends an older man, Joshua Wickham, who was an early Colorado settler and
is the “pioneer” of the title. He encourages Campbell to establish a law
practice in a succession of mining camps that are growing into towns—Del Norte,
Saguache, Lake City.
After a while, they take a long excursion together, first to
arid southwestern Colorado, then northward to Salt Lake City, Butte, and
Idaho’s Couer d’Alene. At that point, they part company. Wickham travels on to
British Columbia, and Campbell returns to Colorado.
Wickham and Campbell |
In the final three chapters, the narrative jumps ahead to
the year 1900. Campbell, now middle aged, retraces the route of his journey to
Idaho, and Wickham, an elderly man, returns to Colorado to find it greatly
changed. The old frontier spirit he once cherished is now hard to find. The
book ends with a family reunion for Wickham and his grown children.
Structure. At 531
pages, this is a long book to be summed up in just three paragraphs. The action
doesn’t come together as a plot so much as a loosely connected series of
incidents that illustrate larger philosophical and legal themes. A central
thread running through the book is the pioneer Wickham’s philosophy of
optimism. He believes that Nature moves at all times toward peace, harmony, and
justice.
The unjust and dishonest, he says, are merely temporary
impediments in the path of progress toward a more perfect world. For him the
glass is always half full. Right will prevail. A skilled arbitrator, he keeps
apparently irreconcilable disputes from escalating to litigation. He boasts
that his efforts have made courts unnecessary.
Wickham returns a bad horse |
Character. In a
rough and ready way, the book is a bildungsroman. It tells the
story of a young man, Campbell, who gains the courage to be a true public
servant by becoming socially conscious and confronting injustice wherever it
rears its hoary head.
He starts out as a timid fellow, a tenderfoot in the wild
and woolly West. From humble beginnings, he has trusting expectations of a world
that is in fact full of predators. The loose behavior of dancehall girls
unnerves him, and he’s often the butt of practical jokes.
Nonetheless, he acquires a reputation among the more
reputable among his fellow frontiersmen. Known to be unstinting in his efforts
to serve his clients, he is soon elevated to the position of county attorney.
Whites and nonwhites. The
subject of interracial marriage is a prominent theme in the book. Wickham, we
learn, married an Indian chief’s daughter when he was a young man on the
frontier. She bore him six daughters, all of whom shame him because they show
no mixture of white blood. When his wife dies, he sees that they are married to
white men, and he divides up his extensive property among them before leaving.
Susan B. Anthony and the miners |
Over the years, Wickham laments that he ever fathered his
daughters because he disadvantaged them by giving them mixed blood. Another man
faults him for giving his children a “greasy, dumb, thoughtless, unsympathetic
Indian squaw” for a mother. He hardly disagrees and comes to believe that it
would take generations of infusions of white blood to lift his progeny out of
their unfortunate genetic heritage.
Women.
Respectability comes at a high price for the women. A young bride is forced by
winter weather to overnight in a one-room inn with several men clustered in
blankets around the fire. The next morning, they must promise that no one, not
even her husband, will ever learn of their unconventional sleeping
arrangements.
There’s one stellar appearance by Susan B. Anthony, who
comes to town briefly in 1876. She appeals to the assembled miners to support
the personal, property, and political rights of women. The men are won over by
her well-reasoned argument that women should be granted equal rights in the Colorado
Constitution.
Newlyweds on a horse-drawn wagon |
Cowboys. The men who
herd cattle in the mountain valleys are presented in the book as thoroughly
honorable and decent men. As someone observes, they are “sons of nature,” not
subject to the corrupting influences of city life, where alcohol ruins men.
The occasional bad-mannered cowboy is often a fugitive from
justice, or he may tend to behave recklessly, but even then he is always a
defender of women. As a class, cowboys are deemed “worthy and law-abiding
citizens.”
East vs. West. Wickham
often praises the West as superior to the East for its democratic spirit.
Westerners are not class conscious as are Easterners. At a dance you will find
the servant girl and the waitress treated with the same regard as the most
respectable women.
Still, Wickham finds occasion to lament that western towns
are often governed by the “dregs of society.” He rails against the ignorance of
ordinary people, who allow themselves to be governed by inept and corrupt
leaders. With his reliable optimism, however, he believes an informed
electorate would select representatives who would actually serve the public
interest.
John C. Bell |
Wrapping up. While
fascinating for its content, the book is obviously written by an amateur
novelist. The narration often shifts into long, soapbox-style declamatory
passages, like a lawyer presenting a case to a jury. Though probably
unintentional, the story bears a resemblance to Voltaire’s Candide,
with Wickham as the optimistic Dr. Pangloss and Campbell as the impressionable
Candide.
John Calhoun Bell (1851-1933) grew up on a farm in Tennessee
and went to Colorado after finishing law school in 1874. He practiced law in
mining camp settlements and occupied various public offices before serving five
terms in the U.S. Congress, 1893-1903. He was the first representative from his
district and ran on the Populist ticket. The Pilgrim and the Pioneer seems to be his only publication as a writer of
fiction.
The Pilgrim and the Pioneer is currently available at google books, Internet Archive and for the nook. For more of Friday's Forgotten Books, click on over to Patti Abbott's blog.
Image credits:
Illustrations from the first edition by Ned Hadley
Author's photo, Wikimedia Commons
Coming up: Phil Truman, Red Lands Outlaw: The Ballad of Henry Starr
You know I'm kind of nostalgic for covers like this. Reminds me of my early days in reading when the covers really didn't matter but it was what was inside.
ReplyDelete