Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Ten Nights in A Bar Room And What I Saw There by Timothy Shay Arthur

"He loved his mother, and was deeply afflicted by the calamity; but it seemed as if he could not stop.  Some terrible necessity appeared to be impelling him onward.  If he formed good resolutions  - and I doubt not that he did - they were blown away like threads of gossamer, the moment he came within the sphere of old associations.  His way to the mill was by the Sickle and Sheaf, and it was not easy for him to pass there without being drawn into the bar, either by his own desire for drink, or through the invitation of some pleasant companion, who was lounging in front of the Tavern". - Ten Nights In A Bar Room by Timothy Shay Arthur.

Ten Nights In A Bar Room by Timothy Shay Arthur was published in 1854 and it was a very popular novel in its day dealing with the subject of temperance.  Only Uncle Tom's Cabin did better in book sales during the 1850's.  Yet today Ten Nights in A Bar Room has fallen into obscurity.  That fascinates me, once popular books that are no longer read or remembered  I have a number of such novels in my kindle and are they worth reading?  Do they have lessons for modern times?

And so when Ten Nights In A Bar Room begins it is the mid 19th century in the fictional town of Cedarville.  The novel is narrated by a business man whose name we never learn.  His work keeps bringing him back to Cedarville over a ten year period.  Each time the narrator returns he rents a room for the night at the Sickle and Sheaf, the local saloon.  The Sickle and Sheaf starts out as a promising enterprise for the town and its owner Simon Slade.  However as the years go by the Sickle and Sheaf detiorates into a den of vice and corruption which eventually destroys the lives of the owner, his family, the young men who frequent the tavern, their long suffering mothers and wives and pretty much anyone who walks through its doors. 

As the novel progresses a young girl is killed by a flying bottle when she comes to the bar pleading for her father to come home.  Willie Hammond, the son of Judge Hammond,  who is the light of his parent's lives and who is one of the nicest young men around who tne town has high hopes for, develops a drinking and gambling problem.  Simon Slade the owner of the bar gets seriously injured in a bar fight.  His wife loses her wits seeing what has happened to her family.  Their son, sixteen year old Frank Slade, starts out helping his father run the bar and takes up with a bad crowd.   At various points in the novel the subject of temperance is discussed and despite the damage that the saloon is doing to Cedarville, many of the bar patrons are not willing to go there.  As Judge Lynan states:

"The next thing we will have will be laws to fine any man who takes a chew of tobacco or lights a cigar.  Touch the liberties of the people in the smallest particular, and all guarantees are gone.  The Stamp Act, against which our noble forefathers rebelled, was a light measure of oppression to that contemplated by these worse than fanatics".  

Ten Nights In A Bar Room is not shy about conveying its message with regard to the evils of alcohol.  It can be overwrought, particularly as we get near to the end of the book.  On the whole though its decently written and it did cause me to think.  

Nowadays the temperance movement looks foolish and fanatical but if you look at the situation from a 19th century perspective saloons opening up in small towns across the country could cause real problems.  When Ten Nights was written for example what could a young man (women weren't allowed in bars back then) do for fun?  This was before television the movies, radio, the telephone, automobiles.  It could get boring and lonely in small towns and saloons were a place of commraderie.  

But the book points out that in many of these saloons gamblers would arrive.taking advantage of customers too inebriated to know what they were doing.  Women were hit hard by the saloon culture as well.  If a woman was married to a man who drank what recourse did she have?  Divorce was not an option back then and there were no jobs for women to help feed their families.

So I am glad I read Ten Nights In A Bar Room.  I think its worth reading for its historical value, a window into a different time and why temperance became such a big issue in the 19th century.

11 comments:

  1. I am also interested in once popular books that have been forgotten. If something were really worthwhile in the past, it seems like it should be worthwhile now.

    I have often thought of the temperance movement as very wrongheaded. However, the way that you explain it makes it very understandable.

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  2. Hi Brian, Publishers Weekly online maintains a fiction and I believe nonfiction bestseller list going back to 1900. So many of those books from 1900's,1910's unknown today but can be downloaded from one's kindle.

    Glad I read Ten Nights. Today a nice bar restaurant a great way to relax with friends but back then it seemed to be the only source of entertainment in a small town and I think that's where trouble can set in.

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  3. I suspect the fact that there were so little other forms of entertainment may explain why this book was a best-seller of its time. Now we have TV shows like “Intervention” or a celebrity memoir to warn popular audiences of the dangers of addiction and this kind of book becomes as you point out, more valuable for its historical value rather than its literary merit.

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    1. Good point about Ten Nights in A Bar Room being the 19th century version of Intervention. I've heard it said that sensational books like this were very popular in Victorian times because ypu could wrap these potboilers in a moral message and people could eagerly read them without guilt.

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    2. Sounds just like reality TV - Victorian style! :D

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    3. LoL. I couldn't imagine living without TV but I guess the Victorians didn't know what they were missing although with some of the reality shows they weren't missing much!

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  4. Insight into the past is always a good reason to read a book...even if it's a little overwrought at times. :) Great review, as always!

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    1. Thanks Lark. I have alot of these books in my kindle. Bestsellers from the 19th and early 20th century. Publishers Weekly lists the bestsellers going back to the 1890's. Amazing how many titles and authors tjat were once so popular have faded into oblivion.

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  5. Sounds interesting from a historical perspective.

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    1. I think that's the way to read Ten Nights, from a historical,perspective. There is very little subtlety in the book when it comes to alcohol.

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