Stop Smearing Lee
by
Gail Jarvis
by
Gail Jarvis
Those
who rely on the mainstream media for their news will know all about
the Iowa Caucus and Martin Luther King Day; both of which took place
on Monday, January 19th. But they might not know that yesterday
was also the 197th anniversary of the birth date of Robert E. Lee.
Americans no longer expect the mainstream media to mention Robert
E. Lee’s birthday because it is not a part of government defined
culture. But those of us who think highly of General Lee are a steadfast
group and, in our own ways, we paid tribute to this Southern icon
whom we consider to be one of the finest men our country has produced.
Rarely
does a year go by that a new biography of Lee doesn’t appear. 2003
saw the publication on the Penguin Lives Series edition; Robert
E. Lee by Roy Blount, Jr. The Penguin Lives Series are condensed
biographies, not written for scholars but for mass consumption.
To make them more accessible to the general public, fiction writers
rather than historians are often chosen to write these mini-biographies.
Although these little books, usually 200 pages or less, have limitations,
they provide an excellent source of information for those who have
neither the time nor the inclination for more thorough research.
Overall, Roy Blount has done a commendable job of investigating
the life of Robert E. Lee, and I am impressed with his ability to
condense so much information in order to meet the Penguin format.
But
it is unfortunate that Blount employs the popular trend of resorting
to "psychobabble" to explain General Lee. It doesn’t work.
It not only demeans Lee, it also belittles Blount’s scholarship.
Roy Blount states his purpose at the beginning: "What is so
fine about Lee is that he is exempt from whatever sifter a given
age may employ to sort out personality. It is too late for Freud
now, but not for psychologizing." Apparently Blount isn’t aware
that Freud’s contrived theories about complexes developed in childhood
have been universally discredited and are now considered passé.
So he blithely attributes an Oedipus Complex to Robert E. Lee: an
abnormal attraction to his mother because his father was largely
absent from his life.
Mr.
Blount falls into the psychobabble trap again by attributing feelings
of inferiority to Lee as a result of his small feet. For a man of
five foot eleven, Lee’s feet were indeed small, size 4½. Shoe sizes
were the same as now and an adult male of Lee’s height would normally
wear a shoe size between 9 and 11. But where is the evidence that
Lee had feelings of inadequacy about the size of his feet? As proof,
Blount offers the frequent references to socks in the General’s
letters to his wife who knitted his socks and sent them to him at
various battle sites. Blount states: "No one has ascribed any
psychosexual significance to this socks fixation but it must be
said that in Lee’s culture feet were highly eroticized."
Blount
also quotes Alice Miller‘s Drama
of the Gifted Child: "A recent study found boys brought
up in "mother-only households" to be disproportionately
at risk for major depressive disorders." According to Blount,
Lee was one of those children who grew up in "families who
were socially isolated and felt themselves to be too little respected
in their neighborhood. They therefore made special efforts to increase
their prestige with their neighbors through conformity and outstanding
achievements." In other words, Robert E. Lee was driven to
achieve as a result of deeply rooted feelings of inadequacy.
But
consider this 1831 painting of Robert E. Lee as a young Lieutenant
in the Corps of Engineers. Does this look like a man who feels inadequate?
To the contrary, we see a confident and handsome young officer who
could have come right out of Central Casting. We can understand
why ladies were drawn to him and why he commanded the respect of
his soldiers. In fact, in every painting or picture of Lee, he always
appears larger-than-life.
However,
we live in a time when larger-than-life types must be reduced to
life size, even if it takes psychobabble. And some of the psychobabble
is simply ludicrous, as is this example of Roy Blount’s use of hidden
meanings to interpret Lee’s actions. Again our author returns to
Robert E. Lee’s childhood, this time for a psychological explanation
of one of the most thoroughly analyzed and controversial skirmishes
in the War Between the States: the Confederate attack on Cemetery
Ridge, commonly known as "Pickett’s Charge." Follow this
closely because Blount really strains for this fanciful diagnosis.
When
Robert was a young boy, his father, Lighthorse Harry Lee, traveled
to Baltimore to help defend a newspaper editor who was under attack
from an enraged mob. In the ensuing fracas, Lee was beaten into
insensibility by "a giant of a man named Mumma" who tried
to cut off his nose. The mob left Harry for dead but he miraculously
recovered and guardedly made his way back to his Virginia home.
In what was certainly a traumatic experience, young Robert saw his
blood-soaked and battered father stumbling toward the house. Harry
was 58 at the time and never fully recovered from his injuries.
It
would take a fertile imagination to transpose this painful childhood
memory into an explanation of Lee’s fatal military decision at the
battle of Gettysburg. But Blount presents a series of coincidences
to support his theory. First: At the time of the Gettysburg conflict,
Lee was about the same age as his father when he was savagely beaten
in Baltimore. This fact must have weighed heavily on his thoughts.
Second: The Union’s headquarters were located about a thousand yards
from the Baltimore Pike. The word "Baltimore" surely brought
back memories of his father’s tragedy. And third: Lee’s headquarters
were about the same distance from the Mummasburg Road. How could
Lee not be reminded of the man, Mumma, would had almost killed his
father in Baltimore?
Our
author suggests that these coincidences overpowered Lee’s reasoning.
"In a kind of adolescent ecstasy" Robert E. Lee thought
he could "resolve his Oedipal conflict" and restore his
family name that had been tarnished by his fathers failed
financial dealings. So, in a moment of reckless bravado, Lee impulsively
ordered Pickett’s troops to charge directly into the Union line.
But strategically placed Union artillery eventually overwhelmed
the attacking Confederates and more than half of Pickett’s men were
killed, wounded or captured.
Although
Roy Blount, Jr. is noted primarily as a humorist, I have to think
that he wants us to take his psychological theories seriously. But
we cannot. They are absolutely too far-fetched. However, Blount’s
biography of Lee fits well into our "anti-hero" era; i.e.:
There are no great men. Those who excel are simply driven by something
they lack, some shortcoming. This minimizing of exemplary men is
a by-product of egalitarianism to infer that some men are
remarkable is insensitive because it implies that others may not
be.
This
photograph of Lee shows the handsome young Lieutenant in advanced
age. Look at those eyes. A little sadder than those of the youthful
officer we saw earlier but still the eyes of a leader. And again
we are struck with Robert E Lee’s imposing demeanor. In the early
1930s, before psychobabble and egalitarianism, Douglas Southall
Freeman said of General Lee: "There is no inconsistency to
be explained, no enigma to be solved." Freeman maintained that
Lee’s character is easily understood by two elements: "simplicity
and spirituality." To me, "simplicity and spirituality"
ring true.
The
unique thing about Lee is, that with all the PC campaigns to erase
his memory, he continues to intrigue us. And each year, more organizations
are conducting public ceremonies honoring Robert E. Lee on his birth
date.
January
20, 2004
Gail
Jarvis [send
him mail], a CPA living in
Beaufort, SC, is an advocate of the voluntary union of states established
by the founders.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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