Eugene Field, a Study in Heredity and Contradictions — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about Eugene Field, a Study in Heredity and Contradictions — Volume 2.

Eugene Field, a Study in Heredity and Contradictions — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about Eugene Field, a Study in Heredity and Contradictions — Volume 2.

LAST YEARS

If this were a record of a life, and not a study of character, with the side-lights bearing upon its development and idiosyncrasies, there would remain much to write of Eugene Field after his return from abroad.  Much came to him in fame, in fortune, in his friendships, and in his home.  Two more children were born to brighten his hearthstone and refresh his memories of childhood and the enchanting ways of children.  The elder of these two, a son, was named Roswell Francis, a combination of the names of Field’s father and mother, with the change of a vowel to suit his sex; the younger, his second daughter, was christened Ruth, after Mrs. Gray, in whose home Field had found, more than a score of years before, the disinterested affection of a mother, “a refuge from temptation, care, and vexation.”

Although immediately upon getting back Field resumed his daily grind of “Sharps and Flats” for the Chicago Record, his paragraphs showed more and more the effects of his reading and his withdrawal from the activities and associations of men.  Mankind continued to interest him as much as ever, but books wearied him less, and in his home were more easily within reach.  This home was now at 420 Fullerton Avenue, an old-fashioned house on the northern limit of old Chicago, rather off the beaten track.  It was the fifth place the Field household had set up its lares and penates since coming to Chicago.  In consequence of his collecting mania, his impedimenta had become a puzzle to house and a domestic cataclysm to move.

By 1891 Field realized, as none of his family or friends did, that his health would never be better, and that it behooved him to put his house in order and make the most of the strength remaining.  If he needed the words of a mentor to warn him, he could have found them in the brief memoir his uncle, Charles Kellogg, had written of his father.  In that I find this remarkable anticipation of what befell his son, written of Roswell M. Field—­who, be it remembered, started in life with a healthy and vigorous body, whereas uncertain health and a rebellious stomach were Eugene Field’s portion all the days of his life.

He [Field’s father] made the perusal of the Greek and Latin classics his most delightful pastime.  In fact, he resorted to this scientific research, particularly in the department of mathematics, for his chief mental recreation.  It is greatly to be regretted that he neglected to combine, with his cessation from professional labor, some employment which would have revived and strengthened his physical frame.  He was averse to active exercise, and for some years before his death he lived a life of studious seclusion which would have been philosophical had he not violated, in the little care he took of his health, one of the most important lessons which philosophy teaches.  At a comparatively early age he died of physical exhaustion, a deterioration of the bodily
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Eugene Field, a Study in Heredity and Contradictions — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.