
Brother Men: The Correspondence of Edgar Rice Burroughs and Herbert
T. Weston
By Edgar Rice Burroughs and Herbert T. Weston. Edited by Matt
Cohen.
Duke University Press, 2005. 310 pages. $21.95, paper.
This correspondence traces the history of a friendship.
Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) and Herbert T. Weston (1876-1951),
both youngest sons of wealthy Midwestern businessmen, met
as cadets at Michigan Military Academy in Orchard Lake, probably
in the autumn of 1893, when Burroughs was eighteen and Weston
seventeen years old. Once graduated from MMA, Burroughs balked
at remaining in the family business, American Battery Company
in Chicago. Instead, after a brief stint in the Army, he
bounced from minor job to job for more than a decade.
Then, in 1911, when he was thirty-five, he discovered his
extraordinary gift for popular writing and launched the John
Carter stories and Tarzan adventures that made him one of
the most widely read authors of the twentieth century. At
last a success on his own terms, in 1919 he slammed the door
on his Chicago past and moved to the San Fernando Valley
in southern California, where he gave his most famous character's
name to a ranch, now the Los Angeles suburb of Tarzana. Weston,
by contrast, after graduating from Yale's Sheffield Scientific
School, dutifully took up his post in the family bank in
Beatrice, Nebraska, and started Nebraska Corn Mills, staying
in Gage County, albeit with frequent travels, the rest of
his life.
"I have a recollection of the day I arrived" at
Michigan Military Academy, Weston recalled in a 1927 letter, "and
you hard-boiled up to me and asked if I had ever played football.
I blushingly replied that I had played two games as end on
the Nebraska 'Varsity [sic], and you almost kissed me!" Their
correspondence might be seen as a continuing effort to sustain
this youthful affection despite physical separation, pressures
of work and family, and other divergences in their lives.
Even though the letters continued to flow between them for
four decades, sometimes frequently, at others, desultorily,
and with silences lasting as long as five years, the period
of their most intense friendship was, from the outset, far
behind them, encased in the glowing amber of youth. Already
by the time of the Great War, when they were in their early
forties, they speak of themselves as "old" and "decrepit," and
receding hairlines and expanding waistlines are a staple
of their humor.
Burroughs was a disciplined professional author, yet news
of his actual writing plays little part in these letters.
When he does mention his work, it is often in the jocular
pose of "poor, struggling young author" to Weston's "poor
man" in banter that they kept up for decades. "Everything
is moving about the same here," Burroughs wrote in a
typical exchange in 1928. "I am trying to work hard
on new stories in the constant battle against the wolf of
which you plutocrats know nothing." Nonetheless, Weston's
admiration for Burroughs' gift emerges unmistakably: "You
know, and I well know, that you have something which make
[sic] a tremedous [sic] popular appeal," Weston wrote
in 1933. "You have had many immitators [sic], as I well
know, and not one of them has got to even First Base. There
is some g-d----d spark which you possess which just bars
competition."
Yet apart from Burroughs' own work, the two ignore literature.
Instead, seasoned with frequent damns and exclamation points,
their topics are the standard businessmen's clubroom and
parlor-car fare of the period: family, football, photography,
animals, automobiles, old school chums, investments (including
joint, ill-fated speculations in a proposed Los Angeles airport
and an airplane engine, two Burroughs enthusiasms), illness,
death, taxes, politics (both were lifelong Republicans),
prohibition, drinking, gambling, travel, the weather, and
the relative advantages of the Nebraska and Southern California
climates. They revered Theodore Roosevelt and admired Charles
Lindbergh and Wendell Wilkie.
By 1940, when the U.S. was teetering on the brink of another
war, Weston excoriated the "scum of Middle Europe" he
saw in New York City. In reply, Burroughs propounded his
own ruthless updating of the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe
Doctrine. Within the Western hemisphere, he fulminated, "If
we discover that fifth column infiltration has made any country
a menace to us, we shouldn't stand on ceremony or international
law or ethics--we should just wipe that country off the face
of the earth."
After such armchair aerobic exercises, Burroughs and Weston
cooled down with nostalgic recollections. In the same letter
in which Burroughs imagined wholesale extermination, he added, "You're
goddam right, the horse-and-buggy days were the best! What
we didn't know about, we didn't miss. We didn't have Brain
Trusters, New Deals, Hitlers, Stalins, Mussolinis, Jim Farley,
or FDR. We didn't know when we were well off. We got along
very well with one horse open sleighs, Annie Rooney, Anna
Held, E.H. Sothern, Lillian Russell, Charles Dana Gibson,
Graustark, and Jerome K. Jerome. Twenty-five miles an hour
was too fast and Western Union was fast enough."
Matt Cohen, an assistant professor of English at Duke and
a great-grandson of Herbert Weston, provides helpful notes.
His critical introduction, however, is addressed to the relative
handful of cultural historians immersed in debates "about
the nature of male subjectivity and the uses of homosocial
intimacy," and his critical jargon will baffle most
readers. Certainly, he provides an informative historical
context for Burroughs and Weston's lives, but his cultural
analyses often seem labored, and his generalizations about
the broader significance of this correspondence unsupported.
--John F. Kasson
Kasson is a professor of history and American
Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
He is the author of several books on American cultural history,
among them, Houdini, Tarzan, and the Perfect Man: The White
Male Body and the Challenge of Modernity in America.
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Sermons
from Duke Chapel: Voices from "A Great Towering Church"
William H. Willimon, editor.
Duke University Press, 2005. 384 pages. $34.95.
Can you remember your first glimpse of Duke Chapel? Mine
was as a young teenager. The spectacular scene as my father's
car turned onto Chapel Drive made a strong impression on
my adolescent psyche: Something was quite significant about
this university. While I might wish to think my decision
to enroll was fully intellectual, I cannot deny the emotional
hook set that day.
Many a guest speaker also has felt a degree of awe from the
Chapel pulpit. Former Dean of the Chapel William Willimon
notes that the cavernous edifice can challenge preachers.
Lighting makes it difficult for speakers to see their audience
and to be seen.
Willimon relates that once after he "had preached as
well as I knew how, a woman grasped my hand as I stood at
the door and said, 'Would you please tell the lady who preached
this morning that I thought she had a thoughtful sermon?' "
"I prayed that she had been seated in the last row," he
deadpans.
To commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary of Duke Chapel's
groundbreaking, Sermons from Duke Chapel assembles fifty-eight
notable sermons delivered there. The collection reflects
diversity in theme and viewpoint. Speakers from Paul Tillich
to Billy Graham have addressed war, racism, forgiveness,
gender equality, literature, joy, the afterlife, and more.
Willimon, now Methodist Bishop for North Alabama, notes that
the Chapel has hosted "just about every prominent woman
preacher in American Protestantism," around a dozen
Catholics, four rabbis, and numerous African-American preachers.
Snapshots of several recurring themes can give a preview
of the collection. Race relations figure prominently. In
1956, Duke religion professor Shelton Smith lamented the "anti-Christian
assumption" that "the Negro is humanly inferior
to the white man. In the final analysis, our dual racist
structure in the South rests upon that belief." Smith
advocated a biblical position: "There is neither Jew
nor Greek... neither slave nor free; ... for you are all
one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28).
By 1978, Clarence G. Newsome '72, M.Div. '75, Ph.D. '82,
then an instructor in the Divinity School and one of Duke's
first African-American doctoral candidates, was expounding
from the Chapel pulpit on God's nature and modern times.
Newsome, now president of Shaw University and a Duke trustee,
concluded that "in a society where permissiveness is
the rule ... this God of love and righteousness is still
the standard."
The need for forgiveness, which defines many human relationships,
is another sermon theme. In 1963, German pastor Martin Niemˆller
told of imprisonment by Nazis in the Dachau concentration
camp. From his solitary-confinement cell, he could see the
gallows on which his comrades were hanged and imagined invoking
God's wrath should executioners come for him. Then he reflected
gratefully that Jesus "died a different way," praying "Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do!" Niemˆller
said he needed inner strength from a relationship with God--not
merely Christian principles--to have such an attitude.
Several sermons highlight coping with disappointment and
difficulty. In 1957, Divinity School ethics professor Waldo
Beach noted that in a success-driven culture, universities "need
also to educate for failure, for tragedy, for the perversities
of human nature, the letdowns of human existence...." In
1994, Divinity School preaching professor Carol Marie Noren
compared a biblical storm at sea with storms of life that
can test faith. She said the story of Jesus' disciples' fear
during a storm held good news for those who, like her, could
identify more closely with the fear of the "fainthearted
followers ... than with the courage of modern martyrs." Human
weakness, she maintained, can be a channel for divine power.
I laughed aloud as sociology professor Tony Campolo described
entering a crowded New York skyscraper elevator, facing the
sophisticated but joyless strangers, and suggesting they
all sing "You are My Sunshine" to pass time on
the lengthy ascent. They sang. This evangelical social activist's
sermon deftly blends the social imperative of Jesus' mission
with the spiritual emphasis on knowing God personally as
he focuses on childlike joy.
In discussing important social issues and ultimate questions,
the collection provides reactions to history as it happened.
June 9, 1968, four days after Robert F. Kennedy's assassination,
Duke theology professor Thor Hall scrapped his planned sermon
to speak about killing. In September 1973, Billy Graham told
his audience "There's a little bit of Watergate in all
of us." He called on the entire nation, both Republicans
and Democrats--his own party, he noted--to turn to God to
restore the nation's soul.
These sermons evoked in me reflection, inspiration, occasional
disagreement, and applause--as one might expect of oration
emanating from a spiritual centerpiece in a marketplace of
ideas. Reading and following text written for auditory rather
than visual consumption can be challenging, however. Imagining
speakers I had heard delivering their lines orally became
my communication facilitator as I read.
In the book's final sermon, which he himself delivered in
2003, Willimon noted that his Chapel audience routinely rated
music higher than the sermons. "I try not to take it
personally," he quipped. "We have spent years educating
you into the conceit that you have all you need to grasp
the world ... to get the truth ... to ... make money off
of your knowledge," he told students. Yet the Chapel,
Willimon continued, explores truth that is larger and difficult
to grasp. "I am the way, the truth, and the life," he
said, quoting Jesus. "You don't grasp him; he grasps
you."
--Rusty Wright
Wright '71 is an author, journalist, and university lecturer who has spoken on
six continents.
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