cPERSPEC TI VES Page Five INSIDE 1776 ... A Review, By Howard Peckham Secre History of the American Rev- olution, by Carl Van Doren, Viking, New York, 1941, 534 pp. $3.75. CARL VAN DOREN belongs to that all-too-small group of scholars who can also write well. Doubtless this talent is his be- cause he was first a professor of English, then an editor, critic and biographer, and lately a historian. His Pulitzer prize- winning biography of Benjamin Frank- lin was a best seller because it was emi- nently readable. Thanks to its style, -many persons are the better informed today on Franklin and the eighteenth century. In his current study, Secret History of the American Revolution, Mr. Van Doren has tackled a compli- cated subject that many a scholar would have served up as dull and dry as a bone, or that a professorial writer would have made sensational and unreliable. But again Mr. Van Doren has managed to be accurate and exhaustive and yet be as readable as a novel. In a sense, Mr. Van Doren makes history popular by rendering it painless. Such an accomplishment does not al- ways elicit the highest regard from the academic world. But history does not exist for the exclusive enjoyment of a privileged few. It must be made popular or it loses its primary function. Wash- ington once stated the argument suc- cinctly: "As our Country grows and its population increases-as it will-care must be taken to have each succeeding generation know the trials and tribula- tions of those sho preceded them. His- tory is an essential study to better gov- ernment." Mr. Van Doren's book is an account of one of the most insidious temptations faced by the generation that fought for the independence of the United States-namely. to give up the fight. That temptation. which was ac- tively stimulated by the British, played on the people's love for peace and com- fort, their fears for a new and unprece- dented form of government, their han- kering for empire ties their suspicion that they niay have acted hastily or gone too far, their doubts over whether they could win such a war, their fear of economic ruin, and all the other con- siderations which made some men Loy- alists and others reluctant Rebels. Those who risked all and persevered in their faith in America's future finally won and are revered today. but those who wavered along the line are the sub- ject of Mr. Van Doren' study. Great Britain was as much aware of this lack of unity among the Ameri- cans as the Continental Congress was. After the peace offers of 1778 were re- jected, and the British had failed to win any decisive victory thus far in the war, a definite policy was inaugurated to try to buy off the rebel leaders. British pol- itics was so corrupt that this move seemed entirely logical to His Majesty's ministers. No one, they argued, would really risk his life and fortune long for a political principle: these American leaders simply wanted something for themselves-money, social prestige, or power, Why not, then. find out their price for abandoning their precious cause? Money was available, as well as Irish peerages, pensions, government appointments, and other distinctions. As commander-in-chief of the British army in North America, Sir Henry Clin- ton was charged with carrying out this policy. Accordingly, several rebel lead- ers were slyly approached: Ethan Allen, John Sullivan, Israel Putnam, Joseph Reed, but without success, although some minor figures were engaged to transmit intelligence. Amusingly enough, the only person connected with the Continental Congress who was won over to the British side was the chaplain, Jacob Duch. Then, out of a clear sky, one of the ablest American generals, who had not been approached by British "feelers," abruptly offered his services to the enemy. The date was early in May, 1779, and the man was Benedict Arnold..% The greater part of Mr. Van Doren's book is taken up with Arnold's long ne- gotiations with the British, the climac- tic meeting with Major Andre to arrange for the surrender of West Point, the sudden revarsal of fortune after Andre was captured by the Americans, Arnold's flight and his pay-off. For the first time the story is authentically and com- pletely told. Arnold's correspondence with British headquarters has been hitherto unavailable and the extent of it unknowit. When Sir Henry Clinton returned to England in the spring of 1782, he took his papers with him and kept them in his home. There they re- ish came uncomfortably close to suc- ceeding, and the episode has been called the crisis of the Revolution. Arnold's treason is familiar in its out- lines to most of us. No one need be ashamed for remembering it but vaguely because a vague version is all we have had. Of the 68 letters printed in Mr. Van Doren's appendix, only six were known to historians before this. It was known that Arnold corresponded with the British, but not for how long. It was known that in September, 1780, he had a meeting with Andre in order to arrange for the surrender of West Point, after which Andr6 was captured. Arnold managed to escape down the Hudson to Clinton's headquarters, while his wife had hysterics and everyone felt sorry for her. Andr6 won admiration for his composure, and many people regretted The Vision of Hugh Fitzgerald is taken from the first chapter of a long novel which John Ragsdale has been writing for more than a year. Out of school since the year before last he returned in September as a junior to continue with his school work (and, incidently, to compete in the annual Hopwood contest). The declaration of war, however, stirred his poetic blood and he is now waiting a calling from our Uncle Sam to begin the training period as an Army Flying Cadet. Eugene Mandeberg, a junior in the Lit School and a night editor on The Daily, appears in Perspectives for the second time. He practices journalism but keeps a finger in the artistic pot. Burton Gavitt writes only as an avocation but occassionally produces such a story as Brother Eddie despite himself. This is his first appear- ance in Perspectives. James Allen, a beloved alumnus of Perspectives' editorial staff, left the lit school a couple of years ago with his equally beloved associate, Harvey Swados. Now completing his curriculum in the Law School he finds little time to write, reviewed Fitzgerald's last book largely to avoid buying it himself. May have been motivated in part by a piquant urge to view his name again in respectable print. Monet Sorensen, now one of Perspectives' regular contributors, won a minor prize in the 1941 Hopwood Contest. Although only a junior in school. she plans to continue with her poetry after graduation. Jean Michael is the nom de plume of a sophomore who could not stand the glow of literary publicity. Her story, The Funeral, fits into Perspectives' traditional progression of stories of the depressing and macabre. Wystan Hugh Auden, whose work has appeared under the Random House imprint, in the pages of America's fashionable magazines, and in numerous coterie publications, does not come to us as a stranger. English by birth. Mr. Auden came to the United States a few years ago and is today considered among America's outstanding poets. guilty on two counts of using his public position for private gain, that same courtmartial had acquitted him for lack of proof of a more serious charge of the same nature, of which we know now that he was guilty. Arnold also wanted glory, renown, eminence. He was pri- marily a man of action and an able field commander whose men would fol- lo whim any where. This inactivity as military governor of Philadelphia was not good for a man of his temperatment. He saw himself taking the limelight if he could crush the Revolution by sur- rendering to the enemy an important post like West Point. Such a leading role appealed strongly to him. Revenge likewise was a part of his motivation. He had without doubt been ill-used by Congress, but most of the other generals had been slighted too, Washington in particular. No one would have blamed Arnold if under the circumstances he had resigned his commission and retired to private life. But of course, Congress' unjust treatment of him was no excuse for a treasonable plot which would bring great suffering to hundreds of thous- ands of innocent third parties. After Arnold joined the British he issued a proclamation attempting to justify his conduct. Therein he gave three reasons for changing sides: fear of the French alliance, disapproval of in- dependence, and objection to the tyr- anny of Congress. Yet, as Mr. Van Doren points out, Arnold never ex- pressed such sentiments while he was in the American army. Even his quar- rel with Congress was a personal mat- ter, not a political dispute about the powers of that body. Furthermore, Mr. Van Doren has discovered that this pro- clamation _was drafted with the help of William Smith, a noted Loyalist inNew York, and that it embodies the familiar old Loyalist arguments, M1R. VAN DOREN'S third revelation is proof that Peggy Shippen Arnold, the young second wife of Arnold, was involved in the treason from the start. She is referred to early in the correspon- dence, and later she helped forward some of the letters. Therefore, her hys- terics at West Point, after Arnold had been forced to flee, was clearly an act to fool Washington and the other Amer- ican officers into believeing her inno- cent. Oddly enough, only one person ever accused her of acting then, and he was Aaron Burr. But because of his dark reputation, it was easy to dis- believe him. Mr. Van Doren's careful check of the sequence of events on the day Arnold fled also points to her in- sincerity. If she had been innocent, she would have thrown her fit immediately after Arnold broke the news to her that all was discovered. Instead, she kept quiet for several hours to give him a head start on his pursuers; then when she was sure that Washington had at last learned of his flight, she went into her act to protect herself. Although Mr. Van Doren exposes sev- eral men as traitors who have hidden under the cloak of patriots, his book is still tremendously heartening. The won- der is, as he concludes, "not that some were false but that most of them were true to the ragged colors of a perilous cause." Both Arnold and the British assumed that many soldiers would fol- low Arnold's example. To encourage them Arnold issued a second proclama- tion offering them very lucrative in- ducements. But 'after two months of advertising and waiting, Arnold was able to muster only 28 deserters! It also shows how little he understood the men he had led; and how little he compre- hended the motives of his fellow ofifcers is indicated by his serious suggestion to the colonial secretary that Washing- ton could be bought off with a title. (Continued on Page Eleven) mained until Mr. Clements purchased them from a descendant in 1926. Then they were removed to Mr. Clements' house in Bay City, where they were sorted, arranged and catalogued. After Mr. Clements' death, the collection was removed to the Library he built and gave to the University of Michigan. Mr. Van Doren is the first person, outside of Library staff members, permitted to study the treason story in these papers. To substantiate all his charges, he has carefully documented his statements and has published Arnold's treason cor- respondence in an appendix. Although written for the lay public, the book is as soundly written as any PhD dis- sertation. ARNOLD'S STORY is too involved 'to be summarized here. As he was in Philadelphia when he opened the treas- onable correspondence, the transmission of messages required the services of runners, agents, and decoders. The af- fair had its melodramatic aspects which Major Andre, who as Clinton's aide handled the British end of the negotia- tions, was not one to subdue. Mr. Van Doren once remarked that Andre's ex- ecution was a form of dramatic criti- cism for his having bungled the third act of his little play. Even so, the Brit- Washington's sternness in having him hung. That about sums up the story heretofore. Arnold has been alternately villified and defended. What, then, has Mr. Van Doren re- vealed that is new? First of all, he has suppleid the continuity of the story from beginning to end. It has been assumed that Arnold did not correspond with the enemy until 1780, after the court-mar- tial vrdict against him in February of that year had stung his pride. But his defection in May, 1779. makes his vil- lainy even less defensible. Moreover, the fact that Arnold initiated the cor- respondence throws new light on his character. The means by which the correspondence was carried on and the other person involved are also new details. Secondly, Mr. Van Doren has made indisputably clear that Arnold's motives for changing sides were personal, not political as Arnold insisted later. There can be no doubt that Arnold had a lust for money and that in 1779 he needed money. Perhaps it was his mercantile background that made it impossible for him to overlook an opportunity to ob- tain a dollar or turn a profit. Although be railed against the "injustice" of the courtmartial verdict which found him